When these methods were originally written, I wasn't aware that
`newtype_index!` already supports addition with ordinary numbers, without
needing to unwrap and re-wrap.
Cleanup number handling in match exhaustiveness
Doing a little bit of cleanup; handling number constants was somewhat messy. In particular, this:
- evals float consts once instead of repetitively
- reduces `Constructor` from 88 bytes to 56 (`mir::Const` is big!)
The `fast_try_eval_bits` function was mostly constructed from inlining existing code but I don't fully understand it; I don't follow how consts work and are evaluated very well.
Assorted improvements for `rustc_middle::mir::traversal`
r? `@cjgillot`
I'm not _entirely_ sure about all changes, although I do like all of them. If you'd like I can drop some commits. Best reviewed on a commit-by-commit basis, I think, since they are fairly isolated.
Implement a global value numbering MIR optimization
The aim of this pass is to avoid repeated computations by reusing past assignments. It is based on an analysis of SSA locals, in order to perform a restricted form of common subexpression elimination.
By opportunity, this pass allows for some simplifications by combining assignments. For instance, this pass could be able to see through projections of aggregates to directly reuse the aggregate field (not in this PR).
We handle references by assigning a different "provenance" index to each `Ref`/`AddressOf` rvalue. This ensure that we do not spuriously merge borrows that should not be merged. Meanwhile, we consider all the derefs of an immutable reference to a freeze type to give the same value:
```rust
_a = *_b // _b is &Freeze
_c = *_b // replaced by _c = _a
```
Don't store lazyness in `DefKind::TyAlias`
1. Don't store lazyness of a type alias in its `DefKind`, but instead via a query.
2. This allows us to treat type aliases as lazy if `#[feature(lazy_type_alias)]` *OR* if the alias contains a TAIT, rather than having checks for both in separate parts of the codebase.
r? `@oli-obk` cc `@fmease`
Check that closure/generator's interior/capture types are sized
check that closure upvars and generator interiors are sized. this check is only necessary when `unsized_fn_params` or `unsized_locals` is enabled, so only check if those are active.
Fixes#93622Fixes#61335Fixes#68543
adjust how closure/generator types are printed
I saw `&[closure@$DIR/issue-20862.rs:2:5]` and I thought it is a slice type, because that's usually what `&[_]` is... it took me a while to realize that this is just a confusing printer and actually there's no slice. Let's use something that cannot be mistaken for a regular type.
give FutureIncompatibilityReason variants more explicit names
Also make the `reason` field mandatory when declaring a lint, to make sure this is a deliberate decision.