Give a better error when `std` or `core` are missing
- Suggest using `rustup target add` if `RUSTUP_HOME` is set. I don't know if there's any precedent for doing this, but it seems harmless enough and it will be a big help.
- On nightly, suggest using `cargo build -Z build-std` if `CARGO` is set
- Add a note about `#![no_std]` if `std` is missing but not core
- Add a note that std may be unsupported if `std` is missing but not core
Fixes https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/84418.
r? `@petrochenkov`
- Suggest using `rustup target add` if `RUSTUP_HOME` is set. I don't know if there's any precedent for doing this, but it seems harmless enough and it will be a big help.
- Add a note about `#![no_std]` if `std` is missing but not core
- On nightly, suggest using `cargo build -Z build-std` if `CARGO` is set
- Add a note that std may be unsupported if `std` is missing but not core
- Don't suggest `#![no_std]` when the load isn't injected by the
compiler
various const parameter defaults improvements
Actually resolve names in const parameter defaults, fixing `struct Foo<const N: usize = { usize::MAX }>`.
---
Split generic parameter ban rib for types and consts, allowing
```rust
#![feature(const_generics_defaults)]
struct Q;
struct Foo<T = Q, const Q: usize = 3>(T);
```
---
Remove the type/const ordering restriction if `const_generics_defaults` is active, even if `const_generics` is not. allowing us to stabilize and test const param defaults separately.
---
Check well formedness of const parameter defaults, eagerly emitting an error for `struct Foo<const N: usize = { 0 - 1 }>`
---
Do not forbid const parameters in param defaults, allowing `struct Foo<const N: usize, T = [u8; N]>(T)` and `struct Foo<const N: usize, const M: usize = N>`. Note that this should not change anything which is stabilized, as on stable, type parameters must be in front of const parameters, which means that type parameter defaults are only allowed if no const parameters exist.
We still forbid generic parameters inside of const param types.
r? `@varkor` `@petrochenkov`
move core::hint::black_box under its own feature gate
The `black_box` function had its own RFC and is tracked separately from the `test` feature at https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/64102. Let's reflect this in the feature gate.
To avoid breaking all the benchmarks, libtest's `test::black_box` is a wrapping definition, not a reexport -- this means it is still under the `test` feature gate.
Cautiously add IntoIterator for arrays by value
Add the attribute described in #84133, `#[rustc_skip_array_during_method_dispatch]`, which effectively hides a trait from method dispatch when the receiver type is an array.
Then cherry-pick `IntoIterator for [T; N]` from #65819 and gate it with that attribute. Arrays can now be used as `IntoIterator` normally, but `array.into_iter()` has edition-dependent behavior, returning `slice::Iter` for 2015 and 2018 editions, or `array::IntoIter` for 2021 and later.
r? `@nikomatsakis`
cc `@LukasKalbertodt` `@rust-lang/libs`
Fixes: #84180
For chained function calls separated by the `?` try operator, the
function call following the try operator produced a MIR `Call` span that
matched the span of the first call. The `?` try operator started a new
span, so the second call got no span.
It turns out the MIR `Call` terminator has a `func` `Operand`
for the `Constant` representing the function name, and the function
name's Span can be used to reset the starting position of the span.
Static initializer can read other statics. Initializers are evaluated at
compile time, and so their content could become inlined into another
crate. Ensure that initializers of reachable statics are also reachable.
Previously, when an item incorrectly considered to be unreachable was
reached from another crate an attempt would be made to codegen it. The
attempt could fail with an ICE (in the case MIR wasn't available to do
so) in some circumstances the attempt could also succeed resulting in
a local codegen of non-local items, including static ones.
further split up const_fn feature flag
This continues the work on splitting up `const_fn` into separate feature flags:
* `const_fn_trait_bound` for `const fn` with trait bounds
* `const_fn_unsize` for unsizing coercions in `const fn` (looks like only `dyn` unsizing is still guarded here)
I don't know if there are even any things left that `const_fn` guards... at least libcore and liballoc do not need it any more.
`@oli-obk` are you currently able to do reviews?
Fixes: #83792
MIR `InstrumentCoverage` assumed the `FnSig` span was contained within a
single file, but this is not always the case. Some macro constructions
can result in a span that starts in one `SourceFile` and ends in a
different one.
The `FnSig` span is included in coverage results as long as that span is
in the same `SourceFile` and the same macro context, but by assuming the
`FnSig` span's `hi()` and `lo()` were in the same file, I took this for
granted, and checked only that the `FnSig` `hi()` was in the same
`SourceFile` as the `body_span`.
I actually drop the `hi()` though, and extend the `FnSig` span to the
`body_span.lo()`, so I really should have simply checked that the
`FnSig` span's `lo()` was in the `SourceFile` of the `body_span`.
Implement a lint that highlights all moves larger than a configured limit
Tracking issue: #83518
[MCP 420](https://github.com/rust-lang/compiler-team/issues/420) still ~blazing~ in progress
r? ```@pnkfelix```
The main open issue I see with this minimal impl of the feature is that the lint is immediately "stable" (so it can be named on stable), even if it is never executed on stable. I don't think we have the concept of unstable lint names or hiding lint names without an active feature gate, so that would be a bigger change.
