Previously, `rustc_transmute`'s layout representations were genericized
over `R`, a reference. Now, it's instead genericized over
representations of type and region. This allows us to move reference
transmutability logic from `rustc_trait_selection` to
`rustc_transmutability` (and thus unit test it independently of the
compiler), and — in a follow-up PR — will make it possible to support
analyzing function pointer transmutability with minimal surgery.
Dont make `ObligationCtxt`s with diagnostics unnecessarily
just a nit, shouldn't affect perf b/c `ObligationCtxt::new_with_diagnostics` should only be more expensive in the new trait solver, and I don't expect either of these to encounter errors today anyways.
r? oli-obk
Add (back) `unsupported_calling_conventions` lint to reject more invalid calling conventions
This adds back the `unsupported_calling_conventions` lint that was removed in https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/129935, in order to start the process of dealing with https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/137018. Specifically, we are going for the plan laid out [here](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/137018#issuecomment-2672118326):
- thiscall, stdcall, fastcall, cdecl should only be accepted on x86-32
- vectorcall should only be accepted on x86-32 and x86-64
The difference to the status quo is that:
- We stop accepting stdcall, fastcall on targets that are windows && non-x86-32 (we already don't accept these on targets that are non-windows && non-x86-32)
- We stop accepting cdecl on targets that are non-x86-32
- (There is no difference for thiscall, this was already a hard error on non-x86-32)
- We stop accepting vectorcall on targets that are windows && non-x86-*
Vectorcall is an unstable ABI so we can just make this a hard error immediately. The others are stable, so we emit the `unsupported_calling_conventions` forward-compat lint. I set up the lint to show up in dependencies via cargo's future-compat report immediately, but we could also make it show up just for the local crate first if that is preferred.
try-job: i686-msvc-1
try-job: x86_64-msvc-1
try-job: test-various
store `target.min_global_align` as an `Align`
Parse the alignment properly when the target is defined/parsed, and error out on invalid alignment values. That means this work doesn't need to happen for every global in each backend.
Replace all uses of sysroot_candidates with get_or_default_sysroot
Before this change we had two different ways to attempt to locate the sysroot which are inconsistently used:
* `get_or_default_sysroot` which tries to locate based on the 0th cli argument and if that doesn't work falls back to locating it using the librustc_driver.so location and returns a single path.,
* `sysroot_candidates` which takes the former and additionally does another attempt at locating using `librustc_driver.so` except without linux multiarch handling and then returns both paths.,
The latter was originally introduced to be able to locate the codegen backend back when cg_llvm was dynamically linked even for a custom driver when the `--sysroot` passed in does not contain a copy of cg_llvm. Back then `get_or_default_sysroot` did not attempt to locate the sysroot based on the location of librustc_driver.so yet. Because that is now done, the only case where removing `sysroot_candidates` can break things is if you have a custom driver inside what looks like a sysroot including the `lib/rustlib` directory, but which is missing some parts of the full sysroot like eg rust-lld.
Follow up to https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/138404
We will want to remove many cases of `.abi`, including `.abi.thing`,
so this may simplify future PRs and certainly doesn't hurt.
We omit DerefMut because mutation is much rarer and localized.
In PR 90877 T-lang decided not to remove `intrinsics::pref_align_of`.
However, the intrinsic and its supporting code
1. is a nightly feature, so can be removed at compiler/libs discretion
2. requires considerable effort in the compiler to support, as it
necessarily complicates every single site reasoning about alignment
3. has been justified based on relevance to codegen, but it is only a
requirement for C++ (not C, not Rust) stack frame layout for AIX,
in ways Rust would not consider even with increased C++ interop
4. is only used by rustc to overalign some globals, not correctness
5. can be adequately replaced by other rules for globals, as it mostly
affects alignments for a few types under 16 bytes of alignment
6. has only one clear benefactor: automating C -> Rust translation
for GNU extensions like `__alignof`
7. such code was likely intended to be `alignof` or `_Alignof`,
because the GNU extension is a "false friend" of the C keyword,
which makes the choice to support such a mapping very questionable
8. makes it easy to do incorrect codegen in the compiler by its mere
presence as usual Rust rules of alignment (e.g. `size == align * N`)
do not hold with preferred alignment
The implementation is clearly damaging the code quality of the compiler.
Thus it is within the compiler team's purview to simply rip it out.
If T-lang wishes to have this intrinsic restored for c2rust's benefit,
it would have to use a radically different implementation that somehow
does not cause internal incorrectness.
Until then, remove the intrinsic and its supporting code, as one tool
and an ill-considered GCC extension cannot justify risking correctness.
