Commit Graph

19636 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
xizheyin
12604fa071 Skip suggest impl or dyn when poly trait is not a real trait
Signed-off-by: xizheyin <xizheyin@smail.nju.edu.cn>
2025-04-01 14:32:17 +08:00
xizheyin
27b866d59a Add ui test ui/traits/object/suggestion-trait-object-issue-139174.rs
Signed-off-by: xizheyin <xizheyin@smail.nju.edu.cn>
2025-04-01 14:27:28 +08:00
Nicholas Nethercote
ec10833609 Address review comments. 2025-04-01 16:07:23 +11:00
Nicholas Nethercote
df247968f2 Move ast::Item::ident into ast::ItemKind.
`ast::Item` has an `ident` field.

- It's always non-empty for these item kinds: `ExternCrate`, `Static`,
  `Const`, `Fn`, `Mod`, `TyAlias`, `Enum`, `Struct`, `Union`,
  `Trait`, `TraitAlias`, `MacroDef`, `Delegation`.

- It's always empty for these item kinds: `Use`, `ForeignMod`,
  `GlobalAsm`, `Impl`, `MacCall`, `DelegationMac`.

There is a similar story for `AssocItemKind` and `ForeignItemKind`.

Some sites that handle items check for an empty ident, some don't. This
is a very C-like way of doing things, but this is Rust, we have sum
types, we can do this properly and never forget to check for the
exceptional case and never YOLO possibly empty identifiers (or possibly
dummy spans) around and hope that things will work out.

The commit is large but it's mostly obvious plumbing work. Some notable
things.

- `ast::Item` got 8 bytes bigger. This could be avoided by boxing the
  fields within some of the `ast::ItemKind` variants (specifically:
  `Struct`, `Union`, `Enum`). I might do that in a follow-up; this
  commit is big enough already.

- For the visitors: `FnKind` no longer needs an `ident` field because
  the `Fn` within how has one.

- In the parser, the `ItemInfo` typedef is no longer needed. It was used
  in various places to return an `Ident` alongside an `ItemKind`, but
  now the `Ident` (if present) is within the `ItemKind`.

- In a few places I renamed identifier variables called `name` (or
  `foo_name`) as `ident` (or `foo_ident`), to better match the type, and
  because `name` is normally used for `Symbol`s. It's confusing to see
  something like `foo_name.name`.
2025-04-01 14:08:57 +11:00
Nicholas Nethercote
43018eacb6 Ignore #[test_case] on anything other than fn/const/static.
`expand_test_case` looks for any item with a `#[test_case]` attribute
and adds a `test_path_symbol` attribute to it while also fiddling with
the item's ident's span.

This is pretty weird, because `#[test_case]` is only valid on
`fn`/`const`/`static` items, as far as I can tell. But you don't
currently get an error or warning if you use it on other kinds of items.

This commit changes things so that a `#[test_case]` item is modified
only if it is `fn`/`const`/`static`. This is relevant for moving idents
from `Item` to `ItemKind`, because some item kinds don't have an ident,
e.g. `impl` blocks.

The commit also does the following.
- Renames a local variable `test_id` as `test_ident`.
- Changes a `const` to `static` in
  `tests/ui/custom_test_frameworks/full.rs` to give the `static` case
  some test coverage.
- Adds a `struct` and `impl` to the same test to give some test coverage
  to the non-affected item kinds. These have a `FIXME` comment
  identifying the weirdness here. Hopefully this will be useful
  breadcrumbs for somebody else in the future.
2025-04-01 13:42:00 +11:00
Zalathar
26cea8a286 coverage: Don't split bang-macro spans, just truncate them 2025-04-01 13:13:21 +11:00
Zalathar
62a533ce78 coverage: Instead of splitting, just discard any span that overlaps a hole 2025-04-01 13:13:20 +11:00
Zalathar
577272eede coverage: Shrink call spans to just the function name
This is a way to shrink call spans that doesn't involve mixing different spans,
and avoids overlap with argument spans.

