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Re-implement a type-size based limit #125507
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@bors try @rust-timer queue |
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…=<try> Re-implement a type-size based limit r? lcnr Fixes rust-lang#125460
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@bors try |
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…=<try> Re-implement a type-size based limit r? lcnr Fixes rust-lang#125460
☀️ Try build successful - checks-actions |
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@craterbot run mode=build-and-test |
👌 Experiment ℹ️ Crater is a tool to run experiments across parts of the Rust ecosystem. Learn more |
Finished benchmarking commit (61a9ac6): comparison URL. Overall result: ❌✅ regressions and improvements - ACTION NEEDEDBenchmarking this pull request likely means that it is perf-sensitive, so we're automatically marking it as not fit for rolling up. While you can manually mark this PR as fit for rollup, we strongly recommend not doing so since this PR may lead to changes in compiler perf. Next Steps: If you can justify the regressions found in this try perf run, please indicate this with @bors rollup=never Warning ⚠: The following benchmark(s) failed to build:
Instruction countThis is a highly reliable metric that was used to determine the overall result at the top of this comment.
Max RSS (memory usage)This benchmark run did not return any relevant results for this metric. CyclesThis benchmark run did not return any relevant results for this metric. Binary sizeThis benchmark run did not return any relevant results for this metric. Bootstrap: 674.001s -> 680.65s (0.99%) |
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want to try bumping the limit x10 and rerun crater? |
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cache type sizes in type-size limit visitor This is rust-lang#125507 (comment) as lcnr can't open the PR now. Locally it reduces the `itertools` regression by quite a bit, "only +50%" compared to nightly. ```console Benchmark 1: cargo +stage1 build --release Time (mean ± σ): 2.721 s ± 0.009 s [User: 2.446 s, System: 0.325 s] Range (min … max): 2.710 s … 2.738 s 10 runs Benchmark 2: cargo +nightly build --release Time (mean ± σ): 1.784 s ± 0.005 s [User: 1.540 s, System: 0.279 s] Range (min … max): 1.778 s … 1.792 s 10 runs Summary cargo +nightly build --release ran 1.52 ± 0.01 times faster than cargo +stage1 build --release ``` On master, it's from 34s to the 2.7s above. r? compiler-errors just as a cc, as they said they might open the same PR later Opening as draft to do a perf run to see `deeply-nested-multi` (which should be fixed on the perf server now), and validate bootstrap times.
cache type sizes in type-size limit visitor This is rust-lang#125507 (comment) as lcnr can't open the PR now. Locally it reduces the `itertools` regression by quite a bit, "only +50%" compared to nightly. ```console Benchmark 1: cargo +stage1 build --release Time (mean ± σ): 2.721 s ± 0.009 s [User: 2.446 s, System: 0.325 s] Range (min … max): 2.710 s … 2.738 s 10 runs Benchmark 2: cargo +nightly build --release Time (mean ± σ): 1.784 s ± 0.005 s [User: 1.540 s, System: 0.279 s] Range (min … max): 1.778 s … 1.792 s 10 runs Summary cargo +nightly build --release ran 1.52 ± 0.01 times faster than cargo +stage1 build --release ``` On master, it's from 34s to the 2.7s above. r? compiler-errors just as a cc, as they said they might open the same PR later Opening as draft to do a perf run to see `deeply-nested-multi` fixed on the perf server (the type length has been bumped), and validate bootstrap times.
