Commit Graph

1283 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Jonathan Brouwer 6e3c17424d Rollup merge of #153702 - SpriteOvO:guard-matcher, r=davidtwco
Add macro matcher for `guard` fragment specifier

Tracking issue #153104

This PR implements a new `guard` macro matcher to match `if-let` guards (specifically [`MatchArmGuard`](https://github.com/rust-lang/reference/blob/50a1075e879be75aeec436252c84eef0fad489f4/src/expressions/match-expr.md#match-guards)). In the upcoming PR, we can use this new matcher in the `matches!` and `assert_matches!` macros to support their use with `if-let` guards. (see #152313)

The original `Expr` used to represent a guard has been wrapped in a new `Guard` type, allowing us to carry the span information of the leading `if` keyword. However, it might be even better to include the `if` keyword in the `Guard` type as well? I've left a FIXME comment in the code.
2026-03-25 19:52:50 +01:00
Jonathan Brouwer 0cd8de3843 Rollup merge of #153049 - Darksonn:kasan-sw-tags, r=fmease
Add `-Zsanitize=kernel-hwaddress`

The Linux kernel has a config option called `CONFIG_KASAN_SW_TAGS`  that enables `-fsanitize=kernel-hwaddress`. This is not supported by Rust.

One slightly awkward detail is that `#[sanitize(address = "off")]` applies to both `-Zsanitize=address` and `-Zsanitize=kernel-address`. Probably it was done this way because both are the same LLVM pass. I replicated this logic here for hwaddress, but it might be undesirable.

Note that `#[sanitize(kernel_hwaddress = "off")]` could be supported as an annotation on statics, but since it's also missing for `#[sanitize(hwaddress = "off")]`, I did not add it.

MCP: https://github.com/rust-lang/compiler-team/issues/975
Tracking issue: https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/154171

cc @rcvalle @maurer @ojeda
2026-03-25 19:52:49 +01:00
Romain Perier e0aed9c5f6 Point to the tracking issue for #[diagnostic::on_move]
Now that the tracking issue has been opened, point to it.
2026-03-21 19:18:20 +01:00
Stuart Cook 734cca0053 Rollup merge of #150935 - rperier:provide_diagnostic_on_move_for_smart_pointers, r=JonathanBrouwer
Introduce #[diagnostic::on_move(message)]

cc rust-lang/rust#149862

This is a first proposal. I have deliberately kept it simpler than `diagnostic::on_unimplemented`.

Few questions/remarks:

- Do I need to move the OnMoveDirective logic into a dedicated module perhaps ? let's say into compiler/rustc_borrowck/src/diagnostics/on_move.rs
- No problems to depend on crates like `rustc_ast` from the borrowck ?
- Notes are not supported yet. While message and label are very static , in the sense that they are emitted in the same way from the same place in the borrowck, it is not the case for the notes. It would make the code more complex. But, I can add support for notes if it does make sense.

Suggestions are welcomed !
2026-03-20 15:33:05 +11:00
Alice Ryhl a197752e88 Add kernel-hwaddress sanitizer
Signed-off-by: Alice Ryhl <aliceryhl@google.com>
2026-03-17 20:23:59 +00:00
Stuart Cook 4625821025 Rollup merge of #153818 - oli-obk:const-closures, r=fee1-dead
Reimplement const closures

Tracking issue: rust-lang/rust#106003

Best reviewed commit-by-commit

The old solver can't handle `for<'a> |x: &'a()| ()` closures in const contexts, but that feature is unstable itself, so we can just leave it to the next solver to handle.

We need a lot more tests, we're testing the bare minimum of success and failure paths right now.

r? @fee1-dead
2026-03-14 17:30:24 +11:00
Oli Scherer c521b8084f Remove the incomplete marker from const closures 2026-03-13 20:29:43 +00:00
Asuna 9729bb2558 Add macro matcher for guard fragment specifier 2026-03-12 02:18:34 +00:00
cyrgani c909ae5a35 add test that an incomplete feature emits a warning 2026-03-11 18:26:49 +00:00
Romain Perier 965f1e7681 Introduce #[diagnostic::on_move]
This might be helpful for smart pointers to explains why they aren't Copy
and what to do instead or just to let the user know that .clone() is very
cheap and can be called without a performance penalty.
2026-03-11 16:56:19 +01:00
Jonathan Brouwer 8120cc4c49 Rollup merge of #153053 - cyrgani:deref-patterns-not-imcomplete, r=fee1-dead,Nadrieril
stop marking `deref_patterns` as an incomplete feature

