Commit Graph

804 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Matthias Krüger 3c40e383df
Rollup merge of #124818 - compiler-errors:ena, r=Mark-Simulacrum
Update ena to 0.14.3

Includes https://github.com/rust-lang/ena/pull/53, which removes a trivial `Self: Sized` bound that prevents `ena` from building on the new solver.
2024-05-11 08:00:15 +02:00
Nicholas Nethercote 58a06b6a99 Remove `enum_from_u32`.
It's a macro that just creates an enum with a `from_u32` method. It has
two arms. One is unused and the other has a single use.

This commit inlines that single use and removes the whole macro. This
increases readability because we don't have two different macros
interacting (`enum_from_u32` and `language_item_table`).
2024-05-09 09:01:59 +10:00
Nicholas Nethercote d3d01e1cd3 Remove `vec_linked_list`.
It provides a way to effectively embed a linked list within an
`IndexVec` and also iterate over that list. It's written in a very
generic way, involving two traits `Links` and `LinkElem`. But the
`Links` trait is only impl'd for `IndexVec` and `&IndexVec`, and the
whole thing is only used in one module within `rustc_borrowck`. So I
think it's over-engineered and hard to read. Plus it has no comments.

This commit removes it, and adds a (non-generic) local iterator for the
use within `rustc_borrowck`. Much simpler.
2024-05-09 08:13:24 +10:00
Nicholas Nethercote f5d7d346a4 Remove `TinyList`.
It is optimized for lists with a single element, avoiding the need for
an allocation in that case. But `SmallVec<[T; 1]>` also avoids the
allocation, and is better in general: more standard, log2 number of
allocations if the list exceeds one item, and a much more capable API.

This commit removes `TinyList` and converts the two uses to
`SmallVec<[T; 1]>`. It also reorders the `use` items in the relevant
file so they are in just two sections (`pub` and non-`pub`), ordered
alphabetically, instead of many sections. (This is a relevant part of
the change because I had to decide where to add a `use` item for
`SmallVec`.)
2024-05-09 08:13:24 +10:00
Nicholas Nethercote d7814e72eb Document `Pu128`.
And move the `repr` line after the `derive` line, where it's harder to
overlook. (I overlooked it initially, and didn't understand how this
type worked.)
2024-05-09 08:13:24 +10:00
Nicholas Nethercote 55b6ff8e41 Remove `extern crate tracing`.
`use` is a nicer way of doing things.
2024-05-08 12:52:31 +10:00
Nicholas Nethercote 351c0fa2a3 Reorder top-level crate items.
- `use` before `mod`
- `pub` before `non-pub`
- Alphabetical order within sections
2024-05-07 10:20:04 +10:00
Nicholas Nethercote df8fe7dd34 Remove `macro_use` from `stable_hasher`.
Normal `use` items are nicer.
2024-05-07 10:19:12 +10:00
Michael Goulet 2af0871297 Update ena to 0.14.3 2024-05-06 14:32:39 -04:00
bors 0d7b2fb797 Auto merge of #123441 - saethlin:fixed-len-file-names, r=oli-obk
Stabilize the size of incr comp object file names

The current implementation does not produce stable-length paths, and we create the paths in a way that makes our allocation behavior is nondeterministic. I think `@eddyb` fixed a number of other cases like this in the past, and this PR fixes another one. Whether that actually matters I have no idea, but we still have bimodal behavior in rustc-perf and the non-uniformity in `find` and `ls` was bothering me.

I've also removed the truncation of the mangled CGU names. Before this PR incr comp paths look like this:
```
target/debug/incremental/scratch-38izrrq90cex7/s-gux6gz0ow8-1ph76gg-ewe1xj434l26w9up5bedsojpd/261xgo1oqnd90ry5.o
```
And after, they look like this:
```
target/debug/incremental/scratch-035omutqbfkbw/s-gux6borni0-16r3v1j-6n64tmwqzchtgqzwwim5amuga/55v2re42sztc8je9bva6g8ft3.o
```

On the one hand, I'm sure this will break some people's builds because they're on Windows and only a few bytes from the path length limit. But if we're that seriously worried about the length of our file names, I have some other ideas on how to make them smaller. And last time I deleted some hash truncations from the compiler, there was a huge drop in the number if incremental compilation ICEs that were reported: https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/110367https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/110367

