Commit Graph

1672 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Matthias Krüger
306dbaf574 Rollup merge of #107662 - cjgillot:copy-projection, r=oli-obk
Turn projections into copies in CopyProp.

The current implementation can leave behind projections that are moved out several times.

This PR widens the check to turn such moves into copies: a move out of a projection of a copy is equivalent to a copy of the original projection.
2023-02-07 17:57:15 +01:00
Matthias Krüger
917662a8f6 Rollup merge of #107555 - edward-shen:edward-shen/dup-trait-suggestion, r=compiler-errors
Modify existing bounds if they exist

Fixes #107335.

This implementation is kinda gross but I don't really see a better way to do it.

This primarily does two things: Modifies `suggest_constraining_type_param` to accept a new parameter that indicates a span to be replaced instead of added, if presented, and limit the additive suggestions to either suggest a new bound on an existing bound (see newly added unit test) or add the generics argument if a generics argument wasn't found.

The former change is required to retain the capability to add an entirely new bounds if it was entirely omitted.

r? ``@compiler-errors``
2023-02-07 17:57:14 +01:00
Matthias Krüger
6d225bb080 Rollup merge of #100599 - MatthewPeterKelly:add-E0523-description-and-test, r=compiler-errors,GuillaumeGomez
Add compiler error E0523 long description and test

This PR is one step towards addressing:  https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/61137.
2023-02-07 17:57:13 +01:00
Oli Scherer
f95b553eb4 Replace a command line flag with an env var to allow tools to initialize the tracing loggers at their own discretion 2023-02-07 16:33:03 +00:00
bors
5dd0e1b7ae Auto merge of #107671 - CastilloDel:master, r=estebank
Fix suggestions rendering when the diff span is multiline

Fixes #92741

cc `@estebank`

I think, I finally fixed. I still want to go back and try to clean up the code a bit. I'm open to suggestions.

Some examples of the new suggestions:

```
help: consider removing the borrow
  |
2 -     &
  |
```
```
help: consider removing the borrow
  |
2 -     &
3 -     mut
  |
```
```
help: consider removing the borrow
  |
2 -     &
3 -     mut if true { true } else { false }
2 +     if true { true } else { false }
  |
```

Should we add a test to ensure this behavior doesn't disappear in the future?
2023-02-07 13:29:45 +00:00
kadmin
15f4eec7a9 Leave FIXME for wasm layout difference.
There is a distinction between running this on wasm and i686, even though they should be
identical. This technically is not _incorrect_, it's just an unexpected difference, which is
worth investigating, but not for correctness.
2023-02-07 09:37:55 +00:00
kadmin
610e1a1e05 Add tag for ignoring wasm 2023-02-07 09:37:55 +00:00
kadmin
5d9f5145ac Rm allocation in candidate
Instead of storing an extra array for discriminant values, create an allocation there and store
those in an allocation immediately.
2023-02-07 09:37:55 +00:00
kadmin
3e97cef7e5 Set mir-opt-level = 0 on some codegen tests
Since we're changing a bunch of stuff, necessary to remove some codegen tests
which look for specific things. Also attempting to restart a test which timed out, maybe due to
fastly failing?
2023-02-07 09:37:55 +00:00
Arpad Borsos
7a7b2e3521 Add test for Future inflating arg size to 3x
This adds one more test that should track improvements to generator
layout, like #62958 and #62575.

