1 //! This module contains `TyKind` and its major components. 2 3 #![allow(rustc::usage_of_ty_tykind)] 4 5 use self::TyKind::*; 6 7 use crate::infer::canonical::Canonical; 8 use crate::ty::fold::ValidateBoundVars; 9 use crate::ty::subst::{GenericArg, InternalSubsts, Subst, SubstsRef}; 10 use crate::ty::InferTy::{self, *}; 11 use crate::ty::{ 12 self, AdtDef, DefIdTree, Discr, Ty, TyCtxt, TypeFlags, TypeFoldable, WithConstness, 13 }; 14 use crate::ty::{DelaySpanBugEmitted, List, ParamEnv, TyS}; 15 use polonius_engine::Atom; 16 use rustc_data_structures::captures::Captures; 17 use rustc_hir as hir; 18 use rustc_hir::def_id::DefId; 19 use rustc_index::vec::Idx; 20 use rustc_macros::HashStable; 21 use rustc_span::symbol::{kw, Symbol}; 22 use rustc_target::abi::VariantIdx; 23 use rustc_target::spec::abi; 24 use std::borrow::Cow; 25 use std::cmp::Ordering; 26 use std::marker::PhantomData; 27 use std::ops::Range; 28 use ty::util::IntTypeExt; 29 30 #[derive(Clone, Copy, PartialEq, Eq, PartialOrd, Ord, Hash, Debug, TyEncodable, TyDecodable)] 31 #[derive(HashStable, TypeFoldable, Lift)] 32 pub struct TypeAndMut<'tcx> { 33 pub ty: Ty<'tcx>, 34 pub mutbl: hir::Mutability, 35 } 36 37 #[derive(Clone, PartialEq, PartialOrd, Eq, Ord, Hash, TyEncodable, TyDecodable, Copy)] 38 #[derive(HashStable)] 39 /// A "free" region `fr` can be interpreted as "some region 40 /// at least as big as the scope `fr.scope`". 41 pub struct FreeRegion { 42 pub scope: DefId, 43 pub bound_region: BoundRegionKind, 44 } 45 46 #[derive(Clone, PartialEq, PartialOrd, Eq, Ord, Hash, TyEncodable, TyDecodable, Copy)] 47 #[derive(HashStable)] 48 pub enum BoundRegionKind { 49 /// An anonymous region parameter for a given fn (&T) 50 BrAnon(u32), 51 52 /// Named region parameters for functions (a in &'a T) 53 /// 54 /// The `DefId` is needed to distinguish free regions in 55 /// the event of shadowing. 56 BrNamed(DefId, Symbol), 57 58 /// Anonymous region for the implicit env pointer parameter 59 /// to a closure 60 BrEnv, 61 } 62 63 #[derive(Copy, Clone, PartialEq, Eq, Hash, TyEncodable, TyDecodable, Debug, PartialOrd, Ord)] 64 #[derive(HashStable)] 65 pub struct BoundRegion { 66 pub var: BoundVar, 67 pub kind: BoundRegionKind, 68 } 69 70 impl BoundRegionKind { is_named(&self) -> bool71 pub fn is_named(&self) -> bool { 72 match *self { 73 BoundRegionKind::BrNamed(_, name) => name != kw::UnderscoreLifetime, 74 _ => false, 75 } 76 } 77 } 78 79 /// Defines the kinds of types. 80 /// 81 /// N.B., if you change this, you'll probably want to change the corresponding 82 /// AST structure in `rustc_ast/src/ast.rs` as well. 83 #[derive(Clone, PartialEq, Eq, PartialOrd, Ord, Hash, TyEncodable, TyDecodable, Debug)] 84 #[derive(HashStable)] 85 #[rustc_diagnostic_item = "TyKind"] 86 pub enum TyKind<'tcx> { 87 /// The primitive boolean type. Written as `bool`. 88 Bool, 89 90 /// The primitive character type; holds a Unicode scalar value 91 /// (a non-surrogate code point). Written as `char`. 92 Char, 93 94 /// A primitive signed integer type. For example, `i32`. 95 Int(ty::IntTy), 96 97 /// A primitive unsigned integer type. For example, `u32`. 98 Uint(ty::UintTy), 99 100 /// A primitive floating-point type. For example, `f64`. 101 Float(ty::FloatTy), 102 103 /// Algebraic data types (ADT). For example: structures, enumerations and unions. 104 /// 105 /// InternalSubsts here, possibly against intuition, *may* contain `Param`s. 106 /// That is, even after substitution it is possible that there are type 107 /// variables. This happens when the `Adt` corresponds to an ADT 108 /// definition and not a concrete use of it. 109 Adt(&'tcx AdtDef, SubstsRef<'tcx>), 110 111 /// An unsized FFI type that is opaque to Rust. Written as `extern type T`. 112 Foreign(DefId), 113 114 /// The pointee of a string slice. Written as `str`. 115 Str, 116 117 /// An array with the given length. Written as `[T; n]`. 118 Array(Ty<'tcx>, &'tcx ty::Const<'tcx>), 119 120 /// The pointee of an array slice. Written as `[T]`. 121 Slice(Ty<'tcx>), 122 123 /// A raw pointer. Written as `*mut T` or `*const T` 124 RawPtr(TypeAndMut<'tcx>), 125 126 /// A reference; a pointer with an associated lifetime. Written as 127 /// `&'a mut T` or `&'a T`. 128 Ref(Region<'tcx>, Ty<'tcx>, hir::Mutability), 129 130 /// The anonymous type of a function declaration/definition. Each 131 /// function has a unique type, which is output (for a function 132 /// named `foo` returning an `i32`) as `fn() -> i32 {foo}`. 133 /// 134 /// For example the type of `bar` here: 135 /// 136 /// ```rust 137 /// fn foo() -> i32 { 1 } 138 /// let bar = foo; // bar: fn() -> i32 {foo} 139 /// ``` 140 FnDef(DefId, SubstsRef<'tcx>), 141 142 /// A pointer to a function. Written as `fn() -> i32`. 143 /// 144 /// For example the type of `bar` here: 145 /// 146 /// ```rust 147 /// fn foo() -> i32 { 1 } 148 /// let bar: fn() -> i32 = foo; 149 /// ``` 150 FnPtr(PolyFnSig<'tcx>), 151 152 /// A trait object. Written as `dyn for<'b> Trait<'b, Assoc = u32> + Send + 'a`. 153 Dynamic(&'tcx List<Binder<'tcx, ExistentialPredicate<'tcx>>>, ty::Region<'tcx>), 154 155 /// The anonymous type of a closure. Used to represent the type of 156 /// `|a| a`. 157 Closure(DefId, SubstsRef<'tcx>), 158 159 /// The anonymous type of a generator. Used to represent the type of 160 /// `|a| yield a`. 161 Generator(DefId, SubstsRef<'tcx>, hir::Movability), 162 163 /// A type representing the types stored inside a generator. 164 /// This should only appear in GeneratorInteriors. 165 GeneratorWitness(Binder<'tcx, &'tcx List<Ty<'tcx>>>), 166 167 /// The never type `!`. 168 Never, 169 170 /// A tuple type. For example, `(i32, bool)`. 171 /// Use `TyS::tuple_fields` to iterate over the field types. 172 Tuple(SubstsRef<'tcx>), 173 174 /// The projection of an associated type. For example, 175 /// `<T as Trait<..>>::N`. 176 Projection(ProjectionTy<'tcx>), 177 178 /// Opaque (`impl Trait`) type found in a return type. 179 /// The `DefId` comes either from 180 /// * the `impl Trait` ast::Ty node, 181 /// * or the `type Foo = impl Trait` declaration 182 /// The substitutions are for the generics of the function in question. 183 /// After typeck, the concrete type can be found in the `types` map. 184 Opaque(DefId, SubstsRef<'tcx>), 185 186 /// A type parameter; for example, `T` in `fn f<T>(x: T) {}`. 187 Param(ParamTy), 188 189 /// Bound type variable, used only when preparing a trait query. 190 Bound(ty::DebruijnIndex, BoundTy), 191 192 /// A placeholder type - universally quantified higher-ranked type. 193 Placeholder(ty::PlaceholderType), 194 195 /// A type variable used during type checking. 196 Infer(InferTy), 197 198 /// A placeholder for a type which could not be computed; this is 199 /// propagated to avoid useless error messages. 200 Error(DelaySpanBugEmitted), 201 } 202 203 impl TyKind<'tcx> { 204 #[inline] is_primitive(&self) -> bool205 pub fn is_primitive(&self) -> bool { 206 matches!(self, Bool | Char | Int(_) | Uint(_) | Float(_)) 207 } 208 209 /// Get the article ("a" or "an") to use with this type. article(&self) -> &'static str210 pub fn article(&self) -> &'static str { 211 match self { 212 Int(_) | Float(_) | Array(_, _) => "an", 213 Adt(def, _) if def.is_enum() => "an", 214 // This should never happen, but ICEing and causing the user's code 215 // to not compile felt too harsh. 216 Error(_) => "a", 217 _ => "a", 218 } 219 } 220 } 221 222 // `TyKind` is used a lot. Make sure it doesn't unintentionally get bigger. 223 #[cfg(all(target_arch = "x86_64", target_pointer_width = "64"))] 224 static_assert_size!(TyKind<'_>, 32); 225 226 /// A closure can be modeled as a struct that looks like: 227 /// 228 /// struct Closure<'l0...'li, T0...Tj, CK, CS, U>(...U); 229 /// 230 /// where: 231 /// 232 /// - 'l0...'li and T0...Tj are the generic parameters 233 /// in scope on the function that defined the closure, 234 /// - CK represents the *closure kind* (Fn vs FnMut vs FnOnce). This 235 /// is rather hackily encoded via a scalar type. See 236 /// `TyS::to_opt_closure_kind` for details. 237 /// - CS represents the *closure signature*, representing as a `fn()` 238 /// type. For example, `fn(u32, u32) -> u32` would mean that the closure 239 /// implements `CK<(u32, u32), Output = u32>`, where `CK` is the trait 240 /// specified above. 241 /// - U is a type parameter representing the types of its upvars, tupled up 242 /// (borrowed, if appropriate; that is, if a U field represents a by-ref upvar, 243 /// and the up-var has the type `Foo`, then that field of U will be `&Foo`). 244 /// 245 /// So, for example, given this function: 246 /// 247 /// fn foo<'a, T>(data: &'a mut T) { 248 /// do(|| data.count += 1) 249 /// } 250 /// 251 /// the type of the closure would be something like: 252 /// 253 /// struct Closure<'a, T, U>(...U); 254 /// 255 /// Note that the type of the upvar is not specified in the struct. 256 /// You may wonder how the impl would then be able to use the upvar, 257 /// if it doesn't know it's type? The answer is that the impl is 258 /// (conceptually) not fully generic over Closure but rather tied to 259 /// instances with the expected upvar types: 260 /// 261 /// impl<'b, 'a, T> FnMut() for Closure<'a, T, (&'b mut &'a mut T,)> { 262 /// ... 263 /// } 264 /// 265 /// You can see that the *impl* fully specified the type of the upvar 266 /// and thus knows full well that `data` has type `&'b mut &'a mut T`. 267 /// (Here, I am assuming that `data` is mut-borrowed.) 268 /// 269 /// Now, the last question you may ask is: Why include the upvar types 270 /// in an extra type parameter? The reason for this design is that the 271 /// upvar types can reference lifetimes that are internal to the 272 /// creating function. In my example above, for example, the lifetime 273 /// `'b` represents the scope of the closure itself; this is some 274 /// subset of `foo`, probably just the scope of the call to the to 275 /// `do()`. If we just had the lifetime/type parameters from the 276 /// enclosing function, we couldn't name this lifetime `'b`. Note that 277 /// there can also be lifetimes in the types of the upvars themselves, 278 /// if one of them happens to be a reference to something that the 279 /// creating fn owns. 280 /// 281 /// OK, you say, so why not create a more minimal set of parameters 282 /// that just includes the extra lifetime parameters? The answer is 283 /// primarily that it would be hard --- we don't know at the time when 284 /// we create the closure type what the full types of the upvars are, 285 /// nor do we know which are borrowed and which are not. In this 286 /// design, we can just supply a fresh type parameter and figure that 287 /// out later. 288 /// 289 /// All right, you say, but why include the type parameters from the 290 /// original function then? The answer is that codegen may need them 291 /// when monomorphizing, and they may not appear in the upvars. A 292 /// closure could capture no variables but still make use of some 293 /// in-scope type parameter with a bound (e.g., if our example above 294 /// had an extra `U: Default`, and the closure called `U::default()`). 