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Rollup of 20 pull requests #126653
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Rollup of 20 pull requests #126653
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Previously, `Tree::from_enum`'s implementation branched into three disjoint cases: 1. enums that uninhabited 2. enums for which all but one variant is uninhabited 3. enums with multiple inhabited variants This branching (incorrectly) did not differentiate between variantful and variantless uninhabited enums. In both cases, we assumed (and asserted) that uninhabited enums are zero-sized types. This assumption is false for enums like: enum Uninhabited { A(!, u128) } ...which, currently, has the same size as `u128`. This faulty assumption manifested as the ICE reported in rust-lang#126460. In this PR, we revise the first case of `Tree::from_enum` to consider only the narrow category of "enums that are uninhabited ZSTs". These enums, whose layouts are described with `Variants::Single { index }`, are special in their layouts otherwise resemble the `!` type and cannot be descended into like typical enums. This first case captures uninhabited enums like: enum Uninhabited { A(!, !), B(!) } The second case is revised to consider the broader category of "enums that defer their layout to one of their variants"; i.e., enums whose layouts are described with `Variants::Single { index }` and that do have a variant at `index`. This second case captures uninhabited enums that are not ZSTs, like: enum Uninhabited { A(!, u128) } ...which represent their variants with `Variants::Single`. Finally, the third case is revised to cover the broader category of "enums with multiple variants", which captures uninhabited, non-ZST enums like: enum Uninhabited { A(u8, !), B(!, u32) } ...which represent their variants with `Variants::Multiple`. This PR also adds a comment requested by RalfJung in his review of rust-lang#126358 to `compiler/rustc_const_eval/src/interpret/discriminant.rs`. Fixes rust-lang#126460
Apparently MIR borrowck cares about at least one of these for checking variance. In runtime MIR, though, there's no need for them as `PtrToPtr` does the same thing. (Banning them simplifies passes like GVN that no longer need to handle multiple cast possibilities.)
We can't mix them with candidates below them, but we can mix them with candidates above.
Signed-off-by: onur-ozkan <work@onurozkan.dev>
This is already handled at the config parsing level, so we can simplify it. Signed-off-by: onur-ozkan <work@onurozkan.dev>
This synchronizes the fuchsia test running code with the clang test runner. This brings with it: * Improved logging * Uses the fuchsia image from the SDK version * Caches the product bundle across test runs * Strips the binaries to reduce the data sent to the emulator
Co-authored-by: Oli Scherer <github35764891676564198441@oli-obk.de>
Edit from rust-lang#126631 to revert changes on ui tests
…compatible lifetimes
Sync fuchsia test runner with clang test runner This synchronizes the fuchsia test running code with the clang test runner. This brings with it: * Improved logging * Uses the fuchsia image from the SDK version * Caches the product bundle across test runs * Strips the binaries to reduce the data sent to the emulator r? `@tmandry`
…, r=matthewjasper match lowering: expand or-candidates mixed with candidates above This PR tweaks match lowering of or-patterns. Consider this: ```rust match (x, y) { (1, true) => 1, (2, false) => 2, (1 | 2, true | false) => 3, (3 | 4, true | false) => 4, _ => 5, } ``` One might hope that this can be compiled to a single `SwitchInt` on `x` followed by some boolean checks. Before this PR, we compile this to 3 `SwitchInt`s on `x`, because an arm that contains more than one or-pattern was compiled on its own. This PR groups branch `3` with the two branches above, getting us down to 2 `SwitchInt`s on `x`. We can't in general expand or-patterns freely, because this interacts poorly with another optimization we do: or-pattern simplification. When an or-pattern doesn't involve bindings, we branch the success paths of all its alternatives to the same block. The drawback is that in a case like: ```rust match (1, true) { (1 | 2, false) => unreachable!(), (2, _) => unreachable!(), _ => {} } ``` if we used a single `SwitchInt`, by the time we test `false` we don't know whether we came from the `1` case or the `2` case, so we don't know where to go if `false` doesn't match. Hence the limitation: we can process or-pattern alternatives alongside candidates that precede it, but not candidates that follow it. (Unless the or-pattern is the only remaining match pair of its candidate, in which case we can process it alongside whatever). This PR allows the processing of or-pattern alternatives alongside candidates that precede it. One benefit is that we now process or-patterns in a single place in `mod.rs`. r? `@matthewjasper`
hir_typeck: be more conservative in making "note caller chooses ty param" note In rust-lang#122195 I added a "caller chooses ty for type param" note for when the return expression type a.k.a. found type does not match the expected return type. rust-lang#126547 found that this note was confusing when the found return type *contains* the expected type, e.g. ```rs fn f<T>(t: &T) -> T { t } ``` because the found return type `&T` will *always* be different from the expected return type `T`, so the note was needlessly redundant and confusing. This PR addresses that by not making the note if the found return type contains the expected return type. r? `@fmease` (since you reviewed the original PR) Fixes rust-lang#126547
…by789 override user defined channel when using precompiled rustc We need to override `rust.channel` if it's manually specified when using the CI rustc. This is because if the compiler uses a different channel than the one specified in config.toml, tests may fail due to using a different channel than the one used by the compiler during tests. For more context, see rust-lang#122709 (comment).
…r=Nilstrieb Add @badboy and @BlackHoleFox as Mac Catalyst maintainers Assented in rust-lang/compiler-team#761 (comment) and https://rust-lang.zulipchat.com/#narrow/stream/233931-t-compiler.2Fmajor-changes/topic/Promote.20Mac.20Catalyst.20targets.20to.20Tier.202.20compiler-team.23761/near/444590303.
…drop-glue, r=oli-obk Make async drop code more consistent with regular drop code Fixes rust-lang#126573 Relates to rust-lang#126482 r? ``@petrochenkov``
…-errors Add `rustc-ice*` to `.gitignore` I am a bit surprised this wasn't already here but there doesn't seem to be any reason not to add it. This will be nice to cut down on `git {add, diff, etc}` noise when debugging crashes.
…-v2, r=Nilstrieb Replace `move||` with `move ||` Edit from rust-lang#126631 to revert changes in `tests/ui`. There are 18 instances of `move||` across 6 files in the repo: - `compiler/rustc_hir_typeck/src/typeck_root_ctxt.rs` - `library/core/src/sync/atomic.rs` - `library/std/src/sync/condvar.rs` - `library/std/src/sync/mpsc/mod.rs` - `library/std/src/sync/barrier.rs` - `library/std/src/thread/local.rs` I have replaced all such instances with `move ||` instead as it better adheres to modern formatting standards. Ideally, we would have this automated by rustfmt or some other tool, but I do not have the time to implement such a feature or tool. Nonetheless, I would encourage any effort invested into such a tool or feature.
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A-run-make
Area: port run-make Makefiles to rmake.rs
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Successful merges:
bin-emit-no-symbols
run-make
test tormake
#125787 (Migratebin-emit-no-symbols
run-make
test tormake
)ArrayToPointer
andMutToConstPointer
from runtime MIR #126308 (BanArrayToPointer
andMutToConstPointer
from runtime MIR)rustc-ice*
to.gitignore
#126615 (Addrustc-ice*
to.gitignore
)move||
withmove ||
#126632 (Replacemove||
withmove ||
)r? @ghost
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