In particular, this test highlights suboptimal layout, as the storage
for the argument future is not being reused across its usage as `upvar`,
`local` and `awaitee` (being polled to completion).
2023-02-07 08:52:15 +01:00
bors
dffea43fc1 Auto merge of #106180 - RalfJung:dereferenceable-generators, r=nbdd0121
make &mut !Unpin not dereferenceable, and Box<!Unpin> not noalias

See https://github.com/rust-lang/unsafe-code-guidelines/issues/381 and [this LLVM discussion](https://discourse.llvm.org/t/interaction-of-noalias-and-dereferenceable/66979). The exact semantics of how `noalias` and `dereferenceable` interact are unclear, and `@comex` found a case of LLVM actually exploiting that ambiguity for optimizations. I think for now we should treat LLVM `dereferenceable` as implying a "fake read" to happen immediately at the top of the function (standing in for the spurious reads that LLVM might introduce), and that fake read is subject to all the usual `noalias` restrictions. This means we cannot put `dereferenceable` on `&mut !Unpin` references as those references can alias with other references that are being read and written inside the function (e.g. for self-referential generators), meaning the fake read introduces aliasing conflicts with those other accesses.

For `&` this is already not a problem due to https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/98017 which removed the `dereferenceable` attribute for other reasons.

Regular `&mut Unpin` references are unaffected, so I hope the impact of this is going to be tiny.

The first commit does some refactoring of the `PointerKind` enum since I found the old code very confusing each time I had to touch it. It doesn't change behavior.

Fixes https://github.com/rust-lang/miri/issues/2714

EDIT: Turns out our `Box<!Unpin>` treatment was incorrect, too, so the PR also fixes that now (in codegen and Miri): we do not put `noalias` on these boxes any more.
2023-02-07 03:35:10 +00:00
Camille GILLOT
9a6c04f5d0 Handle discriminants in dataflow-const-prop. 2023-02-06 21:51:47 +00:00
Nick Lamb
747cdc0dfd Fix problem noticed in PR106859 with char -> u8 suggestion 2023-02-06 21:48:10 +00:00
Matthias Krüger
a5288a7803 Rollup merge of #107692 - Swatinem:printsizeyield, r=compiler-errors
Sort Generator `print-type-sizes` according to their yield points

Especially when trying to diagnose runaway future sizes, it might be more intuitive to sort the variants according to the control flow (aka their yield points) rather than the size of the variants.
2023-02-06 21:16:41 +01:00
Matthias Krüger
800221b5b8 Rollup merge of #106477 - Nathan-Fenner:nathanf/refined-error-span-trait-impl, r=compiler-errors
Refine error spans for "The trait bound `T: Trait` is not satisfied" when passing literal structs/tuples

This PR adds a new heuristic which refines the error span reported for "`T: Trait` is not satisfied" errors, by "drilling down" into individual fields of structs/enums/tuples to point to the "problematic" value.

Here's a self-contained example of the difference in error span:

```rs
struct Burrito<Filling> {
    filling: Filling,
}
impl <Filling: Delicious> Delicious for Burrito<Filling> {}
fn eat_delicious_food<Food: Delicious>(food: Food) {}
fn will_type_error() {
    eat_delicious_food(Burrito { filling: Kale });
    //                 ^~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ (before) The trait bound `Kale: Delicious` is not satisfied
    //                                    ^~~~   (after)  The trait bound `Kale: Delicious` is not satisfied
}
```
(kale is fine, this is just a silly food-based example)

Before this PR, the error span is identified as the entire argument to the generic function `eat_delicious_food`. However, since only `Kale` is the "problematic" part, we can point at it specifically. In particular, the primary error message itself mentions the missing `Kale: Delicious` trait bound, so it's much clearer if this part is called out explicitly.

---

The _existing_ heuristic tries to label the right function argument in `point_at_arg_if_possible`. It goes something like this:
- Look at the broken base trait `Food: Delicious` and find which generics it mentions (in this case, only `Food`)
- Look at the parameter type definitions and find which of them mention `Filling` (in this case, only `food`)
- If there is exactly one relevant parameter, label the corresponding argument with the error span, instead of the entire call

This PR extends this heuristic by further refining the resulting expression span in the new `point_at_specific_expr_if_possible` function. For each `impl` in the (broken) chain, we apply the following strategy:

The strategy to determine this span involves connecting information about our generic `impl`
with information about our (struct) type and the (struct) literal expression:
- Find the `impl` (`impl <Filling: Delicious> Delicious for Burrito<Filling>`)
  that links our obligation (`Kale: Delicious`) with the parent obligation (`Burrito<Kale>: Delicious`)
- Find the "original" predicate constraint in the impl (`Filling: Delicious`) which produced our obligation.
- Find all of the generics that are mentioned in the predicate (`Filling`).
- Examine the `Self` type in the `impl`, and see which of its type argument(s) mention any of those generics.
- Examing the definition for the `Self` type, and identify (for each of its variants) if there's a unique field
  which uses those generic arguments.
- If there is a unique field mentioning the "blameable" arguments, use that field for the error span.

Before we do any of this logic, we recursively call `point_at_specific_expr_if_possible` on the parent
obligation. Hence we refine the `expr` "outwards-in" and bail at the first kind of expression/impl we don't recognize.

This function returns a `Result<&Expr, &Expr>` - either way, it returns the `Expr` whose span should be
reported as an error. If it is `Ok`, then it means it refined successfull. If it is `Err`, then it may be
only a partial success - but it cannot be refined even further.

---

I added a new test file which exercises this new behavior. A few existing tests were affected, since their error spans are now different. In one case, this leads to a different code suggestion for the autofix - although the new suggestion isn't _wrong_, it is different from what used to be.

This change doesn't create any new errors or remove any existing ones, it just adjusts the spans where they're presented.

---

Some considerations: right now, this check occurs in addition to some similar logic in `adjust_fulfillment_error_for_expr_obligation` function, which tidies up various kinds of error spans (not just trait-fulfillment error). It's possible that this new code would be better integrated into that function (or another one) - but I haven't looked into this yet.

Although this code only occurs when there's a type error, it's definitely not as efficient as possible. In particular, there are definitely some cases where it degrades to quadratic performance (e.g. for a trait `impl` with 100+ generic parameters or 100 levels deep nesting of generic types). I'm not sure if these are realistic enough to worry about optimizing yet.

There's also still a lot of repetition in some of the logic, where the behavior for different types (namely, `struct` vs `enum` variant) is _similar_ but not the same.

---

I think the biggest win here is better targeting for tuples; in particular, if you're using tuples + traits to express variadic-like functions, the compiler can't tell you which part of a tuple has the wrong type, since the span will cover the entire argument. This change allows the individual field in the tuple to be highlighted, as in this example:

```
// NEW
LL |     want(Wrapper { value: (3, q) });
   |     ----                      ^ the trait `T3` is not implemented for `Q`

// OLD
LL |     want(Wrapper { value: (3, q) });
   |     ---- ^~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ the trait `T3` is not implemented for `Q`
```
Especially with large tuples, the existing error spans are not very effective at quickly narrowing down the source of the problem.
2023-02-06 21:16:39 +01:00
Edward Shen
af5a37e844 Modify existing bounds if they exist 2023-02-06 11:26:36 -08:00
bors
7ff69b49df Auto merge of #107727 - Dylan-DPC:rollup-b1yexcl, r=Dylan-DPC
Rollup of 5 pull requests

Successful merges:

 - #107553 (Suggest std::ptr::null if literal 0 is given to a raw pointer function argument)
 - #107580 (Recover from lifetimes with default lifetimes in generic args)
 - #107669 (rustdoc: combine duplicate rules in ayu CSS)
 - #107685 (Suggest adding a return type for async functions)
 - #107687 (Adapt SROA MIR opt for aggregated MIR)

Failed merges:

r? `@ghost`
`@rustbot` modify labels: rollup
2023-02-06 16:28:18 +00:00
clubby789
521c5f36d6 Migrate rustc_parse to derive diagnostics 2023-02-06 14:40:35 +00:00
CastilloDel
f0830c0ade Add run-rustfix to tests/ui/issues/issue-92741.rs 2023-02-06 15:34:47 +01:00
CastilloDel
039f70e926 Add more test cases to tests/ui/issues/issue-92741.rs 2023-02-06 15:30:29 +01:00
Dylan DPC
e385ca25be Rollup merge of #107687 - cjgillot:sroa-2, r=oli-obk
Adapt SROA MIR opt for aggregated MIR

The pass was broken by https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/107267.

