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Rustup #14080

Merged
merged 29 commits into from
Jan 28, 2025
Merged

Rustup #14080

merged 29 commits into from
Jan 28, 2025

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flip1995
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r? @ghost

changelog: none

m-ou-se and others added 26 commits January 7, 2025 16:04
Make missing_abi lint warn-by-default.

This makes the missing_abi lint warn-by-default, as suggested here: rust-lang/rfcs#3722 (comment)

This needs a lang FCP.
…, r=wesleywiser

Treat safe target_feature functions as unsafe by default [less invasive variant]

This unblocks
* #134090

As I stated in rust-lang/rust#134090 (comment) I think the previous impl was too easy to get wrong, as by default it treated safe target feature functions as safe and had to add additional checks for when they weren't. Now the logic is inverted. By default they are unsafe and you have to explicitly handle safe target feature functions.

This is the less (imo) invasive variant of #134317, as it doesn't require changing the Safety enum, so it only affects FnDefs and nothing else, as it should.
…, r=davidtwco

deprecate `std::intrinsics::transmute` etc, use `std::mem::*` instead

The `rustc_allowed_through_unstable_modules` attribute lets users call `std::mem::transmute` as `std::intrinsics::transmute`. The former is a reexport of the latter, and for a long time we didn't properly check stability for reexports, so making this a hard error now would be a breaking change for little gain. But at the same time, `std::intrinsics::transmute` is not the intended path for this function, so I think it is a good idea to show a deprecation warning when that path is used. This PR implements that, for all the functions in `std::intrinsics` that carry the attribute.

I assume this will need ``@rust-lang/libs-api`` FCP.
…wjasper"

This reverts commit e108481f74ff123ad98a63bd107a18d13035b275, reversing
changes made to 303e8bd768526a5812bb1776e798e829ddb7d3ca.
remove support for the (unstable) #[start] attribute

As explained by `@Noratrieb:`
`#[start]` should be deleted. It's nothing but an accidentally leaked implementation detail that's a not very useful mix between "portable" entrypoint logic and bad abstraction.

I think the way the stable user-facing entrypoint should work (and works today on stable) is pretty simple:
- `std`-using cross-platform programs should use `fn main()`. the compiler, together with `std`, will then ensure that code ends up at `main` (by having a platform-specific entrypoint that gets directed through `lang_start` in `std` to `main` - but that's just an implementation detail)
- `no_std` platform-specific programs should use `#![no_main]` and define their own platform-specific entrypoint symbol with `#[no_mangle]`, like `main`, `_start`, `WinMain` or `my_embedded_platform_wants_to_start_here`. most of them only support a single platform anyways, and need cfg for the different platform's ways of passing arguments or other things *anyways*

`#[start]` is in a super weird position of being neither of those two. It tries to pretend that it's cross-platform, but its signature is  a total lie. Those arguments are just stubbed out to zero on ~~Windows~~ wasm, for example. It also only handles the platform-specific entrypoints for a few platforms that are supported by `std`, like Windows or Unix-likes. `my_embedded_platform_wants_to_start_here` can't use it, and neither could a libc-less Linux program.
So we have an attribute that only works in some cases anyways, that has a signature that's a total lie (and a signature that, as I might want to add, has changed recently, and that I definitely would not be comfortable giving *any* stability guarantees on), and where there's a pretty easy way to get things working without it in the first place.

Note that this feature has **not** been RFCed in the first place.

*This comment was posted [in May](rust-lang/rust#29633 (comment)) and so far nobody spoke up in that issue with a usecase that would require keeping the attribute.*

Closes rust-lang/rust#29633

try-job: x86_64-gnu-nopt
try-job: x86_64-msvc-1
try-job: x86_64-msvc-2
try-job: test-various
Move `supertrait_def_ids` into the elaborate module like all other fns

It's strange that this is the only elaborate-like fn on tcx.

r? lcnr
It has become nothing other than a wrapper around run_compiler.
…mpiler-errors

Forbid usage of `hir` `Infer` const/ty variants in ambiguous contexts

The feature `generic_arg_infer` allows providing `_` as an argument to const generics in order to infer them. This introduces a syntactic ambiguity as to whether generic arguments are type or const arguments. In order to get around this we introduced a fourth `GenericArg` variant, `Infer` used to represent `_` as an argument to generic parameters when we don't know if its a type or a const argument.

This made hir visitors that care about `TyKind::Infer` or `ConstArgKind::Infer` very error prone as checking for `TyKind::Infer`s in  `visit_ty` would find *some* type infer arguments but not *all* of them as they would sometimes be lowered to `GenericArg::Infer` instead.

Additionally the `visit_infer` method would previously only visit `GenericArg::Infer` not *all* infers (e.g. `TyKind::Infer`), this made it very easy to override `visit_infer` and expect it to visit all infers when in reality it would only visit *some* infers.

