rust/compiler/rustc_const_eval/src/interpret/operand.rs
Tomasz Miąsko 67f455afe1 Suppress "erroneous constant used" for constants tainted by errors
When constant evaluation fails because its MIR is tainted by errors,
suppress note indicating that erroneous constant was used, since those
errors have to be fixed regardless of the constant being used or not.
2023-05-15 00:00:00 +00:00

689 lines
28 KiB
Rust

//! Functions concerning immediate values and operands, and reading from operands.
//! All high-level functions to read from memory work on operands as sources.
use either::{Either, Left, Right};
use rustc_hir::def::Namespace;
use rustc_middle::ty::layout::{LayoutOf, TyAndLayout};
use rustc_middle::ty::print::{FmtPrinter, PrettyPrinter};
use rustc_middle::ty::{ConstInt, Ty, ValTree};
use rustc_middle::{mir, ty};
use rustc_span::Span;
use rustc_target::abi::{self, Abi, Align, HasDataLayout, Size};
use super::{
alloc_range, from_known_layout, mir_assign_valid_types, AllocId, ConstValue, Frame, GlobalId,
InterpCx, InterpResult, MPlaceTy, Machine, MemPlace, MemPlaceMeta, Place, PlaceTy, Pointer,
Provenance, Scalar,
};
/// An `Immediate` represents a single immediate self-contained Rust value.
///
/// For optimization of a few very common cases, there is also a representation for a pair of
/// primitive values (`ScalarPair`). It allows Miri to avoid making allocations for checked binary
/// operations and wide pointers. This idea was taken from rustc's codegen.
/// In particular, thanks to `ScalarPair`, arithmetic operations and casts can be entirely
/// defined on `Immediate`, and do not have to work with a `Place`.
#[derive(Copy, Clone, Debug)]
pub enum Immediate<Prov: Provenance = AllocId> {
/// A single scalar value (must have *initialized* `Scalar` ABI).
Scalar(Scalar<Prov>),
/// A pair of two scalar value (must have `ScalarPair` ABI where both fields are
/// `Scalar::Initialized`).
ScalarPair(Scalar<Prov>, Scalar<Prov>),
/// A value of fully uninitialized memory. Can have and size and layout.
Uninit,
}
impl<Prov: Provenance> From<Scalar<Prov>> for Immediate<Prov> {
#[inline(always)]
fn from(val: Scalar<Prov>) -> Self {
Immediate::Scalar(val)
}
}
impl<Prov: Provenance> Immediate<Prov> {
pub fn from_pointer(p: Pointer<Prov>, cx: &impl HasDataLayout) -> Self {
Immediate::Scalar(Scalar::from_pointer(p, cx))
}
pub fn from_maybe_pointer(p: Pointer<Option<Prov>>, cx: &impl HasDataLayout) -> Self {
Immediate::Scalar(Scalar::from_maybe_pointer(p, cx))
}
pub fn new_slice(val: Scalar<Prov>, len: u64, cx: &impl HasDataLayout) -> Self {
Immediate::ScalarPair(val, Scalar::from_target_usize(len, cx))
}
pub fn new_dyn_trait(
val: Scalar<Prov>,
vtable: Pointer<Option<Prov>>,
cx: &impl HasDataLayout,
) -> Self {
Immediate::ScalarPair(val, Scalar::from_maybe_pointer(vtable, cx))
}
#[inline]
#[cfg_attr(debug_assertions, track_caller)] // only in debug builds due to perf (see #98980)
pub fn to_scalar(self) -> Scalar<Prov> {
match self {
Immediate::Scalar(val) => val,
Immediate::ScalarPair(..) => bug!("Got a scalar pair where a scalar was expected"),
Immediate::Uninit => bug!("Got uninit where a scalar was expected"),
}
}
#[inline]
#[cfg_attr(debug_assertions, track_caller)] // only in debug builds due to perf (see #98980)
pub fn to_scalar_pair(self) -> (Scalar<Prov>, Scalar<Prov>) {
match self {
Immediate::ScalarPair(val1, val2) => (val1, val2),
Immediate::Scalar(..) => bug!("Got a scalar where a scalar pair was expected"),
Immediate::Uninit => bug!("Got uninit where a scalar pair was expected"),
}
}
}
// ScalarPair needs a type to interpret, so we often have an immediate and a type together
// as input for binary and cast operations.
