Notes about closure de-sugaring
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- [The HIR (High-level IR)](./hir.md)
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- [The HIR (High-level IR)](./hir.md)
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- [Lowering AST to HIR](./lowering.md)
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- [Lowering AST to HIR](./lowering.md)
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- [Debugging](./hir-debugging.md)
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- [Debugging](./hir-debugging.md)
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- [Closure expansion](./closure.md)
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- [The `ty` module: representing types](./ty.md)
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- [The `ty` module: representing types](./ty.md)
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- [Kinds](./kinds.md)
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- [Kinds](./kinds.md)
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- [Type inference](./type-inference.md)
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- [Type inference](./type-inference.md)
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# Closure Expansion in rustc
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Let's start with a few examples
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### Example 1
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```rust
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fn closure(f: impl Fn()) {
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f();
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}
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fn main() {
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let x: i32 = 10;
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closure(|| println!("Hi {}", x)); // The closure just reads x.
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println!("Value of x after return {}", x);
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}
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```
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Let's say the above is the content of a file called immut.rs. If we compile immut.rs using the command
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```
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rustc +stage1 immut.rs -Zdump-mir=all
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```
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we will see a newly generated directory in our current working directory called mir_dump, which will
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contain several files. If we look at file `rustc.main.-------.mir_map.0.mir`, we will find, among
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other things, it also contains this line:
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```rust,ignore
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_4 = &_1; // bb0[6]: scope 1 at immut.rs:7:13: 7:36
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_3 = [closure@immut.rs:7:13: 7:36] { x: move _4 }; // bb0[7]: scope 1 at immut.rs:7:13: 7:36
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```
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Here in first line `_4 = &_1;`, the mir_dump tells us that x was borrowed as an immutable reference.
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This is what we would hope as our closure just reads x.
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### Example 2
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```rust
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fn closure(mut f: impl FnMut()) {
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f();
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}
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fn main() {
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let mut x: i32 = 10;
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closure(|| {
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x += 10; // The closure mutates the value of x
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println!("Hi {}", x)
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});
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println!("Value of x after return {}", x);
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}
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```
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```rust,ignore
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_4 = &mut _1; // bb0[6]: scope 1 at mut.rs:7:13: 10:6
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_3 = [closure@mut.rs:7:13: 10:6] { x: move _4 }; // bb0[7]: scope 1 at mut.rs:7:13: 10:6
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```
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This time along, in the line `_4 = &mut _1;`, we see that the borrow is changed to mutable borrow.
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fair enough as the closure increments x by 10.
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### Example 3
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```rust
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fn closure(f: impl FnOnce()) {
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f();
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}
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fn main() {
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let x = vec![21];
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closure(|| {
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drop(x); // Makes x unusable after the fact.
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});
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// println!("Value of x after return {:?}", x);
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}
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```
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```rust,ignore
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_6 = [closure@move.rs:7:13: 9:6] { x: move _1 }; // bb16[3]: scope 1 at move.rs:7:13: 9:6
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```
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Here, x is directly moved into the closure and the access to it will not be permitted after the
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closure.
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Now let's dive into rustc code and see how all these inferences are done by the compiler.
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Let's start with defining a term that we will be using quite a bit in the rest of the discussion -
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*upvar*. An **upvar** is a variable that is local to the function, where the closure is defined. So,
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in the above examples, **x** will be an upvar to the closure. They are also sometimes referred to as
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the *free variables* meaning they are not bound to the context of the closure.
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`src/librustc/ty/query/mod.rs` defines a query called *freevars* for this purpose.
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So, we know that other than lazy invocation, one other thing that the distinguishes a closure from a
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normal function is that it can use the upvars. Because, it borrows these upvars from its surrounding
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context, therfore the compiler has to determine the upvar's borrow type. The compiler starts with
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assigning an immutable borrow type and lowers the restriction (that is, changes it from
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**immutable** to **mutable** to **move**) as needed, based on the usage. In the Example 1 above, the
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closure only uses the variable for printing but does not modify it in any way and therefore, in the
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mir_dump, we find the borrow type for the upvar x to be immutable. In example 2, however the
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closure modifies x and increments it by some value. Because of this mutation, the compiler, which
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started off assigning x as an immutable reference type, has to adjust it as mutable reference.
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Likewise in the third example, the closure drops the vector and therefore this requires the variable
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x to be moved into the closure. Depending on the borrow kind, the closure has to implement the
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appropriate trait. Fn trait for immutable borrow, FnMut for mutable borrow and FnOnce for move
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semantics.
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Most of the code related to the closure is in the src/librustc_typeck/check/upvar.rs file and the
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data structures are declared in the file src/librustc/ty/mod.rs.
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Before we go any further, let's discuss how we can examine the flow of coontrol through the rustc
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codebase. For the closure part specifically, I would set the RUST_LOG as under and collect the
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output in a file
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```
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RUST_LOG=rustc_typeck::check::upvar rustc +stage1 -Zdump-mir=all <.rs file to compile> 2> <file
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where the output will be dumped>
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```
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This uses the stage1 compiler.
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The other option is to step through the code using lldb or gdb.
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```
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1. rust-lldb build/x86_64-apple-darwin/stage1/bin/rustc test.rs
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2. b upvar.rs:134 // Setting the breakpoint on a certain line in the upvar.rs file
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3. r // Run the program until it hits the breakpoint
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```
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Let's start with the file: `upvar.rs`. This file has something called the euv::ExprUseVisitor which
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walks the source of the closure and it gets called back for each upvar that is borrowed, mutated or
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moved.
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```rust
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fn main() {
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let x = vec![21];
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let _cl = || {
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let y = x[0]; // 1.
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x[0] += 1; // 2.
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};
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}
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```
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In the above example, our visitor will be called twice, for the lines marked 1 and 2, once as a
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shared borrow and another one as a mutable borrow. It will also tell as what was borrowed. The
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callbacks get invoked at the delegate. The delegate is of type `struct InferBorrowKind` which has a
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few fields but the one we are interested in is the `adjust_upvar_captures` which is of type
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`FxHashMap<UpvarId, UpvarCapture<'tcx>>` which tells us for each upvar, which mode of borrow did we
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require. The modes of borrow can be ByValue (moved) or ByRef (borrowed) and for ByRef borrows, it
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can be one among shared, shallow, unique or mut as defined in the `src/librustc/mir/mod.rs`
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The method callbacks are the method implementations of the euv::Delegate trait for InferBorrowKind.
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**consume** callback is for *move* of a variable, **borrow** callback if there is a *borrow* of some
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kind, shared or mutable and **mutate** when we see an *assignment* of something. We will see that
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all these callbacks have a common argument *cmt* which stands for category, Mutability and Type and
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is defined in *src/librustc/middle/mem_categorization.rs*. Borrowing from the code comments *cmt *is
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a complete categorization of a value indicating where it originated and how it is located, as well
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as the mutability of the memory in which the value is stored.** Based on the callback (consume,
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borrow etc.), we will call the relevant *adjust_upvar_borrow_kind_for_<something>* and pass the cmt
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along. Once the borrow type is adjusted, we store it in the table, which basically says for this
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closure, these set of borrows were made.
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```
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self.tables
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.borrow_mut()
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.upvar_capture_map
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.extend(delegate.adjust_upvar_captures);
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```
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