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Rollup of 7 pull requests #111089

Merged
merged 39 commits into from May 2, 2023
Merged

Rollup of 7 pull requests #111089

merged 39 commits into from May 2, 2023

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Dylan-DPC
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Successful merges:

Failed merges:

r? @ghost
@rustbot modify labels: rollup

Create a similar rollup

gibbyfree and others added 30 commits March 1, 2023 18:56
Change core::char::{EscapeUnicode, EscapeDefault and EscapeDebug}
structures from using a state machine to computing escaped sequence
upfront and during iteration just going through the characters.

This is arguably simpler since it’s easier to think about having
a buffer and start..end range to iterate over rather than thinking
about a state machine.

This also harmonises implementation of aforementioned iterators and
core::ascii::EscapeDefault struct.  This is done by introducing a new
helper EscapeIterInner struct which holds the buffer and offers simple
methods for iterating over range.

As a side effect, this probably optimises Display implementation for
those types since rather than calling write_char repeatedly, write_str
is invoked once.  On 64-bit platforms, it also reduces size of some of
the structs:

    | Struct                     | Before | After |
    |----------------------------+--------+-------+
    | core::char::EscapeUnicode  |     16 |    12 |
    | core::char::EscapeDefault  |     16 |    12 |
    | core::char::EscapeDebug    |     16 |    16 |

My ulterior motive and reason why I started looking into this is
addition of as_str method to the iterators.  With this change this
will became trivial.  It’s also going to be trivial to implement
DoubleEndedIterator if that’s ever desired.
I think it was left there by mistake after previous refactoring.

Signed-off-by: Ayush Singh <ayushsingh1325@gmail.com>
(`StructuralEq` is shallow for some reason...)
Refactor core::char::EscapeDefault and co. structures

Change core::char::{EscapeUnicode, EscapeDefault and EscapeDebug}
structures from using a state machine to computing escaped sequence
upfront and during iteration just going through the characters.

This is arguably simpler since it’s easier to think about having
a buffer and start..end range to iterate over rather than thinking
about a state machine.

This also harmonises implementation of aforementioned iterators and
core::ascii::EscapeDefault struct.  This is done by introducing a new
helper EscapeIterInner struct which holds the buffer and offers simple
methods for iterating over range.

As a side effect, this probably optimises Display implementation for
those types since rather than calling write_char repeatedly, write_str
is invoked once.  On 64-bit platforms, it also reduces size of some of
the structs:

    | Struct                     | Before | After |
    |----------------------------+--------+-------+
    | core::char::EscapeUnicode  |     16 |    12 |
    | core::char::EscapeDefault  |     16 |    12 |
    | core::char::EscapeDebug    |     16 |    16 |

My ulterior motive and reason why I started looking into this is
addition of as_str method to the iterators.  With this change this
will became trivial.  It’s also going to be trivial to implement
DoubleEndedIterator if that’s ever desired.
…yUwU

Add `ConstParamTy` trait

This is a bit sketch, but idk.
r? `@BoxyUwU`

Yet to be done:
- [x] ~~Figure out if it's okay to implement `StructuralEq` for primitives / possibly remove their special casing~~ (it should be okay, but maybe not in this PR...)
- [ ] Maybe refactor the code a little bit
- [x] Use a macro to make impls a bit nicer

Future work:
- [ ] Actually™ use the trait when checking if a `const` generic type is allowed
- [ ] _Really_ refactor the surrounding code
- [ ] Refactor `marker.rs` into multiple modules for each "theme" of markers
…zer, r=wesleywiser

Stabilize debugger_visualizer

This stabilizes the `debugger_visualizer` attribute (rust-lang#95939).

* Marks the `debugger_visualizer` feature as `accepted`.
* Marks the `debugger_visualizer` attribute as `ungated`.
* Deletes feature gate test, removes feature gate from other tests.

Closes rust-lang#95939
…th-associated-type-bounds, r=spastorino

Fix elaboration with associated type bounds

When computing a trait's supertrait predicates, do not add any associated type *trait* bounds to that list of supertrait predicates. This is because supertrait predicates are expected to have the same `Self` type as the trait.

For example, given:

```rust
trait Foo: Bar<Assoc: Send>
```

Before, we would compute that the supertrait predicates of `T: Foo` are `T: Bar` and `<T as Bar>::Assoc: Send`. However, the last bound is a trait predicate for a totally different type than `T`, and existing code that uses supertrait bounds such as vtable construction, closure fn signature deduction, etc. all rely on the invariant that we have a list of predicates for self type `T`.

Fixes rust-lang#76593

The reason for all the extra diagnostic noise is that we're recomputing predicates with a different filter now. These diagnostics should be deduplicated for any end-user though.

