avoid unneeded subtype obligations in lub/glb

In some specific cases, the new scheme was failing to learn as much from
a LUB/GLB operaiton as the old code, which caused coercion to go awry. A
slight ordering hack fixes this.
This commit is contained in:
Niko Matsakis 2017-04-11 17:16:57 -04:00
parent 14f1e3459f
commit 3a5bbf89b2

View File

@ -44,6 +44,10 @@ pub trait LatticeDir<'f, 'gcx: 'f+'tcx, 'tcx: 'f> : TypeRelation<'f, 'gcx, 'tcx>
// Relates the type `v` to `a` and `b` such that `v` represents
// the LUB/GLB of `a` and `b` as appropriate.
//
// Subtle hack: ordering *may* be significant here. This method
// relates `v` to `a` first, which may help us to avoid unecessary
// type variable obligations. See caller for details.
fn relate_bound(&mut self, v: Ty<'tcx>, a: Ty<'tcx>, b: Ty<'tcx>) -> RelateResult<'tcx, ()>;
}
@ -74,7 +78,29 @@ pub fn super_lattice_tys<'a, 'gcx, 'tcx, L>(this: &mut L,
Ok(v)
}
(&ty::TyInfer(TyVar(..)), _) |
// If one side is known to be a variable and one is not,
// create a variable (`v`) to represent the LUB. Make sure to
// relate `v` to the non-type-variable first (by passing it
// first to `relate_bound`). Otherwise, we would produce a
// subtype obligation that must then be processed.
//
// Example: if the LHS is a type variable, and RHS is
// `Box<i32>`, then we current compare `v` to the RHS first,
// which will instantiate `v` with `Box<i32>`. Then when `v`
// is compared to the LHS, we instantiate LHS with `Box<i32>`.
// But if we did in reverse order, we would create a `v <:
// LHS` (or vice versa) constraint and then instantiate
// `v`. This would require further processing to achieve same
// end-result; in partiular, this screws up some of the logic
// in coercion, which expects LUB to figure out that the LHS
// is (e.g.) `Box<i32>`. A more obvious solution might be to
// iterate on the subtype obligations that are returned, but I
// think this suffices. -nmatsakis
(&ty::TyInfer(TyVar(..)), _) => {
let v = infcx.next_ty_var(TypeVariableOrigin::LatticeVariable(this.cause().span));
this.relate_bound(v, b, a)?;
Ok(v)
}
(_, &ty::TyInfer(TyVar(..))) => {
let v = infcx.next_ty_var(TypeVariableOrigin::LatticeVariable(this.cause().span));
this.relate_bound(v, a, b)?;