diff --git a/RELEASES.md b/RELEASES.md index 2297924c7f338..305da6a3550e9 100644 --- a/RELEASES.md +++ b/RELEASES.md @@ -97,7 +97,6 @@ Cargo - [Prevent dashes in `lib.name`, always normalizing to `_`.](https://github.com/rust-lang/cargo/pull/12783/) - [Stabilize MSRV-aware version requirement selection in `cargo add`.](https://github.com/rust-lang/cargo/pull/13608/) - [Switch to using `gitoxide` by default for listing files.](https://github.com/rust-lang/cargo/pull/13696/) -- [Error on `[project]` in Edition 2024; `cargo fix --edition` will change it to `[package]`.](https://github.com/rust-lang/cargo/pull/13747/) diff --git a/compiler/rustc_lint/messages.ftl b/compiler/rustc_lint/messages.ftl index 043042a492b54..da1f36112ab38 100644 --- a/compiler/rustc_lint/messages.ftl +++ b/compiler/rustc_lint/messages.ftl @@ -14,6 +14,7 @@ lint_associated_const_elided_lifetime = {$elided -> *[false] `'_` cannot be used here } .suggestion = use the `'static` lifetime + .note = cannot automatically infer `'static` because of other lifetimes in scope lint_async_fn_in_trait = use of `async fn` in public traits is discouraged as auto trait bounds cannot be specified .note = you can suppress this lint if you plan to use the trait only in your own code, or do not care about auto traits like `Send` on the `Future` diff --git a/compiler/rustc_lint/src/context/diagnostics.rs b/compiler/rustc_lint/src/context/diagnostics.rs index 83640d7210fa7..290bb5173dbe7 100644 --- a/compiler/rustc_lint/src/context/diagnostics.rs +++ b/compiler/rustc_lint/src/context/diagnostics.rs @@ -319,11 +319,20 @@ pub(super) fn decorate_lint(sess: &Session, diagnostic: BuiltinLintDiag, diag: & BuiltinLintDiag::UnusedQualifications { removal_span } => { lints::UnusedQualifications { removal_span }.decorate_lint(diag); } - BuiltinLintDiag::AssociatedConstElidedLifetime { elided, span: lt_span } => { + BuiltinLintDiag::AssociatedConstElidedLifetime { + elided, + span: lt_span, + lifetimes_in_scope, + } => { let lt_span = if elided { lt_span.shrink_to_hi() } else { lt_span }; let code = if elided { "'static " } else { "'static" }; - lints::AssociatedConstElidedLifetime { span: lt_span, code, elided } - .decorate_lint(diag); + lints::AssociatedConstElidedLifetime { + span: lt_span, + code, + elided, + lifetimes_in_scope, + } + .decorate_lint(diag); } BuiltinLintDiag::RedundantImportVisibility { max_vis, span: vis_span, import_vis } => { lints::RedundantImportVisibility { span: vis_span, help: (), max_vis, import_vis } diff --git a/compiler/rustc_lint/src/lints.rs b/compiler/rustc_lint/src/lints.rs index 8059f5c1a2ea7..f60f8f7c6b7f4 100644 --- a/compiler/rustc_lint/src/lints.rs +++ b/compiler/rustc_lint/src/lints.rs @@ -2873,6 +2873,8 @@ pub struct AssociatedConstElidedLifetime { pub code: &'static str, pub elided: bool, + #[note] + pub lifetimes_in_scope: MultiSpan, } #[derive(LintDiagnostic)] diff --git a/compiler/rustc_lint_defs/src/builtin.rs b/compiler/rustc_lint_defs/src/builtin.rs index a12c76037e77e..1913b9d6a1c31 100644 --- a/compiler/rustc_lint_defs/src/builtin.rs +++ b/compiler/rustc_lint_defs/src/builtin.rs @@ -4593,16 +4593,18 @@ declare_lint! { declare_lint! { /// The `elided_lifetimes_in_associated_constant` lint detects elided lifetimes - /// that were erroneously allowed in associated constants. + /// in associated constants when there are other lifetimes in scope. This was + /// accidentally supported, and this lint was later relaxed to allow eliding + /// lifetimes to `'static` when there are no lifetimes in scope. /// /// ### Example /// /// ```rust,compile_fail /// #![deny(elided_lifetimes_in_associated_constant)] /// - /// struct Foo; + /// struct Foo<'a>(&'a ()); /// - /// impl Foo { + /// impl<'a> Foo<'a> { /// const STR: &str = "hello, world"; /// } /// ``` diff --git a/compiler/rustc_lint_defs/src/lib.rs b/compiler/rustc_lint_defs/src/lib.rs index 1ce95df34041c..70330c4457766 100644 --- a/compiler/rustc_lint_defs/src/lib.rs +++ b/compiler/rustc_lint_defs/src/lib.rs @@ -696,6 +696,7 @@ pub enum BuiltinLintDiag { AssociatedConstElidedLifetime { elided: bool, span: Span, + lifetimes_in_scope: MultiSpan, }, RedundantImportVisibility { span: Span, diff --git a/compiler/rustc_mir_transform/src/coverage/counters.rs b/compiler/rustc_mir_transform/src/coverage/counters.rs index b5968517d772d..a8b0f4a8d6df4 100644 --- a/compiler/rustc_mir_transform/src/coverage/counters.rs +++ b/compiler/rustc_mir_transform/src/coverage/counters.rs @@ -168,11 +168,6 @@ impl CoverageCounters { self.counter_increment_sites.len() } - #[cfg(test)] - pub(super) fn num_expressions(&self) -> usize { - self.expressions.len() - } - fn set_bcb_counter(&mut self, bcb: BasicCoverageBlock, counter_kind: BcbCounter) -> BcbCounter { if let Some(replaced) = self.bcb_counters[bcb].replace(counter_kind) { bug!( diff --git a/compiler/rustc_mir_transform/src/coverage/graph.rs b/compiler/rustc_mir_transform/src/coverage/graph.rs index fd74a2a97e2c2..360dccb240dc6 100644 --- a/compiler/rustc_mir_transform/src/coverage/graph.rs +++ b/compiler/rustc_mir_transform/src/coverage/graph.rs @@ -14,16 +14,16 @@ use std::ops::{Index, IndexMut}; /// A coverage-specific simplification of the MIR control flow graph (CFG). The `CoverageGraph`s /// nodes are `BasicCoverageBlock`s, which encompass one or more MIR `BasicBlock`s. #[derive(Debug)] -pub(super) struct CoverageGraph { +pub(crate) struct CoverageGraph { bcbs: IndexVec, bb_to_bcb: IndexVec>, - pub successors: IndexVec>, - pub predecessors: IndexVec>, + pub(crate) successors: IndexVec>, + pub(crate) predecessors: IndexVec>, dominators: Option>, } impl CoverageGraph { - pub fn from_mir(mir_body: &mir::Body<'_>) -> Self { + pub(crate) fn from_mir(mir_body: &mir::Body<'_>) -> Self { let (bcbs, bb_to_bcb) = Self::compute_basic_coverage_blocks(mir_body); // Pre-transform MIR `BasicBlock` successors and predecessors into the BasicCoverageBlock @@ -135,24 +135,28 @@ impl CoverageGraph { } #[inline(always)] - pub fn iter_enumerated( + pub(crate) fn iter_enumerated( &self, ) -> impl Iterator { self.bcbs.iter_enumerated() } #[inline(always)] - pub fn bcb_from_bb(&self, bb: BasicBlock) -> Option { + pub(crate) fn bcb_from_bb(&self, bb: BasicBlock) -> Option { if bb.index() < self.bb_to_bcb.len() { self.bb_to_bcb[bb] } else { None } } #[inline(always)] - pub fn dominates(&self, dom: BasicCoverageBlock, node: BasicCoverageBlock) -> bool { + pub(crate) fn dominates(&self, dom: BasicCoverageBlock, node: BasicCoverageBlock) -> bool { self.dominators.as_ref().unwrap().dominates(dom, node) } #[inline(always)] - pub fn cmp_in_dominator_order(&self, a: BasicCoverageBlock, b: BasicCoverageBlock) -> Ordering { + pub(crate) fn cmp_in_dominator_order( + &self, + a: BasicCoverageBlock, + b: BasicCoverageBlock, + ) -> Ordering { self.dominators.as_ref().unwrap().cmp_in_dominator_order(a, b) } @@ -166,7 +170,7 @@ impl CoverageGraph { /// /// FIXME: That assumption might not be true for [`TerminatorKind::Yield`]? #[inline(always)] - pub(super) fn bcb_has_multiple_in_edges(&self, bcb: BasicCoverageBlock) -> bool { + pub(crate) fn bcb_has_multiple_in_edges(&self, bcb: BasicCoverageBlock) -> bool { // Even though bcb0 conceptually has an extra virtual in-edge due to // being the entry point, we've already asserted that it has no _other_ // in-edges, so there's no possibility of it having _multiple_ in-edges. @@ -212,7 +216,7 @@ impl graph::StartNode for CoverageGraph { impl graph::Successors for CoverageGraph { #[inline] fn successors(&self, node: Self::Node) -> impl Iterator { - self.successors[node].iter().cloned() + self.successors[node].iter().copied() } } @@ -227,7 +231,7 @@ rustc_index::newtype_index! { /// A node in the control-flow graph of CoverageGraph. #[orderable] #[debug_format = "bcb{}"] - pub(super) struct BasicCoverageBlock { + pub(crate) struct BasicCoverageBlock { const START_BCB = 0; } } @@ -259,23 +263,23 @@ rustc_index::newtype_index! { /// queries (`dominates()`, `predecessors`, `successors`, etc.) have branch (control flow) /// significance. #[derive(Debug, Clone)] -pub(super) struct BasicCoverageBlockData { - pub basic_blocks: Vec, +pub(crate) struct BasicCoverageBlockData { + pub(crate) basic_blocks: Vec, } impl BasicCoverageBlockData { - pub fn from(basic_blocks: Vec) -> Self { + fn from(basic_blocks: Vec) -> Self { assert!