---

This does bring up an interesting question -- is the predicate `<T as Bar>::Assoc: Send` an implied bound of `T: Foo`? Because currently the only bounds implied by a (non-alias) trait are its supertraits. I guess I could fix this too, but it would require even more changes, and I'm inclined to punt this question along.
Remove `all` in target_thread_local cfg

I think it was left there by mistake after the previous refactoring. I just came across it while rebasing to master.
…=compiler-errors

uplift `clippy::clone_double_ref` as `suspicious_double_ref_op`

Split from rust-lang#109842.

r? ``@compiler-errors``
…ete, r=jackh726

Mark`feature(return_position_impl_trait_in_trait)` and`feature(async_fn_in_trait)` as not incomplete

I think they've graduated, since as far as I'm aware, they don't cause compiler crashes or unsoundness anymore.
@rustbot rustbot added A-testsuite Area: The testsuite used to check the correctness of rustc S-waiting-on-review Status: Awaiting review from the assignee but also interested parties. T-bootstrap Relevant to the bootstrap subteam: Rust's build system (x.py and src/bootstrap) T-compiler Relevant to the compiler team, which will review and decide on the PR/issue. T-libs Relevant to the library team, which will review and decide on the PR/issue. T-rustdoc Relevant to the rustdoc team, which will review and decide on the PR/issue. rollup A PR which is a rollup labels May 2, 2023
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@bors r+ rollup=never p=5

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bors commented May 2, 2023

📌 Commit 2e3373c has been approved by Dylan-DPC

It is now in the queue for this repository.

@bors bors added S-waiting-on-bors Status: Waiting on bors to run and complete tests. Bors will change the label on completion. and removed S-waiting-on-review Status: Awaiting review from the assignee but also interested parties. labels May 2, 2023
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bors commented May 2, 2023

⌛ Testing commit 2e3373c with merge 7b99493...

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bors commented May 2, 2023

☀️ Test successful - checks-actions
Approved by: Dylan-DPC
Pushing 7b99493 to master...

@bors bors added the merged-by-bors This PR was explicitly merged by bors. label May 2, 2023
@bors bors merged commit 7b99493 into rust-lang:master May 2, 2023
12 checks passed
@rustbot rustbot added this to the 1.71.0 milestone May 2, 2023
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📌 Perf builds for each rolled up PR:

PR# Perf Build Sha
#111048 0a662b24081b7411e60c7d3690cea473a350d17e
#110955 7ea20ff9c23c730159bb142e52500611bbc00eef
#110895 f14b6984ef3555b08605d670a824a208c4a9e8c3
#110512 f9d9cdb08339b33b0d54222f4c772362a8880228
#108668 563d021ca768a63a567b11e0e4c749d38ecdce04
#108161 9a0b251595db987bcdb12442cb756a800f798468
#105076 9265333d0b6fcde10d7d6d8d6d5b2d95b6ea8309

previous master: 5133e15459

In the case of a perf regression, run the following command for each PR you suspect might be the cause: @rust-timer build $SHA

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Finished benchmarking commit (7b99493): comparison URL.

Overall result: no relevant changes - no action needed

@rustbot label: -perf-regression

Instruction count

This benchmark run did not return any relevant results for this metric.

Max RSS (memory usage)

Results

This is a less reliable metric that may be of interest but was not used to determine the overall result at the top of this comment.

mean range count
Regressions ❌
(primary)
2.5% [2.4%, 2.6%] 2
Regressions ❌
(secondary)
1.3% [1.3%, 1.3%] 1
Improvements ✅
(primary)
- - 0
Improvements ✅
(secondary)
- - 0
All ❌✅ (primary) 2.5% [2.4%, 2.6%] 2

Cycles

This benchmark run did not return any relevant results for this metric.

Binary size

Results

This is a less reliable metric that may be of interest but was not used to determine the overall result at the top of this comment.

mean range count
Regressions ❌
(primary)
0.5% [0.1%, 0.6%] 10
Regressions ❌
(secondary)
0.5% [0.0%, 0.6%] 75
Improvements ✅
(primary)
-0.1% [-0.1%, -0.1%] 1
Improvements ✅
(secondary)
- - 0
All ❌✅ (primary) 0.4% [-0.1%, 0.6%] 11

Bootstrap: 657.612s -> 655.687s (-0.29%)

@Dylan-DPC Dylan-DPC deleted the rollup-b8oj6du branch May 2, 2023 11:17
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A-testsuite Area: The testsuite used to check the correctness of rustc merged-by-bors This PR was explicitly merged by bors. rollup A PR which is a rollup S-waiting-on-bors Status: Waiting on bors to run and complete tests. Bors will change the label on completion. T-bootstrap Relevant to the bootstrap subteam: Rust's build system (x.py and src/bootstrap) T-compiler Relevant to the compiler team, which will review and decide on the PR/issue. T-libs Relevant to the library team, which will review and decide on the PR/issue. T-rustdoc Relevant to the rustdoc team, which will review and decide on the PR/issue.
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