When projecting associate types for a trait's default methods, the
trait itself was added to the predicate candidate list twice: one from
parameter environment, the other from trait definition. Then the
duplicates were deemed as code ambiguity and the compiler rejected the
code. Simply checking and dropping the duplicates solves the issue.
Closes#22036
As the function comment already says, the types generated in the
foreign_signture function don't necessarily match the types used for a
corresponding rust function. Therefore we can't just use these types to
guide the translation of the wrapper function that bridges between the
external ABI and the rust ABI. Instead, we can query LLVM about the
types used in the rust function and use those to generate an appropriate
wrapper.
Fixes#21454
As the function comment already says, the types generated in the
foreign_signture function don't necessarily match the types used for a
corresponding rust function. Therefore we can't just use these types to
guide the translation of the wrapper function that bridges between the
external ABI and the rust ABI. Instead, we can query LLVM about the
types used in the rust function and use those to generate an appropriate
wrapper.
Fixes#21454
Crate types from multiple sources appear to be deduplicated properly, but not
deduplicated if they come from the command line arguments. At worst, this used
to cause compiler failures when `--crate-type=lib,rlib` (the same as
`--crate-type=rlib,rlib`, at least at the time of this commit) is provided and
generate the output multiple times otherwise.
r? @alexcrichton
- c-link-to-rust-staticlib: use `EXTRACFLAGS` defined by tools.mk for
choose the good libraries to link to.
tools.mk define a variable `EXTRACFLAGS` that contains the needed library per target. So it is better to use it, instead of duplicate the code here. I keep the `ifndef IS_WINDOWS` has tools.mk define something for WINDOWS... so I don't change things that I couldn't test.
- no-stack-check: disabled for openbsd (no segmented stacks here)
- symbols-are-reasonable: use portable grep pattern
- target-specs: use POSIX form for options when invoking grep
- use-extern-for-plugins: disable as OpenBSD only support x86_64 for now
Given `<expr> as Box<Trait>`, infer that `Box<_>` is expected type for `<expr>`.
This is useful for addressing fallout from newly proposed box protocol; see #22006 for examples of such fallout, much of which will be unnecessary with this fix.
Simplify cache selection by just using the local cache whenever there
are any where-clauses at all. This seems to be the simplest possible
rule and will (hopefully!) put an end to these annoying "cache leak"
bugs. Fixes#22019.
r? @aturon
```rust
#[plugin] #[no_link] extern crate bleh;
```
becomes a crate attribute
```rust
#![plugin(bleh)]
```
The feature gate is still required.
It's almost never correct to link a plugin into the resulting library / executable, because it will bring all of libsyntax and librustc with it. However if you really want this behavior, you can get it with a separate `extern crate` item in addition to the `plugin` attribute.
Fixes#21043.
Fixes#20769.
[breaking-change]
#[plugin] #[no_link] extern crate bleh;
becomes a crate attribute
#![plugin(bleh)]
The feature gate is still required.
It's almost never correct to link a plugin into the resulting library /
executable, because it will bring all of libsyntax and librustc with it.
However if you really want this behavior, you can get it with a separate
`extern crate` item in addition to the `plugin` attribute.
Fixes#21043.
Fixes#20769.
[breaking-change]
Crate types from multiple sources appear to be deduplicated properly, but not
deduplicated if they come from the command line arguments. At worst, this used
to cause compiler failures when `--crate-type=lib,rlib` (the same as
`--crate-type=rlib,rlib`, at least at the time of this commit) is provided and
generate the output multiple times otherwise.
Makes the compilation abort when a parse error is encountered while
trying to parse an item in an included file. The previous behaviour was
to stop processing the file when a token that can't start an item was
encountered, without producing any error. Fixes#21146.
- c-link-to-rust-staticlib: use EXTRACFLAGS defined by tools.mk for
choose the good libraries to link to.
- no-stack-check: disabled for openbsd (no segmented stacks here)
- symbols-are-reasonable: use portable grep pattern
- target-specs: use POSIX form for options when invoking grep
- use-extern-for-plugins: disable as OpenBSD only support x86_64 for now
This PR moves all `compile-fail` tests that fail at the parsing stage to a `parse-fail` directory, in order to use the tests in the `parse-fail` directory to test if the new LALR parser rejects the same files as the Rust parser. I also adjusted the `testparser.py` script to handle the tests in `parse-fail` differently.