This PR removes the `incomplete_feature` warning for `deref_patterns`. The reason given for this in the tracking issue (rust-lang/rust#87121) was
> Per policy, the `incomplete_feature` is supposed to stay on until the feature has an accepted RFC. We're slowly working on writing up that RFC so it'll take some more time unfortunately.
>
> I don't know of any compiler crashes it causes today. The feature should be pretty usable.

However, I could not find any evidence of such a policy. The [lint documentation](https://doc.rust-lang.org/rustc/lints/listing/warn-by-default.html#incomplete-features) for `incomplete_features` also only mentions features that are more likely to cause errors.
There are also many other features without an RFC that are not considered incomplete, e.g. `macro_metavar_expr_concat`, `negative_impls` or `yeet_expr`.
The feature does not cause any known ICEs either.

The concrete motivation is to use this feature to replace `box_patterns` in the compiler and pave the way towards removing that legacy feature.
2026-03-09 17:56:15 +01:00
Jonathan Brouwer 0da3785222 Rollup merge of #152210 - Ozzy1423:attrs7, r=JonathanBrouwer
Gate #![reexport_test_harness_main] properly

Address the FIXME

Removed from `issue-43106-gating-of-builtin-attrs.rs` since that is for stable attributes only.

This would be a breaking change, search of github shows it is mostly but not always used with `#![test_runner]` which is already gated correctly.

Details:
https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/50297

Feel free to close this issue if you think it is not worth addressing the FIXME...
2026-03-07 20:02:30 +01:00
Josh Stone 78157ddde9 Replace version placeholders with 1.95.0
(cherry picked from commit bad24ccbec)
2026-03-07 10:42:01 -08:00
Jonathan Brouwer 23e27344e9 Rollup merge of #153300 - fmease:test-attrs-tweaks, r=JonathanBrouwer
Tweak some of our internal `#[rustc_*]` TEST attributes

I think I might be the one who's used the internal TEST attrs `#[rustc_{dump_predicates,object_lifetime_default,outlives,variance}]` the most in recent times, I might even be the only one. As such I've noticed some recent-ish issues that haven't been fixed so far and which keep bothering me. Moreover I have a longstanding urge to rename several of these attributes which I couldn't contain anymore.

[`#[rustc_*]` TEST attributes](https://rustc-dev-guide.rust-lang.org/compiler-debugging.html#rustc_-test-attributes) are internal attributes that basically allow you to dump the output of specific queries for use in UI tests or for debugging purposes.

1. When some of these attributes were ported over to the new parsing API, their targets were unnecessarily restricted. I've kept encountering these incorrect "attribute cannot be used" errors all the while HIR analysis happily & correctly dumped the requested data below it. I've now relaxed their targets.
2. Since we now have target checking for the internal attributes I figured that it's unhelpful if we still intentionally crashed on invalid targets, so I've got rid of that.
3. I've always been annoyed that most of these (very old) attributes don't contain the word `dump` in their name (rendering their purpose non-obvious) and that some of their names diverge quite a bit from the corresponding query name. I've now rectified that. The new names take longer to type but it's still absolutely acceptable imo.

---

I haven't renamed all of the TEST attributes to follow the `rustc_dump_` scheme since that's quite tedious. If it's okay with you I'd like to postpone that (e.g., `rustc_{def_path,hidden_type…,layout,regions,symbol_name}`).