Because we touch a fair amount of the compiler to change this at all,
and unfortunately the duplication of AbiAndPrefAlign is deep-rooted,
we keep an "AbiAlign" type which we can wean code off later.
const-eval error: always say in which item the error occurred
I don't see why "is this generic" should make a difference. It may be reasonable to key this on whether the error occurs in a `const fn` that was invoked by a const (making it non-obvious which constant it is) vs inside the body of the const.
r? `@oli-obk`
Simplify and optimize `VecCache`'s `SlotIndex::from_index`
Simplify and optimize `SlotIndex::from_index`
Break out bucket 0 (containing `idx < 4096`) as an early return, which
simplifies the remainder of the function, and allows optimizing the
`checked_ilog2` since it can no longer return `None`.
This reduces the runtime of `vec_cache::tests::slot_index_exhaustive`
(which calls `SlotIndex::from_index` for every `u32`, twice) from ~15.5s
to ~13.3s.
Separately, simplify the test case as well. (The old and new code passes with
the old and new test case.)
---
Noticed because `slot_index_exhaustive` stood out as taking unusually long compared to other tests, so I started investigating what it was doing.
Don't walk into `Certainty::Yes` goals
Don't walk into `Certainty::Yes` goals in the pending obligation finding code, since they will not have been stalled on an infer var anyways
Many of `std`'s dependency have a dependency on the crates.io
`compiler-builtins` when used with the feature
`rustc-std-workspace-core`. Use a Cargo patch to select the in-tree
version instead.
`compiler-builtins` is also added as a dependency of
`rustc-std-workspace-core` so these crates can remove their crates.io
dependency in the future.
Remove CollectItemTypesVisitor
I always felt like we were very unnecessarily walking the HIR, let's see if perf agrees
There is lots to ~~improve~~ consolidate further here, as we still have 3 item wfchecks:
* check_item (matching on the hir::ItemKind)
* actually doing trait solver based checks (by using HIR spans)
* lower_item (matching on the hir::ItemKind after loading it again??)
* just ensure_ok-ing a bunch of queries
* check_item_type (matching on DefKind)
* some type based checks, mostly ensure_ok-ing a bunch of queries
fixesrust-lang/rust#121429
compiler: Treat ForceWarning as a Warning for diagnostic level
This silences an ICE.
No idea if this is the correct solution though tbh.
Fixesrust-lang/rust#142144
compiler: Sort and doc ExternAbi variants
My personal brainworms found this ordering made the most sense while writing the CanonAbi PR. It is *an* ordering, at least, unlike the current mess. There has been no particular reason for the previous order ever since rust-lang/rust#136901, despite the comment I delete here. I just didn't change it.
Because I feel weird just fussing with variant ordering in the source definition, I also documented a bunch to the best of my ability.
Treat normalizing consts like normalizing types in deeply normalize
...so that we don't end up putting a top-level normalizes-to goal in the fulfillment context, which ICEs. This basically just models the normalize-const code off of the normalize-ty code above it, which uses an alias-relate goal instead.
Fixesrust-lang/rust#140571
r? lcnr
Make the `dangerous_implicit_autorefs` lint deny-by-default
I intended for the `dangerous_implicit_autorefs` lint to be deny-by-default, the [T-lang nomination comment](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/123239#issuecomment-2727551097) even clearly mentioned deny-by-default, but somehow I and other missed that it is only warn-by-default.
I think the lint should still be deny-by-default as the implicit aliasing requirements can be quite dangerous.
In any-case, opening this PR for T-lang awareness.
`@rustbot` label +I-lang-nominated +T-lang
r? `@traviscross`
Allow `#![doc(test(attr(..)))]` everywhere
This PR adds the ability to specify [`#![doc(test(attr(..)))]`](https://doc.rust-lang.org/nightly/rustdoc/write-documentation/the-doc-attribute.html#testattr) ~~at module level~~ everywhere in addition to allowing it at crate-root.
This is motivated by a recent PR #140323 (by ````@tgross35)```` where we have to duplicate 2 attributes to every single `f16` and `f128` doctests, by allowing `#![doc(test(attr(..)))]` at module level (and everywhere else) we can omit them entirely and just have (in both module):
```rust
#![doc(test(attr(feature(cfg_target_has_reliable_f16_f128))))]
#![doc(test(attr(expect(internal_features))))]
```
Those new attributes are appended to the one found at crate-root or at a previous module. Those "global" attributes are compatible with merged doctests (they already were before).
Given the small addition that this is, I'm proposing to insta-stabilize it, but I can feature-gate it if preferred.
Best reviewed commit by commit.
r? ````@GuillaumeGomez````
Move coroutine_by_move_body_def_id into the big check_crate body owner loop
This avoids starting a parallel loop in sequence and instead runs all the queries for a specific DefId together.