Remove all ConstPropNonsense
We track all locals and projections on them ourselves within the const propagator and only use the InterpCx to actually do some low level operations or read from constants (via `OpTy` we get for said constants).
This helps moving the const prop lint out from the normal pipeline and running it just based on borrowck information. This in turn allows us to make progress on https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/108730#issuecomment-1875557745
there are various follow up cleanups that can be done after this PR (e.g. not matching on Rvalue twice and doing binop checks twice), but lets try landing this one first.
r? `@RalfJung`
They can't contain `\x` escapes, which means they can't contain high
bytes, which means we can used `unescape_unicode` instead of
`unescape_mixed` to unescape them. This avoids unnecessary used of
`MixedUnit`.
`unescape_literal` becomes `unescape_unicode`, and `unescape_c_string`
becomes `unescape_mixed`. Because rfc3349 will mean that C string
literals will no longer be the only mixed utf8 literals.
- Rename it as `MixedUnit`, because it will soon be used in more than
just C string literals.
- Change the `Byte` variant to `HighByte` and use it only for
`\x80`..`\xff` cases. This fixes the old inexactness where ASCII chars
could be encoded with either `Byte` or `Char`.
- Add useful comments.
- Remove `is_ascii`, in favour of `u8::is_ascii`.
The `T` type in these functions took me some time to understand, and I
find the explicit `T` in the use of `from` makes the code easier to
read, as does the `u8` annotation in `scan_escape`.
The parser already does a check-only unescaping which catches all
errors. So the checking done in `from_token_lit` never hits.
But literals causing warnings can still occur in `from_token_lit`. So
the commit changes `str-escape.rs` to use byte string literals and C
string literals as well, to give better coverage and ensure the new
assertions in `from_token_lit` are correct.
When encountering a type mismatch error involving `dyn Trait`, mention
the existence of boxed trait objects if the other type involved
implements `Trait`.
Partially addresses #102629.
privacy: Refactor top-level visiting in `TypePrivacyVisitor`
Full hierarchical visiting (`nested_filter::All`) is not necessary, visiting all item-likes in isolation is enough.
Tracking current item is not necessary, just keeping the current `mod` item is enough.
`visit_generic_arg` should behave like its default version, including checking types of const arguments.
Some comments, including FIXMEs, are also added.
Noticed while reading code to review https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/113671.
r? ``@oli-obk``
coverage: Don't instrument `#[automatically_derived]` functions
This PR makes the coverage instrumentor detect and skip functions that have [`#[automatically_derived]`](https://doc.rust-lang.org/reference/attributes/derive.html#the-automatically_derived-attribute) on their enclosing impl block.
Most notably, this means that methods generated by built-in derives (e.g. `Clone`, `Debug`, `PartialEq`) are now ignored by coverage instrumentation, and won't appear as executed or not-executed in coverage reports.
This is a noticeable change in user-visible behaviour, but overall I think it's a net improvement. For example, we've had a few user requests for this sort of change (e.g. #105055, https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/84605#issuecomment-1902069040), and I believe it's the behaviour that most users will expect/prefer by default.
It's possible to imagine situations where users would want to instrument these derived implementations, but I think it's OK to treat that as an opportunity to consider adding more fine-grained option flags to control the details of coverage instrumentation, while leaving this new behaviour as the default.
(Also note that while `-Cinstrument-coverage` is a stable feature, the exact details of coverage instrumentation are allowed to change. So we *can* make this change; the main question is whether we *should*.)
Fixes#105055.
Add a new `wasm32-wasi-preview2` target
This is the initial implementation of the MCP https://github.com/rust-lang/compiler-team/issues/694 creating a new tier 3 target `wasm32-wasi-preview2`. That MCP has been seconded and will most likely be approved in a little over a week from now. For more information on the need for this target, please read the [MCP](https://github.com/rust-lang/compiler-team/issues/694).
There is one aspect of this PR that will become insta-stable once these changes reach a stable compiler:
* A new `target_family` named `wasi` is introduced. This target family incorporates all wasi targets including `wasm32-wasi` and its derivative `wasm32-wasi-preview1-threads`. The difference between `target_family = wasi` and `target_os = wasi` will become much clearer when `wasm32-wasi` is renamed to `wasm32-wasi-preview1` and the `target_os` becomes `wasm32-wasi-preview1`. You can read about this target rename in [this MCP](https://github.com/rust-lang/compiler-team/issues/695) which has also been seconded and will hopefully be officially approved soon.