This has broken real-world code for me (hard compile error, not just performance). Here's a minimized version: use itertools::Itertools;
pub fn blah() {
let _ = "".split("")
.flat_map(|l| l.split(""))
.flat_map(|l| l.split(""))
.flat_map(|l| l.split(""))
.flat_map(|l| l.split(""))
.flat_map(|l| l.split(""))
.flat_map(|l| l.split(""))
.join("");
}
rustc 1.81.0-nightly (aa1d4f6 2024-07-03) |
Itertools ends up with very large closure types, so this fels unsurprising and intended (as these large closures significantly degrade performance during canonicalization and can easily result in defacto hangs, especially with the new solver). I hope you're able to patch the affected crate and increase its type length limit. Alternatively it may be worth it to patch itertools to outline the relevant closure here as well, similar to the PR mentioned aboe |
cache type sizes in type-size limit visitor This is basically rust-lang#125507 (comment) as lcnr can't open the PR now. Locally it reduces the `itertools` regression by quite a bit, to "only +50%" compared to nightly (that includes overhead from the local lack of artifact post-processing, and is just a data point to compare to the 10-20x timings without the cache). ```console Benchmark 1: cargo +stage1 build --release Time (mean ± σ): 2.721 s ± 0.009 s [User: 2.446 s, System: 0.325 s] Range (min … max): 2.710 s … 2.738 s 10 runs Benchmark 2: cargo +nightly build --release Time (mean ± σ): 1.784 s ± 0.005 s [User: 1.540 s, System: 0.279 s] Range (min … max): 1.778 s … 1.792 s 10 runs Summary cargo +nightly build --release ran 1.52 ± 0.01 times faster than cargo +stage1 build --release ``` On master, it's from 34s to the 2.7s above. r? compiler-errors
Ok, eventually it compiled, but I had to set max type length to 11GB (this repro function is part of another iterator…) super deep stack trace
|
cache type sizes in type-size limit visitor This is basically rust-lang/rust#125507 (comment) as lcnr can't open the PR now. Locally it reduces the `itertools` regression by quite a bit, to "only +50%" compared to nightly (that includes overhead from the local lack of artifact post-processing, and is just a data point to compare to the 10-20x timings without the cache). ```console Benchmark 1: cargo +stage1 build --release Time (mean ± σ): 2.721 s ± 0.009 s [User: 2.446 s, System: 0.325 s] Range (min … max): 2.710 s … 2.738 s 10 runs Benchmark 2: cargo +nightly build --release Time (mean ± σ): 1.784 s ± 0.005 s [User: 1.540 s, System: 0.279 s] Range (min … max): 1.778 s … 1.792 s 10 runs Summary cargo +nightly build --release ran 1.52 ± 0.01 times faster than cargo +stage1 build --release ``` On master, it's from 34s to the 2.7s above. r? compiler-errors
The attribute required to make the code in #127346 compile is quite silly. #![type_length_limit = "30491060267835378"] Given that value is just over 2 << 53, I think we might have a deeper problem here. The type length limit is stored in a Here's the implementation: rust/compiler/rustc_middle/src/ty/instance.rs Lines 391 to 422 in ed7e35f
Am I missing something obvious? |
This seems to be causing problems for people. We should consider reverting this as we assess the impact and correctness. |
This crate seems to have been broken by rust-lang/rust#125507, which re-introduces a type length limit check that wax already exceeded.
The Helix editor no longer compiles on the latest nightly (154fdac39 2024-07-07). I believe it is because of this PR |
@saethlin having 53 level nested 2-element tuples is enough to reach 2<<53. That's just 53 distinct types, which, thanks to caching, is easily processed by the rest of the compiler. edit: this appears to not be that simple from my testing, such nested tuples do OOM the compiler :3 |
…=lcnr Re-implement a type-size based limit r? lcnr This PR reintroduces the type length limit added in rust-lang#37789, which was accidentally made practically useless by the caching changes to `Ty::walk` in rust-lang#72412, which caused the `walk` function to no longer walk over identical elements. Hitting this length limit is not fatal unless we are in codegen -- so it shouldn't affect passes like the mir inliner which creates potentially very large types (which we observed, for example, when the new trait solver compiles `itertools` in `--release` mode). This also increases the type length limit from `1048576 == 2 ** 20` to `2 ** 24`, which covers all of the code that can be reached with craterbot-check. Individual crates can increase the length limit further if desired. Perf regression is mild and I think we should accept it -- reinstating this limit is important for the new trait solver and to make sure we don't accidentally hit more type-size related regressions in the future. Fixes rust-lang#125460
Upgrade toolchain to 7/12 Relevant PRs: rust-lang/rust#127176 and rust-lang/rust#125507 Resolves #3319 By submitting this pull request, I confirm that my contribution is made under the terms of the Apache 2.0 and MIT licenses.
