Commit Graph

3395 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Matthias Krüger 89ae2e60e3
Rollup merge of #138628 - spastorino:add-more-ergonomic-clone-tests, r=nikomatsakis
Add more ergonomic clone tests

I've added some extra tests.

r? `@nikomatsakis`
2025-04-09 20:23:09 +02:00
Matthias Krüger df1012c55c
Rollup merge of #138470 - spastorino:test-rfc2229-and-ergonomic-clones, r=nikomatsakis
Test interaction between RFC 2229 migration and use closures

r? `@nikomatsakis`

Fixes #138101
2025-04-09 20:23:08 +02:00
bors 771483bdbe Auto merge of #139327 - cjgillot:gvn-place, r=oli-obk
Allow GVN to produce places and not just locals.

That may be too big of a hammer, as we may introduce new deref projections (possible UB footgun + probably not good for perf).

The second commit opts out of introducing projections that don't have a stable offset, which is probably what we want. Hence no new Deref and no new Index projections.

Fixes https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/138936
cc `@scottmcm` `@dianqk`
2025-04-09 08:50:33 +00:00
bors cd593d4692 Auto merge of #139552 - matthiaskrgr:rollup-b194mk8, r=matthiaskrgr
Rollup of 10 pull requests

Successful merges:

 - #139494 (Restrict some queries by def-kind more)
 - #139496 (Revert r-a changes of rust-lang/rust#139455)
 - #139506 (add missing word in doc comment (part 2))
 - #139515 (Improve presentation of closure signature mismatch from `Fn` trait goal)
 - #139520 (compiletest maintenance: sort deps and drop dep on `anyhow`)
 - #139523 (Rustc dev guide subtree update)
 - #139526 (Fix deprecation note for std::intrinsics)
 - #139528 (compiletest: Remove the `--logfile` flag)
 - #139541 (Instantiate higher-ranked transmute goal w/ placeholders before emitting sub-obligations)
 - #139547 (Update library tracking issue template to set S-tracking-unimplemented)

r? `@ghost`
`@rustbot` modify labels: rollup
2025-04-09 05:39:18 +00:00
Matthias Krüger b2148a818f
Rollup merge of #139547 - joshtriplett:library-tracking-issue-template, r=Amanieu
Update library tracking issue template to set S-tracking-unimplemented

This will help people notice the `S-tracking-*` labels, and if the
tracking issue *is* implemented, they can change the label.

Discussed in a `@rust-lang/libs-api` meeting.

r? `@Amanieu`
2025-04-08 21:26:03 +02:00
Matthias Krüger 8fcd5484bc
Rollup merge of #139541 - compiler-errors:transmute, r=lcnr
Instantiate higher-ranked transmute goal w/ placeholders before emitting sub-obligations

This avoids an ICE where we weren't keeping track of bound variables correctly in the `Freeze` obligations we emit for transmute goals. We could use `rebind` instead on that goal, but I think it's better just to instantiate the binder.

Fixes #139538

r? `@lcnr` or reassign
2025-04-08 21:26:02 +02:00
Matthias Krüger af6d4f7165
Rollup merge of #139528 - Zalathar:no-logfile, r=jieyouxu
compiletest: Remove the `--logfile` flag

This flag is deprecated in libtest (#134283), and there's no evidence in-tree of this flag actually being passed to compiletest.

For detailed information about test results, bootstrap parses JSON output from compiletest instead (#108659).

As part of my experimental work on removing the libtest dependency from compiletest, it's useful to be able to disconnect libtest functionality that isn't needed.
2025-04-08 21:26:02 +02:00
Matthias Krüger 69fdbc5da4
Rollup merge of #139526 - smanilov:issue-139505, r=RalfJung
Fix deprecation note for std::intrinsics

Also checked the rest of the mentions of std::mem in the changed file and they look good to me.