#[derive(Clone, Debug)]
pub struct ImmTy<'tcx, Prov: Provenance = AllocId> {
imm: Immediate<Prov>,
pub layout: TyAndLayout<'tcx>,
}
impl<Prov: Provenance> std::fmt::Display for ImmTy<'_, Prov> {
fn fmt(&self, f: &mut std::fmt::Formatter<'_>) -> std::fmt::Result {
/// Helper function for printing a scalar to a FmtPrinter
fn p<'a, 'tcx, Prov: Provenance>(
cx: FmtPrinter<'a, 'tcx>,
s: Scalar<Prov>,
ty: Ty<'tcx>,
) -> Result<FmtPrinter<'a, 'tcx>, std::fmt::Error> {
match s {
Scalar::Int(int) => cx.pretty_print_const_scalar_int(int, ty, true),
Scalar::Ptr(ptr, _sz) => {
// Just print the ptr value. `pretty_print_const_scalar_ptr` would also try to
// print what is points to, which would fail since it has no access to the local
// memory.
cx.pretty_print_const_pointer(ptr, ty, true)
}
}
}
ty::tls::with(|tcx| {
match self.imm {
Immediate::Scalar(s) => {
if let Some(ty) = tcx.lift(self.layout.ty) {
let cx = FmtPrinter::new(tcx, Namespace::ValueNS);
f.write_str(&p(cx, s, ty)?.into_buffer())?;
return Ok(());
}
write!(f, "{:x}: {}", s, self.layout.ty)
}
Immediate::ScalarPair(a, b) => {
// FIXME(oli-obk): at least print tuples and slices nicely
write!(f, "({:x}, {:x}): {}", a, b, self.layout.ty)
}
Immediate::Uninit => {
write!(f, "uninit: {}", self.layout.ty)
}
}
})
}
}
impl<'tcx, Prov: Provenance> std::ops::Deref for ImmTy<'tcx, Prov> {
type Target = Immediate<Prov>;
#[inline(always)]
fn deref(&self) -> &Immediate<Prov> {
&self.imm
}
}
/// An `Operand` is the result of computing a `mir::Operand`. It can be immediate,
/// or still in memory. The latter is an optimization, to delay reading that chunk of
/// memory and to avoid having to store arbitrary-sized data here.
#[derive(Copy, Clone, Debug)]
pub enum Operand<Prov: Provenance = AllocId> {
Immediate(Immediate<Prov>),
Indirect(MemPlace<Prov>),
}
#[derive(Clone, Debug)]
pub struct OpTy<'tcx, Prov: Provenance = AllocId> {
op: Operand<Prov>, // Keep this private; it helps enforce invariants.
pub layout: TyAndLayout<'tcx>,
/// rustc does not have a proper way to represent the type of a field of a `repr(packed)` struct:
/// it needs to have a different alignment than the field type would usually have.
/// So we represent this here with a separate field that "overwrites" `layout.align`.
/// This means `layout.align` should never be used for an `OpTy`!
/// `None` means "alignment does not matter since this is a by-value operand"
/// (`Operand::Immediate`); this field is only relevant for `Operand::Indirect`.
/// Also CTFE ignores alignment anyway, so this is for Miri only.
