This CL makes a number of small changes to dyn compatibility errors:
- "object safety" has been renamed to "dyn-compatibility" throughout
- "Convert to enum" suggestions are no longer generated when there
exists a type-generic impl of the trait or an impl for `dyn OtherTrait`
- Several error messages are reorganized for user readability
Additionally, the dyn compatibility error creation code has been
split out into functions.
cc #132713
cc #133267
Properly record metavar spans for other expansions other than TT
This properly records metavar spans for nonterminals other than tokentree. This means that we operations like `span.to(other_span)` work correctly for macros. As you can see, other diagnostics involving metavars have improved as a result.
Fixes#132908
Alternative to #133270
cc `@ehuss`
cc `@petrochenkov`
Update our range `assume`s to the format that LLVM prefers
I found out in https://github.com/llvm/llvm-project/issues/123278#issuecomment-2597440158 that the way I started emitting the `assume`s in #109993 was suboptimal, and as seen in that LLVM issue the way we're doing it -- with two `assume`s sometimes -- can at times lead to CVP/SCCP not realize what's happening because one of them turns into a `ne` instead of conveying a range.
So this updates how it's emitted from
```
assume( x >= LOW );
assume( x <= HIGH );
```
or
```
// (for ranges that wrap the range)
assume( (x <= LOW) | (x >= HIGH) );
```
to
```
assume( (x - LOW) <= (HIGH - LOW) );
```
so that we don't need multiple `icmp`s nor multiple `assume`s for a single value, and both wrappping and non-wrapping ranges emit the same shape.
(And we don't bother emitting the subtraction if `LOW` is zero, since that's trivial for us to check too.)
The candidate shouldn't have false_edge_start_block if it has sub candidates.
In remove_never_subcandidates(), the false_edge_start_block from the first sub candidte is assigned to a value and the value is later used if all sub candidates are removed and candidate doesn't have false_edge_start_block.
In merge_trivial_subcandidates, I leave the if block which assign a false_edge_start_block into the candidate as before I put this commit since compile panics.
Signed-off-by: Shunpoco <tkngsnsk313320@gmail.com>
The size of this struct depends on the alignment of `u128`, for example
powerpc64le and s390x have align-8 and end up with only 280 bytes. Our
64-bit tier-1 arches are the same though, so let's just assert on those.
Rollup of 8 pull requests
Successful merges:
- #132232 (CI: build FreeBSD artifacts on FreeBSD 13.4)
- #135706 (Move `supertrait_def_ids` into the elaborate module like all other fns)
- #135750 (Add an example of using `carrying_mul_add` to write wider multiplication)
- #135793 (Ignore `mermaid.min.js`)
- #135810 (Add Kobzol on vacation)
- #135821 (fix OsString::from_encoded_bytes_unchecked description)
- #135824 (tests: delete `cat-and-grep-sanity-check`)
- #135833 (Add fixme and test for issue #135289)
Failed merges:
- #135816 (Use `structurally_normalize` instead of manual `normalizes-to` goals in alias relate errors)
r? `@ghost`
`@rustbot` modify labels: rollup
```
error: couldn't read `$DIR/not-utf8-bin-file.rs`: stream did not contain valid UTF-8
--> $DIR/not-utf8-2.rs:6:5
|
LL | include!("not-utf8-bin-file.rs");
| ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
|
note: `[193]` is not valid utf-8
--> $DIR/not-utf8-bin-file.rs:2:14
|
LL | let _ = "�|�␂!5�cc␕␂��";
| ^
= note: this error originates in the macro `include` (in Nightly builds, run with -Z macro-backtrace for more info)
```
When we attempt to load a Rust source code file, if there is a OS file failure we try reading the file as bytes. If that succeeds we try to turn it into UTF-8. If *that* fails, we provide additional context about *where* the file has the first invalid UTF-8 character.
Fix#76869.
Add fixme and test for issue #135289
This PR:
- adds a test minimizing issue #135289 for PR #135310
- adds a fixme about the suboptimal fix for the ICE
I've verified the test indeed ICEs with 3f2f695d68 reverted.
r? `@estebank`
bump compiler and tools to windows 0.59, bootstrap to 0.57
This bumps compiler and tools to windows 0.59 (temporary dupes version, as `sysinfo` still depend on <= 0.57).