Fixes #139505
2025-04-08 21:26:01 +02:00
Matthias Krüger 877f9819b0
Rollup merge of #139523 - BoxyUwU:rgd-push, r=jieyouxu
Rustc dev guide subtree update

r? `@jieyouxu`
2025-04-08 21:26:00 +02:00
许杰友 Jieyou Xu (Joe) cdc10f0a22
Merge pull request #2318 from rust-lang/tshepang-patch-3
improve flow
2025-04-07 13:00:41 +08:00
Tshepang Mbambo e76ab78d1d
improve flow 2025-04-07 06:42:37 +02:00
许杰友 Jieyou Xu (Joe) 5f6d843eef
Merge pull request #2291 from rust-lang/rustc-pull
Rustc pull update
2025-04-07 12:37:32 +08:00
The rustc-dev-guide Cronjob Bot 216eb512fb Merge from rustc 2025-04-07 04:12:22 +00:00
The rustc-dev-guide Cronjob Bot e6458031c0 Preparing for merge from rustc 2025-04-07 04:06:33 +00:00
bors 372b40ba42 Auto merge of #138951 - jwnrt:alloc-raw-vec-strict-prov, r=Noratrieb
Replace last `usize` -> `ptr` transmute in `alloc` with strict provenance API

This replaces the `usize -> ptr` transmute in `RawVecInner::new_in` with a strict provenance API (`NonNull::without_provenance`).

The API is changed to take an `Alignment` which encodes the non-null constraint needed for `Unique` and allows us to do the construction safely.

Two internal-only APIs were added to let us avoid UB-checking in this hot code: `Layout::alignment` to get the `Alignment` type directly rather than as a `usize`, and `Unique::from_non_null` to create `Unique` in const context without a transmute.
2025-04-06 23:07:48 +00:00
Takayuki Maeda ff6719eac2
Merge pull request #2317 from kxxt/patch-1
Fix deadlink in libs-and-metadata.md
2025-04-06 21:43:27 +09:00
Levi Zim 4188afe2e7
Fix deadlink in libs-and-metadata.md 2025-04-06 20:05:03 +08:00
bors 124fda2559 Auto merge of #139292 - compiler-errors:folder-experiment-7, r=lqd
Folder experiment: Micro-optimize RegionEraserVisitor

**NOTE:** This is one of a series of perf experiments that I've come up with while sick in bed. I'm assigning them to lqd b/c you're a good reviewer and you'll hopefully be awake when these experiments finish, lol.

r? lqd

The region eraser is very hot, so let's see if we can avoid erasing types (and visiting consts and preds that don't have region-ful types) unnecessarily.
2025-04-05 12:33:47 +00:00
bors 7678ec9428 Auto merge of #139281 - petrochenkov:ctxtdecod6, r=wesleywiser
hygiene: Avoid recursion in syntax context decoding

#139241 has two components
- Avoiding recursion during syntax context decoding
- Encoding/decoding only the non-redundant data, and recalculating the redundant data again during decoding

Both of these parts may influence compilation times, possibly in opposite directions.
So this PR contains only the first part to evaluate its effect in isolation.
2025-04-05 06:18:04 +00:00
bors 793fdc36e6 Auto merge of #138785 - lcnr:typing-mode-borrowck, r=compiler-errors,oli-obk
add `TypingMode::Borrowck`

Shares the first commit with #138499, doesn't really matter which PR to land first 😊 😁

Introduces `TypingMode::Borrowck` which unlike `TypingMode::Analysis`, uses the hidden type computed by HIR typeck as the initial value of opaques instead of an unconstrained infer var. This is a part of https://github.com/rust-lang/types-team/issues/129.

Using this new `TypingMode` is unfortunately a breaking change for now, see tests/ui/impl-trait/non-defining-uses/as-projection-term.rs. Using an inference variable as the initial value results in non-defining uses in the defining scope. We therefore only enable it if with `-Znext-solver=globally` or `-Ztyping-mode-borrowck`

To do that the PR contains the following changes:
- `TypeckResults::concrete_opaque_type` are already mapped to the definition of the opaque type
  - writeback now checks that the non-lifetime parameters of the opaque are universal
  - for this, `fn check_opaque_type_parameter_valid` is moved from `rustc_borrowck` to `rustc_trait_selection`
- we add a new `query type_of_opaque_hir_typeck` which, using the same visitors as MIR typeck, attempts to merge the hidden types from HIR typeck from all defining scopes
  - done by adding a `DefiningScopeKind` flag to toggle between using borrowck and HIR typeck
  - the visitors stop checking that the MIR type matches the HIR type. This is trivial as the HIR type are now used as the initial hidden types of the opaque. This check is useful as a safeguard when not using `TypingMode::Borrowck`, but adding it to the new structure is annoying and it's not soundness critical, so I intend to not add it back.
- add a `TypingMode::Borrowck`  which behaves just like `TypingMode::Analysis` except when normalizing opaque types
   - it uses `type_of_opaque_hir_typeck(opaque)` as the initial value after replacing its regions with new inference vars
   - it uses structural lookup in the new solver

fixes #112201, fixes #132335, fixes #137751

r? `@compiler-errors` `@oli-obk`
2025-04-04 19:54:42 +00:00
bors 8ce8eb22d7 Auto merge of #137869 - Noratrieb:Now_I_am_become_death,_the_destroyer_of_i686-pc-windows-gnu, r=workingjubilee
Demote i686-pc-windows-gnu to Tier 2