I've noticed that the parsers for TEST attrs are spread across `rustc_dump.rs`, `rustc_internal.rs` & `test_attrs.rs` which is a bit confusing. Since the new names are prefixed with `rustc_dump_` I've moved their parsers into `rustc_dump.rs` but of course they are still TEST attrs. IIRC, `test_attrs.rs` also contains non-`rustc_`-TEST attrs, so we can't just merge these two files. I guess that'll sort itself out in the future when I tackle the other internal TEST attrs.

r\? Jana || Jonathan
2026-03-04 19:30:39 +01:00
Jonathan Brouwer 1c44dbd580 Rollup merge of #152164 - mu001999-contrib:lint/unused_features, r=JonathanBrouwer
Lint unused features

*[View all comments](https://triagebot.infra.rust-lang.org/gh-comments/rust-lang/rust/pull/152164)*

Fixes rust-lang/rust#44232
Fixes rust-lang/rust#151752

---

This PR records used features through query side effect, then reports unsued features finally.
2026-03-04 19:30:36 +01:00
Oscar Bray 4af572d84e Gate #![reexport_test_harness_main] properly 2026-03-04 08:29:44 +00:00
Jonathan Brouwer bef489b0ce Rollup merge of #152943 - CoCo-Japan-pan:impl-restriction-parse, r=Urgau,jhpratt
Parse `impl` restrictions

This PR implements the parsing logic for `impl` restrictions (e.g., `pub impl(crate) trait Foo {}`) as proposed in [RFC 3323](https://rust-lang.github.io/rfcs/3323-restrictions.html).
As the first step of the RFC implementation, this PR focuses strictly on the parsing phase. The new syntax is guarded by the `#![feature(impl_restriction)]` feature gate.
This implementation basically follows the pattern used in rust-lang/rust#141754.

r? @jhpratt
2026-03-03 13:08:43 +01:00
León Orell Valerian Liehr 722fcbb72e Rename #[rustc_object_lifetime_default] to #[rustc_dump_object_lifetime_defaults] 2026-03-02 19:31:15 +01:00
León Orell Valerian Liehr 6af78890bc Rename #![rustc_variance_of_opaques] to #![rustc_dump_variances_of_opaques] 2026-03-02 19:31:15 +01:00
León Orell Valerian Liehr 6bb6b11d9d Rename #[rustc_variance] to #[rustc_dump_variances] 2026-03-02 19:31:15 +01:00
León Orell Valerian Liehr c3a40e26e4 Rename #[rustc_outlives] to #[rustc_dump_inferred_outlives] 2026-03-02 19:31:14 +01:00
mu001999 7f3bbe371f Report unused features 2026-03-02 09:38:03 +08:00
CoCo-Japan-pan a0ccef6f25 Add impl_restriction feature 2026-02-28 13:56:56 +09:00
Benno Lossin 7b428597ff add field representing types 2026-02-27 15:54:20 +01:00
cyrgani 06b0bd21d7 stop marking deref_patterns as an incomplete feature 2026-02-24 17:43:06 +00:00
Folkert de Vries 14d29f9ae2 Stabilize cfg_select 2026-02-22 19:59:25 +01:00
bors e0cb264b81 Auto merge of #141295 - Kivooeo:if-let-guard-stable, r=fee1-dead,est31
Stabilize `if let` guards (`feature(if_let_guard)`)



## Summary

This proposes the stabilization of `if let` guards (tracking issue: rust-lang/rust#51114, RFC: rust-lang/rfcs#2294). This feature allows `if let` expressions to be used directly within match arm guards, enabling conditional pattern matching within guard clauses.

## What is being stabilized

The ability to use `if let` expressions within match arm guards.

Example:

```rust
enum Command {
    Run(String),
    Stop,
    Pause,
}

fn process_command(cmd: Command, state: &mut String) {
    match cmd {
        Command::Run(name) if let Some(first_char) = name.chars().next() && first_char.is_ascii_alphabetic() => {
            // Both `name` and `first_char` are available here
            println!("Running command: {} (starts with '{}')", name, first_char);
            state.push_str(&format!("Running {}", name));
        }
        Command::Run(name) => {
            println!("Cannot run command '{}'. Invalid name.", name);
        }
        Command::Stop if state.contains("running") => {
            println!("Stopping current process.");
            state.clear();
        }
        _ => {
            println!("Unhandled command or state.");
        }
    }
}
```

## Motivation

The primary motivation for `if let` guards is to reduce nesting and improve readability when conditional logic depends on pattern matching. Without this feature, such logic requires nested `if let` statements within match arms:

```rust
// Without if let guards
match value {
    Some(x) => {
        if let Ok(y) = compute(x) {
            // Both `x` and `y` are available here
            println!("{}, {}", x, y);
        }
    }
    _ => {}
}

// With if let guards
match value {
    Some(x) if let Ok(y) = compute(x) => {
        // Both `x` and `y` are available here
        println!("{}, {}", x, y);
    }
    _ => {}
}
```

