Commit Graph

241154 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
bors 1aa6aefdc9 Auto merge of #118566 - klensy:cstr-new, r=WaffleLapkin
use c literals in compiler and library

Relands refreshed https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/111647
2023-12-14 11:14:03 +00:00
bors 9d49eb76c4 Auto merge of #118417 - anforowicz:default-hidden-visibility, r=TaKO8Ki
Add unstable `-Zdefault-hidden-visibility` cmdline flag for `rustc`.

The new flag has been described in the Major Change Proposal at
https://github.com/rust-lang/compiler-team/issues/656
2023-12-14 09:16:15 +00:00
bors 1a8afa0e74 Auto merge of #118538 - RalfJung:size-of-val-comments, r=WaffleLapkin
fix dynamic size/align computation logic for packed types with dyn trait tail

This logic was never updated to support `packed(N)` where `N > 1`, and it turns out to be wrong for that case.

Fixes https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/80925

`@bjorn3` I have not looked at cranelift; I assume it basically copied the size-of-val logic and hence could use much the same patch.
2023-12-14 07:19:07 +00:00
bors d23e1a6894 Auto merge of #117749 - aliemjay:perf-canon-cache, r=lcnr
cache param env canonicalization

Canonicalize ParamEnv only once and store it. Then whenever we try to canonicalize `ParamEnvAnd<'tcx, T>` we only have to canonicalize `T` and then merge the results.

Prelimiary results show ~3-4% savings in diesel and serde benchmarks.

Best to review commits individually. Some commits have a short description.

Initial implementation had a soundness bug (https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/117749#issuecomment-1840453387) due to cache invalidation:
- When canonicalizing `Ty<'?0>` we first try to resolve region variables in the current InferCtxt which may have a constraint `?0 == 'static`. This means that we register `Ty<'?0> => Canonical<Ty<'static>>` in the cache, which is obviously incorrect in another inference context.
- This is fixed by not doing region resolution when canonicalizing the query *input* (vs. response), which is the only place where ParamEnv is used, and then in a later commit we *statically* guard against any form of inference variable resolution of the cached canonical ParamEnv's.

r? `@ghost`
2023-12-14 04:04:10 +00:00
Ali MJ Al-Nasrawy aa36c35296 rustdoc: avoid ParamEnv with infer vars
ParamEnv's with inference variabels are invalid.
2023-12-14 03:03:03 +00:00
Ali MJ Al-Nasrawy e452c94912 remove canonicalize_query_preserving_universes
unused!
2023-12-14 03:03:03 +00:00
Ali MJ Al-Nasrawy 3b55869615 make infcx optional in canonicalizer
This doesn't change behavior.
It should prevent unintentional resolution of inference variables
during canonicalization, which previously caused a soundness bug.
See PR description for more.
2023-12-14 03:03:03 +00:00
bors e6d1b0ec98 Auto merge of #118491 - cuviper:aarch64-stack-probes, r=wesleywiser
Enable stack probes on aarch64 for LLVM 18

I tested this on `aarch64-unknown-linux-gnu` with LLVM main (~18).

cc #77071, to be closed once we upgrade our LLVM submodule.
2023-12-14 02:01:13 +00:00
bors 5f73b006d2 Auto merge of #118389 - estebank:type-verbosity, r=b-naber
Tweak `short_ty_string` to reduce number of files

When shortening types and writing them to disk, make `short_ty_string` capable of reusing the same file, instead of writing a file per shortened type.
2023-12-14 00:04:08 +00:00
Esteban Küber 9d846fcc11 Tweak `short_ty_string` to reduce number of files
When shortening types and writing them to disk, make `short_ty_string`
capable of reusing the same file, instead of writing a file per
shortened type.
2023-12-13 23:07:10 +00:00
bors eeff92ad32 Auto merge of #118402 - notriddle:notriddle/ranking-and-filtering, r=GuillaumeGomez
rustdoc-search: use set ops for ranking and filtering

This commit adds ranking and quick filtering to type-based search, improving performance and having it order results based on their type signatures.

Preview
-------

Profiler output: https://notriddle.com/rustdoc-html-demo-6/profile-8/index.html

Preview: https://notriddle.com/rustdoc-html-demo-6/ranking-and-filtering-v2/std/index.html

Motivation
----------

If I write a query like `str -> String`, a lot of functions come up. That's to be expected, but `String::from` should come up on top, and it doesn't right now. This is because the sorting algorithm is based on the functions name, and doesn't consider the type signature at all. `slice::join` even comes up above it!