295 /// 296 /// There is another reason. This design (implicitly) prohibits 297 /// closures from capturing themselves (except via a trait 298 /// object). This simplifies closure inference considerably, since it 299 /// means that when we infer the kind of a closure or its upvars, we 300 /// don't have to handle cycles where the decisions we make for 301 /// closure C wind up influencing the decisions we ought to make for 302 /// closure C (which would then require fixed point iteration to 303 /// handle). Plus it fixes an ICE. :P 304 /// 305 /// ## Generators 306 /// 307 /// Generators are handled similarly in `GeneratorSubsts`. The set of 308 /// type parameters is similar, but `CK` and `CS` are replaced by the 309 /// following type parameters: 310 /// 311 /// * `GS`: The generator's "resume type", which is the type of the 312 /// argument passed to `resume`, and the type of `yield` expressions 313 /// inside the generator. 314 /// * `GY`: The "yield type", which is the type of values passed to 315 /// `yield` inside the generator. 316 /// * `GR`: The "return type", which is the type of value returned upon 317 /// completion of the generator. 318 /// * `GW`: The "generator witness". 319 #[derive(Copy, Clone, Debug, TypeFoldable)] 320 pub struct ClosureSubsts<'tcx> { 321 /// Lifetime and type parameters from the enclosing function, 322 /// concatenated with a tuple containing the types of the upvars. 323 /// 324 /// These are separated out because codegen wants to pass them around 325 /// when monomorphizing. 326 pub substs: SubstsRef<'tcx>, 327 } 328 329 /// Struct returned by `split()`. 330 pub struct ClosureSubstsParts<'tcx, T> { 331 pub parent_substs: &'tcx [GenericArg<'tcx>], 332 pub closure_kind_ty: T, 333 pub closure_sig_as_fn_ptr_ty: T, 334 pub tupled_upvars_ty: T, 335 } 336 337 impl<'tcx> ClosureSubsts<'tcx> { 338 /// Construct `ClosureSubsts` from `ClosureSubstsParts`, containing `Substs` 339 /// for the closure parent, alongside additional closure-specific components. new( tcx: TyCtxt<'tcx>, parts: ClosureSubstsParts<'tcx, Ty<'tcx>>, ) -> ClosureSubsts<'tcx>340 pub fn new( 341 tcx: TyCtxt<'tcx>, 342 parts: ClosureSubstsParts<'tcx, Ty<'tcx>>, 343 ) -> ClosureSubsts<'tcx> { 344 ClosureSubsts { 345 substs: tcx.mk_substs( 346 parts.parent_substs.iter().copied().chain( 347 [parts.closure_kind_ty, parts.closure_sig_as_fn_ptr_ty, parts.tupled_upvars_ty] 348 .iter() 349 .map(|&ty| ty.into()), 350 ), 351 ), 352 } 353 } 354 355 /// Divides the closure substs into their respective components. 356 /// The ordering assumed here must match that used by `ClosureSubsts::new` above. split(self) -> ClosureSubstsParts<'tcx, GenericArg<'tcx>>357 fn split(self) -> ClosureSubstsParts<'tcx, GenericArg<'tcx>> { 358 match self.substs[..] { 359 [ref parent_substs @ .., closure_kind_ty, closure_sig_as_fn_ptr_ty, tupled_upvars_ty] => { 360 ClosureSubstsParts { 361 parent_substs, 362 closure_kind_ty, 363 closure_sig_as_fn_ptr_ty, 364 tupled_upvars_ty, 365 } 366 } 367 _ => bug!("closure substs missing synthetics"), 368 } 369 } 370 371 /// Returns `true` only if enough of the synthetic types are known to 372 /// allow using all of the methods on `ClosureSubsts` without panicking. 373 /// 374 /// Used primarily by `ty::print::pretty` to be able to handle closure 375 /// types that haven't had their synthetic types substituted in. is_valid(self) -> bool376 pub fn is_valid(self) -> bool { 377 self.substs.len() >= 3 378 && matches!(self.split().tupled_upvars_ty.expect_ty().kind(), Tuple(_)) 379 } 380 381 /// Returns the substitutions of the closure's parent. parent_substs(self) -> &'tcx [GenericArg<'tcx>]382 pub fn parent_substs(self) -> &'tcx [GenericArg<'tcx>] { 383 self.split().parent_substs 384 } 385 386 /// Returns an iterator over the list of types of captured paths by the closure. 387 /// In case there was a type error in figuring out the types of the captured path, an 388 /// empty iterator is returned. 389 #[inline] upvar_tys(self) -> impl Iterator<Item = Ty<'tcx>> + 'tcx390 pub fn upvar_tys(self) -> impl Iterator<Item = Ty<'tcx>> + 'tcx { 391 match self.tupled_upvars_ty().kind() { 392 TyKind::Error(_) => None, 393 TyKind::Tuple(..) => Some(self.tupled_upvars_ty().tuple_fields()), 394 TyKind::Infer(_) => bug!("upvar_tys called before capture types are inferred"), 395 ty => bug!("Unexpected representation of upvar types tuple {:?}", ty), 396 } 397 .into_iter() 398 .flatten() 399 } 400 401 /// Returns the tuple type representing the upvars for this closure. 402 #[inline] tupled_upvars_ty(self) -> Ty<'tcx>403 pub fn tupled_upvars_ty(self) -> Ty<'tcx> { 404 self.split().tupled_upvars_ty.expect_ty() 405 } 406 407 /// Returns the closure kind for this closure; may return a type 408 /// variable during inference. To get the closure kind during 409 /// inference, use `infcx.closure_kind(substs)`. kind_ty(self) -> Ty<'tcx>410 pub fn kind_ty(self) -> Ty<'tcx> { 411 self.split().closure_kind_ty.expect_ty() 412 } 413 414 /// Returns the `fn` pointer type representing the closure signature for this 415 /// closure. 416 // FIXME(eddyb) this should be unnecessary, as the shallowly resolved 417 // type is known at the time of the creation of `ClosureSubsts`, 418 // see `rustc_typeck::check::closure`. sig_as_fn_ptr_ty(self) -> Ty<'tcx>419 pub fn sig_as_fn_ptr_ty(self) -> Ty<'tcx> { 420 self.split().closure_sig_as_fn_ptr_ty.expect_ty() 421 } 422 423 /// Returns the closure kind for this closure; only usable outside 424 /// of an inference context, because in that context we know that 425 /// there are no type variables. 426 /// 427 /// If you have an inference context, use `infcx.closure_kind()`. kind(self) -> ty::ClosureKind428 pub fn kind(self) -> ty::ClosureKind { 429 self.kind_ty().to_opt_closure_kind().unwrap() 430 } 431 432 /// Extracts the signature from the closure. sig(self) -> ty::PolyFnSig<'tcx>433 pub fn sig(self) -> ty::PolyFnSig<'tcx> { 434 let ty = self.sig_as_fn_ptr_ty(); 435 match ty.kind() { 436 ty::FnPtr(sig) => *sig, 437 _ => bug!("closure_sig_as_fn_ptr_ty is not a fn-ptr: {:?}", ty.kind()), 438 } 439 } 440 } 441 442 /// Similar to `ClosureSubsts`; see the above documentation for more. 443 #[derive(Copy, Clone, Debug, TypeFoldable)] 444 pub struct GeneratorSubsts<'tcx> { 445 pub substs: SubstsRef<'tcx>, 446 } 447 448 pub struct GeneratorSubstsParts<'tcx, T> { 449 pub parent_substs: &'tcx [GenericArg<'tcx>], 450 pub resume_ty: T, 451 pub yield_ty: T, 452 pub return_ty: T, 453 pub witness: T, 454 pub tupled_upvars_ty: T, 455 } 456 457 impl<'tcx> GeneratorSubsts<'tcx> { 458 /// Construct `GeneratorSubsts` from `GeneratorSubstsParts`, containing `Substs` 459 /// for the generator parent, alongside additional generator-specific components. new( tcx: TyCtxt<'tcx>, parts: GeneratorSubstsParts<'tcx, Ty<'tcx>>, ) -> GeneratorSubsts<'tcx>460 pub fn new( 461 tcx: TyCtxt<'tcx>, 462 parts: GeneratorSubstsParts<'tcx, Ty<'tcx>>, 463 ) -> GeneratorSubsts<'tcx> { 464 GeneratorSubsts { 465 substs: tcx.mk_substs( 466 parts.parent_substs.iter().copied().chain( 467 [ 468 parts.resume_ty, 469 parts.yield_ty, 470 parts.return_ty, 471 parts.witness, 472 parts.tupled_upvars_ty, 473 ] 474 .iter() 475 .map(|&ty| ty.into()), 476 ), 477 ), 478 } 479 } 480 481 /// Divides the generator substs into their respective components. 482 /// The ordering assumed here must match that used by `GeneratorSubsts::new` above. split(self) -> GeneratorSubstsParts<'tcx, GenericArg<'tcx>>483 fn split(self) -> GeneratorSubstsParts<'tcx, GenericArg<'tcx>> { 484 match self.substs[..] { 485 [ref parent_substs @ .., resume_ty, yield_ty, return_ty, witness, tupled_upvars_ty] => { 486 GeneratorSubstsParts { 487 parent_substs, 488 resume_ty, 489 yield_ty, 490 return_ty, 491 witness, 492 tupled_upvars_ty, 493 } 494 } 495 _ => bug!("generator substs missing synthetics"), 496 } 497 } 498 499 /// Returns `true` only if enough of the synthetic types are known to 500 /// allow using all of the methods on `GeneratorSubsts` without panicking. 501 /// 502 /// Used primarily by `ty::print::pretty` to be able to handle generator 503 /// types that haven't had their synthetic types substituted in. is_valid(self) -> bool504 pub fn is_valid(self) -> bool { 505 self.substs.len() >= 5 506 && matches!(self.split().tupled_upvars_ty.expect_ty().kind(), Tuple(_)) 507 } 508 509 /// Returns the substitutions of the generator's parent. parent_substs(self) -> &'tcx [GenericArg<'tcx>]510 pub fn parent_substs(self) -> &'tcx [GenericArg<'tcx>] { 511 self.split().parent_substs 512 } 513 514 /// This describes the types that can be contained in a generator. 515 /// It will be a type variable initially and unified in the last stages of typeck of a body. 516 /// It contains a tuple of all the types that could end up on a generator frame. 517 /// The state transformation MIR pass may only produce layouts which mention types 518 /// in this tuple. Upvars are not counted here. witness(self) -> Ty<'tcx>519 pub fn witness(self) -> Ty<'tcx> { 520 self.split().witness.expect_ty() 521 } 522 523 /// Returns an iterator over the list of types of captured paths by the generator. 524 /// In case there was a type error in figuring out the types of the captured path, an 525 /// empty iterator is returned. 526 #[inline] upvar_tys(self) -> impl Iterator<Item = Ty<'tcx>> + 'tcx527 pub fn upvar_tys(self) -> impl Iterator<Item = Ty<'tcx>> + 'tcx { 528 match self.tupled_upvars_ty().kind() { 529 TyKind::Error(_) => None, 530 TyKind::Tuple(..) => Some(self.tupled_upvars_ty().tuple_fields()), 531 TyKind::Infer(_) => bug!("upvar_tys called before capture types are inferred"), 532 ty => bug!("Unexpected representation of upvar types tuple {:?}", ty), 533 } 534 .into_iter() 535 .flatten() 536 } 537 538 /// Returns the tuple type representing the upvars for this generator. 539 #[inline] tupled_upvars_ty(self) -> Ty<'tcx>540 pub fn tupled_upvars_ty(self) -> Ty<'tcx> { 541 self.split().tupled_upvars_ty.expect_ty() 542 } 543 544 /// Returns the type representing the resume type of the generator. resume_ty(self) -> Ty<'tcx>545 pub fn resume_ty(self) -> Ty<'tcx> { 546 self.split().resume_ty.expect_ty() 547 } 548 549 /// Returns the type representing the yield type of the generator. yield_ty(self) -> Ty<'tcx>550 pub fn yield_ty(self) -> Ty<'tcx> { 551 self.split().yield_ty.expect_ty() 552 } 553 554 /// Returns the type representing the return type of the generator. return_ty(self) -> Ty<'tcx>555 pub fn return_ty(self) -> Ty<'tcx> { 556 self.split().return_ty.expect_ty() 557 } 558 559 /// Returns the "generator signature", which consists of its yield 560 /// and return types. 