Fix: non_exhaustive_omitted_patterns by filtering unstable and doc hidden variants
Fixes: #89042
Now that #86809 has been merged there are cases (std::io::ErrorKind) where unstable feature gated variants were included in warning/error messages when the feature was not turned on. This filters those variants out of the return of `SplitWildcard::new`.
Variants marked `doc(hidden)` are filtered out of the witnesses list in `Usefulness::apply_constructor`.
Probably worth a perf run 🤷 since this area can be sensitive.
Add test cases for unstable variants
Add test cases for doc hidden variants
Move is_doc_hidden to method on TyCtxt
Add unstable variants test to reachable-patterns ui test
Rename reachable-patterns -> omitted-patterns
Add #[must_use] to From::from and Into::into
Risk of churn: **High**
Magic 8-Ball says: **Outlook not so good**
I figured I'd put this out there. If we don't do it now maybe we save it for a rainy day.
Parent issue: #89692
r? `@joshtriplett`
Fix function-names test for GDB 10.1
This PR updates the test output in `src/test/debuginfo/function-names.rs` for GDB 10.1.
This should fix issue https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/89750 -- but not the underlying problem of CI ignoring tests if not viable debugger happens to be present.
Ignore type of projections for upvar capturing
Fix#89606
Ignore type of projections for upvar capturing. Originally HashMap is used, and the hash/eq implementation of Place takes the type of projections into account. These types may differ by lifetime which causes #89606 to ICE.
I originally considered erasing regions but `place.ty()` is used when creating upvar tuple type, more than just serving as a key type, so I switched to a linear comparison with custom eq (`compare_place_ignore_ty`) instead.
r? `@wesleywiser`
`@rustbot` label +T-compiler
Add enum_intrinsics_non_enums lint
There is a clippy lint to prevent calling [`mem::discriminant`](https://doc.rust-lang.org/std/mem/fn.discriminant.html) with a non-enum type. I think the lint is worthy of being included in rustc, given that `discriminant::<T>()` where `T` is a non-enum has an unspecified return value, and there are no valid use cases where you'd actually want this.
I've also made the lint check [variant_count](https://doc.rust-lang.org/core/mem/fn.variant_count.html) (#73662).
closes#83899
Add #[must_use] to alloc constructors
Added `#[must_use]`. to the various forms of `new`, `pin`, and `with_capacity` in the `alloc` crate. No extra explanations given as I couldn't think of anything useful to add.
I figure this deserves extra scrutiny compared to the other PRs I've done so far. In particular:
* The 4 `pin`/`pin_in` methods I touched. Are there legitimate use cases for pinning and not using the result? Pinning's a difficult concept I'm not very comfortable with.
* `Box`'s constructors. Do people ever create boxes just for the side effects... allocating or zeroing out memory?
Parent issue: #89692
r? ``@joshtriplett``
Create more accurate debuginfo for vtables.
Before this PR all vtables would have the same name (`"vtable"`) in debuginfo. Now they get an unambiguous name that identifies the implementing type and the trait that is being implemented.
This is only one of several possible improvements:
- This PR describes vtables as arrays of `*const u8` pointers. It would nice to describe them as structs where function pointer is represented by a field with a name indicative of the method it maps to. However, this requires coming up with a naming scheme that avoids clashes between methods with the same name (which is possible if the vtable contains multiple traits).
- The PR does not update the debuginfo we generate for the vtable-pointer field in a fat `dyn` pointer. Right now there does not seem to be an easy way of getting ahold of a vtable-layout without also knowing the concrete self-type of a trait object.
r? `@wesleywiser`
Cleanup src/test/ui/{simd,simd-intrinsic}
Initial motivation was to simplify a huge macro expansion using a tuple, since we can just use an array in `#[repr(simd)]` now for the same result. But also, several tests were going unnoticed during development of SIMD intrinsics because people kept looking in the wrong directory, and many are basically run-pass vs. build-fail versions of the same tests, so let's keep them close together and simplify their names, so they're easier to sift through.
Show detailed expected/found types in error message when trait paths are the same
Fixes#65230.