To fix this, the sorting should take into account the function's signature, and the closer match should come up on top.

Guide-level description
-----------------------

When searching by type signature, types with a "closer" match will show up above types that match less precisely.

Reference-level explanation
---------------------------

Functions signature search works in three major phases:

* A compact "fingerprint," based on the [bloom filter] technique, is used to check for matches and to estimate the distance. It sometimes has false positive matches, but it also operates on 128 bit contiguous memory and requires no backtracking, so it performs a lot better than real unification.

  The fingerprint represents the set of items in the type signature, but it does not represent nesting, and it ignores when the same item appears more than once.

  The result is rejected if any query bits are absent in the function, or if the distance is higher than the current maximum and 200 results have already been found.

* The second step performs unification. This is where nesting and true bag semantics are taken into account, and it has no false positives. It uses a recursive, backtracking algorithm.

  The result is rejected if any query elements are absent in the function.

[bloom filter]: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bloom_filter

Drawbacks
---------

This makes the code bigger.

More than that, this design is a subtle trade-off. It makes the cases I've tested against measurably faster, but it's not clear how well this extends to other crates with potentially more functions and fewer types.

The more complex things get, the more important it is to gather a good set of data to test with (this is arguably more important than the actual benchmarking ifrastructure right now).

Rationale and alternatives
--------------------------

Throwing a bloom filter in front makes it faster.

More than that, it tries to take a tactic where the system can not only check for potential matches, but also gets an accurate distance function without needing to do unification. That way it can skip unification even on items that have the needed elems, as long as they have more items than the currently found maximum.

If I didn't want to be able to cheaply do set operations on the fingerprint, a [cuckoo filter] is supposed to have better performance. But the nice bit-banging set intersection doesn't work AFAIK.

I also looked into [minhashing], but since it's actually an unbiased estimate of the similarity coefficient, I'm not sure how it could be used to skip unification (I wouldn't know if the estimate was too low or too high).

This function actually uses the number of distinct items as its "distance function." This should give the same results that it would have gotten from a Jaccard Distance $1-\frac{|F\cap{}Q|}{|F\cup{}Q|}$, while being cheaper to compute. This is because:

* The function $F$ must be a superset of the query $Q$, so their union is just $F$ and the intersection is $Q$ and it can be reduced to $1-\frac{|Q|}{|F|}.

* There are no magic thresholds. These values are only being used to compare against each other while sorting (and, if 200 results are found, to compare with the maximum match). This means we only care if one value is bigger than the other, not what it's actual value is, and since $Q$ is the same for everything, it can be safely left out, reducing the formula to $1-\frac{1}{|F|} = \frac{|F|}{|F|}-\frac{1}{|F|} = |F|-1$. And, since the values are only being compared with each other, $|F|$ is fine.

Prior art
---------

This is significantly different from how Hoogle does it.
It doesn't account for order, and it has no special account for nesting, though `Box<t>` is still two items, while `t` is only one.

This should give the same results that it would have gotten from a Jaccard Distance $1-\frac{|A\cap{}B|}{|A\cup{}B|}$, while being cheaper to compute.

Unresolved questions
--------------------

`[]` and `()`, the slice/array and tuple/union operators, are ignored while building the signature for the query. This is because they match more than one thing, making them ambiguous. Unfortunately, this also makes them a performance cliff. Is this likely to be a problem?

Right now, the system just stashes the type distance into the same field that levenshtein distance normally goes in. This means exact query matches show up on top (for example, if you have a function like `fn nothing(a: Nothing, b: i32)`, then searching for `nothing` will show it on top even if there's another function with `fn bar(x: Nothing)` that's technically a closer match in type signature.

Future possibilities
--------------------

It should be possible to adopt more sorting criteria to act as a tie breaker, which could be determined during unification.

[cuckoo filter]: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cuckoo_filter
[minhashing]: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/MinHash
2023-12-13 21:45:01 +00:00
Lukasz Anforowicz 981c4e3ce6 Add unstable `-Zdefault-hidden-visibility` cmdline flag for `rustc`.
The new flag has been described in the Major Change Proposal at
https://github.com/rust-lang/compiler-team/issues/656
2023-12-13 21:14:23 +00:00
bors a90372c6e8 Auto merge of #118213 - Urgau:check-cfg-diagnostics-rustc-cargo, r=petrochenkov
Add more suggestions to unexpected cfg names and values

