Remove `Symbol` from `Named` variant of `BoundRegionKind`/`LateParamRegionKind`
The `Symbol` is redundant, since we already store a `DefId` in the region variant. Instead, load the name via `item_name` when needed (which is almost always on the diagnostic path).
This introduces a `BoundRegionKind::NamedAnon` which is used for giving anonymous bound regions names, but which should only be used during pretty printing and error reporting.
Make metadata a workproduct and reuse it
This PR aims to skip the generation of metadata by reusing the infrastructure that already exists for compiled codegen-units, namely "workproducts".
This can yield substantial gains (~10%) when we can demonstrate that metadata does not change between an incremental session and the next. This is the case if the crate is unchanged, or if all the changes are in upstream crates and have no effect on it. This latter case is most interesting, as it arises regularly for users with several crates in their workspace.
TODO:
- [x] Materialize the fact that metadata encoding relies on the relative order of definitions;
- [x] Refactor the handling of doc links.
setup typos check in CI
This allows to check typos in CI, currently for compiler only (to reduce commit size with fixes). With current setup, exclude list is quite short, so it worth trying?
Also includes commits with actual typo fixes.
MCP: https://github.com/rust-lang/compiler-team/issues/817
typos check currently turned for:
* ./compiler
* ./library
* ./src/bootstrap
* ./src/librustdoc
After merging, PRs which enables checks for other crates (tools) can be implemented too.
Found typos will **not break** other jobs immediately: (tests, building compiler for perf run). Job will be marked as red on completion in ~ 20 secs, so you will not forget to fix it whenever you want, before merging pr.
Check typos: `python x.py test tidy --extra-checks=spellcheck`
Apply typo fixes: `python x.py test tidy --extra-checks=spellcheck:fix` (in case if there only 1 suggestion of each typo)
Current fail in this pr is expected and shows how typo errors emitted. Commit with error will be removed after r+.
interpret: move the native call preparation logic into Miri
`@nia-e` has to do a bunch of changes to this logic for her native call ptrace work, and it's getting annoying that the logic is split between Miri and rustc. So this moves the logic to Miri, keeping just the generic traversal part in rustc. It is unfortunate that this means we have to expose `get_alloc_raw`/`get_alloc_raw_mut`... I hope the function name is scary enough to reduce the risk of misuse.
r? `@oli-obk`
Rollup of 11 pull requests
Successful merges:
- rust-lang/rust#131923 (Derive `Copy` and `Hash` for `IntErrorKind`)
- rust-lang/rust#138340 (Remove some unsized tuple impls now that we don't support unsizing tuples anymore)
- rust-lang/rust#141219 (Change `{Box,Arc,Rc,Weak}::into_raw` to only work with `A = Global`)
- rust-lang/rust#142212 (bootstrap: validate `rust.codegen-backends` & `target.<triple>.codegen-backends`)
- rust-lang/rust#142237 (Detect more cases of unused_parens around types)
- rust-lang/rust#142964 (Attribute rework: a parser for single attributes without arguments)
- rust-lang/rust#143070 (Rewrite `macro_rules!` parser to not use the MBE engine itself)
- rust-lang/rust#143235 (Assemble const bounds via normal item bounds in old solver too)
- rust-lang/rust#143261 (Feed `explicit_predicates_of` instead of `predicates_of`)
- rust-lang/rust#143276 (loop match: handle opaque patterns)
- rust-lang/rust#143306 (Add `track_caller` attributes to trace origin of Clippy lints)
r? `@ghost`
`@rustbot` modify labels: rollup
try-job: aarch64-apple
try-job: x86_64-msvc-1
try-job: x86_64-gnu
try-job: dist-i586-gnu-i586-i686-musl
try-job: test-various
Feed `explicit_predicates_of` instead of `predicates_of`
Tiny nitpick, just avoiding needing to mark the `predicates_of` query as feedable since it's derived from `explicit_predicates_of`.
Don't recompute `DisambiguatorState` for every RPITIT in trait definition
The `associated_type_for_impl_trait_in_trait` currently needs to rerun the `RPITVisitor` for every RPITIT to compute its disambiguator.
Instead of synthesizing all of the RPITITs def ids one at a time in different queries, just synthesize them inside of the `associated_types_for_impl_traits_in_associated_fn` query. There we can just share the same `DisambiguatorState` for all the RPITITs in one function signature.
r? ``````@Zoxc`````` or ``````@oli-obk`````` cc rust-lang/rust#140453
Remove support for `dyn*` from the compiler
This PR removes support for `dyn*` (https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/102425), which are a currently un-RFC'd experiment that was opened a few years ago to explore a component that we thought was necessary for AFIDT (async fn in dyn trait).
It doesn't seem like we are going to need `dyn*` types -- even in an not-exposed-to-the-user way[^1] -- for us to implement AFIDT. Given that AFIDT was the original motivating purpose of `dyn*` types, I don't really see a compelling reason to have to maintain their implementation in the compiler.
[^1]: Compared to, e.g., generators whih are an unstable building block we use to implement stable syntax like `async {}`.
We've learned quite a lot from `dyn*`, but I think at this point its current behavior leads to more questions than answers. For example, `dyn*` support today remains somewhat fragile; it ICEs in many cases where the current "normal" `dyn Trait` types rely on their unsizedness for their vtable-based implementation to be sound I wouldn't be surprised if it's unsound in other ways, though I didn't play around with it too much. See the examples below.
