Commit Graph

19636 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Scott McMurray
143f39362a Don't alloca just to look at a discriminant
Today we're making LLVM do a bunch of extra work for every enum you match on, even trivial stuff like `Option<bool>`.  Let's not.
2025-03-12 00:56:43 -07:00
Matthias Krüger
b849aa9f61 Rollup merge of #138360 - Urgau:fix-fp-expr_or_init, r=wesleywiser
Fix false-positive in `expr_or_init` and in the `invalid_from_utf8` lint

This PR fixes the logic for finding initializer in the `expr_or_init` and `expr_or_init_with_outside_body` functions.

If the binding were to be mutable (`let mut`), the logic wouldn't consider that the initializer expression could have been modified and would return the init expression even-trough multiple subsequent assignments could have been done.

Example:
```rust
let mut a = [99, 108, 130, 105, 112, 112]; // invalid, not UTF-8
loop {
    a = *b"clippy"; // valid
    break;
}
std::str::from_utf8_mut(&mut a); // currently warns, with this PR it doesn't
```

This PR modifies the logic to excludes mutable let bindings.

Found when using `expr_or_init` in https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/119220.

r? compiler
2025-03-12 08:06:50 +01:00
Matthias Krüger
143eb4f03e Rollup merge of #138174 - compiler-errors:elaborate-unsize-self-pred, r=BoxyUwU
Elaborate trait assumption in `receiver_is_dispatchable`

Fixes #138172. See comment on the linked test.

Probably not a fix for the general problem, bc I think this may still be incomplete for other weird `where` clauses on the receiver. But 🤷, supertraits seems like an obvious one to fix.
2025-03-12 08:06:47 +01:00
bors
a21d9789e2 Auto merge of #138052 - lqd:lld-linker-messages, r=jieyouxu
strip `-Wlinker-messages` wrappers from `rust-lld` rmake test

The `tests/run-make/rust-lld` rmake test is failing locally on my M1, due to linker messages being in a different shape than the test expects: it asserts that the LLD version is the first linker message, which is seemingly not always the case on osx I guess.

```console
thread 'main' panicked at /Users/lqd/rust/lqd-rust/tests/run-make/rust-lld/rmake.rs:24:5:
the LLD version string should be present in the output logs:
warning: linker stderr: rust-lld: directory not found for option -L/usr/local/lib
         LLD 20.1.0 (https://github.com/rust-lang/llvm-project.git 1c3bb96fdb6db7b8e8f24edb016099c223fdd27e)
         Library search paths:
             /Users/lqd/rust/lqd-rust/build/aarch64-apple-darwin/test/run-make/rust-lld/rmake_out
             /Applications/Xcode.app/Contents/Developer/Platforms/MacOSX.platform/Developer/SDKs/MacOSX.sdk/usr/lib
         Framework search paths:
             /Applications/Xcode.app/Contents/Developer/Platforms/MacOSX.platform/Developer/SDKs/MacOSX.sdk/System/Library/Frameworks
```

This PR normalizes away the `-Wlinker-messages` wrappers around the linker output, to remove the requirement that the linker version is the first linker message / is prefixed with the warning wrapper in the regex.

(also another strange thing to explain the pre-existing regex: it seems the LLD version is sometimes output on stderr sometimes on stdout cool stuff)

We could do this for the other lld rmake tests, but they're only enabled on x64 linux so less likely to have random linker messages appearing without anyone noticing.
2025-03-12 03:32:13 +00:00
Thalia Archibald
9d379e11a6 Implement SliceIndex for ByteStr 2025-03-11 20:26:10 -07:00
bors
c625102320 Auto merge of #138366 - matthiaskrgr:rollup-cn16m7q, r=matthiaskrgr
Rollup of 10 pull requests

Successful merges:

 - #137715 (Allow int literals for pattern types with int base types)
 - #138002 (Disable CFI for weakly linked syscalls)
 - #138051 (Add support for downloading GCC from CI)
 - #138231 (Prevent ICE in autodiff validation by emitting user-friendly errors)
 - #138245 (stabilize `ci_rustc_if_unchanged_logic` test for local environments)
 - #138256 (Do not feed anon const a type that references generics that it does not have)
 - #138284 (Do not write user type annotation for const param value path)
 - #138296 (Remove `AdtFlags::IS_ANONYMOUS` and `Copy`/`Clone` condition for anonymous ADT)
 - #138352 (miri native_calls: ensure we actually expose *mutable* provenance to the memory FFI can access)
 - #138354 (remove redundant `body`  arguments)

r? `@ghost`
`@rustbot` modify labels: rollup
2025-03-11 21:17:18 +00:00
Urgau
faa5b3f7de Fix false-positive in expr_or_init and in the invalid_from_utf8 lint 2025-03-11 21:56:53 +01:00
Matthias Krüger
16ff824133 Rollup merge of #138284 - compiler-errors:const-param-ty-annotation, r=BoxyUwU
Do not write user type annotation for const param value path

As I noted in the code comment, `DefKind::ConstParam` isn't actually *generic* over its own args, we just use the identity args from the body when lowering the value path so we have something to plug into the `EarlyBinder` we get back from `type_of` for the const param. So skip over it in `write_user_type_annotation_from_args`.

Somewhat unrelated, but I left an explanation for a somewhat mysterious quirk in the THIR lowering of user type annotations for patterns having to do with ctors and their `type_of` not actually being the type of the pattern node it's ascribing.

Fixes #138048

r? ``@BoxyUwU``
2025-03-11 19:35:32 +01:00
Matthias Krüger
4ff58c9103 Rollup merge of #138256 - compiler-errors:anon-const-ty, r=BoxyUwU
Do not feed anon const a type that references generics that it does not have

Fixes #137865

See the comment I left in the code. We could alternatively give these anon consts the generics from the parent, but that would be moving in a GCE-esque direction that we may not want. Open to tweaks here.

r? BoxyUwU
2025-03-11 19:35:31 +01:00
Matthias Krüger
caa2d008f9 Rollup merge of #138231 - Sa4dUs:autodiff-ice, r=ZuseZ4
Prevent ICE in autodiff validation by emitting user-friendly errors

This PR moves `valid_ret_activity` and `valid_input_activity` checks to the macro expansion phase in compiler/rustc_builtin_macros/src/autodiff.rs, replacing the following internal compiler error (ICE):
```
error: internal compiler error:
compiler/rustc_codegen_ssa/src/codegen_attrs.rs:935:13:
Invalid input activity Dual for Reverse mode
```
with a more user-friendly message.

The issue specifically affected the test file `tests/ui/autodiff/autodiff_illegal.rs`, impacting the functions `f5` and `f6`.

The ICE can be reproduced by following [Enzyme's Rustbook](https://enzymead.github.io/rustbook/installation.html) installation guide.

Additionally, this PR adds tests for invalid return activity in `autodiff_illegal.rs`, which previously triggered an unnoticed ICE before these fixes.

r? ``@oli-obk``
2025-03-11 19:35:29 +01:00
Matthias Krüger
8a2e3acb45 Rollup merge of #137715 - oli-obk:pattern-type-literals, r=BoxyUwU
Allow int literals for pattern types with int base types

r? ``@BoxyUwU``

I also added an error at layout computation time for layouts that contain wrapping ranges (happens at monomorphization time). This is obviously hacky, but at least prevents such types from making it to codegen for now. It made writing the tests for int literals easier as I didn't have to think about that edge case

Basically this PR allows you to stop using transmutes for creating pattern types and instead just use literals:

```rust
let x: pattern_type!(u32 is 5..10) = 7;
```

works, and if the literal is out of range you get a type mismatch because it just stays at the base type and the base type can't be coerced to the pattern type.

cc ``@joshtriplett`` ``@scottmcm``
2025-03-11 19:35:27 +01:00
bors
6650252439 Auto merge of #128440 - oli-obk:defines, r=lcnr
Add `#[define_opaques]` attribute and require it for all type-alias-impl-trait sites that register a hidden type

Instead of relying on the signature of items to decide whether they are constraining an opaque type, the opaque types that the item constrains must be explicitly listed.