This pull request adds more suggestion to unexpected cfg names and values diagnostics:
 - it first adds a links to the [rustc unstable book](https://doc.rust-lang.org/nightly/unstable-book/compiler-flags/check-cfg.html) or the [Cargo reference](https://doc.rust-lang.org/nightly/cargo/reference/unstable.html#check-cfg), depending if rustc is invoked by Cargo
 - it secondly adds a suggestion on how to expect the cfg name or value:
    *excluding well known names and values*
    - for Cargo: it suggest using a feature or `cargo:rust-check-cfg` in build script
    - for rustc: it suggest using `--check-cfg` (with the correct invocation)

Those diagnostics improvements are directed towards enabling users to fix the issue if the previous suggestions weren't good enough.

r? `@petrochenkov`
2023-12-13 19:45:57 +00:00
Ralf Jung 7e4c4271f4 fix computing the dynamic alignment of packed structs with dyn trait tails 2023-12-13 20:21:57 +01:00
bors 2862500152 Auto merge of #118919 - matthiaskrgr:rollup-02udckl, r=matthiaskrgr
Rollup of 4 pull requests

Successful merges:

 - #118759 (Support bare unit structs in destructuring assignments)
 - #118871 (Coroutine variant fields can be uninitialized)
 - #118883 (Change a typo mistake in the-doc-attribute.md)
 - #118906 (Fix LLD thread flags in bootstrap on Windows)

r? `@ghost`
`@rustbot` modify labels: rollup
2023-12-13 17:45:17 +00:00
Michael Howell bec6672984 rustdoc-search: clean up handleSingleArg type handling 2023-12-13 10:37:52 -07:00
Michael Howell 9dfcf131b3 rustdoc-search: better hashing, faster unification
The hash changes are based on some tests with `arti` and various
specific queries, aimed at reducing the false positive rate.

Sorting the query elements so that generics always come first is
instead aimed at reducing the number of Map operations on mgens,
assuming if the bloom filter does find a false positive, it'll
be able to reject the row without having to track a mapping.

- https://hur.st/bloomfilter/?n=3&p=&m=96&k=6

  Different functions have different amounts of inputs, and
  unification isn't very slow anyway, so figuring out a single
  ideal number of hash functions is nasty, but 6 keeps things
  low even up to 10 inputs.

- https://web.archive.org/web/20210927123933/https://citeseerx.ist.psu.edu/viewdoc/download?doi=10.1.1.72.2442&rep=rep1&type=pdf

  This is the `h1` and `h2`, both derived from `h0`.
2023-12-13 10:37:51 -07:00
Michael Howell 9a9695a052 rustdoc-search: use set ops for ranking and filtering
This commit adds ranking and quick filtering to type-based search,
improving performance and having it order results based on their
type signatures.

Motivation
----------

If I write a query like `str -> String`, a lot of functions come up.
That's to be expected, but `String::from_str` should come up on top, and
it doesn't right now. This is because the sorting algorithm is based
on the functions name, and doesn't consider the type signature at all.
`slice::join` even comes up above it!

To fix this, the sorting should take into account the function's
signature, and the closer match should come up on top.

Guide-level description
-----------------------

When searching by type signature, types with a "closer" match will
show up above types that match less precisely.

Reference-level explanation
---------------------------

Functions signature search works in three major phases:

* A compact "fingerprint," based on the [bloom filter] technique, is used to
  check for matches and to estimate the distance. It sometimes has false
  positive matches, but it also operates on 128 bit contiguous memory and
  requires no backtracking, so it performs a lot better than real
  unification.

  The fingerprint represents the set of items in the type signature, but it
  does not represent nesting, and it ignores when the same item appears more
  than once.

  The result is rejected if any query bits are absent in the function, or
  if the distance is higher than the current maximum and 200
  results have already been found.

* The second step performs unification. This is where nesting and true bag
  semantics are taken into account, and it has no false positives. It uses a
  recursive, backtracking algorithm.

  The result is rejected if any query elements are absent in the function.

[bloom filter]: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bloom_filter

Drawbacks
---------

This makes the code bigger.

More than that, this design is a subtle trade-off. It makes the cases I've
tested against measurably faster, but it's not clear how well this extends
to other crates with potentially more functions and fewer types.

The more complex things get, the more important it is to gather a good set
of data to test with (this is arguably more important than the actual
benchmarking ifrastructure right now).

Rationale and alternatives
--------------------------

Throwing a bloom filter in front makes it faster.

More than that, it tries to take a tactic where the system can not only check
for potential matches, but also gets an accurate distance function without
needing to do unification. That way it can skip unification even on items
that have the needed elems, as long as they have more items than the
currently found maximum.