This patch also removes some low-value comments that were causing rustfmt to
ignore the match arms.
2025-04-01 13:07:33 +11:00
Zalathar
e80a3e2232 coverage: Tweak tests/coverage/assert-ne.rs
This test is intended to demonstrate that a particular macro-argument span
doesn't get lost during span-refinement, but it turns out that span-extraction
currently doesn't yield any MIR spans for this position.

This patch therefore tweaks the test to add a function call in that position,
so that it still remains relevant to span refinement.
2025-04-01 13:07:33 +11:00
lcnr
654b7b5413 increment depth of nested obligations 2025-03-31 23:58:17 +02:00
Michael Goulet
e2d5033bce Feed HIR for by-move coroutine body def, since the inliner tries to read its attrs 2025-03-31 21:10:56 +00:00
Matthias Krüger
5b46e2462a Rollup merge of #139176 - m-ou-se:print3, r=compiler-errors
Remove fragile equal-pointers-unequal/*/print3.rs tests.

These tests were added in #127003

The print3.rs tests stop working when I change implementation details of format_args!(). (For example, in https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/139175 and https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/139135). These tests shouldn't rely on such implementation details. It gets in the way for format_args!() improvements.

If they test anything that aren't already covered by the other tests in this directory, they should be expressed in a less fragile way that doesn't rely on internal details of format_args!().

cc ``@GrigorenkoPV,`` author of these tests.
2025-03-31 23:05:46 +02:00
Matthias Krüger
50485342a0 Rollup merge of #138840 - jyn514:precedence-order, r=wesleywiser
rustc_resolve: Test the order that preludes are resolved

This test is exhaustive. See attached truth table:
![image](https://github.com/user-attachments/assets/11fe703c-e114-48df-84f8-426b63395784)

Companion PR to https://github.com/rust-lang/reference/pull/1765.
2025-03-31 23:05:44 +02:00
Alona Enraght-Moony
7feac15ca7 rustdoc-json: Add test for #[automatically_derived] attribute 2025-03-31 20:42:49 +00:00
Augie Fackler
b14a0ce7f6 PassWrapper: adapt for llvm/llvm-project@94122d58fc
We also have to remove the LLVM argument in cast-target-abi.rs for LLVM
21. I'm not really sure what the best approach here is since that test
already uses revisions. We could also fork the test into a copy for LLVM
19-20 and another for LLVM 21, but what I did for now was drop the
lint-abort-on-error flag to LLVM figuring that some coverage was better
than none, but I'm happy to change this if that was a bad direction.

The above also applies for ffi-out-of-bounds-loads.rs.

r? dianqk
@rustbot label llvm-main
2025-03-31 15:47:26 -04:00
bors
0b45675cfc Auto merge of #139169 - matthiaskrgr:rollup-nfy4aew, r=matthiaskrgr
Rollup of 6 pull requests

Successful merges:

 - #138176 (Prefer built-in sized impls (and only sized impls) for rigid types always)
 - #138749 (Fix closure recovery for missing block when return type is specified)
 - #138842 (Emit `unused_attributes` for `#[inline]` on exported functions)
 - #139153 (Encode synthetic by-move coroutine body with a different `DefPathData`)
 - #139157 (Remove mention of `exhaustive_patterns` from `never` docs)
 - #139167 (Remove Amanieu from the libs review rotation)

r? `@ghost`
`@rustbot` modify labels: rollup
2025-03-31 15:10:21 +00:00
reez12g
dea9472127 Add tests for LLVM 20 slice bounds check optimization 2025-03-31 22:38:53 +09:00
Mara Bos
4e99dca8c3 Remove fragile equal-pointers-unequal/*/print3.rs tests. 2025-03-31 15:37:16 +02:00
Vadim Petrochenkov
54bb849aff hygiene: Rename semi-transparent to semi-opaque
The former is just too long, see the examples in `hygiene.rs`
2025-03-31 15:41:48 +03:00
Matthias Krüger
b17948ad52 Rollup merge of #139153 - compiler-errors:incr-comp-closure, r=oli-obk
Encode synthetic by-move coroutine body with a different `DefPathData`

See the included test. In the first revision rpass1, we have an async closure `{closure#0}` which has a coroutine as a child `{closure#0}::{closure#0}`. We synthesize a by-move coroutine body, which is `{closure#0}::{closure#1}` which depends on the mir_built query, which depends on the typeck query.

