diff --git a/compiler/rustc_middle/src/ty/flags.rs b/compiler/rustc_middle/src/ty/flags.rs index 01bc5cc761ca6..d2e233f67d7bf 100644 --- a/compiler/rustc_middle/src/ty/flags.rs +++ b/compiler/rustc_middle/src/ty/flags.rs @@ -59,6 +59,13 @@ impl FlagComputation { { let mut computation = FlagComputation::new(); + // In some cases, there are binders with variables that are unused (e.g., `for<'a> fn(u32)`). + // Set the flag to represent the `'a` in this example. Note that if there are late bound types + // or consts, this flag will also get set. + if !value.bound_vars().is_empty() { + computation.flags = computation.flags | TypeFlags::HAS_RE_LATE_BOUND; + } + f(&mut computation, value.skip_binder()); self.add_flags(computation.flags); diff --git a/compiler/rustc_mir/src/transform/coverage/spans.rs b/compiler/rustc_mir/src/transform/coverage/spans.rs index 2041109eb385f..e0c09d9ed0d8a 100644 --- a/compiler/rustc_mir/src/transform/coverage/spans.rs +++ b/compiler/rustc_mir/src/transform/coverage/spans.rs @@ -11,8 +11,9 @@ use rustc_middle::mir::{ use rustc_middle::ty::TyCtxt; use rustc_span::source_map::original_sp; -use rustc_span::{BytePos, Span}; +use rustc_span::{BytePos, ExpnKind, MacroKind, Span, Symbol}; +use std::cell::RefCell; use std::cmp::Ordering; #[derive(Debug, Copy, Clone)] @@ -67,6 +68,8 @@ impl CoverageStatement { #[derive(Debug, Clone)] pub(super) struct CoverageSpan { pub span: Span, + pub expn_span: Span, + pub current_macro_or_none: RefCell>>, pub bcb: BasicCoverageBlock, pub coverage_statements: Vec, pub is_closure: bool, @@ -74,12 +77,20 @@ pub(super) struct CoverageSpan { impl CoverageSpan { pub fn for_fn_sig(fn_sig_span: Span) -> Self { - Self { span: fn_sig_span, bcb: START_BCB, coverage_statements: vec![], is_closure: false } + Self { + span: fn_sig_span, + expn_span: fn_sig_span, + current_macro_or_none: Default::default(), + bcb: START_BCB, + coverage_statements: vec![], + is_closure: false, + } } pub fn for_statement( statement: &Statement<'tcx>, span: Span, + expn_span: Span, bcb: BasicCoverageBlock, bb: BasicBlock, stmt_index: usize, @@ -94,15 +105,24 @@ impl CoverageSpan { Self { span, + expn_span, + current_macro_or_none: Default::default(), bcb, coverage_statements: vec![CoverageStatement::Statement(bb, span, stmt_index)], is_closure, } } - pub fn for_terminator(span: Span, bcb: BasicCoverageBlock, bb: BasicBlock) -> Self { + pub fn for_terminator( + span: Span, + expn_span: Span, + bcb: BasicCoverageBlock, + bb: BasicBlock, + ) -> Self { Self { span, + expn_span, + current_macro_or_none: Default::default(), bcb, coverage_statements: vec![CoverageStatement::Terminator(bb, span)], is_closure: false, @@ -158,6 +178,38 @@ impl CoverageSpan { .collect::>() .join("\n") } + + /// If the span is part of a macro, returns the macro name symbol. + pub fn current_macro(&self) -> Option { + self.current_macro_or_none + .borrow_mut() + .get_or_insert_with(|| { + if let ExpnKind::Macro(MacroKind::Bang, current_macro) = + self.expn_span.ctxt().outer_expn_data().kind + { + return Some(current_macro); + } + None + }) + .map(|symbol| symbol) + } + + /// If the span is part of a macro, and the macro is visible (expands directly to the given + /// body_span), returns the macro name symbol. + pub fn visible_macro(&self, body_span: Span) -> Option { + if let Some(current_macro) = self.current_macro() { + if self.expn_span.parent().unwrap_or_else(|| bug!("macro must have a parent")).ctxt() + == body_span.ctxt() + { + return Some(current_macro); + } + } + None + } + + pub fn is_macro_expansion(&self) -> bool { + self.current_macro().is_some() + } } /// Converts the initial set of `CoverageSpan`s (one per MIR `Statement` or `Terminator`) into a @@ -201,6 +253,9 @@ pub struct CoverageSpans<'a, 'tcx> { /// Assigned from `curr_original_span` from the previous iteration. prev_original_span: Span, + /// A copy of the expn_span from the prior iteration. + prev_expn_span: Option, + /// One or more `CoverageSpan`s with the same `Span` but different `BasicCoverageBlock`s, and /// no `BasicCoverageBlock` in this list dominates another `BasicCoverageBlock` in the list. /// If a new `curr` span also fits this criteria (compared to an existing list of @@ -255,15 +310,13 @@ impl<'a, 'tcx> CoverageSpans<'a, 'tcx> { curr_original_span: Span::with_root_ctxt(BytePos(0), BytePos(0)), some_prev: None, prev_original_span: Span::with_root_ctxt(BytePos(0), BytePos(0)), + prev_expn_span: None, pending_dups: Vec::new(), }; let sorted_spans = coverage_spans.mir_to_initial_sorted_coverage_spans(); coverage_spans.sorted_spans_iter = Some(sorted_spans.into_iter()); - coverage_spans.some_prev = coverage_spans.sorted_spans_iter.as_mut().unwrap().next(); - coverage_spans.prev_original_span = - coverage_spans.some_prev.as_ref().expect("at least one span").span; coverage_spans.to_refined_spans() } @@ -317,10 +370,14 @@ impl<'a, 'tcx> CoverageSpans<'a, 'tcx> { /// de-duplicated `CoverageSpan`s. fn to_refined_spans(mut self) -> Vec { while self.next_coverage_span() { - if self.curr().is_mergeable(self.prev()) { + if self.some_prev.is_none() { + debug!(" initial span"); + self.check_invoked_macro_name_span(); + } else if self.curr().is_mergeable(self.prev()) { debug!(" same bcb (and neither is a closure), merge with prev={:?}", self.prev()); let prev = self.take_prev(); self.curr_mut().merge_from(prev); + self.check_invoked_macro_name_span(); // Note that curr.span may now differ from curr_original_span } else if self.prev_ends_before_curr() { debug!