Lower index bounds checking to `PtrMetadata`, this time with the right fake borrow semantics 😸
Change `Rvalue::RawRef` to take a `RawRefKind` instead of just a `Mutability`. Then introduce `RawRefKind::FakeForPtrMetadata` and use that for lowering index bounds checking to a `PtrMetadata`. This new `RawRefKind::FakeForPtrMetadata` acts like a shallow fake borrow in borrowck, which mimics the semantics of the old `Rvalue::Len` operation we're replacing.
We can then use this `RawRefKind` instead of using a span desugaring hack in CTFE.
cc ``@scottmcm`` ``@RalfJung``
Trim extra whitespace in fn ptr suggestion span
Trim extra whitespace when suggesting removal of invalid qualifiers when parsing function pointer type.
Fixes: #133083
---
I made a comment about the format of the diagnostic error message in https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/133083#issuecomment-2480047875. I think the `.label` may be a little redundant if the diagnostic only highlights the bad qualifier instead of the entire `TyKind::BareFn` span. If it makes sense, I can include it in this PR.
Trim extra whitespace when suggesting removal of invalid qualifiers when
parsing function pointer type.
Fixes: #133083
Signed-off-by: Tyrone Wu <wudevelops@gmail.com>
Clean up all dead files inside `tests/ui/`
While rebasing #135860 I noticed that there are several dead `*.stderr` files inside `tests/ui/`.
When I checked thoroughly, I found 69 dead `*.$revision.stderr` files, 3 other dead `*.stderr` files and one dead `*.rs` file.
Prior to #134808, compiletest's `--bless` didn't remove dead `*.stderr` files when the set of revisions changed in any way (renamings, removals, additions, …) which explains their existence.
Regarding the dead `*.rs` file, that one was located inside an `auxiliary/` directory (together with a `*.stderr` file) despite not being meant to be an auxiliary file (it's not referenced by any `//@ aux-*`, it has an accompanying `*.stderr` file and it's obvious from looking at #111056 which added it). Ideally compiletest or tidy would forbid `*.std{out,err}` files inside `auxiliary/` dirs, that would've caught it. I moved it, updated it and turned it into a proper UI test.
---
How to reproduce:
1. Run `rm tests/ui/**/*.stderr`
2. Run `./x test tests/ui --bless` (or similar)
3. Manually / semi-automatically go through all tests that were ignored (likely due to your OS etc. not matching) and restore any stderr files that were overzealously removed
---
r? compiler
Add a workaround for parallel rustc crashing when there are delayed bugs
This doesn't fix the root cause of this crash, but at least stops it from happening for the time being.
Workaround for https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/135870
Uplift `clippy::double_neg` lint as `double_negations`
Warns about cases like this:
```rust
fn main() {
let x = 1;
let _b = --x; //~ WARN use of a double negation
}
```
The intent is to keep people from thinking that `--x` is a prefix decrement operator. `++x`, `x++` and `x--` are invalid expressions and already have a helpful diagnostic.
I didn't add a machine-applicable suggestion to the lint because it's not entirely clear what the programmer was trying to achieve with the `--x` operation. The code that triggers the lint should always be reviewed manually.
Closes#82987
- `check-pass` test for a MRE of #135020
- fail test for #135138
- switch to `TooGeneric` for checking CMSE fn signatures
- switch to `TooGeneric` for compute `SizeSkeleton` (for transmute)
- fix broken tests
Fix tests on LLVM 20
For sparcv8plus.rs, duplicate the test for LLVM 19 and LLVM 20. LLVM 20 resolves one of the FIXME in the test.
For x86_64-bigint-add.rs split the check lines for LLVM 19 and LLVM 20. The difference in codegen here is due to a difference in unroll factor, which I believe is not what the test is interested in.
Fixes https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/132957.
Fixes https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/133754.
