rust/src
bors 47dd709bed Auto merge of #121123 - compiler-errors:item-assumptions, r=oli-obk
Split an item bounds and an item's super predicates

This is the moral equivalent of #107614, but instead for predicates this applies to **item bounds**. This PR splits out the item bounds (i.e. *all* predicates that are assumed to hold for the alias) from the item *super predicates*, which are the subset of item bounds which share the same self type as the alias.

## Why?

Much like #107614, there are places in the compiler where we *only* care about super-predicates, and considering predicates that possibly don't have anything to do with the alias is problematic. This includes things like closure signature inference (which is at its core searching for `Self: Fn(..)` style bounds), but also lints like `#[must_use]`, error reporting for aliases, computing type outlives predicates.

Even in cases where considering all of the `item_bounds` doesn't lead to bugs, unnecessarily considering irrelevant bounds does lead to a regression (#121121) due to doing extra work in the solver.

## Example 1 - Trait Aliases

This is best explored via an example:

```
type TAIT<T> = impl TraitAlias<T>;

trait TraitAlias<T> = A + B where T: C;
```

The item bounds list for `Tait<T>` will include:
* `Tait<T>: A`
* `Tait<T>: B`
* `T: C`

While `item_super_predicates` query will include just the first two predicates.

Side-note: You may wonder why `T: C` is included in the item bounds for `TAIT`? This is because when we elaborate `TraitAlias<T>`, we will also elaborate all the predicates on the trait.

## Example 2 - Associated Type Bounds

```
type TAIT<T> = impl Iterator<Item: A>;
```

The `item_bounds` list for `TAIT<T>` will include:
* `Tait<T>: Iterator`
* `<Tait<T> as Iterator>::Item: A`

But the `item_super_predicates` will just include the first bound, since that's the only bound that is relevant to the *alias* itself.

## So what

This leads to some diagnostics duplication just like #107614, but none of it will be user-facing. We only see it in the UI test suite because we explicitly disable diagnostic deduplication.

Regarding naming, I went with `super_predicates` kind of arbitrarily; this can easily be changed, but I'd consider better names as long as we don't block this PR in perpetuity.
2024-03-21 06:12:24 +00:00
..
bootstrap Auto merge of #122754 - Mark-Simulacrum:bootstrap-bump, r=albertlarsan68 2024-03-20 13:43:41 +00:00
ci Update the minimum external LLVM to 17 2024-03-17 10:11:04 -07:00
doc Only split by-ref/by-move futures for async closures 2024-03-19 16:59:23 -04:00
etc Auto merge of #121885 - reitermarkus:generic-nonzero-inner, r=oli-obk,wesleywiser 2024-03-17 02:27:52 +00:00
librustdoc Fix bad span for explicit lifetime suggestion 2024-03-21 10:31:04 +09:00
llvm-project@0af6c732ec Update to LLVM 18.1.2 2024-03-20 12:26:19 +01:00
rustdoc-json-types Add is_object_safe information for traits in JSON output 2023-12-23 11:43:31 +01:00
tools Auto merge of #121123 - compiler-errors:item-assumptions, r=oli-obk 2024-03-21 06:12:24 +00:00
README.md
stage0.json Bump stage0 2024-03-19 19:27:24 -04:00
version Bump to 1.79.0 2024-03-16 09:56:09 -04:00

This directory contains some source code for the Rust project, including:

  • The bootstrapping build system
  • Various submodules for tools, like cargo, tidy, etc.

For more information on how various parts of the compiler work, see the rustc dev guide.