### Issue solved by this PR
```rust
trait T {
type U;
fn f(&self) -> Self::U;
}
struct X<'a>(&'a mut i32);
impl<'a> T for X<'a> {
type U = &'a i32;
fn f(&self) -> Self::U {
self.0
}
}
fn main() {}
```
Compiler generates the following note:
```
note: ...so that the types are compatible
--> test.rs:10:28
|
10 | fn f(&self) -> Self::U {
| ____________________________^
11 | | self.0
12 | | }
| |_____^
= note: expected `T`
found `T`
```
This note is not useful since the expected type and the found type are the same.
### How this PR solve the issue
When the expected type and the found type are exactly the same in string representation, the note falls back to the detailed string representation of trait ref:
```
note: ...so that the types are compatible
--> test.rs:10:28
|
10 | fn f(&self) -> Self::U {
| ____________________________^
11 | | self.0
12 | | }
| |_____^
= note: expected `<X<'a> as T>`
found `<X<'_> as T>`
```
So that a user can notice what was different between the expected one and the found one.
Refactor fingerprint reconstruction
This PR replaces can_reconstruct_query_key with fingerprint_style, which returns the style of the fingerprint for that query. This allows us to avoid trying to extract a DefId (or equivalent) from keys which *are* reconstructible because they're () but not as DefIds.
This is done with the goal of fixing -Zdump-dep-graph, which seems to have broken a while ago (I didn't try to bisect). Currently even on a `fn main() {}` file it'll ICE (you need to also pass -Zquery-dep-graph for it to work at all), and this patch indirectly fixes the cause of that ICE. This also adds a test for it continuing to work.
rustc_driver: Enable the `WARN` log level by default
This commit changes the `tracing_subscriber` initialization in
`rustc_driver` so that the `WARN` verbosity level is enabled by default
when the `RUSTC_LOG` env variable is empty. If the `RUSTC_LOG` env
variable is set, the filter string in the environment variable is
honored, instead.
Fixes#76824Closes#89623
cc ``@eddyb,`` ``@oli-obk``
Actually add the feature to the lints ui test
Add tracking issue to the feature declaration
Rename feature gate to non_exhaustive_omitted_patterns_lint
Add more omitted_patterns lint feature gate
Don't normalize xform_ret_ty during method candidate assembly
Fixes https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/85671
Normalizing the return type of a method candidate together with the expected receiver type of the method can lead to valid method candidates being rejected during probing. Specifically in the example of the fixed issue we have a `self_ty` of the form `&A<&[Coef]>` whereas the `impl_ty` of the method would be `&A<_>`, if we normalize the projection in the return type we unify the inference variable with `Cont`, which will lead us to reject the candidate in the sup type check in `consider_probe`. Since we don't actually need the normalized return type during candidate assembly, we postpone the normalization until we consider candidates in `consider_probe`.
Prevent error reporting from outputting a recursion error if it finds an ambiguous trait impl during suggestions
Closes#89275
This fixes the compiler reporting a recursion error during another already in progress error by trying to make a conversion method suggestion and encounters ambiguous trait implementations that can convert a the original type into a type that can then be recursively converted into itself via another method in the trait.
Updated OverflowError struct to be an enum so I could differentiate between passes - it's no longer a ZST but I don't think that should be a problem as they only generate when there's an error in compiling code anyway
Turn vtable_allocation() into a query
This PR removes the untracked vtable-const-allocation cache from the `tcx` and turns the `vtable_allocation()` method into a query.
The change is pretty straightforward and should be backportable without too much effort.
Fixes https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/89598.
Before this commit all vtables would have the same name "vtable" in
debuginfo. Now they get a name that identifies the implementing type
and the trait that is being implemented.
Correct decoding of foreign expansions during incr. comp.
Fixes https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/74946
The original issue was due to a wrong assertion in `expn_hash_to_expn_id`.
The secondary issue was due to a mismatch between the encoding and decoding paths for expansions that are created after the TyCtxt is created.
Implement `#[link_ordinal(n)]`
Allows the use of `#[link_ordinal(n)]` with `#[link(kind = "raw-dylib")]`, allowing Rust to link against DLLs that export symbols by ordinal rather than by name. As long as the ordinal matches, the name of the function in Rust is not required to match the name of the corresponding function in the exporting DLL.
Part of #58713.