In accordance with [RFC 3771](https://github.com/rust-lang/rfcs/pull/3771). FCP has been completed.

tracking issue #138422

I also added a stub doc page for the target and renamed the windows-gnullvm page for consistency.
2025-04-04 15:45:03 +00:00
bors c189a961fc Auto merge of #139213 - bjorn3:cg_clif_test_coretests, r=jieyouxu
Run coretests and alloctests with cg_clif in CI

Part of https://github.com/rust-lang/rustc_codegen_cranelift/issues/1290
2025-04-04 11:59:59 +00:00
Yuki Okushi 664ab4cd4f
Merge pull request #2316 from szabgab/patch-1
Update book.toml fix the authors field
2025-04-04 15:31:01 +09:00
bors 484e2c183f Auto merge of #139287 - compiler-errors:folder-experiment-1, r=lqd
Folder experiment: Monomorphize region resolver

**NOTE:** This is one of a series of perf experiments that I've come up with while sick in bed. I'm assigning them to lqd b/c you're a good reviewer and you'll hopefully be awake when these experiments finish, lol.

r? lqd

This is actually two tweaks to the `RegionFolder`, monomorphizing its callback and accounting for flags to avoid folding unnecessarily.
2025-04-04 05:41:45 +00:00
Gábor Szabó 02aa6b4852
Update book.toml fix the authors field
See https://rust-lang.github.io/mdBook/format/configuration/general.html#general-metadata
2025-04-04 08:34:08 +03:00
bors 4799d41075 Auto merge of #120706 - Bryanskiy:leak, r=lcnr
Initial support for auto traits with default bounds

This PR is part of ["MCP: Low level components for async drop"](https://github.com/rust-lang/compiler-team/issues/727)
Tracking issue: #138781
Summary: https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/120706#issuecomment-1934006762

### Intro

Sometimes we want to use type system to express specific behavior and provide safety guarantees. This behavior can be specified by various "marker" traits. For example, we use `Send` and `Sync` to keep track of which types are thread safe. As the language develops, there are more problems that could be solved by adding new marker traits:

- to forbid types with an async destructor to be dropped in a synchronous context a trait like `SyncDrop` could be used [Async destructors, async genericity and completion futures](https://sabrinajewson.org/blog/async-drop).
- to support [scoped tasks](https://without.boats/blog/the-scoped-task-trilemma/) or in a more general sense to provide a [destruction guarantee](https://zetanumbers.github.io/book/myosotis.html) there is a desire among some users to see a `Leak` (or `Forget`) trait.
- Withoutboats in his [post](https://without.boats/blog/changing-the-rules-of-rust/) reflected on the use of `Move` trait instead of a `Pin`.

All the traits proposed above are supposed to be auto traits implemented for most types, and usually implemented automatically by compiler.

For backward compatibility these traits have to be added implicitly to all bound lists in old code (see below). Adding new default bounds involves many difficulties: many standard library interfaces may need to opt out of those default bounds, and therefore be infected with confusing `?Trait` syntax, migration to a new edition may contain backward compatibility holes, supporting new traits in the compiler can be quite difficult and so forth. Anyway, it's hard to evaluate the complexity until we try the system on a practice.

In this PR we introduce new optional lang items for traits that are added to all bound lists by default, similarly to existing `Sized`. The examples of such traits could be `Leak`, `Move`, `SyncDrop` or something else, it doesn't matter much right now (further I will call them `DefaultAutoTrait`'s). We want to land this change into rustc under an option, so it becomes available in bootstrap compiler. Then we'll be able to do standard library experiments with the aforementioned traits without adding hundreds of `#[cfg(not(bootstrap))]`s. Based on the experiments, we can come up with some scheme for the next edition, in which such bounds are added in a more targeted way, and not just everywhere.