(basic_blocks.len() > 0); Self { basic_blocks } } #[inline(always)] - pub fn leader_bb(&self) -> BasicBlock { + pub(crate) fn leader_bb(&self) -> BasicBlock { self.basic_blocks[0] } #[inline(always)] - pub fn last_bb(&self) -> BasicBlock { + pub(crate) fn last_bb(&self) -> BasicBlock { *self.basic_blocks.last().unwrap() } } @@ -364,7 +368,7 @@ fn bcb_filtered_successors<'a, 'tcx>(terminator: &'a Terminator<'tcx>) -> Covera /// CoverageGraph outside all loops. This supports traversing the BCB CFG in a way that /// ensures a loop is completely traversed before processing Blocks after the end of the loop. #[derive(Debug)] -pub(super) struct TraversalContext { +struct TraversalContext { /// BCB with one or more incoming loop backedges, indicating which loop /// this context is for. /// @@ -375,7 +379,7 @@ pub(super) struct TraversalContext { worklist: VecDeque, } -pub(super) struct TraverseCoverageGraphWithLoops<'a> { +pub(crate) struct TraverseCoverageGraphWithLoops<'a> { basic_coverage_blocks: &'a CoverageGraph, backedges: IndexVec>, @@ -384,7 +388,7 @@ pub(super) struct TraverseCoverageGraphWithLoops<'a> { } impl<'a> TraverseCoverageGraphWithLoops<'a> { - pub(super) fn new(basic_coverage_blocks: &'a CoverageGraph) -> Self { + pub(crate) fn new(basic_coverage_blocks: &'a CoverageGraph) -> Self { let backedges = find_loop_backedges(basic_coverage_blocks); let worklist = VecDeque::from([basic_coverage_blocks.start_node()]); @@ -400,7 +404,7 @@ impl<'a> TraverseCoverageGraphWithLoops<'a> { /// For each loop on the loop context stack (top-down), yields a list of BCBs /// within that loop that have an outgoing edge back to the loop header. - pub(super) fn reloop_bcbs_per_loop(&self) -> impl Iterator { + pub(crate) fn reloop_bcbs_per_loop(&self) -> impl Iterator { self.context_stack .iter() .rev() @@ -408,39 +412,38 @@ impl<'a> TraverseCoverageGraphWithLoops<'a> { .map(|header_bcb| self.backedges[header_bcb].as_slice()) } - pub(super) fn next(&mut self) -> Option { + pub(crate) fn next(&mut self) -> Option { debug!( "TraverseCoverageGraphWithLoops::next - context_stack: {:?}", self.context_stack.iter().rev().collect::>() ); while let Some(context) = self.context_stack.last_mut() { - if let Some(bcb) = context.worklist.pop_front() { - if !self.visited.insert(bcb) { - debug!("Already visited: {bcb:?}"); - continue; - } - debug!("Visiting {bcb:?}"); - - if self.backedges[bcb].len() > 0 { - debug!("{bcb:?} is a loop header! Start a new TraversalContext..."); - self.context_stack.push(TraversalContext { - loop_header: Some(bcb), - worklist: VecDeque::new(), - }); - } - self.add_successors_to_worklists(bcb); - return Some(bcb); - } else { - // Strip contexts with empty worklists from the top of the stack + let Some(bcb) = context.worklist.pop_front() else { + // This stack level is exhausted; pop it and try the next one. self.context_stack.pop(); + continue; + }; + + if !self.visited.insert(bcb) { + debug!("Already visited: {bcb:?}"); + continue; + } + debug!("Visiting {bcb:?}"); + + if self.backedges[bcb].len() > 0 { + debug!("{bcb:?} is a loop header! Start a new TraversalContext..."); + self.context_stack + .push(TraversalContext { loop_header: Some(bcb), worklist: VecDeque::new() }); } + self.add_successors_to_worklists(bcb); + return Some(bcb); } None } - pub fn add_successors_to_worklists(&mut self, bcb: BasicCoverageBlock) { + fn add_successors_to_worklists(&mut self, bcb: BasicCoverageBlock) { let successors = &self.basic_coverage_blocks.successors[bcb]; debug!("{:?} has {} successors:", bcb, successors.len()); @@ -494,11 +497,11 @@ impl<'a> TraverseCoverageGraphWithLoops<'a> { } } - pub fn is_complete(&self) -> bool { + pub(crate) fn is_complete(&self) -> bool { self.visited.count() == self.visited.domain_size() } - pub fn unvisited(&self) -> Vec { + pub(crate) fn unvisited(&self) -> Vec { let mut unvisited_set: BitSet = BitSet::new_filled(self.visited.domain_size()); unvisited_set.subtract(&self.visited); @@ -506,7 +509,7 @@ impl<'a> TraverseCoverageGraphWithLoops<'a> { } } -pub(super) fn find_loop_backedges( +fn find_loop_backedges( basic_coverage_blocks: &CoverageGraph, ) -> IndexVec> { let num_bcbs = basic_coverage_blocks.num_nodes(); diff --git a/compiler/rustc_mir_transform/src/coverage/spans.rs b/compiler/rustc_mir_transform/src/coverage/spans.rs index bb6a666ff73b1..84a70d1f02d75 100644 --- a/compiler/rustc_mir_transform/src/coverage/spans.rs +++ b/compiler/rustc_mir_transform/src/coverage/spans.rs @@ -1,9 +1,15 @@ +use std::collections::VecDeque; + +use rustc_data_structures::captures::Captures; +use rustc_data_structures::fx::FxHashSet; use rustc_middle::mir; use rustc_span::Span; use crate::coverage::graph::{BasicCoverageBlock, CoverageGraph}; use crate::coverage::mappings; -use crate::coverage::spans::from_mir::SpanFromMir; +use crate::coverage::spans::from_mir::{ + extract_covspans_and_holes_from_mir, ExtractedCovspans, Hole, SpanFromMir, +}; use crate::coverage::ExtractedHirInfo; mod from_mir; @@ -19,50 +25,181 @@ pub(super) fn extract_refined_covspans( basic_coverage_blocks: &CoverageGraph, code_mappings: &mut impl Extend, ) { - let sorted_span_buckets = - from_mir::mir_to_initial_sorted_coverage_spans(mir_body, hir_info, basic_coverage_blocks); - for bucket in sorted_span_buckets { - let refined_spans = refine_sorted_spans(bucket); - code_mappings.extend(refined_spans.into_iter().map(|RefinedCovspan { span, bcb }| { + let ExtractedCovspans { mut covspans, mut holes } = + extract_covspans_and_holes_from_mir(mir_body, hir_info, basic_coverage_blocks); + + // First, perform the passes that need macro information. + covspans.sort_by(|a, b| basic_coverage_blocks.cmp_in_dominator_order(a.bcb, b.bcb)); + remove_unwanted_macro_spans(&mut covspans); + split_visible_macro_spans(&mut covspans); + + // We no longer need the extra information in `SpanFromMir`, so convert to `Covspan`. + let mut covspans = covspans.into_iter().map(SpanFromMir::into_covspan).collect::>(); + + let compare_covspans = |a: &Covspan, b: &Covspan| { + compare_spans(a.span, b.span) + // After deduplication, we want to keep only the most-dominated BCB. + .then_with(|| basic_coverage_blocks.cmp_in_dominator_order(a.bcb, b.bcb).reverse()) + }; + covspans.sort_by(compare_covspans); + + // Among covspans with the same span, keep only one, + // preferring the one with the most-dominated BCB. + // (Ideally we should try to preserve _all_ non-dominating BCBs, but that + // requires a lot more complexity in the span refiner, for little benefit.) + covspans.dedup_by(|b, a| a.span.source_equal(b.span)); + + // Sort the holes, and merge overlapping/adjacent holes. + holes.sort_by(|a, b| compare_spans(a.span, b.span)); + holes.dedup_by(|b, a| a.merge_if_overlapping_or_adjacent(b)); + + // Split the covspans into separate buckets that don't overlap any holes. + let buckets = divide_spans_into_buckets(covspans, &holes); + + for mut covspans in buckets { + // Make sure each individual bucket is internally sorted. + covspans.sort_by(compare_covspans); + let _span = debug_span!("processing bucket", ?covspans).entered(); + + let mut covspans = remove_unwanted_overlapping_spans(covspans); + debug!(?covspans, "after removing overlaps"); + + // Do one last merge pass, to simplify the output. + covspans.dedup_by(|b, a| a.merge_if_eligible(b)); + debug!(?covspans, "after merge"); + + code_mappings.extend(covspans.into_iter().map(|Covspan { span, bcb }| { // Each span produced by the refiner represents an ordinary code region. mappings::CodeMapping { span, bcb } })); } } -#[derive(Debug)] -struct RefinedCovspan { - span: Span, - bcb: BasicCoverageBlock, +/// Macros that expand into branches (e.g. `assert!`, `trace!`) tend to generate +/// multiple condition/consequent blocks that have the span of the whole macro +/// invocation, which is unhelpful. Keeping only the first such span seems to +/// give better mappings, so remove the others. +/// +/// (The input spans should be sorted in BCB dominator order, so that the +/// retained "first" span is likely to dominate the others.) +fn remove_unwanted_macro_spans(covspans: &mut Vec) { + let mut seen_macro_spans = FxHashSet::default(); + covspans.retain(|covspan| { + // Ignore (retain) non-macro-expansion spans. + if covspan.visible_macro.is_none() { + return true; + } + + // Retain only the first macro-expanded covspan with this span. + seen_macro_spans.insert(covspan.span) + }); } -impl RefinedCovspan { - fn is_mergeable(&self, other: &Self) -> bool { - self.bcb == other.bcb - } +/// When a span corresponds to a macro invocation that is visible from the +/// function body, split it into two parts. The first part covers just the +/// macro name plus `!`, and the second part covers the rest of the macro +/// invocation. This seems to give better results for code that uses macros. +fn split_visible_macro_spans(covspans: &mut Vec) { + let mut extra_spans = vec![]; - fn merge_from(&mut self, other: &Self) { - debug_assert!(self.is_mergeable(other)); - self.span = self.span.to(other.span); + covspans.retain(|covspan| { + let Some(visible_macro) = covspan.visible_macro else { return true }; + + let split_len = visible_macro.as_str().len() as u32 + 1; + let (before, after) = covspan.span.split_at(split_len); + if !covspan.span.contains(before) || !covspan.span.contains(after) { + // Something is unexpectedly wrong with the split point. + // The debug assertion in `split_at` will have already caught this, + // but in release builds it's safer to do nothing and maybe get a + // bug report for unexpected coverage, rather than risk an ICE. + return true; + } + + extra_spans.push(SpanFromMir::new(before, covspan.visible_macro, covspan.bcb)); + extra_spans.push(SpanFromMir::new(after, covspan.visible_macro, covspan.bcb)); + false // Discard the original covspan that we just split. + }); + + // The newly-split spans are added at the end, so any previous sorting + // is not preserved. + covspans.extend(extra_spans); +} + +/// Uses the holes to divide the given covspans into buckets, such that: +/// - No span in any hole overlaps a bucket (truncating the spans if necessary). +/// - The spans in each bucket are strictly after all spans in previous buckets, +/// and strictly before all spans in subsequent buckets. +/// +/// The resulting buckets are sorted relative to each other, but might not be +/// internally sorted. +#[instrument(level = "debug")] +fn divide_spans_into_buckets(input_covspans: Vec, holes: &[Hole]) -> Vec> { + debug_assert!