Do not add leading asterisk in the `PartialEq`
I think we should address this issue, however I am not exactly sure, if this is the right way to do it. It is related to the #123056.
Imagine the simplified code:
```rust
trait MyTrait {}
impl PartialEq for dyn MyTrait {
fn eq(&self, _other: &Self) -> bool {
true
}
}
#[derive(PartialEq)]
enum Bar {
Foo(Box<dyn MyTrait>),
}
```
On the nightly compiler, the `derive` produces invalid code with the weird error message:
```
error[E0507]: cannot move out of `*__arg1_0` which is behind a shared reference
--> src/main.rs:11:9
|
9 | #[derive(PartialEq)]
| --------- in this derive macro expansion
10 | enum Things {
11 | Foo(Box<dyn MyTrait>),
| ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ move occurs because `*__arg1_0` has type `Box<dyn MyTrait>`, which does not implement the `Copy` trait
|
= note: this error originates in the derive macro `PartialEq` (in Nightly builds, run with -Z macro-backtrace for more info)
```
It may be related to the perfect derive problem, although requiring the _type_ to be `Copy` seems unfortunate because it is not necessary. Besides, we are adding the extra dereference only for the diagnostics?
Handle field projections like slice indexing in invalid_reference_casting
r? `@Urgau`
I saw the implementation in https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/124761, and I was wondering if we also need to handle field access. We do. Without this PR, we get this errant diagnostic:
```
error: casting references to a bigger memory layout than the backing allocation is undefined behavior, even if the reference is unused
--> /home/ben/rust/tests/ui/lint/reference_casting.rs:262:18
|
LL | let r = &mut v.0;
| --- backing allocation comes from here
LL | let ptr = r as *mut i32 as *mut Vec3<i32>;
| ------------------------------- casting happend here
LL | unsafe { *ptr = Vec3(0, 0, 0) }
| ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
|
= note: casting from `i32` (4 bytes) to `Vec3<i32>` (12 bytes)
```
Fix more ICEs in `diagnostic::on_unimplemented`
There were 8 other calls to `expect_local` left in `on_unimplemented.rs` -- all of which (afaict) could be turned into ICEs.
I would really like to see validation of `on_unimplemented` separated from parsing, so we only emit errors here:
a60f077c38/compiler/rustc_hir_analysis/src/check/check.rs (L836-L839)
...And gracefully fail instead when emitting trait predicate failures, not *ever* even trying to emit an error or a lint. But that's left for a separate PR.
r? `@estebank`
Fix Error Messages for `break` Inside Coroutines
Fixes#124495
Previously, `break` inside `gen` blocks and functions
were incorrectly identified to be enclosed by a closure.
This PR fixes it by displaying an appropriate error message
for async blocks, async closures, async functions, gen blocks,
gen closures, gen functions, async gen blocks, async gen closures
and async gen functions.
Note: gen closure and async gen closure are not supported by the
compiler yet but I have added an error message here assuming that
they might be implemented in the future.
~~Also, fixes grammar in a few places by replacing
`inside of a $coroutine` with `inside a $coroutine`.~~
It's a macro that just creates an enum with a `from_u32` method. It has
two arms. One is unused and the other has a single use.
This commit inlines that single use and removes the whole macro. This
increases readability because we don't have two different macros
interacting (`enum_from_u32` and `language_item_table`).
It provides a way to effectively embed a linked list within an
`IndexVec` and also iterate over that list. It's written in a very
generic way, involving two traits `Links` and `LinkElem`. But the
`Links` trait is only impl'd for `IndexVec` and `&IndexVec`, and the
whole thing is only used in one module within `rustc_borrowck`. So I
think it's over-engineered and hard to read. Plus it has no comments.
This commit removes it, and adds a (non-generic) local iterator for the
use within `rustc_borrowck`. Much simpler.
It is optimized for lists with a single element, avoiding the need for
an allocation in that case. But `SmallVec<[T; 1]>` also avoids the
allocation, and is better in general: more standard, log2 number of
allocations if the list exceeds one item, and a much more capable API.
This commit removes `TinyList` and converts the two uses to
`SmallVec<[T; 1]>`. It also reorders the `use` items in the relevant
file so they are in just two sections (`pub` and non-`pub`), ordered
alphabetically, instead of many sections. (This is a relevant part of
the change because I had to decide where to add a `use` item for
`SmallVec`.)
And move the `repr` line after the `derive` line, where it's harder to
overlook. (I overlooked it initially, and didn't understand how this
type worked.)
Simplify `use crate::rustc_foo::bar` occurrences.
They can just be written as `use rustc_foo::bar`, which is far more standard. (I didn't even know that a `crate::` prefix was valid.)
r? ``@eholk``
Remove braces when fixing a nested use tree into a single item
[Back in 2019](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/56645) I added rustfix support for the `unused_imports` lint, to automatically remove them when running `cargo fix`. For the most part this worked great, but when removing all but one childs of a nested use tree it turned `use foo::{Unused, Used}` into `use foo::{Used}`. This is slightly annoying, because it then requires you to run `rustfmt` to get `use foo::Used`.
This PR automatically removes braces and the surrouding whitespace when all but one child of a nested use tree are unused. To get it done I had to add the span of the nested use tree to the AST, and refactor a bit the code I wrote back then.
A thing I noticed is, there doesn't seem to be any `//@ run-rustfix` test for fixing the `unused_imports` lint. I created a test in `tests/suggestions` (is that the right directory?) that for now tests just what I added in the PR. I can followup in a separate PR to add more tests for fixing `unused_lints`.
This PR is best reviewed commit-by-commit.