pub align: Option<Align>,
}
impl<'tcx, Prov: Provenance> std::ops::Deref for OpTy<'tcx, Prov> {
type Target = Operand<Prov>;
#[inline(always)]
fn deref(&self) -> &Operand<Prov> {
&self.op
}
}
impl<'tcx, Prov: Provenance> From<MPlaceTy<'tcx, Prov>> for OpTy<'tcx, Prov> {
#[inline(always)]
fn from(mplace: MPlaceTy<'tcx, Prov>) -> Self {
OpTy { op: Operand::Indirect(*mplace), layout: mplace.layout, align: Some(mplace.align) }
}
}
impl<'tcx, Prov: Provenance> From<&'_ MPlaceTy<'tcx, Prov>> for OpTy<'tcx, Prov> {
#[inline(always)]
fn from(mplace: &MPlaceTy<'tcx, Prov>) -> Self {
OpTy { op: Operand::Indirect(**mplace), layout: mplace.layout, align: Some(mplace.align) }
}
}
impl<'tcx, Prov: Provenance> From<&'_ mut MPlaceTy<'tcx, Prov>> for OpTy<'tcx, Prov> {
#[inline(always)]
fn from(mplace: &mut MPlaceTy<'tcx, Prov>) -> Self {
OpTy { op: Operand::Indirect(**mplace), layout: mplace.layout, align: Some(mplace.align) }
}
}
impl<'tcx, Prov: Provenance> From<ImmTy<'tcx, Prov>> for OpTy<'tcx, Prov> {
#[inline(always)]
fn from(val: ImmTy<'tcx, Prov>) -> Self {
OpTy { op: Operand::Immediate(val.imm), layout: val.layout, align: None }
}
}
impl<'tcx, Prov: Provenance> ImmTy<'tcx, Prov> {
#[inline]
pub fn from_scalar(val: Scalar<Prov>, layout: TyAndLayout<'tcx>) -> Self {
ImmTy { imm: val.into(), layout }
}
#[inline]
pub fn from_immediate(imm: Immediate<Prov>, layout: TyAndLayout<'tcx>) -> Self {
ImmTy { imm, layout }
}
#[inline]
pub fn uninit(layout: TyAndLayout<'tcx>) -> Self {
ImmTy { imm: Immediate::Uninit, layout }
}
#[inline]
pub fn try_from_uint(i: impl Into<u128>, layout: TyAndLayout<'tcx>) -> Option<Self> {
Some(Self::from_scalar(Scalar::try_from_uint(i, layout.size)?, layout))
}
#[inline]
pub fn from_uint(i: impl Into<u128>, layout: TyAndLayout<'tcx>) -> Self {
Self::from_scalar(Scalar::from_uint(i, layout.size), layout)
}
#[inline]
pub fn try_from_int(i: impl Into<i128>, layout: TyAndLayout<'tcx>) -> Option<Self> {
Some(Self::from_scalar(Scalar::try_from_int(i, layout.size)?, layout))
}
#[inline]
pub fn from_int(i: impl Into<i128>, layout: TyAndLayout<'tcx>) -> Self {
Self::from_scalar(Scalar::from_int(i, layout.size), layout)
}
#[inline]
pub fn to_const_int(self) -> ConstInt {
assert!(self.layout.ty.is_integral());
let int = self.to_scalar().assert_int();
ConstInt::new(int, self.layout.ty.is_signed(), self.layout.ty.is_ptr_sized_integral())
}
}
impl<'tcx, Prov: Provenance> OpTy<'tcx, Prov> {
pub fn len(&self, cx: &impl HasDataLayout) -> InterpResult<'tcx, u64> {
if self.layout.is_unsized() {
if matches!(self.op, Operand::Immediate(Immediate::Uninit)) {
// Uninit unsized places shouldn't occur. In the interpreter we have them
// temporarily for unsized arguments before their value is put in; in ConstProp they
// remain uninit and this code can actually be reached.
throw_inval!(UninitUnsizedLocal);
}
// There are no unsized immediates.
self.assert_mem_place().len(cx)
} else {
match self.layout.fields {
abi::FieldsShape::Array { count, .. } => Ok(count),
_ => bug!("len not supported on sized type {:?}", self.layout.ty),
}
}
}
/// Replace the layout of this operand. There's basically no sanity check that this makes sense,
/// you better know what you are doing! If this is an immediate, applying the wrong layout can
/// not just lead to invalid data, it can actually *shift the data around* since the offsets of
/// a ScalarPair are entirely determined by the layout, not the data.
pub fn transmute(&self, layout: TyAndLayout<'tcx>) -> Self {
assert_eq!(
self.layout.size, layout.size,
"transmuting with a size change, that doesn't seem right"
);
OpTy { layout, ..*self }
}
/// Offset the operand in memory (if possible) and change its metadata.