(input_covspans.is_sorted_by(|a, b| compare_spans(a.span, b.span).is_le())); + debug_assert!(holes.is_sorted_by(|a, b| compare_spans(a.span, b.span).is_le())); + + // Now we're ready to start carving holes out of the initial coverage spans, + // and grouping them in buckets separated by the holes. + + let mut input_covspans = VecDeque::from(input_covspans); + let mut fragments = vec![]; + + // For each hole: + // - Identify the spans that are entirely or partly before the hole. + // - Put those spans in a corresponding bucket, truncated to the start of the hole. + // - If one of those spans also extends after the hole, put the rest of it + // in a "fragments" vector that is processed by the next hole. + let mut buckets = (0..holes.len()).map(|_| vec![]).collect::>(); + for (hole, bucket) in holes.iter().zip(&mut buckets) { + let fragments_from_prev = std::mem::take(&mut fragments); + + // Only inspect spans that precede or overlap this hole, + // leaving the rest to be inspected by later holes. + // (This relies on the spans and holes both being sorted.) + let relevant_input_covspans = + drain_front_while(&mut input_covspans, |c| c.span.lo() < hole.span.hi()); + + for covspan in fragments_from_prev.into_iter().chain(relevant_input_covspans) { + let (before, after) = covspan.split_around_hole_span(hole.span); + bucket.extend(before); + fragments.extend(after); + } } + + // After finding the spans before each hole, any remaining fragments/spans + // form their own final bucket, after the final hole. + // (If there were no holes, this will just be all of the initial spans.) + fragments.extend(input_covspans); + buckets.push(fragments); + + buckets +} + +/// Similar to `.drain(..)`, but stops just before it would remove an item not +/// satisfying the predicate. +fn drain_front_while<'a, T>( + queue: &'a mut VecDeque, + mut pred_fn: impl FnMut(&T) -> bool, +) -> impl Iterator + Captures<'a> { + std::iter::from_fn(move || if pred_fn(queue.front()?) { queue.pop_front() } else { None }) } /// Takes one of the buckets of (sorted) spans extracted from MIR, and "refines" -/// those spans by removing spans that overlap in unwanted ways, and by merging -/// compatible adjacent spans. +/// those spans by removing spans that overlap in unwanted ways. #[instrument(level = "debug")] -fn refine_sorted_spans(sorted_spans: Vec) -> Vec { +fn remove_unwanted_overlapping_spans(sorted_spans: Vec) -> Vec { + debug_assert!(sorted_spans.is_sorted_by(|a, b| compare_spans(a.span, b.span).is_le())); + // Holds spans that have been read from the input vector, but haven't yet // been committed to the output vector. let mut pending = vec![]; let mut refined = vec![]; for curr in sorted_spans { - pending.retain(|prev: &SpanFromMir| { + pending.retain(|prev: &Covspan| { if prev.span.hi() <= curr.span.lo() { // There's no overlap between the previous/current covspans, // so move the previous one into the refined list. - refined.push(RefinedCovspan { span: prev.span, bcb: prev.bcb }); + refined.push(prev.clone()); false } else { // Otherwise, retain the previous covspan only if it has the @@ -75,22 +212,57 @@ fn refine_sorted_spans(sorted_spans: Vec) -> Vec { } // Drain the rest of the pending list into the refined list. - for prev in pending { - refined.push(RefinedCovspan { span: prev.span, bcb: prev.bcb }); + refined.extend(pending); + refined +} + +#[derive(Clone, Debug)] +struct Covspan { + span: Span, + bcb: BasicCoverageBlock, +} + +impl Covspan { + /// Splits this covspan into 0-2 parts: + /// - The part that is strictly before the hole span, if any. + /// - The part that is strictly after the hole span, if any. + fn split_around_hole_span(&self, hole_span: Span) -> (Option, Option) { + let before = try { + let span = self.span.trim_end(hole_span)?; + Self { span, ..*self } + }; + let after = try { + let span = self.span.trim_start(hole_span)?; + Self { span, ..*self } + }; + + (before, after) } - // Do one last merge pass, to simplify the output. - debug!(?refined, "before merge"); - refined.dedup_by(|b, a| { - if a.is_mergeable(b) { - debug!(?a, ?b, "merging list-adjacent refined spans"); - a.merge_from(b); - true - } else { - false + /// If `self` and `other` can be merged (i.e. they have the same BCB), + /// mutates `self.span` to also include `other.span` and returns true. + /// + /// Note that compatible covspans can be merged even if their underlying + /// spans are not overlapping/adjacent; any space between them will also be + /// part of the merged covspan. + fn merge_if_eligible(&mut self, other: &Self) -> bool { + if self.bcb != other.bcb { + return false; } - }); - debug!(?refined, "after merge"); - refined + self.span = self.span.to(other.span); + true + } +} + +/// Compares two spans in (lo ascending, hi descending) order. +fn compare_spans(a: Span, b: Span) -> std::cmp::Ordering { + // First sort by span start. + Ord::cmp(&a.lo(), &b.lo()) + // If span starts are the same, sort by span end in reverse order. + // This ensures that if spans A and B are adjacent in the list, + // and they overlap but are not equal, then either: + // - Span A extends further left, or + // - Both have the same start and span A extends further right + .then_with(|| Ord::cmp(&a.hi(), &b.hi()).reverse()) } diff --git a/compiler/rustc_mir_transform/src/coverage/spans/from_mir.rs b/compiler/rustc_mir_transform/src/coverage/spans/from_mir.rs index b1f71035ddede..09deb7534bfde 100644 --- a/compiler/rustc_mir_transform/src/coverage/spans/from_mir.rs +++ b/compiler/rustc_mir_transform/src/coverage/spans/from_mir.rs @@ -1,7 +1,3 @@ -use std::collections::VecDeque; - -use rustc_data_structures::captures::Captures; -use rustc_data_structures::fx::FxHashSet; use rustc_middle::bug; use rustc_middle::mir::coverage::CoverageKind; use rustc_middle::mir::{ @@ -13,25 +9,25 @@ use rustc_span::{ExpnKind, MacroKind, Span, Symbol}; use crate::coverage::graph::{ BasicCoverageBlock, BasicCoverageBlockData, CoverageGraph, START_BCB, }; +use crate::coverage::spans::Covspan; use crate::coverage::ExtractedHirInfo; +pub(crate) struct ExtractedCovspans { + pub(crate) covspans: Vec, + pub(crate) holes: Vec, +} + /// Traverses the MIR body to produce an initial collection of coverage-relevant /// spans, each associated with a node in the coverage graph (BCB) and possibly /// other metadata. -/// -/// The returned spans are divided into one or more buckets, such that: -/// - The spans in each bucket are strictly after all spans in previous buckets, -/// and strictly before all spans in subsequent buckets. -/// - The contents of each bucket are also sorted, in a specific order that is -/// expected by the subsequent span-refinement step. -pub(super) fn mir_to_initial_sorted_coverage_spans( +pub(crate) fn extract_covspans_and_holes_from_mir( mir_body: &mir::Body<'_>, hir_info: &ExtractedHirInfo, basic_coverage_blocks: &CoverageGraph, -) -> Vec> { +) -> ExtractedCovspans { let &ExtractedHirInfo { body_span, .. } = hir_info; - let mut initial_spans = vec![]; + let mut covspans = vec![]; let mut holes = vec![]; for (bcb, bcb_data) in basic_coverage_blocks.iter_enumerated() { @@ -40,150 +36,21 @@ pub(super) fn mir_to_initial_sorted_coverage_spans( body_span, bcb, bcb_data, - &mut initial_spans, + &mut covspans, &mut holes, ); } // Only add the signature span if we found at least one span in the body. - if !initial_spans.is_empty() || !holes.is_empty() { + if !covspans.is_empty() || !holes.is_empty() { // If there is no usable signature span, add a fake one (before refinement) // to avoid an ugly gap between the body start and the first real span. // FIXME: Find a more principled way to solve this problem. let fn_sig_span = hir_info.fn_sig_span_extended.unwrap_or_else(|| body_span.shrink_to_lo()); - initial_spans.push(SpanFromMir::for_fn_sig(fn_sig_span)); - } - - initial_spans.sort_by(|a, b| basic_coverage_blocks.cmp_in_dominator_order(a.bcb, b.bcb)); - remove_unwanted_macro_spans(&mut initial_spans); - split_visible_macro_spans(&mut initial_spans); - - let compare_covspans = |a: &SpanFromMir, b: &SpanFromMir| { - compare_spans(a.span, b.span) - // After deduplication, we want to keep only the most-dominated BCB. - .then_with(|| basic_coverage_blocks.cmp_in_dominator_order(a.bcb, b.bcb).reverse()) - }; - initial_spans.sort_by(compare_covspans); - - // Among covspans with the same span, keep only one, - // preferring the one with the most-dominated BCB. - // (Ideally we should try to preserve _all_ non-dominating BCBs, but that - // requires a lot more complexity in the span refiner, for little benefit.) - initial_spans.dedup_by(|b, a| a.span.source_equal(b.span)); - - // Sort the holes, and merge overlapping/adjacent holes. - holes.sort_by(|a, b| compare_spans(a.span, b.span)); - holes.dedup_by(|b, a| a.merge_if_overlapping_or_adjacent(b)); - - // Now we're ready to start carving holes out