add more `s390x` target features
Closes#88937
tracking issue: https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/130869
The target feature names are, right now, just the llvm target feature names. These mostly line up well with the names of [Facility Indications](https://publibfp.dhe.ibm.com/epubs/pdf/a227832d.pdf#page=301) names. The linux kernel (and `/proc/cpuinfo`) uses shorter, more cryptic names. (e.g. "vector" is `vx`). We can deviate from the llvm names, but the CPU vendor (IBM) does not appear to use e.g. `vx` for what they call `vector`.
There are a number of implied target features between the vector facilities (based on the [Facility Indications](https://publibfp.dhe.ibm.com/epubs/pdf/a227832d.pdf#page=301) table):
- 129 The vector facility for z/Architecture is installed in the z/Architecture architectural mode.
- 134 The vector packed decimal facility is installed in the z/Architecture architectural mode. When bit 134 is one, bit 129 is also one.
- 135 The vector enhancements facility 1 is installed in the z/Architecture architectural mode. When bit 135 is one, bit 129 is also one.
- 148 The vector-enhancements facility 2 is installed in the z/Architecture architectural mode. When bit 148 is one, bits 129 and 135 are also one.
- 152 The vector-packed-decimal-enhancement facility 1 is installed in the z/Architecture architectural mode. When bit 152 is one, bits 129 and 134 are also one.
- 165 The neural-network-processing-assist facility is installed in the z/Architecture architectural mode. When bit 165 is one, bit 129 is also one.
- 192 The vector-packed-decimal-enhancement facility 2 is installed in the z/Architecture architectural mode. When bit 192 is one, bits 129, 134, and 152 are also one.
The remaining facilities do not have any implied target features (that we provide):
- 45 The distinct-operands, fast-BCR-serialization, high-word, and population-count facilities, the interlocked-access facility 1, and the load/store-oncondition facility 1 are installed in the z/Architecture architectural mode.
- 73 The transactional-execution facility is installed in the z/Architecture architectural mode. Bit 49 is one when bit 73 is one.
- 133 The guarded-storage facility is installed in the z/Architecture architectural mode.
- 150 The enhanced-sort facility is installed in the z/Architecture architectural mode.
- 151 The DEFLATE-conversion facility is installed in the z/Architecture architectural mode.
The added target features are those that have ISA implications, can be queried at runtime, and have LLVM support. LLVM [defines more target features](d49a2d2bc9/llvm/lib/Target/SystemZ/SystemZFeatures.td), but I'm not sure those are useful. They can always be added later, and can already be set globally using `-Ctarget-feature`.
I'll also update the `is_s390x_feature_supported` macro (added in https://github.com/rust-lang/stdarch/pull/1699, not yet on nightly, that needs an stdarch sync) to include these target features.
``@Amanieu`` you had some reservations about the `"vector"` target feature name. It does appear to be the most "official" name we have. On the one hand the name is very generic, and some of the other names are rather long. For the `neural-network-processing-assist` even LLVM thought that was a bit much and shortened it to `nnp-assist`. Also for `vector-packed-decimal-enhancement facility 1` the llvm naming is inconsistent. On the other hand, the cpuinfo names are very cryptic, and aren't found in the IBM documentation.
r? ``@Amanieu``
cc ``@uweigand`` ``@taiki-e``
Specify scope in `out_of_scope_macro_calls` lint
```
warning: cannot find macro `in_root` in the crate root
--> $DIR/key-value-expansion-scope.rs:1:10
|
LL | #![doc = in_root!()]
| ^^^^^^^ not found in the crate root
|
= warning: this was previously accepted by the compiler but is being phased out; it will become a hard error in a future release!
= note: for more information, see issue #124535 <https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/124535>
= help: import `macro_rules` with `use` to make it callable above its definition
= note: `#[warn(out_of_scope_macro_calls)]` on by default
```
r? ```@petrochenkov```
Notes about tests:
- tests/ui/parser/macro/trait-object-macro-matcher.rs: the syntax error
is duplicated, because it occurs now when parsing the decl macro
input, and also when parsing the expanded decl macro. But this won't
show up for normal users due to error de-duplication.
- tests/ui/associated-consts/issue-93835.rs: similar, plus there are
some additional errors about this very broken code.
- The changes to metavariable descriptions in #132629 are now visible in
error message for several tests.
The target feature names are, right now, based on the llvm target feature names. These mostly line up well with the names of [Facility Inidications](https://publibfp.dhe.ibm.com/epubs/pdf/a227832d.pdf#page=301) names. The linux kernel uses shorter, more cryptic names. (e.g. "vector" is `vx`). We can deviate from the llvm names, but the CPU vendor (IBM) does not appear to use e.g. `vx` for what they call `vector`.
