Commit graph

2496 commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Nicholas Nethercote
f27cab806e Use Option<Ident> for lowered param names.
Parameter patterns are lowered to an `Ident` by
`lower_fn_params_to_names`, which is used when lowering bare function
types, trait methods, and foreign functions. Currently, there are two
exceptional cases where the lowered param can become an empty `Ident`.

- If the incoming pattern is an empty `Ident`. This occurs if the
  parameter is anonymous, e.g. in a bare function type.

- If the incoming pattern is neither an ident nor an underscore. Any
  such parameter will have triggered a compile error (hence the
  `span_delayed_bug`), but lowering still occurs.

This commit replaces these empty `Ident` results with `None`, which
eliminates a number of `kw::Empty` uses, and makes it impossible to fail
to check for these exceptional cases.

Note: the `FIXME` comment in `is_unwrap_or_empty_symbol` is removed. It
actually should have been removed in #138482, the precursor to this PR.
That PR changed the lowering of wild patterns to `_` symbols instead of
empty symbols, which made the mentioned underscore check load-bearing.
2025-03-19 20:54:10 +11:00
bors
259fdb5212 Auto merge of #138630 - matthiaskrgr:rollup-kk1gogr, r=matthiaskrgr
Rollup of 7 pull requests

Successful merges:

 - #138384 (Move `hir::Item::ident` into `hir::ItemKind`.)
 - #138508 (Clarify "owned data" in E0515.md)
 - #138531 (Store test diffs in job summaries and improve analysis formatting)
 - #138533 (Only use `DIST_TRY_BUILD` for try jobs that were not selected explicitly)
 - #138556 (Fix ICE: attempted to remap an already remapped filename)
 - #138608 (rustc_target: Add target feature constraints for LoongArch)
 - #138619 (Flatten `if`s in `rustc_codegen_ssa`)

r? `@ghost`
`@rustbot` modify labels: rollup
2025-03-18 05:58:46 +00:00
Nicholas Nethercote
f2ddbcd24b Move hir::Item::ident into hir::ItemKind.
`hir::Item` has an `ident` field.

- It's always non-empty for these item kinds: `ExternCrate`, `Static`,
  `Const`, `Fn`, `Macro`, `Mod`, `TyAlias`, `Enum`, `Struct`, `Union`,
  Trait`, TraitAalis`.

- It's always empty for these item kinds: `ForeignMod`, `GlobalAsm`,
  `Impl`.

- For `Use`, it is non-empty for `UseKind::Single` and empty for
  `UseKind::{Glob,ListStem}`.

All of this is quite non-obvious; the only documentation is a single
comment saying "The name might be a dummy name in case of anonymous
items". Some sites that handle items check for an empty ident, some
don't. This is a very C-like way of doing things, but this is Rust, we
have sum types, we can do this properly and never forget to check for
the exceptional case and never YOLO possibly empty identifiers (or
possibly dummy spans) around and hope that things will work out.

The commit is large but it's mostly obvious plumbing work. Some notable
things.

- A similar transformation makes sense for `ast::Item`, but this is
  already a big change. That can be done later.

- Lots of assertions are added to item lowering to ensure that
  identifiers are empty/non-empty as expected. These will be removable
  when `ast::Item` is done later.

- `ItemKind::Use` doesn't get an `Ident`, but `UseKind::Single` does.

- `lower_use_tree` is significantly simpler. No more confusing `&mut
  Ident` to deal with.

- `ItemKind::ident` is a new method, it returns an `Option<Ident>`. It's
  used with `unwrap` in a few places; sometimes it's hard to tell
  exactly which item kinds might occur. None of these unwraps fail on
  the test suite. It's conceivable that some might fail on alternative
  input. We can deal with those if/when they happen.

- In `trait_path` the `find_map`/`if let` is replaced with a loop, and
  things end up much clearer that way.

- `named_span` no longer checks for an empty name; instead the call site
  now checks for a missing identifier if necessary.

- `maybe_inline_local` doesn't need the `glob` argument, it can be
  computed in-function from the `renamed` argument.

- `arbitrary_source_item_ordering::check_mod` had a big `if` statement
  that was just getting the ident from the item kinds that had one. It
  could be mostly replaced by a single call to the new `ItemKind::ident`
  method.