Most of the implementation is basically a refactoring that replaces hardcoded uses of `Sized` with iterating over a list of traits including both `Sized` and the new traits when `-Zexperimental-default-bounds` is enabled (or just `Sized` as before, if the option is not enabled).

### Default bounds for old editions

All existing types, including generic parameters, are considered `Leak`/`Move`/`SyncDrop` and can be forgotten, moved or destroyed in generic contexts without specifying any bounds. New types that cannot be, for example, forgotten and do not implement `Leak` can be added at some point, and they should not be usable in such generic contexts in existing code.

To both maintain this property and keep backward compatibility with existing code, the new traits should be added as default bounds _everywhere_ in previous editions. Besides the implicit `Sized` bound contexts that includes supertrait lists and trait lists in trait objects (`dyn Trait1 + ... + TraitN`). Compiler should also generate implicit `DefaultAutoTrait` implementations for foreign types (`extern { type Foo; }`) because they are also currently usable in generic contexts without any bounds.

#### Supertraits

Adding the new traits as supertraits to all existing traits is potentially necessary, because, for example, using a `Self` param in a trait's associated item may be a breaking change otherwise:

```rust
trait Foo: Sized {
    fn new() -> Option<Self>; // ERROR: `Option` requires `DefaultAutoTrait`, but `Self` is not `DefaultAutoTrait`
}

// desugared `Option`
enum Option<T: DefaultAutoTrait + Sized> {
    Some(T),
    None,
}
```

However, default supertraits can significantly affect compiler performance. For example, if we know that `T: Trait`, the compiler would deduce that `T: DefaultAutoTrait`. It also implies proving `F: DefaultAutoTrait` for each field `F` of type `T` until an explicit impl is be provided.

If the standard library is not modified, then even traits like `Copy` or `Send` would get these supertraits.

In this PR for optimization purposes instead of adding default supertraits, bounds are added to the associated items:

```rust
// Default bounds are generated in the following way:
trait Trait {
   fn foo(&self) where Self: DefaultAutoTrait {}
}

// instead of this:
trait Trait: DefaultAutoTrait {
   fn foo(&self) {}
}
```

It is not always possible to do this optimization because of backward compatibility:

```rust
pub trait Trait<Rhs = Self> {}
pub trait Trait1 : Trait {} // ERROR: `Rhs` requires `DefaultAutoTrait`, but `Self` is not `DefaultAutoTrait`
```

or

```rust
trait Trait {
   type Type where Self: Sized;
}
trait Trait2<T> : Trait<Type = T> {} // ERROR: `???` requires `DefaultAutoTrait`, but `Self` is not `DefaultAutoTrait`
```

Therefore, `DefaultAutoTrait`'s are still being added to supertraits if the `Self` params or type bindings were found in the trait header.

#### Trait objects

Trait objects requires explicit `+ Trait` bound to implement corresponding trait which is not backward compatible:

```rust
fn use_trait_object(x: Box<dyn Trait>) {
   foo(x) // ERROR: `foo` requires `DefaultAutoTrait`, but `dyn Trait` is not `DefaultAutoTrait`
}

// implicit T: DefaultAutoTrait here
fn foo<T>(_: T) {}
```

So, for a trait object `dyn Trait` we should add an implicit bound `dyn Trait + DefaultAutoTrait` to make it usable, and allow relaxing it with a question mark syntax `dyn Trait + ?DefaultAutoTrait` when it's not necessary.

#### Foreign types

If compiler doesn't generate auto trait implementations for a foreign type, then it's a breaking change if the default bounds are added everywhere else:

```rust
// implicit T: DefaultAutoTrait here
fn foo<T: ?Sized>(_: &T) {}

extern "C" {
    type ExternTy;
}

fn forward_extern_ty(x: &ExternTy) {
    foo(x); // ERROR: `foo` requires `DefaultAutoTrait`, but `ExternTy` is not `DefaultAutoTrait`
}
```

We'll have to enable implicit `DefaultAutoTrait` implementations for foreign types at least for previous editions:

```rust
// implicit T: DefaultAutoTrait here
fn foo<T: ?Sized>(_: &T) {}

extern "C" {
    type ExternTy;
}

impl DefaultAutoTrait for ExternTy {} // implicit impl

fn forward_extern_ty(x: &ExternTy) {
    foo(x); // OK
}
```

### Unresolved questions

New default bounds affect all existing Rust code complicating an already complex type system.