A previous version of this PR used an actual attribute, but had to keep the resolved `DefId`s in a side table.

Now we just lower to fields in the AST that have no surface syntax, instead a builtin attribute macro fills in those fields where applicable.

Note that for convenience referencing opaque types in associated types from associated methods on the same impl will not require an attribute. If that causes problems `#[defines()]` can be used to overwrite the default of searching for opaques in the signature.

One wart of this design is that closures and static items do not have generics. So since I stored the opaques in the generics of functions, consts and methods, I would need to add a custom field to closures and statics to track this information. During a T-types discussion we decided to just not do this for now.

fixes #131298
2025-03-11 18:13:31 +00:00
clubby789
85b1116a18 rustdoc: Add FIXME test for doc_cfg interaction with check_cfg 2025-03-11 17:03:00 +00:00
Eric Huss
f505d4e8e3 Migrate alloc to Rust 2024 2025-03-11 09:46:34 -07:00
Eric Huss
0e071c2c6a Migrate core to Rust 2024 2025-03-11 09:46:34 -07:00
Eric Huss
590b277d25 Add a test for new 2024 standard library behavior
When migrating the standard library to 2024, there will be some behavior
changes that users will be able to observe. This test should cover that
(I cannot think of any other observable differences).
2025-03-11 09:46:30 -07:00
Michael Goulet
c170d0f12f Elaborate param-env built for checking DispatchFromDyn for dyn compat 2025-03-11 16:32:56 +00:00
lcnr
a5eb387d61 merge TypeChecker and TypeVerifier 2025-03-11 16:34:15 +01:00
lcnr
2f6aca8206 change TypeChecker to a MIR visitor 2025-03-11 16:08:53 +01:00
Jakub Beránek
07f33e22bf Rollup merge of #138300 - RalfJung:unqualified-local-imports, r=jieyouxu
add tracking issue for unqualified_local_imports

Tracking issue: https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/138299

r? ``````@jieyouxu``````
2025-03-11 13:30:53 +01:00
Jakub Beránek
79fa56a026 Rollup merge of #138288 - jyn514:crate-attr, r=Noratrieb
Document -Z crate-attr

and also add a bunch of tests
2025-03-11 13:30:53 +01:00
Jakub Beránek
c054bac89a Rollup merge of #138063 - compiler-errors:improve-attr-unpretty, r=jdonszelmann
Improve `-Zunpretty=hir` for parsed attrs

0. Rename `print_something` to `should_render` to make it distinct from `print_attribute` in that it doesn't print anything, it's just a way to probe if a type renders anything.
1. Fixes a few bugs in the `PrintAttribute` derive. Namely, the `__printed_anything` variable was entangled with the `should_render` call, leading us to always render field names but never render commas.
2. Remove the outermost `""` from the attr.
3. Debug print `Symbol`s. I know that this is redundant for some parsed attributes, but there's no good way to distinguish symbols that are ident-like and symbols which are cooked string literals. We could perhaps *conditionally* to fall back to a debug printing if the symbol doesn't match an ident? But seems like overkill.