561 /// 562 /// N.B., some bits of the code prefers to see this wrapped in a 563 /// binder, but it never contains bound regions. Probably this 564 /// function should be removed. poly_sig(self) -> PolyGenSig<'tcx>565 pub fn poly_sig(self) -> PolyGenSig<'tcx> { 566 ty::Binder::dummy(self.sig()) 567 } 568 569 /// Returns the "generator signature", which consists of its resume, yield 570 /// and return types. sig(self) -> GenSig<'tcx>571 pub fn sig(self) -> GenSig<'tcx> { 572 ty::GenSig { 573 resume_ty: self.resume_ty(), 574 yield_ty: self.yield_ty(), 575 return_ty: self.return_ty(), 576 } 577 } 578 } 579 580 impl<'tcx> GeneratorSubsts<'tcx> { 581 /// Generator has not been resumed yet. 582 pub const UNRESUMED: usize = 0; 583 /// Generator has returned or is completed. 584 pub const RETURNED: usize = 1; 585 /// Generator has been poisoned. 586 pub const POISONED: usize = 2; 587 588 const UNRESUMED_NAME: &'static str = "Unresumed"; 589 const RETURNED_NAME: &'static str = "Returned"; 590 const POISONED_NAME: &'static str = "Panicked"; 591 592 /// The valid variant indices of this generator. 593 #[inline] variant_range(&self, def_id: DefId, tcx: TyCtxt<'tcx>) -> Range<VariantIdx>594 pub fn variant_range(&self, def_id: DefId, tcx: TyCtxt<'tcx>) -> Range<VariantIdx> { 595 // FIXME requires optimized MIR 596 let num_variants = tcx.generator_layout(def_id).unwrap().variant_fields.len(); 597 VariantIdx::new(0)..VariantIdx::new(num_variants) 598 } 599 600 /// The discriminant for the given variant. Panics if the `variant_index` is 601 /// out of range. 602 #[inline] discriminant_for_variant( &self, def_id: DefId, tcx: TyCtxt<'tcx>, variant_index: VariantIdx, ) -> Discr<'tcx>603 pub fn discriminant_for_variant( 604 &self, 605 def_id: DefId, 606 tcx: TyCtxt<'tcx>, 607 variant_index: VariantIdx, 608 ) -> Discr<'tcx> { 609 // Generators don't support explicit discriminant values, so they are 610 // the same as the variant index. 611 assert!(self.variant_range(def_id, tcx).contains(&variant_index)); 612 Discr { val: variant_index.as_usize() as u128, ty: self.discr_ty(tcx) } 613 } 614 615 /// The set of all discriminants for the generator, enumerated with their 616 /// variant indices. 617 #[inline] discriminants( self, def_id: DefId, tcx: TyCtxt<'tcx>, ) -> impl Iterator<Item = (VariantIdx, Discr<'tcx>)> + Captures<'tcx>618 pub fn discriminants( 619 self, 620 def_id: DefId, 621 tcx: TyCtxt<'tcx>, 622 ) -> impl Iterator<Item = (VariantIdx, Discr<'tcx>)> + Captures<'tcx> { 623 self.variant_range(def_id, tcx).map(move |index| { 624 (index, Discr { val: index.as_usize() as u128, ty: self.discr_ty(tcx) }) 625 }) 626 } 627 628 /// Calls `f` with a reference to the name of the enumerator for the given 629 /// variant `v`. variant_name(v: VariantIdx) -> Cow<'static, str>630 pub fn variant_name(v: VariantIdx) -> Cow<'static, str> { 631 match v.as_usize() { 632 Self::UNRESUMED => Cow::from(Self::UNRESUMED_NAME), 633 Self::RETURNED => Cow::from(Self::RETURNED_NAME), 634 Self::POISONED => Cow::from(Self::POISONED_NAME), 635 _ => Cow::from(format!("Suspend{}", v.as_usize() - 3)), 636 } 637 } 638 639 /// The type of the state discriminant used in the generator type. 640 #[inline] discr_ty(&self, tcx: TyCtxt<'tcx>) -> Ty<'tcx>641 pub fn discr_ty(&self, tcx: TyCtxt<'tcx>) -> Ty<'tcx> { 642 tcx.types.u32 643 } 644 645 /// This returns the types of the MIR locals which had to be stored across suspension points. 646 /// It is calculated in rustc_const_eval::transform::generator::StateTransform. 647 /// All the types here must be in the tuple in GeneratorInterior. 648 /// 649 /// The locals are grouped by their variant number. Note that some locals may 650 /// be repeated in multiple variants. 651 #[inline] state_tys( self, def_id: DefId, tcx: TyCtxt<'tcx>, ) -> impl Iterator<Item = impl Iterator<Item = Ty<'tcx>> + Captures<'tcx>>652 pub fn state_tys( 653 self, 654 def_id: DefId, 655 tcx: TyCtxt<'tcx>, 656 ) -> impl Iterator<Item = impl Iterator<Item = Ty<'tcx>> + Captures<'tcx>> { 657 let layout = tcx.generator_layout(def_id).unwrap(); 658 layout.variant_fields.iter().map(move |variant| { 659 variant.iter().map(move |field| layout.field_tys[*field].subst(tcx, self.substs)) 660 }) 661 } 662 663 /// This is the types of the fields of a generator which are not stored in a 664 /// variant. 665 #[inline] prefix_tys(self) -> impl Iterator<Item = Ty<'tcx>>666 pub fn prefix_tys(self) -> impl Iterator<Item = Ty<'tcx>> { 667 self.upvar_tys() 668 } 669 } 670 671 #[derive(Debug, Copy, Clone, HashStable)] 672 pub enum UpvarSubsts<'tcx> { 673 Closure(SubstsRef<'tcx>), 674 Generator(SubstsRef<'tcx>), 675 } 676 677 impl<'tcx> UpvarSubsts<'tcx> { 678 /// Returns an iterator over the list of types of captured paths by the closure/generator. 679 /// In case there was a type error in figuring out the types of the captured path, an 680 /// empty iterator is returned. 681 #[inline] upvar_tys(self) -> impl Iterator<Item = Ty<'tcx>> + 'tcx682 pub fn upvar_tys(self) -> impl Iterator<Item = Ty<'tcx>> + 'tcx { 683 let tupled_tys = match self { 684 UpvarSubsts::Closure(substs) => substs.as_closure().tupled_upvars_ty(), 685 UpvarSubsts::Generator(substs) => substs.as_generator().tupled_upvars_ty(), 686 }; 687 688 match tupled_tys.kind() { 689 TyKind::Error(_) => None, 690 TyKind::Tuple(..) => Some(self.tupled_upvars_ty().tuple_fields()), 691 TyKind::Infer(_) => bug!("upvar_tys called before capture types are inferred"), 692 ty => bug!("Unexpected representation of upvar types tuple {:?}", ty), 693 } 694 .into_iter() 695 .flatten() 696 } 697 698 #[inline] tupled_upvars_ty(self) -> Ty<'tcx>699 pub fn tupled_upvars_ty(self) -> Ty<'tcx> { 700 match self { 701 UpvarSubsts::Closure(substs) => substs.as_closure().tupled_upvars_ty(), 702 UpvarSubsts::Generator(substs) => substs.as_generator().tupled_upvars_ty(), 703 } 704 } 705 } 706 707 /// An inline const is modeled like 708 /// 709 /// const InlineConst<'l0...'li, T0...Tj, R>: R; 710 /// 711 /// where: 712 /// 713 /// - 'l0...'li and T0...Tj are the generic parameters 714 /// inherited from the item that defined the inline const, 715 /// - R represents the type of the constant. 716 /// 717 /// When the inline const is instantiated, `R` is substituted as the actual inferred 718 /// type of the constant. The reason that `R` is represented as an extra type parameter 719 /// is the same reason that [`ClosureSubsts`] have `CS` and `U` as type parameters: 720 /// inline const can reference lifetimes that are internal to the creating function. 721 #[derive(Copy, Clone, Debug, TypeFoldable)] 722 pub struct InlineConstSubsts<'tcx> { 723 /// Generic parameters from the enclosing item, 724 /// concatenated with the inferred type of the constant. 725 pub substs: SubstsRef<'tcx>, 726 } 727 728 /// Struct returned by `split()`. 729 pub struct InlineConstSubstsParts<'tcx, T> { 730 pub parent_substs: &'tcx [GenericArg<'tcx>], 731 pub ty: T, 732 } 733 734 impl<'tcx> InlineConstSubsts<'tcx> { 735 /// Construct `InlineConstSubsts` from `InlineConstSubstsParts`. new( tcx: TyCtxt<'tcx>, parts: InlineConstSubstsParts<'tcx, Ty<'tcx>>, ) -> InlineConstSubsts<'tcx>736 pub fn new( 737 tcx: TyCtxt<'tcx>, 738 parts: InlineConstSubstsParts<'tcx, Ty<'tcx>>, 739 ) -> InlineConstSubsts<'tcx> { 740 InlineConstSubsts { 741 substs: tcx.mk_substs( 742 parts.parent_substs.iter().copied().chain(std::iter::once(parts.ty.into())), 743 ), 744 } 745 } 746 747 /// Divides the inline const substs into their respective components. 748 /// The ordering assumed here must match that used by `InlineConstSubsts::new` above. split(self) -> InlineConstSubstsParts<'tcx, GenericArg<'tcx>>749 fn split(self) -> InlineConstSubstsParts<'tcx, GenericArg<'tcx>> { 750 match self.substs[..] { 751 [ref parent_substs @ .., ty] => InlineConstSubstsParts { parent_substs, ty }, 752 _ => bug!("inline const substs missing synthetics"), 753 } 754 } 755 756 /// Returns the substitutions of the inline const's parent. parent_substs(self) -> &'tcx [GenericArg<'tcx>]757 pub fn parent_substs(self) -> &'tcx [GenericArg<'tcx>] { 758 self.split().parent_substs 759 } 760 761 /// Returns the type of this inline const. ty(self) -> Ty<'tcx>762 pub fn ty(self) -> Ty<'tcx> { 763 self.split().ty.expect_ty() 764 } 765 } 766 767 #[derive(Debug, Copy, Clone, PartialEq, PartialOrd, Ord, Eq, Hash, TyEncodable, TyDecodable)] 768 #[derive(HashStable, TypeFoldable)] 769 pub enum ExistentialPredicate<'tcx> { 770 /// E.g., `Iterator`. 771 Trait(ExistentialTraitRef<'tcx>), 772 /// E.g., `Iterator::Item = T`. 773 Projection(ExistentialProjection<'tcx>), 774 /// E.g., `Send`. 775 AutoTrait(DefId), 776 } 777 778 impl<'tcx> ExistentialPredicate<'tcx> { 779 /// Compares via an ordering that will not change if modules are reordered or other changes are 780 /// made to the tree. In particular, this ordering is preserved across incremental compilations. stable_cmp(&self, tcx: TyCtxt<'tcx>, other: &Self) -> Ordering781 pub fn stable_cmp(&self, tcx: TyCtxt<'tcx>, other: &Self) -> Ordering { 782 use self::ExistentialPredicate::*; 783 match (*self, *other) { 784 (Trait(_), Trait(_)) => Ordering::Equal, 785 (Projection(ref a), Projection(ref b)) => { 786 tcx.def_path_hash(a.item_def_id).cmp(&tcx.def_path_hash(b.item_def_id)) 787 } 788 (AutoTrait(ref a), AutoTrait(ref b)) => { 789 tcx.trait_def(*a).def_path_hash.cmp(&tcx.trait_def(*b).def_path_hash) 790 } 791 (Trait(_), _) => Ordering::Less, 792 (Projection(_), Trait(_)) => Ordering::Greater, 793 (Projection(_), _) => Ordering::Less, 794 (AutoTrait(_), _) => Ordering::Greater, 795 } 796 } 797 } 798 799 impl<'tcx> Binder<'tcx, ExistentialPredicate<'tcx>> { with_self_ty(&self, tcx: TyCtxt<'tcx>, self_ty: Ty<'tcx>) -> ty::Predicate<'tcx>800 pub fn with_self_ty(&self, tcx: TyCtxt<'tcx>, self_ty: Ty<'tcx>) -> ty::Predicate<'tcx> { 801 use crate::ty::ToPredicate; 802 match self.skip_binder() { 803 ExistentialPredicate::Trait(tr) => { 804 self.rebind(tr).with_self_ty(tcx, self_ty).without_const().to_predicate(tcx) 805 } 806 ExistentialPredicate::Projection(p) => { 807 self.rebind(p.with_self_ty(tcx, self_ty)).to_predicate(tcx) 808 } 809 ExistentialPredicate::AutoTrait(did) => { 810 let trait_ref = self.rebind(ty::TraitRef { 811 def_id: did, 812 substs: tcx.mk_substs_trait(self_ty, &[]), 813 }); 814 trait_ref.without_const().to_predicate(tcx) 815 } 816 } 817 } 818 } 819 820 impl<'tcx> List<ty::Binder<'tcx, ExistentialPredicate<'tcx>>> { 821 /// Returns the "principal `DefId`" of this set of existential predicates. 822 /// 823 /// A Rust trait object type consists (in addition to a lifetime bound) 824 /// of a set of trait bounds, which are separated into any number 825 /// of auto-trait bounds, and at most one non-auto-trait bound. The 826 /// non-auto-trait bound is called the "principal" of the trait 827 /// object. 828 /// 829 /// Only the principal can have methods or type parameters (because 830 /// auto traits can have neither of them). This is important, because 831 /// it means the auto traits can be treated as an unordered set (methods 832 /// would force an order for the vtable, while relating traits with 833 /// type parameters without knowing the order to relate them in is 834 /// a rather non-trivial task). 835 /// 836 /// For example, in the trait object `dyn fmt::Debug + Sync`, the 837 /// principal bound is `Some(fmt::Debug)`, while the auto-trait bounds 838 /// are the set `{Sync}`. 