Rollup of 10 pull requests
Successful merges:
- #83990 (implement `TrustedRandomAccess` for `Take` iterator adapter)
- #84250 (bootstrap: use bash on illumos to run install scripts)
- #84320 (Use details tag for trait implementors.)
- #84436 (Make a few functions private)
- #84453 (Document From implementations for Waker and RawWaker)
- #84458 (Remove unnecessary fields and parameters in rustdoc)
- #84485 (Add some associated type bounds tests)
- #84489 (Mention FusedIterator case in Iterator::fuse doc)
- #84492 (rustdoc: Remove unnecessary dummy span)
- #84496 (Add some specialization tests)
Failed merges:
r? `@ghost`
`@rustbot` modify labels: rollup
Make a few functions private
These were made public in 3105bcfdc1. This
is so long ago I doubt anyone remembers why they're public. No one outside rustc_session uses
them, including in-tree tools.
On stable, suggest removing `#![feature]` for features that have been stabilized
I don't know how to test this (https://rust-lang.zulipchat.com/#narrow/stream/182449-t-compiler.2Fhelp/topic/Run.20tests.20without.20enabling.20nightly.20features.3F). I confirmed locally that this gives the
appropriate help with `channel = "beta"`:
```
error[E0554]: `#![feature]` may not be used on the beta release channel
--> src/lib.rs:2:1
|
2 | #![feature(min_const_generics)]
| ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ help: remove the attribute
|
= help: the feature `min_const_generics` has been stable since 1.51.0 and no longer requires an attribute to enable
error[E0554]: `#![feature]` may not be used on the beta release channel
--> src/lib.rs:3:1
|
3 | #![feature(min_const_generics, min_specialization)]
| ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
|
= help: the feature `min_const_generics` has been stable since 1.51.0 and no longer requires an attribute to enable
error[E0554]: `#![feature]` may not be used on the beta release channel
--> src/lib.rs:4:1
|
4 | #![feature(box_patterns)]
| ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
```
Closes https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/83715.
Fix ICE if original_span(fn_sig) returns a span not in body sourcefile
Fixes: #84421
r? ````@tmandry````
fyi: ````@wesleywiser```` ````@sdroege```` ````@rajivshah3````
rustc: Use LLVM's new saturating float-to-int intrinsics
This commit updates rustc, with an applicable LLVM version, to use
LLVM's new `llvm.fpto{u,s}i.sat.*.*` intrinsics to implement saturating
floating-point-to-int conversions. This results in a little bit tighter
codegen for x86/x86_64, but the main purpose of this is to prepare for
upcoming changes to the WebAssembly backend in LLVM where wasm's
saturating float-to-int instructions will now be implemented with these
intrinsics.
This change allows simplifying a good deal of surrounding code, namely
removing a lot of wasm-specific behavior. WebAssembly no longer has any
special-casing of saturating arithmetic instructions and the need for
`fptoint_may_trap` is gone and all handling code for that is now
removed. This means that the only wasm-specific logic is in the
`fpto{s,u}i` instructions which only get used for "out of bounds is
undefined behavior". This does mean that for the WebAssembly target
specifically the Rust compiler will no longer be 100% compatible with
pre-LLVM 12 versions, but it seems like that's unlikely to be relied on
by too many folks.
Note that this change does immediately regress the codegen of saturating
float-to-int casts on WebAssembly due to the specialization of the LLVM
intrinsic not being present in our LLVM fork just yet. I'll be following
up with an LLVM update to pull in those patches, but affects a few other
SIMD things in flight for WebAssembly so I wanted to separate this change.
Eventually the entire `cast_float_to_int` function can be removed when
LLVM 12 is the minimum version, but that will require sinking the
complexity of it into other backends such as Cranelfit.
It doesn't do anything `--unpretty` doesn't, and due to a bug, also
didn't show up in `--help`. I don't think there's any reason to keep it
around, I haven't seen anyone using it.
RustWrapper: work around unification of diagnostic handlers
This lets me build against llvm/main as of March 23rd, 2021. I'm not
entirely sure this is _correct_, but it appears to be functionally
identical to what was done in LLVM: existing callsites of
setInlineAsmDiagnosticHandler were moved to SetDiagnosticHandler() on
the context object, which we already set up in both places that we
called setInlineAsmDiagnosticHandler().
Use arrayvec 0.7, drop smallvec 0.6
With the arrival of min const generics, many alt-vec libraries have
updated to use it in some way and arrayvec is no exception. Use the
latest with minor refactoring.
Also, rustc_workspace_hack is the only user of smallvec 0.6 in the
entire tree, so drop it.
This lets me build against llvm/main as of March 23rd, 2021. I'm not
entirely sure this is _correct_, but it appears to be functionally
identical to what was done in LLVM: existing callsites of
setInlineAsmDiagnosticHandler were moved to SetDiagnosticHandler() on
the context object, which we already set up in both places that we
called setInlineAsmDiagnosticHandler().