Based on #138060, only review the commits not in that one.
2025-03-11 13:30:51 +01:00
Jakub Beránek
95d9ade39d Rollup merge of #137967 - mustartt:fix-aix-test-hangs, r=workingjubilee
[AIX] Fix hangs during testing

Fixes all current test hangs experienced during CI runs.
1. ipv6 link-local (the loopback device) gets assigned an automatic zone id of 1, causing the assert to fail and hang in `library/std/src/net/udp/tests.rs`
2. Const alloc does not fail gracefully
3. Debuginfo test has problem with gdb auto load safe path
2025-03-11 13:30:50 +01:00
Oli Scherer
69a1bb8bdb Error on define_opaques entries without any opaques actually referenced 2025-03-11 12:05:02 +00:00
Oli Scherer
43e39260f9 Keep items around even if builtin macros on them fail to parse 2025-03-11 12:05:02 +00:00
Oli Scherer
3e4e65ee8b Test invalid define_opaques attributes 2025-03-11 12:05:02 +00:00
Oli Scherer
cb4751d4b8 Implement #[define_opaque] attribute for functions. 2025-03-11 12:05:02 +00:00
Marcelo Domínguez
cf8e1f5e0f Fix ICE for invalid return activity and proper error handling 2025-03-11 09:36:57 +01:00
bors
705421b522 Auto merge of #135651 - arjunr2:master, r=davidtwco
Support for `wasm32-wali-linux-musl` Tier-3 target

Adding a new target -- `wasm32-wali-linux-musl` -- to the compiler can target the [WebAssembly Linux Interface](https://github.com/arjunr2/WALI) according to MCP rust-lang/compiler-team#797
Preliminary support involves minimal changes, primarily

* A new target spec for `wasm32_wali_linux_musl` that bridges linux options with supported wasm options. Right now, since there is no canonical Linux ABI for Wasm, we use `wali` in the vendor field, but this can be migrated in future version.
* Dependency patches to the following crates are required and these crates can be updated to bring target support:
  - **stdarch** rust-lang/stdarch#1702
  - **libc** rust-lang/libc#4244
  - **cc** rust-lang/cc-rs#1373
* Minimal additions for FFI support

cc `@tgross35` for libc-related changes

Tier-3 policy:
> A tier 3 target must have a designated developer or developers (the "target maintainers") on record to be CCed when issues arise regarding the target. (The mechanism to track and CC such developers may evolve over time.)

I will take responsibility for maintaining this target as well as issues

> Targets must use naming consistent with any existing targets; for instance, a target for the same CPU or OS as an existing Rust target should use the same name for that CPU or OS. Targets should normally use the same names and naming conventions as used elsewhere in the broader ecosystem beyond Rust (such as in other toolchains), unless they have a very good reason to diverge. Changing the name of a target can be highly disruptive, especially once the target reaches a higher tier, so getting the name right is important even for a tier 3 target.

The target name is consistent with naming patterns from currently supported targets for arch (wasm32), OS, (linux) and env (musl)

> Target names should not introduce undue confusion or ambiguity unless absolutely necessary to maintain ecosystem compatibility. For example, if the name of the target makes people extremely likely to form incorrect beliefs about what it targets, the name should be changed or augmented to disambiguate it.

No naming confusion is introduced.

> If possible, use only letters, numbers, dashes and underscores for the name. Periods (.) are known to cause issues in Cargo.

Compliant

> Tier 3 targets may have unusual requirements to build or use, but must not create legal issues or impose onerous legal terms for the Rust project or for Rust developers or users.

It's fully open source

> The target must not introduce license incompatibilities. Anything added to the Rust repository must be under the standard Rust license (MIT OR Apache-2.0).

Noted

> The target must not cause the Rust tools or libraries built for any other host (even when supporting cross-compilation to the target) to depend on any new dependency less permissive than the Rust licensing policy. This applies whether the dependency is a Rust crate that would require adding new license exceptions (as specified by the tidy tool in the rust-lang/rust repository), or whether the dependency is a native library or binary. In other words, the introduction of the target must not cause a user installing or running a version of Rust or the Rust tools to be subject to any new license requirements.