Additional technical details include:
* Both `std::sys::wasi_preview2` and `std::os::wasi_preview2` have been created and mostly use `#[path]` annotations on their submodules to reach into the existing `wasi` (soon to be `wasi_preview1`) modules. Over time the differences between `wasi_preview1` and `wasi_preview2` will grow and most like all `#[path]` based module aliases will fall away.
* Building `wasi-preview2` relies on a [`wasi-sdk`](https://github.com/WebAssembly/wasi-sdk) in the same way that `wasi-preview1` does (one must include a `wasi-root` path in the `Config.toml` pointing to sysroot included in the wasi-sdk). The target should build against [wasi-sdk v21](https://github.com/WebAssembly/wasi-sdk/releases/tag/wasi-sdk-21) without modifications. However, the wasi-sdk itself is growing [preview2 support](https://github.com/WebAssembly/wasi-sdk/pull/370) so this might shift rapidly. We will be following along quickly to make sure that building the target remains possible as the wasi-sdk changes.
* This requires a [patch to libc](https://github.com/rylev/rust-libc/tree/wasm32-wasi-preview2) that we'll need to land in conjunction with this change. Until that patch lands the target won't actually build.
coverage: Never emit improperly-ordered coverage regions
If we emit a coverage region that is improperly ordered (end < start), `llvm-cov` will fail with `coveragemap_error::malformed`, which is inconvenient for users and also very hard to debug.
Ideally we would fix the root causes of these situations, but they tend to occur in very obscure edge-case scenarios (often involving nested macros), and we don't always have a good MCVE to work from. So it makes sense to also have a catch-all check that will prevent improperly-ordered regions from ever being emitted.
---
This is mainly aimed at resolving #119453. We don't have a specific way to reproduce it, which is why I haven't been able to add a test case in this PR. But based on the information provided in that issue, this change seems likely to avoid the error in `llvm-cov`.
`````@rustbot````` label +A-code-coverage
Return a finite number of AllocIds per ConstAllocation in Miri
Before this, every evaluation of a const slice would produce a new AllocId. So in Miri, this program used to have unbounded memory use:
```rust
fn main() {
loop {
helper();
}
}
fn helper() {
"ouch";
}
```
Every trip around the loop creates a new AllocId which we need to keep track of a base address for. And the provenance GC can never clean up that AllocId -> u64 mapping, because the AllocId is for a const allocation which will never be deallocated.
So this PR moves the logic of producing an AllocId for a ConstAllocation to the Machine trait, and the implementation that Miri provides will only produce 16 AllocIds for each allocation. The cache is also keyed on the Instance that the const is evaluated in, so that equal consts evaluated in two functions will have disjoint base addresses.
r? RalfJung
Change the implicit `Sized` `Obligation` `Span` for call expressions to
include the whole expression. This aids the existing deduplication
machinery to reduce the number of errors caused by a single unsized
expression.
Rollup of 9 pull requests
Successful merges:
- #112806 (Small code improvements in `collect_intra_doc_links.rs`)
- #119766 (Split tait and impl trait in assoc items logic)
- #120139 (Do not normalize closure signature when building `FnOnce` shim)
- #120160 (Manually implement derived `NonZero` traits.)