## Implementation and Testing

The feature has been implemented and tested comprehensively across different scenarios:

### Core Functionality Tests

**Scoping and variable binding:**
- [`scope.rs`](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/blob/5796073c134eaac30475f9a19462c4e716c9119c/tests/ui/rfcs/rfc-2294-if-let-guard/scope.rs) - Verifies that bindings created in `if let` guards are properly scoped and available in match arms
- [`shadowing.rs`](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/blob/5796073c134eaac30475f9a19462c4e716c9119c/tests/ui/rfcs/rfc-2294-if-let-guard/shadowing.rs) - Tests that variable shadowing works correctly within guards
- [`scoping-consistency.rs`](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/blob/5796073c134eaac30475f9a19462c4e716c9119c/tests/ui/rfcs/rfc-2294-if-let-guard/scoping-consistency.rs) - Ensures temporaries in guards remain valid for the duration of their match arms

**Type system integration:**
- [`type-inference.rs`](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/blob/5796073c134eaac30475f9a19462c4e716c9119c/tests/ui/rfcs/rfc-2294-if-let-guard/type-inference.rs) - Confirms type inference works correctly in `if let` guards  
- [`typeck.rs`](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/blob/5796073c134eaac30475f9a19462c4e716c9119c/tests/ui/rfcs/rfc-2294-if-let-guard/typeck.rs) - Verifies type mismatches are caught appropriately

**Pattern matching semantics:**
- [`exhaustive.rs`](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/blob/5796073c134eaac30475f9a19462c4e716c9119c/tests/ui/rfcs/rfc-2294-if-let-guard/exhaustive.rs) - Validates that `if let` guards are correctly handled in exhaustiveness analysis
- [`move-guard-if-let.rs`](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/blob/5796073c134eaac30475f9a19462c4e716c9119c/tests/ui/rfcs/rfc-2294-if-let-guard/move-guard-if-let.rs) and [`move-guard-if-let-chain.rs`](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/blob/5796073c134eaac30475f9a19462c4e716c9119c/tests/ui/rfcs/rfc-2294-if-let-guard/move-guard-if-let-chain.rs) - Test that conditional moves in guards are tracked correctly by the borrow checker

### Error Handling and Diagnostics

- [`warns.rs`](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/blob/5796073c134eaac30475f9a19462c4e716c9119c/tests/ui/rfcs/rfc-2294-if-let-guard/warns.rs) - Tests warnings for irrefutable patterns and unreachable code in guards
- [`parens.rs`](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/blob/5796073c134eaac30475f9a19462c4e716c9119c/tests/ui/rfcs/rfc-2294-if-let-guard/parens.rs) - Ensures parentheses around `let` expressions are properly rejected
- [`macro-expanded.rs`](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/blob/5796073c134eaac30475f9a19462c4e716c9119c/tests/ui/rfcs/rfc-2294-if-let-guard/macro-expanded.rs) - Verifies macro expansions that produce invalid constructs are caught
- [`guard-mutability-2.rs`](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/blob/5796073c134eaac30475f9a19462c4e716c9119c/tests/ui/rfcs/rfc-2294-if-let-guard/guard-mutability-2.rs) - Tests mutability and ownership violations in guards
- [`ast-validate-guards.rs`](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/blob/5796073c134eaac30475f9a19462c4e716c9119c/tests/ui/rfcs/rfc-2497-if-let-chains/ast-validate-guards.rs) - Validates AST-level syntax restrictions

### Drop Order and Temporaries

**Key insight:** Unlike `let_chains` in regular `if` expressions, `if let` guards do not have drop order inconsistencies because:
1. Match guards are clearly scoped to their arms
2. There is no "else block" equivalent that could cause temporal confusion