Previously, `break` inside `gen` blocks and functions
were incorrectly identified to be enclosed by a closure.
This PR fixes it by displaying an appropriate error message
for async blocks, async closures, async functions, gen blocks,
gen closures, gen functions, async gen blocks, async gen closures
and async gen functions.
Note: gen closure and async gen closure are not supported by the
compiler yet but I have added an error message here assuming that
they might be implemented in the future.
Also, fixes grammar in a few places by replacing
`inside of a $coroutine` with `inside a $coroutine`.
Fix insufficient logic when searching for the underlying allocation
This PR fixes the logic inside the `invalid_reference_casting` lint, when trying to lint on bigger memory layout casts.
More specifically when looking for the "underlying allocation" we were wrongly assuming that when we got `&mut slice[index]` that `slice[index]` was the allocation, but it's not.
Fixes https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/124685
Handle normalization failure in `struct_tail_erasing_lifetimes`
Fixes#113272
The ICE occurred because the struct being normalized had an error. This PR adds some defensive code to guard against that.
rustc: Some small changes for the wasm32-wasip2 target
This commit has a few changes for the wasm32-wasip2 target. The first two are aimed at improving the compatibility of using `clang` as an external linker driver on this target. The default target to LLVM is updated to match the Rust target and additionally the `-fuse-ld=lld` argument is dropped since that otherwise interferes with clang's own linker detection. The only linker on wasm targets is LLD but on the wasip2 target a wrapper around LLD, `wasm-component-ld`, is used to drive the process and perform steps necessary for componentization.
The final commit changes the output of all objects on the wasip2 target to being PIC by default. This improves compatibilty with shared libaries but notably does not mean that there's a turnkey solution for shared libraries. The hope is that by having the standard libray work both with and without dynamic libraries will make experimentation easier.
Improve `rustc_parse::Parser`'s debuggability
The main event is the final commit where I add `Parser::debug_lookahead`. Everything else was basically cleaning up things that bugged me (debugging, as it were) until I felt comfortable enough to actually work on it.
The motivation is that it's annoying as hell to try to figure out how the debug infra works in rustc without having basic queries like `debug!(?parser);` come up "empty". However, Parser has a lot of fields that are mostly irrelevant for most debugging, like the entire ParseSess. I think `Parser::debug_lookahead` with a capped lookahead might be fine as a general-purpose Debug impl, but this adapter version was suggested to allow more choice, and admittedly, it's a refined version of what I was already handrolling just to get some insight going.
I tried debugging a parser-related issue but found it annoying to not be
able to easily peek into the Parser's token stream.
Add a convenience fn that offers an opinionated view into the parser,
but one that is useful for answering basic questions about parser state.
coverage: Branch coverage support for let-else and if-let
This PR adds branch coverage instrumentation for let-else and if-let, including let-chains.
This lifts two of the limitations listed at #124118.
This commit changes the new `wasm32-wasip2` target to being PIC by
default rather than the previous non-PIC by default. This change is
intended to make it easier for the standard library to be used in a
shared object in its precompiled form. This comes with a hypothetical
modest slowdown but it's expected that this is quite minor in most use
cases or otherwise wasm compilers and/or optimizing runtimes can elide
the cost.
Do not ICE on `AnonConst`s in `diagnostic_hir_wf_check`
Fixes#122989
Below is the snippet from #122989 that ICEs:
```rust
trait Traitor<const N: N<2> = 1, const N: N<2> = N> {
fn N(&N) -> N<2> {
M
}
}
trait N<const N: Traitor<2> = 12> {}
```
The `AnonConst` that triggers the ICE is the `2` in the param `const N: N<2> = 1`. The currently existing code in `diagnostic_hir_wf_check` deals only with `AnonConst`s that are default values of some param, but the `2` is not a default value. It is just an `AnonConst` HIR node inside a `TraitRef` HIR node corresponding to `N<2>`. Therefore the existing code cannot handle it and this PR ensures that it does.
Rollup of 5 pull requests
Successful merges:
- #124738 (rustdoc: dedup search form HTML)
- #124827 (generalize hr alias: avoid unconstrainable infer vars)
- #124832 (narrow down visibilities in `rustc_parse::lexer`)
- #124842 (replace another Option<Span> by DUMMY_SP)
- #124846 (Don't ICE when we cannot eval a const to a valtree in the new solver)
r? `@ghost`
`@rustbot` modify labels: rollup
Don't ICE when we cannot eval a const to a valtree in the new solver
Use `const_eval_resolve` instead of `try_const_eval_resolve` because naming aside, the former doesn't ICE when a value can't be evaluated to a valtree.
r? lcnr
never patterns: lower never patterns to `Unreachable` in MIR
This lowers a `!` pattern to "goto Unreachable". Ideally I'd like to read from the place to make it clear that the UB is coming from an invalid value, but that's tricky so I'm leaving it for later.
r? `@compiler-errors` how do you feel about a lil bit of MIR lowering
Adjust 64-bit ARM data layouts for LLVM update
LLVM has updated data layouts to specify `Fn32` on 64-bit ARM to avoid C++ accidentally underaligning functions when trying to comply with member function ABIs.
This should only affect Rust in cases where we had a similar bug (I don't believe we have one), but our data layout must match to generate code.
As a compatibility adaptatation, if LLVM is not version 19 yet, `Fn32` gets voided from the data layout.
See llvm/llvm-project#90415
`@rustbot` label: +llvm-main
cc `@krasimirgg`
r? `@durin42`
borrowck: prepopulate opaque storage more eagerly
otherwise we ICE due to ambiguity when normalizing while computing implied bounds.
r? ``@compiler-errors``