There are a number of implied target features between the vector facilities (based on the [Facility Inidications](https://publibfp.dhe.ibm.com/epubs/pdf/a227832d.pdf#page=301) table):
- 129 The vector facility for z/Architecture is installed in the z/Architecture architectural mode.
- 134 The vector packed decimal facility is installed in the z/Architecture architectural mode. When bit 134 is one, bit 129 is also one.
- 135 The vector enhancements facility 1 is installed in the z/Architecture architectural mode. When bit 135 is one, bit 129 is also one.
- 148 The vector-enhancements facility 2 is installed in the z/Architecture architectural mode. When bit 148 is one, bits 129 and 135 are also one.
- 152 The vector-packed-decimal-enhancement facility 1 is installed in the z/Architecture architectural mode. When bit 152 is one, bits 129 and 134 are also one.
- 165 The neural-network-processing-assist facility is installed in the z/Architecture architectural mode. When bit 165 is one, bit 129 is also one.
- 192 The vector-packed-decimal-enhancement facility 2 is installed in the z/Architecture architectural mode. When bit 192 is one, bits 129, 134, and 152 are also one.
And then there are a number of facilities without any implied target features
- 45 The distinct-operands, fast-BCR-serialization, high-word, and population-count facilities, the interlocked-access facility 1, and the load/store-oncondition facility 1 are installed in the z/Architecture architectural mode.
- 73 The transactional-execution facility is installed in the z/Architecture architectural mode. Bit 49 is one when bit 73 is one.
- 133 The guarded-storage facility is installed in the z/Architecture architectural mode.
- 150 The enhanced-sort facility is installed in the z/Architecture architectural mode.
- 151 The DEFLATE-conversion facility is installed in the z/Architecture architectural mode.
The added target features are those that have ISA implications, can be queried at runtime, and have LLVM support. LLVM [defines more target features](d49a2d2bc9/llvm/lib/Target/SystemZ/SystemZFeatures.td), but I'm not sure those are useful. They can always be added later, and can already be set globally using `-Ctarget-feature`.
Make x86 QNX target name consistent with other Rust targets
Rename target to be consistent with other Rust targets: Use `i686` instead of `i586`
See also
- #136495
- #109173
CC: `@jonathanpallant` `@japaric` `@gh-tr` `@samkearney`
Do not ignore uninhabited types for function-call ABI purposes. (Remove BackendRepr::Uninhabited)
Accepted MCP: https://github.com/rust-lang/compiler-team/issues/832Fixes#135802
Do not consider the inhabitedness of a type for function call ABI purposes.
* Remove the [`rustc_abi::BackendRepr::Uninhabited`](https://doc.rust-lang.org/nightly/nightly-rustc/rustc_abi/enum.BackendRepr.html) variant
* Instead calculate the `BackendRepr` of uninhabited types "normally" (as though they were not uninhabited "at the top level", but still considering inhabitedness of variants to determine enum layout, etc)
* Add an `uninhabited: bool` field to [`rustc_abi::LayoutData`](https://doc.rust-lang.org/nightly/nightly-rustc/rustc_abi/struct.LayoutData.html) so inhabitedness of a `LayoutData` can still be queried when necessary (e.g. when determining if an enum variant needs a tag value allocated to it).
This should not affect type layouts (size/align/field offset); this should only affect function call ABI, and only of uninhabited types.
cc ``@RalfJung``
Create a generic AVR target: avr-none
This commit removes the `avr-unknown-gnu-atmega328` target and replaces it with a more generic `avr-none` variant that must be specialized using `-C target-cpu` (e.g. `-C target-cpu=atmega328p`).
Seizing the day, I'm adding myself as the maintainer of this target - I've been already fixing the bugs anyway, might as well make it official 🙂
Related discussions:
- https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/131171
- https://github.com/rust-lang/compiler-team/issues/800
try-job: x86_64-gnu-debug
Fix codegen of uninhabited PassMode::Indirect return types.
Add codegen test for uninhabited PassMode::Indirect return types.
Enable optimizations for uninhabited return type codegen test
When a `?` operation requires an `Into` conversion with additional bounds (like having a concrete error but wanting to convert to a trait object), we handle it speficically and provide the same kind of information we give other `?` related errors.
