Closing brackets were missing on AdtDef, the field_types list in FruInfo, and InlineAsmExpr, breaking folding in some editors;
Fields were incorrectly (?) indexed in the list for functional update syntax, showing the (implicit, irrelevant) iteration index instead of the field index;
also spurious colon after Pat.
Add `MaybeDangling` to `core`
This is the library part of adding `MaybeDangling`. Note that it doesn't actually do anything described in its docs (yet), I'll make a separate PR for that.
Tracking issue: https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/118166.
r? libs
cc `@RalfJung`
Extend parsing of `ReprOptions` with `rustc_scalable_vector(N)` which
optionally accepts a single literal integral value - the base multiple of
lanes that are in a scalable vector. Can only be applied to structs.
Co-authored-by: Jamie Cunliffe <Jamie.Cunliffe@arm.com>
`c_variadic`: make `VaList` abi-compatible with C
tracking issue: https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/44930
related PR: rust-lang/rust#144529
On some platforms, the C `va_list` type is actually a single-element array of a struct (on other platforms it is just a pointer). In C, arrays passed as function arguments expirience array-to-pointer decay, which means that C will pass a pointer to the array in the caller instead of the array itself, and modifications to the array in the callee will be visible to the caller (this does not match Rust by-value semantics). However, for `va_list`, the C standard explicitly states that it is undefined behaviour to use a `va_list` after it has been passed by value to a function (in Rust parlance, the `va_list` is moved, not copied). This matches Rust's pass-by-value semantics, meaning that when the C `va_list` type is a single-element array of a struct, the ABI will match C as long as the Rust type is always be passed indirectly.
In the old implementation, this ABI was achieved by having two separate types: `VaList` was the type that needed to be used when passing a `VaList` as a function parameter, whereas `VaListImpl` was the actual `va_list` type that was correct everywhere else. This however is quite confusing, as there are lots of footguns: it is easy to cause bugs by mixing them up (e.g. the C function `void foo(va_list va)` was equivalent to the Rust `fn foo(va: VaList)` whereas the C function `void bar(va_list* va)` was equivalent to the Rust `fn foo(va: *mut VaListImpl)`, not `fn foo(va: *mut VaList)` as might be expected); also converting from `VaListImpl` to `VaList` with `as_va_list()` had platform specific behaviour: on single-element array of a struct platforms it would return a `VaList` referencing the original `VaListImpl`, whereas on other platforms it would return a cioy,
In this PR, there is now just a single `VaList` type (renamed from `VaListImpl`) which represents the C `va_list` type and will just work in all positions. Instead of having a separate type just to make the ABI work, rust-lang/rust#144529 adds a `#[rustc_pass_indirectly_in_non_rustic_abis]` attribute, which when applied to a struct will force the struct to be passed indirectly by non-Rustic calling conventions. This PR then implements the `VaList` rework, making use of the new attribute on all platforms where the C `va_list` type is a single-element array of a struct.
Cleanup of the `VaList` API and implementation is also included in this PR: since it was decided it was OK to experiment with Rust requiring that not calling `va_end` is not undefined behaviour (https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/141524#issuecomment-3028383594), I've removed the `with_copy` method as it was redundant to the `Clone` impl (the `Drop` impl of `VaList` is a no-op as `va_end` is a no-op on all known platforms).
Previous discussion: rust-lang/rust#141524 and [t-compiler > c_variadic API and ABI](https://rust-lang.zulipchat.com/#narrow/channel/131828-t-compiler/topic/c_variadic.20API.20and.20ABI)
Tracking issue: https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/44930
r? `@joshtriplett`
This was a bad idea before, but now that `size_of` and `align_of` work completely differently than when removing it was first tried in 2020, maybe it makes sense now.
(Or maybe I'll just add another attempt to the list in the comments...)
Rehome 26 `tests/ui/issues/` tests to other subdirectories under `tests/ui/` [#5 of Batch #2]
Part of rust-lang/rust#133895
Methodology:
1. Refer to the previously written `tests/ui/SUMMARY.md`
2. Find an appropriate category for the test, using the original issue thread and the test contents.
3. Add the issue URL at the bottom (not at the top, as that would mess up stderr line numbers)
4. Rename the tests to make their purpose clearer
Inspired by the methodology that Kivooeo was using.
r? ```@jieyouxu```
Only inherit local hash for paths
`DefPathHash`, as the counterpart of `DefId` that is stable across compiler invocations, is comprised of 2 parts. The first one is the `StableCrateId`, stable form of `CrateNum`. The second is 64 complementary bits to identify the crate-local definition.