///
/// This can go wrong very easily if you give the wrong layout for the new place!
pub(super) fn offset_with_meta(
&self,
offset: Size,
meta: MemPlaceMeta<Prov>,
layout: TyAndLayout<'tcx>,
cx: &impl HasDataLayout,
) -> InterpResult<'tcx, Self> {
match self.as_mplace_or_imm() {
Left(mplace) => Ok(mplace.offset_with_meta(offset, meta, layout, cx)?.into()),
Right(imm) => {
assert!(
matches!(*imm, Immediate::Uninit),
"Scalar/ScalarPair cannot be offset into"
);
assert!(!meta.has_meta()); // no place to store metadata here
// Every part of an uninit is uninit.
Ok(ImmTy::uninit(layout).into())
}
}
}
/// Offset the operand in memory (if possible).
///
/// This can go wrong very easily if you give the wrong layout for the new place!
pub fn offset(
&self,
offset: Size,
layout: TyAndLayout<'tcx>,
cx: &impl HasDataLayout,
) -> InterpResult<'tcx, Self> {
assert!(layout.is_sized());
self.offset_with_meta(offset, MemPlaceMeta::None, layout, cx)
}
}
impl<'mir, 'tcx: 'mir, M: Machine<'mir, 'tcx>> InterpCx<'mir, 'tcx, M> {
/// Try reading an immediate in memory; this is interesting particularly for `ScalarPair`.
/// Returns `None` if the layout does not permit loading this as a value.
///
/// This is an internal function; call `read_immediate` instead.
fn read_immediate_from_mplace_raw(
&self,
mplace: &MPlaceTy<'tcx, M::Provenance>,
) -> InterpResult<'tcx, Option<ImmTy<'tcx, M::Provenance>>> {
if mplace.layout.is_unsized() {
// Don't touch unsized
return Ok(None);
}
let Some(alloc) = self.get_place_alloc(mplace)? else {
// zero-sized type can be left uninit
return Ok(Some(ImmTy::uninit(mplace.layout)));
};
// It may seem like all types with `Scalar` or `ScalarPair` ABI are fair game at this point.
// However, `MaybeUninit<u64>` is considered a `Scalar` as far as its layout is concerned --
// and yet cannot be represented by an interpreter `Scalar`, since we have to handle the
// case where some of the bytes are initialized and others are not. So, we need an extra
// check that walks over the type of `mplace` to make sure it is truly correct to treat this
// like a `Scalar` (or `ScalarPair`).
Ok(match mplace.layout.abi {
Abi::Scalar(abi::Scalar::Initialized { value: s, .. }) => {
let size = s.size(self);
assert_eq!(size, mplace.layout.size, "abi::Scalar size does not match layout size");
let scalar = alloc.read_scalar(
alloc_range(Size::ZERO, size),
/*read_provenance*/ matches!(s, abi::Pointer(_)),
)?;
Some(ImmTy { imm: scalar.into(), layout: mplace.layout })
}
Abi::ScalarPair(
abi::Scalar::Initialized { value: a, .. },
abi::Scalar::Initialized { value: b, .. },
) => {
// We checked `ptr_align` above, so all fields will have the alignment they need.
// We would anyway check against `ptr_align.restrict_for_offset(b_offset)`,
// which `ptr.offset(b_offset)` cannot possibly fail to satisfy.
let (a_size, b_size) = (a.size(self), b.size(self));
let b_offset = a_size.align_to(b.align(self).abi);
assert!(b_offset.bytes() > 0); // in `operand_field` we use the offset to tell apart the fields
let a_val = alloc.read_scalar(
alloc_range(Size::ZERO, a_size),
/*read_provenance*/ matches!(a, abi::Pointer(_)),
)?;
let b_val = alloc.read_scalar(
alloc_range(b_offset, b_size),
/*read_provenance*/ matches!(b, abi::Pointer(_)),
)?;
Some(ImmTy { imm: Immediate::ScalarPair(a_val, b_val), layout: mplace.layout })
}
_ => {
// Neither a scalar nor scalar pair.
None
}
})
}
/// Try returning an immediate for the operand. If the layout does not permit loading this as an
/// immediate, return where in memory we can find the data.
/// Note that for a given layout, this operation will either always return Left or Right!
/// succeed! Whether it returns Left depends on whether the layout can be represented
/// in an `Immediate`, not on which data is stored there currently.