- Proving an auto trait predicate requires recursively traversing the type and proving the predicate for it's fields. This leads to a significant performance regression. Measurements for the stage 2 compiler build show up to 3x regression.
    - We hope that fast path optimizations for well known traits could mitigate such regressions at least partially.
- New default bounds trigger some compiler bugs in both old and new trait solver.
- With new default bounds we encounter some trait solver cycle errors that break existing code.
    - We hope that these cases are bugs that can be addressed in the new trait solver.

Also migration to a new edition could be quite ugly and enormous, but that's actually what we want to solve. For other issues there's a chance that they could be solved by a new solver.
2025-04-04 01:35:52 +00:00
Guillaume Gomez 91dedbdd74
Merge pull request #2315 from lolbinarycat/rustdoc-gui-readme
add some links about the rustdoc-gui test suite
2025-04-03 22:09:48 +02:00
binarycat 7fda61b116 add some links about the rustdoc-gui test suite 2025-04-03 15:09:11 -05:00
bors b88927408f Auto merge of #132527 - DianQK:gvn-stmt-iter, r=oli-obk
gvn: Invalid dereferences for all non-local mutations

Fixes #132353.

This PR removes the computation value by traversing SSA locals through `for_each_assignment_mut`.

Because the `for_each_assignment_mut` traversal skips statements which have side effects, such as dereference assignments, the computation may be unsound. Instead of `for_each_assignment_mut`, we compute values by traversing in reverse postorder.

Because we compute and use the symbolic representation of values on the fly, I invalidate all old values when encountering a dereference assignment. The current approach does not prevent the optimization of a clone to a copy.

In the future, we may add an alias model, or dominance information for dereference assignments, or SSA form to help GVN.

r? cjgillot

cc `@jieyouxu` #132356
cc `@RalfJung` #133474
2025-04-03 19:17:33 +00:00
bors 20d0bf9f27 Auto merge of #139301 - matthiaskrgr:rollup-sa6ali8, r=matthiaskrgr
Rollup of 7 pull requests

Successful merges:

 - #139080 (Experimental feature gate for `super let`)
 - #139145 (slice: Remove some uses of unsafe in first/last chunk methods)
 - #139149 (unstable book: document import_trait_associated_functions)
 - #139273 (Apply requested API changes to `cell_update`)
 - #139282 (rustdoc: make settings checkboxes always square)
 - #139283 (Rustc dev guide subtree update)
 - #139294 (Fix the `f16`/`f128` feature gates on integer literals)

r? `@ghost`
`@rustbot` modify labels: rollup
2025-04-03 15:31:20 +00:00
bors 9cebb04a9d Auto merge of #139137 - petrochenkov:errwhere2, r=jieyouxu
compiletest: Require `//~` annotations even if `error-pattern` is specified

This is continuation of #138865 with some help from #139100.

`error-pattern` annotations that duplicate the newly added `//~` annotations are removed, other `error-pattern`s are not touched yet.

In exceptional cases `//@ compile-flags: --error-format=human` can be used to opt out of these checks.
In this PR I only had to use the opt out 3 times:
- `tests/ui/parser/utf16-{be,le}-without-bom.rs` - there are too many errors that are nearly identical (modulo location), because an error is reported on every second symbol
- `tests/ui-fulldeps/missing-rustc-driver-error.rs` - the errors list various rustc crate dependencies and may unexpectedly invalidate on random rustc changes
2025-04-03 12:05:32 +00:00
bors bd26aa7042 Auto merge of #137738 - Daniel-Aaron-Bloom:const_slice_make_iter, r=dtolnay
Make slice iterator constructors unstably const

See [tracking issue](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/137737) for justification.

try-job: aarch64-apple
try-job: x86_64-gnu
2025-04-03 08:57:46 +00:00
Vadim Petrochenkov 8f4357e7a2 compiletest: Require `//~` annotations even if `error-pattern` is specified 2025-04-03 11:08:55 +03:00
Matthias Krüger cbb602f19b
Rollup merge of #139294 - beetrees:fix-f16-f128-literal-feature-gate, r=fmease
Fix the `f16`/`f128` feature gates on integer literals

The feature gating logic for `f16`/`f128` currently only checks float literals, meaning this code currently compiles with no feature gates on stable ([playground](https://play.rust-lang.org/?version=stable&mode=debug&edition=2024&gist=b0c0e285ccb822fc7e2abc595557886b)):
```rust
fn main() {
    let a = 1f16;
    let b = 1f128;
    dbg!(a, b);
}
```
This PR fixes that.