If I didn't want to be able to cheaply do set operations on the fingerprint,
a [cuckoo filter] is supposed to have better performance.
But the nice bit-banging set intersection doesn't work AFAIK.

I also looked into [minhashing], but since it's actually an unbiased
estimate of the similarity coefficient, I'm not sure how it could be used
to skip unification (I wouldn't know if the estimate was too low or
too high).

This function actually uses the number of distinct items as its
"distance function."
This should give the same results that it would have gotten from a Jaccard
Distance $1-\frac{|F\cap{}Q|}{|F\cup{}Q|}$, while being cheaper to compute.
This is because:

* The function $F$ must be a superset of the query $Q$, so their union is
  just $F$ and the intersection is $Q$ and it can be reduced to
  $1-\frac{|Q|}{|F|}.

* There are no magic thresholds. These values are only being used to
  compare against each other while sorting (and, if 200 results are found,
  to compare with the maximum match). This means we only care if one value
  is bigger than the other, not what it's actual value is, and since $Q$ is
  the same for everything, it can be safely left out, reducing the formula
  to $1-\frac{1}{|F|} = \frac{|F|}{|F|}-\frac{1}{|F|} = |F|-1$. And, since
  the values are only being compared with each other, $|F|$ is fine.

Prior art
---------

This is significantly different from how Hoogle does it.
It doesn't account for order, and it has no special account for nesting,
though `Box<t>` is still two items, while `t` is only one.

This should give the same results that it would have gotten from a Jaccard
Distance $1-\frac{|A\cap{}B|}{|A\cup{}B|}$, while being cheaper to compute.

Unresolved questions
--------------------

`[]` and `()`, the slice/array and tuple/union operators, are ignored while
building the signature for the query. This is because they match more than
one thing, making them ambiguous. Unfortunately, this also makes them
a performance cliff. Is this likely to be a problem?

Right now, the system just stashes the type distance into the
same field that levenshtein distance normally goes in. This means exact
query matches show up on top (for example, if you have a function like
`fn nothing(a: Nothing, b: i32)`, then searching for `nothing` will show it
on top even if there's another function with `fn bar(x: Nothing)` that's
technically a closer match in type signature.

Future possibilities
--------------------

It should be possible to adopt more sorting criteria to act as a tie breaker,
which could be determined during unification.

[cuckoo filter]: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cuckoo_filter
[minhashing]: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/MinHash
2023-12-13 10:37:15 -07:00
Michael Howell fd1d256d61 rustdoc-search: remove the now-redundant `validateResult`
This function dates back to 9a45c9d7c6 and
seems to have been made obsolete when `addIntoResult` grew the ability to
check the levenshtein distance matching with commit
ba824ec52b.
2023-12-13 10:35:36 -07:00
Matthias Krüger 251d1af0d2
Rollup merge of #118906 - Kobzol:bootstrap-is-windows, r=petrochenkov
Fix LLD thread flags in bootstrap on Windows

Fixes [this comment](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/116278#discussion_r1424627056).

r? `@petrochenkov`
2023-12-13 18:03:34 +01:00
Matthias Krüger 666353e7ba
Rollup merge of #118883 - HosseinAssaran:patch-1, r=fmease
Change a typo mistake in the-doc-attribute.md

I guess that `Bar` in the section I changed should be `bar` because when I run the program it has its page under struct but bar doesn't have any page.
2023-12-13 18:03:34 +01:00
Matthias Krüger 1dd36119d0
Rollup merge of #118871 - tmiasko:coroutine-maybe-uninit-fields, r=compiler-errors
Coroutine variant fields can be uninitialized

Wrap coroutine variant fields in MaybeUninit to indicate that they might be uninitialized. Otherwise an uninhabited field will make the entire variant uninhabited and introduce undefined behaviour.

The analogous issue in the prefix of coroutine layout was addressed by 6fae7f8071.
2023-12-13 18:03:33 +01:00
Matthias Krüger dbc6ec6636
Rollup merge of #118759 - compiler-errors:bare-unit-structs, r=petrochenkov
Support bare unit structs in destructuring assignments

We should be allowed to use destructuring assignments on *bare* unit structs, not just unit structs that are located within other pattern constructors.