839 /// 840 /// It is also possible to have a "trivial" trait object that 841 /// consists only of auto traits, with no principal - for example, 842 /// `dyn Send + Sync`. In that case, the set of auto-trait bounds 843 /// is `{Send, Sync}`, while there is no principal. These trait objects 844 /// have a "trivial" vtable consisting of just the size, alignment, 845 /// and destructor. principal(&self) -> Option<ty::Binder<'tcx, ExistentialTraitRef<'tcx>>>846 pub fn principal(&self) -> Option<ty::Binder<'tcx, ExistentialTraitRef<'tcx>>> { 847 self[0] 848 .map_bound(|this| match this { 849 ExistentialPredicate::Trait(tr) => Some(tr), 850 _ => None, 851 }) 852 .transpose() 853 } 854 principal_def_id(&self) -> Option<DefId>855 pub fn principal_def_id(&self) -> Option<DefId> { 856 self.principal().map(|trait_ref| trait_ref.skip_binder().def_id) 857 } 858 859 #[inline] projection_bounds<'a>( &'a self, ) -> impl Iterator<Item = ty::Binder<'tcx, ExistentialProjection<'tcx>>> + 'a860 pub fn projection_bounds<'a>( 861 &'a self, 862 ) -> impl Iterator<Item = ty::Binder<'tcx, ExistentialProjection<'tcx>>> + 'a { 863 self.iter().filter_map(|predicate| { 864 predicate 865 .map_bound(|pred| match pred { 866 ExistentialPredicate::Projection(projection) => Some(projection), 867 _ => None, 868 }) 869 .transpose() 870 }) 871 } 872 873 #[inline] auto_traits<'a>(&'a self) -> impl Iterator<Item = DefId> + 'a874 pub fn auto_traits<'a>(&'a self) -> impl Iterator<Item = DefId> + 'a { 875 self.iter().filter_map(|predicate| match predicate.skip_binder() { 876 ExistentialPredicate::AutoTrait(did) => Some(did), 877 _ => None, 878 }) 879 } 880 } 881 882 /// A complete reference to a trait. These take numerous guises in syntax, 883 /// but perhaps the most recognizable form is in a where-clause: 884 /// 885 /// T: Foo<U> 886 /// 887 /// This would be represented by a trait-reference where the `DefId` is the 888 /// `DefId` for the trait `Foo` and the substs define `T` as parameter 0, 889 /// and `U` as parameter 1. 890 /// 891 /// Trait references also appear in object types like `Foo<U>`, but in 892 /// that case the `Self` parameter is absent from the substitutions. 893 #[derive(Copy, Clone, PartialEq, Eq, PartialOrd, Ord, Hash, TyEncodable, TyDecodable)] 894 #[derive(HashStable, TypeFoldable)] 895 pub struct TraitRef<'tcx> { 896 pub def_id: DefId, 897 pub substs: SubstsRef<'tcx>, 898 } 899 900 impl<'tcx> TraitRef<'tcx> { new(def_id: DefId, substs: SubstsRef<'tcx>) -> TraitRef<'tcx>901 pub fn new(def_id: DefId, substs: SubstsRef<'tcx>) -> TraitRef<'tcx> { 902 TraitRef { def_id, substs } 903 } 904 905 /// Returns a `TraitRef` of the form `P0: Foo<P1..Pn>` where `Pi` 906 /// are the parameters defined on trait. identity(tcx: TyCtxt<'tcx>, def_id: DefId) -> Binder<'tcx, TraitRef<'tcx>>907 pub fn identity(tcx: TyCtxt<'tcx>, def_id: DefId) -> Binder<'tcx, TraitRef<'tcx>> { 908 ty::Binder::dummy(TraitRef { 909 def_id, 910 substs: InternalSubsts::identity_for_item(tcx, def_id), 911 }) 912 } 913 914 #[inline] self_ty(&self) -> Ty<'tcx>915 pub fn self_ty(&self) -> Ty<'tcx> { 916 self.substs.type_at(0) 917 } 918 from_method( tcx: TyCtxt<'tcx>, trait_id: DefId, substs: SubstsRef<'tcx>, ) -> ty::TraitRef<'tcx>919 pub fn from_method( 920 tcx: TyCtxt<'tcx>, 921 trait_id: DefId, 922 substs: SubstsRef<'tcx>, 923 ) -> ty::TraitRef<'tcx> { 924 let defs = tcx.generics_of(trait_id); 925 926 ty::TraitRef { def_id: trait_id, substs: tcx.intern_substs(&substs[..defs.params.len()]) } 927 } 928 } 929 930 pub type PolyTraitRef<'tcx> = Binder<'tcx, TraitRef<'tcx>>; 931 932 impl<'tcx> PolyTraitRef<'tcx> { self_ty(&self) -> Binder<'tcx, Ty<'tcx>>933 pub fn self_ty(&self) -> Binder<'tcx, Ty<'tcx>> { 934 self.map_bound_ref(|tr| tr.self_ty()) 935 } 936 def_id(&self) -> DefId937 pub fn def_id(&self) -> DefId { 938 self.skip_binder().def_id 939 } 940 to_poly_trait_predicate(&self) -> ty::PolyTraitPredicate<'tcx>941 pub fn to_poly_trait_predicate(&self) -> ty::PolyTraitPredicate<'tcx> { 942 self.map_bound(|trait_ref| ty::TraitPredicate { 943 trait_ref, 944 constness: ty::BoundConstness::NotConst, 945 polarity: ty::ImplPolarity::Positive, 946 }) 947 } 948 } 949 950 /// An existential reference to a trait, where `Self` is erased. 951 /// For example, the trait object `Trait<'a, 'b, X, Y>` is: 952 /// 953 /// exists T. T: Trait<'a, 'b, X, Y> 954 /// 955 /// The substitutions don't include the erased `Self`, only trait 956 /// type and lifetime parameters (`[X, Y]` and `['a, 'b]` above). 957 #[derive(Copy, Clone, PartialEq, Eq, PartialOrd, Ord, Hash, TyEncodable, TyDecodable)] 958 #[derive(HashStable, TypeFoldable)] 959 pub struct ExistentialTraitRef<'tcx> { 960 pub def_id: DefId, 961 pub substs: SubstsRef<'tcx>, 962 } 963 964 impl<'tcx> ExistentialTraitRef<'tcx> { erase_self_ty( tcx: TyCtxt<'tcx>, trait_ref: ty::TraitRef<'tcx>, ) -> ty::ExistentialTraitRef<'tcx>965 pub fn erase_self_ty( 966 tcx: TyCtxt<'tcx>, 967 trait_ref: ty::TraitRef<'tcx>, 968 ) -> ty::ExistentialTraitRef<'tcx> { 969 // Assert there is a Self. 970 trait_ref.substs.type_at(0); 971 972 ty::ExistentialTraitRef { 973 def_id: trait_ref.def_id, 974 substs: tcx.intern_substs(&trait_ref.substs[1..]), 975 } 976 } 977 978 /// Object types don't have a self type specified. Therefore, when 979 /// we convert the principal trait-ref into a normal trait-ref, 980 /// you must give *some* self type. A common choice is `mk_err()` 981 /// or some placeholder type. with_self_ty(&self, tcx: TyCtxt<'tcx>, self_ty: Ty<'tcx>) -> ty::TraitRef<'tcx>982 pub fn with_self_ty(&self, tcx: TyCtxt<'tcx>, self_ty: Ty<'tcx>) -> ty::TraitRef<'tcx> { 983 // otherwise the escaping vars would be captured by the binder 984 // debug_assert!(!self_ty.has_escaping_bound_vars()); 985 986 ty::TraitRef { def_id: self.def_id, substs: tcx.mk_substs_trait(self_ty, self.substs) } 987 } 988 } 989 990 pub type PolyExistentialTraitRef<'tcx> = Binder<'tcx, ExistentialTraitRef<'tcx>>; 991 992 impl<'tcx> PolyExistentialTraitRef<'tcx> { def_id(&self) -> DefId993 pub fn def_id(&self) -> DefId { 994 self.skip_binder().def_id 995 } 996 997 /// Object types don't have a self type specified. Therefore, when 998 /// we convert the principal trait-ref into a normal trait-ref, 999 /// you must give *some* self type. A common choice is `mk_err()` 1000 /// or some placeholder type. with_self_ty(&self, tcx: TyCtxt<'tcx>, self_ty: Ty<'tcx>) -> ty::PolyTraitRef<'tcx>1001 pub fn with_self_ty(&self, tcx: TyCtxt<'tcx>, self_ty: Ty<'tcx>) -> ty::PolyTraitRef<'tcx> { 1002 self.map_bound(|trait_ref| trait_ref.with_self_ty(tcx, self_ty)) 1003 } 1004 } 1005 1006 #[derive(Copy, Clone, PartialEq, Eq, PartialOrd, Ord, Hash, Debug, TyEncodable, TyDecodable)] 1007 #[derive(HashStable)] 1008 pub enum BoundVariableKind { 1009 Ty(BoundTyKind), 1010 Region(BoundRegionKind), 1011 Const, 1012 } 1013 1014 /// Binder is a binder for higher-ranked lifetimes or types. It is part of the 1015 /// compiler's representation for things like `for<'a> Fn(&'a isize)` 1016 /// (which would be represented by the type `PolyTraitRef == 1017 /// Binder<'tcx, TraitRef>`). Note that when we instantiate, 1018 /// erase, or otherwise "discharge" these bound vars, we change the 1019 /// type from `Binder<'tcx, T>` to just `T` (see 1020 /// e.g., `liberate_late_bound_regions`). 1021 /// 1022 /// `Decodable` and `Encodable` are implemented for `Binder<T>` using the `impl_binder_encode_decode!` macro. 1023 #[derive(Copy, Clone, PartialEq, Eq, PartialOrd, Ord, Hash, Debug)] 1024 pub struct Binder<'tcx, T>(T, &'tcx List<BoundVariableKind>); 1025 1026 impl<'tcx, T> Binder<'tcx, T> 1027 where 1028 T: TypeFoldable<'tcx>, 1029 { 1030 /// Wraps `value` in a binder, asserting that `value` does not 1031 /// contain any bound vars that would be bound by the 1032 /// binder. This is commonly used to 'inject' a value T into a 1033 /// different binding level. dummy(value: T) -> Binder<'tcx, T>1034 pub fn dummy(value: T) -> Binder<'tcx, T> { 1035 assert!(!value.has_escaping_bound_vars()); 1036 Binder(value, ty::List::empty()) 1037 } 1038 bind_with_vars(value: T, vars: &'tcx List<BoundVariableKind>) -> Binder<'tcx, T>1039 pub fn bind_with_vars(value: T, vars: &'tcx List<BoundVariableKind>) -> Binder<'tcx, T> { 1040 if cfg!(debug_assertions) { 1041 let mut validator = ValidateBoundVars::new(vars); 1042 value.visit_with(&mut validator); 1043 } 1044 Binder(value, vars) 1045 } 1046 } 1047 1048 impl<'tcx, T> Binder<'tcx, T> { 1049 /// Skips the binder and returns the "bound" value. This is a 1050 /// risky thing to do because it's easy to get confused about 1051 /// De Bruijn indices and the like. It is usually better to 1052 /// discharge the binder using `no_bound_vars` or 1053 /// `replace_late_bound_regions` or something like 1054 /// that. `skip_binder` is only valid when you are either 1055 /// extracting data that has nothing to do with bound vars, you 1056 /// are doing some sort of test that does not involve bound 1057 /// regions, or you are being very careful about your depth 1058 /// accounting. 1059 /// 1060 /// Some examples where `skip_binder` is reasonable: 1061 /// 1062 /// - extracting the `DefId` from a PolyTraitRef; 1063 /// - comparing the self type of a PolyTraitRef to see if it is equal to 1064 /// a type parameter `X`, since the type `X` does not reference any regions skip_binder(self) -> T1065 pub fn skip_binder(self) -> T { 1066 self.0 1067 } 1068 bound_vars(&self) -> &'tcx List<BoundVariableKind>1069 pub fn bound_vars(&self) -> &'tcx List<BoundVariableKind> { 1070 self.1 1071 } 1072 as_ref(&self) -> Binder<'tcx, &T>1073 pub fn as_ref(&self) -> Binder<'tcx, &T> { 1074 Binder(&self.0, self.1) 1075 } 1076 map_bound_ref_unchecked<F, U>(&self, f: F) -> Binder<'tcx, U> where F: FnOnce(&T) -> U,1077 pub fn map_bound_ref_unchecked<F, U>(&self, f: F) -> Binder<'tcx, U> 1078 where 1079 F: FnOnce(&T) -> U, 1080 { 1081 let value = f(&self.0); 1082 Binder(value, self.1) 1083 } 1084 map_bound_ref<F, U: TypeFoldable<'tcx>>(&self, f: F) -> Binder<'tcx, U> where F: FnOnce(&T) -> U,1085 pub fn map_bound_ref<F, U: TypeFoldable<'tcx>>(&self, f: F) -> Binder<'tcx, U> 1086 where 1087 F: FnOnce(&T) -> U, 1088 { 1089 self.as_ref().map_bound(f) 1090 } 1091 map_bound<F, U: TypeFoldable<'tcx>>(self, f: F) -> Binder<'tcx, U> where F: FnOnce(T) -> U,1092 pub fn map_bound<F, U: TypeFoldable<'tcx>>(self, f: F) -> Binder<'tcx, U> 1093 where 1094 F: FnOnce(T) -> U, 1095 { 1096 let value = f(self.0); 1097 if cfg!(debug_assertions) { 1098 let mut validator = ValidateBoundVars::new(self.1); 1099 value.visit_with(&mut validator); 1100 } 1101 Binder(value, self.1) 1102 } 1103 1104 /// Wraps a `value` in a binder, using the same bound variables as the 1105 /// current `Binder`. This should not be used if the new value *changes* 1106 /// the bound variables. Note: the (old or new) value itself does not 1107 /// necessarily need to *name* all the bound variables. 