Split-up stability_index query
This PR aims to move deprecation and stability processing away from the monolithic `stability_index` query, and directly implement `lookup_{deprecation,stability,body_stability,const_stability}` queries.
The basic idea is to:
- move per-attribute sanity checks into `check_attr.rs`;
- move attribute compatibility checks into the `MissingStabilityAnnotations` visitor;
- progressively dismantle the `Annotator` visitor and the `stability_index` query.
The first commit contains functional change, and now warns when `#[automatically_derived]` is applied on a non-trait impl block. The other commits should not change visible behaviour.
Perf in https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/143845#issuecomment-3066308630 shows small but consistent improvement, except for unused-warnings case. That case being a stress test, I'm leaning towards accepting the regression.
This PR changes `check_attr`, so has a high conflict rate on that file. This should not cause issues for review.
Make slice comparisons const
This needed a fix for `derive_const`, too, as it wasn't usable in libcore anymore as trait impls need const stability attributes. I think we can't use the same system as normal trait impls while `const_trait_impl` is still unstable.
r? ```@fee1-dead```
cc rust-lang/rust#143800
type_id_eq: check that the hash fully matches the type
The previous logic wouldn't always detect when the hash mismatches the provenance. Fix that by adding a new helper, `read_type_id`, that reads a single type ID while fully checking it for validity and consistency.
r? ``@oli-obk``
trait_sel: `MetaSized` always holds temporarily
As a temporary measure while a proper fix for `tests/ui/sized-hierarchy/incomplete-inference-issue-143992.rs` is implemented, make `MetaSized` obligations always hold. In effect, temporarily reverting the `sized_hierarchy` feature. This is a small change that can be backported.
cc rust-lang/rust#143992
r? ```@lcnr```
Constify `Index` traits
tracking issue: rust-lang/rust#143775
the `SliceIndex` trait cannot be implemented by users as it is sealed. While it would be useful for the `get` method on slices, it seems weird to have a feature gate for that that isn't also gating index syntax at the same time, so I put them under the same feature gate.
r? ```````@fee1-dead```````
As a temporary measure while a proper fix for
`tests/ui/sized-hierarchy/incomplete-inference-issue-143992.rs`
is implemented, make `MetaSized` obligations always hold. In effect,
temporarily reverting the `sized_hierarchy` feature. This is a small
change that can be backported.
New tracking issues for const_ops and const_cmp
Let's do a clean start with new tracking issues to avoid mixing things up with the previous constification.
I assume the fact that the `PartialEq` *trait* and *impls* used different feature names was a mistake (the feature name on the impl is entirely irrelevant anyway).
Part of https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/143800, https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/143802
r? ``@oli-obk``
`tests/ui`: A New Order [27/N]
> [!NOTE]
>
> Intermediate commits are intended to help review, but will be squashed prior to merge.
Some `tests/ui/` housekeeping, to trim down number of tests directly under `tests/ui/`. Part of rust-lang/rust#133895.
r? ``@tgross35``
Rework borrowing suggestions to use `Expr` instead of just `Span`
In the suggestion machinery for borrowing expressions and types, always use the available obligation `Span` to find the appropriate `Expr` to perform appropriateness checks no the `ExprKind` instead of on the textual snippet corresponding to the `Span`. (We were already doing this, but only for a subset of cases.) This now better handles situations where parentheses and `<>` are needed for correct syntax (`&(foo + bar)`, `(&foo).bar()`, `<&Foo>::bar()`, etc.).
Unify the logic for the case where `&` *and* `&mut` are appropriate with the logic for only one of those cases. (Instead of having two branches for emitting the suggestion, we now have a single one, using `Diag::multipart_suggestions` always.)
Handle the case when `S::foo()` should have been `<&S>::foo()` (instead of suggesting the prior `&S::foo()`. Fixrust-lang/rust#143393.
Make `Diag::multipart_suggestions` always verbose. CC rust-lang/rust#141973.
Constify `Fn*` traits
r? `@compiler-errors` `@fee1-dead`
this should unlock a few things. A few `const_closures` tests have broken even more than before, but that feature is marked as incomplete anyway
cc rust-lang/rust#67792
In the suggestion machinery for borrowing expressions and types, always use the available obligation `Span` to find the appropriate `Expr` to perform appropriateness checks no the `ExprKind` instead of on the textual snippet corresponding to the `Span`.
Unify the logic for the case where `&` *and* `&mut` are appropriate with the logic for only one of those cases.
