Currently it relies on special treatment of `kw::Empty`, which is really
easy to get wrong. This commit makes the special case clearer in the
type system by using `Option`. It's a bit clumsy, but the synthetic name
handling itself is a bit clumsy; better to make it explicit than sneak
it in.
Fixes#133426.
Break critical edges in inline asm before code generation
An inline asm terminator defines outputs along its target edges -- a
fallthrough target and labeled targets. Code generation implements this
by inserting code directly into the target blocks. This approach works
only if the target blocks don't have other predecessors.
Establish required invariant by extending existing code that breaks
critical edges before code generation.
Fixes#137867.
r? ``@bjorn3``
Revert #138019 after further discussion about how hir-pretty printing should work
After some more discussion, #138019 was probably merged a little fast. Though there probably is a real bug in pretty printing, it is not feasible to add similar pretty printing routines for all attributes, and making this specific exception is likely not desired either. For more context, see post-merge comments on #138019
I kept the tests around, but reverted the hir-pretty change.
r? ```@compiler-errors```
Improve the generic MIR in the default `PartialOrd::le` and friends
It looks like I regressed this accidentally in #137197 due to #137901
So this PR does two things:
1. Tweaks the way we're calling `is_some_and` so that it optimizes in the generic MIR (rather than needing to optimize it in every monomorphization) -- the first commit adds a MIR test, so you can see the difference in the second commit.
2. Updates the implementations of `is_le` and friends to be slightly simpler, and parallel how clang does them.
This involves replacing `nt_pretty_printing_compatibility_hack` with
`stream_pretty_printing_compatibility_hack`.
The handling of statements in `transcribe` is slightly different to
other nonterminal kinds, due to the lack of `from_ast` implementation
for empty statements.
Notable test changes:
- `tests/ui/proc-macro/expand-to-derive.rs`: the diff looks large but
the only difference is the insertion of a single invisible-delimited
group around a metavar.
Rollup of 17 pull requests
Successful merges:
- #137827 (Add timestamp to unstable feature usage metrics)
- #138041 (bootstrap and compiletest: Use `size_of_val` from the prelude instead of imported)
- #138046 (trim channel value in `get_closest_merge_commit`)
- #138053 (Increase the max. custom try jobs requested to `20`)
- #138061 (triagebot: add a `compiler_leads` ad-hoc group)
- #138064 (Remove - from xtensa targets cpu names)
- #138075 (Use final path segment for diagnostic)
- #138078 (Reduce the noise of bootstrap changelog warnings in --dry-run mode)
- #138081 (Move `yield` expressions behind their own feature gate)
- #138090 (`librustdoc`: flatten nested ifs)
- #138092 (Re-add `DynSend` and `DynSync` impls for `TyCtxt`)
- #138094 (a small borrowck cleanup)
- #138098 (Stabilize feature `const_copy_from_slice`)
- #138103 (Git ignore citool's target directory)
- #138105 (Fix broken link to Miri intrinsics in documentation)
- #138108 (Mention me (WaffleLapkin) when changes to `rustc_codegen_ssa` occur)
- #138117 ([llvm/PassWrapper] use `size_t` when building arg strings)
r? `@ghost`
`@rustbot` modify labels: rollup
Move `yield` expressions behind their own feature gate
In order to make progress with the `iter!` macro (e.g. in #137725), we need `yield` expressions to be available without the `coroutines` feature. This PR moves `yield` to be guarded by the `yield_expr` feature so that we can stabilize that independently (or at least, concurrently with the `iter_macro` feature). Note that once `yield` is stable, it will still be an error to use `yield` expressions outside something like a generator or coroutine, and these features remain unstable.
r? `@oli-obk`
Use final path segment for diagnostic
Test changes should prove the effect of this PR; we want to mention the *function name* not the arbitrary first segment of the path.