This PR extends it to replace:
```
x = Struct { 0: a, 1: b }
y = move? x
```

by assignment between locals
```
x_0 = a
x_1 = b
y_0 = move? x_0
y_1 = move? x_1
```

The improved pass runs to fixpoint, so we can flatten nested field accesses.
2023-02-06 19:54:15 +05:30
Dylan DPC
675976eb21 Rollup merge of #107685 - jieyouxu:issue-90027, r=compiler-errors
Suggest adding a return type for async functions

Fixes #90027.
2023-02-06 19:54:15 +05:30
Dylan DPC
8ddbfadda0 Rollup merge of #107580 - lenko-d:default_value_for_a_lifetime_generic_parameter_produces_confusing_diagnostic, r=compiler-errors
Recover from lifetimes with default lifetimes in generic args

Fixes [#107492](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/107492)
2023-02-06 19:54:14 +05:30
Dylan DPC
496adf81de Rollup merge of #107553 - edward-shen:edward-shen/suggest-null-ptr, r=WaffleLapkin
Suggest std::ptr::null if literal 0 is given to a raw pointer function argument

Implementation feels a little sus (we're parsing the span for a `0`) but it seems to fall in line the string-expected-found-char condition right above this check, so I think it's fine.

Feedback appreciated on help text? I think it's consistent but it does sound a little awkward maybe?

Fixes #107517
2023-02-06 19:54:13 +05:30
bors
044a28a409 Auto merge of #103761 - chenyukang:yukang/fix-103320-must-use, r=compiler-errors
Add explanatory message for [#must_use] in ops

Fixes #103320
2023-02-06 12:57:37 +00:00
Matthew Kelly
2bcd4e256a Add extended error message for E0523
Adds the extended error documentation for E0523 to indicate that the
error is no longer produced by the compiler.

Update the E0464 documentation to include example code that produces the
error.

Remove the error message E0523 from the compiler and replace it with an
internal compiler error.
2023-02-06 06:58:30 -05:00
Ralf Jung
1ef16874b5 also do not add noalias on not-Unpin Box 2023-02-06 12:17:41 +01:00
Ralf Jung
ea541bc2ee make &mut !Unpin not dereferenceable
See https://github.com/rust-lang/unsafe-code-guidelines/issues/381 for discussion.
2023-02-06 11:46:37 +01:00
Ralf Jung
201ae73872 make PointerKind directly reflect pointer types
The code that consumes PointerKind (`adjust_for_rust_scalar` in rustc_ty_utils)
ended up using PointerKind variants to talk about Rust reference types (& and
&mut) anyway, making the old code structure quite confusing: one always had to
keep in mind which PointerKind corresponds to which type. So this changes
PointerKind to directly reflect the type.

This does not change behavior.
2023-02-06 11:46:32 +01:00
许杰友 Jieyou Xu (Joe)
6b05b80690 Suggest return type for async function without return type 2023-02-06 13:02:04 +08:00
bors
7c3f0d6f30 Auto merge of #107141 - notriddle:notriddle/max-lev-distance-2023, r=GuillaumeGomez
rustdoc: compute maximum Levenshtein distance based on the query

Preview: https://notriddle.com/notriddle-rustdoc-demos/search-lev-distance-2023/std/index.html?search=regex

The heuristic is pretty close to the name resolver, maxLevDistance = `Math.floor(queryLen / 3)`.