…, r=jackh726 Gate the type length limit check behind a nightly flag Effectively disables the type length limit by introducing a `-Zenforce-type-length-limit` which defaults to **`false`**, since making the length limit actually be enforced ended up having a worse fallout than expected. We still keep the code around, but the type length limit attr is now a noop (except for its usage in some diagnostics code?). r? `@lcnr` -- up to you to decide what team consensus we need here since this reverses an FCP decision. Reopens rust-lang#125460 (if we decide to reopen it or keep it closed) Effectively reverses the decision FCP'd in rust-lang#125507 Closes rust-lang#127346
This MR contains the following updates: | Package | Update | Change | |---|---|---| | [rust](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust) | minor | `1.80.1` -> `1.81.0` | MR created with the help of [el-capitano/tools/renovate-bot](https://gitlab.com/el-capitano/tools/renovate-bot). **Proposed changes to behavior should be submitted there as MRs.** --- ### Release Notes <details> <summary>rust-lang/rust (rust)</summary> ### [`v1.81.0`](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/blob/HEAD/RELEASES.md#Version-1810-2024-09-05) [Compare Source](rust-lang/rust@1.80.1...1.81.0) \========================== <a id="1.81.0-Language"></a> ## Language - [Abort on uncaught panics in `extern "C"` functions.](rust-lang/rust#116088) - [Fix ambiguous cases of multiple `&` in elided self lifetimes.](rust-lang/rust#117967) - [Stabilize `#[expect]` for lints (RFC 2383),](rust-lang/rust#120924) like `#[allow]` with a warning if the lint is *not* fulfilled. - [Change method resolution to constrain hidden types instead of rejecting method candidates.](rust-lang/rust#123962) - [Bump `elided_lifetimes_in_associated_constant` to deny.](rust-lang/rust#124211) - [`offset_from`: always allow pointers to point to the same address.](rust-lang/rust#124921) - [Allow constraining opaque types during subtyping in the trait system.](rust-lang/rust#125447) - [Allow constraining opaque types during various unsizing casts.](rust-lang/rust#125610) - [Deny keyword lifetimes pre-expansion.](rust-lang/rust#126762) <a id="1.81.0-Compiler"></a> ## Compiler - [Make casts of pointers to trait objects stricter.](rust-lang/rust#120248) - [Check alias args for well-formedness even if they have escaping bound vars.](rust-lang/rust#123737) - [Deprecate no-op codegen option `-Cinline-threshold=...`.](rust-lang/rust#124712) - [Re-implement a type-size based limit.](rust-lang/rust#125507) - [Properly account for alignment in `transmute` size checks.](rust-lang/rust#125740) - [Remove the `box_pointers` lint.](rust-lang/rust#126018) - [Ensure the interpreter checks bool/char for validity when they are used in a cast.](rust-lang/rust#126265) - [Improve coverage instrumentation for functions containing nested items.](rust-lang/rust#127199) - Target changes: - [Add Tier 3 `no_std` Xtensa targets:](rust-lang/rust#125141) `xtensa-esp32-none-elf`, `xtensa-esp32s2-none-elf`, `xtensa-esp32s3-none-elf` - [Add Tier 3 `std` Xtensa targets:](rust-lang/rust#126380) `xtensa-esp32-espidf`, `xtensa-esp32s2-espidf`, `xtensa-esp32s3-espidf` - [Add Tier 3 i686 Redox OS target:](rust-lang/rust#126192) `i686-unknown-redox` - [Promote `arm64ec-pc-windows-msvc` to Tier 2.](rust-lang/rust#126039) - [Promote `loongarch64-unknown-linux-musl` to Tier 2 with host tools.](rust-lang/rust#126298) - [Enable full tools and profiler for LoongArch Linux targets.](rust-lang/rust#127078) - [Unconditionally