Compliant

> Compiling, linking, and emitting functional binaries, libraries, or other code for the target (whether hosted on the target itself or cross-compiling from another target) must not depend on proprietary (non-FOSS) libraries. Host tools built for the target itself may depend on the ordinary runtime libraries supplied by the platform and commonly used by other applications built for the target, but those libraries must not be required for code generation for the target; cross-compilation to the target must not require such libraries at all. For instance, rustc built for the target may depend on a common proprietary C runtime library or console output library, but must not depend on a proprietary code generation library or code optimization library. Rust's license permits such combinations, but the Rust project has no interest in maintaining such combinations within the scope of Rust itself, even at tier 3.

All tools are open-source

> "onerous" here is an intentionally subjective term. At a minimum, "onerous" legal/licensing terms include but are not limited to: non-disclosure requirements, non-compete requirements, contributor license agreements (CLAs) or equivalent, "non-commercial"/"research-only"/etc terms, requirements conditional on the employer or employment of any particular Rust developers, revocable terms, any requirements that create liability for the Rust project or its developers or users, or any requirements that adversely affect the livelihood or prospects of the Rust project or its developers or users.

No terms present

> Neither this policy nor any decisions made regarding targets shall create any binding agreement or estoppel by any party. If any member of an approving Rust team serves as one of the maintainers of a target, or has any legal or employment requirement (explicit or implicit) that might affect their decisions regarding a target, they must recuse themselves from any approval decisions regarding the target's tier status, though they may otherwise participate in discussions.
This requirement does not prevent part or all of this policy from being cited in an explicit contract or work agreement (e.g. to implement or maintain support for a target). This requirement exists to ensure that a developer or team responsible for reviewing and approving a target does not face any legal threats or obligations that would prevent them from freely exercising their judgment in such approval, even if such judgment involves subjective matters or goes beyond the letter of these requirements.

I am not a reviewer

> Tier 3 targets should attempt to implement as much of the standard libraries as possible and appropriate (core for most targets, alloc for targets that can support dynamic memory allocation, std for targets with an operating system or equivalent layer of system-provided functionality), but may leave some code unimplemented (either unavailable or stubbed out as appropriate), whether because the target makes it impossible to implement or challenging to implement. The authors of pull requests are not obligated to avoid calling any portions of the standard library on the basis of a tier 3 target not implementing those portions.

This target supports the full standard library with appropriate configuration stubs where necessary (however, similar to all existing wasm32 targets, it excludes dynamic linking or hardware-specific features)

> The target must provide documentation for the Rust community explaining how to build for the target, using cross-compilation if possible. If the target supports running binaries, or running tests (even if they do not pass), the documentation must explain how to run such binaries or tests for the target, using emulation if possible or dedicated hardware if necessary.

Preliminary documentation is provided at https://github.com/arjunr2/WALI. Further detailed docs (if necessary) can be added once this PR lands

> Tier 3 targets must not impose burden on the authors of pull requests, or other developers in the community, to maintain the target. In particular, do not post comments (automated or manual) on a PR that derail or suggest a block on the PR based on a tier 3 target. Do not send automated messages or notifications (via any medium, including via `@)` to a PR author or others involved with a PR regarding a tier 3 target, unless they have opted into such messages.
Backlinks such as those generated by the issue/PR tracker when linking to an issue or PR are not considered a violation of this policy, within reason. However, such messages (even on a separate repository) must not generate notifications to anyone involved with a PR who has not requested such notifications.

Understood

> Patches adding or updating tier 3 targets must not break any existing tier 2 or tier 1 target, and must not knowingly break another tier 3 target without approval of either the compiler team or the maintainers of the other tier 3 target.
In particular, this may come up when working on closely related targets, such as variations of the same architecture with different features. Avoid introducing unconditional uses of features that another variation of the target may not have; use conditional compilation or runtime detection, as appropriate, to let each target run code supported by that target.

To the best of my knowledge, it does not break any existing target in the ecosystem -- only minimal configuration-specific additions were made to support the target.

> Tier 3 targets must be able to produce assembly using at least one of rustc's supported backends from any host target. (Having support in a fork of the backend is not sufficient, it must be upstream.)