of the initial coverage spans, - // and grouping them in buckets separated by the holes. - - let mut initial_spans = VecDeque::from(initial_spans); - let mut fragments: Vec = vec![]; - - // For each hole: - // - Identify the spans that are entirely or partly before the hole. - // - Put those spans in a corresponding bucket, truncated to the start of the hole. - // - If one of those spans also extends after the hole, put the rest of it - // in a "fragments" vector that is processed by the next hole. - let mut buckets = (0..holes.len()).map(|_| vec![]).collect::>(); - for (hole, bucket) in holes.iter().zip(&mut buckets) { - let fragments_from_prev = std::mem::take(&mut fragments); - - // Only inspect spans that precede or overlap this hole, - // leaving the rest to be inspected by later holes. - // (This relies on the spans and holes both being sorted.) - let relevant_initial_spans = - drain_front_while(&mut initial_spans, |c| c.span.lo() < hole.span.hi()); - - for covspan in fragments_from_prev.into_iter().chain(relevant_initial_spans) { - let (before, after) = covspan.split_around_hole_span(hole.span); - bucket.extend(before); - fragments.extend(after); - } + covspans.push(SpanFromMir::for_fn_sig(fn_sig_span)); } - // After finding the spans before each hole, any remaining fragments/spans - // form their own final bucket, after the final hole. - // (If there were no holes, this will just be all of the initial spans.) - fragments.extend(initial_spans); - buckets.push(fragments); - - // Make sure each individual bucket is still internally sorted. - for bucket in &mut buckets { - bucket.sort_by(compare_covspans); - } - buckets -} - -fn compare_spans(a: Span, b: Span) -> std::cmp::Ordering { - // First sort by span start. - Ord::cmp(&a.lo(), &b.lo()) - // If span starts are the same, sort by span end in reverse order. - // This ensures that if spans A and B are adjacent in the list, - // and they overlap but are not equal, then either: - // - Span A extends further left, or - // - Both have the same start and span A extends further right - .then_with(|| Ord::cmp(&a.hi(), &b.hi()).reverse()) -} - -/// Similar to `.drain(..)`, but stops just before it would remove an item not -/// satisfying the predicate. -fn drain_front_while<'a, T>( - queue: &'a mut VecDeque, - mut pred_fn: impl FnMut(&T) -> bool, -) -> impl Iterator + Captures<'a> { - std::iter::from_fn(move || if pred_fn(queue.front()?) { queue.pop_front() } else { None }) -} - -/// Macros that expand into branches (e.g. `assert!`, `trace!`) tend to generate -/// multiple condition/consequent blocks that have the span of the whole macro -/// invocation, which is unhelpful. Keeping only the first such span seems to -/// give better mappings, so remove the others. -/// -/// (The input spans should be sorted in BCB dominator order, so that the -/// retained "first" span is likely to dominate the others.) -fn remove_unwanted_macro_spans(initial_spans: &mut Vec) { - let mut seen_macro_spans = FxHashSet::default(); - initial_spans.retain(|covspan| { - // Ignore (retain) non-macro-expansion spans. - if covspan.visible_macro.is_none() { - return true; - } - - // Retain only the first macro-expanded covspan with this span. - seen_macro_spans.insert(covspan.span) - }); -} - -/// When a span corresponds to a macro invocation that is visible from the -/// function body, split it into two parts. The first part covers just the -/// macro name plus `!`, and the second part covers the rest of the macro -/// invocation. This seems to give better results for code that uses macros. -fn split_visible_macro_spans(initial_spans: &mut Vec) { - let mut extra_spans = vec![]; - - initial_spans.retain(|covspan| { - let Some(visible_macro) = covspan.visible_macro else { return true }; - - let split_len = visible_macro.as_str().len() as u32 + 1; - let (before, after) = covspan.span.split_at(split_len); - if !covspan.span.contains(before) || !covspan.span.contains(after) { - // Something is unexpectedly wrong with the split point. - // The debug assertion in `split_at` will have already caught this, - // but in release builds it's safer to do nothing and maybe get a - // bug report for unexpected coverage, rather than risk an ICE. - return true; - } - - extra_spans.push(SpanFromMir::new(before, covspan.visible_macro, covspan.bcb)); - extra_spans.push(SpanFromMir::new(after, covspan.visible_macro, covspan.bcb)); - false // Discard the original covspan that we just split. - }); - - // The newly-split spans are added at the end, so any previous sorting - // is not preserved. - initial_spans.extend(extra_spans); + ExtractedCovspans { covspans, holes } } // Generate a set of coverage spans from the filtered set of `Statement`s and `Terminator`s of @@ -402,12 +269,12 @@ fn unexpand_into_body_span_with_prev( } #[derive(Debug)] -struct Hole { - span: Span, +pub(crate) struct Hole { + pub(crate) span: Span, } impl Hole { - fn merge_if_overlapping_or_adjacent(&mut self, other: &mut Self) -> bool { + pub(crate) fn merge_if_overlapping_or_adjacent(&mut self, other: &mut Self) -> bool { if !self.span.overlaps_or_adjacent(other.span) { return false; } @@ -418,7 +285,7 @@ impl Hole { } #[derive(Debug)] -pub(super) struct SpanFromMir { +pub(crate) struct SpanFromMir { /// A span that has been extracted from MIR and then "un-expanded" back to /// within the current function's `body_span`. After various intermediate /// processing steps, this span is emitted as part of the final coverage @@ -426,9 +293,9 @@ pub(super) struct SpanFromMir { /// /// With the exception of `fn_sig_span`, this should always be contained /// within `body_span`. - pub(super) span: Span, - visible_macro: Option, - pub(super) bcb: BasicCoverageBlock, + pub(crate) span: Span, + pub(crate) visible_macro: Option, + pub(crate) bcb: BasicCoverageBlock, } impl SpanFromMir { @@ -436,23 +303,12 @@ impl SpanFromMir { Self::new(fn_sig_span, None, START_BCB) } - fn new(span: Span, visible_macro: Option, bcb: BasicCoverageBlock) -> Self { + pub(crate) fn new(span: Span, visible_macro: Option, bcb: BasicCoverageBlock) -> Self { Self { span, visible_macro, bcb } } - /// Splits this span into 0-2 parts: - /// - The part that is strictly before the hole span, if any. - /// - The part that is strictly after the hole span, if any. - fn split_around_hole_span(&self, hole_span: Span) -> (Option, Option) { - let before = try { - let span = self.span.trim_end(hole_span)?; - Self { span, ..*self } - }; - let after = try { - let span = self.span.trim_start(hole_span)?; - Self { span, ..*self } - }; - - (before, after) + pub(crate) fn into_covspan(self) -> Covspan { + let Self { span, visible_macro: _, bcb } = self; + Covspan { span, bcb } } } diff --git a/compiler/rustc_mir_transform/src/coverage/tests.rs b/compiler/rustc_mir_transform/src/coverage/tests.rs index ca64688e6b87b..048547dc9f543 100644 --- a/compiler/rustc_mir_transform/src/coverage/tests.rs +++ b/compiler/rustc_mir_transform/src/coverage/tests.rs @@ -24,7 +24,6 @@ //! globals is comparatively simpler. The easiest way is to wrap the test in a closure argument //! to: `rustc_span::create_default_session_globals_then(|| { test_here(); })`. -use super::counters; use super::graph::{self, BasicCoverageBlock}; use itertools::Itertools; @@ -551,108 +550,3 @@ fn test_covgraph_switchint_loop_then_inner_loop_else_break() { assert_successors(&basic_coverage_blocks, bcb(5), &[bcb(1)]); assert_successors(&basic_coverage_blocks, bcb(6), &[bcb(4)]); } - -#[test] -fn test_find_loop_backedges_none() { - let mir_body = goto_switchint(); - let basic_coverage_blocks = graph::CoverageGraph::from_mir(&mir_body); - if false { - eprintln!( - "basic_coverage_blocks = {:?}", - basic_coverage_blocks.iter_enumerated().collect::>() - ); - eprintln!("successors = {:?}", basic_coverage_blocks.successors); - } - let backedges = graph::find_loop_backedges(&basic_coverage_blocks); - assert_eq!( - backedges.iter_enumerated().map(|(_bcb, backedges)| backedges.len()).sum::(), - 0, - "backedges: {:?}", - backedges - ); -} - -#[test] -fn test_find_loop_backedges_one() { - let mir_body = switchint_then_loop_else_return(); - let basic_coverage_blocks = graph::CoverageGraph::from_mir(&mir_body); - let backedges = graph::find_loop_backedges(&basic_coverage_blocks); - assert_eq!( - backedges.iter_enumerated().map(|(_bcb, backedges)| backedges.len()).sum::(), - 1, - "backedges: {:?}", - backedges - ); - - assert_eq!(backedges[bcb(1)], &[bcb(3)]); -} - -#[test] -fn test_find_loop_backedges_two() { - let mir_body = switchint_loop_then_inner_loop_else_break(); - let basic_coverage_blocks = graph::CoverageGraph::from_mir(&mir_body); - let backedges = graph::find_loop_backedges(&basic_coverage_blocks); - assert_eq!( - backedges.iter_enumerated().map(|(_bcb, backedges)| backedges.len()).sum::(), - 2, - "backedges: {:?}", - backedges - ); - - assert_eq!(backedges[bcb(1)], &[bcb(5)]); - assert_eq!(backedges[bcb(4)], &[bcb(6)]); -} - -#[test] -fn test_traverse_coverage_with_loops() { - let mir_body = switchint_loop_then_inner_loop_else_break(); - let basic_coverage_blocks = graph::CoverageGraph::from_mir(&mir_body); - let mut traversed_in_order = Vec::new(); - let mut traversal = graph::TraverseCoverageGraphWithLoops::new(&basic_coverage_blocks); - while let Some(bcb) = traversal.next() { - traversed_in_order.push(bcb); - } - - // bcb0 is visited first. Then bcb1 starts the first loop, and all remaining nodes, *except* - // bcb6 are inside the first loop. - assert_eq!