warn on usage of `wasm32-wasi`.](rust-lang/rust#126662) (see compatibility note below) - Refer to Rust's \[platform support page]\[platform-support-doc] for more information on Rust's tiered platform support. <a id="1.81.0-Libraries"></a> ## Libraries - [Split core's `PanicInfo` and std's `PanicInfo`.](rust-lang/rust#115974) (see compatibility note below) - [Generalize `{Rc,Arc}::make_mut()` to unsized types.](rust-lang/rust#116113) - [Replace sort implementations with stable `driftsort` and unstable `ipnsort`.](rust-lang/rust#124032) All `slice::sort*` and `slice::select_nth*` methods are expected to see significant performance improvements. See the [research project](https://github.com/Voultapher/sort-research-rs) for more details. - [Document behavior of `create_dir_all` with respect to empty paths.](rust-lang/rust#125112) - [Fix interleaved output in the default panic hook when multiple threads panic simultaneously.](rust-lang/rust#127397) <a id="1.81.0-Stabilized-APIs"></a> ## Stabilized APIs - [`core::error`](https://doc.rust-lang.org/stable/core/error/index.html) - [`hint::assert_unchecked`](https://doc.rust-lang.org/stable/core/hint/fn.assert_unchecked.html) - [`fs::exists`](https://doc.rust-lang.org/stable/std/fs/fn.exists.html) - [`AtomicBool::fetch_not`](https://doc.rust-lang.org/stable/core/sync/atomic/struct.AtomicBool.html#method.fetch_not) - [`Duration::abs_diff`](https://doc.rust-lang.org/stable/core/time/struct.Duration.html#method.abs_diff) - [`IoSlice::advance`](https://doc.rust-lang.org/stable/std/io/struct.IoSlice.html#method.advance) - [`IoSlice::advance_slices`](https://doc.rust-lang.org/stable/std/io/struct.IoSlice.html#method.advance_slices) - [`IoSliceMut::advance`](https://doc.rust-lang.org/stable/std/io/struct.IoSliceMut.html#method.advance) - [`IoSliceMut::advance_slices`](https://doc.rust-lang.org/stable/std/io/struct.IoSliceMut.html#method.advance_slices) - [`PanicHookInfo`](https://doc.rust-lang.org/stable/std/panic/struct.PanicHookInfo.html) - [`PanicInfo::message`](https://doc.rust-lang.org/stable/core/panic/struct.PanicInfo.html#method.message) - [`PanicMessage`](https://doc.rust-lang.org/stable/core/panic/struct.PanicMessage.html) These APIs are now stable in const contexts: - [`char::from_u32_unchecked`](https://doc.rust-lang.org/stable/core/char/fn.from_u32\_unchecked.html) (function) - [`char::from_u32_unchecked`](https://doc.rust-lang.org/stable/core/primitive.char.html#method.from_u32\_unchecked) (method) - [`CStr::count_bytes`](https://doc.rust-lang.org/stable/core/ffi/c_str/struct.CStr.html#method.count_bytes) - [`CStr::from_ptr`](https://doc.rust-lang.org/stable/core/ffi/c_str/struct.CStr.html#method.from_ptr) <a id="1.81.0-Cargo"></a> ## Cargo - [Generated `.cargo_vcs_info.json` is always included, even when `--allow-dirty` is passed.](rust-lang/cargo#13960) - [Disallow `package.license-file` and `package.readme` pointing to non-existent files during packaging.](rust-lang/cargo#13921) - [Disallow passing `--release`/`--debug` flag along with the `--profile` flag.](rust-lang/cargo#13971) - [Remove `lib.plugin` key support in `Cargo.toml`. Rust plugin support has been deprecated for four years and was removed in 1.75.0.](rust-lang/cargo#13902) <a id="1.81.0-Compatibility-Notes"></a> ## Compatibility Notes - Usage of the `wasm32-wasi` target will now issue a compiler warning and request users switch to the `wasm32-wasip1` target instead. Both targets are the same, `wasm32-wasi` is only being renamed, and this [change to the WASI