- #120171 (Fix assume and assert in jump threading)
- #120183 (Add `#[coverage(off)]` to closures introduced by `#[test]` and `#[bench]`)
- #120195 (add several resolution test cases)
- #120259 (Split Diagnostics for Uncommon Codepoints: Add List to Display Characters Involved)
- #120261 (Provide structured suggestion to use trait objects in some cases of `if` arm type divergence)
r? `@ghost`
`@rustbot` modify labels: rollup
Provide structured suggestion to use trait objects in some cases of `if` arm type divergence
```
error[E0308]: `if` and `else` have incompatible types
--> $DIR/suggest-box-on-divergent-if-else-arms.rs:15:9
|
LL | let _ = if true {
| _____________-
LL | | Struct
| | ------ expected because of this
LL | | } else {
LL | | foo()
| | ^^^^^ expected `Struct`, found `Box<dyn Trait>`
LL | | };
| |_____- `if` and `else` have incompatible types
|
= note: expected struct `Struct`
found struct `Box<dyn Trait>`
help: `Struct` implements `Trait` so you can box it to coerce to the trait object `Box<dyn Trait>`
|
LL | Box::new(Struct)
| +++++++++ +
error[E0308]: `if` and `else` have incompatible types
--> $DIR/suggest-box-on-divergent-if-else-arms.rs:20:9
|
LL | let _ = if true {
| _____________-
LL | | foo()
| | ----- expected because of this
LL | | } else {
LL | | Struct
| | ^^^^^^ expected `Box<dyn Trait>`, found `Struct`
LL | | };
| |_____- `if` and `else` have incompatible types
|
= note: expected struct `Box<dyn Trait>`
found struct `Struct`
= note: for more on the distinction between the stack and the heap, read https://doc.rust-lang.org/book/ch15-01-box.html, https://doc.rust-lang.org/rust-by-example/std/box.html, and https://doc.rust-lang.org/std/boxed/index.html
help: store this in the heap by calling `Box::new`
|
LL | Box::new(Struct)
| +++++++++ +
error[E0308]: `if` and `else` have incompatible types
--> $DIR/suggest-box-on-divergent-if-else-arms.rs:25:9
|
LL | fn bar() -> impl Trait {
| ---------- the found opaque type
...
LL | let _ = if true {
| _____________-
LL | | Struct
| | ------ expected because of this
LL | | } else {
LL | | bar()
| | ^^^^^ expected `Struct`, found opaque type
LL | | };
| |_____- `if` and `else` have incompatible types
|
= note: expected struct `Struct`
found opaque type `impl Trait`
help: `Struct` implements `Trait` so you can box both arms and coerce to the trait object `Box<dyn Trait>`
|
LL ~ Box::new(Struct) as Box<dyn Trait>
LL | } else {
LL ~ Box::new(bar())
|
error[E0308]: `if` and `else` have incompatible types
--> $DIR/suggest-box-on-divergent-if-else-arms.rs:30:9
|
LL | fn bar() -> impl Trait {
| ---------- the expected opaque type
...
LL | let _ = if true {
| _____________-
LL | | bar()
| | ----- expected because of this
LL | | } else {
LL | | Struct
| | ^^^^^^ expected opaque type, found `Struct`
LL | | };
| |_____- `if` and `else` have incompatible types
|
= note: expected opaque type `impl Trait`
found struct `Struct`
help: `Struct` implements `Trait` so you can box both arms and coerce to the trait object `Box<dyn Trait>`
|
LL ~ Box::new(bar()) as Box<dyn Trait>
LL | } else {
LL ~ Box::new(Struct)
|
```
Partially address #102629.
Split Diagnostics for Uncommon Codepoints: Add List to Display Characters Involved
This Pull Request adds a list of the uncommon codepoints involved in the `uncommon_codepoints` lint, as outlined as a first step in #120228.
Example rendered diagnostic:
```
error: identifier contains an uncommon Unicode codepoint: 'µ'
--> $DIR/lint-uncommon-codepoints.rs:3:7
|
LL | const µ: f64 = 0.000001;
| ^
|
note: the lint level is defined here
--> $DIR/lint-uncommon-codepoints.rs:1:9
|
LL | #![deny(uncommon_codepoints)]
| ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
```
(Retrying #120258.)
Add `#[coverage(off)]` to closures introduced by `#[test]` and `#[bench]`
These closures are an internal implementation detail of the `#[test]` and `#[bench]` attribute macros, so from a user perspective there is no reason to instrument them for coverage.
Skipping them makes coverage reports slightly cleaner, and will also allow other changes to span processing during coverage instrumentation, without having to worry about how they affect the `#[test]` macro.
The `#[coverage(off)]` attribute has no effect when `-Cinstrument-coverage` is not used.
Fixes#120046.
---
Note that this PR has no effect on the user-written function that has the `#[test]` attribute attached to it. That function will still be instrumented as normal.