```
error[E0277]: `?` couldn't convert the error: `E: std::error::Error` is not satisfied
--> $DIR/bad-question-mark-on-trait-object.rs:5:13
|
LL | fn foo() -> Result<(), Box<dyn std::error::Error>> {
| -------------------------------------- required `E: std::error::Error` because of this
LL | Ok(bar()?)
| ^ the trait `std::error::Error` is not implemented for `E`
|
= note: the question mark operation (`?`) implicitly performs a conversion on the error value using the `From` trait
= note: required for `Box<dyn std::error::Error>` to implement `From<E>`
```
Avoid talking about `FromResidual` when other more relevant information is being given, particularly from `rust_on_unimplemented`.
Emit `trunc nuw` for unchecked shifts and `to_immediate_scalar`
- For shifts this shrinks the IR by no longer needing an `assume` while still providing the UB information
- Having this on the `i8`→`i1` truncations will hopefully help with some places that have to load `i8`s or pass those in LLVM structs without range information
Tweak "expected ident" parse error to avoid talking about doc comments
When encountering a doc comment without an identifier after, we'd unconditionally state "this doc comment doesn't document anything", swallowing the *actual* error which is that the thing *after* the doc comment wasn't expected. Added a check that the found token is something that "conceptually" closes the previous item before emitting that error, otherwise just complain about the missing identifier.
In both of the following cases, the syntax error follows a doc comment:
```
error: expected identifier, found keyword `Self`
--> $DIR/doc-before-bad-variant.rs:4:5
|
LL | enum TestEnum {
| -------- while parsing this enum
...
LL | Self,
| ^^^^ expected identifier, found keyword
|
= help: enum variants can be `Variant`, `Variant = <integer>`, `Variant(Type, ..., TypeN)` or `Variant { fields: Types }`
```
```
error: expected identifier, found `<`
--> $DIR/doc-before-syntax-error.rs:2:1
|
LL | <>
| ^ expected identifier
```
Fix#71982.
Pattern Migration 2024: properly label `&` patterns whose subpatterns are from macro expansions
See the failing test output in the first commit for an example of what this going wrong looks like. The error/lint diagnostic tries to point to just the `&` or `&mut` of reference patterns when labeling the causes, to make the output clearer (#134394). The trimming there wasn't quite right though: it used the interior of the reference pattern as a cutoff and extended backwards to find where to trim the pattern's span, but this breaks if the `&` and the interior are from different sources. This PR instead trims by starting at the start of the pattern and ending at the final character of the `&` (or `&mut`, `ref`, `ref mut`, or `mut`, depending on what the error/lint is labeling); that way, there's no opportunity for failure from mixing sources.
I'm not 100% happy with this approach, but I'm also not sure what the best practices are as far as hacky `SourceMap` munching goes, so please let me know if something else would be preferred.
Since `SourceMap::span_through_char` can't change the syntax context of the span, I've also removed a call to `Span::with_ctxt` (we care about the edition of the span in question since this is a hard error in Rust 2024). If we want to be extra safe in case that changes, I can re-add it or track error hardness separately in the `rust_2024_migration_desugared_pats` table.
Restrict `bevy_ecs` `ParamSet` hack
This limits the bevy WF hack to only apply to ADTs named `ParamSet` that come from crates named `bevy_ecs`, and references to the latter.
Previously, we were applying it to all ADTs that contained the substring `"ParamSet"`. This could show up anywhere in the ADT name, and it could come from any crate. It's a bit concerning since other code could theoretically begin to rely on this behavior too (though I don't expect it to)
This simplifies the logic a bit and turns it into a visitor.
r? `@jackh726`
Add customized compare for Link in rustdoc
Maybe some other types in sidebar need to be sorted in this way, maybe add this crate `natord` is ok?
r? clubby789
Fixes#137098
Lint `#[must_use]` attributes applied to methods in trait impls
The `#[must_use]` attribute has no effect when applied to methods in trait implementations. This PR adds it to the unused `#[must_use]` lint, and cleans the extra attributes in portable-simd and Clippy.
Suggest replacing `.` with `::` in more error diagnostics.
First commit makes the existing "help: use the path separator to refer to an item" also work when the base is a type alias, not just a trait/module/struct.
The existing unconditional `DefKind::Mod | DefKind::Trait` match arm is changed to a conditional `DefKind::Mod | DefKind::Trait | DefKind::TyAlias` arm that only matches if the `path_sep` suggestion-adding closure succeeds, so as not to stop the later `DefKind::TyAlias`-specific suggestions if the path-sep suggestion does not apply. This shouldn't change behavior for `Mod` or `Trait` (due to the default arm's `return false` etc).
This commit also updates `tests/ui/resolve/issue-22692.rs` to reflect this, and also renames it to something more meaningful.