In the second revision rpass2, we've replaced the coroutine-closure by a closure with two children closure. Notably, the def path of the second child closure is the same as the synthetic def id from the last revision: `{closure#0}::{closure#1}`. When type-checking this closure, we end up trying to compute its def_span, which tries to fetch it from the incremental cache; this will try to force the dependencies from the last run, which ends up forcing the mir_built query, which ends up forcing the typeck query, which ends up with a query cycle.

The problem here is that we really should never have used the same `DefPathData` for the synthetic by-move coroutine body, since it's not a closure. Changing the `DefPathData` will mean that we can see that the def ids are distinct, which means we won't try to look up the closure's def span from the incremental cache, which will properly skip replaying the node's dependencies and avoid a query cycle.

Fixes #139142
2025-03-31 14:36:22 +02:00
Matthias Krüger
ac05597cd7 Rollup merge of #138842 - Noratrieb:inline-exported, r=me,saethlin
Emit `unused_attributes` for `#[inline]` on exported functions

I saw someone post a code sample that contained these two attributes, which immediately made me suspicious.
My suspicions were confirmed when I did a small test and checked the compiler source code to confirm that in these cases, `#[inline]` is indeed ignored (because you can't exactly `LocalCopy`an unmangled symbol since that would lead to duplicate symbols, and doing a mix of an unmangled `GloballyShared` and mangled `LocalCopy` instantiation is too complicated for our current instatiation mode logic, which I don't want to change right now).

So instead, emit the usual unused attribute lint with a message saying that the attribute is ignored in this position.

I think this is not 100% true, since I expect LLVM `inlinehint` to still be applied to such a function, but that's not why people use this attribute, they use it for the `LocalCopy` instantiation mode, where it doesn't work.

r? saethlin as the instantiation guy

Procedurally, I think this should be fine to merge without any lang involvement, as this only does a very minor extension to an existing lint.
2025-03-31 14:36:22 +02:00
Matthias Krüger
0a579d5247 Rollup merge of #138749 - compiler-errors:closure-recovery, r=fmease
Fix closure recovery for missing block when return type is specified

Firstly, fix the `is_array_like_block` condition to make sure we're actually recovering a mistyped *block* rather than some other delimited expression. This fixes #138748.

Secondly, split out the recovery of missing braces on a closure body into a separate recovery. Right now, the suggestion `"you might have meant to write this as part of a block"` originates from `suggest_fixes_misparsed_for_loop_head`, which feels kinda brittle and coincidental since AFAICT that recovery wasn't ever really intended to fix this.

We also can make this `MachineApplicable` in this case.

Fixes #138748

r? `@fmease` or reassign if you're busy/don't wanna review this
2025-03-31 14:36:21 +02:00
Matthias Krüger
e15161d528 Rollup merge of #138176 - compiler-errors:rigid-sized-obl, r=lcnr
Prefer built-in sized impls (and only sized impls) for rigid types always

This PR changes the confirmation of `Sized` obligations to unconditionally prefer the built-in impl, even if it has nested obligations. This also changes all other built-in impls (namely, `Copy`/`Clone`/`DiscriminantKind`/`Pointee`) to *not* prefer built-in impls over param-env impls. This aligns the old solver with the behavior of the new solver.

---

In the old solver, we register many builtin candidates with the `BuiltinCandidate { has_nested: bool }` candidate kind. The precedence this candidate takes over other candidates is based on the `has_nested` field. We only prefer builtin impls over param-env candidates if `has_nested` is `false`

2b4694a698/compiler/rustc_trait_selection/src/traits/select/mod.rs (L1804-L1866)

Preferring param-env candidates when the builtin candidate has nested obligations *still* ends up leading to detrimental inference guidance, like:

```rust
fn hello<T>() where (T,): Sized {
    let x: (_,) = Default::default();
    // ^^ The `Sized` obligation on the variable infers `_ = T`.
    let x: (i32,) = x;
    // We error here, both a type mismatch and also b/c `T: Default` doesn't hold.
}
```

Therefore this PR adjusts the candidate precedence of `Sized` obligations by making them a distinct candidate kind and unconditionally preferring them over all other candidate kinds.

