Rollup of 7 pull requests
Successful merges:
- #136073 (Always compute coroutine layout for eagerly emitting recursive layout errors)
- #136235 (Pretty print pattern type values with transmute if they don't satisfy their pattern)
- #136311 (Ensure that we never try to monomorphize the upcasting or vtable calls of impossible dyn types)
- #136315 (Use short ty string for binop and unop errors)
- #136393 (Fix accidentally not emitting overflowing literals lints anymore in patterns)
- #136435 (Simplify some code for lowering THIR patterns)
- #136630 (Change two std process tests to not output to std{out,err}, and fix test suite stat reset in bootstrap CI test rendering)
r? `@ghost`
`@rustbot` modify labels: rollup
try-job: aarch64-gnu-debug
Simplify some code for lowering THIR patterns
I've been playing around with some radically different ways of storing THIR patterns, and while those experiments haven't yet produced a clear win, I have noticed various smaller things in the existing code that can be made a bit nicer.
Some of the more significant changes:
- With a little bit of extra effort (and thoughtful use of Arc), we can completely remove an entire layer of `'pat` lifetimes from the intermediate data structures used for match lowering.
- In several places, lists of THIR patterns were being double-boxed for no apparent reason.
Use short ty string for binop and unop errors
```
error[E0369]: cannot add `(..., ..., ..., ...)` to `(..., ..., ..., ...)`
--> $DIR/binop.rs:10:7
|
LL | x + x;
| - ^ - (..., ..., ..., ...)
| |
| (..., ..., ..., ...)
|
= note: the full name for the type has been written to '$TEST_BUILD_DIR/$FILE.long-type-hash.txt'
= note: consider using `--verbose` to print the full type name to the console
```
```
error[E0600]: cannot apply unary operator `!` to type `(..., ..., ..., ...)`
--> $DIR/binop.rs:14:5
|
LL | !x;
| ^^ cannot apply unary operator `!`
|
= note: the full name for the type has been written to '$TEST_BUILD_DIR/$FILE.long-type-hash.txt'
= note: consider using `--verbose` to print the full type name to the console
```
CC #135919.
Ensure that we never try to monomorphize the upcasting or vtable calls of impossible dyn types
Check for impossible obligations in the `dyn Trait` type we're trying to compute its the vtable upcasting and method call slots.
r? lcnr
tree-wide: parallel: Fully removed all `Lrc`, replaced with `Arc`
tree-wide: parallel: Fully removed all `Lrc`, replaced with `Arc`
This is continuation of https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/132282 .
I'm pretty sure I did everything right. In particular, I searched all occurrences of `Lrc` in submodules and made sure that they don't need replacement.
There are other possibilities, through.
We can define `enum Lrc<T> { Rc(Rc<T>), Arc(Arc<T>) }`. Or we can make `Lrc` a union and on every clone we can read from special thread-local variable. Or we can add a generic parameter to `Lrc` and, yes, this parameter will be everywhere across all codebase.
So, if you think we should take some alternative approach, then don't merge this PR. But if it is decided to stick with `Arc`, then, please, merge.
cc "Parallel Rustc Front-end" ( https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/113349 )
r? SparrowLii
`@rustbot` label WG-compiler-parallel
Upgrade elsa to the newest version.
This was locked to 1.7.1 because of an error in the elsa release process that has since been fixed. Upgrading has the advantage that the elsa code runs properly in miri, at least with tree borrows.
This was spawned from https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/135870#issuecomment-2612470540
Shard AllocMap Lock
This improves performance on many-seed parallel (-Zthreads=32) miri executions from managing to use ~8 cores to using 27-28 cores, which is about the same as what I see with the data structure proposed in https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/136105 - I haven't analyzed but I suspect the sharding might actually work out better if we commonly insert "densely" since sharding would split the cache lines and the OnceVec packs locks close together. Of course, we could do something similar with the bitset lock too.
Either way, this seems like a very reasonable starting point that solves the problem ~equally well on what I can test locally.
r? `@RalfJung`
Display of integers without raw pointers and without overflowing_literals
The benchmarks as is measure formatting speed of literals. The first commit `black_box`-es input to simulate runtime speed instead.
The second commit replaces `unsafe` pointer optimizations with plain array indices. The performance is equivalent on Apple M1. Needs peer review on Intel.
Happy to do the 128-bit version too if such change is welcome.
Explicitly choose x86 softfloat/hardfloat ABI
Part of https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/135408:
Instead of choosing this based on the target features listed in the target spec, make that choice explicit.
All built-in targets are being updated here; custom (JSON-defined) x86 (32bit and 64bit) softfloat targets need to explicitly set `rustc-abi` to `x86-softfloat`.
Add a couple of missing `ensure_sufficient_stacks`
r? `@saethlin` I hope you didn't spend time on this already.