---

Upon further reading, this PR actually fixes a bug. This comment says the CGU names are supposed to be a fixed-length hash, and before this PR they aren't: ca7d34efa9/compiler/rustc_monomorphize/src/partitioning.rs (L445-L448)
2024-05-03 17:41:48 +00:00
bors f5efc3c286 Auto merge of #124521 - Mark-Simulacrum:bootstrap-bump, r=albertlarsan68
Bump bootstrap compiler to latest beta

https://forge.rust-lang.org/release/process.html#master-bootstrap-update-t-2-day-tuesday

This also cherry-picks d716d72586548963f32e5c8d57c41db0065fa6e0 from the beta branching, to continue to workaround #122758.

r? bootstrap
2024-05-02 09:21:43 +00:00
Waffle Lapkin 3c815a644c Add `UnordMap::try_insert` 2024-05-02 03:49:46 +02:00
Mark Rousskov 43f9a5ec0c Mark more entries in rustc_data_structures as no_inline for docs
This is a workaround for #122758, but it's not clear why 1.79 requires a
more extensive amount of no_inline than the previous release. Seems like
there's something relatively subtle happening here.
2024-05-01 21:01:51 -04:00
León Orell Valerian Liehr dec1d16a9b
Give an item related to issue 27438 a more meaningful name 2024-04-30 22:27:19 +02:00
Nicholas Nethercote 4814fd0a4b Remove `extern crate rustc_macros` from numerous crates. 2024-04-29 10:21:54 +10:00
Markus Reiter 33e68aadc9
Stabilize generic `NonZero`. 2024-04-22 18:48:47 +02:00
Ben Kimock 6ee3713b08 Stabilize the size of incr comp object file names 2024-04-22 10:50:07 -04:00
Maybe Waffle 523fe2b67b Add tests for predecessor-aware `VecGraph` mode 2024-04-18 17:32:42 +00:00
Maybe Waffle fa134b5e0f Add `graph::depth_first_search_as_undirected` 2024-04-15 23:20:52 +00:00
Maybe Waffle 7d2cb3dda7 Make `graph::DepthFirstSearch` accept `G` by value
It's required for the next commit.

Note that you can still have `G = &H`, since there are implementations of all
the graph traits for references.
2024-04-15 23:20:52 +00:00
Maybe Waffle 86a576528c Add an opt-in to store incoming edges in `VecGraph` + some docs 2024-04-15 23:20:52 +00:00
许杰友 Jieyou Xu (Joe) 5580ae9795
Rollup merge of #123934 - WaffleLapkin:graph-mini-refactor, r=fmease
`rustc_data_structures::graph` mini refactor

Who doesn't love to breathe dust from the ancient times?
2024-04-15 16:56:18 +01:00
Maybe Waffle 435db9b9bd Use RPITIT for `Successors` and `Predecessors` traits
Now with RPITIT instead of GAT!
2024-04-15 13:34:08 +00:00
Maybe Waffle e8d2221e3b Make `depth_first_search` into a standalone function
Does not necessarily change much, but we never overwrite it, so I see no reason
for it to be in the `Successors` trait. (+we already have a similar `is_cyclic`)
2024-04-14 16:03:08 +00:00
Maybe Waffle 3124fa9310 Document `ControlFlowGraph` 2024-04-14 15:53:38 +00:00
Maybe Waffle f5144938bd Rename `WithNumEdges` => `NumEdges` and `WithStartNode` => `StartNode` 2024-04-14 15:51:29 +00:00
Maybe Waffle 0d5fc9bf58 Merge `{With,Graph}{Successors,Predecessors}` into `{Successors,Predecessors}`
Now with GAT!
2024-04-14 15:48:53 +00:00
Maybe Waffle 398da593a5 Merge `WithNumNodes` into DirectedGraph 2024-04-14 15:46:40 +00:00
bors af6a1613b3 Auto merge of #123175 - Nilstrieb:debug-strict-overflow, r=wesleywiser
Add add/sub methods that only panic with debug assertions to rustc

This mitigates the perf impact of enabling overflow checks on rustc. The change to use overflow checks will be done in a later PR.