Special-casing `Sized` this way is necessary as there are a lot of traits with a `Sized` super-trait bound, so a `&'a str: From<T>` where-bound results in an elaborated `&'a str: Sized` bound. People tend to not add explicit where-clauses which overlap with builtin impls, so this tends to not be an issue for other traits.

We don't know of any tests/crates which need preference for other builtin traits. As this causes builtin impls to diverge from user-written impls we would like to minimize the affected traits. Otherwise e.g. moving impls for tuples to std by using variadic generics would be a breaking change. For other builtin impls it's also easier for the preference of builtin impls over where-bounds to result in issues.

---

There are two ways preferring builtin impls over where-bounds can be incorrect and undesirable:
- applying the builtin impl results in undesirable region constraints. E.g. if only `MyType<'static>` implements `Copy` then a goal like `(MyType<'a>,): Copy` would require `'a == 'static` so we must not prefer it over a `(MyType<'a>,): Copy` where-bound
   - this is mostly not an issue for `Sized` as all `Sized` impls are builtin and don't add any region constraints not already required for the type to be well-formed
   - however, even with `Sized` this is still an issue if a nested goal also gets proven via a where-bound: [playground](https://play.rust-lang.org/?version=stable&mode=debug&edition=2024&gist=30377da5b8a88f654884ab4ebc72f52b)
- if the builtin impl has associated types, we should not prefer it over where-bounds when normalizing that associated type. This can result in normalization adding more region constraints than just proving trait bounds. https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/133044
  - not an issue for `Sized` as it doesn't have associated types.

r? lcnr
2025-03-31 14:36:20 +02:00
bors
ab5b1be771 Auto merge of #138892 - compiler-errors:revert-ptr-ptr, r=oli-obk
Revert "Rollup merge of #136127 - WaffleLapkin:dyn_ptr_unwrap_cast, r=compiler-errors"

...not permanently tho. Just until we can land something like #138542, which will fix the underlying perf issues (https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/136127#issuecomment-2743891744). I just don't want this to land on beta and have people rely on this behavior if it'll need some reworking for it to be implemented performantly.

r? `@WaffleLapkin` or reassign -- sorry for reverting ur pr! i'm working on getting it re-landed soon :>
2025-03-31 11:58:58 +00:00
bors
10a76d6347 Auto merge of #139083 - petrochenkov:ctxtdecod3, r=nnethercote
hygiene: Rewrite `apply_mark_internal` to be more understandable

The previous implementation allocated new `SyntaxContext`s in the inverted order, and it was generally very hard to understand why its result matches what the `opaque` and `opaque_and_semitransparent` field docs promise.
```rust
/// This context, but with all transparent and semi-transparent expansions filtered away.
opaque: SyntaxContext,
/// This context, but with all transparent expansions filtered away.
opaque_and_semitransparent: SyntaxContext,
```
It also couldn't be easily reused for the case where the context id is pre-reserved like in #129827.

The new implementation tries to follow the docs in a more straightforward way.
I did the transformation in small steps, so it indeed matches the old implementation, not just the docs.
So I suggest reading only the new version.
2025-03-31 08:44:14 +00:00
Jakub Beránek
5a71da56d8 Add tests 2025-03-31 10:41:10 +02:00
Scott McMurray
19648ce5cd codegen test for non-memcmp array comparison 2025-03-30 23:44:31 -07:00
bors
7bfd9529be Auto merge of #119220 - Urgau:uplift-invalid_null_ptr_usage, r=fee1-dead
Uplift `clippy::invalid_null_ptr_usage` lint as `invalid_null_arguments`

This PR aims at uplifting the `clippy::invalid_null_ptr_usage` lint into rustc, this is similar to the [`clippy::invalid_utf8_in_unchecked` uplift](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/111543) a few months ago, in the sense that those two lints lint on invalid parameter(s), here a null pointer where it is unexpected and UB to pass one.