(I couldn't sleep, opened `check_tail_calls`, there was a single call where it could happen, might as well fix it)
This PR adds a couple of missing `ensure_sufficient_stack`s:
- one in `check_tail_calls` that prevented the #135709 backport on some targets.
- after that was fixed, the test still didn't pass starting at 4MB, so I also added one in `check_unsafety` and that made it pass.
I didn't add an `rmake` test purposefully limiting the min stack size on `issue-74564-if-expr-stack-overflow.rs`, but we could if we wanted to.
On `apple-aarch64-darwin`, this is enough to make `RUST_MIN_STACK=$((1024*1024*3)) ./x test tests/ui --test-args tests/ui/issues/issue-74564-if-expr-stack-overflow.rs` pass for me locally, and it does stack overflow otherwise.
Target modifiers (special marked options) are recorded in metainfo
Target modifiers (special marked options) are recorded in metainfo and compared to be equal in different linked crates.
PR for this RFC: https://github.com/rust-lang/rfcs/pull/3716
Option may be marked as `TARGET_MODIFIER`, example: `regparm: Option<u32> = (None, parse_opt_number, [TRACKED TARGET_MODIFIER]`.
If an TARGET_MODIFIER-marked option has non-default value, it will be recorded in crate metainfo as a `Vec<TargetModifier>`:
```
pub struct TargetModifier {
pub opt: OptionsTargetModifiers,
pub value_name: String,
}
```
OptionsTargetModifiers is a macro-generated enum.
Option value code (for comparison) is generated using `Debug` trait.
Error example:
```
error: mixing `-Zregparm` will cause an ABI mismatch in crate `incompatible_regparm`
--> $DIR/incompatible_regparm.rs:10:1
|
LL | #![crate_type = "lib"]
| ^
|
= help: the `-Zregparm` flag modifies the ABI so Rust crates compiled with different values of this flag cannot be used together safely
= note: `-Zregparm=1` in this crate is incompatible with `-Zregparm=2` in dependency `wrong_regparm`
= help: set `-Zregparm=2` in this crate or `-Zregparm=1` in `wrong_regparm`
= help: if you are sure this will not cause problems, use `-Cunsafe-allow-abi-mismatch=regparm` to silence this error
error: aborting due to 1 previous error
```
`-Cunsafe-allow-abi-mismatch=regparm,reg-struct-return` to disable list of flags.
Explain why we retroactively change a static initializer to have a different type
I keep getting confused about it and in turn confused `@GuillaumeGomez` while trying to explain it badly
Shorten error message for callable with wrong return type
```
error: expected `{closure@...}` to return `Ret`, but it returns `Other`
```
instead of
```
error: expected `{closure@...}` to be a closure that returns `Ret`, but it returns `Other`
```
Fix malformed error annotations in a UI test
The compiletest DSL still features a historical remnant from the time when its directives were merely prefixed with `//` instead of `//`@`` when unknown directive names weren't rejected since they could just as well be part of prose:
As an "optimization", it stops looking for directives once it stumbles upon a line which starts with either `fn` or `mod`. This allowed a malformed error annotation of the form `//`@[…]~^^^`` to go undetected & unexercised (as it's placed below `fn main() {`).
Obviously a character other than ``@`` would've mangled the error annotation, too (but it might've caught the reviewer's eye). I specifically found this file because I ran `rg '^(fn|mod)[\s\S]*?//`@'` tests/ui --multiline -trust` to check how footgun-y that "special feature" of compiletest is.
CompileTest: Add Directives to Ignore `arm-unknown-*` Targets
In #134626, I want to ignore `arm-unknown-*` targets because the LLVM IR for those looks very different compared to other targets: https://rust.godbolt.org/z/ssYMhdv4x.
I can use `ignore-arm` but, I think, it would exclude large number of Apple devices.
So this PR adds a few directives to ignore `arm-unknown-*` targets specifically.
tests: Port `symbol-mangling-hashed` to rmake.rs
Part of #121876.
This PR supersedes #128567 and is co-authored with `@lolbinarycat.`
### Summary
This PR ports `tests/run-make/symbol-mangling-hashed` to rmake.rs. Notable differences when compared to the Makefile version includes:
- It's no longer limited to linux + x86_64 only. In particular, this now is exercised on darwin and windows (esp. msvc) too.
- The test uses `object` crate to be more precise in the filtering, and avoids relying on parsing the human-readable `nm` output for *some* `nm` in the given environment (which isn't really a thing on msvc anyway, and `llvm-nm` doesn't handle msvc dylibs AFAICT).
- Dump the symbols satisfying various criteria on test failure to make it hopefully less of a pain to debug if it ever fails in CI.
### Review advice
- Best reviewed commit-by-commit.
- I'm not *super* sure about the msvc logic, would benefit from a MSVC (PE/COFF) expert taking a look.