Fixes #118753

r? petrochenkov since you reviewed #95380, reassign if you're busy or don't want to review this.
2023-12-13 18:03:33 +01:00
Urgau f6617d050d Remove dangling check-cfg ui tests files 2023-12-13 17:48:04 +01:00
Urgau 5345a166fe Add more suggestion to unexpected cfg names and values 2023-12-13 17:48:04 +01:00
bors 7176b8babd Auto merge of #118894 - dtolnay:bootstrapwrite, r=onur-ozkan
Unbreak non-unix non-windows bootstrap

Fixes #118862.

#118647 added a new use of std::io::Write that is not conditional on any cfg.

028b6d152e/src/bootstrap/src/bin/main.rs (L134)

```console
error[E0599]: no method named `write_all` found for struct `File` in the current scope
   --> src/bin/main.rs:134:21
    |
134 |             t!(file.write_all(lines.join("\n").as_bytes()));
    |                     ^^^^^^^^^ method not found in `File`
    |
    = help: items from traits can only be used if the trait is in scope
help: the following trait is implemented but not in scope; perhaps add a `use` for it:
    |
8   + use std::io::Write;
    |
```
2023-12-13 15:17:26 +00:00
Ali MJ Al-Nasrawy fafe66d438 don't resolve regions in query input
fixes a soundness regression described in the PR description.
2023-12-13 14:57:52 +00:00
Ali MJ Al-Nasrawy a1459c3fca fix small perf regressions 2023-12-13 14:57:52 +00:00
Ali MJ Al-Nasrawy 85338197d4 don't store OriginalQueryValues::universe_map
ParamEnv is canonicalized in *queries input* rather than query response.
In such case we don't "preserve universes" of canonical variable.
This means that `universe_map` always has the default value, which is
wasteful to store in the cache.
2023-12-13 14:57:52 +00:00
Ali MJ Al-Nasrawy f38d1e971d global param_env canonicalization cache 2023-12-13 14:57:52 +00:00
bors c3def263a4 Auto merge of #118870 - Enselic:rustc_passes-query-stability, r=compiler-errors
rustc_passes: Enforce `rustc::potential_query_instability` lint

Stop allowing `rustc::potential_query_instability` in all of `rustc_passes` and instead allow it on a case-by-case basis if it is safe. In this case, all instances of the lint are safe to allow.

Part of https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/84447 which is E-help-wanted.
2023-12-13 12:47:43 +00:00
bors 56d25ba5ea Auto merge of #118500 - ZetaNumbers:tcx_hir_refactor, r=petrochenkov
Move some methods from `tcx.hir()` to `tcx`

https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/118256#issuecomment-1826442834

Renamed:
- find -> opt_hir_node
- get -> hir_node
- find_by_def_id -> opt_hir_node_by_def_id
- get_by_def_id -> hir_node_by_def_id
2023-12-13 10:31:56 +00:00
bors 2fdd9eda0c Auto merge of #118534 - RalfJung:extern-type-size-of-val, r=WaffleLapkin
codegen: panic when trying to compute size/align of extern type

The alignment is also computed when accessing a field of extern type at non-zero offset, so we also panic in that case.

Previously `size_of_val` worked because the code path there assumed that "thin pointer" means "sized". But that's not true any more with extern types. The returned size and align are just blatantly wrong, so it seems better to panic than returning wrong results. We use a non-unwinding panic since code probably does not expect size_of_val to panic.
2023-12-13 08:33:05 +00:00
Jakub Beránek 066e6ffa02
Fix LLD thread flag selection for Windows targets 2023-12-13 07:47:46 +01:00
Jakub Beránek c5208518fa
Add `TargetSelection::is_windows` method 2023-12-13 07:47:25 +01:00
bors f651b436ce Auto merge of #117050 - c410-f3r:here-we-go-again, r=petrochenkov
[`RFC 3086`] Attempt to try to resolve blocking concerns

Implements what is described at https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/83527#issuecomment-1744822345 to hopefully make some progress.

It is unknown if such approach is or isn't desired due to the lack of further feedback, as such, it is probably best to nominate this PR to the official entities.