( - *traversed_in_order.last().expect("should have elements"), - bcb(6), - "bcb6 should not be visited until all nodes inside the first loop have been visited" - ); -} - -#[test] -fn test_make_bcb_counters() { - rustc_span::create_default_session_globals_then(|| { - let mir_body = goto_switchint(); - let basic_coverage_blocks = graph::CoverageGraph::from_mir(&mir_body); - // Historically this test would use `spans` internals to set up fake - // coverage spans for BCBs 1 and 2. Now we skip that step and just tell - // BCB counter construction that those BCBs have spans. - let bcb_has_coverage_spans = |bcb: BasicCoverageBlock| (1..=2).contains(&bcb.as_usize()); - let coverage_counters = counters::CoverageCounters::make_bcb_counters( - &basic_coverage_blocks, - bcb_has_coverage_spans, - ); - assert_eq!(coverage_counters.num_expressions(), 0); - - assert_eq!( - 0, // bcb1 has a `Counter` with id = 0 - match coverage_counters.bcb_counter(bcb(1)).expect("should have a counter") { - counters::BcbCounter::Counter { id, .. } => id, - _ => panic!("expected a Counter"), - } - .as_u32() - ); - - assert_eq!( - 1, // bcb2 has a `Counter` with id = 1 - match coverage_counters.bcb_counter(bcb(2)).expect("should have a counter") { - counters::BcbCounter::Counter { id, .. } => id, - _ => panic!("expected a Counter"), - } - .as_u32() - ); - }); -} diff --git a/compiler/rustc_resolve/src/late.rs b/compiler/rustc_resolve/src/late.rs index fa711d932b63b..c1e83c59f98ce 100644 --- a/compiler/rustc_resolve/src/late.rs +++ b/compiler/rustc_resolve/src/late.rs @@ -310,9 +310,10 @@ enum LifetimeRibKind { /// error on default object bounds (e.g., `Box`). AnonymousReportError, - /// Resolves elided lifetimes to `'static`, but gives a warning that this behavior - /// is a bug and will be reverted soon. - AnonymousWarn(NodeId), + /// Resolves elided lifetimes to `'static` if there are no other lifetimes in scope, + /// otherwise give a warning that the previous behavior of introducing a new early-bound + /// lifetime is a bug and will be removed (if `emit_lint` is enabled). + StaticIfNoLifetimeInScope { lint_id: NodeId, emit_lint: bool }, /// Signal we cannot find which should be the anonymous lifetime. ElisionFailure, @@ -1212,7 +1213,7 @@ impl<'a: 'ast, 'ast, 'tcx> Visitor<'ast> for LateResolutionVisitor<'a, '_, 'ast, } LifetimeRibKind::AnonymousCreateParameter { .. } | LifetimeRibKind::AnonymousReportError - | LifetimeRibKind::AnonymousWarn(_) + | LifetimeRibKind::StaticIfNoLifetimeInScope { .. } | LifetimeRibKind::Elided(_) | LifetimeRibKind::ElisionFailure | LifetimeRibKind::ConcreteAnonConst(_) @@ -1580,7 +1581,7 @@ impl<'a: 'ast, 'b, 'ast, 'tcx> LateResolutionVisitor<'a, 'b, 'ast, 'tcx> { // lifetime would be illegal. LifetimeRibKind::Item | LifetimeRibKind::AnonymousReportError - | LifetimeRibKind::AnonymousWarn(_) + | LifetimeRibKind::StaticIfNoLifetimeInScope { .. } | LifetimeRibKind::ElisionFailure => Some(LifetimeUseSet::Many), // An anonymous lifetime is legal here, and bound to the right // place, go ahead. @@ -1643,7 +1644,7 @@ impl<'a: 'ast, 'b, 'ast, 'tcx> LateResolutionVisitor<'a, 'b, 'ast, 'tcx> { | LifetimeRibKind::Generics { .. } | LifetimeRibKind::ElisionFailure | LifetimeRibKind::AnonymousReportError - | LifetimeRibKind::AnonymousWarn(_) => {} + | LifetimeRibKind::StaticIfNoLifetimeInScope { .. } => {} } } @@ -1677,16 +1678,36 @@ impl<'a: 'ast, 'b, 'ast, 'tcx> LateResolutionVisitor<'a, 'b, 'ast, 'tcx> { self.record_lifetime_res(lifetime.id, res, elision_candidate); return; } - LifetimeRibKind::AnonymousWarn(node_id) => { - self.r.lint_buffer.buffer_lint( - lint::builtin::ELIDED_LIFETIMES_IN_ASSOCIATED_CONSTANT, - node_id, - lifetime.ident.span, - lint::BuiltinLintDiag::AssociatedConstElidedLifetime { - elided, - span: lifetime.ident.span, - }, - ); + LifetimeRibKind::StaticIfNoLifetimeInScope { lint_id: node_id, emit_lint } => { + let mut lifetimes_in_scope = vec![]; + for rib in &self.lifetime_ribs[..i] { + lifetimes_in_scope.extend(rib.bindings.iter().map(|(ident, _)| ident.span)); + // Consider any anonymous lifetimes, too + if let LifetimeRibKind::AnonymousCreateParameter { binder, .. } = rib.kind + && let Some(extra) = self.r.extra_lifetime_params_map.get(&binder) + { + lifetimes_in_scope.extend(extra.iter().map(|(ident, _, _)| ident.span)); + } + } + if lifetimes_in_scope.is_empty() { + self.record_lifetime_res( + lifetime.id, + LifetimeRes::Static, + elision_candidate, + ); + return; + } else if emit_lint { + self.r.lint_buffer.buffer_lint( + lint::builtin::ELIDED_LIFETIMES_IN_ASSOCIATED_CONSTANT, + node_id, + lifetime.ident.span, + lint::BuiltinLintDiag::AssociatedConstElidedLifetime { + elided, + span: lifetime.ident.span, + lifetimes_in_scope: lifetimes_in_scope.into(), + }, + ); + } } LifetimeRibKind::AnonymousReportError => { if elided { @@ -1904,7 +1925,7 @@ impl<'a: 'ast, 'b, 'ast, 'tcx> LateResolutionVisitor<'a, 'b, 'ast, 'tcx> { // impl Foo for std::cell::Ref // note lack of '_ // async fn foo(_: std::cell::Ref) { ... } LifetimeRibKind::AnonymousCreateParameter { report_in_path: true, .. } - | LifetimeRibKind::AnonymousWarn(_) => { + | LifetimeRibKind::StaticIfNoLifetimeInScope { .. } => { let sess = self.r.tcx.sess; let subdiag = rustc_errors::elided_lifetime_in_path_suggestion( sess.source_map(), @@ -2838,19 +2859,27 @@ impl<'a: 'ast, 'b, 'ast, 'tcx> LateResolutionVisitor<'a, 'b, 'ast, 'tcx> { kind: LifetimeBinderKind::ConstItem, }, |this| { - this.visit_generics(generics); - this.visit_ty(ty); - - // Only impose the restrictions of `ConstRibKind` for an - // actual constant expression in a provided default. - if let Some(expr) = expr { - // We allow arbitrary const expressions inside of associated consts, - // even if they are potentially not const evaluatable. - // - // Type parameters can already be used and as associated consts are - // not used as part of the type system, this is far less surprising. - this.resolve_const_body(expr, None); - } + this.with_lifetime_rib( + LifetimeRibKind::StaticIfNoLifetimeInScope { + lint_id: item.id, + emit_lint: false, + }, + |this| { + this.visit_generics(generics); + this.visit_ty(ty); + + // Only impose the restrictions of `ConstRibKind` for an + // actual constant expression in a provided default. + if let Some(expr) = expr { + // We allow arbitrary const expressions inside of associated consts, + // even if they are potentially not const evaluatable. + // + // Type parameters can already be used and as associated consts are + // not used as part of the type system, this is far less surprising. + this.resolve_const_body(expr, None); + } + }, + ) }, ); } @@ -3030,30 +3059,37 @@ impl<'a: 'ast, 'b, 'ast, 'tcx> LateResolutionVisitor<'a, 'b, 'ast, 'tcx> { kind: LifetimeBinderKind::ConstItem, }, |this| { - this.with_lifetime_rib(LifetimeRibKind::AnonymousWarn(item.id), |this| { - // If this is a trait impl, ensure the const - // exists in trait - this.check_trait_item( - item.id, - item.ident, - &item.kind, - ValueNS, - item.span, - seen_trait_items, - |i, s, c| ConstNotMemberOfTrait(i, s, c), - ); + this.with_lifetime_rib( + LifetimeRibKind::StaticIfNoLifetimeInScope { + lint_id: item.id, + // In impls, it's not a hard error yet due to backcompat. + emit_lint: true, + }, + |this| { + // If this is a trait impl, ensure the const + // exists in trait + this.check_trait_item( + item.id, + item.ident, + &item.kind, + ValueNS, + item.span, + seen_trait_items, + |i, s, c| ConstNotMemberOfTrait(i, s, c), + ); - this.visit_generics(generics); - this.visit_ty(ty); - if let Some(expr) = expr { - // We allow arbitrary const expressions inside of associated consts, - // even if they are potentially not const evaluatable. - // - // Type parameters can already be used and as associated consts are - // not used as part of the type system, this is far less surprising. - this.resolve_const_body(expr, None); - } - }); + this.visit_generics(generics); + this.visit_ty(ty); + if let Some(expr) = expr { + // We allow arbitrary const expressions inside of associated consts, + // even if they are potentially not const evaluatable. + // + // Type parameters can already be used and as associated consts are + // not used as part of the type system, this is far less surprising. + this.resolve_const_body(expr, None); + } + }, + ); }, ); } diff --git a/library/core/src/error.rs b/library/core/src/error.rs index 042a8c9925f38..150e4f3f31857 100644 --- a/library/core/src/error.rs +++ b/library/core/src/error.rs @@ -928,7 +928,7 @@ pub(crate) mod tags { /// An `Option` with a type tag `I`. /// /// Since this struct implements `Erased`, the type can be erased to make a dynamically typed -/// option. The type can be checked dynamically using `Erased::tag_id` and since this is statically +/// option. The type can be checked dynamically using `Tagged::tag_id` and since this is statically /// checked for the concrete type, there is some degree of type safety. #[repr(transparent)] pub(crate) struct TaggedOption<'a, I: tags::Type<'a>>(pub Option); diff --git a/library/core/src/num/int_macros.rs b/library/core/src/num/int_macros.rs index 55bb6166f1017..4488948496398 100644 --- a/library/core/src/num/int_macros.rs +++ b/library/core/src/num/int_macros.rs @@ -2784,8 +2784,10 @@ macro_rules! int_impl { /// /// In other words, the result is `self / rhs` rounded to the integer `q` /// such that `self >= q * rhs`. - /// If `self > 0`, this is equal to round towards zero (the default in Rust); - /// if `self < 0`, this is equal to round towards +/- infinity. + /// If `self > 0`, this is equal to rounding towards zero (the default in Rust); + /// if `self < 0`, this is equal to rounding away from zero (towards +/- infinity). + /// If `rhs > 0`, this is equal to rounding towards -infinity; + /// if `rhs < 0`, this is equal to rounding towards +infinity. /// /// # Panics /// @@ -2823,8 +2825,8 @@ macro_rules! int_impl { /// Calculates the least nonnegative remainder of `self (mod rhs)`. /// /// This is done as if by the Euclidean division algorithm -- given - /// `r = self.rem_euclid(rhs)`, `self = rhs * self.div_euclid(rhs) + r`, and - /// `0 <= r < abs(rhs)`. + /// `r = self.rem_euclid(rhs)`, the result satisfies + /// `self = rhs * self.div_euclid(rhs) + r` and `0 <= r < abs(rhs)`. /// /// # Panics /// diff --git a/library/core/src/ptr/mod.rs b/library/core/src/ptr/mod.rs index 6661f6ee78b42..a8a47b69632f7 100644 --- a/library/core/src/ptr/mod.rs +++ b/library/core/src/ptr/mod.rs @@ -237,7 +237,7 @@ //! pointer. For code which *does* cast a usize to a pointer, the scope of the change depends //! on exactly what you're doing. //! -//! In general you just need to make sure that if you want to convert a usize address to a +//! In general, you just need to make sure that if you want to convert a usize address to a //! pointer and then use that pointer to read/write memory, you need to keep around a pointer //! that has sufficient provenance to perform that read/write itself. In this way all of your //! casts from an address to a pointer are essentially just applying offsets/indexing. @@ -309,7 +309,7 @@ //! i.e. the usual "ZSTs are fake, do what you want" rules apply *but* this only applies //! for actual forgery (integers cast to pointers). If you borrow some struct's field //! that *happens* to be zero-sized, the resulting pointer will have provenance tied to -//! that allocation and it will still get invalidated if the allocation gets deallocated. +//! that allocation, and it will still get invalidated if the allocation gets deallocated. //! In the future we may introduce an API to make such a forged allocation explicit. //! //! * [`wrapping_offset`][] a pointer outside its provenance. This includes pointers @@ -698,7 +698,7 @@ pub const fn dangling_mut() -> *mut T { /// /// If there is no 'exposed' provenance that justifies the way this pointer will be used, /// the program has undefined behavior. In particular, the aliasing rules still apply: pointers -/// and references that have been invalidated due to aliasing accesses cannot be used any more, +/// and references that have been invalidated due to aliasing accesses cannot be used anymore, /// even if they have been exposed! /// /// Note that there is no algorithm that decides which provenance will be used. You can think of this @@ -1097,7 +1097,7 @@ const unsafe fn swap_nonoverlapping_simple_untyped(x: *mut T, y: *mut T, coun // If we end up here, it's because we're using a simple type -- like // a small power-of-two-sized thing -- or a special type with particularly // large alignment, particularly SIMD types. - // Thus we're fine just reading-and-writing it, as either it's small + // Thus, we're fine just reading-and-writing it, as either it's small // and that works well anyway or it's special and the type's author // presumably wanted things to be done in the larger chunk. @@ -1290,7 +1290,7 @@ pub const unsafe fn read(src: *const T) -> T { // provides enough information to know that this is a typed operation. // However, as of March 2023 the compiler was not capable of taking advantage - // of that information. Thus the implementation here switched to an intrinsic, + // of that information. Thus, the implementation here switched to an intrinsic, // which lowers to `_0 = *src` in MIR, to address a few issues: // // - Using `MaybeUninit::assume_init` after a `copy_nonoverlapping` was not @@ -1570,7 +1570,7 @@ pub const unsafe fn write(dst: *mut T, src: T) { /// As a result, using `&packed.unaligned as *const FieldType` causes immediate /// *undefined behavior* in your program. /// -/// Instead you must use the [`ptr::addr_of_mut!`](addr_of_mut) +/// Instead, you must use the [`ptr::addr_of_mut!`](addr_of_mut) /// macro to create the pointer. You may use that returned pointer together with /// this function. /// diff --git a/library/std/src/os/hermit/io/mod.rs b/library/std/src/os/hermit/io/mod.rs index 524dfae0d63ae..df93f63a003cf 100644 --- a/library/std/src/os/hermit/io/mod.rs +++ b/library/std/src/os/hermit/io/mod.rs @@ -1,13 +1,4 @@ -#![stable(feature = "os_fd", since = "1.66.0")] +#![stable(feature = "rust1", since = "1.0.0")] -mod net; -#[path = "../../fd/owned.rs"] -mod owned; -#[path = "../../fd/raw.rs"] -mod raw; - -// Export the types and traits for the public API. -#[stable(feature = "os_fd", since = "1.66.0")] -pub use owned::*; -#[stable(feature = "os_fd", since = "1.66.0")] -pub use raw::*; +#[stable(feature = "rust1", since = "1.0.0")] +pub use crate::os::fd::*; diff --git a/library/std/src/os/mod.rs b/library/std/src/os/mod.rs index ca3584e82f918..d2a7b316b8131 100644 --- a/library/std/src/os/mod.rs +++ b/library/std/src/os/mod.rs @@ -160,7 +160,7 @@ pub(crate) mod watchos; #[cfg(target_os = "xous")] pub mod xous; -#[cfg(any(unix, target_os = "wasi", doc))] +#[cfg(any(unix, target_os = "hermit", target_os = "wasi", doc))] pub mod fd; #[cfg(any(target_os = "linux", target_os = "android", doc))] diff --git a/tests/codegen/error-provide.rs b/tests/codegen/error-provide.rs new file mode 100644 index 0000000000000..68dd383e5cce0 --- /dev/null +++ b/tests/codegen/error-provide.rs @@ -0,0 +1,50 @@ +// Codegen test for #126242 + +//@ compile-flags: -O +#![crate_type = "lib"] +#![feature(error_generic_member_access)] +use std::error::Request; +use std::fmt; + +#[derive(Debug)] +struct MyBacktrace1 {} + +#[derive(Debug)] +struct MyBacktrace2 {} + +#[derive(Debug)] +struct MyBacktrace3 {} + +#[derive(Debug)] +struct MyError { + backtrace1: MyBacktrace1, + backtrace2: MyBacktrace2, + backtrace3: MyBacktrace3, + other: MyBacktrace3, +} + +impl fmt::Display for MyError { + fn fmt(&self, f: &mut fmt::Formatter<'_>) -> fmt::Result { + write!(f, "Example Error") + } +} + +impl std::error::Error for MyError { + // CHECK-LABEL: @provide + #[no_mangle] + fn provide<'a>(&'a self, request: &mut Request<'a>) { + // LLVM should be able to optimize multiple .provide_* calls into a switch table + // and eliminate redundant ones, rather than compare one-by-one. + + // CHECK-NEXT: start: + // CHECK-NEXT: %[[SCRUTINEE:[^ ]+]] = load i64, ptr + // CHECK-NEXT: switch i64 %[[SCRUTINEE]], label %{{.*}} [ + // CHECK-COUNT-3: i64 {{.*}}, label %{{.*}} + // CHECK-NEXT: ] + request + .provide_ref::(&self.backtrace1) + .provide_ref::(&self.other) + .provide_ref::(&self.backtrace2) + .provide_ref::(&self.backtrace3); + } +} diff --git a/tests/ui/associated-consts/double-elided.rs b/tests/ui/associated-consts/double-elided.rs index fd0317781bb15..6831b599374ad 100644 --- a/tests/ui/associated-consts/double-elided.rs +++ b/tests/ui/associated-consts/double-elided.rs @@ -1,12 +1,10 @@ +//@ check-pass + struct S; impl S { const C: &&str = &""; - //~^ WARN `&` without an explicit lifetime name cannot be used here - //~| WARN this was previously accepted by the compiler but is being phased out; it will become a hard error in a future release! - //~| WARN `&` without an explicit lifetime name cannot be used here - //~| WARN this was previously accepted by the compiler but is being phased out; it will become a hard error in a future release! - //~| ERROR in type `&&str`, reference has a longer lifetime than the data it references + // Now resolves to `&'static &'static str`. } fn main() {} diff --git a/tests/ui/associated-consts/double-elided.stderr b/tests/ui/associated-consts/double-elided.stderr deleted file mode 100644 index 67834788ccd4a..0000000000000 --- a/tests/ui/associated-consts/double-elided.stderr +++ /dev/null @@ -1,47 +0,0 @@ -warning: `&` without an explicit lifetime name cannot be used here - --> $DIR/double-elided.rs:4:14 - | -LL | const C: &&str = &""; - | ^ - | - = warning: this was previously accepted by the compiler but is being phased out; it will become a hard error in a future release! - = note: for more information, see issue #115010 - = note: `#[warn(elided_lifetimes_in_associated_constant)]` on by default -help: use the `'static` lifetime - | -LL | const C: &'static &str = &""; - | +++++++ - -warning: `&` without an explicit lifetime name cannot be used here - --> $DIR/double-elided.rs:4:15 - | -LL | const C: &&str = &""; - | ^ - | - = warning: this was previously accepted by the compiler but is being phased out; it will become a hard