( @@ -329,7 +386,8 @@ impl<'a, 'tcx> CoverageSpans<'a, 'tcx> { self.prev() ); let prev = self.take_prev(); - self.refined_spans.push(prev); + self.push_refined_span(prev); + self.check_invoked_macro_name_span(); } else if self.prev().is_closure { // drop any equal or overlapping span (`curr`) and keep `prev` to test again in the // next iter @@ -344,18 +402,39 @@ impl<'a, 'tcx> CoverageSpans<'a, 'tcx> { } else if self.prev_original_span == self.curr().span { // Note that this compares the new span to `prev_original_span`, which may not // be the full `prev.span` (if merged during the previous iteration). - self.hold_pending_dups_unless_dominated(); + if self.prev().is_macro_expansion() && self.curr().is_macro_expansion() { + // Macros that expand to include branching (such as + // `assert_eq!()`, `assert_ne!()`, `info!()`, `debug!()`, or + // `trace!()) typically generate callee spans with identical + // ranges (typically the full span of the macro) for all + // `BasicBlocks`. This makes it impossible to distinguish + // the condition (`if val1 != val2`) from the optional + // branched statements (such as the call to `panic!()` on + // assert failure). In this case it is better (or less + // worse) to drop the optional branch bcbs and keep the + // non-conditional statements, to count when reached. + debug!( + " curr and prev are part of a macro expansion, and curr has the same span \ + as prev, but is in a different bcb. Drop curr and keep prev for next iter. \ + prev={:?}", + self.prev() + ); + self.take_curr(); + } else { + self.hold_pending_dups_unless_dominated(); + } } else { self.cutoff_prev_at_overlapping_curr(); + self.check_invoked_macro_name_span(); } } debug!(" AT END, adding last prev={:?}", self.prev()); let prev = self.take_prev(); - let CoverageSpans { pending_dups, mut refined_spans, .. } = self; + let pending_dups = self.pending_dups.split_off(0); for dup in pending_dups { debug!(" ...adding at least one pending dup={:?}", dup); - refined_spans.push(dup); + self.push_refined_span(dup); } // Async functions wrap a closure that implements the body to be executed. The enclosing @@ -365,21 +444,60 @@ impl<'a, 'tcx> CoverageSpans<'a, 'tcx> { // excluded. The closure's `Return` is the only one that will be counted. This provides // adequate coverage, and more intuitive counts. (Avoids double-counting the closing brace // of the function body.) - let body_ends_with_closure = if let Some(last_covspan) = refined_spans.last() { + let body_ends_with_closure = if let Some(last_covspan) = self.refined_spans.last() { last_covspan.is_closure && last_covspan.span.hi() == self.body_span.hi() } else { false }; if !body_ends_with_closure { - refined_spans.push(prev); + self.push_refined_span(prev); } // Remove `CoverageSpan`s derived from closures, originally added to ensure the coverage // regions for the current function leave room for the closure's own coverage regions // (injected separately, from the closure's own MIR). - refined_spans.retain(|covspan| !covspan.is_closure); - refined_spans + self.refined_spans.retain(|covspan| !covspan.is_closure); + self.refined_spans + } + + fn push_refined_span(&mut self, covspan: CoverageSpan) { + let len = self.refined_spans.len(); + if len > 0 { + let last = &mut self.refined_spans[len - 1]; + if last.is_mergeable(&covspan) { + debug!( + "merging new refined span with last refined span, last={:?}, covspan={:?}", + last, covspan + ); + last.merge_from(covspan); + return; + } + } + self.refined_spans.push(covspan) + } + + fn check_invoked_macro_name_span(&mut self) { + if let Some(visible_macro) = self.curr().visible_macro(self.body_span) { + if self.prev_expn_span.map_or(true, |prev_expn_span| { + self.curr().expn_span.ctxt() != prev_expn_span.ctxt() + }) { + let merged_prefix_len = self.curr_original_span.lo() - self.curr().span.lo(); + let after_macro_bang = + merged_prefix_len + BytePos(visible_macro.as_str().bytes().count() as u32 + 1); + let mut macro_name_cov = self.curr().clone(); + self.curr_mut().span = + self.curr().span.with_lo(self.curr().span.lo() + after_macro_bang); + macro_name_cov.span = + macro_name_cov.span.with_hi(macro_name_cov.span.lo() + after_macro_bang); + debug!( + " and curr starts a new macro expansion, so add a new span just for \ + the macro `{}!`, new span={:?}", + visible_macro, macro_name_cov + ); + self.push_refined_span(macro_name_cov); + } + } } // Generate a set of `CoverageSpan`s from the filtered set of `Statement`s and `Terminator`s of @@ -401,14 +519,17 @@ impl<'a, 'tcx> CoverageSpans<'a, 'tcx> { .iter() .enumerate() .filter_map(move |(index, statement)| { - filtered_statement_span(statement, self.body_span).map(|span| { - CoverageSpan::for_statement(statement, span, bcb, bb, index) - }) + filtered_statement_span(statement, self.body_span).map( + |(span, expn_span)| { + CoverageSpan::for_statement( + statement, span, expn_span, bcb, bb, index, + ) + }, + ) }) - .chain( - filtered_terminator_span(data.terminator(), self.body_span) - .map(|span| CoverageSpan::for_terminator(span, bcb, bb)), - ) + .chain(filtered_terminator_span(data.terminator(), self.body_span).map( + |(span, expn_span)| CoverageSpan::for_terminator(span, expn_span, bcb, bb), + )) }) .collect() } @@ -461,7 +582,7 @@ impl<'a, 'tcx> CoverageSpans<'a, 'tcx> { let pending_dups = self.pending_dups.split_off(0); for dup in pending_dups.into_iter() { debug!(" ...adding at least one pending={:?}", dup); - self.refined_spans.push(dup); + self.push_refined_span(dup); } } else { self.pending_dups.clear(); @@ -473,12 +594,13 @@ impl<'a, 'tcx> CoverageSpans<'a, 'tcx> { /// Advance `prev` to `curr` (if any), and `curr` to the next `CoverageSpan` in sorted order. fn next_coverage_span(&mut self) -> bool { if let Some(curr) = self.some_curr.take() { + self.prev_expn_span = Some(curr.expn_span); self.some_prev = Some(curr); self.prev_original_span = self.curr_original_span; } while let Some(curr) = self.sorted_spans_iter.as_mut().unwrap().next() { debug!("FOR curr={:?}", curr); - if self.prev_starts_after_next(&curr) { + if self.some_prev.is_some() && self.prev_starts_after_next(&curr) { debug!