For rust-lang/compiler-team#724, based on data gathered in #119440.
2024-04-13 17:18:42 +00:00
Nilstrieb 5039160c5b Add add/sub methods that only panic with debug assertions to rustc
This mitigates the perf impact of enabling overflow checks on rustc.
The change to use overflow checks will be done in a later PR.
2024-04-13 17:03:12 +02:00
Vadim Petrochenkov b40ea03f8a rustc_index: Add a `ZERO` constant to index types
It is commonly used.
2024-04-03 19:06:22 +03:00
bors bf71daedc2 Auto merge of #121851 - michaelwoerister:mcp-533-effective-vis, r=cjgillot
Use FxIndexMap instead FxHashMap to stabilize iteration order in EffectiveVisibilities

Part of [MCP 533](https://github.com/rust-lang/compiler-team/issues/533).
2024-03-31 16:22:38 +00:00
Urgau 16d11c539f Add support for NonNull in ambiguous_wide_ptr_comparisions 2024-03-29 22:02:07 +01:00
Michael Woerister 7e4bc4a373 Remove and disallow HashStable impl of HashMap. 2024-03-27 14:57:01 +01:00
bors df8ac8f1d7 Auto merge of #122568 - RalfJung:mentioned-items, r=oli-obk
recursively evaluate the constants in everything that is 'mentioned'

This is another attempt at fixing https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/107503. The previous attempt at https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/112879 seems stuck in figuring out where the [perf regression](https://perf.rust-lang.org/compare.html?start=c55d1ee8d4e3162187214692229a63c2cc5e0f31&end=ec8de1ebe0d698b109beeaaac83e60f4ef8bb7d1&stat=instructions:u) comes from. In  https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/122258 I learned some things, which informed the approach this PR is taking.

Quoting from the new collector docs, which explain the high-level idea:
```rust
//! One important role of collection is to evaluate all constants that are used by all the items
//! which are being collected. Codegen can then rely on only encountering constants that evaluate
//! successfully, and if a constant fails to evaluate, the collector has much better context to be
//! able to show where this constant comes up.
//!
//! However, the exact set of "used" items (collected as described above), and therefore the exact
//! set of used constants, can depend on optimizations. Optimizing away dead code may optimize away
//! a function call that uses a failing constant, so an unoptimized build may fail where an
//! optimized build succeeds. This is undesirable.
//!
//! To fix this, the collector has the concept of "mentioned" items. Some time during the MIR
//! pipeline, before any optimization-level-dependent optimizations, we compute a list of all items
//! that syntactically appear in the code. These are considered "mentioned", and even if they are in
//! dead code and get optimized away (which makes them no longer "used"), they are still
//! "mentioned". For every used item, the collector ensures that all mentioned items, recursively,
//! do not use a failing constant. This is reflected via the [`CollectionMode`], which determines
//! whether we are visiting a used item or merely a mentioned item.
//!
//! The collector and "mentioned items" gathering (which lives in `rustc_mir_transform::mentioned_items`)
//! need to stay in sync in the following sense:
//!
//! - For every item that the collector gather that could eventually lead to build failure (most
//!   likely due to containing a constant that fails to evaluate), a corresponding mentioned item
//!   must be added. This should use the exact same strategy as the ecollector to make sure they are
//!   in sync. However, while the collector works on monomorphized types, mentioned items are
//!   collected on generic MIR -- so any time the collector checks for a particular type (such as
//!   `ty::FnDef`), we have to just onconditionally add this as a mentioned item.
//! - In `visit_mentioned_item`, we then do with that mentioned item exactly what the collector
//!   would have done during regular MIR visiting. Basically you can think of the collector having
//!   two stages, a pre-monomorphization stage and a post-monomorphization stage (usually quite
//!   literally separated by a call to `self.monomorphize`); the pre-monomorphizationn stage is
//!   duplicated in mentioned items gathering and the post-monomorphization stage is duplicated in
//!   `visit_mentioned_item`.
//! - Finally, as a performance optimization, the collector should fill `used_mentioned_item` during
//!   its MIR traversal with exactly what mentioned item gathering would have added in the same
//!   situation. This detects mentioned items that have *not* been optimized away and hence don't
//!   need a dedicated traversal.

enum CollectionMode {
    /// Collect items that are used, i.e., actually needed for codegen.
    ///
    /// Which items are used can depend on optimization levels, as MIR optimizations can remove
    /// uses.
    UsedItems,
    /// Collect items that are mentioned. The goal of this mode is that it is independent of
    /// optimizations: the set of "mentioned" items is computed before optimizations are run.
    ///
    /// The exact contents of this set are *not* a stable guarantee. (For instance, it is currently
    /// computed after drop-elaboration. If we ever do some optimizations even in debug builds, we
    /// might decide to run them before computing mentioned items.) The key property of this set is
    /// that it is optimization-independent.
    MentionedItems,
}
```
And the `mentioned_items` MIR body field docs:
```rust
    /// Further items that were mentioned in this function and hence *may* become monomorphized,
    /// depending on optimizations. We use this to avoid optimization-dependent compile errors: the
    /// collector recursively traverses all "mentioned" items and evaluates all their
    /// `required_consts`.
    ///
    /// This is *not* soundness-critical and the contents of this list are *not* a stable guarantee.
    /// All that's relevant is that this set is optimization-level-independent, and that it includes
    /// everything that the collector would consider "used". (For example, we currently compute this
    /// set after drop elaboration, so some drop calls that can never be reached are not considered
    /// "mentioned".) See the documentation of `CollectionMode` in
    /// `compiler/rustc_monomorphize/src/collector.rs` for more context.
    pub mentioned_items: Vec<Spanned<MentionedItem<'tcx>>>,
```