We can upstream LLVM target support
2025-03-11 07:21:45 +00:00
jyn
512ebed59a add more -Z crate-attr tests 2025-03-11 00:13:17 -04:00
bors
374ce1f909 Auto merge of #136932 - m-ou-se:fmt-width-precision-u16, r=scottmcm
Reduce formatting `width` and `precision` to 16 bits

This is part of https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/99012

This is reduces the `width` and `precision` fields in format strings to 16 bits. They are currently full `usize`s, but it's a bit nonsensical that we need to support the case where someone wants to pad their value to eighteen quintillion spaces and/or have eighteen quintillion digits of precision.

By reducing these fields to 16 bit, we can reduce `FormattingOptions` to 64 bits (see https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/136974) and improve the in memory representation of `format_args!()`. (See additional context below.)

This also fixes a bug where the width or precision is silently truncated when cross-compiling to a target with a smaller `usize`. By reducing the width and precision fields to the minimum guaranteed size of `usize`, 16 bits, this bug is eliminated.

This is a breaking change, but affects almost no existing code.

---

Details of this change:

There are three ways to set a width or precision today:

1. Directly a formatting string, e.g. `println!("{a:1234}")`
2. Indirectly in a formatting string, e.g. `println!("{a:width$}", width=1234)`
3. Through the unstable `FormattingOptions::width` method.

This PR:

- Adds a compiler error for 1. (`println!("{a:9999999}")` no longer compiles and gives a clear error.)
- Adds a runtime check for 2. (`println!("{a:width$}, width=9999999)` will panic.)
- Changes the signatures of the (unstable) `FormattingOptions::[get_]width` methods to use a `u16` instead.

---

Additional context for improving `FormattingOptions` and `fmt::Arguments`:

All the formatting flags and options are currently:

- The `+` flag (1 bit)
- The `-` flag (1 bit)
- The `#` flag (1 bit)
- The `0` flag (1 bit)
- The `x?` flag (1 bit)
- The `X?` flag (1 bit)
- The alignment (2 bits)
- The fill character (21 bits)
- Whether a width is specified (1 bit)
- Whether a precision is specified (1 bit)
- If used, the width (a full usize)
- If used, the precision (a full usize)

Everything except the last two can simply fit in a `u32` (those add up to 31 bits in total).

If we can accept a max width and precision of u16::MAX, we can make a `FormattingOptions` that is exactly 64 bits in size; the same size as a thin reference on most platforms.

If, additionally, we also limit the number of formatting arguments, we can also reduce the size of `fmt::Arguments` (that is, of a `format_args!()` expression).
2025-03-11 04:07:05 +00:00
Arjun Ramesh
336a327f7c Target definition for wasm32-wali-linux-musl to support the Wasm Linux
Interface

This commit does not patch libc, stdarch, or cc
2025-03-10 21:26:45 -04:00
bors
90384941aa Auto merge of #138302 - matthiaskrgr:rollup-an2up80, r=matthiaskrgr
Rollup of 8 pull requests

Successful merges:

 - #136395 (Update to rand 0.9.0)
 - #137279 (Make some invalid codegen attr errors structured/translatable)
 - #137585 (Update documentation to consistently use 'm' in atomic synchronization example)
 - #137926 (Add a test for `-znostart-stop-gc` usage with LLD)
 - #138074 (Support `File::seek` for Hermit)
 - #138238 (Fix dyn -> param suggestion in struct ICEs)
 - #138270 (chore: Fix some comments)
 - #138286 (triagebot.toml: Don't label `test/rustdoc-json` as A-rustdoc-search (…)

r? `@ghost`
`@rustbot` modify labels: rollup
2025-03-11 00:55:25 +00:00
Folkert de Vries
c0957ef45a naked functions: on windows emit .endef without the symbol name
also add test with `fastcall`, which on i686 uses a different mangling scheme
2025-03-11 00:27:32 +01:00
Matthias Krüger
0d6311931b Rollup merge of #138278 - Bryanskiy:delegation-ice-1, r=petrochenkov
Delegation: fix ICE with invalid `MethodCall` generation