Tracking issue: #116909
2025-04-03 07:39:08 +02:00
Matthias Krüger 2352fada0a
Rollup merge of #139283 - BoxyUwU:rdg-push, r=jieyouxu
Rustc dev guide subtree update

r? ``@jieyouxu`` ``@Kobzol``
2025-04-03 07:39:08 +02:00
Matthias Krüger f61e6a5c28
Rollup merge of #139080 - m-ou-se:super-let-gate, r=traviscross
Experimental feature gate for `super let`

This adds an experimental feature gate, `#![feature(super_let)]`, for the `super let` experiment.

Tracking issue: https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/139076

Liaison: ``@nikomatsakis``

## Description

There's a rough (inaccurate) description here: https://blog.m-ou.se/super-let/

In short, `super let` allows you to define something that lives long enough to be borrowed by the tail expression of the block. For example:

```rust
let a = {
    super let b = temp();
    &b
};
```

Here, `b` is extended to live as long as `a`, similar to how in `let a = &temp();`, the temporary will be extended to live as long as `a`.

## Properties

During the temporary lifetimes work we did last year, we explored the properties of "super let" and concluded that the fundamental property should be that these two are always equivalent in any context:

1. `& $expr`
2. `{ super let a = & $expr; a }`

And, additionally, that these are equivalent in any context when `$expr` is a temporary (aka rvalue):

1. `& $expr`
2. `{ super let a = $expr; & a }`

This makes it possible to give a name to a temporary without affecting how temporary lifetimes work, such that a macro can transparently use a block in its expansion, without that having any effect on the outside.

## Implementing pin!() correctly

With `super let`, we can properly implement the `pin!()` macro without hacks: 

```rust
pub macro pin($value:expr $(,)?) {
    {
        super let mut pinned = $value;
        unsafe { $crate::pin::Pin::new_unchecked(&mut pinned) }
    }
}
```

This is important, as there is currently no way to express it without hacks in Rust 2021 and before (see [hacky definition](2a06022951/library/core/src/pin.rs (L1947))), and no way to express it at all in Rust 2024 (see [issue](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/138718)).

## Fixing format_args!()

This will also allow us to express `format_args!()` in a way where one can assign the result to a variable, fixing a [long standing issue](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/92698):

```rust
let f = format_args!("Hello {name}!"); // error today, but accepted in the future! (after separate FCP)
```

## Experiment

The precise definition of `super let`, what happens for `super let x;` (without initializer), and whether to accept `super let _ = _ else { .. }` are still open questions, to be answered by the experiment.

Furthermore, once we have a more complete understanding of the feature, we might be able to come up with a better syntax. (Which could be just a different keywords, or an entirely different way of naming temporaries that doesn't involve a block and a (super) let statement.)
2025-04-03 07:39:05 +02:00
León Orell Valerian Liehr eb02e6bf34
Merge pull request #2314 from rust-lang/tshepang-patch-3
test directive can appear anywhere in the file
2025-04-03 03:19:07 +02:00
Tshepang Mbambo a90cb7416c
test directive can appear anywhere in the file 2025-04-03 02:04:49 +02:00
许杰友 Jieyou Xu (Joe) c834b7ed95
Merge pull request #2313 from jieyouxu/rustc-pull
Rustc pull
2025-04-02 23:35:57 +08:00
Jieyou Xu 64527fa438
Merge from rustc 2025-04-02 23:26:35 +08:00
Jieyou Xu b67b4357e4
Preparing for merge from rustc 2025-04-02 23:26:26 +08:00
bors 9720c5c717 Auto merge of #138928 - ChrisDenton:fix-uwp, r=tgross35
Fix UWP reparse point check

Fixes #138921
2025-04-01 18:22:03 +00:00
bors df5deaf921 Auto merge of #138492 - lcnr:rm-inline_const_pat, r=oli-obk
remove `feature(inline_const_pat)`

Summarizing https://rust-lang.zulipchat.com/#narrow/channel/144729-t-types/topic/remove.20feature.28inline_const_pat.29.20and.20shared.20borrowck.