Add timestamp to unstable feature usage metrics
part of https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/129485
with this we should be able to temporarily enable metrics on docs.rs to gather a nice test dataset for the initial PoC dashboard
r? ```@estebank```
An inline asm terminator defines outputs along its target edges -- a
fallthrough target and labeled targets. Code generation implements this
by inserting code directly into the target blocks. This approach works
only if the target blocks don't have other predecessors.
Establish required invariant by extending existing code that breaks
critical edges before code generation.
Improve error message for `AsyncFn` trait failure for RPIT
Use a `WellFormedDerived` obligation cause to make sure we can turn an `AsyncFnKindHelper` trait goal into its parent `AsyncFn*` goal, then fix the logic for reporting `AsyncFn*` kind mismatches.
Best reviewed without whitespace.
Fixes#137905
r? oli-obk
Provide more context on resolve error caused from incorrect RTN
When encountering a resolve E0575 error for an associated method (when a type was expected), see if it could have been an intended return type notation bound.
```
error[E0575]: expected associated type, found associated function `Trait::method`
--> $DIR/bad-inputs-and-output.rs:31:36
|
LL | fn foo_qualified<T: Trait>() where <T as Trait>::method(i32): Send {}
| ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ not a associated type
|
help: you might have meant to use the return type notation syntax
|
LL - fn foo_qualified<T: Trait>() where <T as Trait>::method(i32): Send {}
LL + fn foo_qualified<T: Trait>() where T::method(..): Send {}
|
```
Built on top of #137824, only second commit is relevant for review.
r? ````````@compiler-errors````````
fix usage of ty decl macro fragments in attributes
See the test case. Due to one missing code path (and also the changes in #137517), using $ty or other specific fragments as part of an attr wouldn't work. $tt used to work since it wouldn't be parsed anywhere along the way.
Closes#137662
Add DWARF test case for non-C-like `repr128` enums
LLVM 20 fixes DWARF debuginfo for non-C-like 128-bit enums: this PR adds a test case to the `repr128-dwarf` test to ensure that LLVM doesn't regress in the future.
Tracking issue: #56071
Try to point of macro expansion from resolver and method errors if it involves macro var
In the case that a macro caller passes an identifier into a macro generating a path or method expression, point out that identifier in the context of the *macro* so it's a bit more clear how the macro is involved in causing the error.
r? ``````````@estebank`````````` or reassign
Remove `MaybeForgetReturn` suggestion
#115196 implemented a suggestion to add a missing `return` when there is an ambiguity error, when that ambiguity error could be constrained by the return type of the function.
I initially reviewed it and thought it could be useful; however, looking back at that code now, I feel like it's a bit too much of a hack to be worth keeping around in typeck, especially given how rare it's expected to fire in practice. This is especially true because it depends on `StashKey::MaybeForgetReturn`, which is only stashed when we have *Sized* obligation ambiguity errors. Let's remove it for now.
I'd like to note that it's basically impossible to get this suggestion to apply in its current state except for what I'd consider somewhat artificial examples, involving no generic trait bounds. For example, it's not triggered for:
```rust
struct W<T>(T);
fn bar<T: Default>() -> W<T> { todo!() }
fn foo() -> W<i32> {
if true {
bar();
}
W(0)
}
```
Nor is it triggered for:
```
fn foo() -> i32 {
if true {
Default::default();
}
0
}
```
It's basically only triggered iff there's only one ambiguity error on the type, which is `Sized`.
Generally, suggesting something that affects control flow is a pretty dramatic suggestion; therefore, both the accuracy and precision of this diagnostic should be pretty high.
One other, somewhat unrelated observation is that this might be using stashed diagnostics incorrectly (or at least unnecessarily). Stashed diagnostics are used when error detection is fragmented over several major stages of the compiler, like a parse or resolver error which later can be recovered in typeck. However, this one is a bit different since it is fully handled within typeck -- perhaps that suggests that if this were to be reimplemented, it wouldn't need to be so complicated of an implementation.