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lints.rs
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use rustc_session::lint::builtin::NON_EXHAUSTIVE_OMITTED_PATTERNS;
use rustc_span::ErrorGuaranteed;
use crate::errors::{NonExhaustiveOmittedPattern, NonExhaustiveOmittedPatternLintOnArm, Uncovered};
use crate::pat::PatOrWild;
use crate::rustc::{
Constructor, DeconstructedPat, MatchArm, MatchCtxt, PlaceCtxt, RevealedTy, RustcMatchCheckCtxt,
SplitConstructorSet, WitnessPat,
};
/// A column of patterns in the matrix, where a column is the intuitive notion of "subpatterns that
/// inspect the same subvalue/place".
/// This is used to traverse patterns column-by-column for lints. Despite similarities with the
/// algorithm in [`crate::usefulness`], this does a different traversal. Notably this is linear in
/// the depth of patterns, whereas `compute_exhaustiveness_and_usefulness` is worst-case exponential
/// (exhaustiveness is NP-complete). The core difference is that we treat sub-columns separately.
///
/// This must not contain an or-pattern. `expand_and_push` takes care to expand them.
///
/// This is not used in the usefulness algorithm; only in lints.
#[derive(Debug)]
pub(crate) struct PatternColumn<'p, 'tcx> {
patterns: Vec<&'p DeconstructedPat<'p, 'tcx>>,
}
impl<'p, 'tcx> PatternColumn<'p, 'tcx> {
pub(crate) fn new(arms: &[MatchArm<'p, 'tcx>]) -> Self {
let patterns = Vec::with_capacity(arms.len());
let mut column = PatternColumn { patterns };
for arm in arms {
column.expand_and_push(PatOrWild::Pat(arm.pat));
}
column
}
/// Pushes a pattern onto the column, expanding any or-patterns into its subpatterns.
/// Internal method, prefer [`PatternColumn::new`].
fn expand_and_push(&mut self, pat: PatOrWild<'p, RustcMatchCheckCtxt<'p, 'tcx>>) {
// We flatten or-patterns and skip algorithm-generated wildcards.
if pat.is_or_pat() {
self.patterns.extend(
pat.flatten_or_pat().into_iter().filter_map(|pat_or_wild| pat_or_wild.as_pat()),
)
} else if let Some(pat) = pat.as_pat() {
self.patterns.push(pat)
}
}
fn head_ty(&self) -> Option<RevealedTy<'tcx>> {
self.patterns.first().map(|pat| pat.ty())
}
/// Do constructor splitting on the constructors of the column.
fn analyze_ctors(
&self,
pcx: &PlaceCtxt<'_, 'p, 'tcx>,
) -> Result<SplitConstructorSet<'p, 'tcx>, ErrorGuaranteed> {
let column_ctors = self.patterns.iter().map(|p| p.ctor());
let ctors_for_ty = &pcx.ctors_for_ty()?;
Ok(ctors_for_ty.split(pcx, column_ctors))
}
/// Does specialization: given a constructor, this takes the patterns from the column that match
/// the constructor, and outputs their fields.
/// This returns one column per field of the constructor. They usually all have the same length
/// (the number of patterns in `self` that matched `ctor`), except that we expand or-patterns
/// which may change the lengths.
fn specialize(
&self,
pcx: &PlaceCtxt<'_, 'p, 'tcx>,
ctor: &Constructor<'p, 'tcx>,
) -> Vec<PatternColumn<'p, 'tcx>> {
let arity = ctor.arity(pcx);
if arity == 0 {
return Vec::new();
}
// We specialize the column by `ctor`. This gives us `arity`-many columns of patterns. These
// columns may have different lengths in the presence of or-patterns (this is why we can't
// reuse `Matrix`).
let mut specialized_columns: Vec<_> =
(0..arity).map(|_| Self { patterns: Vec::new() }).collect();
let relevant_patterns =
self.patterns.iter().filter(|pat| ctor.is_covered_by(pcx, pat.ctor()));
for pat in relevant_patterns {
let specialized = pat.specialize(ctor, arity);
for (subpat, column) in specialized.into_iter().zip(&mut specialized_columns) {
column.expand_and_push(subpat);
}
}
specialized_columns
}
}
/// Traverse the patterns to collect any variants of a non_exhaustive enum that fail to be mentioned
/// in a given column.