( " prev.span starts after curr.span, so curr will be dropped (skipping past \ closure?); prev={:?}", @@ -535,10 +657,10 @@ impl<'a, 'tcx> CoverageSpans<'a, 'tcx> { for mut dup in pending_dups.iter().cloned() { dup.span = dup.span.with_hi(left_cutoff); debug!(" ...and at least one pre_closure dup={:?}", dup); - self.refined_spans.push(dup); + self.push_refined_span(dup); } } - self.refined_spans.push(pre_closure); + self.push_refined_span(pre_closure); } if has_post_closure_span { // Update prev.span to start after the closure (and discard curr) @@ -549,7 +671,7 @@ impl<'a, 'tcx> CoverageSpans<'a, 'tcx> { } self.pending_dups.append(&mut pending_dups); let closure_covspan = self.take_curr(); - self.refined_spans.push(closure_covspan); // since self.prev() was already updated + self.push_refined_span(closure_covspan); // since self.prev() was already updated } else { pending_dups.clear(); } @@ -640,7 +762,7 @@ impl<'a, 'tcx> CoverageSpans<'a, 'tcx> { } else { debug!(" ... adding modified prev={:?}", self.prev()); let prev = self.take_prev(); - self.refined_spans.push(prev); + self.push_refined_span(prev); } } else { // with `pending_dups`, `prev` cannot have any statements that don't overlap @@ -653,10 +775,13 @@ impl<'a, 'tcx> CoverageSpans<'a, 'tcx> { } } +/// See `function_source_span()` for a description of the two returned spans. +/// If the MIR `Statement` is not contributive to computing coverage spans, +/// returns `None`. pub(super) fn filtered_statement_span( statement: &'a Statement<'tcx>, body_span: Span, -) -> Option { +) -> Option<(Span, Span)> { match statement.kind { // These statements have spans that are often outside the scope of the executed source code // for their parent `BasicBlock`. @@ -698,10 +823,13 @@ pub(super) fn filtered_statement_span( } } +/// See `function_source_span()` for a description of the two returned spans. +/// If the MIR `Terminator` is not contributive to computing coverage spans, +/// returns `None`. pub(super) fn filtered_terminator_span( terminator: &'a Terminator<'tcx>, body_span: Span, -) -> Option { +) -> Option<(Span, Span)> { match terminator.kind { // These terminators have spans that don't positively contribute to computing a reasonable // span of actually executed source code. (For example, SwitchInt terminators extracted from @@ -741,8 +869,23 @@ pub(super) fn filtered_terminator_span( } } +/// Returns two spans from the given span (the span associated with a +/// `Statement` or `Terminator`): +/// +/// 1. An extrapolated span (pre-expansion[^1]) corresponding to a range within +/// the function's body source. This span is guaranteed to be contained +/// within, or equal to, the `body_span`. If the extrapolated span is not +/// contained within the `body_span`, the `body_span` is returned. +/// 2. The actual `span` value from the `Statement`, before expansion. +/// +/// Only the first span is used when computing coverage code regions. The second +/// span is useful if additional expansion data is needed (such as to look up +/// the macro name for a composed span within that macro).) +/// +/// [^1]Expansions result from Rust syntax including macros, syntactic +/// sugar, etc.). #[inline] -fn function_source_span(span: Span, body_span: Span) -> Span { - let span = original_sp(span, body_span).with_ctxt(body_span.ctxt()); - if body_span.contains(span) { span } else { body_span } +fn function_source_span(span: Span, body_span: Span) -> (Span, Span) { + let original_span = original_sp(span, body_span).with_ctxt(body_span.ctxt()); + (if body_span.contains(original_span) { original_span } else { body_span }, span) } diff --git a/compiler/rustc_mir/src/transform/coverage/tests.rs b/compiler/rustc_mir/src/transform/coverage/tests.rs index dee112443d337..9b84173c8a293 100644 --- a/compiler/rustc_mir/src/transform/coverage/tests.rs +++ b/compiler/rustc_mir/src/transform/coverage/tests.rs @@ -1,6 +1,10 @@ //! This crate hosts a selection of "unit tests" for components of the `InstrumentCoverage` MIR //! pass. //! +//! ```shell +//! ./x.py test --keep-stage 1 compiler/rustc_mir --test-args '--show-output coverage' +//! ``` +//! //! The tests construct a few "mock" objects, as needed, to support the `InstrumentCoverage` //! functions and algorithms. Mocked objects include instances of `mir::Body`; including //! `Terminator`s of various `kind`s, and `Span` objects. Some functions used by or used on @@ -679,10 +683,15 @@ fn test_make_bcb_counters() { let mut basic_coverage_blocks = graph::CoverageGraph::from_mir(&mir_body); let mut coverage_spans = Vec::new(); for (bcb, data) in basic_coverage_blocks.iter_enumerated() { - if let Some(span) = + if let Some((span, expn_span)) = spans::filtered_terminator_span(data.terminator(&mir_body), body_span) { - coverage_spans.push(spans::CoverageSpan::for_terminator(span, bcb, data.last_bb())); + coverage_spans.push(spans::CoverageSpan::for_terminator( + span, + expn_span, + bcb, + data.last_bb(), + )); } } let mut coverage_counters = counters::CoverageCounters::new(0); diff --git a/compiler/rustc_mir/src/util/spanview.rs b/compiler/rustc_mir/src/util/spanview.rs index a9a30e407b4b0..9abfa4a8dc68b 100644 --- a/compiler/rustc_mir/src/util/spanview.rs +++ b/compiler/rustc_mir/src/util/spanview.rs @@ -99,7 +99,11 @@ where W: Write, { let def_id = body.source.def_id(); - let body_span = hir_body(tcx, def_id).value.span; + let hir_body = hir_body(tcx, def_id); + if hir_body.is_none() { + return Ok(()); + } + let body_span = hir_body.unwrap().value.span; let mut span_viewables = Vec::new(); for (bb, data) in body.basic_blocks().iter_enumerated() { match spanview { @@ -664,19 +668,16 @@ fn fn_span<'tcx>(tcx: TyCtxt<'tcx>, def_id: DefId) -> Span { let hir_id = tcx.hir().local_def_id_to_hir_id(def_id.as_local().expect("expected