- `ItemKind` grows from 56 to 64 bytes, but `Item` stays the same size,
  and that's what matters, because `ItemKind` only occurs within `Item`.
2025-03-18 06:29:50 +11:00
Nicholas Nethercote
6698c26b3a Fix is_relevant_impl.
It determines if a function should have any `inline` attributes checked.
For `ItemKind::Fn` it returns true or false depending on the details of
the function; for anything other item kind it returns *true*. This
latter case should instead be *false*. (In the nearby and similar
functions `is_relevant_impl` and `is_relevant_trait` the non-function
cases return false.)

The effect of this is that non-functions are no longer checked. But
rustc already disallows `inline` on any non-function items. So if
anything its a tiny performance win, because that was useless anyway.
2025-03-17 08:20:56 +11:00
Michael Goulet
380ce74401 Suppress must_use in compiler and tools 2025-03-16 17:47:57 +00:00
bors
aa95b9648a Auto merge of #138464 - compiler-errors:less-type-ir, r=lcnr
Use `rustc_type_ir` directly less in the codebase

cc https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/138449

This is a somewhat opinionated bundle of changes that will make working on https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/138449 more easy, since it cuts out the bulk of the changes that would be necessitated by the lint. Namely:

1. Fold `rustc_middle::ty::fold` and `rustc_middle::ty::visit` into `rustc_middle::ty`. This is because we already reexport some parts of these modules into `rustc_middle::ty`, and there's really no benefit from namespacing away the rest of these modules's functionality given how important folding and visiting is to the type layer.
2. Rename `{Decodable,Encodable}_Generic` to `{Decodable,Encodable}_NoContext`[^why], change it to be "perfect derive" (`synstructure::AddBounds::Fields`), use it throughout `rustc_type_ir` instead of `TyEncodable`/`TyDecodable`.
3. Make `TyEncodable` and `TyDecodable` derives use `::rustc_middle::ty::codec::TyEncoder` (etc) for its generated paths, and move the `rustc_type_ir::codec` module back to `rustc_middle::ty::codec` 🎉.
4. Stop using `rustc_type_ir` in crates that aren't "fundamental" to the type system, namely middle/infer/trait-selection. This amounted mostly to changing imports from `use rustc_type_ir::...` to `use rustc_middle::ty::...`, but also this means that we can't glob import `TyKind::*` since the reexport into `rustc_middle::ty::TyKind` is a type alias. Instead, use the prefixed variants like `ty::Str` everywhere -- IMO this is a good change, since it makes it more regularized with most of the rest of the compiler.

[^why]: `_NoContext` is the name for derive macros with no additional generic bounds and which do "perfect derive" by generating bounds based on field types. See `HashStable_NoContext`.

I'm happy to cut out some of these changes into separate PRs to make landing it a bit easier, though I don't expect to have much trouble with bitrot.

r? lcnr
2025-03-15 08:36:38 +00:00
Michael Goulet
e5a2220327 Fold visit into ty 2025-03-15 06:34:36 +00:00
Esteban Küber
f0b8e13b59 Do not suggest using -Zmacro-backtrace for builtin macros
For macros that are implemented on the compiler, we do *not* mention the `-Zmacro-backtrace` flag. This includes `derive`s and standard macros.
2025-03-14 19:50:03 +00:00
Nicholas Nethercote
256c27e748 Move methods from Map to TyCtxt, part 4.
Continuing the work from #137350.

Removes the unused methods: `expect_variant`, `expect_field`,
`expect_foreign_item`.

Every method gains a `hir_` prefix.
2025-03-12 08:55:37 +11:00
Oli Scherer
cb4751d4b8 Implement #[define_opaque] attribute for functions. 2025-03-11 12:05:02 +00:00
Matthias Krüger
0defc4f27f
Rollup merge of #137977 - nnethercote:less-kw-Empty-1, r=spastorino
Reduce `kw::Empty` usage, part 1

This PR fixes some confusing `kw::Empty` usage, fixing a crash test along the way.

r? ```@spastorino```
2025-03-07 19:15:34 +01:00
Matthias Krüger
f5a143f796
Rollup merge of #134797 - spastorino:ergonomic-ref-counting-1, r=nikomatsakis
Ergonomic ref counting

This is an experimental first version of ergonomic ref counting.

This first version implements most of the RFC but doesn't implement any of the optimizations. This was left for following iterations.