target](https://blog.rust-lang.org/2024/04/09/updates-to-rusts-wasi-targets.html) is being done to enable removing `wasm32-wasi` in January 2025. - We have renamed `std::panic::PanicInfo` to `std::panic::PanicHookInfo`. The old name will continue to work as an alias, but will result in a deprecation warning starting in Rust 1.82.0. `core::panic::PanicInfo` will remain unchanged, however, as this is now a *different type*. The reason is that these types have different roles: `std::panic::PanicHookInfo` is the argument to the [panic hook](https://doc.rust-lang.org/stable/std/panic/fn.set_hook.html) in std context (where panics can have an arbitrary payload), while `core::panic::PanicInfo` is the argument to the [`#[panic_handler]`](https://doc.rust-lang.org/nomicon/panic-handler.html) in no_std context (where panics always carry a formatted *message*). Separating these types allows us to add more useful methods to these types, such as `std::panic::PanicHookInfo::payload_as_str()` and `core::panic::PanicInfo::message()`. - The new sort implementations may panic if a type's implementation of [`Ord`](https://doc.rust-lang.org/std/cmp/trait.Ord.html) (or the given comparison function) does not implement a [total order](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Total_order) as the trait requires. `Ord`'s supertraits (`PartialOrd`, `Eq`, and `PartialEq`) must also be consistent. The previous implementations would not "notice" any problem, but the new implementations have a good chance of detecting inconsistencies, throwing a panic rather than returning knowingly unsorted data. - [In very rare cases, a change in the internal evaluation order of the trait solver may result in new fatal overflow errors.](rust-lang/rust#126128) <a id="1.81.0-Internal-Changes"></a> ## Internal Changes These changes do not affect any public interfaces of Rust, but they represent significant improvements to the performance or internals of rustc and related tools. - [Add a Rust-for Linux `auto` CI job to check kernel builds.](rust-lang/rust#125209) </details> --- ### Configuration 📅 **Schedule**: Branch creation - At any time (no schedule defined), Automerge - At any time (no schedule defined). 🚦 **Automerge**: Disabled by config. Please merge this manually once you are satisfied. ♻ **Rebasing**: Whenever MR becomes conflicted, or you tick the rebase/retry checkbox. 🔕 **Ignore**: Close this MR and you won't be reminded about this update again. --- - [ ] <!-- rebase-check -->If you want to rebase/retry this MR, check this box --- This MR has been generated by [Renovate Bot](https://github.com/renovatebot/renovate). <!--renovate-debug:eyJjcmVhdGVkSW5WZXIiOiIzNy40NDAuNyIsInVwZGF0ZWRJblZlciI6IjM3LjQ0MC43IiwidGFyZ2V0QnJhbmNoIjoibWFpbiIsImxhYmVscyI6WyJSZW5vdmF0ZSBCb3QiXX0=-->
Pkgsrc changes: * Adapt patches, apply to new vendored crates where needed. * Back-port rust pull request 130110, "make dist vendoring configurable" * Disable "dist vendoring", otherwise cargo would try to access the network during the build phase. Upstream changes: Version 1.81.0 (2024-09-05) ========================== Language -------- - [Abort on uncaught panics in `extern "C"` functions.] (rust-lang/rust#116088) - [Fix ambiguous cases of multiple `&` in elided self lifetimes.] (rust-lang/rust#117967) - [Stabilize `#[expect]` for lints (RFC 2383),] (rust-lang/rust#120924) like `#[allow]` with a warning if the lint is _not_ fulfilled. - [Change method resolution to constrain hidden types instead of rejecting method candidates.] (rust-lang/rust#123962) - [Bump `elided_lifetimes_in_associated_constant` to deny.] (rust-lang/rust#124211) - [`offset_from`: always allow pointers to point to the same address.] (rust-lang/rust#124921) - [Allow constraining opaque types during subtyping in the trait system.] (rust-lang/rust#125447) - [Allow constraining opaque types during various unsizing casts.] (rust-lang/rust#125610) - [Deny keyword lifetimes pre-expansion.] (rust-lang/rust#126762) Compiler -------- - [Make casts of pointers to trait objects stricter.] (rust-lang/rust#120248) - [Check alias args for well-formedness even if they have escaping bound vars.] (rust-lang/rust#123737) - [Deprecate no-op codegen option `-Cinline-threshold=...`.] (rust-lang/rust#124712) - [Re-implement a type-size based limit.] (rust-lang/rust#125507) - [Properly account for alignment in `transmute` size checks.] (rust-lang/rust#125740) - [Remove the `box_pointers` lint.] (rust-lang/rust#126018) - [Ensure the interpreter checks bool/char for validity when they are used in a cast.] (rust-lang/rust#126265) - [Improve coverage instrumentation for functions containing nested items.] (rust-lang/rust#127199) - Target changes: - [Add Tier 3 `no_std` Xtensa targets:] (rust-lang/rust#125141) `xtensa-esp32-none-elf`, `xtensa-esp32s2-none-elf`, `xtensa-esp32s3-none-elf` - [Add Tier 3 `std` Xtensa targets:] (rust-lang/rust#126380) `xtensa-esp32-espidf`, `xtensa-esp32s2-espidf`, `xtensa-esp32s3-espidf` - [Add Tier 3 i686 Redox OS target:] (rust-lang/rust#126192) `i686-unknown-redox` - [Promote `arm64ec-pc-windows-msvc` to Tier 2.] (rust-lang/rust#126039) - [Promote `wasm32-wasip2` to Tier 2.] (rust-lang/rust#126967) - [Promote `loongarch64-unknown-linux-musl` to Tier 2 with host tools.] (rust-lang/rust#126298) - [Enable full tools and profiler for LoongArch Linux targets.] (rust-lang/rust#127078) - [Unconditionally warn on usage of `wasm32-wasi`.] (rust-lang/rust#126662) (see compatibility note below) - Refer to Rust's [platform support page][platform-support-doc] for more information on Rust's tiered platform support. Libraries --------- - [Split core's `PanicInfo` and std's `PanicInfo`.] (rust-lang/rust#115974) (see compatibility note below) - [Generalize `{Rc,Arc}::make_mut()` to unsized types.] (rust-lang/rust#116113) - [Replace sort implementations with stable `driftsort` and unstable `ipnsort`.] (rust-lang/rust#124032) All `slice::sort*` and `slice::select_nth*` methods are expected to see significant performance improvements. See the [research project] (https://github.com/Voultapher/sort-research-rs) for more details. - [Document behavior of `create_dir_all` with respect to empty paths.] (rust-lang/rust#125112) - [Fix interleaved output in the default panic hook when multiple threads panic simultaneously.] (rust-lang/rust#127397) - Fix `Command`'s batch files argument escaping not working when file name has trailing whitespace or periods (CVE-2024-43402). Stabilized APIs --------------- - [`core::error`] (https://doc.rust-lang.org/stable/core/error/index.html) - [`hint::assert_unchecked`] (https://doc.rust-lang.org/stable/core/hint/fn.assert_unchecked.html) - [`fs::exists`] (https://doc.rust-lang.org/stable/std/fs/fn.exists.html) - [`AtomicBool::fetch_not`] (https://doc.rust-lang.org/stable/core/sync/atomic/struct.AtomicBool.html#method.fetch_not) - [`Duration::abs_diff`] (https://doc.rust-lang.org/stable/core/time/struct.Duration.html#method.abs_diff) - [`IoSlice::advance`] (https://doc.rust-lang.org/stable/std/io/struct.IoSlice.html#method.advance) - [`IoSlice::advance_slices`] (https://doc.rust-lang