```rust
#![feature(dyn_star)]
trait Foo {
fn hello(self);
}
impl Foo for usize {
fn hello(self) {
println!("hello, world");
}
}
fn main() {
let x: dyn* Foo = 1usize;
x.hello();
}
```
And:
```rust
#![feature(dyn_star)]
trait Trait {
type Out where Self: Sized;
}
fn main() {
let x: <dyn* Trait as Trait>::Out;
}
```
...and probably many more problems having to do with the intersection of dyn-compatibility and `Self: Sized` bounds that I was too lazy to look into like:
* GATs
* Methods with invalid signatures
* Associated consts
Generally, `dyn*` types also end up getting in the way of working with [normal `dyn` types](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/102425#issuecomment-1712604409) to an extent that IMO outweighs the benefit of experimentation.
I recognize that there are probably other, more creative usages of `dyn*` that are orthogonal to AFIDT. However, I think any work along those lines should first have to think through some of the more fundamental interactions between `dyn*` and dyn-compatibility before we think about reimplementing them in the type system.
---
I'm planning on removing the `DynKind` enum and the `PointerLike` built-in trait from the compiler after this PR lands.
Closesrust-lang/rust#102425.
cc `@eholk` `@rust-lang/lang` `@rust-lang/types`
Closesrust-lang/rust#116979.
Closesrust-lang/rust#119694.
Closesrust-lang/rust#134591.
Closesrust-lang/rust#104800.
Port `#[rustc_layout_scalar_valid_range_start/end]` to the new attrib…
Ports `rustc_layout_scalar_valid_range_start` and `rustc_layout_scalar_valid_range_end` to the new attribute parsing infrastructure for https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/131229#issuecomment-2971353197
r? `@jdonszelmann`
inherit `#[align]` from trait method prototypes
````@workingjubilee```` this seems straightforward enough. Now that we're planning to make `-Cmin-function-alignment` a target modifier, I don't think there are any cross-crate complications here?
````@Jules-Bertholet```` is this the behavior you had in mind? In particular the inheritance of the attribute of a default impl is maybe a bit unintuitive at first? (but I think it's ok if that behavior is explicitly documented).
r? ghost
Introduce `ByteSymbol`
It's like `Symbol` but for byte strings. The interner is now used for both `Symbol` and `ByteSymbol`. E.g. if you intern `"dog"` and `b"dog"` you'll get a `Symbol` and a `ByteSymbol` with the same index and the characters will only be stored once.
The motivation for this is to eliminate the `Arc`s in `ast::LitKind`, to make `ast::LitKind` impl `Copy`, and to avoid the need to arena-allocate `ast::LitKind` in HIR. The latter change reduces peak memory by a non-trivial amount on literal-heavy benchmarks such as `deep-vector` and `tuple-stress`.
`Encoder`, `Decoder`, `SpanEncoder`, and `SpanDecoder` all get some changes so that they can handle normal strings and byte strings.
give Pointer::into_parts a more scary name and offer a safer alternative
`into_parts` is a bit too innocent of a name for a somewhat subtle operation.
r? `@oli-obk`
It's like `Symbol` but for byte strings. The interner is now used for
both `Symbol` and `ByteSymbol`. E.g. if you intern `"dog"` and `b"dog"`
you'll get a `Symbol` and a `ByteSymbol` with the same index and the
characters will only be stored once.
The motivation for this is to eliminate the `Arc`s in `ast::LitKind`, to
make `ast::LitKind` impl `Copy`, and to avoid the need to arena-allocate
`ast::LitKind` in HIR. The latter change reduces peak memory by a
non-trivial amount on literal-heavy benchmarks such as `deep-vector` and
`tuple-stress`.
`Encoder`, `Decoder`, `SpanEncoder`, and `SpanDecoder` all get some
changes so that they can handle normal strings and byte strings.
This change does slow down compilation of programs that use
`include_bytes!` on large files, because the contents of those files are
now interned (hashed). This makes `include_bytes!` more similar to
`include_str!`, though `include_bytes!` contents still aren't escaped,
and hashing is still much cheaper than escaping.
Remove unused feature gates
After finding some unused feature gates in rust-lang/rust#143155 , I wrote a small script to see if I can find any others.
And I did. Not a lot, but still a small win 😁
Contains a few instances of `iter_from_coroutine` that can be removed due to rust-lang/rust#142801 (I guess).
Improve documentation of `TagEncoding`
This PR is follow-up from the [discussion here](https://rust-lang.zulipchat.com/#narrow/channel/182449-t-compiler.2Fhelp/topic/.E2.9C.94.20VariantId.3DDiscriminant.20when.20tag.20is.20niche.20encoded.3F/with/524384295).
It aims at making the `TagEncoding` documentation less ambiguous and more detailed with references to relevant implementation sides. It especially clears up the ambiguous use of discriminant/variant index, which sparked the discussion referenced above.
PS: While working with layout data, I somehow ended up looking at the docs for `FakeBorrowKind` and noticed that the one example was not in a doc comment. I hope that this is minor enough of a fix for it to be okay in this otherwise unrelated PR.