///
/// This is an internal function that should not usually be used; call `read_immediate` instead.
/// ConstProp needs it, though.
pub fn read_immediate_raw(
&self,
src: &OpTy<'tcx, M::Provenance>,
) -> InterpResult<'tcx, Either<MPlaceTy<'tcx, M::Provenance>, ImmTy<'tcx, M::Provenance>>> {
Ok(match src.as_mplace_or_imm() {
Left(ref mplace) => {
if let Some(val) = self.read_immediate_from_mplace_raw(mplace)? {
Right(val)
} else {
Left(*mplace)
}
}
Right(val) => Right(val),
})
}
/// Read an immediate from a place, asserting that that is possible with the given layout.
///
/// If this succeeds, the `ImmTy` is never `Uninit`.
#[inline(always)]
pub fn read_immediate(
&self,
op: &OpTy<'tcx, M::Provenance>,
) -> InterpResult<'tcx, ImmTy<'tcx, M::Provenance>> {
if !matches!(
op.layout.abi,
Abi::Scalar(abi::Scalar::Initialized { .. })
| Abi::ScalarPair(abi::Scalar::Initialized { .. }, abi::Scalar::Initialized { .. })
) {
span_bug!(self.cur_span(), "primitive read not possible for type: {:?}", op.layout.ty);
}
let imm = self.read_immediate_raw(op)?.right().unwrap();
if matches!(*imm, Immediate::Uninit) {
throw_ub!(InvalidUninitBytes(None));
}
Ok(imm)
}
/// Read a scalar from a place
pub fn read_scalar(
&self,
op: &OpTy<'tcx, M::Provenance>,
) -> InterpResult<'tcx, Scalar<M::Provenance>> {
Ok(self.read_immediate(op)?.to_scalar())
}
// Pointer-sized reads are fairly common and need target layout access, so we wrap them in
// convenience functions.
/// Read a pointer from a place.
pub fn read_pointer(
&self,
op: &OpTy<'tcx, M::Provenance>,
) -> InterpResult<'tcx, Pointer<Option<M::Provenance>>> {
self.read_scalar(op)?.to_pointer(self)
}
/// Read a pointer-sized unsigned integer from a place.
pub fn read_target_usize(&self, op: &OpTy<'tcx, M::Provenance>) -> InterpResult<'tcx, u64> {
self.read_scalar(op)?.to_target_usize(self)
}
/// Read a pointer-sized signed integer from a place.
pub fn read_target_isize(&self, op: &OpTy<'tcx, M::Provenance>) -> InterpResult<'tcx, i64> {
self.read_scalar(op)?.to_target_isize(self)
}
/// Turn the wide MPlace into a string (must already be dereferenced!)
pub fn read_str(&self, mplace: &MPlaceTy<'tcx, M::Provenance>) -> InterpResult<'tcx, &str> {
let len = mplace.len(self)?;
let bytes = self.read_bytes_ptr_strip_provenance(mplace.ptr, Size::from_bytes(len))?;
let str = std::str::from_utf8(bytes).map_err(|err| err_ub!(InvalidStr(err)))?;
Ok(str)
}
/// Converts a repr(simd) operand into an operand where `place_index` accesses the SIMD elements.
/// Also returns the number of elements.
///
/// Can (but does not always) trigger UB if `op` is uninitialized.
pub fn operand_to_simd(
&self,
op: &OpTy<'tcx, M::Provenance>,
) -> InterpResult<'tcx, (MPlaceTy<'tcx, M::Provenance>, u64)> {
// Basically we just transmute this place into an array following simd_size_and_type.
// This only works in memory, but repr(simd) types should never be immediates anyway.
assert!(op.layout.ty.is_simd());
match op.as_mplace_or_imm() {
Left(mplace) => self.mplace_to_simd(&mplace),
Right(imm) => match *imm {
Immediate::Uninit => {
throw_ub!(InvalidUninitBytes(None))
}
Immediate::Scalar(..) | Immediate::ScalarPair(..) => {
bug!("arrays/slices can never have Scalar/ScalarPair layout")
}
},
}
}
/// Read from a local.
/// Will not access memory, instead an indirect `Operand` is returned.