DefId is local")); let fn_decl_span = tcx.hir().span(hir_id); - let body_span = hir_body(tcx, def_id).value.span; - if fn_decl_span.ctxt() == body_span.ctxt() { - fn_decl_span.to(body_span) + if let Some(body_span) = hir_body(tcx, def_id).map(|hir_body| hir_body.value.span) { + if fn_decl_span.ctxt() == body_span.ctxt() { fn_decl_span.to(body_span) } else { body_span } } else { - // This probably occurs for functions defined via macros - body_span + fn_decl_span } } -fn hir_body<'tcx>(tcx: TyCtxt<'tcx>, def_id: DefId) -> &'tcx rustc_hir::Body<'tcx> { +fn hir_body<'tcx>(tcx: TyCtxt<'tcx>, def_id: DefId) -> Option<&'tcx rustc_hir::Body<'tcx>> { let hir_node = tcx.hir().get_if_local(def_id).expect("expected DefId is local"); - let fn_body_id = hir::map::associated_body(hir_node).expect("HIR node is a function with body"); - tcx.hir().body(fn_body_id) + hir::map::associated_body(hir_node).map(|fn_body_id| tcx.hir().body(fn_body_id)) } fn escape_html(s: &str) -> String { diff --git a/compiler/rustc_target/src/asm/aarch64.rs b/compiler/rustc_target/src/asm/aarch64.rs index e7c9edea7653a..dd51574efca0a 100644 --- a/compiler/rustc_target/src/asm/aarch64.rs +++ b/compiler/rustc_target/src/asm/aarch64.rs @@ -83,10 +83,8 @@ def_regs! { x13: reg = ["x13", "w13"], x14: reg = ["x14", "w14"], x15: reg = ["x15", "w15"], - x16: reg = ["x16", "w16"], x17: reg = ["x17", "w17"], x18: reg = ["x18", "w18"], - x19: reg = ["x19", "w19"], x20: reg = ["x20", "w20"], x21: reg = ["x21", "w21"], x22: reg = ["x22", "w22"], @@ -96,7 +94,7 @@ def_regs! { x26: reg = ["x26", "w26"], x27: reg = ["x27", "w27"], x28: reg = ["x28", "w28"], - x30: reg = ["x30", "w30", "lr"], + x30: reg = ["x30", "w30", "lr", "wlr"], v0: vreg, vreg_low16 = ["v0", "b0", "h0", "s0", "d0", "q0"], v1: vreg, vreg_low16 = ["v1", "b1", "h1", "s1", "d1", "q1"], v2: vreg, vreg_low16 = ["v2", "b2", "h2", "s2", "d2", "q2"], @@ -129,7 +127,11 @@ def_regs! { v29: vreg = ["v29", "b29", "h29", "s29", "d29", "q29"], v30: vreg = ["v30", "b30", "h30", "s30", "d30", "q30"], v31: vreg = ["v31", "b31", "h31", "s31", "d31", "q31"], - #error = ["x29", "fp"] => + #error = ["x16", "w16"] => + "x16 is used internally by LLVM and cannot be used as an operand for inline asm", + #error = ["x19", "w19"] => + "x19 is used internally by LLVM and cannot be used as an operand for inline asm", + #error = ["x29", "w29", "fp", "wfp"] => "the frame pointer cannot be used as an operand for inline asm", #error = ["sp", "wsp"] => "the stack pointer cannot be used as an operand for inline asm", diff --git a/compiler/rustc_target/src/asm/arm.rs b/compiler/rustc_target/src/asm/arm.rs index a7a708fe7dec3..4c323fc35d643 100644 --- a/compiler/rustc_target/src/asm/arm.rs +++ b/compiler/rustc_target/src/asm/arm.rs @@ -98,7 +98,6 @@ def_regs! { r5: reg, reg_thumb = ["r5", "v2"], r7: reg, reg_thumb = ["r7", "v4"] % frame_pointer_r7, r8: reg = ["r8", "v5"], - r9: reg = ["r9", "v6", "rfp"], r10: reg = ["r10", "sl"], r11: reg = ["r11", "fp"] % frame_pointer_r11, r12: reg = ["r12", "ip"], @@ -185,6 +184,8 @@ def_regs! { q15: qreg = ["q15"], #error = ["r6", "v3"] => "r6 is used internally by LLVM and cannot be used as an operand for inline asm", + #error = ["r9", "v6", "rfp"] => + "r9 is used internally by LLVM and cannot be used as an operand for inline asm", #error = ["r13", "sp"] => "the stack pointer cannot be used as an operand for inline asm", #error = ["r15", "pc"] => diff --git a/compiler/rustc_target/src/asm/hexagon.rs b/compiler/rustc_target/src/asm/hexagon.rs index d41941d0b4cd7..74afddb69dc75 100644 --- a/compiler/rustc_target/src/asm/hexagon.rs +++ b/compiler/rustc_target/src/asm/hexagon.rs @@ -60,7 +60,6 @@ def_regs! { r16: reg = ["r16"], r17: reg = ["r17"], r18: reg = ["r18"], - r19: reg = ["r19"], r20: reg = ["r20"], r21: reg = ["r21"], r22: reg = ["r22"], @@ -70,6 +69,8 @@ def_regs! { r26: reg = ["r26"], r27: reg = ["r27"], r28: reg = ["r28"], + #error = ["r19"] => + "r19 is used internally by LLVM and cannot be used as an operand for inline asm", #error = ["r29", "sp"] => "the stack pointer cannot be used as an operand for inline asm", #error = ["r30", "fr"] => diff --git a/compiler/rustc_target/src/asm/riscv.rs b/compiler/rustc_target/src/asm/riscv.rs index 185d6ac8246c9..e276a9175f9ab 100644 --- a/compiler/rustc_target/src/asm/riscv.rs +++ b/compiler/rustc_target/src/asm/riscv.rs @@ -66,7 +66,6 @@ def_regs! { x5: reg = ["x5", "t0"], x6: reg = ["x6", "t1"], x7: reg = ["x7", "t2"], - x9: reg = ["x9", "s1"], x10: reg = ["x10", "a0"], x11: reg = ["x11", "a1"], x12: reg = ["x12", "a2"], @@ -121,6 +120,8 @@ def_regs! { f29: freg = ["f29", "ft9"], f30: freg = ["f30", "ft10"], f31: freg = ["f31", "ft11"], + #error = ["x9", "s1"] => + "s1 is used internally by LLVM and cannot be used as an operand for inline asm", #error = ["x8", "s0", "fp"] => "the frame pointer cannot be used as an operand for inline asm", #error = ["x2", "sp"] => diff --git a/compiler/rustc_target/src/asm/x86.rs b/compiler/rustc_target/src/asm/x86.rs index 90660dad4c2a1..48f83ca7cd49a 100644 --- a/compiler/rustc_target/src/asm/x86.rs +++ b/compiler/rustc_target/src/asm/x86.rs @@ -152,13 +152,41 @@ fn high_byte( } } +fn rbx_reserved( + arch: InlineAsmArch, + _has_feature: impl FnMut(&str) -> bool, + _target: &Target, +) -> Result<(), &'static str> { + match arch { + InlineAsmArch::X86 => Ok(()), + InlineAsmArch::X86_64 => { + Err("rbx is used internally by LLVM and cannot be used as an operand for inline asm") + } + _ => unreachable!(), + } +} + +fn esi_reserved( + arch: InlineAsmArch, + _has_feature: impl FnMut(&str) -> bool, + _target: &Target, +) -> Result<(), &'static str> { + match arch { + InlineAsmArch::X86 => { + Err("esi is used internally by LLVM and cannot be used as an operand for inline asm") + } + InlineAsmArch::X86_64 => Ok(()), + _ => unreachable!