Rollup of 7 pull requests
Successful merges:
- #133631 (Support QNX 7.1 with `io-sock`+libstd and QNX 8.0 (`no_std` only))
- #134358 (compiler: Set `target_abi = "ilp32e"` on all riscv32e targets)
- #135812 (Fix GDB `OsString` provider on Windows )
- #135842 (TRPL: more backward-compatible Edition changes)
- #135946 (Remove extra whitespace from rustdoc breadcrumbs for copypasting)
- #135953 (ci.py: check the return code in `run-local`)
- #136019 (Add an `unchecked_div` alias to the `Div<NonZero<_>>` impls)
r? `@ghost`
`@rustbot` modify labels: rollup
compiler: Set `target_abi = "ilp32e"` on all riscv32e targets
This allows compile-time configuration based on this. In the near future we should do this across all RISCV targets, probably, but this cfg is essential for building software usable on these targets, and they are tier 3 so it seems less of a concern to tweak their definition thusly.
Support QNX 7.1 with `io-sock`+libstd and QNX 8.0 (`no_std` only)
Changes of this pull request:
1. Refactor code for qnx nto targets to share more code in file `nto_qnx.rs`
1. Add support for an additional network stack on nto qnx 7.1.
QNX 7.1 supports two network stacks:
1. `io-pkt`, which is default
2. `io-sock`, which is optional on 7.1 but default in QNX 8.0
As one can see in the [io-sock migration notes](https://www.qnx.com/developers/docs/7.1/index.html#com.qnx.doc.neutrino.io_sock/topic/migrate_app.html), this changes the libc API in a way similar to e.g. linux-gnu vs. linux-musl.
This change adds a new target which has a different value for `target_env`, so that e.g. libc can distinguish between both APIs.
2. Add initial support for QNX 8.0, thanks to AkhilTThomas. As it turned out, the problem with forking many processes still exists in QNX 8.0. Because if this, we are now using it for any QNX version (i.e. not check for `target_env` anymore).
Account for mutable borrow in argument suggestion
```
error: value assigned to `object` is never read
--> $DIR/mut-arg-of-borrowed-type-meant-to-be-arg-of-mut-borrow.rs:21:5
|
LL | object = &mut object2;
| ^^^^^^
|
help: you might have meant to mutate the pointed at value being passed in, instead of changing the reference in the local binding
|
LL ~ fn change_object3(object: &mut Object) {
LL |
LL | let object2 = Object;
LL ~ *object = object2;
|
```
instead of
```
error: value assigned to `object` is never read
--> $DIR/mut-arg-of-borrowed-type-meant-to-be-arg-of-mut-borrow.rs:21:5
|
LL | object = &mut object2;
| ^^^^^^
|
help: you might have meant to mutate the pointed at value being passed in, instead of changing the reference in the local binding
|
LL ~ fn change_object3(object: &mut mut Object) {
LL |
LL | let object2 = Object;
LL ~ *object = object2;
|
```
Fix#136028.
Make the wasm_c_abi future compat warning a hard error
This is the next step in getting rid of the broken C abi for wasm32-unknown-unknown.
The lint was made deny-by-default in https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/129534 3 months ago. This still keeps the `-Zwasm-c-abi` flag set to `legacy` by default. It will be flipped in a future PR.
cc https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/122532
Improve check-cfg expected names diagnostic
This PR improves the check-cfg `allow-same-level` test by ~~normalizing it's output and by~~ adding more context to the test.
It also filters the well known cfgs from the `expected names are` note, as to reduce the size of the diagnostic. Users can still find the full list on the [rustc book](https://doc.rust-lang.org/nightly/rustc/check-cfg.html#well-known-names-and-values), which is reinforced for Cargo users by adding a note in the Cargo check-cfg specific section.
Fixes https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/135995
r? `@jieyouxu`
Reword resolve errors caused by likely missing crate in dep tree
Reword label and add `help`:
```
error[E0432]: unresolved import `some_novel_crate`
--> f704.rs:1:5
|
1 | use some_novel_crate::Type;
| ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ use of unresolved module or unlinked crate `some_novel_crate`
|
= help: if you wanted to use a crate named `some_novel_crate`, use `cargo add some_novel_crate` to add it to your `Cargo.toml`
```
Fix#133137.
Skip suggestions in `derive`d code
Do not suggest
```
help: use parentheses to call these
|
5 | (callback: Rc<dyn Fn()>)(),
| + +++
```
Skip all "call function for this binop" suggestions when in a derive context.
Fix#135989.
