```
warning: `<` is interpreted as a start of generic arguments for `usize`, not a comparison
--> $DIR/issue-22644.rs:16:33
|
16 | println!("{}", a as usize < b);
| - ^ interpreted as generic argument
| |
| not interpreted as comparison
|
help: if you want to compare the casted value then write:
| println!("{}", (a as usize) < b);
```
rustdoc: Link directly to associated types
Rather than just linking to the trait.
Also simplifies the logic used to decide whether to render the full
QPath.
rustdoc: Stop stripping empty modules
There is no good reason to strip empty modules with no documentation and
doing so causes subtle problems.
Fixes#42590
* The lazy loading mechanism has been moved to a more appropriate place.
* Return values from the functions invoked there are properly used.
* Documentation has gotten some minor improvements.
* Possibly some larger restructuring will need to take place still.
incr.comp.: Make DepNode `Copy` and valid across compilation sessions
This PR moves `DepNode` to a representation that does not need retracing and thus simplifies comparing dep-graphs from different compilation sessions. The code also gets a lot simpler in many places, since we don't need the generic parameter on `DepNode` anymore. See https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/42294 for details.
~~NOTE: Only the last commit of this is new, the rest is already reviewed in https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/42504.~~
This PR is almost done but there are some things I still want to do:
- [x] Add some module-level documentation to `dep_node.rs`, explaining especially what the `define_dep_nodes!()` macro is about.
- [x] Do another pass over the dep-graph loading logic. I suspect that we can get rid of building the `edges` map and also use arrays instead of hash maps in some places.
cc @rust-lang/compiler
r? @nikomatsakis
Also, I removed the `continue;` statement. I don't think it makes
a difference whether its there or not, but having it there confuses things
when the actual goal was to side-step the assertion in the default case.
The tests use `-Z identify_regions` so one can eyeball output for
sanity. The tests with closures use `-Z span_free_formats` so that
host-specific paths do not get embedded into the dumped MIR.
The tests check against MIR dump output immediately prior to borrowck
(determined by hand to be the dump from after the "qualify-consts"
pass) since that is when `EndRegion` will be most relevant in the near
term.
* Emit `EndRegion` for every code-extent for which we observe a
borrow. To do this, we needed to thread source info back through
to `fn in_scope`, which makes this commit a bit more painful than
one might have expected.
* There is `end_region` emission in `Builder::pop_scope` and in
`Builder::exit_scope`; the first handles falling out of a scope
normally, the second handles e.g. `break`.
* Remove `EndRegion` statements during the erase_regions mir
transformation.
* Preallocate the terminator block, and throw an `Unreachable` marker
on it from the outset. Then overwrite that Terminator as necessary
on demand.
* Instead of marking the scope as needs_cleanup after seeing a
borrow, just treat every scope in the chain as being part of the
diverge_block (after any *one* of them has separately signalled
that it needs cleanup, e.g. due to having a destructor to run).
* Allow for resume terminators to be patched when looking up drop flags.
(In particular, `MirPatch::new` has an explicit code path,
presumably previously unreachable, that patches up such resume
terminators.)
* Make `Scope` implement `Debug` trait.
* Expanded a stray comment: we do not emit StorageDead on diverging
paths, but that end behavior might not be desirable.
Unlike `-Z verbose`, it is succinct.
It uniquely identifies regions when displaying them, and distinguishes
code extents from user-specified lifetimes in the output by leveraging
a syntactic restriction: you cannot write a lifetime that starts with
a numeric character.
For example, it prints '<num>ce for the more verbose
`ReScope(CodeExtent(<num>))`.
This is solely a hack to make comparing test output plausible; it
makes closures print as [closure@node_id] instead of
[closure@span-with-host-path] in debug printouts.
rustdoc: Use `create_dir_all` to create output directory
Currently rustdoc will fail if passed `-o foo/doc` if the `foo`
directory doesn't exist.
Also remove unneeded `mkdir` as `create_dir_all` can now handle
concurrent invocations since #39799.
```
warning: `<` is interpreted as a start of generic arguments for `usize`, not comparison
--> $DIR/issue-22644.rs:16:33
|
16 | println!("{}", a as usize < b);
| ^ expected one of `!`, `(`, `+`, `,`, `::`, or `>` here
|
help: if you want to compare the casted value then write
| println!("{}", (a as usize) < b);
```
Explicate what "Rc" and "Arc" stand for.
A person on the weekly "Easy Questions" Reddit thread [was mystified by what `Arc`/`Rc` means](https://www.reddit.com/r/rust/comments/6dyud9/hey_rustaceans_got_an_easy_question_ask_here/did87ds/). Though this is explained in various places, it's not mentioned in the documentation directly.
This PR adds an explanation of the `Rc`/`Arc` acronyms to their respective documentations. There are two things I'm not sure of:
* Does "Rc" mean "Reference Count**er**" or "Reference Count**ed**"? ~~I went with the former.~~ *Edit:* I've changed this to use the latter alternative.
* Should this information be spelled out elsewhere, such as in the docs for the `rc` module?
Parsing `a as usize > b` always works, but `a as usize < b` was a
parsing error because the parser would think the `<` started a generic
type argument for `usize`. The parser now attempts to parse as before,
and if a DiagnosticError is returned, try to parse again as a type with
no generic arguments. If this fails, return the original
`DiagnosticError`.
core: allow messages in unimplemented!() macro
This makes `unimplemented!()` match `unreachable!()`, allowing a message and possible formatting to be provided to better explain what and/or why something is not implemented.
I've used this myself in hyper for a while, include the type and method name, to better help while prototyping new modules, like `unimplemented!("Conn::poll_complete")`, or `unimplemented!("Conn::poll; state={:?}", state)`.
speed up mem::swap
I would have thought that the mem::swap code didn't need an intermediate variable precisely because the pointers are guaranteed never to alias. And.. it doesn't! It seems that llvm will also auto-vectorize this case for large structs, but alas it doesn't seem to have all the aliasing info it needs and so will add redundant checks (and even not bother with autovectorizing for small types). Looks like a lot of performance could still be gained here, so this might be a good test case for future optimizer improvements.
Here are the current benchmarks for the simd version of mem::swap; the timings are in cycles (code below) measured with 10 iterations. The timings for sizes > 32 which are not a multiple of 8 tend to be ever so slightly faster in the old code, but not always. For large struct sizes (> 1024) the new code shows a marked improvement.
\* = latest commit
† = subtracted from other measurements
| arr_length | noop<sup>†</sup> | rust_stdlib | simd_u64x4\* | simd_u64x8
|------------------|------------|-------------------|-------------------|-------------------
8|80|90|90|90
16|72|177|177|177
24|32|76|76|76
32|68|188|112|188
40|32|80|60|80
48|32|84|56|84
56|32|108|72|108
64|32|108|72|76
72|80|350|220|230
80|80|350|220|230
88|80|420|270|270
96|80|420|270|270
104|80|500|320|320
112|80|490|320|320
120|72|528|342|342
128|48|360|234|234
136|72|987|387|387
144|80|1070|420|420
152|64|856|376|376
160|68|804|400|400
168|80|1060|520|520
176|80|1070|520|520
184|32|464|228|228
192|32|504|228|228
200|32|440|248|248
208|72|987|573|573
216|80|1464|220|220
224|48|852|450|450
232|72|1182|666|666
240|32|428|288|288
248|32|428|308|308
256|80|860|770|770
264|80|1130|820|820
272|80|1340|820|820
280|80|1220|870|870
288|72|1227|804|804
296|72|1356|849|849