error in a future release! - = note: for more information, see issue #115010 -help: use the `'static` lifetime - | -LL | const C: &&'static str = &""; - | +++++++ - -error[E0491]: in type `&&str`, reference has a longer lifetime than the data it references - --> $DIR/double-elided.rs:4:5 - | -LL | const C: &&str = &""; - | ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ - | -note: the pointer is valid for the anonymous lifetime as defined here - --> $DIR/double-elided.rs:4:14 - | -LL | const C: &&str = &""; - | ^ -note: but the referenced data is only valid for the anonymous lifetime as defined here - --> $DIR/double-elided.rs:4:14 - | -LL | const C: &&str = &""; - | ^ - -error: aborting due to 1 previous error; 2 warnings emitted - -For more information about this error, try `rustc --explain E0491`. diff --git a/tests/ui/associated-consts/infer-placeholder-in-non-suggestable-pos.rs b/tests/ui/associated-consts/infer-placeholder-in-non-suggestable-pos.rs index 1e0b77b0d3bd3..40896c32e1113 100644 --- a/tests/ui/associated-consts/infer-placeholder-in-non-suggestable-pos.rs +++ b/tests/ui/associated-consts/infer-placeholder-in-non-suggestable-pos.rs @@ -5,8 +5,6 @@ trait Trait { impl Trait for () { const ASSOC: &dyn Fn(_) = 1i32; //~^ ERROR the placeholder `_` is not allowed within types on item signatures for associated constants - //~| WARN `&` without an explicit lifetime name cannot be used here - //~| WARN this was previously accepted by the compiler but is being phased out; it will become a hard error in a future release! } fn main() {} diff --git a/tests/ui/associated-consts/infer-placeholder-in-non-suggestable-pos.stderr b/tests/ui/associated-consts/infer-placeholder-in-non-suggestable-pos.stderr index e946491a08482..6b8ba9af7a072 100644 --- a/tests/ui/associated-consts/infer-placeholder-in-non-suggestable-pos.stderr +++ b/tests/ui/associated-consts/infer-placeholder-in-non-suggestable-pos.stderr @@ -1,23 +1,9 @@ -warning: `&` without an explicit lifetime name cannot be used here - --> $DIR/infer-placeholder-in-non-suggestable-pos.rs:6:18 - | -LL | const ASSOC: &dyn Fn(_) = 1i32; - | ^ - | - = warning: this was previously accepted by the compiler but is being phased out; it will become a hard error in a future release! - = note: for more information, see issue #115010 - = note: `#[warn(elided_lifetimes_in_associated_constant)]` on by default -help: use the `'static` lifetime - | -LL | const ASSOC: &'static dyn Fn(_) = 1i32; - | +++++++ - error[E0121]: the placeholder `_` is not allowed within types on item signatures for associated constants --> $DIR/infer-placeholder-in-non-suggestable-pos.rs:6:26 | LL | const ASSOC: &dyn Fn(_) = 1i32; | ^ not allowed in type signatures -error: aborting due to 1 previous error; 1 warning emitted +error: aborting due to 1 previous error For more information about this error, try `rustc --explain E0121`. diff --git a/tests/ui/consts/assoc-const-elided-lifetime.stderr b/tests/ui/consts/assoc-const-elided-lifetime.stderr index a1eeaff4ba87b..3e847298c356a 100644 --- a/tests/ui/consts/assoc-const-elided-lifetime.stderr +++ b/tests/ui/consts/assoc-const-elided-lifetime.stderr @@ -6,6 +6,11 @@ LL | const FOO: Foo<'_> = Foo { x: PhantomData::<&()> }; | = warning: this was previously accepted by the compiler but is being phased out; it will become a hard error in a future release! = note: for more information, see issue #115010 +note: cannot automatically infer `'static` because of other lifetimes in scope + --> $DIR/assoc-const-elided-lifetime.rs:9:6 + | +LL | impl<'a> Foo<'a> { + | ^^ note: the lint level is defined here --> $DIR/assoc-const-elided-lifetime.rs:1:9 | @@ -24,6 +29,13 @@ LL | const BAR: &() = &(); | = warning: this was previously accepted by the compiler but is being phased out; it will become a hard error in a future release! = note: for more information, see issue #115010 +note: cannot automatically infer `'static` because of other lifetimes in scope + --> $DIR/assoc-const-elided-lifetime.rs:9:6 + | +LL | impl<'a> Foo<'a> { + | ^^ +LL | const FOO: Foo<'_> = Foo { x: PhantomData::<&()> }; + | ^^ help: use the `'static` lifetime | LL | const BAR: &'static () = &(); diff --git a/tests/ui/consts/static-default-lifetime/elided-lifetime.rs b/tests/ui/consts/static-default-lifetime/elided-lifetime.rs new file mode 100644 index 0000000000000..95d59f9b894e4 --- /dev/null +++ b/tests/ui/consts/static-default-lifetime/elided-lifetime.rs @@ -0,0 +1,22 @@ +#![deny(elided_lifetimes_in_associated_constant)] + +struct Foo<'a>(&'a ()); + +impl Foo<'_> { + const STATIC: &str = ""; + //~^ ERROR `&` without an explicit lifetime name cannot be used here + //~| WARN this was previously accepted by the compiler but is being phased out +} + +trait Bar { + const STATIC: &str; +} + +impl Bar for Foo<'_> { + const STATIC: &str = ""; + //~^ ERROR `&` without an explicit lifetime name cannot be used here + //~| WARN this was previously accepted by the compiler but is being phased out + //~| ERROR const not compatible with trait +} + +fn main() {} diff --git a/tests/ui/consts/static-default-lifetime/elided-lifetime.stderr b/tests/ui/consts/static-default-lifetime/elided-lifetime.stderr new file mode 100644 index 0000000000000..d4fc171753894 --- /dev/null +++ b/tests/ui/consts/static-default-lifetime/elided-lifetime.stderr @@ -0,0 +1,59 @@ +error: `&` without an explicit lifetime name cannot be used here + --> $DIR/elided-lifetime.rs:6:19 + | +LL | const STATIC: &str = ""; + | ^ + | + = warning: this was previously accepted by the compiler but is being phased out; it will become a hard error in a future release! + = note: for more information, see issue #115010 +note: cannot automatically infer `'static` because of other lifetimes in scope + --> $DIR/elided-lifetime.rs:5:10 + | +LL | impl Foo<'_> { + | ^^ +note: the lint level is defined here + --> $DIR/elided-lifetime.rs:1:9 + | +LL | #![deny(elided_lifetimes_in_associated_constant)] + | ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ +help: use the `'static` lifetime + | +LL | const STATIC: &'static str = ""; + | +++++++ + +error: `&` without an explicit lifetime name cannot be used here + --> $DIR/elided-lifetime.rs:16:19 + | +LL | const STATIC: &str = ""; + | ^ + | + = warning: this was previously accepted by the compiler but is being phased out; it will become a hard error in a future release! + = note: for more information, see issue #115010 +note: cannot automatically infer `'static` because of other lifetimes in scope + --> $DIR/elided-lifetime.rs:15:18 + | +LL | impl Bar for Foo<'_> { + | ^^ +help: use the `'static` lifetime + | +LL | const STATIC: &'static str = ""; + | +++++++ + +error[E0308]: const not compatible with trait + --> $DIR/elided-lifetime.rs:16:5 + | +LL | const STATIC: &str = ""; + | ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ lifetime mismatch + | + = note: expected reference `&'static _` + found reference `&_` +note: the anonymous lifetime as defined here... + --> $DIR/elided-lifetime.rs:15:18 + | +LL | impl Bar for Foo<'_> { + | ^^ + = note: ...does not necessarily outlive the static lifetime + +error: aborting due to 3 previous errors + +For more information about this error, try `rustc --explain E0308`. diff --git a/tests/ui/consts/static-default-lifetime/generic-associated-const.rs b/tests/ui/consts/static-default-lifetime/generic-associated-const.rs new file mode 100644 index 0000000000000..721920bd810cb --- /dev/null +++ b/tests/ui/consts/static-default-lifetime/generic-associated-const.rs @@ -0,0 +1,19 @@ +#![deny(elided_lifetimes_in_associated_constant)] +#![feature(generic_const_items)] +//~^ WARN the feature `generic_const_items` is incomplete + +struct A; +impl A { + const GAC_TYPE: &str = ""; + const GAC_LIFETIME<'a>: &str = ""; + //~^ ERROR `&` without an explicit lifetime name cannot be used here + //~| WARN this was previously accepted by the compiler but is being phased out +} + +trait Trait { + const GAC_TYPE: &str = ""; + const GAC_LIFETIME<'a>: &str = ""; + //~^ ERROR missing lifetime specifier +} + +fn main() {} diff --git a/tests/ui/consts/static-default-lifetime/generic-associated-const.stderr b/tests/ui/consts/static-default-lifetime/generic-associated-const.stderr new file mode 100644 index 0000000000000..2ecab3442a96e --- /dev/null +++ b/tests/ui/consts/static-default-lifetime/generic-associated-const.stderr @@ -0,0 +1,46 @@ +error[E0106]: missing lifetime specifier + --> $DIR/generic-associated-const.rs:15:29 + | +LL | const GAC_LIFETIME<'a>: &str = ""; + | ^ expected named lifetime parameter + | +help: consider using the `'a` lifetime + | +LL | const GAC_LIFETIME<'a>: &'a str = ""; + | ++ + +warning: the feature `generic_const_items` is incomplete and may not be safe to use and/or cause compiler crashes + --> $DIR/generic-associated-const.rs:2:12 + | +LL | #![feature(generic_const_items)] + | ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ + | + = note: see issue #113521 for more information + = note: `#[warn(incomplete_features)]` on by default + +error: `&` without an explicit lifetime name cannot be used here + --> $DIR/generic-associated-const.rs:8:29 + | +LL | const GAC_LIFETIME<'a>: &str = ""; + | ^ + | + = warning: this