- [`drop-order.rs`](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/blob/5796073c134eaac30475f9a19462c4e716c9119c/tests/ui/rfcs/rfc-2294-if-let-guard/drop-order.rs) - Check drop order of temporaries create in match guards
- [`compare-drop-order.rs`](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/blob/aef3f5fdf052fbbc16e174aef5da6d50832ca316/tests/ui/rfcs/rfc-2294-if-let-guard/compare-drop-order.rs) - Compares drop order between `if let` guards and nested `if let` in match arms, confirming they behave identically across all editions
- rust-lang/rust#140981 - A complicated drop order test involved `let chain` was made by @est31
- [`drop-order-comparisons-let-chains.rs`](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/blob/902b4d28783e03e231d8513082cc30c4fcce5d95/tests/ui/drop/drop-order-comparisons-let-chains.rs) - Compares drop order between `let chains` in `if let guard` and regular `if` expressions
- [`if-let-guards.rs`](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/blob/5650d716e0589e2e145ce9027f35bd534e5f862a/tests/ui/drop/if-let-guards.rs) - Test correctness of drop order for bindings and temporaries
- [`if-let-guards-2`](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/blob/3a6c8c8f3d7ae654fdb6ce1255182bda21680655/tests/ui/drop/if-let-guards-2.rs) - The same test as above but more comprehensive and tests more interactions between different features and their drop order, checking that drop order is correct, created by @traviscross 

## Edition Compatibility

This feature stabilizes on all editions, unlike `let chains` which was limited to edition 2024. This is safe because:

1. `if let` guards don't suffer from the drop order issues that affected `let chains` in regular `if` expressions
2. The scoping is unambiguous - guards are clearly tied to their match arms
3. Extensive testing confirms identical behavior across all editions

## Interactions with Future Features

The lang team has reviewed potential interactions with planned "guard patterns" and determined that stabilizing `if let` guards now does not create obstacles for future work. The scoping and evaluation semantics established here align with what guard patterns will need.

## Unresolved Issues

- [x] - rust-lang/rust#140981
- [x] - added tests description by @jieyouxu request
- [x] - Concers from @scottmcm about stabilizing this across all editions
- [x] - check if drop order in all edition when using `let chains` inside `if let` guard is the same
- [x] - interactions with guard patters
- [x] - pattern bindings drops before guard bindings https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/143376
- [x] - documentaion (https://github.com/rust-lang/reference/pull/1957)
- [ ] (non-blocking) add tests for [this](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/145237) and [this](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/141295#issuecomment-3173059821)

---

**Related:**
- Tracking Issue: rust-lang/rust#51114  
- RFC: rust-lang/rfcs#2294
- Documentation PR: https://github.com/rust-lang/reference/pull/1957
2026-02-18 20:49:50 +00:00
Stuart Cook 8a2c6ea409 Rollup merge of #152778 - mu001999-contrib:fix/final-method, r=fmease
Update tracking issue number for final_associated_functions

From https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/151783#discussion_r2816929026
2026-02-18 17:29:51 +11:00
Stuart Cook e53dd52e16 Rollup merge of #152749 - cyrgani:rustc-allow-const, r=jdonszelmann
make `rustc_allow_const_fn_unstable` an actual `rustc_attrs` attribute

It is already named like one, but used to have its own feature gate, which this PR now removes in favor of just using `#![feature(rustc_attrs)]`.

Most of the diff is just the line number changes in `malformed-attrs.stderr`.
2026-02-18 17:29:49 +11:00
mu001999 d2580fdd58 Update tracking issue number for final_associated_functions 2026-02-18 10:35:02 +08:00
cyrgani 83ef5059d6 make rustc_allow_const_fn_unstable an actual rustc_attrs attribute 2026-02-17 20:16:29 +00:00
cyrgani 609fde8569 remove the issue_5723_bootstrap feature 2026-02-17 10:54:04 +00:00
Stuart Cook 910d4f4c09 Rollup merge of #152206 - tshepang:misc, r=davidtwco
misc doc improvements

These are things I collected as I was looking at code and docs
2026-02-17 13:02:23 +11:00
Stuart Cook 1367126837 Rollup merge of #151783 - mu001999-contrib:impl/final-method, r=fee1-dead
Implement RFC 3678: Final trait methods

Tracking: https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/131179

This PR is based on rust-lang/rust#130802, with some minor changes and conflict resolution.

Futhermore, this PR excludes final methods from the vtable of a dyn Trait.