(), + } +} + def_regs! { X86 X86InlineAsmReg X86InlineAsmRegClass { ax: reg, reg_abcd = ["ax", "eax", "rax"], - bx: reg, reg_abcd = ["bx", "ebx", "rbx"], + bx: reg, reg_abcd = ["bx", "ebx", "rbx"] % rbx_reserved, cx: reg, reg_abcd = ["cx", "ecx", "rcx"], dx: reg, reg_abcd = ["dx", "edx", "rdx"], - si: reg = ["si", "esi", "rsi"], + si: reg = ["si", "esi", "rsi"] % esi_reserved, di: reg = ["di", "edi", "rdi"], r8: reg = ["r8", "r8w", "r8d"] % x86_64_only, r9: reg = ["r9", "r9w", "r9d"] % x86_64_only, diff --git a/library/alloc/src/collections/btree/node.rs b/library/alloc/src/collections/btree/node.rs index f330a1bb3dcfe..af403496e38e9 100644 --- a/library/alloc/src/collections/btree/node.rs +++ b/library/alloc/src/collections/btree/node.rs @@ -89,7 +89,7 @@ impl LeafNode { /// The underlying representation of internal nodes. As with `LeafNode`s, these should be hidden /// behind `BoxedNode`s to prevent dropping uninitialized keys and values. Any pointer to an -/// `InternalNode` can be directly casted to a pointer to the underlying `LeafNode` portion of the +/// `InternalNode` can be directly cast to a pointer to the underlying `LeafNode` portion of the /// node, allowing code to act on leaf and internal nodes generically without having to even check /// which of the two a pointer is pointing at. This property is enabled by the use of `repr(C)`. #[repr(C)] @@ -408,7 +408,7 @@ impl NodeRef { } impl<'a, K, V, Type> NodeRef, K, V, Type> { - /// Temporarily takes out another, mutable reference to the same node. Beware, as + /// Temporarily takes out another mutable reference to the same node. Beware, as /// this method is very dangerous, doubly so since it may not immediately appear /// dangerous. /// @@ -759,7 +759,7 @@ impl PartialEq impl Handle, HandleType> { - /// Temporarily takes out another, immutable handle on the same location. + /// Temporarily takes out another immutable handle on the same location. pub fn reborrow(&self) -> Handle, K, V, NodeType>, HandleType> { // We can't use Handle::new_kv or Handle::new_edge because we don't know our type Handle { node: self.node.reborrow(), idx: self.idx, _marker: PhantomData } @@ -767,7 +767,7 @@ impl } impl<'a, K, V, NodeType, HandleType> Handle, K, V, NodeType>, HandleType> { - /// Temporarily takes out another, mutable handle on the same location. Beware, as + /// Temporarily takes out another mutable handle on the same location. Beware, as /// this method is very dangerous, doubly so since it may not immediately appear /// dangerous. /// diff --git a/src/doc/unstable-book/src/library-features/asm.md b/src/doc/unstable-book/src/library-features/asm.md index 4f9033cedc3ff..7c2bf62185530 100644 --- a/src/doc/unstable-book/src/library-features/asm.md +++ b/src/doc/unstable-book/src/library-features/asm.md @@ -535,20 +535,20 @@ Here is the list of currently supported register classes: | Architecture | Register class | Registers | LLVM constraint code | | ------------ | -------------- | --------- | -------------------- | -| x86 | `reg` | `ax`, `bx`, `cx`, `dx`, `si`, `di`, `r[8-15]` (x86-64 only) | `r` | +| x86 | `reg` | `ax`, `bx`, `cx`, `dx`, `si`, `di`, `bp`, `r[8-15]` (x86-64 only) | `r` | | x86 | `reg_abcd` | `ax`, `bx`, `cx`, `dx` | `Q` | | x86-32 | `reg_byte` | `al`, `bl`, `cl`, `dl`, `ah`, `bh`, `ch`, `dh` | `q` | -| x86-64 | `reg_byte`\* | `al`, `bl`, `cl`, `dl`, `sil`, `dil`, `r[8-15]b` | `q` | +| x86-64 | `reg_byte`\* | `al`, `bl`, `cl`, `dl`, `sil`, `dil`, `bpl`, `r[8-15]b` | `q` | | x86 | `xmm_reg` | `xmm[0-7]` (x86) `xmm[0-15]` (x86-64) | `x` | | x86 | `ymm_reg` | `ymm[0-7]` (x86) `ymm[0-15]` (x86-64) | `x` | | x86 | `zmm_reg` | `zmm[0-7]` (x86) `zmm[0-31]` (x86-64) | `v` | | x86 | `kreg` | `k[1-7]` | `Yk` | -| AArch64 | `reg` | `x[0-28]`, `x30` | `r` | +| AArch64 | `reg` | `x[0-30]` | `r` | | AArch64 | `vreg` | `v[0-31]` | `w` | | AArch64 | `vreg_low16` | `v[0-15]` | `x` | -| ARM | `reg` | `r[0-5]` `r7`\*, `r[8-10]`, `r11`\*, `r12`, `r14` | `r` | +| ARM | `reg` | `r[0-12]`, `r14` | `r` | | ARM (Thumb) | `reg_thumb` | `r[0-r7]` | `l` | -| ARM (ARM) | `reg_thumb` | `r[0-r10]`, `r12`, `r14` | `l` | +| ARM (ARM) | `reg_thumb` | `r[0-r12]`, `r14` | `l` | | ARM | `sreg` | `s[0-31]` | `t` | | ARM | `sreg_low16` | `s[0-15]` | `x` | | ARM | `dreg` | `d[0-31]` | `w` | @@ -573,9 +573,7 @@ Here is the list of currently supported register classes: > > Note #3: NVPTX doesn't have a fixed register set, so named registers are not supported. > -> Note #4: On ARM the frame pointer is either `r7` or `r11` depending on the platform. -> -> Note #5: WebAssembly doesn't have registers, so named registers are not supported. +> Note #4: WebAssembly doesn't have registers, so named registers are not supported. Additional register classes may be added in the future based on demand (e.g. MMX, x87, etc). @@ -677,13 +675,15 @@ Some registers cannot be used for input or output operands: | All | `sp` | The stack pointer must be restored to its original value at the end of an asm code block. | | All | `bp` (x86), `x29` (AArch64), `x8` (RISC-V), `fr` (Hexagon), `$fp` (MIPS) | The frame pointer cannot be used as an input or output. | | ARM | `r7` or `r11` | On ARM the frame pointer can be either `r7` or `r11` depending on the target. The frame pointer cannot be used as an input or output. | -| ARM | `r6` | `r6` is used internally by LLVM as a base pointer and therefore cannot be used as an input or output. | +| All | `si` (x86-32), `bx` (x86-64), `r6` (ARM), `x19` (AArch64), `r19` (Hexagon), `x9` (RISC-V) | This is used internally by LLVM as a "base pointer" for functions with complex stack frames. | | x86 | `k0` | This is a constant zero register which can't be modified. | | x86 | `ip` | This is the program counter, not a real