Use short ty string for move errors
```
error[E0382]: use of moved value: `x`
--> bay.rs:14:14
|
12 | fn foo(x: D) {
| - move occurs because `x` has type `(((..., ..., ..., ...), ..., ..., ...), ..., ..., ...)`, which does not implement the `Copy` trait
13 | let _a = x;
| - value moved here
14 | let _b = x; //~ ERROR use of moved value
| ^ value used here after move
|
= note: the full type name has been written to 'bay.long-type-14349227078439097973.txt'
= note: consider using `--verbose` to print the full type name to the console
help: consider cloning the value if the performance cost is acceptable
|
13 | let _a = x.clone();
| ++++++++
```
Address 4th case in #135919.
Rename test to `unresolvable-upvar-issue-87987.rs` and add some notes
Extracted from #135756. I had to figure out what this test was trying to test, so I might as well write it down for future reference.
Properly report error when object type param default references self
I accidentally broke this error for cases where a type parameter references `Self` via a projection (i.e. `trait Foo<Arg = Self::Bar> {}`). This PR fixes that, and also makes the error a bit easier to understand.
Fixes#135918
Add `#[optimize(none)]`
cc #54882
This extends the `optimize` attribute to add `none`, which corresponds to the LLVM `OptimizeNone` attribute.
Not sure if an MCP is required for this, happy to file one if so.
```
error: value assigned to `object` is never read
--> $DIR/mut-arg-of-borrowed-type-meant-to-be-arg-of-mut-borrow.rs:21:5
|
LL | object = &mut object2;
| ^^^^^^
|
help: you might have meant to mutate the pointed at value being passed in, instead of changing the reference in the local binding
|
LL ~ fn change_object3(object: &mut Object) {
LL |
LL | let object2 = Object;
LL ~ *object = object2;
|
```
instead of
```
error: value assigned to `object` is never read
--> $DIR/mut-arg-of-borrowed-type-meant-to-be-arg-of-mut-borrow.rs:21:5
|
LL | object = &mut object2;
| ^^^^^^
|
help: you might have meant to mutate the pointed at value being passed in, instead of changing the reference in the local binding
|
LL ~ fn change_object3(object: &mut mut Object) {
LL |
LL | let object2 = Object;
LL ~ *object = object2;
|
```
Fix#136028.
Don't drop types with no drop glue when building drops for tailcalls
this is required as otherwise drops of `&mut` refs count as a usage of a
'two-phase temporary' causing an ICE.
fixes#128097
The underlying issue is that the current code generates drops for `&mut` which are later counted as a second use of a two-phase temporary:
`bat t.rs -p`
```rust
#![expect(incomplete_features)]
#![feature(explicit_tail_calls)]
fn f(x: &mut ()) {
let _y = String::new();
become f(x);
}
fn main() {}
```
`rustc t.rs -Zdump_mir=f`
```text
error: internal compiler error: compiler/rustc_borrowck/src/borrow_set.rs:298:17: found two uses for 2-phase borrow temporary _4: bb2[1] and bb3[0]
--> t.rs:6:5
|
6 | become f(x);
| ^^^^^^^^^^^
thread 'rustc' panicked at compiler/rustc_borrowck/src/borrow_set.rs:298:17:
Box<dyn Any>
stack backtrace:
[REDACTED]
error: aborting due to 1 previous error
```
`bat ./mir_dump/t.f.-------.renumber.0.mir -p -lrust`
```rust
// MIR for `f` 0 renumber
fn f(_1: &mut ()) -> () {
debug x => _1;
let mut _0: ();
let mut _2: !;
let _3: std::string::String;
let mut _4: &mut ();
scope 1 {
debug _y => _3;
}
bb0: {
StorageLive(_3);
_3 = String::new() -> [return: bb1, unwind: bb4];
}
bb1: {
FakeRead(ForLet(None), _3);
StorageLive(_4);
_4 = &mut (*_1);
drop(_3) -> [return: bb2, unwind: bb3];
}
bb2: {
StorageDead(_3);
tailcall f(Spanned { node: move _4, span: t.rs:6:14: 6:15 (#0) });
}
bb3 (cleanup): {
drop(_4) -> [return: bb4, unwind terminate(cleanup)];
}
bb4 (cleanup): {
resume;
}
}
```
Note how `_4 is moved into the tail call in `bb2` and dropped in `bb3`.