Fixes #103357
Fixes #82131

Similar to https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/103710, but following the suggestion in https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/103710#issuecomment-1296360267 to use `floor` instead of `ceil`, and unblocked now that https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/105796 made it so that setting the max lev distance to `0` doesn't cause substring matches to be removed.
2023-02-06 02:09:00 +00:00
Lukas Markeffsky
e2a1a2ab79 yet another ui test 2023-02-05 22:51:37 +01:00
bors
75a0be98f2 Auto merge of #107526 - obeis:for-missing-iterator, r=estebank,compiler-errors
Recover form missing expression in `for` loop

Close #78537
r? `@estebank`
2023-02-05 20:33:05 +00:00
CastilloDel
9cdc07538d Add UI test for issue #92741 2023-02-05 19:12:41 +01:00
bors
a676496750 Auto merge of #107663 - matthiaskrgr:107423-point-at-EOF-code, r=compiler-errors
don't point at nonexisting code beyond EOF when warning about delims

Previously we would show this:
```
warning: unnecessary braces around block return value
 --> /tmp/bad.rs:1:8
  |
1 | fn a(){{{
  |        ^  ^
  |
  = note: `#[warn(unused_braces)]` on by default
help: remove these braces
  |
1 - fn a(){{{
1 + fn a(){{
  |
```

which is now hidden in this case.
We would create a span spanning between the pair of redundant {}s but there is only EOF instead of the `}` so we would previously point at nothing. This would cause the debug assertion ice to trigger. I would have loved to just only point at the second delim and say "you can remove that" but I'm not sure how to do that without refactoring the entire diagnostic which seems tricky. :( But given that this does not seem to regress any other tests we have, I think this edge-casey enough be acceptable.

Fixes https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/107423

r? `@compiler-errors`
2023-02-05 17:32:26 +00:00
Arpad Borsos
dae00152e7 Sort Generator print-type-sizes according to their yield points
Especially when trying to diagnose runaway future sizes, it might be
more intuitive to sort the variants according to the control flow
(aka their yield points) rather than the size of the variants.
2023-02-05 17:34:33 +01:00
Obei Sideg
17b6bd6b70 Add ui test for missing expression in for loop 2023-02-05 17:33:17 +03:00
Lukas Markeffsky
9d110847ab ReErased regions are local 2023-02-05 15:29:07 +01:00
bors
319b88c463 Auto merge of #102842 - rol1510:issue-85566-fix, r=notriddle
rustdoc: change trait bound formatting

Fixes #85566

Before
<img width="268" alt="image" src="https://user-images.githubusercontent.com/29011024/208326689-cc9b4bae-529c-473c-81e2-fc5ddb738f07.png">

Now
<img width="268" alt="image" src="https://user-images.githubusercontent.com/29011024/216216918-d7923787-3e3b-486d-9735-4cecd2988dba.png">
2023-02-05 14:01:49 +00:00
Camille GILLOT
51ef82d19b Bless 32bit tests. 2023-02-05 13:51:37 +00:00
Camille GILLOT
8e05ab04e5 Run SROA to fixpoint. 2023-02-05 12:08:42 +00:00
Camille GILLOT
42c9514629 Simplify construction of replacement map. 2023-02-05 11:44:18 +00:00
Camille GILLOT
dc4fe8e295 Make SROA expand assignments. 2023-02-05 11:42:11 +00:00
Camille GILLOT
0843acbea6 Fix SROA without deaggregation. 2023-02-05 08:37:03 +00:00
Boxy
d85d906f8c emit ConstEquate in TypeRelating<D> 2023-02-05 07:24:54 +00:00
Edward Shen
32967296b4 Suggest null ptr if 0 is given as a raw ptr arg 2023-02-04 20:13:16 -08:00
Scott McMurray
bb77860d9c Add another autovectorization codegen test using array zip-map 2023-02-04 16:44:53 -08:00
Scott McMurray
5bc328fdef Allow canonicalizing the array::map loop in trusted cases 2023-02-04 16:44:51 -08:00
Scott McMurray
52df0558ea Stop forcing array::map through an unnecessary Result 2023-02-04 16:41:35 -08:00
Scott McMurray
5a7342c3dd Stop using into_iter in array::map 2023-02-04 16:41:35 -08:00