register. | | x86 | `mm[0-7]` | MMX registers are not currently supported (but may be in the future). | | x86 | `st([0-7])` | x87 registers are not currently supported (but may be in the future). | | AArch64 | `xzr` | This is a constant zero register which can't be modified. | +| AArch64 | `x16` | This is used internally by LLVM for speculative load hardening. | | ARM | `pc` | This is the program counter, not a real register. | +| ARM | `r9` | This is a reserved register on some ARM targets. | | MIPS | `$0` or `$zero` | This is a constant zero register which can't be modified. | | MIPS | `$1` or `$at` | Reserved for assembler. | | MIPS | `$26`/`$k0`, `$27`/`$k1` | OS-reserved registers. | @@ -693,9 +693,10 @@ Some registers cannot be used for input or output operands: | RISC-V | `gp`, `tp` | These registers are reserved and cannot be used as inputs or outputs. | | Hexagon | `lr` | This is the link register which cannot be used as an input or output. | -In some cases LLVM will allocate a "reserved register" for `reg` operands even though this register cannot be explicitly specified. Assembly code making use of reserved registers should be careful since `reg` operands may alias with those registers. Reserved registers are: -- The frame pointer on all architectures. -- `r6` on ARM. +In some cases LLVM will allocate a "reserved register" for `reg` operands even though this register cannot be explicitly specified. Assembly code making use of reserved registers should be careful since `reg` operands may alias with those registers. Reserved registers are the frame pointer and base pointer +- The frame pointer and LLVM base pointer on all architectures. +- `x16` on AArch64. +- `r6` and `r9` on ARM. ## Template modifiers diff --git a/src/librustdoc/html/static/rustdoc.css b/src/librustdoc/html/static/rustdoc.css index a024fa49b0e8b..a95c90e999f98 100644 --- a/src/librustdoc/html/static/rustdoc.css +++ b/src/librustdoc/html/static/rustdoc.css @@ -117,9 +117,12 @@ h4:not(.method):not(.type):not(.tymethod):not(.associatedconstant) { } h1.fqn { display: flex; - width: 100%; border-bottom: 1px dashed; margin-top: 0; + + /* workaround to keep flex from breaking below 700 px width due to the float: right on the nav + above the h1 */ + padding-left: 1px; } h1.fqn > .in-band > a:hover { text-decoration: underline; @@ -385,17 +388,9 @@ nav.sub { position: relative; } -#results { - position: absolute; - right: 0; - left: 0; - overflow: auto; -} - #results > table { width: 100%; table-layout: fixed; - margin-bottom: 40px; } .content pre.line-numbers { @@ -453,20 +448,14 @@ nav.sub { } .content .out-of-band { - float: right; + flex-grow: 0; + text-align: right; font-size: 23px; margin: 0px; - padding: 0px; + padding: 0 0 0 12px; font-weight: normal; } -h1.fqn > .out-of-band { - float: unset; - flex: 1; - text-align: right; - margin-left: 8px; -} - h3.impl > .out-of-band { font-size: 21px; } @@ -486,6 +475,7 @@ h4 > code, h3 > code, .invisible > code { } .content .in-band { + flex-grow: 1; margin: 0px; padding: 0px; } @@ -1484,10 +1474,6 @@ h4 > .notable-traits { display: none !important; } - h1.fqn { - overflow: initial; - } - .theme-picker { left: 10px; top: 54px; diff --git a/src/llvm-project b/src/llvm-project index 0ed6038a318e3..06c2b9d1e23b7 160000 --- a/src/llvm-project +++ b/src/llvm-project @@ -1 +1 @@ -Subproject commit 0ed6038a318e34e3d76a9e55bdebc4cfd17f902a +Subproject commit 06c2b9d1e23b73ffb5059769542097b86d5a4623 diff --git a/src/test/codegen/asm-multiple-options.rs b/src/test/codegen/asm-multiple-options.rs index c702742bf1a63..baf9f3e9bd14d 100644 --- a/src/test/codegen/asm-multiple-options.rs +++ b/src/test/codegen/asm-multiple-options.rs @@ -10,7 +10,7 @@ #[no_mangle] pub unsafe fn pure(x: i32) { let y: i32; - asm!("", out("ax") y, in("bx") x, options(pure), options(nomem)); + asm!("", out("ax") y, in("cx") x, options(pure), options(nomem)); } pub static mut VAR: i32 = 0; diff --git a/src/test/codegen/asm-options.rs b/src/test/codegen/asm-options.rs index 21e7eb4379634..70391661b0cfb 100644 --- a/src/test/codegen/asm-options.rs +++ b/src/test/codegen/asm-options.rs @@ -10,7 +10,7 @@ #[no_mangle] pub unsafe fn pure(x: i32) { let y: i32; - asm!("", out("ax") y, in("bx") x, options(pure, nomem)); + asm!("", out("ax") y, in("cx") x, options(pure, nomem)); } // CHECK-LABEL: @noreturn diff --git a/src/test/pretty/asm.pp b/src/test/pretty/asm.pp index c86d8a1197188..a2065039692b7 100644 --- a/src/test/pretty/asm.pp +++ b/src/test/pretty/asm.pp @@ -21,7 +21,7 @@ asm!("{0}", out(reg) a); asm!("{0}", inout(reg) b); asm!("{0} {1}", out(reg) _, inlateout(reg) b => _); - asm!("", out("al") _, lateout("rbx") _); + asm!("", out("al") _, lateout("rcx") _); asm!("inst1\ninst2"); asm!("inst1 {0}, 42\ninst2 {1}, 24", in(reg) a, out(reg) b); asm!("inst2 {1}, 24\ninst1 {0}, 42", in(reg) a, out(reg) b); diff --git a/src/test/pretty/asm.rs b/src/test/pretty/asm.rs index 33f25e5216b4e..1156ab769a043 100644 --- a/src/test/pretty/asm.rs +++ b/src/test/pretty/asm.rs @@ -15,7 +15,7 @@ pub fn main() { asm!("{0}", out(reg) a); asm!("{name}", name = inout(reg) b); asm!("{} {}", out(reg) _, inlateout(reg) b => _); - asm!("", out("al") _, lateout("rbx") _); + asm!("", out("al") _, lateout("rcx") _); asm!("inst1", "inst2"); asm!("inst1 {}, 42", "inst2 {}, 24", in(reg) a, out(reg) b); asm!