RFC: https://github.com/rust-lang/rfcs/pull/3680
Tracking issue: https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/132290
Project goal: https://github.com/rust-lang/rust-project-goals/issues/107

r? ```@nikomatsakis```
2025-03-07 19:15:33 +01:00
Nicholas Nethercote
af92a33dee Make synthetic RPITIT assoc ty name handling more rigorous.
Currently it relies on special treatment of `kw::Empty`, which is really
easy to get wrong. This commit makes the special case clearer in the
type system by using `Option`. It's a bit clumsy, but the synthetic name
handling itself is a bit clumsy; better to make it explicit than sneak
it in.

Fixes #133426.
2025-03-07 20:59:45 +11:00
Santiago Pastorino
60b6470104
Fix clippy 2025-03-06 17:58:32 -03:00
Oli Scherer
e8f7a382be Remove the Option part of range ends in the HIR 2025-03-06 10:47:40 +00:00
bors
fd17deacce Auto merge of #137959 - matthiaskrgr:rollup-62vjvwr, r=matthiaskrgr
Rollup of 12 pull requests

Successful merges:

 - #135767 (Future incompatibility warning `unsupported_fn_ptr_calling_conventions`: Also warn in dependencies)
 - #137852 (Remove layouting dead code for non-array SIMD types.)
 - #137863 (Fix pretty printing of unsafe binders)
 - #137882 (do not build additional stage on compiler paths)
 - #137894 (Revert "store ScalarPair via memset when one side is undef and the other side can be memset")
 - #137902 (Make `ast::TokenKind` more like `lexer::TokenKind`)
 - #137921 (Subtree update of `rust-analyzer`)
 - #137922 (A few cleanups after the removal of `cfg(not(parallel))`)
 - #137939 (fix order on shl impl)
 - #137946 (Fix docker run-local docs)
 - #137955 (Always allow rustdoc-json tests to contain long lines)
 - #137958 (triagebot.toml: Don't label `test/rustdoc-json` as A-rustdoc-search)

r? `@ghost`
`@rustbot` modify labels: rollup
2025-03-04 02:27:56 +00:00
Matthias Krüger
2344a34241
Rollup merge of #132388 - frank-king:feature/where-cfg, r=petrochenkov
Implement `#[cfg]` in `where` clauses

This PR implements #115590, which supports `#[cfg]` attributes in `where` clauses.

The biggest change is, that it adds `AttrsVec` and  `NodeId` to the `ast::WherePredicate` and `HirId` to the `hir::WherePredicate`.
2025-03-03 10:40:56 +01:00
Zalathar
32c5449d45 Remove some unnecessary aliases from rustc_data_structures::sync
With the removal of `cfg(parallel_compiler)`, these are always shared
references and `std::sync::OnceLock`.
2025-03-03 20:20:24 +11:00
Frank King
42f51d4fd4 Implment #[cfg] and #[cfg_attr] in where clauses 2025-03-01 22:02:46 +08:00
Philipp Krones
1e4bce2ee1
Fix link to ty::Ty in clippy_utils 2025-02-28 23:27:26 +01:00
Philipp Krones
f5851e7045
Clippy: skip check_host_compiler check in rustc testsuite
This test only makes sense to run in the Clippy repo

In the Rust repo the name of the host_compiler is dev, not nightly
2025-02-28 23:27:22 +01:00
Philipp Krones
65eb2b2237
Merge commit '9f9a822509' into clippy-subtree-update 2025-02-28 23:27:09 +01:00
许杰友 Jieyou Xu (Joe)
a9f3f02ed7
Rollup merge of #137712 - meithecatte:extract-binding-mode, r=oli-obk
Clean up TypeckResults::extract_binding_mode

- Remove the `Option` from the result type, as `None` is never returned.
- Document the difference from the `BindingMode` in `PatKind::Binding`.
2025-02-28 21:42:00 +08:00
Maja Kądziołka
5765005a7f
Clean up TypeckResults::extract_binding_mode
- Remove the `Option` from the result type, as `None` is never returned.
- Document the difference from the `BindingMode` in `PatKind::Binding`.
2025-02-27 10:19:12 +01:00
Nicholas Nethercote
2ac46f6517 Rename AssocOp::As as AssocOp::Cast.
To match `ExprKind::Cast`, and because a semantic name makes more sense
here than a syntactic name.
2025-02-27 09:53:18 +11:00
Nicholas Nethercote
fc8e87b274 Replace AssocOp::DotDot{,Eq} with AssocOp::Range.
It makes `AssocOp` more similar to `ExprKind` and makes things a little
simpler. And the semantic names make more sense here than the syntactic
names.
2025-02-27 09:53:18 +11:00
Nicholas Nethercote
ceafbad81f Introduce AssocOp::Binary.
It mirrors `ExprKind::Binary`, and contains a `BinOpKind`. This makes
`AssocOp` more like `ExprKind`. Note that the variants removed from
`AssocOp` are all named differently to `BinOpToken`, e.g. `Multiply`
instead of `Mul`, so that's an inconsistency removed.