*For context: GitHub Search reveals that just for `slice::from_raw_parts{_mut}` [~20 invalid usages](hhttps://github.com/search?q=lang%3Arust+%2Fslice%3A%3Afrom_raw_parts%28_mut%29%3F%5C%28ptr%3A%3Anull%2F+NOT+path%3A%2F%5Eclippy_lints%5C%2Fsrc%5C%2F%2F+NOT+path%3A%2F%5Erust%5C%2Fsrc%5C%2Ftools%5C%2Fclippy%5C%2Fclippy_lints%5C%2Fsrc%5C%2F%2F+NOT+path%3A%2F%5Esrc%5C%2Ftools%5C%2Fclippy%5C%2Fclippy_lints%5C%2Fsrc%5C%2F%2F&type=code) with `ptr::null` and an additional [4 invalid usages](https://github.com/search?q=lang%3Arust+%2Fslice%3A%3Afrom_raw_parts%5C%280%28%5C%29%7C+as%29%2F+NOT+path%3A%2F%5Eclippy_lints%5C%2Fsrc%5C%2F%2F+NOT+path%3A%2F%5Erust%5C%2Fsrc%5C%2Ftools%5C%2Fclippy%5C%2Fclippy_lints%5C%2Fsrc%5C%2F%2F+NOT+path%3A%2F%5Esrc%5C%2Ftools%5C%2Fclippy%5C%2Fclippy_lints%5C%2Fsrc%5C%2F%2F+NOT+path%3A%2F%5Eutils%5C%2Ftinystr%5C%2Fsrc%5C%2F%2F+NOT+path%3A%2F%5Eutils%5C%2Fzerovec%5C%2Fsrc%5C%2F%2F+NOT+path%3A%2F%5Eprovider%5C%2Fcore%5C%2Fsrc%5C%2F%2F&type=code) with `0 as *const ...`-ish casts.*

-----

## `invalid_null_arguments`

(deny-by-default)

The `invalid_null_arguments` lint checks for invalid usage of null pointers.

### Example

```rust
// Undefined behavior
unsafe { std::slice::from_raw_parts(ptr::null(), 1); }
```

Produces:
```
error: calling this function with a null pointer is Undefined Behavior, even if the result of the function is unused
  --> $DIR/invalid_null_args.rs:21:23
   |
LL |     let _: &[usize] = std::slice::from_raw_parts(ptr::null_mut(), 0);
   |                       ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^---------------^^^^
   |                                                  |
   |                                                  null pointer originates from here
   |
   = help: for more information, visit <https://doc.rust-lang.org/std/ptr/index.html> and <https://doc.rust-lang.org/reference/behavior-considered-undefined.html>
```

### Explanation

Calling methods whose safety invariants requires non-null pointer with a null pointer is undefined behavior.

-----

The lint use a list of functions to know which functions and arguments to checks, this could be improved in the future with a rustc attribute, or maybe even with a `#[diagnostic]` attribute.

This PR also includes some small refactoring to avoid some ambiguities in naming, those can be done in another PR is desired.

`@rustbot` label: +I-lang-nominated
r? compiler
2025-03-31 04:17:14 +00:00
Michael Goulet
897acc3e5d Encode synthetic by-move coroutine body with a different DefPathData 2025-03-30 22:53:21 +00:00
Jacob Pratt
f07a0d117f Rollup merge of #139132 - m-ou-se:hir-pp-struct-expr, r=compiler-errors
Improve hir_pretty for struct expressions.

While working on https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/139131 I noticed the hir pretty printer outputs an empty line between each field, and is also missing a space before the `{` and the `}`:

```rust
    let a =
        StructWithSomeFields{
            field_1: 1,

            field_2: 2,

            field_3: 3,

            field_4: 4,

            field_5: 5,

            field_6: 6,};

    let a = StructWithSomeFields{ field_1: 1,  field_2: 2, ..a};
```

This changes it to:

```rust
    let a =
        StructWithSomeFields {
            field_1: 1,
            field_2: 2,
            field_3: 3,
            field_4: 4,
            field_5: 5,
            field_6: 6 };

    let a = StructWithSomeFields { field_1: 1, field_2: 2, ..a };
```
2025-03-30 17:59:29 -04:00
Jacob Pratt
eb42422258 Rollup merge of #139122 - petrochenkov:norerr, r=compiler-errors
Remove attribute `#[rustc_error]`