This commit also makes the `bad_struct_syntax_suggestion` closure take `err` as a parameter instead of capturing it, since otherwise caused borrowing errors due to the change to using `path_sep` in a pattern guard.
<details> <summary> Type alias diagnostic example </summary>
```rust
type S = String;
fn main() {
let _ = S.new;
}
```
```diff
error[E0423]: expected value, found type alias `S`
--> diag7.rs:4:13
|
4 | let _ = S.new;
| ^
|
- = note: can't use a type alias as a constructor
+ help: use the path separator to refer to an item
+ |
+4 | let _ = S::new;
+ | ~~
```
</details>
Second commit adds some cases for `enum`s, where if there is a field/method expression where the field/method has the name of a unit/tuple variant, we assume the user intended to create that variant[^1] and suggest replacing the `.` from the field/method suggestion with a `::` path separator. If no such variant is found (or if the error is not a field/method expression), we give the existing suggestion that suggests adding `::TupleVariant(/* fields */)` after the enum.
<details> <summary> Enum diagnostic example </summary>
```rust
enum Foo {
A(u32),
B,
C { x: u32 },
}
fn main() {
let _ = Foo.A(42); // changed
let _ = Foo.B; // changed
let _ = Foo.D(42); // no change
let _ = Foo.D; // no change
let _ = Foo(42); // no change
}
```
```diff
error[E0423]: expected value, found enum `Foo`
--> diag8.rs:8:13
|
8 | let _ = Foo.A(42); // changed
| ^^^
|
note: the enum is defined here
--> diag8.rs:1:1
|
1 | / enum Foo {
2 | | A(u32),
3 | | B,
4 | | C { x: u32 },
5 | | }
| |_^
-help: you might have meant to use the following enum variant
- |
-8 | let _ = Foo::B.A(42); // changed
- | ~~~~~~
-help: alternatively, the following enum variant is available
+help: use the path separator to refer to a variant
|
-8 | let _ = (Foo::A(/* fields */)).A(42); // changed
- | ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
+8 | let _ = Foo::A(42); // changed
+ | ~~
error[E0423]: expected value, found enum `Foo`
--> diag8.rs:9:13
|
9 | let _ = Foo.B; // changed
| ^^^
|
note: the enum is defined here
--> diag8.rs:1:1
|
1 | / enum Foo {
2 | | A(u32),
3 | | B,
4 | | C { x: u32 },
5 | | }
| |_^
-help: you might have meant to use the following enum variant
- |
-9 | let _ = Foo::B.B; // changed
- | ~~~~~~
-help: alternatively, the following enum variant is available
+help: use the path separator to refer to a variant
|
-9 | let _ = (Foo::A(/* fields */)).B; // changed
- | ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
+9 | let _ = Foo::B; // changed
+ | ~~
error[E0423]: expected value, found enum `Foo`
--> diag8.rs:10:13
|
10 | let _ = Foo.D(42); // no change
| ^^^
|
note: the enum is defined here
--> diag8.rs:1:1
|
1 | / enum Foo {
2 | | A(u32),
3 | | B,
4 | | C { x: u32 },
5 | | }
| |_^
help: you might have meant to use the following enum variant
|
10 | let _ = Foo::B.D(42); // no change
| ~~~~~~
help: alternatively, the following enum variant is available
|
10 | let _ = (Foo::A(/* fields */)).D(42); // no change
| ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
error[E0423]: expected value, found enum `Foo`
--> diag8.rs:11:13
|
11 | let _ = Foo.D; // no change
| ^^^
|
note: the enum is defined here
--> diag8.rs:1:1
|
1 | / enum Foo {
2 | | A(u32),
3 | | B,
4 | | C { x: u32 },
5 | | }
| |_^
help: you might have meant to use the following enum variant
|
11 | let _ = Foo::B.D; // no change
| ~~~~~~
help: alternatively, the following enum variant is available
|
11 | let _ = (Foo::A(/* fields */)).D; // no change
| ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
error[E0423]: expected function, tuple struct or tuple variant, found enum `Foo`
--> diag8.rs:12:13
|
12 | let _ = Foo(42); // no change
| ^^^ help: try to construct one of the enum's variants: `Foo::A`
|
= help: you might have meant to construct the enum's non-tuple variant
note: the enum is defined here
--> diag8.rs:1:1
|
1 | / enum Foo {
2 | | A(u32),
3 | | B,
4 | | C { x: u32 },
5 | | }
| |_^
error: aborting due to 5 previous errors
```
</details>
[^1]: or if it's a field expression and a tuple variant, that they meant to refer the variant constructor.
