Rollup of 10 pull requests
Successful merges:
- #126841 ([`macro_metavar_expr_concat`] Add support for literals)
- #126881 (Make `NEVER_TYPE_FALLBACK_FLOWING_INTO_UNSAFE` a deny-by-default lint in edition 2024)
- #126921 (Give VaList its own home)
- #127367 (Run alloc sync tests)
- #127431 (Use field ident spans directly instead of the full field span in diagnostics on local fields)
- #127437 (Uplift trait ref is knowable into `rustc_next_trait_solver`)
- #127439 (Uplift elaboration into `rustc_type_ir`)
- #127451 (Improve `run-make/output-type-permutations` code and improve `filename_not_in_denylist` API)
- #127452 (Fix intrinsic const parameter counting with `effects`)
- #127459 (rustdoc-json: add type/trait alias tests)
r? `@ghost`
`@rustbot` modify labels: rollup
Use field ident spans directly instead of the full field span in diagnostics on local fields
This improves diagnostics and avoids having to store the `DefId`s of fields
Make `NEVER_TYPE_FALLBACK_FLOWING_INTO_UNSAFE` a deny-by-default lint in edition 2024
I don't actually really care about this, but ``@traviscross`` asked me to do this, because lang team briefly discussed this before.
(TC here:)
Specifically, our original FCPed plan included this step:
- Add a lint against fallback affecting a generic that is passed to an `unsafe` function.
- Perhaps make this lint `deny-by-default` or a hard error in Rust 2024.
That is, we had left as an open question strengthening this in Rust 2024, and had marked it as an open question on the tracking issue. We're nominating here to address the open question. (Closing the remaining open question helps us to fully mark this off for Rust 2024.)
r? ``@compiler-errors``
Tracking:
- https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/123748
[`macro_metavar_expr_concat`] Add support for literals
Adds support for things like `${concat($variable, 123)}` or `${concat("hello", "_world")}` .
cc #124225
Support tail calls in mir via `TerminatorKind::TailCall`
This is one of the interesting bits in tail call implementation — MIR support.
This adds a new `TerminatorKind` which represents a tail call:
```rust
TailCall {
func: Operand<'tcx>,
args: Vec<Operand<'tcx>>,
fn_span: Span,
},
```
*Structurally* this is very similar to a normal `Call` but is missing a few fields:
- `destination` — tail calls don't write to destination, instead they pass caller's destination to the callee (such that eventual `return` will write to the caller of the function that used tail call)
- `target` — similarly to `destination` tail calls pass the caller's return address to the callee, so there is nothing to do
- `unwind` — I _think_ this is applicable too, although it's a bit confusing
- `call_source` — `become` forbids operators and is not created as a lowering of something else; tail calls always come from HIR (at least for now)
It might be helpful to read the interpreter implementation to understand what `TailCall` means exactly, although I've tried documenting it too.
-----
There are a few `FIXME`-questions still left, ideally we'd be able to answer them during review ':)
-----
r? `@oli-obk`
cc `@scottmcm` `@DrMeepster` `@JakobDegen`
Make `can_eq` process obligations (almost) everywhere
Move `can_eq` to an extension trait on `InferCtxt` in `rustc_trait_selection`, and change it so that it processes obligations. This should strengthen it to be more accurate in some cases, but is most important for the new trait solver which delays relating aliases to `AliasRelate` goals. Without this, we always basically just return true when passing aliases to `can_eq`, which can lead to weird errors, for example #127149.
I'm not actually certain if we should *have* `can_eq` be called on the good path. In cases where we need `can_eq`, we probably should just be using a regular probe.
Fixes#127149
r? lcnr
Emit a wrap expr span_bug only if context is not tainted
Fixes#127332
The ICE occurs because of this `span_bug`: 51917e2e69/compiler/rustc_hir_typeck/src/expr_use_visitor.rs (L732-L738)
which is triggered by the fact that we're trying to use an `enum` in a `with` expression instead of a `struct`.
The issue originates in commit 814bfe9335 from PR #127202. As per the title of that commit the ICEing code should not be reachable any more, but looks like it still is.
This PR changes the code so that the `span_bug` will be emitted only if the context is not tainted by a previous error.
Don't try to label `ObligationCauseCode::CompareImplItem` for an RPITIT, since it has no name
The old (current) trait solver has a limitation that when a where clause in param-env must be normalized using the same where clause, then we get spurious errors in `normalize_param_env_or_error`. I don't think there's an issue tracking it, but it's the root cause for many of the "fixed-by-next-solver" labeled issues.
Specifically, these errors may occur when checking predicate entailment of the GAT that comes out of desugaring RPITITs. Since we use `ObligationCauseCode::CompareImplItem` for these predicates, we try calling `item_name` on an RPITIT which fails, since the RPITIT has no name.
We simply suppress this logic when we're reporting a predicate entailment error for an RPITIT. RPITITs should never have predicate entailment errors, *by construction*, but they may due to this bug in the old solver.
Addresses the ICE in #127331, though doesn't fix the underlying issue (which is fundamental to the old solver).
r? types
offset_from, offset: clearly separate safety requirements the user needs to prove from corollaries that automatically follow
By landing https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/116675 we decided that objects larger than `isize::MAX` cannot exist in the address space of a Rust program, which lets us simplify these rules.
For `offset_from`, we can even state that the *absolute* distance fits into an `isize`, and therefore exclude `isize::MIN`. This PR also changes Miri to treat an `isize::MIN` difference like the other isize-overflowing cases.
Match ergonomics 2024: align with RFC again
- `&` matches `&mut` on old editions
- Add some more tests
r? ``@Nadrieril``
cc https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/123076
``@rustbot`` label A-edition-2024 A-patterns