This PR adds a check that the locals we drop need dropping.
r? `@oli-obk` (feel free to reassign, I'm not sure who would be a good reviewer, but thought you might have an idea)
cc `@beepster4096,` since you wrote the original drop implementation.
Use short type string in E0308 secondary span label
We were previously printing the full type on the "this expression has type" label.
```
error[E0308]: mismatched types
--> $DIR/secondary-label-with-long-type.rs:8:9
|
LL | let () = x;
| ^^ - this expression has type `((..., ..., ..., ...), ..., ..., ...)`
| |
| expected `((..., ..., ..., ...), ..., ..., ...)`, found `()`
|
= note: expected tuple `((..., ..., ..., ...), ..., ..., ...)`
found unit type `()`
= note: the full type name has been written to '$TEST_BUILD_DIR/diagnostic-width/secondary-label-with-long-type/secondary-label-with-long-type.long-type-3987761834644699448.txt'
= note: consider using `--verbose` to print the full type name to the console
```
Reported in a comment of #135919.
Do not suggest
```
help: use parentheses to call these
|
5 | (callback: Rc<dyn Fn()>)(),
| + +++
```
Skip all "call function for this binop" suggestions when in a derive context.
Fix#135989.
```
error[E0382]: use of moved value: `x`
--> bay.rs:14:14
|
12 | fn foo(x: D) {
| - move occurs because `x` has type `(((..., ..., ..., ...), ..., ..., ...), ..., ..., ...)`, which does not implement the `Copy` trait
13 | let _a = x;
| - value moved here
14 | let _b = x; //~ ERROR use of moved value
| ^ value used here after move
|
= note: the full type name has been written to 'bay.long-type-14349227078439097973.txt'
= note: consider using `--verbose` to print the full type name to the console
help: consider cloning the value if the performance cost is acceptable
|
13 | let _a = x.clone();
| ++++++++
```
Implement `needs-subprocess` directive, and cleanup a bunch of tests to use `needs-{subprocess,threads}`
### Summary
Closes#128295.
- Implements `//@ needs-subprocess` directive in compiletest as requested in #128295. However, compiletest is a host tool, so we can't just try to spawn process because that spawns the process on *host*, not the *target*, under cross-compilation scenarios.
- The short-term solution is to add *Yet Another* list of allow-list targets.
- The long-term solution is to first check if a `$target` supports std, then try to run a binary to do run-time capability detection *on the target*. But that is tricky because you have to build-and-run a binary *for the target*.
- This PR picks the short-term solution, because the long-term solution is highly non-trivial, and it's already an improvement over individual `ignore-*`s all over the place.
- Opened an issue about the long-term solution in #135928.
- Documents `//@ needs-subprocess` in rustc-dev-guide.
- Replace `ignore-{wasm,wasm32,emscripten,sgx}` with `needs-{subprocess,threads}` where suitable in tests.
- Some drive-by test changes as I was trying to figure out if I could use `needs-{subprocess,threads}` and found some bits needlessly distracting.
Count of tests that use `ignore-{wasm,wasm32,emscripten,sgx}` before and after this PR:
| State | `ignore-sgx` | `ignore-wasm` | `ignore-emscripten` |
| - | - | - | - |
| Before this PR | 96 | 88 | 207 |
| After this PR | 36 | 38 | 61 |
<details>
<summary>Commands used to find out locally</summary>
```
--- before
[17:40] Joe:rust (fresh) | rg --no-ignore -l "ignore-sgx" tests | wc -l
96
[17:40] Joe:rust (fresh) | rg --no-ignore -l "ignore-wasm" tests | wc -l
88
[17:40] Joe:rust (fresh) | rg --no-ignore -l "ignore-emscripten" tests | wc -l
207
--- after
[17:39] Joe:rust (needs-subprocess-thread) | rg --no-ignore -l "ignore-sgx" tests | wc -l
36
[17:39] Joe:rust (needs-subprocess-thread) | rg --no-ignore -l "ignore-wasm" tests | wc -l
38
[17:39] Joe:rust (needs-subprocess-thread) | rg --no-ignore -l "ignore-emscripten" tests | wc -l
61
```
</details>
### Review advice
- Best reviewed commit-by-commit.
- Non-trivial test changes (not mechanically simple replacements) are split into individual commits to help with review. Their individual commit messages give some basic description of the changes.
