Implement lint against using Interner and InferCtxtLike in random compiler crates
Often `Interner` defines similar methods to `TyCtxt` (but often simplified due to the simpler API surface of the type system layer for the new solver), which people will either unintentionally or intentionally import and use. Let's discourage that.
r? lcnr
Perform deeper compiletest path normalization for `$TEST_BUILD_DIR` to account for compare-mode/debugger cases, and normalize long type file filename hashes
Fixes#136510.
### Summary
- Whereas previously `$TEST_BUILD_DIR` is a normalization of `/path/to/build/test/<test_suite_name>/`, we now more deeply normalize. `$TEST_BUILD_DIR` now becomes a normalization of `/path/to/build/test/<test_suite_name>/<subdirs>/$name.$revision.$compare_mode.$debugger/` to normalize away path name differences when `--compare-mode` and/or `--debugger` are specified.
- We also centralize the normalization of long type name hashes
cf. https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/136328#discussion_r1936760908.
### Review advice
- Best reviewed commit-by-commit.
- Split into 3 commits:
- **Commit 1**: compiletest changes to have `$TEST_BUILD_DIR` more deeply normalize.
- **Commit 2**: remove per-test hacks for long type path hash normalizations, and rebless tests *specifically* affected by that.
- **Commit 3**: rebless other tests that were changed as a side-effect of deeper `$TEST_BUILD_DIR` normalizations.
**Commit 2** is created via first finding tests that try to perform long type file hash normalizations on an ad hoc, per-test basis:
```
rg --no-ignore -l --no-ignore -F -e "long-type" tests/ui/**/*.rs
```
<details>
<summary>Tests with ad hoc long-type hash normalizations</summary>
```
tests/ui/type_length_limit.rs
tests/ui/traits/on_unimplemented_long_types.rs
tests/ui/regions/issue-102374.rs
tests/ui/recursion/recursion.rs
tests/ui/recursion/issue-83150.rs
tests/ui/recursion/issue-23122-2.rs
tests/ui/methods/inherent-bound-in-probe.rs
tests/ui/issues/issue-67552.rs
tests/ui/issues/issue-37311-type-length-limit/issue-37311.rs
tests/ui/issues/issue-20413.rs
tests/ui/issues/issue-8727.rs
tests/ui/infinite/infinite-instantiation.rs
tests/ui/infinite/infinite-instantiation-struct-tail-ice-114484.rs
tests/ui/higher-ranked/trait-bounds/hrtb-doesnt-borrow-self-1.rs
tests/ui/higher-ranked/trait-bounds/hrtb-doesnt-borrow-self-2.rs
tests/ui/higher-ranked/trait-bounds/hang-on-deeply-nested-dyn.rs
tests/ui/error-codes/E0275.rs
tests/ui/diagnostic-width/secondary-label-with-long-type.rs
tests/ui/diagnostic-width/long-e0277.rs
tests/ui/diagnostic-width/non-copy-type-moved.rs
tests/ui/diagnostic-width/long-E0308.rs
tests/ui/diagnostic-width/E0271.rs
tests/ui/diagnostic-width/binop.rs
```
</details>
These ad hoc normalizations were removed, and they are reblessed.
r? `````@lqd`````
When we initially created `CrateItem`, it would only represent items
that contain a body.
That is no longer the case, for now, make this explicit by expanding
the APIs to retrieve the item body.
This is related to https://github.com/rust-lang/project-stable-mir/issues/34
Rollup of 7 pull requests
Successful merges:
- #137095 (Replace some u64 hashes with Hash64)
- #137100 (HIR analysis: Remove unnecessary abstraction over list of clauses)
- #137105 (Restrict DerefPure for Cow<T> impl to T = impl Clone, [impl Clone], str.)
- #137120 (Enable `relative-path-include-bytes-132203` rustdoc-ui test on Windows)
- #137125 (Re-add missing empty lines in the releases notes)
- #137145 (use add-core-stubs / minicore for a few more tests)
- #137149 (Remove SSE ABI from i586-pc-windows-msvc)
r? `@ghost`
`@rustbot` modify labels: rollup
The end goal is to eliminate `Map` altogether.
