More trivial tweaks
Found some really tiny nits when trying to find places that span tracking caused queries to be recomputed in incremental; these probably don't need a perf run b/c they're so simple.
r? oli-obk
style guide: add let-chain rules
Reopens#110568
refs #53667 and I suppose #132833 as well
This reflects the style rules that the style team had already agreed upon back in 2023, with the addition of literals in the lhs being permissible for single line formatting, and the removal of unnecessary language/example snippets around non-`&&` operators that was a small hiccup in the original PR.
It also reflects current formatting behavior implemented in rustfmt (though note that the adjustment to include literals has been implemented & merged, but is still pending a sync to nightly)
Make the UnifyKey and UnifyValue imports non-nightly
Explicitly depend on ena in rustc_type_ir and import types from there.
This is required for rust-analyzer to use the new solver.
r? types
fix usage of `autodiff` macro with inner functions
This PR adds additional handling into the expansion step of the `std::autodiff` macro (in `compiler/rustc_builtin_macros/src/autodiff.rs`), which allows the macro to be applied to inner functions.
```rust
#![feature(autodiff)]
use std::autodiff::autodiff;
fn main() {
#[autodiff(d_inner, Forward, Dual, DualOnly)]
fn inner(x: f32) -> f32 {
x * x
}
}
```
Previously, the compiler didn't allow this due to only handling `Annotatable::Item` and `Annotatable::AssocItem` and missing the handling of `Annotatable::Stmt`. This resulted in the rather generic error
```
error: autodiff must be applied to function
--> src/main.rs:6:5
|
6 | / fn inner(x: f32) -> f32 {
7 | | x * x
8 | | }
| |_____^
error: could not compile `enzyme-test` (bin "enzyme-test") due to 1 previous error
```
This issue was originally reported [here](https://github.com/EnzymeAD/rust/issues/184).
Quick question: would it make sense to add a ui test to ensure there is no regression on this?
This is my first contribution, so I'm extra grateful for any piece of feedback!! :D
r? `@oli-obk`
Tracking issue for autodiff: #124509
Replace last `usize` -> `ptr` transmute in `alloc` with strict provenance API
This replaces the `usize -> ptr` transmute in `RawVecInner::new_in` with a strict provenance API (`NonNull::without_provenance`).
The API is changed to take an `Alignment` which encodes the non-null constraint needed for `Unique` and allows us to do the construction safely.
Two internal-only APIs were added to let us avoid UB-checking in this hot code: `Layout::alignment` to get the `Alignment` type directly rather than as a `usize`, and `Unique::from_non_null` to create `Unique` in const context without a transmute.
- fix errors caused by the move of `ast::Item::ident` (see #138740)
- move the logic of getting `sig`, `vis`, and `ident` from two seperate
`match` statements into one (less repetition especially with the
nested `match`)
Add `*_value` methods to proc_macro lib
This is the (re-)implementation of https://github.com/rust-lang/libs-team/issues/459.
It allows to get the actual value (unescaped) of the different string literals.
It was originally done in https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/136355 but it broke the artifacts build so we decided to move the crate to crates.io to go around this limitation.
Part of https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/136652.
Considering this is a copy-paste of the originally approved PR, no need to go through the whole process again. \o/
r? `@Urgau`
Trusty: Implement `write_vectored` for stdio
Currently, `write` for stdout and stderr on Trusty is implemented with the semantics of `write_all`. Instead, call the underlying syscall only once in `write` and use the default implementation of `write_all` like other platforms. Also, implement `write_vectored` by adding support for `IoSlice`.
Refactor stdin to reuse the unsupported type like https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/136769.
It requires #138875 to fix the build for Trusty, though they do not conflict and can merge in either order.
cc `@randomPoison`
Optimize slice {Chunks,Windows}::nth
I've noticed that the `nth` functions on slice iters had non-optimized-out bounds checks.
The new implementation even generates branchless code.
Refactor Apple version handling in the compiler
Move various Apple version handling code in the compiler out `rustc_codegen_ssa` and into a place where it can be accessed by `rustc_attr_parsing`, which I found to be necessary when doing https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/136867. Thought I'd split it out to make it easier to land, and to make further changes like https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/131477 have fewer conflicts / PR dependencies.
There should be no functional changes in this PR.
`@rustbot` label O-apple
r? rust-lang/compiler
Rollup of 3 pull requests
Successful merges:
- #139123 (tidy: Fix paths to `coretests` and `alloctests`)
- #139347 (Only build `rust_test_helpers` for `{incremental,ui}` test suites)
- #139438 (Prevent a test from seeing forbidden numbers in the rustc version)
r? `@ghost`
`@rustbot` modify labels: rollup
Prevent a test from seeing forbidden numbers in the rustc version
The final CHECK-NOT directive in this test was able to see past the end of the enclosing function, and find the substring `753` or `754` in the git hash in the rustc version number, causing false failures in CI whenever the git hash happens to contain those digits in sequence.
Adding an explicit check for `ret` prevents the CHECK-NOT directive from seeing past the end of the function.
---
Manually tested by adding `// CHECK-NOT: rustc` after the existing CHECK-NOT directives, and demonstrating that the new check prevents it from seeing the rustc version string.
Only build `rust_test_helpers` for `{incremental,ui}` test suites
Only build `rust_test_helpers` for `{incremental,ui}` test suites.