And some excerpt from the original PR description:
> Implements the surface part of https://github.com/rust-lang/rfcs/pull/3678.
>
> I'm using the word "method" in the title, but in the diagnostics and the feature gate I used "associated function", since that's more accurate.

cc @joshtriplett
2026-02-17 13:02:21 +11:00
Kivooeo 964b63f42e if let guard stabilize 2026-02-16 12:24:15 +00:00
Folkert de Vries 981dacc34f feature-gate c-variadic definitions and calls in const contexts 2026-02-15 19:54:25 +01:00
Jonathan Brouwer 42a3c864d2 Remove deprecated_safe and its corresponding feature gate 2026-02-12 22:16:28 +01:00
mu001999 7077797f52 Parse and lower final for methods
Co-authored-by: Michael Goulet <michael@errs.io>
2026-02-12 15:12:29 +08:00
Keith-Cancel 73a991fb9d Allow provisional mgca syntax of type const <IDENT> = <EXPR> to be reconized.
Revert, but without type const.

Update symbol for feature err, then update suggestion output, and lastly update tests that change because of those.

Update these new tests with the correct syntax, and few existing tests with the new outputs the merge with main added.

Fix for tidyfmt and some errors when manually resolving a merge conflicts.

Update these tests to use update error messages and type const syntax.

Update comments and error message to use new syntax instead of old type_const attribute.

Remove the type_const attribute

update some more tests to use the new syntax.

Update these test cases.

update feature gate test

Change gate logic for `mgca_type_const_syntax` to work also if `min_generic_const_args` is enabled.

Create a new feature gate that checks for the feature before expansion.

Make rustfmt handle the `type const` syntax correctly.

Add a convience method to check if a RhsKind is type const.

Rename `Const` discriminant to `Body` for `ConstItemRhsKind`

Give the `TraitItemKind` flag an enum instead of a simple bool to better describe what the flag is for.

Update formatting for these match statements.

Update clippy test to use type const syntax.

Update test to use type const syntax.

update rustfmt to match ast items.

Update clippy to match ast and hir items.

Few more test cases that used old attribute, instead of 'type const'

Update to match the output from the feature gate checks.

tidyfmt adjustments.

Update the is_type_const, so I can constrain record!(..) in encoder.rs

Update conditional compilation test.

Move the feature gate to after expansion to allow for cfg(...) to work.

Update some more tests to use the new syntax.

Update type const tests in associated-const-bindings to use new syntax.

Don't check based off the attribute, but the item here.

Update some tests outside of the const_generics folder that were using #[type_const]

update the tests in associated consts that use #[type_const] to use type const

Update these mgca tests with the type const syntax.

Add a flag to TraitItemKind for detecting type const for now. Maybe later change ItemConstRhs to have optional consts but that touches a lot more lines of code.

Don't need into for these now that it's a query.

Add is_type_const query to handle foreign def ids.

update this test to use type const syntax.

Fix logic here, we only want to lower if there is expression in this case.

Update built-in macros to use ConstItemRhsKind

Update more instance of the old ConstItemRhs.

Rename ConstItemKind to ConstItemRhsKind, I noticed there is a typed called ConstantItemKind, so add the Rhs to the name to avoid confusion.

Update lower to use ConstItemKind

Add an other helper method to check if the rhs kinda has an expr.

Update item parse to use ConstItemKind enum.

Felt the field name could a be little clear when editing a few other things.

Change the ConstItem struct see know if we have a type const or regular const.

Make sure this syntax is properly feature gated.
2026-02-09 07:59:24 -08:00
Noah Lev 9a30ec8149 Implement MVP for opaque generic const arguments
This is meant to be the interim successor to generic const expressions.
Essentially, const item RHS's will be allowed to do arbitrary const
operations using generics. The limitation is that these const items will
be treated opaquely, like ADTs in nominal typing, such that uses of them
will only be equal if the same const item is referenced. In other words,
two const items with the exact same RHS will not be considered equal.

I also added some logic to check feature gates that depend on others
being enabled (like oGCA depending on mGCA).

= Coherence =

During coherence, OGCA consts should be normalized ambiguously because
they are opaque but eventually resolved to a real value. We don't want
two OGCAs that have the same value to be treated as distinct for
coherence purposes. (Just like opaque types.)