Handle the case when `S::foo()` should have been `<&S>::foo()` (instead of suggesting the prior `&S::foo()`.
Rollup of 12 pull requests
Successful merges:
- rust-lang/rust#136801 (Implement `Random` for tuple)
- rust-lang/rust#141867 (Describe Future invariants more precisely)
- rust-lang/rust#142760 (docs(fs): Touch up grammar on lock api)
- rust-lang/rust#143181 (Improve testing and error messages for malformed attributes)
- rust-lang/rust#143210 (`tests/ui`: A New Order [19/N] )
- rust-lang/rust#143212 (`tests/ui`: A New Order [20/N])
- rust-lang/rust#143230 ([COMPILETEST-UNTANGLE 2/N] Make some compiletest errors/warnings/help more visually obvious)
- rust-lang/rust#143240 (Port `#[rustc_object_lifetime_default]` to the new attribute parsing …)
- rust-lang/rust#143255 (Do not enable LLD by default in the dist profile)
- rust-lang/rust#143262 (mir: Mark `Statement` and `BasicBlockData` as `#[non_exhaustive]`)
- rust-lang/rust#143269 (bootstrap: make comment more clear)
- rust-lang/rust#143279 (Remove `ItemKind::descr` method)
Failed merges:
- rust-lang/rust#143237 (Port `#[no_implicit_prelude]` to the new attribute parsing infrastructure)
r? `@ghost`
`@rustbot` modify labels: rollup
`tests/ui`: A New Order [20/N]
> [!NOTE]
>
> Intermediate commits are intended to help review, but will be squashed prior to merge.
Some `tests/ui/` housekeeping, to trim down number of tests directly under `tests/ui/`. Part of rust-lang/rust#133895.
r? `@tgross35`
Start moving wf checking away from HIR
I'm trying to only access the HIR in the error path. My hope is that once we move significant portions of wfcheck off HIR that incremental will be able to cache wfcheck queries significantly better.
I think I am reaching a blocker because we normally need to provide good spans to `ObligationCause`, so that the trait solver can report good errors. In some cases I have been able to use bad spans and improve them depending on the `ObligationCauseCode` (by loading HIR in the case where we actually want to error). To scale that further we'll likely need to remove spans from the `ObligationCause` entirely (leaving it to some variants of `ObligationCauseCode` to have a span when they can't recompute the information later). Unsure this is the right approach, but we've already been using it. I will create an MCP about it, but that should not affect this PR, which is fairly limited in where it does those kind of tricks.
Especially b862d8828e is interesting here, because I think it improves spans in all cases
const checks for lifetime-extended temporaries: avoid 'top-level scope' terminology
This error recently got changed in https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/140942 to use the terminology of "top-level scope", but after further discussion in https://github.com/rust-lang/reference/pull/1865 it seems the reference will not be using that terminology after all. So let's also remove it from the compiler again, and let's focus on what actually happens with these temporaries: their lifetime is extended until the end of the program.
r? ``@oli-obk`` ``@traviscross``
Normalize before computing ConstArgHasType goal in new solver
This is a fix for rust-lang/rust#139905. See the description I left in the test.
I chose to fix this by normalizing the type before matching on its `.kind()` in `compute_const_arg_has_type_goal` (since it feels somewhat consistent with how we normalize types before assembling their candidates, for example); however, there are several other solutions that come to mind for fixing this ICE:
1. (this solution)
2. Giving `ConstKind::Error` a proper type, like `ConstKind::Value`, so that consts don't go from failing to passing `ConstArgHasType` goals after normalization (i.e. `UNEVALUATED` would normalize into a `ConstKind::Error(_, bool)` type rather than losing its type altogether).
3. Just suppressing the errors and accepting the fact that goals can go from fail->pass after normalization.
Thoughts? Happy to discuss this fix further.
r? `@BoxyUwU`
New const traits syntax
This PR only affects the AST and doesn't actually change anything semantically.
All occurrences of `~const` outside of libcore have been replaced by `[const]`. Within libcore we have to wait for rustfmt to be bumped in the bootstrap compiler. This will happen "automatically" (when rustfmt is run) during the bootstrap bump, as rustfmt converts `~const` into `[const]`. After this we can remove the `~const` support from the parser
Caveat discovered during impl: there is no legacy bare trait object recovery for `[const] Trait` as that snippet in type position goes down the slice /array parsing code and will error
r? ``@fee1-dead``
cc ``@nikomatsakis`` ``@traviscross`` ``@compiler-errors``