`ExprKind::MethodCall` is now generated instead of `ExprKind::Call` if
- the resolved function has a `&self` argument
- the resolved function is an associated item <- was missed before

Fixes https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/128190
Fixes https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/128119
Fixes https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/127916

r? `@petrochenkov`
2025-03-10 15:57:14 +01:00
Michael Goulet
bc4f0bb486 Pass InferCtxt to InlineAsmCtxt to properly taint on error
Split up some of the tests bc tainting causes some errors to become
suppressed
2025-03-10 14:28:09 +00:00
clubby789
28bd22c3d9 rustdoc: Gate unstable doc(cfg()) predicates 2025-03-10 14:18:56 +00:00
Bryanskiy
61122d1829 Delegation: fix ICE with invalid MethodCall generation 2025-03-10 17:08:29 +03:00
Folkert de Vries
9213cb80c2 fix ICE in pretty-printing global_asm! 2025-03-10 14:46:01 +01:00
morine0122
112f7b01a1 make precise capturing args in rustdoc Json typed 2025-03-10 21:40:09 +09:00
Mara Bos
4374d5461e Update tests. 2025-03-10 12:20:05 +01:00
Oli Scherer
f87e58f194 Allow int literals for pattern types with int base types 2025-03-10 09:33:33 +00:00
Oli Scherer
9d87d4e4f5 Add tests for pattern type literals 2025-03-10 09:27:13 +00:00
Oli Scherer
916f9552e9 Reject wrapping ranges of pattern types 2025-03-10 09:27:13 +00:00
Oli Scherer
f38819ce17 Add some layout tests for pattern type edge cases 2025-03-10 09:27:13 +00:00
Thalia Archibald
523b9d9428 Implement default methods for io::Empty and io::Sink
Eliminate any redundant, unobservable logic from the their default
method implementations.

The observable changes are that `Write::write_fmt` for both types now
ignores the formatting arguments, so a user fmt impl which has side
effects is not invoked, and `Write::write_all_vectored` for both types
does not advance the borrowed buffers. Neither behavior is guaranteed by
the docs and the latter is documented as unspecified.

`Empty` is not marked as vectored, so that `Chain<Empty, _>` and
`Chain<_, Empty>` are not forced to be vectored.
2025-03-10 01:38:20 -07:00
Matthias Krüger
86065acbc3 Rollup merge of #138270 - StevenMia:master, r=compiler-errors
chore: Fix some comments

 Fix some comments
2025-03-10 09:32:15 +01:00
Matthias Krüger
1ae083ddd5 Rollup merge of #138238 - compiler-errors:dyn-suggestion-in-struct, r=nnethercote
Fix dyn -> param suggestion in struct ICEs

Makes the logic from #138042 a bit less ICEy and more clean. Also fixes an incorrect suggestion when the struct already has generics. I'll point out the major changes and observations in the code.

Fixes #138229
Fixes #138211

r? nnethercote since you reviewed the original pr, or re-roll if you don't want to review this
2025-03-10 09:32:14 +01:00
Matthias Krüger
cbde8b9dcf Rollup merge of #137926 - Kobzol:lld-no-start-stop-test, r=lqd
Add a test for `-znostart-stop-gc` usage with LLD

This test replicates the behavior of https://github.com/dtolnay/linkme, to test that it still works even with LLD. Without `-znostart-stop-gc` the test fails.

r? ``@lqd``

try-job: x86_64-gnu
try-job: x86_64-msvc-1
2025-03-10 09:32:12 +01:00
Matthias Krüger
c8194f1da3 Rollup merge of #137279 - estebank:codegen-structured-errors, r=nnethercote
Make some invalid codegen attr errors structured/translatable
2025-03-10 09:32:11 +01:00