#[instrument(level = "debug", skip(cx), ret)]
fn collect_nonexhaustive_missing_variants<'a, 'p, 'tcx>(
cx: MatchCtxt<'a, 'p, 'tcx>,
column: &PatternColumn<'p, 'tcx>,
) -> Result<Vec<WitnessPat<'p, 'tcx>>, ErrorGuaranteed> {
let Some(ty) = column.head_ty() else {
return Ok(Vec::new());
};
let pcx = &PlaceCtxt::new_dummy(cx, ty);
let set = column.analyze_ctors(pcx)?;
if set.present.is_empty() {
// We can't consistently handle the case where no constructors are present (since this would
// require digging deep through any type in case there's a non_exhaustive enum somewhere),
// so for consistency we refuse to handle the top-level case, where we could handle it.
return Ok(Vec::new());
}
let mut witnesses = Vec::new();
if cx.tycx.is_foreign_non_exhaustive_enum(ty) {
witnesses.extend(
set.missing
.into_iter()
// This will list missing visible variants.
.filter(|c| !matches!(c, Constructor::Hidden | Constructor::NonExhaustive))
.map(|missing_ctor| WitnessPat::wild_from_ctor(pcx, missing_ctor)),
)
}
// Recurse into the fields.
for ctor in set.present {
let specialized_columns = column.specialize(pcx, &ctor);
let wild_pat = WitnessPat::wild_from_ctor(pcx, ctor);
for (i, col_i) in specialized_columns.iter().enumerate() {
// Compute witnesses for each column.
let wits_for_col_i = collect_nonexhaustive_missing_variants(cx, col_i)?;
// For each witness, we build a new pattern in the shape of `ctor(_, _, wit, _, _)`,
// adding enough wildcards to match `arity`.
for wit in wits_for_col_i {
let mut pat = wild_pat.clone();
pat.fields[i] = wit;
witnesses.push(pat);
}
}
}
Ok(witnesses)
}
pub(crate) fn lint_nonexhaustive_missing_variants<'a, 'p, 'tcx>(
cx: MatchCtxt<'a, 'p, 'tcx>,
arms: &[MatchArm<'p, 'tcx>],
pat_column: &PatternColumn<'p, 'tcx>,
scrut_ty: RevealedTy<'tcx>,
) -> Result<(), ErrorGuaranteed> {
let rcx: &RustcMatchCheckCtxt<'_, '_> = cx.tycx;
if !matches!(
rcx.tcx.lint_level_at_node(NON_EXHAUSTIVE_OMITTED_PATTERNS, rcx.match_lint_level).0,
rustc_session::lint::Level::Allow
) {
let witnesses = collect_nonexhaustive_missing_variants(cx, pat_column)?;
if !witnesses.is_empty() {
// Report that a match of a `non_exhaustive` enum marked with `non_exhaustive_omitted_patterns`
// is not exhaustive enough.
//
// NB: The partner lint for structs lives in `compiler/rustc_hir_analysis/src/check/pat.rs`.
rcx.tcx.emit_spanned_lint(
NON_EXHAUSTIVE_OMITTED_PATTERNS,
rcx.match_lint_level,
rcx.scrut_span,
NonExhaustiveOmittedPattern {
scrut_ty: scrut_ty.inner(),
uncovered: Uncovered::new(rcx.scrut_span, rcx, witnesses),
},
);
}
} else {
// We used to allow putting the `#[allow(non_exhaustive_omitted_patterns)]` on a match
// arm. This no longer makes sense so we warn users, to avoid silently breaking their
// usage of the lint.
for arm in arms {
let (lint_level, lint_level_source) =
rcx.tcx.lint_level_at_node(NON_EXHAUSTIVE_OMITTED_PATTERNS, arm.arm_data);
if !matches!(lint_level, rustc_session::lint::Level::Allow) {
let decorator = NonExhaustiveOmittedPatternLintOnArm {
lint_span: lint_level_source.span(),
suggest_lint_on_match: rcx.whole_match_span.map(|span| span.shrink_to_lo()),
lint_level: lint_level.as_str(),
lint_name: "non_exhaustive_omitted_patterns",
};
use rustc_errors::DecorateLint;
let mut err = rcx.tcx.dcx().struct_span_warn(arm.pat.data().unwrap().span, "");
err.primary_message(decorator.msg());
decorator.decorate_lint(&mut err);
err.emit();
}
}
}
Ok(())
}