It was an ancient way to write `check-pass` tests, but now it's no longer necessary (except for the `delayed_bug_from_inside_query` flavor, which is retained).
2025-03-30 17:59:28 -04:00
Urgau
aa8848040a Allow invalid_null_arguments in some tests 2025-03-30 19:33:15 +02:00
Urgau
96a2f69844 Uplift clippy::invalid_null_ptr_usage as invalid_null_arguments 2025-03-30 19:33:15 +02:00
okaneco
59ca7679c7 slice: Remove some uses of unsafe in first/last chunk methods
Remove unsafe `split_at_unchecked` and `split_at_mut_unchecked`
in some slice `split_first_chunk`/`split_last_chunk` methods.
Replace those calls with the safe `split_at` and `split_at_checked` where
applicable.

Add codegen tests to check for no panics when calculating the last
chunk index using `checked_sub` and `split_at`
2025-03-30 12:45:04 -04:00
bors
46424fb505 Auto merge of #138206 - amy-kwan:amy-kwan/reprc-struct-power-align-ignore-packed-align, r=workingjubilee
[AIX] Ignore linting on repr(C) structs with repr(packed) or repr(align(n))

This PR updates the lint added in 9b40bd7 to ignore repr(C) structs that also have repr(packed) or repr(align(n)).

As these representations can be modifiers on repr(C), it is assumed that users that add these should know what they are doing, and thus the the lint should not warn on the respective structs. For example, for the time being, using repr(packed) and manually padding a repr(C) struct can be done to correctly align struct members on AIX.
2025-03-30 14:47:07 +00:00
bors
45b40a7596 Auto merge of #139130 - Kobzol:revert-129827, r=petrochenkov
Revert "Auto merge of #129827 - bvanjoi:less-decoding, r=petrochenkov"

Reverting https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/129827 because of a performance regression.

This reverts commit d4812c8638, reversing changes made to 5cc60728e7.

r? `@petrochenkov`
2025-03-30 11:41:40 +00:00
Mara Bos
d035ca7db3 Improve hir_pretty for struct expressions.
Before:

    let a =
        StructWithSomeFields{
            field_1: 1,

            field_2: 2,

            field_3: 3,

            field_4: 4,

            field_5: 5,

            field_6: 6,};

    let a = StructWithSomeFields{ field_1: 1,  field_2: 2, ..a};

After:

    let a =
        StructWithSomeFields {
            field_1: 1,
            field_2: 2,
            field_3: 3,
            field_4: 4,
            field_5: 5,
            field_6: 6 };

    let a = StructWithSomeFields { field_1: 1, field_2: 2, ..a };
2025-03-30 11:21:51 +02:00
Jakub Beránek
31face9f60 Revert "Auto merge of #129827 - bvanjoi:less-decoding, r=petrochenkov"
Reverting because of a performance regression.

This reverts commit d4812c8638, reversing
changes made to 5cc60728e7.
2025-03-30 11:14:33 +02:00
bors
b9ea82b84a Auto merge of #137836 - madsmtm:openwrt-target-vendor, r=jieyouxu
Set `target_vendor = "openwrt"` on `mips64-openwrt-linux-musl`

OpenWRT is a Linux distribution for embedded network devices. The target name contains `openwrt`, so we should set `cfg(target_vendor = "openwrt")`.

This is similar to what other Linux distributions do (the only one in-tree is `x86_64-unikraft-linux-musl`, but that sets `target_vendor = "unikraft"`).

Motivation: To make correctly [parsing target names](https://github.com/rust-lang/cc-rs/pull/1413) simpler.

Fixes https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/131165.