("inst2 {1}, 24", "inst1 {0}, 42", in(reg) a, out(reg) b); diff --git a/src/test/run-make-fulldeps/coverage-reports/expected_show_coverage.inner_items.txt b/src/test/run-make-fulldeps/coverage-reports/expected_show_coverage.inner_items.txt index f5b5184044f65..883254a09ba7d 100644 --- a/src/test/run-make-fulldeps/coverage-reports/expected_show_coverage.inner_items.txt +++ b/src/test/run-make-fulldeps/coverage-reports/expected_show_coverage.inner_items.txt @@ -1,9 +1,9 @@ 1| |#![allow(unused_assignments, unused_variables, dead_code)] 2| | 3| 1|fn main() { - 4| | // Initialize test constants in a way that cannot be determined at compile time, to ensure - 5| | // rustc and LLVM cannot optimize out statements (or coverage counters) downstream from - 6| | // dependent conditions. + 4| 1| // Initialize test constants in a way that cannot be determined at compile time, to ensure + 5| 1| // rustc and LLVM cannot optimize out statements (or coverage counters) downstream from + 6| 1| // dependent conditions. 7| 1| let is_true = std::env::args().len() == 1; 8| 1| 9| 1| let mut countdown = 0; diff --git a/src/test/run-make-fulldeps/coverage-reports/expected_show_coverage.issue-84561.txt b/src/test/run-make-fulldeps/coverage-reports/expected_show_coverage.issue-84561.txt new file mode 100644 index 0000000000000..8256daa1419b3 --- /dev/null +++ b/src/test/run-make-fulldeps/coverage-reports/expected_show_coverage.issue-84561.txt @@ -0,0 +1,196 @@ + 1| |// This demonstrated Issue #84561: function-like macros produce unintuitive coverage results. + 2| | + 3| |// expect-exit-status-101 + 4| 21|#[derive(PartialEq, Eq)] + ^0 + ------------------ + | ::eq: + | 4| 21|#[derive(PartialEq, Eq)] + ------------------ + | Unexecuted instantiation: ::ne + ------------------ + 5| |struct Foo(u32); + 6| 1|fn test3() { + 7| 1| let is_true = std::env::args().len() == 1; + 8| 1| let bar = Foo(1); + 9| 1| assert_eq!(bar, Foo(1)); + 10| 1| let baz = Foo(0); + 11| 1| assert_ne!(baz, Foo(1)); + 12| 1| println!("{:?}", Foo(1)); + 13| 1| println!("{:?}", bar); + 14| 1| println!("{:?}", baz); + 15| 1| + 16| 1| assert_eq!(Foo(1), Foo(1)); + 17| 1| assert_ne!(Foo(0), Foo(1)); + 18| 1| assert_eq!(Foo(2), Foo(2)); + 19| 1| let bar = Foo(0); + 20| 1| assert_ne!(bar, Foo(3)); + 21| 1| assert_ne!(Foo(0), Foo(4)); + 22| 1| assert_eq!(Foo(3), Foo(3), "with a message"); + ^0 + 23| 1| println!("{:?}", bar); + 24| 1| println!("{:?}", Foo(1)); + 25| 1| + 26| 1| assert_ne!(Foo(0), Foo(5), "{}", if is_true { "true message" } else { "false message" }); + ^0 ^0 ^0 + 27| 1| assert_ne!( + 28| | Foo(0) + 29| | , + 30| | Foo(5) + 31| | , + 32| 0| "{}" + 33| 0| , + 34| 0| if + 35| 0| is_true + 36| | { + 37| 0| "true message" + 38| | } else { + 39| 0| "false message" + 40| | } + 41| | ); + 42| | + 43| 1| let is_true = std::env::args().len() == 1; + 44| 1| + 45| 1| assert_eq!( + 46| 1| Foo(1), + 47| 1| Foo(1) + 48| 1| ); + 49| 1| assert_ne!( + 50| 1| Foo(0), + 51| 1| Foo(1) + 52| 1| ); + 53| 1| assert_eq!( + 54| 1| Foo(2), + 55| 1| Foo(2) + 56| 1| ); + 57| 1| let bar = Foo(1); + 58| 1| assert_ne!( + 59| 1| bar, + 60| 1| Foo(3) + 61| 1| ); + 62| 1| if is_true { + 63| 1| assert_ne!( + 64| 1| Foo(0), + 65| 1| Foo(4) + 66| 1| ); + 67| | } else { + 68| 0| assert_eq!( + 69| 0| Foo(3), + 70| 0| Foo(3) + 71| 0| ); + 72| | } + 73| 1| if is_true { + 74| 1| assert_ne!( + 75| | Foo(0), + 76| | Foo(4), + 77| 0| "with a message" + 78| | ); + 79| | } else { + 80| 0| assert_eq!( + 81| | Foo(3), + 82| | Foo(3), + 83| 0| "with a message" + 84| | ); + 85| | } + 86| 1| assert_ne!( + 87| 1| if is_true { + 88| 1| Foo(0) + 89| | } else { + 90| 0| Foo(1) + 91| | }, + 92| | Foo(5) + 93| | ); + 94| 1| assert_ne!( + 95| 1| Foo(5), + 96| 1| if is_true { + 97| 1| Foo(0) + 98| | } else { + 99| 0| Foo(1) + 100| | } + 101| | ); + 102| 1| assert_ne!( + 103| 1| if is_true { + 104| 1| assert_eq!( + 105| 1| Foo(3), + 106| 1| Foo(3) + 107| 1| ); + 108| 1| Foo(0) + 109| | } else { + 110| 0| assert_ne!( + 111| 0| if is_true { + 112| 0| Foo(0) + 113| | } else { + 114| 0| Foo(1) + 115| | }, + 116| | Foo(5) + 117| | ); + 118| 0| Foo(1) + 119| | }, + 120| | Foo(5), + 121| 0| "with a message" + 122| | ); + 123| 1| assert_eq!( + 124| | Foo(1), + 125| | Foo(3), + 126| 1| "this assert should fail" + 127| | ); + 128| 0| assert_eq!( + 129| | Foo(3), + 130| | Foo(3), + 131| 0| "this assert should not be reached" + 132| | ); + 133| 0|} + 134| | + 135| |impl std::fmt::Debug for Foo { + 136| | fn fmt(&self, f: &mut std::fmt::Formatter) -> std::fmt::Result { + 137| 7| write!(f, "try and succeed")?; + ^0 + 138| 7| Ok(()) + 139| 7| } + 140| |} + 141| | + 142| |static mut DEBUG_LEVEL_ENABLED: bool = false; + 143| | + 144| |macro_rules! debug { + 145| | ($($arg:tt)+) => ( + 146| | if unsafe { DEBUG_LEVEL_ENABLED } { + 147| | println!($($arg)+); + 148| | } + 149| | ); + 150| |} + 151| | + 152| 1|fn test1() { + 153| 1| debug!("debug is enabled"); + ^0 + 154| 1| debug!("debug is enabled"); + ^0 + 155| 1| let _ = 0; + 156| 1| debug!("debug is enabled"); + ^0 + 157| 1| unsafe { + 158| 1| DEBUG_LEVEL_ENABLED = true; + 159| 1| } + 160| 1| debug!("debug is enabled"); + 161| 1|} + 162| | + 163| |macro_rules! call_debug { + 164| | ($($arg:tt)+) => ( + 165| 1| fn call_print(s: &str) { + 166| 1| print!("{}", s); + 167| 1| } + 168| | + 169| | call_print("called from call_debug: "); + 170| | debug!($($arg)+); + 171| | ); + 172| |} + 173| | + 174| 1|fn test2() { + 175| 1| call_debug!("debug is enabled"); + 176| 1|} + 177| | + 178| 1|fn main() { + 179| 1| test1(); + 180| 1| test2(); + 181| 1| test3(); + 182| 1|} + diff --git a/src/test/run-make-fulldeps/coverage-reports/expected_show_coverage.uses_crate.txt b/src/test/run-make-fulldeps/coverage-reports/expected_show_coverage.uses_crate.txt index f5beb9ef24a0e..c2d5143a61816 100644 --- a/src/test/run-make-fulldeps/coverage-reports/expected_show_coverage.uses_crate.txt +++ b/src/test/run-make-fulldeps/coverage-reports/expected_show_coverage.uses_crate.txt @@ -3,9 +3,9 @@ 3| |use std::fmt::Debug; 4| | 5| 1|pub fn used_function() { - 6| | // Initialize test constants in a way that cannot be determined at compile time, to ensure - 7| | // rustc and LLVM cannot optimize out statements (or coverage counters) downstream from - 8| | // dependent conditions. + 6| 1| // Initialize test constants in a way that cannot be determined at compile time, to ensure + 7| 1| // rustc and LLVM cannot optimize out statements (or coverage counters) downstream from + 8| 1| // dependent conditions. 