///
/// This is public because it is used by [priroda](https://github.com/oli-obk/priroda) to get an
/// OpTy from a local.
pub fn local_to_op(
&self,
frame: &Frame<'mir, 'tcx, M::Provenance, M::FrameExtra>,
local: mir::Local,
layout: Option<TyAndLayout<'tcx>>,
) -> InterpResult<'tcx, OpTy<'tcx, M::Provenance>> {
let layout = self.layout_of_local(frame, local, layout)?;
let op = *frame.locals[local].access()?;
Ok(OpTy { op, layout, align: Some(layout.align.abi) })
}
/// Every place can be read from, so we can turn them into an operand.
/// This will definitely return `Indirect` if the place is a `Ptr`, i.e., this
/// will never actually read from memory.
#[inline(always)]
pub fn place_to_op(
&self,
place: &PlaceTy<'tcx, M::Provenance>,
) -> InterpResult<'tcx, OpTy<'tcx, M::Provenance>> {
let op = match **place {
Place::Ptr(mplace) => Operand::Indirect(mplace),
Place::Local { frame, local } => {
*self.local_to_op(&self.stack()[frame], local, None)?
}
};
Ok(OpTy { op, layout: place.layout, align: Some(place.align) })
}
/// Evaluate a place with the goal of reading from it. This lets us sometimes
/// avoid allocations.
pub fn eval_place_to_op(
&self,
mir_place: mir::Place<'tcx>,
layout: Option<TyAndLayout<'tcx>>,
) -> InterpResult<'tcx, OpTy<'tcx, M::Provenance>> {
// Do not use the layout passed in as argument if the base we are looking at
// here is not the entire place.
let layout = if mir_place.projection.is_empty() { layout } else { None };
let mut op = self.local_to_op(self.frame(), mir_place.local, layout)?;
// Using `try_fold` turned out to be bad for performance, hence the loop.
for elem in mir_place.projection.iter() {
op = self.operand_projection(&op, elem)?
}
trace!("eval_place_to_op: got {:?}", *op);
// Sanity-check the type we ended up with.
debug_assert!(
mir_assign_valid_types(
*self.tcx,
self.param_env,
self.layout_of(self.subst_from_current_frame_and_normalize_erasing_regions(
mir_place.ty(&self.frame().body.local_decls, *self.tcx).ty
)?)?,
op.layout,
),
"eval_place of a MIR place with type {:?} produced an interpreter operand with type {:?}",
mir_place.ty(&self.frame().body.local_decls, *self.tcx).ty,
op.layout.ty,
);
Ok(op)
}
/// Evaluate the operand, returning a place where you can then find the data.
/// If you already know the layout, you can save two table lookups
/// by passing it in here.
#[inline]
pub fn eval_operand(
&self,
mir_op: &mir::Operand<'tcx>,
layout: Option<TyAndLayout<'tcx>>,
) -> InterpResult<'tcx, OpTy<'tcx, M::Provenance>> {
use rustc_middle::mir::Operand::*;
let op = match mir_op {
// FIXME: do some more logic on `move` to invalidate the old location
&Copy(place) | &Move(place) => self.eval_place_to_op(place, layout)?,
Constant(constant) => {
let c =
self.subst_from_current_frame_and_normalize_erasing_regions(constant.literal)?;
// This can still fail:
// * During ConstProp, with `TooGeneric` or since the `required_consts` were not all
// checked yet.
// * During CTFE, since promoteds in `const`/`static` initializer bodies can fail.
self.eval_mir_constant(&c, Some(constant.span), layout)?
}
};
trace!("{:?}: {:?}", mir_op, *op);
Ok(op)
}
/// Evaluate a bunch of operands at once
pub(super) fn eval_operands(
&self,
ops: &[mir::Operand<'tcx>],
) -> InterpResult<'tcx, Vec<OpTy<'tcx, M::Provenance>>> {
ops.iter().map(|op| self.eval_operand(op, None)).collect()
}
fn eval_ty_constant(
&self,
val: ty::Const<'tcx>,
span: Option<Span>,
) -> InterpResult<'tcx, ValTree<'tcx>> {
Ok(match val.kind() {
ty::ConstKind::Param(_) | ty::ConstKind::Placeholder(..) => {
throw_inval!(TooGeneric)
}
// FIXME(generic_const_exprs): `ConstKind::Expr` should be able to be evaluated
ty::ConstKind::Expr(_) => throw_inval!(TooGeneric),
ty::ConstKind::Error(reported) => {
throw_inval!(AlreadyReported(reported.into()))
}
ty::ConstKind::Unevaluated(uv) => {
let instance = self.resolve(uv.def, uv.substs)?;
let cid = GlobalId { instance, promoted: None };
self.ctfe_query(span, |tcx| {
tcx.eval_to_valtree(self.param_env.with_const().and(cid))
})?