1108 /// 1109 /// This currently doesn't do anything different than `bind`, because we 1110 /// don't actually track bound vars. However, semantically, it is different 1111 /// because bound vars aren't allowed to change here, whereas they are 1112 /// in `bind`. This may be (debug) asserted in the future. rebind<U>(&self, value: U) -> Binder<'tcx, U> where U: TypeFoldable<'tcx>,1113 pub fn rebind<U>(&self, value: U) -> Binder<'tcx, U> 1114 where 1115 U: TypeFoldable<'tcx>, 1116 { 1117 if cfg!(debug_assertions) { 1118 let mut validator = ValidateBoundVars::new(self.bound_vars()); 1119 value.visit_with(&mut validator); 1120 } 1121 Binder(value, self.1) 1122 } 1123 1124 /// Unwraps and returns the value within, but only if it contains 1125 /// no bound vars at all. (In other words, if this binder -- 1126 /// and indeed any enclosing binder -- doesn't bind anything at 1127 /// all.) Otherwise, returns `None`. 1128 /// 1129 /// (One could imagine having a method that just unwraps a single 1130 /// binder, but permits late-bound vars bound by enclosing 1131 /// binders, but that would require adjusting the debruijn 1132 /// indices, and given the shallow binding structure we often use, 1133 /// would not be that useful.) no_bound_vars(self) -> Option<T> where T: TypeFoldable<'tcx>,1134 pub fn no_bound_vars(self) -> Option<T> 1135 where 1136 T: TypeFoldable<'tcx>, 1137 { 1138 if self.0.has_escaping_bound_vars() { None } else { Some(self.skip_binder()) } 1139 } 1140 1141 /// Splits the contents into two things that share the same binder 1142 /// level as the original, returning two distinct binders. 1143 /// 1144 /// `f` should consider bound regions at depth 1 to be free, and 1145 /// anything it produces with bound regions at depth 1 will be 1146 /// bound in the resulting return values. split<U, V, F>(self, f: F) -> (Binder<'tcx, U>, Binder<'tcx, V>) where F: FnOnce(T) -> (U, V),1147 pub fn split<U, V, F>(self, f: F) -> (Binder<'tcx, U>, Binder<'tcx, V>) 1148 where 1149 F: FnOnce(T) -> (U, V), 1150 { 1151 let (u, v) = f(self.0); 1152 (Binder(u, self.1), Binder(v, self.1)) 1153 } 1154 } 1155 1156 impl<'tcx, T> Binder<'tcx, Option<T>> { transpose(self) -> Option<Binder<'tcx, T>>1157 pub fn transpose(self) -> Option<Binder<'tcx, T>> { 1158 let bound_vars = self.1; 1159 self.0.map(|v| Binder(v, bound_vars)) 1160 } 1161 } 1162 1163 /// Represents the projection of an associated type. In explicit UFCS 1164 /// form this would be written `<T as Trait<..>>::N`. 1165 #[derive(Copy, Clone, PartialEq, Eq, PartialOrd, Ord, Hash, Debug, TyEncodable, TyDecodable)] 1166 #[derive(HashStable, TypeFoldable)] 1167 pub struct ProjectionTy<'tcx> { 1168 /// The parameters of the associated item. 1169 pub substs: SubstsRef<'tcx>, 1170 1171 /// The `DefId` of the `TraitItem` for the associated type `N`. 1172 /// 1173 /// Note that this is not the `DefId` of the `TraitRef` containing this 1174 /// associated type, which is in `tcx.associated_item(item_def_id).container`. 1175 pub item_def_id: DefId, 1176 } 1177 1178 impl<'tcx> ProjectionTy<'tcx> { trait_def_id(&self, tcx: TyCtxt<'tcx>) -> DefId1179 pub fn trait_def_id(&self, tcx: TyCtxt<'tcx>) -> DefId { 1180 tcx.associated_item(self.item_def_id).container.id() 1181 } 1182 1183 /// Extracts the underlying trait reference and own substs from this projection. 1184 /// For example, if this is a projection of `<T as StreamingIterator>::Item<'a>`, 1185 /// then this function would return a `T: Iterator` trait reference and `['a]` as the own substs trait_ref_and_own_substs( &self, tcx: TyCtxt<'tcx>, ) -> (ty::TraitRef<'tcx>, &'tcx [ty::GenericArg<'tcx>])1186 pub fn trait_ref_and_own_substs( 1187 &self, 1188 tcx: TyCtxt<'tcx>, 1189 ) -> (ty::TraitRef<'tcx>, &'tcx [ty::GenericArg<'tcx>]) { 1190 let def_id = tcx.associated_item(self.item_def_id).container.id(); 1191 let trait_generics = tcx.generics_of(def_id); 1192 ( 1193 ty::TraitRef { def_id, substs: self.substs.truncate_to(tcx, trait_generics) }, 1194 &self.substs[trait_generics.count()..], 1195 ) 1196 } 1197 1198 /// Extracts the underlying trait reference from this projection. 1199 /// For example, if this is a projection of `<T as Iterator>::Item`, 1200 /// then this function would return a `T: Iterator` trait reference. 1201 /// 1202 /// WARNING: This will drop the substs for generic associated types 1203 /// consider calling [Self::trait_ref_and_own_substs] to get those 1204 /// as well. trait_ref(&self, tcx: TyCtxt<'tcx>) -> ty::TraitRef<'tcx>1205 pub fn trait_ref(&self, tcx: TyCtxt<'tcx>) -> ty::TraitRef<'tcx> { 1206 let def_id = self.trait_def_id(tcx); 1207 ty::TraitRef { def_id, substs: self.substs.truncate_to(tcx, tcx.generics_of(def_id)) } 1208 } 1209 self_ty(&self) -> Ty<'tcx>1210 pub fn self_ty(&self) -> Ty<'tcx> { 1211 self.substs.type_at(0) 1212 } 1213 } 1214 1215 #[derive(Copy, Clone, Debug, TypeFoldable)] 1216 pub struct GenSig<'tcx> { 1217 pub resume_ty: Ty<'tcx>, 1218 pub yield_ty: Ty<'tcx>, 1219 pub return_ty: Ty<'tcx>, 1220 } 1221 1222 pub type PolyGenSig<'tcx> = Binder<'tcx, GenSig<'tcx>>; 1223 1224 /// Signature of a function type, which we have arbitrarily 1225 /// decided to use to refer to the input/output types. 1226 /// 1227 /// - `inputs`: is the list of arguments and their modes. 1228 /// - `output`: is the return type. 1229 /// - `c_variadic`: indicates whether this is a C-variadic function. 1230 #[derive(Copy, Clone, PartialEq, Eq, PartialOrd, Ord, Hash, TyEncodable, TyDecodable)] 1231 #[derive(HashStable, TypeFoldable)] 1232 pub struct FnSig<'tcx> { 1233 pub inputs_and_output: &'tcx List<Ty<'tcx>>, 1234 pub c_variadic: bool, 1235 pub unsafety: hir::Unsafety, 1236 pub abi: abi::Abi, 1237 } 1238 1239 impl<'tcx> FnSig<'tcx> { inputs(&self) -> &'tcx [Ty<'tcx>]1240 pub fn inputs(&self) -> &'tcx [Ty<'tcx>] { 1241 &self.inputs_and_output[..self.inputs_and_output.len() - 1] 1242 } 1243 output(&self) -> Ty<'tcx>1244 pub fn output(&self) -> Ty<'tcx> { 1245 self.inputs_and_output[self.inputs_and_output.len() - 1] 1246 } 1247 1248 // Creates a minimal `FnSig` to be used when encountering a `TyKind::Error` in a fallible 1249 // method. fake() -> FnSig<'tcx>1250 fn fake() -> FnSig<'tcx> { 1251 FnSig { 1252 inputs_and_output: List::empty(), 1253 c_variadic: false, 1254 unsafety: hir::Unsafety::Normal, 1255 abi: abi::Abi::Rust, 1256 } 1257 } 1258 } 1259 1260 pub type PolyFnSig<'tcx> = Binder<'tcx, FnSig<'tcx>>; 1261 1262 impl<'tcx> PolyFnSig<'tcx> { 1263 #[inline] inputs(&self) -> Binder<'tcx, &'tcx [Ty<'tcx>]>1264 pub fn inputs(&self) -> Binder<'tcx, &'tcx [Ty<'tcx>]> { 1265 self.map_bound_ref_unchecked(|fn_sig| fn_sig.inputs()) 1266 } 1267 #[inline] input(&self, index: usize) -> ty::Binder<'tcx, Ty<'tcx>>1268 pub fn input(&self, index: usize) -> ty::Binder<'tcx, Ty<'tcx>> { 1269 self.map_bound_ref(|fn_sig| fn_sig.inputs()[index]) 1270 } inputs_and_output(&self) -> ty::Binder<'tcx, &'tcx List<Ty<'tcx>>>1271 pub fn inputs_and_output(&self) -> ty::Binder<'tcx, &'tcx List<Ty<'tcx>>> { 1272 self.map_bound_ref(|fn_sig| fn_sig.inputs_and_output) 1273 } 1274 #[inline] output(&self) -> ty::Binder<'tcx, Ty<'tcx>>1275 pub fn output(&self) -> ty::Binder<'tcx, Ty<'tcx>> { 1276 self.map_bound_ref(|fn_sig| fn_sig.output()) 1277 } c_variadic(&self) -> bool1278 pub fn c_variadic(&self) -> bool { 1279 self.skip_binder().c_variadic 1280 } unsafety(&self) -> hir::Unsafety1281 pub fn unsafety(&self) -> hir::Unsafety { 1282 self.skip_binder().unsafety 1283 } abi(&self) -> abi::Abi1284 pub fn abi(&self) -> abi::Abi { 1285 self.skip_binder().abi 1286 } 1287 } 1288 1289 pub type CanonicalPolyFnSig<'tcx> = Canonical<'tcx, Binder<'tcx, FnSig<'tcx>>>; 1290 1291 #[derive(Clone, Copy, PartialEq, Eq, PartialOrd, Ord, Hash, TyEncodable, TyDecodable)] 1292 #[derive(HashStable)] 1293 pub struct ParamTy { 1294 pub index: u32, 1295 pub name: Symbol, 1296 } 1297 1298 impl<'tcx> ParamTy { new(index: u32, name: Symbol) -> ParamTy1299 pub fn new(index: u32, name: Symbol) -> ParamTy { 1300 ParamTy { index, name } 1301 } 1302 for_def(def: &ty::GenericParamDef) -> ParamTy1303 pub fn for_def(def: &ty::GenericParamDef) -> ParamTy { 1304 ParamTy::new(def.index, def.name) 1305 } 1306 1307 #[inline] to_ty(self, tcx: TyCtxt<'tcx>) -> Ty<'tcx>1308 pub fn to_ty(self, tcx: TyCtxt<'tcx>) -> Ty<'tcx> { 1309 tcx.mk_ty_param(self.index, self.name) 1310 } 1311 } 1312 1313 #[derive(Copy, Clone, Hash, TyEncodable, TyDecodable, Eq, PartialEq, Ord, PartialOrd)] 1314 #[derive(HashStable)] 1315 pub struct ParamConst { 1316 pub index: u32, 1317 pub name: Symbol, 1318 } 1319 1320 impl ParamConst { new(index: u32, name: Symbol) -> ParamConst1321 pub fn new(index: u32, name: Symbol) -> ParamConst { 1322 ParamConst { index, name } 1323 } 1324 for_def(def: &ty::GenericParamDef) -> ParamConst1325 pub fn for_def(def: &ty::GenericParamDef) -> ParamConst { 1326 ParamConst::new(def.index, def.name) 1327 } 1328 } 1329 1330 pub type Region<'tcx> = &'tcx RegionKind; 1331 1332 /// Representation of regions. Note that the NLL checker uses a distinct 1333 /// representation of regions. For this reason, it internally replaces all the 1334 /// regions with inference variables -- the index of the variable is then used 1335 /// to index into internal NLL data structures. See `rustc_const_eval::borrow_check` 1336 /// module for more information. 1337 /// 1338 /// ## The Region lattice within a given function 1339 /// 1340 /// In general, the region lattice looks like 1341 /// 1342 /// ``` 1343 /// static ----------+-----...------+ (greatest) 1344 /// | | | 1345 /// early-bound and | | 1346 /// free regions | | 1347 /// | | | 1348 /// | | | 1349 /// empty(root) placeholder(U1) | 1350 /// | / | 1351 /// | / placeholder(Un) 1352 /// empty(U1) -- / 1353 /// | / 1354 /// ... / 1355 /// | / 1356 /// empty(Un) -------- (smallest) 1357 /// ``` 1358 /// 1359 /// Early-bound/free regions are the named lifetimes in scope from the 1360 /// function declaration. They have relationships to one another 1361 /// determined based on the declared relationships from the 1362 /// function. 1363 /// 1364 /// Note that inference variables and bound regions are not included 1365 /// in this diagram. In the case of inference variables, they should 1366 /// be inferred to some other region from the diagram. In the case of 1367 /// bound regions, they are excluded because they don't make sense to 1368 /// include -- the diagram indicates the relationship between free 1369 /// regions. 1370 /// 1371 /// ## Inference variables 1372 /// 1373 /// During region inference, we sometimes create inference variables, 1374 /// represented as `ReVar`. These will be inferred by the code in 1375 /// `infer::lexical_region_resolve` to some free region from the 1376 /// lattice above (the minimal region that meets the 1377 /// constraints). 