The commit adds `precedence` and `fixity` methods to `BinOpKind`, and
calls them from the corresponding methods in `AssocOp`. This avoids the
need to create an `AssocOp` from a `BinOpKind` in a bunch of places, and
`AssocOp::from_ast_binop` is removed.

`AssocOp::to_ast_binop` is also no longer needed.

Overall things are shorter and nicer.
2025-02-27 09:53:17 +11:00
Nicholas Nethercote
a8364f3b2a In AssocOp::AssignOp, use BinOpKind instead of BinOpToken
`AssocOp::AssignOp` contains a `BinOpToken`. `ExprKind::AssignOp`
contains a `BinOpKind`. Given that `AssocOp` is basically a cut-down
version of `ExprKind`, it makes sense to make `AssocOp` more like
`ExprKind`. Especially given that `AssocOp` and `BinOpKind` use semantic
operation names (e.g. `Mul`, `Div`), but `BinOpToken` uses syntactic
names (e.g. `Star`, `Slash`).

This results in more concise code, and removes the need for various
conversions. (Note that the removed functions `hirbinop2assignop` and
`astbinop2assignop` are semantically identical, because `hir::BinOp` is
just a synonum for `ast::BinOp`!)

The only downside to this is that it allows the possibility of some
nonsensical combinations, such as `AssocOp::AssignOp(BinOpKind::Lt)`.
But `ExprKind::AssignOp` already has that problem. The problem can be
fixed for both types in the future with some effort, by introducing an
`AssignOpKind` type.
2025-02-27 09:47:22 +11:00
Jana Dönszelmann
80314b1de9
simplify must-use lint slightly 2025-02-24 14:31:19 +01:00
Jana Dönszelmann
f321f107e3
Fix rustdoc and clippy 2025-02-24 14:31:19 +01:00
Matthias Krüger
4115f51d15
Rollup merge of #137180 - compiler-errors:sym-regions, r=oli-obk
Give `global_asm` a fake body to store typeck results, represent `sym fn` as a hir expr to fix `sym fn` operands with lifetimes

There are a few intertwined problems with `sym fn` operands in both inline and global asm macros.

Specifically, unlike other anon consts, they may evaluate to a type with free regions in them without actually having an item-level type annotation to give them a "proper" type. This is in contrast to named constants, which always have an item-level type annotation, or unnamed constants which are constrained by their position (e.g. a const arg in a turbofish, or a const array length).

Today, we infer the type of the operand by looking at the HIR typeck results; however, those results are region-erased, so during borrowck we ICE since we don't expect to encounter erased regions. We can't just fill this type with something like `'static`, since we may want to use real (free) regions:

```rust
fn foo<'a>() {
  asm!("/* ... */", sym bar::<&'a ()>);
}
```

The first idea may be to represent `sym fn` operands using *inline* consts instead of anon consts. This makes sense, since inline consts can reference regions from the parent body (like the `'a` in the example above). However, this introduces a problem with `global_asm!`, which doesn't *have* a parent body; inline consts *must* be associated with a parent body since they are not a body owner of their own. In #116087, I attempted to fix this by using two separate `sym` operands for global and inline asm. However, this led to a lot of confusion and also some unattractive code duplication.

In this PR, I adjust the lowering of `global_asm!` so that it's lowered in a "fake" HIR body. This body contains a single expression which is `ExprKind::InlineAsm`; we don't *use* this HIR body, but it's used in typeck and borrowck so that we can properly infer and validate the the lifetimes of `sym fn` operands.

I then adjust the lowering of `sym fn` to instead be represented with a HIR expression. This is both because it's no longer necessary to represent this operand as an anon const, since it's *just* a path expression, and also more importantly to sidestep yet another ICE (https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/137179), which has to do with the existing code breaking an invariant of def-id creation and anon consts. Specifically, we are not allowed to synthesize a def-id for an anon const when that anon const contains expressions with def-ids whose parent is *not* that anon const. This is somewhat related to https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/130443#issuecomment-2445678945, which is also a place in the compiler where synthesizing anon consts leads to def-id parenting issue.

