-
Notifications
You must be signed in to change notification settings - Fork 12.8k
New issue
Have a question about this project? Sign up for a free GitHub account to open an issue and contact its maintainers and the community.
By clicking “Sign up for GitHub”, you agree to our terms of service and privacy statement. We’ll occasionally send you account related emails.
Already on GitHub? Sign in to your account
Winnow private method candidates instead of assuming any candidate of the right name will apply #125622
Conversation
Can you please share what the motivation here is? Don't see a linked issue and there's no inline discussion, and there's also no test -- hard to understand how all these changes fit together without that. @rustbot author |
/// List of potential private candidates. Will be trimmed to ones that | ||
/// actually apply and then the result inserted into `private_candidate` | ||
private_candidates: Vec<Candidate<'tcx>>, | ||
|
||
/// Some(candidate) if there is a private candidate | ||
private_candidate: Option<(DefKind, DefId)>, | ||
private_candidate: Cell<Option<(DefKind, DefId)>>, |
There was a problem hiding this comment.
Choose a reason for hiding this comment
The reason will be displayed to describe this comment to others. Learn more.
What is the difference between these lol
There was a problem hiding this comment.
Choose a reason for hiding this comment
The reason will be displayed to describe this comment to others. Learn more.
Or actually, better question: Why do we need two fields here?
There was a problem hiding this comment.
Choose a reason for hiding this comment
The reason will be displayed to describe this comment to others. Learn more.
We need the private_candidate
field to communicate an actually found candidate out to the pick
method. While we could just eagerly return the PrivateMatch
error, that would mean we'd miss out on suggesting traits that could be imported to get access to another method of the same name.
Of course we could just eagerly report (not return) an error from method selection and return that no methods were found, which will subsequently return an error containing the list of traits that should be imported. But then method selection is reporting errors, which is also not be desirable (and probably wrong in various cases where we'll return a better error later).
🤦 there is a test, I've just been looking at it all day working on this, and the end result was "no change", which I wanted. Though I just remembered how to write a test that has user visible changes. Will update docs and tests tomorrow |
@oli-obk: I don't need a test per se, but eitehr a test or motivation for why you want this change otherwise would be useful. I just don't know how to review this change w/o any information, since it doesn't seem like a cleanup by itself. |
81ca8e3
to
08914ca
Compare
08914ca
to
575c86f
Compare
@bors r+ |
…ompiler-errors Winnow private method candidates instead of assuming any candidate of the right name will apply partially reverts rust-lang#60721 My original motivation was just to avoid the `delay_span_bug` (by attempting to thread the `ErrorGuaranteed` through to here). But then I realized that the error message is wrong. It refers to the `Foo<A>::foo` instead of `Foo<B>::foo`. This is almost invisible, because both functions are the same, but on different lines, so `-Zui-testing` makes it so the test is the same no matter which of these two functions is referenced. But there's a much more obvious bug: If `Foo<B>` does not have a `foo` method at all, but `Foo<A>` has a private `foo` method, then we'll refer to that one. This has now been fixed, and we report a normal `method not found` error. The way this is done is by creating a list of all possible private functions (just like we create a list of the public functions that can actually be called), and then winnowing it by analyzing where bounds and `Self` types to see if any of the found methods can actually apply (again, just like with the list of public functions). I wonder if there is room for doing the same thing with unstable functions instead of running all of method resolution twice. r? `@compiler-errors` for method resolution stuff
double check tidy perhaps? |
… candidates instead of assuming any candidate of the right name will apply.