`@rustbot` labels +I-compiler-nominated
2023-12-13 06:37:08 +00:00
bors 9f1bfe53b6 Auto merge of #118900 - workingjubilee:rollup-wkv9hq1, r=workingjubilee
Rollup of 10 pull requests

Successful merges:

 - #118858 (Remove dead codes in core)
 - #118864 (Fix alignment passed down to LLVM for simd_masked_load)
 - #118872 (Add rustX check to codeblock attributes lint)
 - #118873 (fix `waker_getters` tracking issue number)
 - #118884 (NFC: simplify merging of two vecs)
 - #118885 (clippy::complexity fixes)
 - #118886 (Clean up variables in `search.js`)
 - #118887 (Typo)
 - #118889 (more clippy::complexity fixes)
 - #118891 (Actually parse async gen blocks correctly)

r? `@ghost`
`@rustbot` modify labels: rollup
2023-12-13 04:38:30 +00:00
Jubilee f9078a40ee
Rollup merge of #118891 - compiler-errors:async-gen-blocks, r=eholk
Actually parse async gen blocks correctly

1. I got the control flow in `parse_expr_bottom` messed up, and obviously forgot a test for `async gen`, so we weren't actually ever parsing it correctly.
2. I forgot to gate the span for `async gen {}`, so even if we did parse it, we wouldn't have correctly denied it in `cfg(FALSE)`.

r? eholk
2023-12-12 18:48:55 -08:00
Jubilee 4583a0134f
Rollup merge of #118889 - matthiaskrgr:compl_2023_2, r=WaffleLapkin
more clippy::complexity fixes

      redundant_guards
      redundant_slicing
      filter_next
      needless_borrowed_reference
      useless_format
2023-12-12 18:48:54 -08:00
Jubilee df0686b629
Rollup merge of #118887 - smoelius:patch-1, r=Nilstrieb
Typo
2023-12-12 18:48:54 -08:00
Jubilee 2f937c720d
Rollup merge of #118886 - GuillaumeGomez:clean-up-search-vars, r=notriddle
Clean up variables in `search.js`

While reviewing https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/118402, I saw a few small clean ups that were needed, mostly about variables creation.

r? ```@notriddle```
2023-12-12 18:48:53 -08:00
Jubilee 5308733112
Rollup merge of #118885 - matthiaskrgr:compl_2023, r=compiler-errors
clippy::complexity fixes

 filter_map_identity
 needless_bool
 search_is_some
 unit_arg
 map_identity
 needless_question_mark
 derivable_impls
2023-12-12 18:48:53 -08:00
Jubilee 89d4a9bee9
Rollup merge of #118884 - matthiaskrgr:auszweimacheins, r=Nadrieril
NFC: simplify merging of two vecs
2023-12-12 18:48:52 -08:00
Jubilee 18e0966f39
Rollup merge of #118873 - lukas-code:fix_waker_getter_tracking_issue_number, r=workingjubilee
fix `waker_getters` tracking issue number

The feature currently links to the closed issue https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/87021. Make it link to the tracking issue https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/96992 instead.
2023-12-12 18:48:52 -08:00
Jubilee 0430782d1d
Rollup merge of #118872 - GuillaumeGomez:codeblock-attr-lint, r=notriddle
Add rustX check to codeblock attributes lint

We discovered this issue [here](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/118802#discussion_r1421815943).

I assume that the issue will be present in other places outside of the compiler so it's worth adding a check for it.

First commit is just a small cleanup about variables creation which was a bit strange (at least more than necessary).

r? ```@notriddle```
2023-12-12 18:48:51 -08:00
Jubilee a33f1a3d3a
Rollup merge of #118864 - farnoy:masked-load-store-fixes, r=workingjubilee
Fix alignment passed down to LLVM for simd_masked_load

Follow up to #117953

The alignment for a masked load operation should be that of the element/lane, not the vector as a whole

It can produce miscompilations after the LLVM optimizer notices the higher alignment and promotes this to an unmasked, aligned load followed up by blend/select - https://rust.godbolt.org/z/KEeGbevbb
2023-12-12 18:48:51 -08:00
Jubilee 2d1d443d7f
Rollup merge of #118858 - mu001999:dead_code/clean, r=cuviper
Remove dead codes in core

Detected by #118257
2023-12-12 18:48:50 -08:00
bors 77d1699756 Auto merge of #116438 - ChrisDenton:truncate, r=thomcc
Windows: Allow `File::create` to work on hidden files

This makes `OpenOptions::new().write(true).create(true).truncate(true).open(&path)` work if the path exists and is a hidden file. Previously it would fail with access denied.

This makes it consistent with `OpenOptions::new().write(true).truncate(true).open(&path)` (note the lack of `create`) which does not have this restriction. It's also more consistent with other platforms.

Fixes #115745 (see that issue for more details).
2023-12-13 02:27:12 +00:00
Josh Stone 233de9d89e Set the `StackProbeType` in `apple::opts` 2023-12-12 17:26:51 -08:00
David Tolnay b30e94b7bb
Unbreak non-unix non-windows bootstrap 2023-12-12 13:11:39 -08:00