Fixes #107503
2024-03-21 09:01:18 +00:00
Mark Rousskov 283db5abfc Workaround for rustdoc bug in new beta
Filed #122758 to track a proper fix, but this seems to solve the
problem in the meantime and is probably OK in terms of impact on
(internal) doc quality.
2024-03-20 08:49:13 -04:00
Ralf Jung 712fe36611 collector: recursively traverse 'mentioned' items to evaluate their constants 2024-03-20 11:07:12 +01:00
Guillaume Yziquel 3fc5ed8067 Issue 122262: MAP_PRIVATE for more reliability on virtualised filesystems.
Adding support of quirky filesystems occuring in virtualised settings not
having full POSIX support for memory mapped files. Example: current virtiofs
with cache disabled, occuring in Incus/LXD or Kata Containers. Has been
hitting various virtualised filesystems since 2016, depending on their levels
of maturity at the time. The situation will perhaps improve when virtiofs DAX
support patches will have made it into the qemu mainline.

On a reliability level, using the MAP_PRIVATE sycall flag instead of the
MAP_SHARED syscall flag for the mmap() system call does have some undefined
behaviour when the caller update the memory mapping of the mmap()ed file, but
MAP_SHARED does allow not only the calling process but other processes to
modify the memory mapping. Thus, in the current context, using MAP_PRIVATE
copy-on-write is marginally more reliable than MAP_SHARED.

This discussion of reliability is orthogonal to the type system enforced safety
policy of rust, which does not claim to handle memory modification of memory
mapped files triggered through the operating system and not the running rust
process.
2024-03-15 18:31:07 -04:00
Matthias Krüger 706fe0b7d8
Rollup merge of #120976 - matthiaskrgr:constify_TL_statics, r=lcnr
constify a couple thread_local statics
2024-03-04 22:16:30 +01:00
Pavel Grigorenko 613cb3262d
compiler: use `addr_of!` 2024-02-24 18:53:48 +03:00
bors c9c83cca51 Auto merge of #121265 - klensy:bump-18-02-24, r=Mark-Simulacrum
bump some deps

First commit dedupes darling* crates and remove one more syn 1.* dep
Second one bumps windows crate to 0.52
2024-02-18 16:54:15 +00:00
klensy 35fe26757a windows bump to 0.52 2024-02-18 16:02:16 +03:00
surechen a61126cef6 By tracking import use types to check whether it is scope uses or the other situations like module-relative uses, we can do more accurate redundant import checking.
fixes #117448

For example unnecessary imports in std::prelude that can be eliminated:

```rust
use std::option::Option::Some;//~ WARNING the item `Some` is imported redundantly
use std::option::Option::None; //~ WARNING the item `None` is imported redundantly
```
2024-02-18 16:38:11 +08:00
bors 1be468815c Auto merge of #120486 - reitermarkus:use-generic-nonzero, r=dtolnay
Use generic `NonZero` internally.

Tracking issue: https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/120257
2024-02-16 07:46:31 +00:00
bors fa9f77ff35 Auto merge of #120931 - chenyukang:yukang-cleanup-hashmap, r=michaelwoerister
Clean up potential_query_instability with FxIndexMap and UnordMap

From https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/120485#issuecomment-1916437191

r? `@michaelwoerister`
2024-02-15 12:36:37 +00:00
Markus Reiter a90cc05233
Replace `NonZero::<_>::new` with `NonZero::new`. 2024-02-15 08:09:42 +01:00
Markus Reiter 746a58d435
Use generic `NonZero` internally. 2024-02-15 08:09:42 +01:00
Eric Huss 217e5e484d Fix SmallCStr conversion from CStr 2024-02-14 18:40:53 -08:00
yukang 3f27e4b3ea clean up potential_query_instability with FxIndexMap and UnordMap 2024-02-14 18:36:37 +08:00
Matthias Krüger d0873c7a11 constify a couple thread_local statics 2024-02-12 16:25:39 +01:00