CC target maintainer `@Itus-Shield`
2025-03-30 08:33:29 +00:00
Michael Goulet
18c787f48f Fix up partial res of segment in primitive resolution hack 2025-03-30 04:22:14 +00:00
Michael Goulet
4f2baaa9c6 Do not mix normalized and unnormalized caller bounds when constructing param-env for receiver_is_dispatchable 2025-03-30 02:39:19 +00:00
bors
85f518ec8e Auto merge of #138742 - taiki-e:riscv-vector, r=Amanieu
rustc_target: Add more RISC-V vector-related features and use zvl*b target features in vector ABI check

Currently, we have only unstable `v` target feature, but RISC-V have more vector-related extensions. The first commit of this PR adds them to unstable `riscv_target_feature`.

- `unaligned-vector-mem`: Has reasonably performant unaligned vector
  - [LLVM definition](https://github.com/llvm/llvm-project/blob/llvmorg-20.1.0/llvm/lib/Target/RISCV/RISCVFeatures.td#L1379)
  - Similar to currently unstable `unaligned-scalar-mem` target feature, but for vector instructions.
- `zvfh`: Vector Extension for Half-Precision Floating-Point
  - [ISA Manual](https://github.com/riscv/riscv-isa-manual/blob/riscv-isa-release-2336fdc-2025-03-19/src/v-st-ext.adoc#zvfh-vector-extension-for-half-precision-floating-point)
  - [LLVM definition](https://github.com/llvm/llvm-project/blob/llvmorg-20.1.0/llvm/lib/Target/RISCV/RISCVFeatures.td#L668)
  - This implies `zvfhmin` and `zfhmin`
- `zvfhmin`: Vector Extension for Minimal Half-Precision Floating-Point
  - [ISA Manual](https://github.com/riscv/riscv-isa-manual/blob/riscv-isa-release-2336fdc-2025-03-19/src/v-st-ext.adoc#zvfhmin-vector-extension-for-minimal-half-precision-floating-point)
  - [LLVM definition](https://github.com/llvm/llvm-project/blob/llvmorg-20.1.0/llvm/lib/Target/RISCV/RISCVFeatures.td#L662)
  - This implies `zve32f`
- `zve32x`, `zve32f`, `zve64x`, `zve64f`, `zve64d`: Vector Extensions for Embedded Processors
  - [ISA Manual](https://github.com/riscv/riscv-isa-manual/blob/riscv-isa-release-2336fdc-2025-03-19/src/v-st-ext.adoc#zve-vector-extensions-for-embedded-processors)
  - [LLVM definitions](https://github.com/llvm/llvm-project/blob/llvmorg-20.1.0/llvm/lib/Target/RISCV/RISCVFeatures.td#L612-L641)
  - `zve32x` implies `zvl32b`
  - `zve32f` implies `zve32x` and `f`
  - `zve64x` implies `zve32x` and `zvl64b`
  - `zve64f` implies `zve32f` and `zve64x`
  - `zve64d` implies `zve64f` and `d`
  - `v` implies `zve64d`
- `zvl*b`: Minimum Vector Length Standard Extensions
  - [ISA Manual](https://github.com/riscv/riscv-isa-manual/blob/riscv-isa-release-2336fdc-2025-03-19/src/v-st-ext.adoc#zvl-minimum-vector-length-standard-extensions)
  - [LLVM definitions](https://github.com/llvm/llvm-project/blob/llvmorg-20.1.0/llvm/lib/Target/RISCV/RISCVFeatures.td#L600-L610)
  - `zvl{N}b` implies `zvl{N>>1}b`
  - `v` implies `zvl128b`
- Vector Cryptography and Bit-manipulation Extensions
  - [ISA Manual](https://github.com/riscv/riscv-isa-manual/blob/riscv-isa-release-2336fdc-2025-03-19/src/vector-crypto.adoc)
  - [LLVM definitions](https://github.com/llvm/llvm-project/blob/llvmorg-20.1.0/llvm/lib/Target/RISCV/RISCVFeatures.td#L679-L807)
  - `zvkb`: Vector Bit-manipulation used in Cryptography
    - This implies `zve32x`
  - `zvbb`: Vector basic bit-manipulation instructions
    - This implies `zvkb`
  - `zvbc`: Vector Carryless Multiplication
    - This implies `zve64x`
  - `zvkg`: Vector GCM instructions for Cryptography
    - This implies `zve32x`
  - `zvkned`: Vector AES Encryption & Decryption (Single Round)
    - This implies `zve32x`
  - `zvknha`: Vector SHA-2 (SHA-256 only))
    - This implies `zve32x`
  - `zvknhb`: Vector SHA-2 (SHA-256 and SHA-512)
    - This implies `zve64x`
    - This is superset of `zvknha`, but doesn't imply that feature at least in LLVM
  - `zvksed`: SM4 Block Cipher Instructions
    - This implies `zve32x`
  - `zvksh`: SM3 Hash Function Instructions
    - This implies `zve32x`
  - `zvkt`: Vector Data-Independent Execution Latency
    - Similar to already stabilized scalar cryptography extension `zkt`.
  - `zvkn`: Shorthand for 'Zvkned', 'Zvknhb', 'Zvkb', and 'Zvkt'
    - Similar to already stabilized scalar cryptography extension `zkn`.
  - `zvknc`: Shorthand for 'Zvkn' and 'Zvbc'
  - `zvkng`: shorthand for 'Zvkn' and 'Zvkg'
  - `zvks`: shorthand for 'Zvksed', 'Zvksh', 'Zvkb', and 'Zvkt'
    - Similar to already stabilized scalar cryptography extension `zks`.
  - `zvksc`: shorthand for 'Zvks' and 'Zvbc'
  - `zvksg`: shorthand for 'Zvks' and 'Zvkg'