Match Ergonomics 2024: update old-edition behavior of feature gates
This updates the behavior of the feature gates `ref_pat_eat_one_layer_2024_structural` and `ref_pat_eat_one_layer_2024` in Editions 2021 and earlier to correspond to the left and right typing rules compared [here](https://nadrieril.github.io/typing-rust-patterns/?opts1=AQEBAQIBAQEBAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAA%3D&style=UserVisible&compare=true&opts2=AQEBAQIBAQABAAAAAQEBAAEBAAABAAA%3D&mode=rules), respectively. Compared to the `stable_rust` rules:
- they both allow reference patterns to match a lone inherited ref,
- they both allow `&` patterns to eat `&mut` reference types (and lone `&mut` inherited refs) as if they're shared,
- they both allow `&mut` patterns to eat `&` reference types when there's a `&mut` inherited reference to also eat,
- and the left ruleset has RFC 3627's Rule 3: after encountering a shared reference type in the scrutinee, the default binding mode will be treated as by-shared-ref when it would otherwise be by-mutable-ref.
I think there's already tests for all of those typing rules, so I've added revisions to use the existing tests with the new rulesets. Additionally, I've added a few tests to make sure we handle mixed-edition patterns appropriately, and I've added references to the unstable book.
Relevant tracking issue: #123076
r? ``@ghost``
- For shifts this shrinks the IR by no longer needing an `assume` while still providing the UB information
- Having this on the `i8`→`i1` truncations will hopefully help with some places that have to load `i8`s or pass those in LLVM structs without range information
```
warning: cannot find macro `in_root` in the crate root
--> $DIR/key-value-expansion-scope.rs:1:10
|
LL | #![doc = in_root!()]
| ^^^^^^^ not found in the crate root
|
= warning: this was previously accepted by the compiler but is being phased out; it will become a hard error in a future release!
= note: for more information, see issue #124535 <https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/124535>
= help: import `macro_rules` with `use` to make it callable above its definition
= note: `#[warn(out_of_scope_macro_calls)]` on by default
```
This commit removes the `avr-unknown-gnu-atmega328` target and replaces
it with a more generic `avr-none` variant that must be specialized with
the `-C target-cpu` flag (e.g. `-C target-cpu=atmega328p`).
coverage: Get hole spans from nested items without fully visiting them
This is a small simplification to the code that collects the spans of nested items within a function, so that those spans can be treated as “holes” to be avoided by the current function's coverage mappings.
The old code was using `nested_filter::All` to ensure that the visitor would see nested items. But we don't need the actual items themselves; we just need their spans, which we can obtain via a custom implementation of `visit_nested_item`.
This avoids the more expansive queries required by `nested_filter::All`.
Don't mention `FromResidual` on bad `?`
Unless `try_trait_v2` is enabled, don't mention that `FromResidual` isn't implemented for a specific type when the implicit `From` conversion of a `?` fails. For the end user on stable, `?` might as well be a compiler intrinsic, so we remove that note to avoid further confusion and allowing other parts of the error to be more prominent.
```
error[E0277]: `?` couldn't convert the error to `u8`
--> $DIR/bad-interconversion.rs:4:20
|
LL | fn result_to_result() -> Result<u64, u8> {
| --------------- expected `u8` because of this
LL | Ok(Err(123_i32)?)
| ------------^ the trait `From<i32>` is not implemented for `u8`
| |
| this can't be annotated with `?` because it has type `Result<_, i32>`
|
= note: the question mark operation (`?`) implicitly performs a conversion on the error value using the `From` trait
= help: the following other types implement trait `From<T>`:
`u8` implements `From<Char>`
`u8` implements `From<bool>`
```
When encountering a doc comment without an identifier after, we'd unconditionally state "this doc comment doesn't document anything", swallowing the *actual* error which is that the thing *after* the doc comment wasn't expected. Added a check that the found token is something that "conceptually" closes the previous item before emitting that error, otherwise just complain about the missing identifier.
In both of the following cases, the syntax error follows a doc comment:
```
error: expected identifier, found keyword `Self`
--> $DIR/doc-before-bad-variant.rs:4:5
|
LL | enum TestEnum {
| -------- while parsing this enum
...
LL | Self,
| ^^^^ expected identifier, found keyword
|
= help: enum variants can be `Variant`, `Variant = <integer>`, `Variant(Type, ..., TypeN)` or `Variant { fields: Types }`
```
```
error: expected identifier, found `<`
--> $DIR/doc-before-syntax-error.rs:2:1
|
LL | <>
| ^ expected identifier
```
Fix#71982.