With https://github.com/rust-lang/types-team/issues/129 we will start to borrowck items together with their typeck parent. This is necessary to correctly support opaque types, blocking the new solver and TAIT/ATPIT stabilization with the old one. This means that we cannot really support `inline_const_pat` as they are implemented right now:

- we want to typeck inline consts together with their parent body to allow inference to flow both ways and to allow the const to refer to local regions of its parent.This means we also need to borrowck the inline const together with its parent as that's necessary to properly support opaque types
- we want the inline const pattern to participate in exhaustiveness checking
- to participate in exhaustiveness checking we need to evaluate it, which requires borrowck, which now relies on borrowck of the typeck root, which ends up checking exhaustiveness again. **This is a query cycle**.

There are 4 possible ways to handle this:
- stop typechecking inline const patterns together with their parent
  - causes inline const patterns to be different than inline const exprs
  - prevents bidirectional inference, we need to either fail to compile `if let const { 1 } = 1u32` or `if let const { 1u32 } = 1`
  - region inference for inline consts will be harder, it feels non-trivial to support inline consts referencing local regions from the parent fn
- inline consts no longer participate in exhaustiveness checking. Treat them like `pat if pat == const { .. }`  instead. We then only evaluate them after borrowck
  - difference between `const { 1 }`  and `const FOO: usize = 1; match x { FOO => () }`. This is confusing
  - do they carry their weight if they are now just equivalent to using an if-guard
- delay exhaustiveness checking until after borrowck
  - should be possible in theory, but is a quite involved change and may have some unexpected challenges
- remove this feature for now

I believe we should either delay exhaustiveness checking or remove the feature entirely. As moving exhaustiveness checking to after borrow checking is quite complex I think the right course of action is to fully remove the feature for now and to add it again once/if we've got that implementation figured out.

`const { .. }`-expressions remain stable. These seem to have been the main motivation for https://github.com/rust-lang/rfcs/issues/2920.

r? types

cc `@rust-lang/types` `@rust-lang/lang` #76001
2025-04-01 14:20:46 +00:00
bors bd0889c207 Auto merge of #138892 - compiler-errors:revert-ptr-ptr, r=oli-obk
Revert "Rollup merge of #136127 - WaffleLapkin:dyn_ptr_unwrap_cast, r=compiler-errors"

...not permanently tho. Just until we can land something like #138542, which will fix the underlying perf issues (https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/136127#issuecomment-2743891744). I just don't want this to land on beta and have people rely on this behavior if it'll need some reworking for it to be implemented performantly.

r? `@WaffleLapkin` or reassign -- sorry for reverting ur pr! i'm working on getting it re-landed soon :>
2025-03-31 11:58:58 +00:00
bors bed5db348e Auto merge of #139083 - petrochenkov:ctxtdecod3, r=nnethercote
hygiene: Rewrite `apply_mark_internal` to be more understandable

The previous implementation allocated new `SyntaxContext`s in the inverted order, and it was generally very hard to understand why its result matches what the `opaque` and `opaque_and_semitransparent` field docs promise.
```rust
/// This context, but with all transparent and semi-transparent expansions filtered away.
opaque: SyntaxContext,
/// This context, but with all transparent expansions filtered away.
opaque_and_semitransparent: SyntaxContext,
```
It also couldn't be easily reused for the case where the context id is pre-reserved like in #129827.

The new implementation tries to follow the docs in a more straightforward way.
I did the transformation in small steps, so it indeed matches the old implementation, not just the docs.
So I suggest reading only the new version.
2025-03-31 08:44:14 +00:00
bors 1255d58927 Auto merge of #119220 - Urgau:uplift-invalid_null_ptr_usage, r=fee1-dead
Uplift `clippy::invalid_null_ptr_usage` lint as `invalid_null_arguments`

This PR aims at uplifting the `clippy::invalid_null_ptr_usage` lint into rustc, this is similar to the [`clippy::invalid_utf8_in_unchecked` uplift](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/111543) a few months ago, in the sense that those two lints lint on invalid parameter(s), here a null pointer where it is unexpected and UB to pass one.