As a side-effect, this consolidates the type checking for inline and global asm, so it allows us to simplify `InlineAsmCtxt` a bit. It also allows us to delete a bit of hacky code from anon const `type_of` which was there to detect `sym fn` operands specifically. This also could be generalized to support `const` asm operands with types with lifetimes in them. Since we specifically reject these consts today, I'm not going to change the representation of those consts (but they'd just be turned into inline consts).

r? oli-obk -- mostly b/c you're patient and also understand the breadth of the code that this touches, please reassign if you don't want to review this.

Fixes #111709
Fixes #96304
Fixes #137179
2025-02-23 00:16:19 +01:00
Michael Goulet
6ba39f7dc7 Make a fake body to store typeck results for global_asm 2025-02-22 00:12:07 +00:00
Michael Goulet
2a6daaf89a Make asm a named field 2025-02-22 00:05:09 +00:00
bors
dc37ff82e8 Auto merge of #137348 - compiler-errors:span-trim, r=estebank
More sophisticated span trimming for suggestions

Previously #136958 only cared about prefixes or suffixes. Now it detects more cases where a suggestion is "sandwiched" by unchanged code on the left or the right. Would be cool if we could detect several insertions, like `ACE` going to `ABCDE`, extracting `B` and `D`, but that seems unwieldy.

r? `@estebank`
2025-02-21 23:59:08 +00:00
bors
794c12416b Auto merge of #137397 - matthiaskrgr:rollup-ls2pilo, r=matthiaskrgr
Rollup of 10 pull requests

Successful merges:

 - #132876 (rustdoc book: acknowledge --document-hidden-items)
 - #136148 (Optionally add type names to `TypeId`s.)
 - #136609 (libcore/net: `IpAddr::as_octets()`)
 - #137336 (Stabilise `os_str_display`)
 - #137350 (Move methods from Map to TyCtxt, part 3.)
 - #137353 (Implement `read_buf` for WASI stdin)
 - #137361 (Refactor `OperandRef::extract_field` to prep for MCP838)
 - #137367 (Do not exempt nonexistent platforms from platform policy)
 - #137374 (Stacker now handles miri using a noop impl itself)
 - #137392 (remove few unused fields)

r? `@ghost`
`@rustbot` modify labels: rollup
2025-02-21 19:57:50 +00:00
Matthias Krüger
1f6c75e682
Rollup merge of #137305 - nnethercote:rustc_middle-2, r=lcnr
Tweaks in and around `rustc_middle`

A bunch of tiny improvements I found while working on bigger things.

r? ```@lcnr```
2025-02-21 12:45:25 +01:00
Matthias Krüger
72861ea7e2
Rollup merge of #137299 - nnethercote:simplify-PostOrder-customization, r=compiler-errors
Simplify `Postorder` customization.

`Postorder` has a `C: Customization<'tcx>` parameter, that gives it flexibility about how it computes successors. But in practice, there are only two `impls` of `Customization`, and one is for the unit type.

This commit simplifies things by removing the generic parameter and replacing it with an `Option`.

r? ````@saethlin````
2025-02-21 12:45:24 +01:00
Nicholas Nethercote
806be25fc9 Move methods from Map to TyCtxt, part 3.
Continuing the work from #137162.

Every method gains a `hir_` prefix.
2025-02-21 14:31:09 +11:00
Michael Goulet
160905b625 Trim suggestion part before generating highlights 2025-02-21 00:54:01 +00:00
Michael Goulet
0a7ab1d6df More sophisticated span trimming 2025-02-21 00:41:17 +00:00
Nicholas Nethercote
5d2d11fd5d Rename ClearCrossCrate::assert_crate_local.
As `unwrap_crate_local`, because it follows exactly the standard form of
an `unwrap` function.
2025-02-21 07:12:13 +11:00
Nicholas Nethercote
cae9ebbe1e Simplify Postorder customization.
`Postorder` has a `C: Customization<'tcx>` parameter, that gives it
flexibility about how it computes successors. But in practice, there are
only two `impls` of `Customization`, and one is for the unit type.