- I *could* split some test changes out into another PR, but I found that I needed to change some tests to `needs-threads`, some to `needs-subprocess`, and some needed to use *both*, so they might conflict and become very annoying.
---
r? ``@ghost`` (need to run try jobs)
try-job: x86_64-msvc-1
try-job: i686-msvc-1
try-job: i686-mingw
try-job: x86_64-mingw-1
try-job: x86_64-apple-1
try-job: aarch64-apple
try-job: aarch64-gnu
try-job: test-various
try-job: armhf-gnu
Forbid usage of `hir` `Infer` const/ty variants in ambiguous contexts
The feature `generic_arg_infer` allows providing `_` as an argument to const generics in order to infer them. This introduces a syntactic ambiguity as to whether generic arguments are type or const arguments. In order to get around this we introduced a fourth `GenericArg` variant, `Infer` used to represent `_` as an argument to generic parameters when we don't know if its a type or a const argument.
This made hir visitors that care about `TyKind::Infer` or `ConstArgKind::Infer` very error prone as checking for `TyKind::Infer`s in `visit_ty` would find *some* type infer arguments but not *all* of them as they would sometimes be lowered to `GenericArg::Infer` instead.
Additionally the `visit_infer` method would previously only visit `GenericArg::Infer` not *all* infers (e.g. `TyKind::Infer`), this made it very easy to override `visit_infer` and expect it to visit all infers when in reality it would only visit *some* infers.
---
This PR aims to fix those issues by making the `TyKind` and `ConstArgKind` types generic over whether the infer types/consts are represented by `Ty/ConstArgKind::Infer` or out of line (e.g. by a `GenericArg::Infer` or accessible by overiding `visit_infer`). We then make HIR Visitors convert all const args and types to the versions where infer vars are stored out of line and call `visit_infer` in cases where a `Ty`/`Const` would previously have had a `Ty/ConstArgKind::Infer` variant:
API Summary
```rust
enum AmbigArg {}
enum Ty/ConstArgKind<Unambig = ()> {
...
Infer(Unambig),
}
impl Ty/ConstArg {
fn try_as_ambig_ty/ct(self) -> Option<Ty/ConstArg<AmbigArg>>;
}
impl Ty/ConstArg<AmbigArg> {
fn as_unambig_ty/ct(self) -> Ty/ConstArg;
}
enum InferKind {
Ty(Ty),
Const(ConstArg),
Ambig(InferArg),
}
trait Visitor {
...
fn visit_ty/const_arg(&mut self, Ty/ConstArg<AmbigArg>) -> Self::Result;
fn visit_infer(&mut self, id: HirId, sp: Span, kind: InferKind) -> Self::Result;
}
// blanket impl'd, not meant to be overriden
trait VisitorExt {
fn visit_ty/const_arg_unambig(&mut self, Ty/ConstArg) -> Self::Result;
}
fn walk_unambig_ty/const_arg(&mut V, Ty/ConstArg) -> Self::Result;
fn walk_ty/const_arg(&mut V, Ty/ConstArg<AmbigArg>) -> Self::Result;
```
The end result is that `visit_infer` visits *all* infer args and is also the *only* way to visit an infer arg, `visit_ty` and `visit_const_arg` can now no longer encounter a `Ty/ConstArgKind::Infer`. Representing this in the type system means that it is now very difficult to mess things up, either accessing `TyKind::Infer` "just works" and you won't miss *some* type infers- or it doesn't work and you have to look at `visit_infer` or some `GenericArg::Infer` which forces you to think about the full complexity involved.
Unfortunately there is no lint right now about explicitly matching on uninhabited variants, I can't find the context for why this is the case 🤷♀️
I'm not convinced the framing of un/ambig ty/consts is necessarily the right one but I'm not sure what would be better. I somewhat like calling them full/partial types based on the fact that `Ty<Partial>`/`Ty<Full>` directly specifies how many of the type kinds are actually represented compared to `Ty<Ambig>` which which leaves that to the reader to figure out based on the logical consequences of it the type being in an ambiguous position.
---
tool changes have been modified in their own commits for easier reviewing by anyone getting cc'd from subtree changes. I also attempted to split out "bug fixes arising from the refactoring" into their own commit so they arent lumped in with a big general refactor commit
Fixes#112110