They used to be covered by `optin_builtin_traits` but negative impls
are now applicable to all traits, not just auto traits.
This also adds docs in the unstable book for the current state of auto traits.
Use smaller discriminants for generators
Closes https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/69815
I'm not yet sure about the runtime performance impact of this, so I'll try running this on some benchmarks (if I can find any). (Update: No impact on the benchmarks I've measured on)
* [x] Add test with a generator that has exactly 256 total states
* [x] Add test with a generator that has more than 256 states so that it needs to use a u16 discriminant
* [x] Add tests for the size of `Option<[generator]>`
* [x] Add tests for the `discriminant_value` intrinsic in all cases
Don't store locals in generators that are immediately overwritten with the resume argument
This fixes https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/69672 and makes https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/69033 pass the async fn size tests again (in other words, there will be no size regression of async fn if both this and https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/69033 land).
~~This is a small botch and I'd rather have a more precise analysis, but that seems much harder to pull off, so this special-cases `Yield` terminators that store the resume argument into a simple local (ie. without any field projections) and explicitly marks that local as "not live" in the suspend point of that yield. We know that this local does not need to be stored in the generator for this suspend point because the next resume would immediately overwrite it with the passed-in resume argument anyways. The local might still end up in the state if it is used across another yield.~~ (this now properly updates the dataflow framework to handle this case)
Address inconsistency in using "is" with "declared here"
"is" was generally used for NLL diagnostics, but not other diagnostics. Using "is" makes the diagnostics sound more natural and readable, so it seems sensible to commit to them throughout.
r? @Centril