---
try-job: x86_64-msvc-1
try-job: i686-msvc-1
try-job: i686-mingw
try-job: x86_64-mingw-1
try-job: x86_64-apple-1
try-job: aarch64-apple
try-job: test-various
Insert null checks for pointer dereferences when debug assertions are enabled
Similar to how the alignment is already checked, this adds a check
for null pointer dereferences in debug mode. It is implemented similarly
to the alignment check as a `MirPass`.
This inserts checks in the same places as the `CheckAlignment` pass and additionally
also inserts checks for `Borrows`, so code like
```rust
let ptr: *const u32 = std::ptr::null();
let val: &u32 = unsafe { &*ptr };
```
will have a check inserted on dereference. This is done because null references
are UB. The alignment check doesn't cover these places, because in `&(*ptr).field`,
the exact requirement is that the final reference must be aligned. This is something to
consider further enhancements of the alignment check.
For now this is implemented as a separate `MirPass`, to make it easy to disable
this check if necessary.
This is related to a 2025H1 project goal for better UB checks in debug
mode: https://github.com/rust-lang/rust-project-goals/pull/177.
r? `@saethlin`
Replace our `LLVMRustDIBuilderRef` with LLVM-C's `LLVMDIBuilderRef`
Inspired by trying to split #134009 into smaller steps that are easier to review individually.
This makes it possible to start incrementally replacing our debuginfo bindings with the ones in the LLVM-C API, all of which operate on `LLVMDIBuilderRef`.
There should be no change to compiler behaviour.
Improve documentation when adding a new target
https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/133631#issuecomment-2607877936 shows that it can be a bit difficult process-wise to add a new target.
I've added a bit of text to the docs, suggesting that users add the target defintion/spec first, and later work on `std` support.
I also found that we have two places where we document how to add a new target. I've linked these for now, but they should probably be merged somehow in the future.
`@rustbot` label A-docs
r? compiler
CC `@workingjubilee` who's worked a lot on target specs IIRC.
Compiler: Finalize dyn compatibility renaming
Update the Reference link to use the new URL fragment from https://github.com/rust-lang/reference/pull/1666 (this change has finally hit stable). Fixes a FIXME.
Follow-up to #130826.
Part of #130852.
~~Blocking it on #133372.~~ (merged)
r? ghost
[rustdoc] Add `--extract-doctests` command-line flag
Part of https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/134529.
It was discussed with the Rust-for-Linux project recently that they needed a way to extract doctests so they can modify them and then run them more easily (look for "a way to extract doctests" [here](https://github.com/Rust-for-Linux/linux/issues/2)).
For now, I output most of `ScrapedDoctest` fields in JSON format with `serde_json`. So it outputs the following information:
* filename
* line
* langstr
* text
cc `@ojeda`
r? `@notriddle`
Rollup of 8 pull requests
Successful merges:
- #135414 (Stabilize `const_black_box`)
- #136150 (ci: use windows 2025 for i686-mingw)
- #136258 (rustdoc: rename `issue-\d+.rs` tests to have meaningful names (part 11))
- #136270 (Remove `NamedVarMap`.)
- #136278 (add constraint graph to polonius MIR dump)
- #136287 (LLVM changed the nocapture attribute to captures(none))
- #136291 (some test suite cleanups)
- #136296 (float::min/max: mention the non-determinism around signed 0)
r? `@ghost`
`@rustbot` modify labels: rollup
Autodiff Upstreaming - rustc_codegen_ssa, rustc_middle
This PR should not be merged until the rustc_codegen_llvm part is merged.
I will also alter it a little based on what get's shaved off from the cg_llvm PR,
and address some of the feedback I received in the other PR (including cleanups).
I am putting it already up to
1) Discuss with `@jieyouxu` if there is more work needed to add tests to this and
2) Pray that there is someone reviewing who can tell me why some of my autodiff invocations get lost.
Re 1: My test require fat-lto. I also modify the compilation pipeline. So if there are any other llvm-ir tests in the same compilation unit then I will likely break them. Luckily there are two groups who currently have the same fat-lto requirement for their GPU code which I have for my autodiff code and both groups have some plans to enable support for thin-lto. Once either that work pans out, I'll copy it over for this feature. I will also work on not changing the optimization pipeline for functions not differentiated, but that will require some thoughts and engineering, so I think it would be good to be able to run the autodiff tests isolated from the rest for now. Can you guide me here please?
For context, here are some of my tests in the samples folder: https://github.com/EnzymeAD/rustbook
Re 2: This is a pretty serious issue, since it effectively prevents publishing libraries making use of autodiff: https://github.com/EnzymeAD/rust/issues/173. For some reason my dummy code persists till the end, so the code which calls autodiff, deletes the dummy, and inserts the code to compute the derivative never gets executed. To me it looks like the rustc_autodiff attribute just get's dropped, but I don't know WHY? Any help would be super appreciated, as rustc queries look a bit voodoo to me.
Tracking:
- https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/124509
r? `@jieyouxu`