This actually doesn't work yet because there are pre-existing
fundamental issues with equate relations involving consts that need to
be normalized. The problem is that we normalize only one layer of the
const item and don't actually process the resulting anon const. Normally
the created inference variable should be handled, which in this case
would cause us to hit the anon const, but that's not happening.
Specifically, `visit_const` on `Generalizer` should be updated to be
similar to `visit_ty`.
2026-02-08 18:15:11 +00:00
Jonathan Brouwer 972a53167c Rollup merge of #149960 - folkertdev:cfg-select-unreachable-lint, r=JonathanBrouwer
add `unreachable_cfg_select_predicates` lint

tracking issue: https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/115585

Split out from https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/149783. This lint is emitted on branches of a `cfg_select!` that are statically known to be unreachable. The lint is only emitted when the feature is enabled, so this change specifically does not need an FCP, and the lint will be stabilized alongside the feature (see https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/149783#issuecomment-3648000286).
2026-02-07 16:04:40 +01:00
Tshepang Mbambo 3be2843107 make docs render better by separating intro from rest of paragraph 2026-02-07 04:25:02 +02:00
Tshepang Mbambo 6bb8cc619e obsolete comment
`since` is now a field of one of the parameters
2026-02-07 04:25:02 +02:00
Folkert de Vries 8aea4b1775 add unreachable_cfg_select_predicates lint
This is emitted on branches of a `cfg_select!` that are statically known
to be unreachable.
2026-02-07 02:19:42 +01:00
Taiki Endo 8cbc623c3a Add avr_target_feature 2026-02-05 19:58:41 +09:00
Deadbeef 02e10b2d90 fix issues and ui tests, address reviews 2026-01-30 15:59:34 +00:00
Deadbeef 38ee80d48e add #[rustc_non_const_trait_method] 2026-01-30 15:52:38 +00:00
bors 75963ce795 Auto merge of #151065 - nagisa:add-preserve-none-abi, r=petrochenkov
abi: add a rust-preserve-none calling convention

This is the conceptual opposite of the rust-cold calling convention and is particularly useful in combination with the new `explicit_tail_calls` feature.

For relatively tight loops implemented with tail calling (`become`) each of the function with the regular calling convention is still responsible for restoring the initial value of the preserved registers. So it is not unusual to end up with a situation where each step in the tail call loop is spilling and reloading registers, along the lines of:

    foo:
        push r12
        ; do things
        pop r12
        jmp next_step

This adds up quickly, especially when most of the clobberable registers are already used to pass arguments or other uses.

I was thinking of making the name of this ABI a little less LLVM-derived and more like a conceptual inverse of `rust-cold`, but could not come with a great name (`rust-cold` is itself not a great name: cold in what context? from which perspective? is it supposed to mean that the function is rarely called?)
2026-01-25 02:49:32 +00:00
Simonas Kazlauskas 6db94dbc25 abi: add a rust-preserve-none calling convention
This is the conceptual opposite of the rust-cold calling convention and
is particularly useful in combination with the new `explicit_tail_calls`
feature.

For relatively tight loops implemented with tail calling (`become`) each
of the function with the regular calling convention is still responsible
for restoring the initial value of the preserved registers. So it is not
unusual to end up with a situation where each step in the tail call loop
is spilling and reloading registers, along the lines of:

    foo:
        push r12
        ; do things
        pop r12
        jmp next_step

This adds up quickly, especially when most of the clobberable registers
are already used to pass arguments or other uses.

I was thinking of making the name of this ABI a little less LLVM-derived
and more like a conceptual inverse of `rust-cold`, but could not come
with a great name (`rust-cold` is itself not a great name: cold in what
context? from which perspective? is it supposed to mean that the
function is rarely called?)
2026-01-24 19:23:17 +02:00
Matthias Krüger 0bb15457de Rollup merge of #149174 - GrigorenkoPV:const_block_item, r=me,ytmimi
`const` blocks as a `mod` item

Tracking issue: rust-lang/rust#149226

This adds support for writing `const { ... }` as an item in a module. In the current implementation, this is a unique AST item that gets lowered to `const _: () = const { ... };` in HIR.

rustfmt support included.

TODO:
- `pub const { ... }` does not make sense (see rust-lang/rust#147136). Reject it. Should this be rejected by the parser or smth?
- Improve diagnostics (preferably they should not mention the fake `_` ident).
2026-01-24 15:35:08 +01:00