---

This PR aims to fix those issues by making the `TyKind` and `ConstArgKind` types generic over whether the infer types/consts are represented by `Ty/ConstArgKind::Infer` or out of line (e.g. by a `GenericArg::Infer` or accessible by overiding `visit_infer`). We then make HIR Visitors convert all const args and types to the versions where infer vars are stored out of line and call `visit_infer` in cases where a `Ty`/`Const` would previously have had a `Ty/ConstArgKind::Infer` variant:

API Summary
```rust
enum AmbigArg {}

enum Ty/ConstArgKind<Unambig = ()> {
   ...
   Infer(Unambig),
}

impl Ty/ConstArg {
  fn try_as_ambig_ty/ct(self) -> Option<Ty/ConstArg<AmbigArg>>;
}
impl Ty/ConstArg<AmbigArg> {
  fn as_unambig_ty/ct(self) -> Ty/ConstArg;
}

enum InferKind {
  Ty(Ty),
  Const(ConstArg),
  Ambig(InferArg),
}

trait Visitor {
  ...
  fn visit_ty/const_arg(&mut self, Ty/ConstArg<AmbigArg>) -> Self::Result;
  fn visit_infer(&mut self, id: HirId, sp: Span, kind: InferKind) -> Self::Result;
}

// blanket impl'd, not meant to be overriden
trait VisitorExt {
  fn visit_ty/const_arg_unambig(&mut self, Ty/ConstArg) -> Self::Result;
}

fn walk_unambig_ty/const_arg(&mut V, Ty/ConstArg) -> Self::Result;
fn walk_ty/const_arg(&mut V, Ty/ConstArg<AmbigArg>) -> Self::Result;
```

The end result is that `visit_infer` visits *all* infer args and is also the *only* way to visit an infer arg, `visit_ty` and `visit_const_arg` can now no longer encounter a `Ty/ConstArgKind::Infer`. Representing this in the type system means that it is now very difficult to mess things up, either accessing `TyKind::Infer` "just works" and you won't miss *some* type infers- or it doesn't work and you have to look at `visit_infer` or some `GenericArg::Infer` which forces you to think about the full complexity involved.

Unfortunately there is no lint right now about explicitly matching on uninhabited variants, I can't find the context for why this is the case 🤷‍♀️

I'm not convinced the framing of un/ambig ty/consts is necessarily the right one but I'm not sure what would be better. I somewhat like calling them full/partial types based on the fact that `Ty<Partial>`/`Ty<Full>` directly specifies how many of the type kinds are actually represented compared to `Ty<Ambig>` which which leaves that to the reader to figure out based on the logical consequences of it the type being in an ambiguous position.

---

tool changes have been modified in their own commits for easier reviewing by anyone getting cc'd from subtree changes. I also attempted to split out "bug fixes arising from the refactoring" into their own commit so they arent lumped in with a big general refactor commit

Fixes #112110
Get rid of `mir::Const::from_ty_const`

This function is strange, because it turns valtrees into `mir::Const::Value`, but the rest of the const variants stay as type system consts.

All of the callsites except for one in `instsimplify` (array length simplification of `ptr_metadata` call) just go through the valtree arm of the function, so it's easier to just create a `mir::Const` directly for those.

For the instsimplify case, if we have a type system const we should *keep* having a type system const, rather than turning it into a `mir::Const::Value`; it doesn't really matter in practice, though, bc `usize` has no padding, but it feels more principled.
@rustbot rustbot added the S-waiting-on-review Status: Awaiting review from the assignee but also interested parties label Jan 26, 2025
@flip1995 flip1995 added this pull request to the merge queue Jan 26, 2025
@github-merge-queue github-merge-queue bot removed this pull request from the merge queue due to failed status checks Jan 26, 2025
@flip1995 flip1995 added this pull request to the merge queue Jan 26, 2025
@github-merge-queue github-merge-queue bot removed this pull request from the merge queue due to failed status checks Jan 26, 2025
Uplift `clippy::double_neg` lint as `double_negations`

Warns about cases like this:
```rust
fn main() {
    let x = 1;
    let _b = --x; //~ WARN use of a double negation
}
```

The intent is to keep people from thinking that `--x` is a prefix decrement operator. `++x`, `x++` and `x--` are invalid expressions and already have a helpful diagnostic.

I didn't add a machine-applicable suggestion to the lint because it's not entirely clear what the programmer was trying to achieve with the `--x` operation. The code that triggers the lint should always be reviewed manually.

Closes #82987
@flip1995 flip1995 added this pull request to the merge queue Jan 28, 2025
Merged via the queue into rust-lang:master with commit 51d49c1 Jan 28, 2025
11 checks passed
@flip1995 flip1995 deleted the rustup branch January 28, 2025 18:28
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