I added a `hir_` prefix to all of them, that seemed simplest. The
exceptions are `module_items` which became `hir_module_free_items` because
there was already a `hir_module_items`, and `items` which became
`hir_free_items` for consistency with `hir_module_free_items`.
Enable more tests on Windows
As part of the discussion of https://github.com/rust-lang/compiler-team/issues/822 on Zulip, it was mentioned that problems with the i686-pc-windows-gnu target may have resulted in tests being disabled on Windows.
So in this PR, I've ripped out all our `//@ ignore-windows` directives, then re-added all the ones that are definitely required based on the outcome of try-builds, and in some cases I've improved the justification or tightened the directives to `//@ ignore-msvc` or ignoring specific targets.
Skip parenthesis around tuple struct field calls
The pretty-printer previously did not distinguish between named vs unnamed fields when printing a function call containing a struct field. It would print the call as `(self.fun)()` for a named field which is correct, and `(self.0)()` for an unnamed field which is redundant.
This PR changes function calls of tuple struct fields to print without parens.
**Before:**
```rust
struct Tuple(fn());
fn main() {
let tuple = Tuple(|| {});
(tuple.0)();
}
```
**After:**
```rust
struct Tuple(fn());
fn main() {
let tuple = Tuple(|| {});
tuple.0();
}
```
Precedence improvements: closures and jumps
This PR fixes some cases where rustc's pretty printers would redundantly parenthesize expressions that didn't need it.
<table>
<tr><th>Before</th><th>After</th></tr>
<tr><td><code>return (|x: i32| x)</code></td><td><code>return |x: i32| x</code></td></tr>
<tr><td><code>(|| -> &mut () { std::process::abort() }).clone()</code></td><td><code>|| -> &mut () { std::process::abort() }.clone()</code></td></tr>
<tr><td><code>(continue) + 1</code></td><td><code>continue + 1</code></td></tr>
</table>
Tested by `echo "fn main() { let _ = $AFTER; }" | rustc -Zunpretty=expanded /dev/stdin`.
The pretty-printer aims to render the syntax tree as it actually exists in rustc, as faithfully as possible, in Rust syntax. It can insert parentheses where forced by Rust's grammar in order to preserve the meaning of a macro-generated syntax tree, for example in the case of `a * $rhs` where $rhs is `b + c`. But for any expression parsed from source code, without a macro involved, there should never be a reason for inserting additional parentheses not present in the original.
For closures and jumps (return, break, continue, yield, do yeet, become) the unneeded parentheses came from the precedence of some of these expressions being misidentified. In the same order as the table above:
- Jumps and closures are supposed to have equal precedence. The [Rust Reference](https://doc.rust-lang.org/1.83.0/reference/expressions.html#expression-precedence) says so, and in Syn they do. There is no Rust syntax that would require making a precedence distinction between jumps and closures. But in rustc these were previously 2 distinct levels with the closure being lower, hence the parentheses around a closure inside a jump (but not a jump inside a closure).
- When a closure is written with an explicit return type, the grammar [requires](https://doc.rust-lang.org/1.83.0/reference/expressions/closure-expr.html) that the closure body consists of exactly one block expression, not any other arbitrary expression as usual for closures. Parsing of the closure body does not continue after the block expression. So in `|| { 0 }.clone()` the clone is inside the closure body and applies to `{ 0 }`, whereas in `|| -> _ { 0 }.clone()` the clone is outside and applies to the closure as a whole.
- Continue never needs parentheses. It was previously marked as having the lowest possible precedence but it should have been the highest, next to paths and loops and function calls, not next to jumps.
Add test to check unicode identifier version
This adds a test to verify which version of Unicode is used for identifiers. This is part of the language, documented at https://doc.rust-lang.org/nightly/reference/identifiers.html#r-ident.unicode. The version here often changes implicitly due to dependency updates pulling in new versions, and thus we often don't notice it has changed leaving the documentation out of date. The intent here is to have a canary to give us a notification when it changes so that we can update the documentation.
It was inconsistently done (sometimes even within a single function) and
most of the rest of the compiler uses fatal errors instead, which need
to be caught using catch_with_exit_code anyway. Using fatal errors
instead of ErrorGuaranteed everywhere in the driver simplifies things a
bit.