// This file contains various trait resolution methods used by codegen. // They all assume regions can be erased and monomorphic types. It // seems likely that they should eventually be merged into more // general routines. use crate::infer::{InferCtxt, TyCtxtInferExt}; use crate::traits::{ FulfillmentContext, ImplSource, Obligation, ObligationCause, SelectionContext, TraitEngine, Unimplemented, }; use rustc_errors::ErrorReported; use rustc_middle::ty::fold::TypeFoldable; use rustc_middle::ty::{self, TyCtxt}; /// Attempts to resolve an obligation to an `ImplSource`. The result is /// a shallow `ImplSource` resolution, meaning that we do not /// (necessarily) resolve all nested obligations on the impl. Note /// that type check should guarantee to us that all nested /// obligations *could be* resolved if we wanted to. /// /// Assumes that this is run after the entire crate has been successfully type-checked. /// This also expects that `trait_ref` is fully normalized. pub fn codegen_fulfill_obligation<'tcx>( tcx: TyCtxt<'tcx>, (param_env, trait_ref): (ty::ParamEnv<'tcx>, ty::PolyTraitRef<'tcx>), ) -> Result, ErrorReported> { // Remove any references to regions; this helps improve caching. let trait_ref = tcx.erase_regions(trait_ref); // We expect the input to be fully normalized. debug_assert_eq!(trait_ref, tcx.normalize_erasing_regions(param_env, trait_ref)); debug!( "codegen_fulfill_obligation(trait_ref={:?}, def_id={:?})", (param_env, trait_ref), trait_ref.def_id() ); // Do the initial selection for the obligation. This yields the // shallow result we are looking for -- that is, what specific impl. tcx.infer_ctxt().enter(|infcx| { let mut selcx = SelectionContext::new(&infcx); let obligation_cause = ObligationCause::dummy(); let obligation = Obligation::new(obligation_cause, param_env, trait_ref.to_poly_trait_predicate()); let selection = match selcx.select(&obligation) { Ok(Some(selection)) => selection, Ok(None) => { // Ambiguity can happen when monomorphizing during trans // expands to some humongo type that never occurred // statically -- this humongo type can then overflow, // leading to an ambiguous result. So report this as an // overflow bug, since I believe this is the only case // where ambiguity can result. infcx.tcx.sess.delay_span_bug( rustc_span::DUMMY_SP, &format!( "encountered ambiguity selecting `{:?}` during codegen, presuming due to \ overflow or prior type error", trait_ref ), ); return Err(ErrorReported); } Err(Unimplemented) => { // This can trigger when we probe for the source of a `'static` lifetime requirement // on a trait object: `impl Foo for dyn Trait {}` has an implicit `'static` bound. infcx.tcx.sess.delay_span_bug( rustc_span::DUMMY_SP, &format!( "Encountered error `Unimplemented` selecting `{:?}` during codegen", trait_ref ), ); return Err(ErrorReported); } Err(e) => { bug!("Encountered error `{:?}` selecting `{:?}` during codegen", e, trait_ref) } }; debug!("fulfill_obligation: selection={:?}", selection); // Currently, we use a fulfillment context to completely resolve // all nested obligations. This is because they can inform the // inference of the impl's type parameters. let mut fulfill_cx = FulfillmentContext::new(); let impl_source = selection.map(|predicate| { debug!("fulfill_obligation: register_predicate_obligation {:?}", predicate); fulfill_cx.register_predicate_obligation(&infcx, predicate); }); let impl_source = drain_fulfillment_cx_or_panic(&infcx, &mut fulfill_cx, impl_source); debug!("Cache miss: {:?} => {:?}", trait_ref, impl_source); Ok(impl_source) }) } // # Global Cache /// Finishes processes any obligations that remain in the /// fulfillment context, and then returns the result with all type /// variables removed and regions erased. Because this is intended /// for use after type-check has completed, if any errors occur, /// it will panic. It is used during normalization and other cases /// where processing the obligations in `fulfill_cx` may cause /// type inference variables that appear in `result` to be /// unified, and hence we need to process those obligations to get /// the complete picture of the type. fn drain_fulfillment_cx_or_panic<'tcx, T>( infcx: &InferCtxt<'_, 'tcx>, fulfill_cx: &mut FulfillmentContext<'tcx>, result: T, ) -> T where T: TypeFoldable<'tcx>, { debug!("drain_fulfillment_cx_or_panic()"); // In principle, we only need to do this so long as `result` // contains unbound type parameters. It could be a slight // optimization to stop iterating early. let errors = fulfill_cx.select_all_or_error(infcx); if !errors.is_empty() { infcx.tcx.sess.delay_span_bug( rustc_span::DUMMY_SP, &format!("Encountered errors `{:?}` resolving bounds after type-checking", errors), ); } let result = infcx.resolve_vars_if_possible(result); infcx.tcx.erase_regions(result) }