The current implementation always hashes the full 128 bits when (1) trying to create a new child `DefPathHash` or (2) hashing a `CrateNum` or a `LocalDefId`. But we only need half that information: `LocalDefId` means that the `StableCrateId` is always the current crate's ; `CrateNum` means that we do not care about the local part.
As stable hashing is very hot in the query system, in particular hashing definitions, this is a big deal.
We still want the local part to change when the `StableCrateId` changes, to make incr-compilation errors less painful, ie. increase the likelihood that if will magically disappear by changing some code.
This PR sprinkles some `#[inline]` attributes on small functions that appeared in profiles.
Initial implementation of `#[feature(default_field_values]`, proposed in https://github.com/rust-lang/rfcs/pull/3681.
Support default fields in enum struct variant
Allow default values in an enum struct variant definition:
```rust
pub enum Bar {
Foo {
bar: S = S,
baz: i32 = 42 + 3,
}
}
```
Allow using `..` without a base on an enum struct variant
```rust
Bar::Foo { .. }
```
`#[derive(Default)]` doesn't account for these as it is still gating `#[default]` only being allowed on unit variants.
Support `#[derive(Default)]` on enum struct variants with all defaulted fields
```rust
pub enum Bar {
#[default]
Foo {
bar: S = S,
baz: i32 = 42 + 3,
}
}
```
Check for missing fields in typeck instead of mir_build.
Expand test with `const` param case (needs `generic_const_exprs` enabled).
Properly instantiate MIR const
The following works:
```rust
struct S<A> {
a: Vec<A> = Vec::new(),
}
S::<i32> { .. }
```
Add lint for default fields that will always fail const-eval
We *allow* this to happen for API writers that might want to rely on users'
getting a compile error when using the default field, different to the error
that they would get when the field isn't default. We could change this to
*always* error instead of being a lint, if we wanted.
This will *not* catch errors for partially evaluated consts, like when the
expression relies on a const parameter.
Suggestions when encountering `Foo { .. }` without `#[feature(default_field_values)]`:
- Suggest adding a base expression if there are missing fields.
- Suggest enabling the feature if all the missing fields have optional values.
- Suggest removing `..` if there are no missing fields.
take 2
open up coroutines
tweak the wordings
the lint works up until 2021
We were missing one case, for ADTs, which was
causing `Result` to yield incorrect results.
only include field spans with significant types
deduplicate and eliminate field spans
switch to emit spans to impl Drops
Co-authored-by: Niko Matsakis <nikomat@amazon.com>
collect drops instead of taking liveness diff
apply some suggestions and add explantory notes
small fix on the cache
let the query recurse through coroutine
new suggestion format with extracted variable name
fine-tune the drop span and messages
bugfix on runtime borrows
tweak message wording
filter out ecosystem types earlier
apply suggestions
clippy
check lint level at session level
further restrict applicability of the lint
translate bid into nop for stable mir
detect cycle in type structure
This involves lots of breaking changes. There are two big changes that
force changes. The first is that the bitflag types now don't
automatically implement normal derive traits, so we need to derive them
manually.
Additionally, bitflags now have a hidden inner type by default, which
breaks our custom derives. The bitflags docs recommend using the impl
form in these cases, which I did.
- Make temporaries in if-let guards be the same variable in MIR when
the guard is duplicated due to or-patterns.
- Change the "destruction scope" for match arms to be the arm scope rather
than the arm body scope.
- Add tests.
The `Debug` impl for `Ty` just calls the `Display` impl for `Ty`. This
is surprising and annoying. In particular, it means `Debug` doesn't show
as much information as `Debug` for `TyKind` does. And `Debug` is used in
some user-facing error messages, which seems bad.
This commit changes the `Debug` impl for `Ty` to call the `Debug` impl
for `TyKind`. It also does a number of follow-up changes to preserve
existing output, many of which involve inserting
`with_no_trimmed_paths!` calls. It also adds `Display` impls for
`UserType` and `Canonical`.
Some tests have changes to expected output:
- Those that use the `rustc_abi(debug)` attribute.
- Those that use the `EMIT_MIR` annotation.
In each case the output is slightly uglier than before. This isn't
ideal, but it's pretty weird (particularly for the attribute) that the
output is using `Debug` in the first place. They're fairly obscure
attributes (I hadn't heard of them) so I'm not worried by this.
For `async-is-unwindsafe.stderr`, there is one line that now lacks a
full path. This is a consistency improvement, because all the other
mentions of `Context` in this test lack a path.