1378 /// 1379 /// During NLL checking, where regions are defined differently, we 1380 /// also use `ReVar` -- in that case, the index is used to index into 1381 /// the NLL region checker's data structures. The variable may in fact 1382 /// represent either a free region or an inference variable, in that 1383 /// case. 1384 /// 1385 /// ## Bound Regions 1386 /// 1387 /// These are regions that are stored behind a binder and must be substituted 1388 /// with some concrete region before being used. There are two kind of 1389 /// bound regions: early-bound, which are bound in an item's `Generics`, 1390 /// and are substituted by an `InternalSubsts`, and late-bound, which are part of 1391 /// higher-ranked types (e.g., `for<'a> fn(&'a ())`), and are substituted by 1392 /// the likes of `liberate_late_bound_regions`. The distinction exists 1393 /// because higher-ranked lifetimes aren't supported in all places. See [1][2]. 1394 /// 1395 /// Unlike `Param`s, bound regions are not supposed to exist "in the wild" 1396 /// outside their binder, e.g., in types passed to type inference, and 1397 /// should first be substituted (by placeholder regions, free regions, 1398 /// or region variables). 1399 /// 1400 /// ## Placeholder and Free Regions 1401 /// 1402 /// One often wants to work with bound regions without knowing their precise 1403 /// identity. For example, when checking a function, the lifetime of a borrow 1404 /// can end up being assigned to some region parameter. In these cases, 1405 /// it must be ensured that bounds on the region can't be accidentally 1406 /// assumed without being checked. 1407 /// 1408 /// To do this, we replace the bound regions with placeholder markers, 1409 /// which don't satisfy any relation not explicitly provided. 1410 /// 1411 /// There are two kinds of placeholder regions in rustc: `ReFree` and 1412 /// `RePlaceholder`. When checking an item's body, `ReFree` is supposed 1413 /// to be used. These also support explicit bounds: both the internally-stored 1414 /// *scope*, which the region is assumed to outlive, as well as other 1415 /// relations stored in the `FreeRegionMap`. Note that these relations 1416 /// aren't checked when you `make_subregion` (or `eq_types`), only by 1417 /// `resolve_regions_and_report_errors`. 1418 /// 1419 /// When working with higher-ranked types, some region relations aren't 1420 /// yet known, so you can't just call `resolve_regions_and_report_errors`. 1421 /// `RePlaceholder` is designed for this purpose. In these contexts, 1422 /// there's also the risk that some inference variable laying around will 1423 /// get unified with your placeholder region: if you want to check whether 1424 /// `for<'a> Foo<'_>: 'a`, and you substitute your bound region `'a` 1425 /// with a placeholder region `'%a`, the variable `'_` would just be 1426 /// instantiated to the placeholder region `'%a`, which is wrong because 1427 /// the inference variable is supposed to satisfy the relation 1428 /// *for every value of the placeholder region*. To ensure that doesn't 1429 /// happen, you can use `leak_check`. This is more clearly explained 1430 /// by the [rustc dev guide]. 1431 /// 1432 /// [1]: https://smallcultfollowing.com/babysteps/blog/2013/10/29/intermingled-parameter-lists/ 1433 /// [2]: https://smallcultfollowing.com/babysteps/blog/2013/11/04/intermingled-parameter-lists/ 1434 /// [rustc dev guide]: https://rustc-dev-guide.rust-lang.org/traits/hrtb.html 1435 #[derive(Clone, PartialEq, Eq, Hash, Copy, TyEncodable, TyDecodable, PartialOrd, Ord)] 1436 pub enum RegionKind { 1437 /// Region bound in a type or fn declaration which will be 1438 /// substituted 'early' -- that is, at the same time when type 1439 /// parameters are substituted. 1440 ReEarlyBound(EarlyBoundRegion), 1441 1442 /// Region bound in a function scope, which will be substituted when the 1443 /// function is called. 1444 ReLateBound(ty::DebruijnIndex, BoundRegion), 1445 1446 /// When checking a function body, the types of all arguments and so forth 1447 /// that refer to bound region parameters are modified to refer to free 1448 /// region parameters. 1449 ReFree(FreeRegion), 1450 1451 /// Static data that has an "infinite" lifetime. Top in the region lattice. 1452 ReStatic, 1453 1454 /// A region variable. Should not exist after typeck. 1455 ReVar(RegionVid), 1456 1457 /// A placeholder region -- basically, the higher-ranked version of `ReFree`. 1458 /// Should not exist after typeck. 1459 RePlaceholder(ty::PlaceholderRegion), 1460 1461 /// Empty lifetime is for data that is never accessed. We tag the 1462 /// empty lifetime with a universe -- the idea is that we don't 1463 /// want `exists<'a> { forall<'b> { 'b: 'a } }` to be satisfiable. 1464 /// Therefore, the `'empty` in a universe `U` is less than all 1465 /// regions visible from `U`, but not less than regions not visible 1466 /// from `U`. 1467 ReEmpty(ty::UniverseIndex), 1468 1469 /// Erased region, used by trait selection, in MIR and during codegen. 1470 ReErased, 1471 } 1472 1473 #[derive(Copy, Clone, PartialEq, Eq, Hash, TyEncodable, TyDecodable, Debug, PartialOrd, Ord)] 1474 pub struct EarlyBoundRegion { 1475 pub def_id: DefId, 1476 pub index: u32, 1477 pub name: Symbol, 1478 } 1479 1480 /// A **`const`** **v**ariable **ID**. 1481 #[derive(Clone, Copy, PartialEq, Eq, PartialOrd, Ord, Hash, TyEncodable, TyDecodable)] 1482 pub struct ConstVid<'tcx> { 1483 pub index: u32, 1484 pub phantom: PhantomData<&'tcx ()>, 1485 } 1486 1487 rustc_index::newtype_index! { 1488 /// A **region** (lifetime) **v**ariable **ID**. 1489 pub struct RegionVid { 1490 DEBUG_FORMAT = custom, 1491 } 1492 } 1493 1494 impl Atom for RegionVid { index(self) -> usize1495 fn index(self) -> usize { 1496 Idx::index(self) 1497 } 1498 } 1499 1500 rustc_index::newtype_index! { 1501 pub struct BoundVar { .. } 1502 } 1503 1504 #[derive(Clone, Copy, PartialEq, Eq, PartialOrd, Ord, Hash, Debug, TyEncodable, TyDecodable)] 1505 #[derive(HashStable)] 1506 pub struct BoundTy { 1507 pub var: BoundVar, 1508 pub kind: BoundTyKind, 1509 } 1510 1511 #[derive(Clone, Copy, PartialEq, Eq, PartialOrd, Ord, Hash, Debug, TyEncodable, TyDecodable)] 1512 #[derive(HashStable)] 1513 pub enum BoundTyKind { 1514 Anon, 1515 Param(Symbol), 1516 } 1517 1518 impl From<BoundVar> for BoundTy { from(var: BoundVar) -> Self1519 fn from(var: BoundVar) -> Self { 1520 BoundTy { var, kind: BoundTyKind::Anon } 1521 } 1522 } 1523 1524 /// A `ProjectionPredicate` for an `ExistentialTraitRef`. 1525 #[derive(Clone, Copy, PartialEq, Eq, PartialOrd, Ord, Hash, Debug, TyEncodable, TyDecodable)] 1526 #[derive(HashStable, TypeFoldable)] 1527 pub struct ExistentialProjection<'tcx> { 1528 pub item_def_id: DefId, 1529 pub substs: SubstsRef<'tcx>, 1530 pub ty: Ty<'tcx>, 1531 } 1532 1533 pub type PolyExistentialProjection<'tcx> = Binder<'tcx, ExistentialProjection<'tcx>>; 1534 1535 impl<'tcx> ExistentialProjection<'tcx> { 1536 /// Extracts the underlying existential trait reference from this projection. 1537 /// For example, if this is a projection of `exists T. <T as Iterator>::Item == X`, 1538 /// then this function would return an `exists T. T: Iterator` existential trait 1539 /// reference. trait_ref(&self, tcx: TyCtxt<'tcx>) -> ty::ExistentialTraitRef<'tcx>1540 pub fn trait_ref(&self, tcx: TyCtxt<'tcx>) -> ty::ExistentialTraitRef<'tcx> { 1541 let def_id = tcx.associated_item(self.item_def_id).container.id(); 1542 let subst_count = tcx.generics_of(def_id).count() - 1; 1543 let substs = tcx.intern_substs(&self.substs[..subst_count]); 1544 ty::ExistentialTraitRef { def_id, substs } 1545 } 1546 with_self_ty( &self, tcx: TyCtxt<'tcx>, self_ty: Ty<'tcx>, ) -> ty::ProjectionPredicate<'tcx>1547 pub fn with_self_ty( 1548 &self, 1549 tcx: TyCtxt<'tcx>, 1550 self_ty: Ty<'tcx>, 1551 ) -> ty::ProjectionPredicate<'tcx> { 1552 // otherwise the escaping regions would be captured by the binders 1553 debug_assert!(!self_ty.has_escaping_bound_vars()); 1554 1555 ty::ProjectionPredicate { 1556 projection_ty: ty::ProjectionTy { 1557 item_def_id: self.item_def_id, 1558 substs: tcx.mk_substs_trait(self_ty, self.substs), 1559 }, 1560 ty: self.ty, 1561 } 1562 } 1563 erase_self_ty( tcx: TyCtxt<'tcx>, projection_predicate: ty::ProjectionPredicate<'tcx>, ) -> Self1564 pub fn erase_self_ty( 1565 tcx: TyCtxt<'tcx>, 1566 projection_predicate: ty::ProjectionPredicate<'tcx>, 1567 ) -> Self { 1568 // Assert there is a Self. 1569 projection_predicate.projection_ty.substs.type_at(0); 1570 1571 Self { 1572 item_def_id: projection_predicate.projection_ty.item_def_id, 1573 substs: tcx.intern_substs(&projection_predicate.projection_ty.substs[1..]), 1574 ty: projection_predicate.ty, 1575 } 1576 } 1577 } 1578 1579 impl<'tcx> PolyExistentialProjection<'tcx> { with_self_ty( &self, tcx: TyCtxt<'tcx>, self_ty: Ty<'tcx>, ) -> ty::PolyProjectionPredicate<'tcx>1580 pub fn with_self_ty( 1581 &self, 1582 tcx: TyCtxt<'tcx>, 1583 self_ty: Ty<'tcx>, 1584 ) -> ty::PolyProjectionPredicate<'tcx> { 1585 self.map_bound(|p| p.with_self_ty(tcx, self_ty)) 1586 } 1587 item_def_id(&self) -> DefId1588 pub fn item_def_id(&self) -> DefId { 1589 self.skip_binder().item_def_id 1590 } 1591 } 1592 1593 /// Region utilities 1594 impl RegionKind { 1595 /// Is this region named by the user? has_name(&self) -> bool1596 pub fn has_name(&self) -> bool { 1597 match *self { 1598 RegionKind::ReEarlyBound(ebr) => ebr.has_name(), 1599 RegionKind::ReLateBound(_, br) => br.kind.is_named(), 1600 RegionKind::ReFree(fr) => fr.bound_region.is_named(), 1601 RegionKind::ReStatic => true, 1602 RegionKind::ReVar(..) => false, 1603 RegionKind::RePlaceholder(placeholder) => placeholder.name.is_named(), 1604 RegionKind::ReEmpty(_) => false, 1605 RegionKind::ReErased => false, 1606 } 1607 } 1608 1609 #[inline] is_late_bound(&self) -> bool1610 pub fn is_late_bound(&self) -> bool { 1611 matches!(*self, ty::ReLateBound(..)) 1612 } 1613 1614 #[inline] is_placeholder(&self) -> bool1615 pub fn is_placeholder(&self) -> bool { 1616 matches!(*self, ty::RePlaceholder(..)) 1617 } 1618 1619 #[inline] bound_at_or_above_binder(&self, index: ty::DebruijnIndex) -> bool1620 pub fn bound_at_or_above_binder(&self, index: ty::DebruijnIndex) -> bool { 1621 match *self { 1622 ty::ReLateBound(debruijn, _) => debruijn >= index, 1623 _ => false, 1624 } 1625 } 1626 type_flags(&self) -> TypeFlags1627 pub fn type_flags(&self) -> TypeFlags { 1628 let mut flags = TypeFlags::empty(); 1629 1630 match *self { 1631 ty::ReVar(..) => { 1632 flags = flags | TypeFlags::HAS_KNOWN_FREE_REGIONS; 1633 flags = flags | TypeFlags::HAS_KNOWN_FREE_LOCAL_REGIONS; 1634 flags = flags | TypeFlags::HAS_RE_INFER; 1635 } 1636 ty::RePlaceholder(..) => { 1637 flags = flags | TypeFlags::HAS_KNOWN_FREE_REGIONS; 1638 flags = flags | TypeFlags::HAS_KNOWN_FREE_LOCAL_REGIONS; 1639 flags = flags | TypeFlags::HAS_RE_PLACEHOLDER; 1640 } 1641 ty::ReEarlyBound(..) => { 1642 flags = flags | TypeFlags::HAS_KNOWN_FREE_REGIONS; 1643 flags = flags | TypeFlags::HAS_KNOWN_FREE_LOCAL_REGIONS; 1644 flags = flags | TypeFlags::HAS_KNOWN_RE_PARAM; 1645 } 1646 ty::ReFree { .. } => { 1647 flags = flags | TypeFlags::HAS_KNOWN_FREE_REGIONS; 1648 flags = flags | TypeFlags::HAS_KNOWN_FREE_LOCAL_REGIONS; 1649 } 1650 ty::ReEmpty(_) | ty::ReStatic => { 1651 flags = flags | TypeFlags::HAS_KNOWN_FREE_REGIONS; 1652 } 1653 ty::ReLateBound(..) => { 1654 flags = flags | TypeFlags::HAS_RE_LATE_BOUND; 1655 } 1656 ty::ReErased => { 1657 flags = flags | TypeFlags::HAS_RE_ERASED; 1658 } 1659 } 1660 1661 debug!