Remove a useless ref/id/ref round-trip from `pattern_from_hir`
This re-lookup of `&hir::Pat` by its ID appears to be an artifact of earlier complexity that has since been removed from the compiler.
Merely deleting the let/match results in borrow errors, but sprinkling `'tcx` in the signature allows it to work again, so I suspect that this code's current function is simply to compensate for overly loose lifetimes in the signature. Perhaps it made more sense at a time when HIR lifetimes were not tied to `'tcx`.
I spotted this while working on some more experimental changes, which is why I've extracted it into its own PR.
Return correct HirId when finding body owner in diagnostics
Fixes#129145Fixes#128810
r? ```@compiler-errors```
```rust
fn generic<const N: u32>() {}
trait Collate<const A: u32> {
type Pass;
fn collate(self) -> Self::Pass;
}
impl<const B: u32> Collate<B> for i32 {
type Pass = ();
fn collate(self) -> Self::Pass {
generic::<{ true }>()
//~^ ERROR: mismatched types
}
}
```
When type checking the `{ true }` anon const we would error with a type mismatch. This then results in diagnostics code attempting to check whether its due to a type mismatch with the return type. That logic was implemented by walking up the hir until we reached the body owner, except instead of using the `enclosing_body_owner` function it special cased various hir nodes incorrectly resulting in us walking out of the anon const and stopping at `fn collate` instead.
This then resulted in diagnostics logic inside of the anon consts `ParamEnv` attempting to do trait solving involving the `<i32 as Collate<B>>::Pass` type which ICEs because it is in the wrong environment.
I have rewritten this function to just walk up until it hits the `enclosing_body_owner` and made some other changes since I found this pretty hard to read/understand. Hopefully it's easier to understand now, it also makes it more obvious that this is not implemented in a very principled way and is definitely missing cases :)
mir/pretty: use `Option` instead of `Either<Once, Empty>`
`Either` is wasteful for a one-or-none iterator, especially since `Once`
is already an `option::IntoIter` internally. We don't really need any of
the iterator mechanisms in this case, just a single conditional insert.
Emit an error for invalid use of the linkage attribute
fixes#128486
Currently, the use of the linkage attribute for Mod, Impl,... is incorrectly permitted. This PR will correct this issue by generating errors, and I've also added some UI test cases for it.
Related: #128552.
Detect multiple crate versions on method not found
When a type comes indirectly from one crate version but the imported trait comes from a separate crate version, the called method won't be found. We now show additional context:
```
error[E0599]: no method named `foo` found for struct `dep_2_reexport::Type` in the current scope
--> multiple-dep-versions.rs:8:10
|
8 | Type.foo();
| ^^^ method not found in `Type`
|
note: there are multiple different versions of crate `dependency` in the dependency graph
--> multiple-dep-versions.rs:4:32
|
4 | use dependency::{do_something, Trait};
| ^^^^^ `dependency` imported here doesn't correspond to the right crate version
|
::: ~/rust/build/x86_64-unknown-linux-gnu/test/run-make/crate-loading/rmake_out/multiple-dep-versions-1.rs:4:1
|
4 | pub trait Trait {
| --------------- this is the trait that was imported
|
::: ~/rust/build/x86_64-unknown-linux-gnu/test/run-make/crate-loading/rmake_out/multiple-dep-versions-2.rs:4:1
|
4 | pub trait Trait {
| --------------- this is the trait that is needed
5 | fn foo(&self);
| --- the method is available for `dep_2_reexport::Type` here
```
Fix#128569, fix#110926, fix#109161, fix#81659, fix#51458, fix#32611. Follow up to #124944.
`Either` is wasteful for a one-or-none iterator, especially since `Once`
is already an `option::IntoIter` internally. We don't really need any of
the iterator mechanisms in this case, just a single conditional insert.
Fix wrong source location for some incorrect macro definitions
Fixes#95463
Currently the code will consume the next token tree after `var` when trying to parse `$var:some_type` even when it's not a `:` (e.g. a `$` when input is `($foo $bar:tt) => {}`). Additionally it will return the wrong span when it's not a `:`.
This PR fixes these problems.
Special-case alias ty during the delayed bug emission in `try_from_lit`
This PR tries to fix#116308.
A delayed bug in `try_from_lit` will not be emitted so that the compiler will not ICE when it sees the pair `(ast::LitKind::Int, ty::TyKind::Alias)` in `lit_to_const` (called from `try_from_lit`).
This PR is related to an unstable feature `adt_const_params` (#95174).
r? ``@BoxyUwU``
Rollup of 9 pull requests
Successful merges:
- #128064 (Improve docs for Waker::noop and LocalWaker::noop)
- #128922 (rust-analyzer: use in-tree `pattern_analysis` crate)
- #128965 (Remove `print::Pat` from the printing of `WitnessPat`)
- #129018 (Migrate `rlib-format-packed-bundled-libs` and `native-link-modifier-bundle` `run-make` tests to rmake)
- #129037 (Port `run-make/libtest-json` and `run-make/libtest-junit` to rmake)
- #129078 (`ParamEnvAnd::fully_perform`: we have an `ocx`, use it)
- #129110 (Add a comment explaining the return type of `Ty::kind`.)