.unwrap_or_else(|| bug!("unable to create ValTree for {uv:?}"))
}
ty::ConstKind::Bound(..) | ty::ConstKind::Infer(..) => {
span_bug!(self.cur_span(), "unexpected ConstKind in ctfe: {val:?}")
}
ty::ConstKind::Value(valtree) => valtree,
})
}
pub fn eval_mir_constant(
&self,
val: &mir::ConstantKind<'tcx>,
span: Option<Span>,
layout: Option<TyAndLayout<'tcx>>,
) -> InterpResult<'tcx, OpTy<'tcx, M::Provenance>> {
match *val {
mir::ConstantKind::Ty(ct) => {
let ty = ct.ty();
let valtree = self.eval_ty_constant(ct, span)?;
let const_val = self.tcx.valtree_to_const_val((ty, valtree));
self.const_val_to_op(const_val, ty, layout)
}
mir::ConstantKind::Val(val, ty) => self.const_val_to_op(val, ty, layout),
mir::ConstantKind::Unevaluated(uv, _) => {
let instance = self.resolve(uv.def, uv.substs)?;
Ok(self.eval_global(GlobalId { instance, promoted: uv.promoted }, span)?.into())
}
}
}
pub(super) fn const_val_to_op(
&self,
val_val: ConstValue<'tcx>,
ty: Ty<'tcx>,
layout: Option<TyAndLayout<'tcx>>,
) -> InterpResult<'tcx, OpTy<'tcx, M::Provenance>> {
// Other cases need layout.
let adjust_scalar = |scalar| -> InterpResult<'tcx, _> {
Ok(match scalar {
Scalar::Ptr(ptr, size) => Scalar::Ptr(self.global_base_pointer(ptr)?, size),
Scalar::Int(int) => Scalar::Int(int),
})
};
let layout = from_known_layout(self.tcx, self.param_env, layout, || self.layout_of(ty))?;
let op = match val_val {
ConstValue::ByRef { alloc, offset } => {
let id = self.tcx.create_memory_alloc(alloc);
// We rely on mutability being set correctly in that allocation to prevent writes
// where none should happen.
let ptr = self.global_base_pointer(Pointer::new(id, offset))?;
Operand::Indirect(MemPlace::from_ptr(ptr.into()))
}
ConstValue::Scalar(x) => Operand::Immediate(adjust_scalar(x)?.into()),
ConstValue::ZeroSized => Operand::Immediate(Immediate::Uninit),
ConstValue::Slice { data, start, end } => {
// We rely on mutability being set correctly in `data` to prevent writes
// where none should happen.
let ptr = Pointer::new(
self.tcx.create_memory_alloc(data),
Size::from_bytes(start), // offset: `start`
);
Operand::Immediate(Immediate::new_slice(
Scalar::from_pointer(self.global_base_pointer(ptr)?, &*self.tcx),
u64::try_from(end.checked_sub(start).unwrap()).unwrap(), // len: `end - start`
self,
))
}
};
Ok(OpTy { op, layout, align: Some(layout.align.abi) })
}
}
// Some nodes are used a lot. Make sure they don't unintentionally get bigger.
#[cfg(all(target_arch = "x86_64", target_pointer_width = "64"))]
mod size_asserts {
use super::*;
use rustc_data_structures::static_assert_size;
// tidy-alphabetical-start
static_assert_size!(Immediate, 48);
static_assert_size!(ImmTy<'_>, 64);
static_assert_size!(Operand, 56);
static_assert_size!(OpTy<'_>, 80);
// tidy-alphabetical-end
}