was previously accepted by the compiler but is being phased out; it will become a hard error in a future release! + = note: for more information, see issue #115010 +note: cannot automatically infer `'static` because of other lifetimes in scope + --> $DIR/generic-associated-const.rs:8:24 + | +LL | const GAC_LIFETIME<'a>: &str = ""; + | ^^ +note: the lint level is defined here + --> $DIR/generic-associated-const.rs:1:9 + | +LL | #![deny(elided_lifetimes_in_associated_constant)] + | ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ +help: use the `'static` lifetime + | +LL | const GAC_LIFETIME<'a>: &'static str = ""; + | +++++++ + +error: aborting due to 2 previous errors; 1 warning emitted + +For more information about this error, try `rustc --explain E0106`. diff --git a/tests/ui/consts/static-default-lifetime/inner-item.rs b/tests/ui/consts/static-default-lifetime/inner-item.rs new file mode 100644 index 0000000000000..061b240a40d8b --- /dev/null +++ b/tests/ui/consts/static-default-lifetime/inner-item.rs @@ -0,0 +1,21 @@ +//@ check-pass + +struct Foo<'a>(&'a ()); + +impl<'a> Foo<'a> { + fn hello(self) { + const INNER: &str = ""; + } +} + +impl Foo<'_> { + fn implicit(self) { + const INNER: &str = ""; + } + + fn fn_lifetime(&self) { + const INNER: &str = ""; + } +} + +fn main() {} diff --git a/tests/ui/consts/static-default-lifetime/static-trait-impl.rs b/tests/ui/consts/static-default-lifetime/static-trait-impl.rs new file mode 100644 index 0000000000000..025fda4df5811 --- /dev/null +++ b/tests/ui/consts/static-default-lifetime/static-trait-impl.rs @@ -0,0 +1,20 @@ +#![deny(elided_lifetimes_in_associated_constant)] + +trait Bar<'a> { + const STATIC: &'a str; +} + +struct A; +impl Bar<'_> for A { + const STATIC: &str = ""; + //~^ ERROR `&` without an explicit lifetime name cannot be used here + //~| WARN this was previously accepted by the compiler but is being phased out + //~| ERROR const not compatible with trait +} + +struct B; +impl Bar<'static> for B { + const STATIC: &str = ""; +} + +fn main() {} diff --git a/tests/ui/consts/static-default-lifetime/static-trait-impl.stderr b/tests/ui/consts/static-default-lifetime/static-trait-impl.stderr new file mode 100644 index 0000000000000..8e4c27875ab3c --- /dev/null +++ b/tests/ui/consts/static-default-lifetime/static-trait-impl.stderr @@ -0,0 +1,45 @@ +error: `&` without an explicit lifetime name cannot be used here + --> $DIR/static-trait-impl.rs:9:19 + | +LL | const STATIC: &str = ""; + | ^ + | + = warning: this was previously accepted by the compiler but is being phased out; it will become a hard error in a future release! + = note: for more information, see issue #115010 +note: cannot automatically infer `'static` because of other lifetimes in scope + --> $DIR/static-trait-impl.rs:8:10 + | +LL | impl Bar<'_> for A { + | ^^ +note: the lint level is defined here + --> $DIR/static-trait-impl.rs:1:9 + | +LL | #![deny(elided_lifetimes_in_associated_constant)] + | ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ +help: use the `'static` lifetime + | +LL | const STATIC: &'static str = ""; + | +++++++ + +error[E0308]: const not compatible with trait + --> $DIR/static-trait-impl.rs:9:5 + | +LL | const STATIC: &str = ""; + | ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ lifetime mismatch + | + = note: expected reference `&_` + found reference `&_` +note: the anonymous lifetime as defined here... + --> $DIR/static-trait-impl.rs:8:10 + | +LL | impl Bar<'_> for A { + | ^^ +note: ...does not necessarily outlive the anonymous lifetime as defined here + --> $DIR/static-trait-impl.rs:8:10 + | +LL | impl Bar<'_> for A { + | ^^ + +error: aborting due to 2 previous errors + +For more information about this error, try `rustc --explain E0308`. diff --git a/tests/ui/suggestions/missing-lifetime-in-assoc-const-type.default.stderr b/tests/ui/suggestions/missing-lifetime-in-assoc-const-type.default.stderr index 24e2e0a0f7a25..71ac55bf04483 100644 --- a/tests/ui/suggestions/missing-lifetime-in-assoc-const-type.default.stderr +++ b/tests/ui/suggestions/missing-lifetime-in-assoc-const-type.default.stderr @@ -1,57 +1,25 @@ -error[E0106]: missing lifetime specifier - --> $DIR/missing-lifetime-in-assoc-const-type.rs:6:14 - | -LL | const A: &str = ""; - | ^ expected named lifetime parameter - | -help: consider introducing a named lifetime parameter - | -LL ~ trait ZstAssert<'a>: Sized { -LL ~ const A: &'a str = ""; - | - -error[E0106]: missing lifetime specifier +error[E0726]: implicit elided lifetime not allowed here --> $DIR/missing-lifetime-in-assoc-const-type.rs:7:14 | LL | const B: S = S { s: &() }; - | ^ expected named lifetime parameter - | -help: consider introducing a named lifetime parameter - | -LL ~ trait ZstAssert<'a>: Sized { -LL | const A: &str = ""; -LL ~ const B: S<'a> = S { s: &() }; + | ^ expected lifetime parameter | - -error[E0106]: missing lifetime specifier - --> $DIR/missing-lifetime-in-assoc-const-type.rs:8:15 - | -LL | const C: &'_ str = ""; - | ^^ expected named lifetime parameter - | -help: consider introducing a named lifetime parameter - | -LL ~ trait ZstAssert<'a>: Sized { -LL | const A: &str = ""; -LL | const B: S = S { s: &() }; -LL ~ const C: &'a str = ""; +help: indicate the anonymous lifetime | +LL | const B: S<'_> = S { s: &() }; + | ++++ -error[E0106]: missing lifetime specifiers +error[E0726]: implicit elided lifetime not allowed here --> $DIR/missing-lifetime-in-assoc-const-type.rs:9:14 | LL | const D: T = T { a: &(), b: &() }; - | ^ expected 2 lifetime parameters - | -help: consider introducing a named lifetime parameter + | ^ expected lifetime parameters | -LL ~ trait ZstAssert<'a>: Sized { -LL | const A: &str = ""; -LL | const B: S = S { s: &() }; -LL | const C: &'_ str = ""; -LL ~ const D: T<'a, 'a> = T { a: &(), b: &() }; +help: indicate the anonymous lifetimes | +LL | const D: T<'_, '_> = T { a: &(), b: &() }; + | ++++++++ -error: aborting due to 4 previous errors +error: aborting due to 2 previous errors -For more information about this error, try `rustc --explain E0106`. +For more information about this error, try `rustc --explain E0726`. diff --git a/tests/ui/suggestions/missing-lifetime-in-assoc-const-type.generic_const_items.stderr b/tests/ui/suggestions/missing-lifetime-in-assoc-const-type.generic_const_items.stderr index a97ffe7da79eb..71ac55bf04483 100644 --- a/tests/ui/suggestions/missing-lifetime-in-assoc-const-type.generic_const_items.stderr +++ b/tests/ui/suggestions/missing-lifetime-in-assoc-const-type.generic_const_items.stderr @@ -1,47 +1,25 @@ -error[E0106]: missing lifetime specifier - --> $DIR/missing-lifetime-in-assoc-const-type.rs:6:14 - | -LL | const A: &str = ""; - | ^ expected named lifetime parameter - | -help: consider introducing a named lifetime parameter - | -LL | const A<'a>: &'a str = ""; - | ++++ ++ - -error[E0106]: missing lifetime specifier +error[E0726]: implicit elided lifetime not allowed here --> $DIR/missing-lifetime-in-assoc-const-type.rs:7:14 | LL | const B: S = S { s: &() }; - | ^ expected named lifetime parameter - | -help: consider introducing a named lifetime parameter - | -LL | const B<'a>: S<'a> = S { s: &() }; - | ++++ ++++ - -error[E0106]: missing lifetime specifier - --> $DIR/missing-lifetime-in-assoc-const-type.rs:8:15 - | -LL | const C: &'_ str = ""; - | ^^ expected named lifetime parameter + | ^ expected lifetime parameter | -help: consider introducing a named lifetime parameter +help: indicate the anonymous lifetime | -LL | const C<'a>: &'a str = ""; - | ++++ ~~ +LL | const B: S<'_> = S { s: &() }; + | ++++ -error[E0106]: missing lifetime specifiers +error[E0726]: implicit elided lifetime not allowed here --> $DIR/missing-lifetime-in-assoc-const-type.rs:9:14 | LL | const D: T = T { a: &(), b: &() }; - | ^ expected 2 lifetime parameters + | ^ expected lifetime parameters | -help: consider introducing a named lifetime parameter +help: indicate the anonymous lifetimes | -LL | const D<'a>: T<'a, 'a> = T { a: &(), b: &() }; - | ++++ ++++++++ +LL | const D: T<'_, '_> = T { a: &(), b: &() }; + | ++++++++ -error: aborting due to 4 previous errors +error: aborting due to 2 previous errors -For more information about this error, try `rustc --explain E0106`. +For more information about this error, try `rustc --explain E0726`. diff --git a/tests/ui/suggestions/missing-lifetime-in-assoc-const-type.rs b/tests/ui/suggestions/missing-lifetime-in-assoc-const-type.rs index f36a6567e423e..a60f0b94587f8 100644 --- a/tests/ui/suggestions/missing-lifetime-in-assoc-const-type.rs +++ b/tests/ui/suggestions/missing-lifetime-in-assoc-const-type.rs @@ -3,10 +3,10 @@ #![cfg_attr(generic_const_items, feature(generic_const_items), allow(incomplete_features))] trait ZstAssert: Sized { - const A: &str = ""; //~ ERROR missing lifetime specifier - const B: S = S { s: &() }; //~ ERROR missing lifetime specifier - const C: &'_ str = ""; //~ ERROR missing lifetime specifier - const D: T = T { a: &(), b: &() }; //~ ERROR missing lifetime specifier + const A: &str = ""; + const B: S = S { s: &() }; //~ ERROR implicit elided lifetime not allowed here + const C: &'_ str = ""; + const D: T = T { a: &(), b: &() }; //~ ERROR implicit elided lifetime not allowed here } struct S<'a> {