- #129111 (Port the `sysroot-crates-are-unstable` Python script to rmake)
- #129135 (crashes: more tests)
r? `@ghost`
`@rustbot` modify labels: rollup
Remove `print::Pat` from the printing of `WitnessPat`
After the preliminary work done in #128536, we can now get rid of `print::Pat` entirely.
- First, we introduce a variant `PatKind::Print(String)`.
- Then we incrementally remove each other variant of `PatKind`, by having the relevant code produce `PatKind::Print` instead.
- Once `PatKind::Print` is the only remaining variant, it becomes easy to remove `print::Pat` and replace it with `String`.
There is more cleanup that I have in mind, but this seemed like a natural stopping point for one PR.
r? ```@Nadrieril```
This commit does the following.
- Renames `collect_tokens_trailing_token` as `collect_tokens`, because
(a) it's annoying long, and (b) the `_trailing_token` bit is less
accurate now that its types have changed.
- In `collect_tokens`, adds a `Option<CollectPos>` argument and a
`UsePreAttrPos` in the return type of `f`. These are used in
`parse_expr_force_collect` (for vanilla expressions) and in
`parse_stmt_without_recovery` (for two different cases of expression
statements). Together these ensure are enough to fix all the problems
with token collection and assoc expressions. The changes to the
`stringify.rs` test demonstrate some of these.
- Adds a new test. The code in this test was causing an assertion
failure prior to this commit, due to an invalid `NodeRange`.
The extra complexity is annoying, but necessary to fix the existing
problems.
This pre-existing type is suitable for use with the return value of the
`f` parameter in `collect_tokens_trailing_token`. The more descriptive
name will be useful because the next commit will add another boolean
value to the return value of `f`.
Fix projections when parent capture is by-ref but child capture is by-value in the `ByMoveBody` pass
This fixes a somewhat strange bug where we build the incorrect MIR in #129074. This one is weird, but I don't expect it to actually matter in practice since it almost certainly results in a move error in borrowck. However, let's not ICE.
Given the code:
```
#![feature(async_closure)]
// NOT copy.
struct Ty;
fn hello(x: &Ty) {
let c = async || {
*x;
//~^ ERROR cannot move out of `*x` which is behind a shared reference
};
}
fn main() {}
```
The parent coroutine-closure captures `x: &Ty` by-ref, resulting in an upvar of `&&Ty`. The child coroutine captures `x` by-value, resulting in an upvar of `&Ty`. When constructing the by-move body for the coroutine-closure, we weren't applying an additional deref projection to convert the parent capture into the child capture, resulting in an type error in assignment, which is a validation ICE.
As I said above, this only occurs (AFAICT) in code that eventually results in an error, because it is only triggered by HIR that attempts to move a non-copy value out of a ref. This doesn't occur if `Ty` is `Copy`, since we'd instead capture `x` by-ref in the child coroutine.
Fixes#129074
Infer async closure args from `Fn` bound even if there is no corresponding `Future` bound on return
In #127482, I implemented the functionality to infer an async closure signature when passed into a function that has `Fn` + `Future` where clauses that look like:
```
fn whatever(callback: F)
where
F: Fn(Arg) -> Fut,
Fut: Future<Output = Out>,
```
However, #127781 demonstrates that this is still incomplete to address the cases users care about. So let's not bail when we fail to find a `Future` bound, and try our best to just use the args from the `Fn` bound if we find it. This is *fine* since most users of closures only really care about the *argument* types for inference guidance, since we require the receiver of a `.` method call to be known in order to probe methods.
When I experimented with programmatically rewriting `|| async {}` to `async || {}` in #127827, this also seems to have fixed ~5000 regressions (probably all coming from usages `TryFuture`/`TryStream` from futures-rs): the [before](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/127827#issuecomment-2254061733) and [after](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/127827#issuecomment-2255470176) crater runs.
Fixes#127781.
Use `impl PartialEq<TokenKind> for Token` more.
This lets us compare a `Token` with a `TokenKind`. It's used a lot, but can be used even more, avoiding the need for some `.kind` uses.
r? `@spastorino`
Unconditionally allow shadow call-stack sanitizer for AArch64
It is possible to do so whenever `-Z fixed-x18` is applied.
cc ``@Darksonn`` for context
The reasoning is that, as soon as reservation on `x18` is forced through the flag `fixed-x18`, on AArch64 the option to instrument with [Shadow Call Stack sanitizer](https://clang.llvm.org/docs/ShadowCallStack.html) is then applicable regardless of the target configuration.
At the every least, we would like to relax the restriction on specifically `aarch64-unknonw-none`. For this option, we can include a documentation change saying that users of compiled objects need to ensure that they are linked to runtime with Shadow Call Stack instrumentation support.
Related: #121972