("type_flags({:?}) = {:?}", self, flags); 1662 1663 flags 1664 } 1665 1666 /// Given an early-bound or free region, returns the `DefId` where it was bound. 1667 /// For example, consider the regions in this snippet of code: 1668 /// 1669 /// ``` 1670 /// impl<'a> Foo { 1671 /// ^^ -- early bound, declared on an impl 1672 /// 1673 /// fn bar<'b, 'c>(x: &self, y: &'b u32, z: &'c u64) where 'static: 'c 1674 /// ^^ ^^ ^ anonymous, late-bound 1675 /// | early-bound, appears in where-clauses 1676 /// late-bound, appears only in fn args 1677 /// {..} 1678 /// } 1679 /// ``` 1680 /// 1681 /// Here, `free_region_binding_scope('a)` would return the `DefId` 1682 /// of the impl, and for all the other highlighted regions, it 1683 /// would return the `DefId` of the function. In other cases (not shown), this 1684 /// function might return the `DefId` of a closure. free_region_binding_scope(&self, tcx: TyCtxt<'_>) -> DefId1685 pub fn free_region_binding_scope(&self, tcx: TyCtxt<'_>) -> DefId { 1686 match self { 1687 ty::ReEarlyBound(br) => tcx.parent(br.def_id).unwrap(), 1688 ty::ReFree(fr) => fr.scope, 1689 _ => bug!("free_region_binding_scope invoked on inappropriate region: {:?}", self), 1690 } 1691 } 1692 } 1693 1694 /// Type utilities 1695 impl<'tcx> TyS<'tcx> { 1696 #[inline(always)] kind(&self) -> &TyKind<'tcx>1697 pub fn kind(&self) -> &TyKind<'tcx> { 1698 &self.kind 1699 } 1700 1701 #[inline(always)] flags(&self) -> TypeFlags1702 pub fn flags(&self) -> TypeFlags { 1703 self.flags 1704 } 1705 1706 #[inline] is_unit(&self) -> bool1707 pub fn is_unit(&self) -> bool { 1708 match self.kind() { 1709 Tuple(ref tys) => tys.is_empty(), 1710 _ => false, 1711 } 1712 } 1713 1714 #[inline] is_never(&self) -> bool1715 pub fn is_never(&self) -> bool { 1716 matches!(self.kind(), Never) 1717 } 1718 1719 #[inline] is_primitive(&self) -> bool1720 pub fn is_primitive(&self) -> bool { 1721 self.kind().is_primitive() 1722 } 1723 1724 #[inline] is_adt(&self) -> bool1725 pub fn is_adt(&self) -> bool { 1726 matches!(self.kind(), Adt(..)) 1727 } 1728 1729 #[inline] is_ref(&self) -> bool1730 pub fn is_ref(&self) -> bool { 1731 matches!(self.kind(), Ref(..)) 1732 } 1733 1734 #[inline] is_ty_var(&self) -> bool1735 pub fn is_ty_var(&self) -> bool { 1736 matches!(self.kind(), Infer(TyVar(_))) 1737 } 1738 1739 #[inline] ty_vid(&self) -> Option<ty::TyVid>1740 pub fn ty_vid(&self) -> Option<ty::TyVid> { 1741 match self.kind() { 1742 &Infer(TyVar(vid)) => Some(vid), 1743 _ => None, 1744 } 1745 } 1746 1747 #[inline] is_ty_infer(&self) -> bool1748 pub fn is_ty_infer(&self) -> bool { 1749 matches!(self.kind(), Infer(_)) 1750 } 1751 1752 #[inline] is_phantom_data(&self) -> bool1753 pub fn is_phantom_data(&self) -> bool { 1754 if let Adt(def, _) = self.kind() { def.is_phantom_data() } else { false } 1755 } 1756 1757 #[inline] is_bool(&self) -> bool1758 pub fn is_bool(&self) -> bool { 1759 *self.kind() == Bool 1760 } 1761 1762 /// Returns `true` if this type is a `str`. 1763 #[inline] is_str(&self) -> bool1764 pub fn is_str(&self) -> bool { 1765 *self.kind() == Str 1766 } 1767 1768 #[inline] is_param(&self, index: u32) -> bool1769 pub fn is_param(&self, index: u32) -> bool { 1770 match self.kind() { 1771 ty::Param(ref data) => data.index == index, 1772 _ => false, 1773 } 1774 } 1775 1776 #[inline] is_slice(&self) -> bool1777 pub fn is_slice(&self) -> bool { 1778 match self.kind() { 1779 RawPtr(TypeAndMut { ty, .. }) | Ref(_, ty, _) => matches!(ty.kind(), Slice(_) | Str), 1780 _ => false, 1781 } 1782 } 1783 1784 #[inline] is_array(&self) -> bool1785 pub fn is_array(&self) -> bool { 1786 matches!(self.kind(), Array(..)) 1787 } 1788 1789 #[inline] is_simd(&self) -> bool1790 pub fn is_simd(&self) -> bool { 1791 match self.kind() { 1792 Adt(def, _) => def.repr.simd(), 1793 _ => false, 1794 } 1795 } 1796 sequence_element_type(&self, tcx: TyCtxt<'tcx>) -> Ty<'tcx>1797 pub fn sequence_element_type(&self, tcx: TyCtxt<'tcx>) -> Ty<'tcx> { 1798 match self.kind() { 1799 Array(ty, _) | Slice(ty) => ty, 1800 Str => tcx.mk_mach_uint(ty::UintTy::U8), 1801 _ => bug!("`sequence_element_type` called on non-sequence value: {}", self), 1802 } 1803 } 1804 simd_size_and_type(&self, tcx: TyCtxt<'tcx>) -> (u64, Ty<'tcx>)1805 pub fn simd_size_and_type(&self, tcx: TyCtxt<'tcx>) -> (u64, Ty<'tcx>) { 1806 match self.kind() { 1807 Adt(def, substs) => { 1808 assert!(def.repr.simd(), "`simd_size_and_type` called on non-SIMD type"); 1809 let variant = def.non_enum_variant(); 1810 let f0_ty = variant.fields[0].ty(tcx, substs); 1811 1812 match f0_ty.kind() { 1813 // If the first field is an array, we assume it is the only field and its 1814 // elements are the SIMD components. 1815 Array(f0_elem_ty, f0_len) => { 1816 // FIXME(repr_simd): https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/78863#discussion_r522784112 1817 // The way we evaluate the `N` in `[T; N]` here only works since we use 1818 // `simd_size_and_type` post-monomorphization. It will probably start to ICE 1819 // if we use it in generic code. See the `simd-array-trait` ui test. 1820 (f0_len.eval_usize(tcx, ParamEnv::empty()) as u64, f0_elem_ty) 1821 } 1822 // Otherwise, the fields of this Adt are the SIMD components (and we assume they 1823 // all have the same type). 1824 _ => (variant.fields.len() as u64, f0_ty), 1825 } 1826 } 1827 _ => bug!("`simd_size_and_type` called on invalid type"), 1828 } 1829 } 1830 1831 #[inline] is_region_ptr(&self) -> bool1832 pub fn is_region_ptr(&self) -> bool { 1833 matches!(self.kind(), Ref(..)) 1834 } 1835 1836 #[inline] is_mutable_ptr(&self) -> bool1837 pub fn is_mutable_ptr(&self) -> bool { 1838 matches!( 1839 self.kind(), 1840 RawPtr(TypeAndMut { mutbl: hir::Mutability::Mut, .. }) 1841 | Ref(_, _, hir::Mutability::Mut) 1842 ) 1843 } 1844 1845 /// Get the mutability of the reference or `None` when not a reference 1846 #[inline] ref_mutability(&self) -> Option<hir::Mutability>1847 pub fn ref_mutability(&self) -> Option<hir::Mutability> { 1848 match self.kind() { 1849 Ref(_, _, mutability) => Some(*mutability), 1850 _ => None, 1851 } 1852 } 1853 1854 #[inline] is_unsafe_ptr(&self) -> bool1855 pub fn is_unsafe_ptr(&self) -> bool { 1856 matches!(self.kind(), RawPtr(_)) 1857 } 1858 1859 /// Tests if this is any kind of primitive pointer type (reference, raw pointer, fn pointer). 1860 #[inline] is_any_ptr(&self) -> bool1861 pub fn is_any_ptr(&self) -> bool { 1862 self.is_region_ptr() || self.is_unsafe_ptr() || self.is_fn_ptr() 1863 } 1864 1865 #[inline] is_box(&self) -> bool1866 pub fn is_box(&self) -> bool { 1867 match self.kind() { 1868 Adt(def, _) => def.is_box(), 1869 _ => false, 1870 } 1871 } 1872 1873 /// Panics if called on any type other than `Box<T>`. boxed_ty(&self) -> Ty<'tcx>1874 pub fn boxed_ty(&self) -> Ty<'tcx> { 1875 match self.kind() { 1876 Adt(def, substs) if def.is_box() => substs.type_at(0), 1877 _ => bug!("`boxed_ty` is called on non-box type {:?}", self), 1878 } 1879 } 1880 1881 /// A scalar type is one that denotes an atomic datum, with no sub-components. 1882 /// (A RawPtr is scalar because it represents a non-managed pointer, so its 1883 /// contents are abstract to rustc.) 1884 #[inline] is_scalar(&self) -> bool1885 pub fn is_scalar(&self) -> bool { 1886 matches!( 1887 self.kind(), 1888 Bool | Char 1889 | Int(_) 1890 | Float(_) 1891 | Uint(_) 1892 | FnDef(..) 1893 | FnPtr(_) 1894 | RawPtr(_) 1895 | Infer(IntVar(_) | FloatVar(_)) 1896 ) 1897 } 1898 1899 /// Returns `true` if this type is a floating point type. 1900 #[inline] is_floating_point(&self) -> bool1901 pub fn is_floating_point(&self) -> bool { 1902 matches!(self.kind(), Float(_) | Infer(FloatVar(_))) 1903 } 1904 1905 #[inline] is_trait(&self) -> bool1906 pub fn is_trait(&self) -> bool { 1907 matches!(self.kind(), Dynamic(..)) 1908 } 1909 1910 #[inline] is_enum(&self) -> bool1911 pub fn is_enum(&self) -> bool { 1912 matches!(self.kind(), Adt(adt_def, _) if adt_def.is_enum()) 1913 } 1914 1915 #[inline] is_union(&self) -> bool1916 pub fn is_union(&self) -> bool { 1917 matches!(self.kind(), Adt(adt_def, _) if adt_def.is_union()) 1918 } 1919 1920 #[inline] is_closure(&self) -> bool1921 pub fn is_closure(&self) -> bool { 1922 matches!(self.kind(), Closure(..)) 1923 } 1924 1925 #[inline] is_generator(&self) -> bool1926 pub fn is_generator(&self) -> bool { 1927 matches!(self.kind(), Generator(..)) 1928 } 1929 1930 #[inline] is_integral(&self) -> bool1931 pub fn is_integral(&self) -> bool { 1932 matches!(self.kind(), Infer(IntVar(_)) | Int(_) | Uint(_)) 1933 } 1934 1935 #[inline] is_fresh_ty(&self) -> bool1936 pub fn is_fresh_ty(&self) -> bool { 1937 matches!(self.kind(), Infer(FreshTy(_))) 1938 } 1939 1940 #[inline] is_fresh(&self) -> bool1941 pub fn is_fresh(&self) -> bool { 1942 matches!(self.kind(), Infer(FreshTy(_) | FreshIntTy(_) | FreshFloatTy(_))) 1943 } 1944 1945 #[inline] is_char(&self) -> bool1946 pub fn is_char(&self) -> bool { 1947 matches!(self.kind(), Char) 1948 } 1949 1950 #[inline] is_numeric(&self) -> bool1951 pub fn is_numeric(&self) -> bool { 1952 self.is_integral() || self.is_floating_point() 1953 } 1954 1955 #[inline] is_signed(&self) -> bool1956 pub fn is_signed(&self) -> bool { 1957 matches!(self.kind(), Int(_)) 1958 } 1959 1960 #[inline] is_ptr_sized_integral(&self) -> bool1961 pub fn is_ptr_sized_integral(&self) -> bool { 1962 matches!(self.kind(), Int(ty::IntTy::Isize) | Uint(ty::UintTy::Usize)) 1963 } 1964 1965 #[inline] has_concrete_skeleton(&self) -> bool1966 pub fn has_concrete_skeleton(&self) -> bool { 1967 !matches!(self.kind(), Param(_) | Infer(_) | Error(_)) 1968 } 1969 1970 /// Returns the type and mutability of `*ty`. 1971 /// 1972 /// The parameter `explicit` indicates if this is an *explicit* dereference. 1973 /// Some types -- notably unsafe ptrs -- can only be dereferenced explicitly. builtin_deref(&self, explicit: bool) -> Option<TypeAndMut<'tcx>>1974 pub fn builtin_deref(&self, explicit: bool) -> Option<TypeAndMut<'tcx>> { 1975 match self.kind() { 1976 Adt(def, _) if def.is_box() => { 1977 Some(TypeAndMut { ty: self.boxed_ty(), mutbl: hir::Mutability::Not }) 1978 } 1979 Ref(_, ty, mutbl) => Some(TypeAndMut { ty, mutbl: *mutbl }), 1980 RawPtr(mt) if explicit => Some(*mt), 1981 _ => None, 1982 } 1983 } 1984 1985 /// Returns the type of `ty[i]`. builtin_index(&self) -> Option<Ty<'tcx>>1986 pub fn builtin_index(&self) -> Option<Ty<'tcx>> { 1987 match self.kind() { 1988 Array(ty, _) | Slice(ty) => Some(ty), 1989 _ => None, 1990 } 1991 } 1992 fn_sig(&self, tcx: TyCtxt<'tcx>) -> PolyFnSig<'tcx>1993 pub fn fn_sig(&self, tcx: TyCtxt<'tcx>) -> PolyFnSig<'tcx> { 1994 match self.kind() { 1995 FnDef(def_id, substs) => tcx.fn_sig(*def_id).subst(tcx, substs), 1996 FnPtr(f) => *f, 1997 Error(_) => { 1998 // ignore errors (#54954) 1999 ty::Binder::dummy(FnSig::fake()) 2000 } 2001 Closure(..) => bug!