Feature gate where clauses on associated type impls
Fixes#52913. This doesn't address the core problem, which is tracked by https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/47206. However, it fixes the stable-to-stable regression: you now have to enable `#![feature(generic_associated_types)]` to trigger the weird behaviour.
Allow panicking with string literal messages inside constants
r? @eddyb
cc https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/51999
we can't implement things like `panic!("foo: {}", x)` right now because we can't call trait methods (most notably `Display::fmt`) inside constants. Also most of these impls probably have loops and conditions, so it's messy anyway.
But hey `panic!("foo")` works at least.
cc @japaric got any test ideas for `#![no_std]`?
Rollup of 10 pull requests
Successful merges:
- #53418 (Mark some suggestions as MachineApplicable)
- #53431 (Moved some feature gate ui tests to correct location)
- #53442 (Update version of rls-data used with save-analysis)
- #53504 (Set applicability for more suggestions.)
- #53541 (Fix missing impl trait display as ret type)
- #53544 (Point at the trait argument when using unboxed closure)
- #53558 (Normalize source line and column numbers.)
- #53562 (Lament the invincibility of the Turbofish)
- #53574 (Suggest direct raw-pointer dereference)
- #53585 (Remove super old comment on function that parses items)
Failed merges:
- #53472 (Use FxHash{Map,Set} instead of the default Hash{Map,Set} everywhere in rustc.)
- #53563 (use String::new() instead of String::from(""), "".to_string(), "".to_owned() or "".into())
r? @ghost
Rename TyVariants and variants
- Rename `TypeVariants` to `TyKind`.
- Remove the `Ty` prefix from each one of its variants (plus the identically-named variants of `PrimTy`).
- Rename `ty::Slice` to `ty::List`.
The new names look cleaner.
r? @eddyb
Remove super old comment on function that parses items
This comment was added more than 5 years ago in ab03c1e422. As far as anyone reading this comment today needs to know, the function has never parsed items from inside an extern crate.
Suggest direct raw-pointer dereference
People often come looking for some kind of `as_ref_unchecked` method on
raw pointers that would give them `&T` and not `Option<&T>` when they
are sure the pointer is not NULL.
There's no such method, but taking a reference of the dereferenced
pointer accomplishes the same thing. Therefore, suggest using that, at
the `as_ref` site ‒ it's a place people are likely going to look into.
Lament the invincibility of the Turbofish
Here a test case is added to ensure that any others attempting to drive the Turbofish to extinction have second thoughts. Previously the [entire test suite would succeed](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/53511) if generic arguments were accepted without disambiguation, making for [confusing and heartbreaking circumstances](https://github.com/rust-lang/rfcs/pull/2527).
Fix missing impl trait display as ret type
I need to convert a `TraitPredicate` into a `TraitBound` to get the returned impl trait. So far, didn't find how or even if it was the good way to do it.
cc @eddyb @oli-obk (since you're the one behind the change apparently 😉)
Set applicability for more suggestions.
Converts a couple more calls to `span_suggestion_with_applicability` (#50723). To be on the safe side, I marked suggestions that depend on the intent of the user or that are potentially lossy conversions as MaybeIncorrect.
r? @estebank
fix array drop glue: properly turn raw ptr into reference
Discovered while working on https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/53424: The generated drop glue uses an assignment `ptr = cur` where `ptr` is a reference and `cur` a raw pointer. This is not well-formed MIR.
Do we have MIR sanity checks that run on the drop glue and should have caught this?
r? @eddyb
Buffer LLVM's object output stream
In some profiling on OSX I saw the `write` syscall as quite high up on
the profiling graph, which is definitely not good! It looks like we're
setting the output stream of an object file as directly to a file
descriptor which means that we run the risk of doing lots of little
writes rather than a few large writes.
This commit fixes this issue by adding a buffered stream on the output,
causing the `write` syscall to disappear from the profiles on OSX.
CTFE engine refactor
* Value gets renamed to `Operand`, so that now `interpret::{Place, Operand}` are the "dynamic" versions of `mir::{Place, Operand}`.
* `Operand` and `Place` share the data for their "stuff is in memory"-base in a new type, `MemPlace`. This also makes it possible to give some more precise types in other areas. Both `Operand` and `MemPlace` have methods available to project into fields (and other kinds of projections) without causing further allocations.
* The type for "a `Scalar` or a `ScalarPair`" is called `Value`, and again used to give some more precise types.
* All of these have versions with an attached layout, so that we can more often drag the layout along instead of recomputing it. This lets us get rid of `PlaceExtra::Downcast`. `MPlaceTy` and `PlaceTy` can only be constructed in place.rs, making sure the layout is handled properly. (The same should eventually be done for `ValTy` and `OpTy`.)
This is used to check, when copying an operand to a place, that the sizes match (which caught a bunch of bugs).
* All the high-level functions to write typed memory take a `Place`, and live in `place.rs`. All the high-level typed functions to read typed memory take an `Operand`, and live in `operands.rs`.
* Remove `cur_frame` and handling of signedess from memory (catching a bug in the float casting code).
* [Only functional change] Enable sanity check to recurse below dyn traits and slices.
r? @oli-obk
Cc @eddyb
During the sanity check, we keep track of the path we are below in a `Vec`. We
avoid cloning that `Vec` unless we hit a pointer indirection. The `String`
representation is only computed when validation actually fails.
This is still roughly 45ns slower than the old state, because it now works with
an MPlaceTy and uses the appropriate abstractions, instead of working with a
ptr-align pair directly.