This commit simplifies things by removing the generic parameter and
replacing it with an `Option`.
2025-02-20 14:00:36 +11:00
Matthias Krüger
c29cc600fd
Rollup merge of #136923 - samueltardieu:push-vxxqvqwspssv, r=davidtwco
Lint `#[must_use]` attributes applied to methods in trait impls

The `#[must_use]` attribute has no effect when applied to methods in trait implementations. This PR adds it to the unused `#[must_use]` lint, and cleans the extra attributes in portable-simd and Clippy.
2025-02-19 21:16:11 +01:00
Nicholas Nethercote
fd7b4bf4e1 Move methods from Map to TyCtxt, part 2.
Continuing the work started in #136466.

Every method gains a `hir_` prefix, though for the ones that already
have a `par_` or `try_par_` prefix I added the `hir_` after that.
2025-02-18 10:17:44 +11:00
Matthias Krüger
86f3d525e0
Rollup merge of #137101 - GrigorenkoPV:str-inherent-lint, r=Urgau
`invalid_from_utf8[_unchecked]`: also lint inherent methods

Addressing https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/131114#issuecomment-2646663535

Also corrected a typo: "_an_ invalid literal", not "_a_ invalid literal".
2025-02-17 06:37:38 +01:00
Nicholas Nethercote
661f99ba03 Overhaul the intravisit::Map trait.
First of all, note that `Map` has three different relevant meanings.
- The `intravisit::Map` trait.
- The `map::Map` struct.
- The `NestedFilter::Map` associated type.

The `intravisit::Map` trait is impl'd twice.
- For `!`, where the methods are all unreachable.
- For `map::Map`, which gets HIR stuff from the `TyCtxt`.

As part of getting rid of `map::Map`, this commit changes `impl
intravisit::Map for map::Map` to `impl intravisit::Map for TyCtxt`. It's
fairly straightforward except various things are renamed, because the
existing names would no longer have made sense.

- `trait intravisit::Map` becomes `trait intravisit::HirTyCtxt`, so named
  because it gets some HIR stuff from a `TyCtxt`.
- `NestedFilter::Map` assoc type becomes `NestedFilter::MaybeTyCtxt`,
  because it's always `!` or `TyCtxt`.
- `Visitor::nested_visit_map` becomes `Visitor::maybe_tcx`.

I deliberately made the new trait and associated type names different to
avoid the old `type Map: Map` situation, which I found confusing. We now
have `type MaybeTyCtxt: HirTyCtxt`.
2025-02-17 13:21:35 +11:00
Nicholas Nethercote
f86f7ad5f2 Move some Map methods onto TyCtxt.
The end goal is to eliminate `Map` altogether.

I added a `hir_` prefix to all of them, that seemed simplest. The
exceptions are `module_items` which became `hir_module_free_items` because
there was already a `hir_module_items`, and `items` which became
`hir_free_items` for consistency with `hir_module_free_items`.
2025-02-17 13:21:02 +11:00
Pavel Grigorenko
77571a5c8b clippy: string_from_utf8_as_bytes: also detect inherent from_utf8 2025-02-16 16:34:51 +03:00
Michael Goulet
6d71251cf9 Trim suggestion parts to the subset that is purely additive 2025-02-14 00:44:10 -08:00
bors
c241e14650 Auto merge of #136593 - lukas-code:ty-value-perf, r=oli-obk
valtree performance tuning

Summary: This PR makes type checking of code with many type-level constants faster.

After https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/136180 was merged, we observed a small perf regression (https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/136318#issuecomment-2635562821). This happened because that PR introduced additional copies in the fast reject code path for consts, which is very hot for certain crates: 6c1d960d88/compiler/rustc_type_ir/src/fast_reject.rs (L486-L487)

This PR improves the performance again by properly interning the valtrees so that copying and comparing them becomes faster. This will become especially useful with `feature(adt_const_params)`, so the fast reject code doesn't have to do a deep compare of the valtrees.

Note that we can't just compare the interned consts themselves in the fast reject, because sometimes `'static` lifetimes in the type are be replaced with inference variables (due to canonicalization) on one side but not the other.

A less invasive alternative that I considered is simply avoiding copies introduced by https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/136180 and comparing the valtrees it in-place (see commit: 9e91e50ac5 / perf results: https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/136593#issuecomment-2642303245), however that was still measurably slower than interning.

There are some minor regressions in secondary benchmarks: These happen due to changes in memory allocations and seem acceptable to me. The crates that make heavy use of valtrees show no significant changes in memory usage.
2025-02-13 15:27:30 +00:00