However during working on this, I discovered, that Rust's parser sometimes fails during parsing, but does not return a nonzero return code, e.g. compiling `/test/compile-fail/doc-before-semi.rs` with `-Z parse-only` prints an error message, but returns status code 0. Compiling the same file without `-Z parse-only`, the same error message is displayed, but error code 101 returned. I'll look into that over the next week.
Fixes#21833.
[breaking-change]
r? @alexcrichton
The tests in #21912 will also need `#[feature(no_std)]`. If you're okay with both PRs, I can merge and test them.
make `for PAT in ITER_EXPR { ... }` a terminating-scope for ITER_EXPR.
In effect, temporary anonymous values created during the evaluation of ITER_EXPR no longer not live for the entirety of the block surrounding the for-loop; instead they only live for the extent of the for-loop itself, and no longer.
----
There is one case I know of that this breaks, demonstrated to me by @nikomatsakis (but it is also a corner-case that is useless in practice). Here is that case:
```
fn main() {
let mut foo: Vec<&i8> = Vec::new();
for i in &[1, 2, 3] { foo.push(i) }
}
```
Note that if you add any code following the for-loop above, or even a semicolon to the end of it, then the code will stop compiling (i.e., it gathers a vector of references but the gathered vector cannot actually be used.)
(The above code, despite being useless, did occur in one run-pass test by accident; that test is updated here to accommodate the new striction.)
----
So, technically this is a:
[breaking-change]
Makes the compilation abort when a parse error is encountered while
trying to parse an item in an included file. The previous behaviour was
to stop processing the file when a token that can't start an item was
encountered, without producing any error. Fixes#21146.
Revised version of PR #21930.
Restrictions on moves into and out-from fixed-length arrays.
(There was only one use of this "feature" in the compiler source.)
Note 1: the change to the error message in tests/compile-fail/borrowck-use-in-index-lvalue.rs, where we now report that *w is uninitialized (rather than w), was unintended fallout from the implementation strategy used here. The change appears harmless to me, but I welcome advice on how to bring back the old message, which was slightly cleaner (i.e. less unintelligible) since that the syntactic form *w does not actually appear in the source text.
Note 2: the move out-from restriction to only apply to expr[i], and not destructuring bind (e.g. f([a, b, c]: Array) { ... }) since the latter is compatible with nonzeroing drop, AFAICT.
[breaking-change]
Note that the change to the error message in
borrowck-use-in-index-lvalue.rs, where we report that `*w` is
uninitialized rather than `w`, was unintended fallout from the
implementation strategy used here.
The change appears harmless to me, but I welcome advice on how to
bring back the old message, which was slightly cleaner (i.e. less
unintelligible).
----
drive-by: revise compile-fail/borrowck-vec-pattern-move-tail to make
it really clear that there is a conflict that must be signaled.
(A hypothetical future version of Rust might be able to accept the
prior version of the code, since the previously updated index was not
actually aliased.)
The compiler would previously fall back to using `-L` and normal lookup paths if
a `--extern` path was specified but it did not match (wrong architecture, for
example). This commit removes this behavior and forces the hand of the crate
loader to *always* use the `--extern` path if specified, no matter whether it is
correct or not.
This fixes a bug today where the compiler's own libraries are favored in cross
compilation by accident. For example when a crate using the crates.io version of
`log` was cross compiled, Cargo would compile `log` for the target architecture.
When loading the macros, however, the compiler currently favors using the *host*
architecture (for plugins), and because the `--extern log=...` pointed at an
rlib for the target architecture, that lookup failed. The crate loader then
fell back on `-L` paths to find the compiler-used `log` crate (the wrong one!)
and then a compile failure happened because the logging macros are slightly
different.
Add special error for this case and help message `please recompile this crate using --crate-type lib`, also list found candidates.
See issue #14416
r? @alexcrichton
closes#21630
Overloaded indexing (`&[mut] foo[bar]`) only works when `<Self as Index>::Output` is the same as `<Self as IndexMut>::Output` (see issue above). To restrict implementations of `IndexMut` that doesn't work, this PR makes `IndexMut` a supertrait over `Index`, i.e. `trait IndexMut<I>: Index<I>`, just like in the `trait DerefMut: Deref` case.
This breaks all downstream implementations of `IndexMut`, in most cases this simply means removing the `type Output = ..` bit, which is now redundant, from `IndexMut` implementations:
``` diff
impl Index<Foo> for Bar {
type Output = Baz;
..
}
impl IndexMut<Foo> for Bar {
- type Output = Baz;
..
}
```
[breaking-change]
---
r? @nikomatsakis