Bootstrap bumps only to 0.57 (the same sysinfo dep).
This additionally resolves my comment https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/130874#issuecomment-2393562071
Will work on it in follow up pr: There still some sus imports for `rustc_driver.dll` like ws2_32 or RoOriginateErrorW, but i will look at them later.
When a struct definition has default field values, and the use struct ctor has missing field, if all those missing fields have defaults suggest `..`:
```
error[E0063]: missing fields `field1` and `field2` in initializer of `S`
--> $DIR/non-exhaustive-ctor.rs:16:13
|
LL | let _ = S { field: () };
| ^ missing `field1` and `field2`
|
help: all remaining fields have defaults, use `..`
|
LL | let _ = S { field: (), .. };
| ++++
```
remove support for the (unstable) #[start] attribute
As explained by `@Noratrieb:`
`#[start]` should be deleted. It's nothing but an accidentally leaked implementation detail that's a not very useful mix between "portable" entrypoint logic and bad abstraction.
I think the way the stable user-facing entrypoint should work (and works today on stable) is pretty simple:
- `std`-using cross-platform programs should use `fn main()`. the compiler, together with `std`, will then ensure that code ends up at `main` (by having a platform-specific entrypoint that gets directed through `lang_start` in `std` to `main` - but that's just an implementation detail)
- `no_std` platform-specific programs should use `#![no_main]` and define their own platform-specific entrypoint symbol with `#[no_mangle]`, like `main`, `_start`, `WinMain` or `my_embedded_platform_wants_to_start_here`. most of them only support a single platform anyways, and need cfg for the different platform's ways of passing arguments or other things *anyways*
`#[start]` is in a super weird position of being neither of those two. It tries to pretend that it's cross-platform, but its signature is a total lie. Those arguments are just stubbed out to zero on ~~Windows~~ wasm, for example. It also only handles the platform-specific entrypoints for a few platforms that are supported by `std`, like Windows or Unix-likes. `my_embedded_platform_wants_to_start_here` can't use it, and neither could a libc-less Linux program.
So we have an attribute that only works in some cases anyways, that has a signature that's a total lie (and a signature that, as I might want to add, has changed recently, and that I definitely would not be comfortable giving *any* stability guarantees on), and where there's a pretty easy way to get things working without it in the first place.
Note that this feature has **not** been RFCed in the first place.
*This comment was posted [in May](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/29633#issuecomment-2088596042) and so far nobody spoke up in that issue with a usecase that would require keeping the attribute.*
Closes https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/29633
try-job: x86_64-gnu-nopt
try-job: x86_64-msvc-1
try-job: x86_64-msvc-2
try-job: test-various
Rework dyn trait lowering to stop being so intertwined with trait alias expansion
This PR reworks the trait object lowering code to stop handling trait aliases so funky, and removes the `TraitAliasExpander` in favor of a much simpler design. This refactoring is important for making the code that I'm writing in https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/133397 understandable and easy to maintain, so the diagnostics regressions are IMO inevitable.
In the old trait object lowering code, we used to be a bit sloppy with the lists of traits in their unexpanded and expanded forms. This PR largely rewrites this logic to expand the trait aliases *once* and handle them more responsibly throughout afterwards.
Please review this with whitespace disabled.
r? lcnr
I think the diagnostic could use some work, but it's more helpful than
the alternative. The previous error was misleading, since it ignored the
inherited reference altogether.
The debug assertion ensuring that the pattern mutability cap holds
assumes the presence of Rule 3, so it now checks for that. I
considered going back to only tracking the mutability cap when Rule 3
is present, but since the mutability cap is used in Rule 5's
implementation too, the debug assertion would still need to check
which typing rules are present.
This also required some changes to tests:
- `ref_pat_eat_one_layer_2021.rs` had a test for Rule 3; I'll be
handling tests for earlier editions in a later commit, so as a stopgap
I've #[cfg]ed it out.
- One test case had to be moved from `well-typed-edition-2024.rs` to
`borrowck-errors.rs` in order to get borrowck to run on it and emit an
error.
These targets have always generated DWARF debuginfo and not CodeView/PDB debuginfo
like the MSVC Windows targets. Correct their target definitions to reflect this.
The newly added tests for the various combinations of `*-windows-gnu*` targets and
`-Csplit-debuginfo` show that this does not change any stable behavior.