575c86f
to
ffb1b2c
Compare
rebased and adjusted tidy limits @bors r=compiler-errors |
…ompiler-errors Winnow private method candidates instead of assuming any candidate of the right name will apply partially reverts rust-lang#60721 My original motivation was just to avoid the `delay_span_bug` (by attempting to thread the `ErrorGuaranteed` through to here). But then I realized that the error message is wrong. It refers to the `Foo<A>::foo` instead of `Foo<B>::foo`. This is almost invisible, because both functions are the same, but on different lines, so `-Zui-testing` makes it so the test is the same no matter which of these two functions is referenced. But there's a much more obvious bug: If `Foo<B>` does not have a `foo` method at all, but `Foo<A>` has a private `foo` method, then we'll refer to that one. This has now been fixed, and we report a normal `method not found` error. The way this is done is by creating a list of all possible private functions (just like we create a list of the public functions that can actually be called), and then winnowing it by analyzing where bounds and `Self` types to see if any of the found methods can actually apply (again, just like with the list of public functions). I wonder if there is room for doing the same thing with unstable functions instead of running all of method resolution twice. r? `@compiler-errors` for method resolution stuff
Rollup of 7 pull requests Successful merges: - rust-lang#122192 (Do not try to reveal hidden types when trying to prove Freeze in the defining scope) - rust-lang#124840 (resolve: mark it undetermined if single import is not has any bindings) - rust-lang#125622 (Winnow private method candidates instead of assuming any candidate of the right name will apply) - rust-lang#125871 (Orphanck[old solver]: Consider opaque types to never cover type parameters) - rust-lang#125893 (Handle all GVN binops in a single place.) - rust-lang#125911 (delete bootstrap build before switching to bumped rustc) - rust-lang#125918 (Revert: create const block bodies in typeck via query feeding) r? `@ghost` `@rustbot` modify labels: rollup
Rollup of 7 pull requests Successful merges: - rust-lang#122192 (Do not try to reveal hidden types when trying to prove Freeze in the defining scope) - rust-lang#124840 (resolve: mark it undetermined if single import is not has any bindings) - rust-lang#125622 (Winnow private method candidates instead of assuming any candidate of the right name will apply) - rust-lang#125871 (Orphanck[old solver]: Consider opaque types to never cover type parameters) - rust-lang#125893 (Handle all GVN binops in a single place.) - rust-lang#125911 (delete bootstrap build before switching to bumped rustc) - rust-lang#125918 (Revert: create const block bodies in typeck via query feeding) r? `@ghost` `@rustbot` modify labels: rollup
Rollup of 7 pull requests Successful merges: - rust-lang#122192 (Do not try to reveal hidden types when trying to prove Freeze in the defining scope) - rust-lang#124840 (resolve: mark it undetermined if single import is not has any bindings) - rust-lang#125622 (Winnow private method candidates instead of assuming any candidate of the right name will apply) - rust-lang#125871 (Orphanck[old solver]: Consider opaque types to never cover type parameters) - rust-lang#125893 (Handle all GVN binops in a single place.) - rust-lang#125911 (delete bootstrap build before switching to bumped rustc) - rust-lang#125918 (Revert: create const block bodies in typeck via query feeding) r? `@ghost` `@rustbot` modify labels: rollup
…iaskrgr Rollup of 9 pull requests Successful merges: - rust-lang#124840 (resolve: mark it undetermined if single import is not has any bindings) - rust-lang#125622 (Winnow private method candidates instead of assuming any candidate of the right name will apply) - rust-lang#125648 (Remove unused(?) `~/rustsrc` folder from docker script) - rust-lang#125672 (Add more ABI test cases to miri (RFC 3391)) - rust-lang#125800 (Fix `mut` static task queue in SGX target) - rust-lang#125871 (Orphanck[old solver]: Consider opaque types to never cover type parameters) - rust-lang#125893 (Handle all GVN binops in a single place.) - rust-lang#126008 (Port `tests/run-make-fulldeps/issue-19371` to ui-fulldeps) - rust-lang#126032 (Update description of the `IsTerminal` example) r? `@ghost` `@rustbot` modify labels: rollup
Rollup merge of rust-lang#125622 - oli-obk:define_opaque_types15, r=compiler-errors Winnow private method candidates instead of assuming any candidate of the right name will apply partially reverts rust-lang#60721 My original motivation was just to avoid the `delay_span_bug` (by attempting to thread the `ErrorGuaranteed` through to here). But then I realized that the error message is wrong. It refers to the `Foo<A>::foo` instead of `Foo<B>::foo`. This is almost invisible, because both functions are the same, but on different lines, so `-Zui-testing` makes it so the test is the same no matter which of these two functions is referenced. But there's a much more obvious bug: If `Foo<B>` does not have a `foo` method at all, but `Foo<A>` has a private `foo` method, then we'll refer to that one. This has now been fixed, and we report a normal `method not found` error. The way this is done is by creating a list of all possible private functions (just like we create a list of the public functions that can actually be called), and then winnowing it by analyzing where bounds and `Self` types to see if any of the found methods can actually apply (again, just like with the list of public functions). I wonder if there is room for doing the same thing with unstable functions instead of running all of method resolution twice. r? ``@compiler-errors`` for method resolution stuff
bors sleepy @bors r- |
partially reverts #60721
My original motivation was just to avoid the
delay_span_bug
(by attempting to thread theErrorGuaranteed
through to here). But then I realized that the error message is wrong. It refers to theFoo<A>::foo
instead ofFoo<B>::foo
. This is almost invisible, because both functions are the same, but on different lines, so-Zui-testing
makes it so the test is the same no matter which of these two functions is referenced.But there's a much more obvious bug: If
Foo<B>
does not have afoo
method at all, butFoo<A>
has a privatefoo
method, then we'll refer to that one. This has now been fixed, and we report a normalmethod not found
error.The way this is done is by creating a list of all possible private functions (just like we create a list of the public functions that can actually be called), and then winnowing it by analyzing where bounds and
Self
types to see if any of the found methods can actually apply (again, just like with the list of public functions).I wonder if there is room for doing the same thing with unstable functions instead of running all of method resolution twice.
r? @compiler-errors for method resolution stuff