*For context: GitHub Search reveals that just for `slice::from_raw_parts{_mut}` [~20 invalid usages](hhttps://github.com/search?q=lang%3Arust+%2Fslice%3A%3Afrom_raw_parts%28_mut%29%3F%5C%28ptr%3A%3Anull%2F+NOT+path%3A%2F%5Eclippy_lints%5C%2Fsrc%5C%2F%2F+NOT+path%3A%2F%5Erust%5C%2Fsrc%5C%2Ftools%5C%2Fclippy%5C%2Fclippy_lints%5C%2Fsrc%5C%2F%2F+NOT+path%3A%2F%5Esrc%5C%2Ftools%5C%2Fclippy%5C%2Fclippy_lints%5C%2Fsrc%5C%2F%2F&type=code) with `ptr::null` and an additional [4 invalid usages](https://github.com/search?q=lang%3Arust+%2Fslice%3A%3Afrom_raw_parts%5C%280%28%5C%29%7C+as%29%2F+NOT+path%3A%2F%5Eclippy_lints%5C%2Fsrc%5C%2F%2F+NOT+path%3A%2F%5Erust%5C%2Fsrc%5C%2Ftools%5C%2Fclippy%5C%2Fclippy_lints%5C%2Fsrc%5C%2F%2F+NOT+path%3A%2F%5Esrc%5C%2Ftools%5C%2Fclippy%5C%2Fclippy_lints%5C%2Fsrc%5C%2F%2F+NOT+path%3A%2F%5Eutils%5C%2Ftinystr%5C%2Fsrc%5C%2F%2F+NOT+path%3A%2F%5Eutils%5C%2Fzerovec%5C%2Fsrc%5C%2F%2F+NOT+path%3A%2F%5Eprovider%5C%2Fcore%5C%2Fsrc%5C%2F%2F&type=code) with `0 as *const ...`-ish casts.*

-----

## `invalid_null_arguments`

(deny-by-default)

The `invalid_null_arguments` lint checks for invalid usage of null pointers.

### Example

```rust
// Undefined behavior
unsafe { std::slice::from_raw_parts(ptr::null(), 1); }
```

Produces:
```
error: calling this function with a null pointer is Undefined Behavior, even if the result of the function is unused
  --> $DIR/invalid_null_args.rs:21:23
   |
LL |     let _: &[usize] = std::slice::from_raw_parts(ptr::null_mut(), 0);
   |                       ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^---------------^^^^
   |                                                  |
   |                                                  null pointer originates from here
   |
   = help: for more information, visit <https://doc.rust-lang.org/std/ptr/index.html> and <https://doc.rust-lang.org/reference/behavior-considered-undefined.html>
```

### Explanation

Calling methods whose safety invariants requires non-null pointer with a null pointer is undefined behavior.

-----

The lint use a list of functions to know which functions and arguments to checks, this could be improved in the future with a rustc attribute, or maybe even with a `#[diagnostic]` attribute.

This PR also includes some small refactoring to avoid some ambiguities in naming, those can be done in another PR is desired.

`@rustbot` label: +I-lang-nominated
r? compiler
2025-03-31 04:17:14 +00:00
bors 91d0b48f01 Auto merge of #139131 - m-ou-se:format-args-struct-expr, r=Mark-Simulacrum
Simplify expansion for format_args!().

Instead of calling `Placeholder::new()`, we can just use a struct expression directly.

Before:

```rust
        Placeholder::new(…, …, …, …)
```

After:

```rust
        Placeholder {
                position: …,
                flags: …,
                width: …,
                precision: …,
        }
```

(I originally avoided the struct expression, because `Placeholder` had a lot of fields. But now that https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/136974 is merged, it only has four fields left.)

This will make the `fmt` argument to `fmt::Arguments::new_v1_formatted()` a candidate for const promotion, which is important if we ever hope to tackle https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/92698 (It doesn't change anything yet though, because the `args` argument to `fmt::Arguments::new_v1_formatted()` is not const-promotable.)
2025-03-30 21:59:02 +00:00
bors 64360586ff Auto merge of #138206 - amy-kwan:amy-kwan/reprc-struct-power-align-ignore-packed-align, r=workingjubilee
[AIX] Ignore linting on repr(C) structs with repr(packed) or repr(align(n))

This PR updates the lint added in 9b40bd7 to ignore repr(C) structs that also have repr(packed) or repr(align(n)).

As these representations can be modifiers on repr(C), it is assumed that users that add these should know what they are doing, and thus the the lint should not warn on the respective structs. For example, for the time being, using repr(packed) and manually padding a repr(C) struct can be done to correctly align struct members on AIX.
2025-03-30 14:47:07 +00:00
许杰友 Jieyou Xu (Joe) 4fe9ead682
Merge pull request #2311 from clubby789/partial-clone-link
Fix partial clone link
2025-03-30 20:37:26 +08:00
clubby789 fcb6370406 Fix partial clone link 2025-03-30 13:21:01 +01:00