( 2002 "to get the signature of a closure, use `substs.as_closure().sig()` not `fn_sig()`", 2003 ), 2004 _ => bug!("Ty::fn_sig() called on non-fn type: {:?}", self), 2005 } 2006 } 2007 2008 #[inline] is_fn(&self) -> bool2009 pub fn is_fn(&self) -> bool { 2010 matches!(self.kind(), FnDef(..) | FnPtr(_)) 2011 } 2012 2013 #[inline] is_fn_ptr(&self) -> bool2014 pub fn is_fn_ptr(&self) -> bool { 2015 matches!(self.kind(), FnPtr(_)) 2016 } 2017 2018 #[inline] is_impl_trait(&self) -> bool2019 pub fn is_impl_trait(&self) -> bool { 2020 matches!(self.kind(), Opaque(..)) 2021 } 2022 2023 #[inline] ty_adt_def(&self) -> Option<&'tcx AdtDef>2024 pub fn ty_adt_def(&self) -> Option<&'tcx AdtDef> { 2025 match self.kind() { 2026 Adt(adt, _) => Some(adt), 2027 _ => None, 2028 } 2029 } 2030 2031 /// Iterates over tuple fields. 2032 /// Panics when called on anything but a tuple. tuple_fields(&self) -> impl DoubleEndedIterator<Item = Ty<'tcx>>2033 pub fn tuple_fields(&self) -> impl DoubleEndedIterator<Item = Ty<'tcx>> { 2034 match self.kind() { 2035 Tuple(substs) => substs.iter().map(|field| field.expect_ty()), 2036 _ => bug!("tuple_fields called on non-tuple"), 2037 } 2038 } 2039 2040 /// Get the `i`-th element of a tuple. 2041 /// Panics when called on anything but a tuple. tuple_element_ty(&self, i: usize) -> Option<Ty<'tcx>>2042 pub fn tuple_element_ty(&self, i: usize) -> Option<Ty<'tcx>> { 2043 match self.kind() { 2044 Tuple(substs) => substs.iter().nth(i).map(|field| field.expect_ty()), 2045 _ => bug!("tuple_fields called on non-tuple"), 2046 } 2047 } 2048 2049 /// If the type contains variants, returns the valid range of variant indices. 2050 // 2051 // FIXME: This requires the optimized MIR in the case of generators. 2052 #[inline] variant_range(&self, tcx: TyCtxt<'tcx>) -> Option<Range<VariantIdx>>2053 pub fn variant_range(&self, tcx: TyCtxt<'tcx>) -> Option<Range<VariantIdx>> { 2054 match self.kind() { 2055 TyKind::Adt(adt, _) => Some(adt.variant_range()), 2056 TyKind::Generator(def_id, substs, _) => { 2057 Some(substs.as_generator().variant_range(*def_id, tcx)) 2058 } 2059 _ => None, 2060 } 2061 } 2062 2063 /// If the type contains variants, returns the variant for `variant_index`. 2064 /// Panics if `variant_index` is out of range. 2065 // 2066 // FIXME: This requires the optimized MIR in the case of generators. 2067 #[inline] discriminant_for_variant( &self, tcx: TyCtxt<'tcx>, variant_index: VariantIdx, ) -> Option<Discr<'tcx>>2068 pub fn discriminant_for_variant( 2069 &self, 2070 tcx: TyCtxt<'tcx>, 2071 variant_index: VariantIdx, 2072 ) -> Option<Discr<'tcx>> { 2073 match self.kind() { 2074 TyKind::Adt(adt, _) if adt.variants.is_empty() => { 2075 // This can actually happen during CTFE, see 2076 // https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/89765. 2077 None 2078 } 2079 TyKind::Adt(adt, _) if adt.is_enum() => { 2080 Some(adt.discriminant_for_variant(tcx, variant_index)) 2081 } 2082 TyKind::Generator(def_id, substs, _) => { 2083 Some(substs.as_generator().discriminant_for_variant(*def_id, tcx, variant_index)) 2084 } 2085 _ => None, 2086 } 2087 } 2088 2089 /// Returns the type of the discriminant of this type. discriminant_ty(&'tcx self, tcx: TyCtxt<'tcx>) -> Ty<'tcx>2090 pub fn discriminant_ty(&'tcx self, tcx: TyCtxt<'tcx>) -> Ty<'tcx> { 2091 match self.kind() { 2092 ty::Adt(adt, _) if adt.is_enum() => adt.repr.discr_type().to_ty(tcx), 2093 ty::Generator(_, substs, _) => substs.as_generator().discr_ty(tcx), 2094 2095 ty::Param(_) | ty::Projection(_) | ty::Opaque(..) | ty::Infer(ty::TyVar(_)) => { 2096 let assoc_items = tcx.associated_item_def_ids( 2097 tcx.require_lang_item(hir::LangItem::DiscriminantKind, None), 2098 ); 2099 tcx.mk_projection(assoc_items[0], tcx.intern_substs(&[self.into()])) 2100 } 2101 2102 ty::Bool 2103 | ty::Char 2104 | ty::Int(_) 2105 | ty::Uint(_) 2106 | ty::Float(_) 2107 | ty::Adt(..) 2108 | ty::Foreign(_) 2109 | ty::Str 2110 | ty::Array(..) 2111 | ty::Slice(_) 2112 | ty::RawPtr(_) 2113 | ty::Ref(..) 2114 | ty::FnDef(..) 2115 | ty::FnPtr(..) 2116 | ty::Dynamic(..) 2117 | ty::Closure(..) 2118 | ty::GeneratorWitness(..) 2119 | ty::Never 2120 | ty::Tuple(_) 2121 | ty::Error(_) 2122 | ty::Infer(IntVar(_) | FloatVar(_)) => tcx.types.u8, 2123 2124 ty::Bound(..) 2125 | ty::Placeholder(_) 2126 | ty::Infer(FreshTy(_) | ty::FreshIntTy(_) | ty::FreshFloatTy(_)) => { 2127 bug!("`discriminant_ty` applied to unexpected type: {:?}", self) 2128 } 2129 } 2130 } 2131 2132 /// Returns the type of metadata for (potentially fat) pointers to this type. ptr_metadata_ty(&'tcx self, tcx: TyCtxt<'tcx>) -> Ty<'tcx>2133 pub fn ptr_metadata_ty(&'tcx self, tcx: TyCtxt<'tcx>) -> Ty<'tcx> { 2134 // FIXME: should this normalize? 2135 let tail = tcx.struct_tail_without_normalization(self); 2136 match tail.kind() { 2137 // Sized types 2138 ty::Infer(ty::IntVar(_) | ty::FloatVar(_)) 2139 | ty::Uint(_) 2140 | ty::Int(_) 2141 | ty::Bool 2142 | ty::Float(_) 2143 | ty::FnDef(..) 2144 | ty::FnPtr(_) 2145 | ty::RawPtr(..) 2146 | ty::Char 2147 | ty::Ref(..) 2148 | ty::Generator(..) 2149 | ty::GeneratorWitness(..) 2150 | ty::Array(..) 2151 | ty::Closure(..) 2152 | ty::Never 2153 | ty::Error(_) 2154 | ty::Foreign(..) 2155 // If returned by `struct_tail_without_normalization` this is a unit struct 2156 // without any fields, or not a struct, and therefore is Sized. 2157 | ty::Adt(..) 2158 // If returned by `struct_tail_without_normalization` this is the empty tuple, 2159 // a.k.a. unit type, which is Sized 2160 | ty::Tuple(..) => tcx.types.unit, 2161 2162 ty::Str | ty::Slice(_) => tcx.types.usize, 2163 ty::Dynamic(..) => { 2164 let dyn_metadata = tcx.lang_items().dyn_metadata().unwrap(); 2165 tcx.type_of(dyn_metadata).subst(tcx, &[tail.into()]) 2166 }, 2167 2168 ty::Projection(_) 2169 | ty::Param(_) 2170 | ty::Opaque(..) 2171 | ty::Infer(ty::TyVar(_)) 2172 | ty::Bound(..) 2173 | ty::Placeholder(..) 2174 | ty::Infer(ty::FreshTy(_) | ty::FreshIntTy(_) | ty::FreshFloatTy(_)) => { 2175 bug!("`ptr_metadata_ty` applied to unexpected type: {:?}", tail) 2176 } 2177 } 2178 } 2179 2180 /// When we create a closure, we record its kind (i.e., what trait 2181 /// it implements) into its `ClosureSubsts` using a type 2182 /// parameter. This is kind of a phantom type, except that the 2183 /// most convenient thing for us to are the integral types. This 2184 /// function converts such a special type into the closure 2185 /// kind. To go the other way, use 2186 /// `tcx.closure_kind_ty(closure_kind)`. 2187 /// 2188 /// Note that during type checking, we use an inference variable 2189 /// to represent the closure kind, because it has not yet been 2190 /// inferred. Once upvar inference (in `rustc_typeck/src/check/upvar.rs`) 2191 /// is complete, that type variable will be unified. to_opt_closure_kind(&self) -> Option<ty::ClosureKind>2192 pub fn to_opt_closure_kind(&self) -> Option<ty::ClosureKind> { 2193 match self.kind() { 2194 Int(int_ty) => match int_ty { 2195 ty::IntTy::I8 => Some(ty::ClosureKind::Fn), 2196 ty::IntTy::I16 => Some(ty::ClosureKind::FnMut), 2197 ty::IntTy::I32 => Some(ty::ClosureKind::FnOnce), 2198 _ => bug!("cannot convert type `{:?}` to a closure kind", self), 2199 }, 2200 2201 // "Bound" types appear in canonical queries when the 2202 // closure type is not yet known 2203 Bound(..) | Infer(_) => None, 2204 2205 Error(_) => Some(ty::ClosureKind::Fn), 2206 2207 _ => bug!("cannot convert type `{:?}` to a closure kind", self), 2208 } 2209 } 2210 2211 /// Fast path helper for testing if a type is `Sized`. 2212 /// 2213 /// Returning true means the type is known to be sized. Returning 2214 /// `false` means nothing -- could be sized, might not be. 2215 /// 2216 /// Note that we could never rely on the fact that a type such as `[_]` is 2217 /// trivially `!Sized` because we could be in a type environment with a 2218 /// bound such as `[_]: Copy`. A function with such a bound obviously never 2219 /// can be called, but that doesn't mean it shouldn't typecheck. This is why 2220 /// this method doesn't return `Option<bool>`. is_trivially_sized(&self, tcx: TyCtxt<'tcx>) -> bool2221 pub fn is_trivially_sized(&self, tcx: TyCtxt<'tcx>) -> bool { 2222 match self.kind() { 2223 ty::Infer(ty::IntVar(_) | ty::FloatVar(_)) 2224 | ty::Uint(_) 2225 | ty::Int(_) 2226 | ty::Bool 2227 | ty::Float(_) 2228 | ty::FnDef(..) 2229 | ty::FnPtr(_) 2230 | ty::RawPtr(..) 2231 | ty::Char 2232 | ty::Ref(..) 2233 | ty::Generator(..) 2234 | ty::GeneratorWitness(..) 2235 | ty::Array(..) 2236 | ty::Closure(..) 2237 | ty::Never 2238 | ty::Error(_) => true, 2239 2240 ty::Str | ty::Slice(_) | ty::Dynamic(..) | ty::Foreign(..) => false, 2241 2242 ty::Tuple(tys) => tys.iter().all(|ty| ty.expect_ty().is_trivially_sized(tcx)), 2243 2244 ty::Adt(def, _substs) => def.sized_constraint(tcx).is_empty(), 2245 2246 ty::Projection(_) | ty::Param(_) | ty::Opaque(..) => false, 2247 2248 ty::Infer(ty::TyVar(_)) => false, 2249 2250 ty::Bound(..) 2251 | ty::Placeholder(..) 2252 | ty::Infer(ty::FreshTy(_) | ty::FreshIntTy(_) | ty::FreshFloatTy(_)) => { 2253 bug!("`is_trivially_sized` applied to unexpected type: {:?}", self) 2254 } 2255 } 2256 } 2257 } 2258 2259 /// Extra information about why we ended up with a particular variance. 2260 /// This is only used to add more information to error messages, and 2261 /// has no effect on soundness. While choosing the 'wrong' `VarianceDiagInfo` 2262 /// may lead to confusing notes in error messages, it will never cause 2263 /// a miscompilation or unsoundness. 2264 /// 2265 /// When in doubt, use `VarianceDiagInfo::default()` 2266 #[derive(Copy, Clone, Debug, Default, PartialEq, Eq, PartialOrd, Ord)] 2267 pub enum VarianceDiagInfo<'tcx> { 2268 /// No additional information - this is the default. 2269 /// We will not add any additional information to error messages. 2270 #[default] 2271 None, 2272 /// We switched our variance because a type occurs inside 2273 /// the generic argument of a mutable reference or pointer 2274 /// (`*mut T` or `&mut T`). In either case, our variance 2275 /// will always be `Invariant`. 2276 Mut { 2277 /// Tracks whether we had a mutable pointer or reference, 2278 /// for better error messages 2279 kind: VarianceDiagMutKind, 2280 /// The type parameter of the mutable pointer/reference 2281 /// (the `T` in `&mut T` or `*mut T`). 2282 ty: Ty<'tcx>, 2283 }, 2284 } 2285 2286 #[derive(Copy, Clone, Debug, PartialEq, Eq, PartialOrd, Ord)] 2287 pub enum VarianceDiagMutKind { 2288 /// A mutable raw pointer (`*mut T`) 2289 RawPtr, 2290 /// A mutable reference (`&mut T`) 2291 Ref, 2292 } 2293 2294 impl<'tcx> VarianceDiagInfo<'tcx> { 2295 /// Mirrors `Variance::xform` - used to 'combine' the existing 2296 /// and new `VarianceDiagInfo`s when our variance changes. xform(self, other: VarianceDiagInfo<'tcx>) -> VarianceDiagInfo<'tcx>2297 pub fn xform(self, other: VarianceDiagInfo<'tcx>) -> VarianceDiagInfo<'tcx> { 2298 // For now, just use the first `VarianceDiagInfo::Mut` that we see 2299 match self { 2300 VarianceDiagInfo::None => other, 2301 VarianceDiagInfo::Mut { .. } => self, 2302 } 2303 } 2304 } 2305