Context: Trying to see what test suites actually need `rust_test_helpers`, because this was causing unnecessary local failures when trying to run `./x test tests/run-make --target=wasm32-unknown-unknown` when `run-make` tests don't need `rust_test_helpers` at all.
r? `@ghost`
try-job: armhf-gnu
try-job: test-various
try-job: x86_64-apple-1
try-job: aarch64-apple
try-job: x86_64-msvc-1
try-job: i686-msvc-1
try-job: x86_64-mingw-1
try-job: i686-mingw-1
tidy: Fix paths to `coretests` and `alloctests`
Following `#135937` and `#136642`, tests for core and alloc are in coretests and alloctests. Fix tidy to lint for the new paths. Also, update comments referring to the old locations.
Some context for changes which don't match that pattern:
- `library/std/src/thread/local/dynamic_tests.rs` and `library/std/src/sync/mpsc/sync_tests.rs` were moved under `library/std/tests/` in 332fb7e6f1 (Move std::thread_local unit tests to integration tests, 2025-01-17) and b8ae372e48 (Move std::sync unit tests to integration tests, 2025-01-17), respectively, so are no longer special cases.
- There never was a `library/core/tests/fmt.rs` file. That comment previously referred to `src/test/ui/ifmt.rs`, which was folded into `library/alloc/tests/fmt.rs` in 949c96660c (move format! interface tests, 2020-09-08).
Now, the only matches for `(alloc|core)/tests` are in `compiler/rustc_codegen_{cranelift,gcc}/patches`. I don't know why CI hasn't broken because those patches can't apply. Or maybe they somehow still can apply?
r? `@bjorn3`
The final CHECK-NOT directive in this test was able to see past the end of the
enclosing function, and find the substring 753 or 754 in the git hash in the
rustc version number, causing false failures in CI.
Adding an explicit check for `ret` prevents the CHECK-NOT directive from seeing
past the end of the function.
In `simplify_repeated_aggregate`, don't test first element against itself
r? `@saethlin`
Noticed that in `InstSimplifyContext::simplify_repeated_aggregate`, we're accidentally evaluating the first element's value twice, and then comparing it with itself, instead of just checking whether the rest of the elements are equal to the first one.
This will probably save very few cycles, but since `InstSimplify` is always enabled, this might improve perf by a bit.
Update the minimum external LLVM to 19
With this change, we'll have stable support for LLVM 19 and 20.
For reference, the previous increase to LLVM 18 was #130487.
cc `@rust-lang/wg-llvm`
r? nikic
Following `#135937` and `#136642`, tests for core and alloc are in
coretests and alloctests. Fix tidy to lint for the new paths. Also,
update comments referring to the old locations.
Some context for changes which don't match that pattern:
* library/std/src/thread/local/dynamic_tests.rs and
library/std/src/sync/mpsc/sync_tests.rs were moved under
library/std/tests/ in 332fb7e6f1 (Move std::thread_local unit tests
to integration tests, 2025-01-17) and b8ae372e48 (Move std::sync unit
tests to integration tests, 2025-01-17), respectively, so are no
longer special cases.
* There never was a library/core/tests/fmt.rs file. That comment
previously referred to src/test/ui/ifmt.rs, which was folded into
library/alloc/tests/fmt.rs in 949c96660c (move format! interface
tests, 2020-09-08).
StableMIR: Prepare for refactoring
Temporarily make `stable_mir` "parasitic" on the `rustc_smir` crate.
It aims to resolve the circular dependency that would arise if we directly invert the dependency order between `rustc_smir` and `stable_mir`.
Once the refactoring is complete (`rustc_smir` does not depend on `stable_mir`), we will migrate it back to the `stable_mir` crate. See more details: [here](https://hackmd.io/jBRkZLqAQL2EVgwIIeNMHg).
Rename internal module from `statik` to `no_threads`
This module is named in reference to the keyword, but the term is somewhat overloaded. Rename it to more clearly describe it and avoid the misspelling.
Fix `ProvenVia` for global where clauses
When we're merging one (or more) global where clauses in the presence of no other candidates, ensure that we return `TraitGoalProvenVia::ParamEnv` so that rigid projections work correctly. This fixes some tests with `feature(trivial_bounds)`.
Fixes#139408
Fix missing const for inherent pointer `replace` methods
`ptr::replace` (the free fn) is already const stable. However, there are inherent convenience methods on `*mut T` and `NonNull<T>`, allowing you to write eg. `unsafe { foo.replace(bar) }` where `foo` is `*mut T` or `NonNull<T>`.
It seems const was never added to the inherent method (likely oversight), so this PR adds it.
I don't believe this needs another[^1] FCP as the inherent methods are already stable and `ptr::replace` is already const stable, so this adds no new API.
Original tracking issue: #83164
`ptr::replace` constified in #83091
`ptr::replace` const stabilized in #130954
[^1]: `const_replace` FCP completed: https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/83164#issuecomment-2385670050
Folder experiment: Micro-optimize RegionEraserVisitor
**NOTE:** This is one of a series of perf experiments that I've come up with while sick in bed. I'm assigning them to lqd b/c you're a good reviewer and you'll hopefully be awake when these experiments finish, lol.
r? lqd
The region eraser is very hot, so let's see if we can avoid erasing types (and visiting consts and preds that don't have region-ful types) unnecessarily.