Also, our vector ABI check wants `zvl*b` target features, the second commit of this PR updates vector ABI check to use them.

4e2b096ed6/compiler/rustc_target/src/target_features.rs (L707-L708)

---

r? `@Amanieu`

`@rustbot` label +O-riscv +A-target-feature
2025-03-30 02:21:56 +00:00
jyn
41fdd280ff rustc_resolve: Test the order that preludes are resolved 2025-03-29 19:18:39 -04:00
bors
2196affd01 Auto merge of #139119 - matthiaskrgr:rollup-7l2ri0f, r=matthiaskrgr
Rollup of 7 pull requests

Successful merges:

 - #137928 (stabilize const_cell)
 - #138431 (Fix `uclibc` LLVM target triples)
 - #138832 (Start using `with_native_path` in `std::sys::fs`)
 - #139081 (std: deduplicate `errno` accesses)
 - #139100 (compiletest: Support matching diagnostics on lines below)
 - #139105 (`BackendRepr::is_signed`: comment why this may panics)
 - #139106 (Mark .pp files as Rust)

r? `@ghost`
`@rustbot` modify labels: rollup
2025-03-29 23:12:40 +00:00
Vadim Petrochenkov
2dfd2a2a24 Remove attribute #[rustc_error] 2025-03-30 01:32:21 +03:00
Matthias Krüger
a584cc7c70 Rollup merge of #139100 - petrochenkov:errbelow, r=jieyouxu
compiletest: Support matching diagnostics on lines below

Using `//~vvv ERROR`.

This is not needed often, but it's easy to support, and it allows to eliminate a class of `error-pattern`s that cannot be eliminated in any other way.

See the diff for the examples of such patterns coming from parser.
Some of them can be matched by `//~ ERROR` or `//~^ ERROR` as well (when the final newline is allowed), but it changes the shape of reported spans, so I chose to keep the spans by using `//~v ERROR`.
2025-03-29 21:08:13 +01:00
bors
1799887bb2 Auto merge of #133572 - frank-king:feature/unique_arc, r=Amanieu
Implement `alloc::sync::UniqueArc`

This implements the `alloc::sync::UniqueArc` part of #112566.
2025-03-29 20:05:06 +00:00
bors
d4812c8638 Auto merge of #129827 - bvanjoi:less-decoding, r=petrochenkov
perform less decoding if it has the same syntax context

Following this [comment](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/127279#issuecomment-2210376603)

r? `@petrochenkov`
2025-03-29 16:50:04 +00:00
Vadim Petrochenkov
cf451f0830 compiletest: Support matching diagnostics on lines below 2025-03-29 13:30:20 +03:00
bohan
366095d6c7 less decoding if it has the same syntax context 2025-03-29 17:44:12 +08:00