9| 1| let is_true = std::env::args().len() == 1; 10| 1| let mut countdown = 0; 11| 1| if is_true { diff --git a/src/test/run-make-fulldeps/coverage-reports/expected_show_coverage.uses_inline_crate.txt b/src/test/run-make-fulldeps/coverage-reports/expected_show_coverage.uses_inline_crate.txt index cc98956e3073a..dab31cbf4ac9e 100644 --- a/src/test/run-make-fulldeps/coverage-reports/expected_show_coverage.uses_inline_crate.txt +++ b/src/test/run-make-fulldeps/coverage-reports/expected_show_coverage.uses_inline_crate.txt @@ -5,9 +5,9 @@ 5| |use std::fmt::Debug; 6| | 7| 1|pub fn used_function() { - 8| | // Initialize test constants in a way that cannot be determined at compile time, to ensure - 9| | // rustc and LLVM cannot optimize out statements (or coverage counters) downstream from - 10| | // dependent conditions. + 8| 1| // Initialize test constants in a way that cannot be determined at compile time, to ensure + 9| 1| // rustc and LLVM cannot optimize out statements (or coverage counters) downstream from + 10| 1| // dependent conditions. 11| 1| let is_true = std::env::args().len() == 1; 12| 1| let mut countdown = 0; 13| 1| if is_true { @@ -19,9 +19,9 @@ 18| | 19| |#[inline(always)] 20| 1|pub fn used_inline_function() { - 21| | // Initialize test constants in a way that cannot be determined at compile time, to ensure - 22| | // rustc and LLVM cannot optimize out statements (or coverage counters) downstream from - 23| | // dependent conditions. + 21| 1| // Initialize test constants in a way that cannot be determined at compile time, to ensure + 22| 1| // rustc and LLVM cannot optimize out statements (or coverage counters) downstream from + 23| 1| // dependent conditions. 24| 1| let is_true = std::env::args().len() == 1; 25| 1| let mut countdown = 0; 26| 1| if is_true { diff --git a/src/test/run-make-fulldeps/coverage/issue-84561.rs b/src/test/run-make-fulldeps/coverage/issue-84561.rs new file mode 100644 index 0000000000000..b39a289c45e20 --- /dev/null +++ b/src/test/run-make-fulldeps/coverage/issue-84561.rs @@ -0,0 +1,182 @@ +// This demonstrated Issue #84561: function-like macros produce unintuitive coverage results. + +// expect-exit-status-101 +#[derive(PartialEq, Eq)] +struct Foo(u32); +fn test3() { + let is_true = std::env::args().len() == 1; + let bar = Foo(1); + assert_eq!(bar, Foo(1)); + let baz = Foo(0); + assert_ne!(baz, Foo(1)); + println!("{:?}", Foo(1)); + println!("{:?}", bar); + println!("{:?}", baz); + + assert_eq!(Foo(1), Foo(1)); + assert_ne!(Foo(0), Foo(1)); + assert_eq!(Foo(2), Foo(2)); + let bar = Foo(0); + assert_ne!(bar, Foo(3)); + assert_ne!(Foo(0), Foo(4)); + assert_eq!(Foo(3), Foo(3), "with a message"); + println!("{:?}", bar); + println!("{:?}", Foo(1)); + + assert_ne!(Foo(0), Foo(5), "{}", if is_true { "true message" } else { "false message" }); + assert_ne!( + Foo(0) + , + Foo(5) + , + "{}" + , + if + is_true + { + "true message" + } else { + "false message" + } + ); + + let is_true = std::env::args().len() == 1; + + assert_eq!( + Foo(1), + Foo(1) + ); + assert_ne!( + Foo(0), + Foo(1) + ); + assert_eq!( + Foo(2), + Foo(2) + ); + let bar = Foo(1); + assert_ne!( + bar, + Foo(3) + ); + if is_true { + assert_ne!( + Foo(0), + Foo(4) + ); + } else { + assert_eq!( + Foo(3), + Foo(3) + ); + } + if is_true { + assert_ne!( + Foo(0), + Foo(4), + "with a message" + ); + } else { + assert_eq!( + Foo(3), + Foo(3), + "with a message" + ); + } + assert_ne!( + if is_true { + Foo(0) + } else { + Foo(1) + }, + Foo(5) + ); + assert_ne!( + Foo(5), + if is_true { + Foo(0) + } else { + Foo(1) + } + ); + assert_ne!( + if is_true { + assert_eq!( + Foo(3), + Foo(3) + ); + Foo(0) + } else { + assert_ne!( + if is_true { + Foo(0) + } else { + Foo(1) + }, + Foo(5) + ); + Foo(1) + }, + Foo(5), + "with a message" + ); + assert_eq!( + Foo(1), + Foo(3), + "this assert should fail" + ); + assert_eq!( + Foo(3), + Foo(3), + "this assert should not be reached" + ); +} + +impl std::fmt::Debug for Foo { + fn fmt(&self, f: &mut std::fmt::Formatter) -> std::fmt::Result { + write!(f, "try and succeed")?; + Ok(()) + } +} + +static mut DEBUG_LEVEL_ENABLED: bool = false; + +macro_rules! debug { + ($($arg:tt)+) => ( + if unsafe { DEBUG_LEVEL_ENABLED } { + println!($($arg)+); + } + ); +} + +fn test1() { + debug!("debug is enabled"); + debug!("debug is enabled"); + let _ = 0; + debug!("debug is enabled"); + unsafe { + DEBUG_LEVEL_ENABLED = true; + } + debug!("debug is enabled"); +} + +macro_rules! call_debug { + ($($arg:tt)+) => ( + fn call_print(s: &str) { + print!("{}", s); + } + + call_print("called from call_debug: "); + debug!($($arg)+); + ); +} + +fn test2() { + call_debug!("debug is enabled"); +} + +fn main() { + test1(); + test2(); + test3(); +} diff --git a/src/test/ui/lifetimes/issue-83737-erasing-bound-vars.rs b/src/test/ui/lifetimes/issue-83737-erasing-bound-vars.rs new file mode 100644 index 0000000000000..c496a3556c84e --- /dev/null +++ b/src/test/ui/lifetimes/issue-83737-erasing-bound-vars.rs @@ -0,0 +1,14 @@ +// build-pass +// compile-flags: --edition 2018 +// compile-flags: --crate-type rlib + +use std::future::Future; + +async fn handle(slf: &F) +where + F: Fn(&()) -> Box Future + Unpin>, +{ + (slf)(&()).await; +} + +fn main() {} diff --git a/src/test/ui/lifetimes/issue-84604.rs b/src/test/ui/lifetimes/issue-84604.rs new file mode 100644 index 0000000000000..df8368da0a09a --- /dev/null +++ b/src/test/ui/lifetimes/issue-84604.rs @@ -0,0 +1,9 @@ +// run-pass +// compile-flags: -Zsymbol-mangling-version=v0 + +pub fn f() {} +pub trait Frob {} +fn main() { + f::>(); + f:: Frob>(); +}