.org/stable/std/io/struct.IoSlice.html#method.advance_slices) - [`IoSliceMut::advance`] (https://doc.rust-lang.org/stable/std/io/struct.IoSliceMut.html#method.advance) - [`IoSliceMut::advance_slices`] (https://doc.rust-lang.org/stable/std/io/struct.IoSliceMut.html#method.advance_slices) - [`PanicHookInfo`] (https://doc.rust-lang.org/stable/std/panic/struct.PanicHookInfo.html) - [`PanicInfo::message`] (https://doc.rust-lang.org/stable/core/panic/struct.PanicInfo.html#method.message) - [`PanicMessage`] (https://doc.rust-lang.org/stable/core/panic/struct.PanicMessage.html) These APIs are now stable in const contexts: - [`char::from_u32_unchecked`] (https://doc.rust-lang.org/stable/core/char/fn.from_u32_unchecked.html) (function) - [`char::from_u32_unchecked`] (https://doc.rust-lang.org/stable/core/primitive.char.html#method.from_u32_unchecked) (method) - [`CStr::count_bytes`] (https://doc.rust-lang.org/stable/core/ffi/c_str/struct.CStr.html#method.count_bytes) - [`CStr::from_ptr`] (https://doc.rust-lang.org/stable/core/ffi/c_str/struct.CStr.html#method.from_ptr) Cargo ----- - [Generated `.cargo_vcs_info.json` is always included, even when `--allow-dirty` is passed.] (rust-lang/cargo#13960) - [Disallow `package.license-file` and `package.readme` pointing to non-existent files during packaging.] (rust-lang/cargo#13921) - [Disallow passing `--release`/`--debug` flag along with the `--profile` flag.] (rust-lang/cargo#13971) - [Remove `lib.plugin` key support in `Cargo.toml`. Rust plugin support has been deprecated for four years and was removed in 1.75.0.] (rust-lang/cargo#13902) Compatibility Notes ------------------- * Usage of the `wasm32-wasi` target will now issue a compiler warning and request users switch to the `wasm32-wasip1` target instead. Both targets are the same, `wasm32-wasi` is only being renamed, and this [change to the WASI target] (https://blog.rust-lang.org/2024/04/09/updates-to-rusts-wasi-targets.html) is being done to enable removing `wasm32-wasi` in January 2025. * We have renamed `std::panic::PanicInfo` to `std::panic::PanicHookInfo`. The old name will continue to work as an alias, but will result in a deprecation warning starting in Rust 1.82.0. `core::panic::PanicInfo` will remain unchanged, however, as this is now a *different type*. The reason is that these types have different roles: `std::panic::PanicHookInfo` is the argument to the [panic hook](https://doc.rust-lang.org/stable/std/panic/fn.set_hook.html) in std context (where panics can have an arbitrary payload), while `core::panic::PanicInfo` is the argument to the [`#[panic_handler]`](https://doc.rust-lang.org/nomicon/panic-handler.html) in no_std context (where panics always carry a formatted *message*). Separating these types allows us to add more useful methods to these types, such as `std::panic::PanicHookInfo::payload_as_str()` and `core::panic::PanicInfo::message()`. * The new sort implementations may panic if a type's implementation of [`Ord`](https://doc.rust-lang.org/std/cmp/trait.Ord.html) (or the given comparison function) does not implement a [total order](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Total_order) as the trait requires. `Ord`'s supertraits (`PartialOrd`, `Eq`, and `PartialEq`) must also be consistent. The previous implementations would not "notice" any problem, but the new implementations have a good chance of detecting inconsistencies, throwing a panic rather than returning knowingly unsorted data. * [In very rare cases, a change in the internal evaluation order of the trait solver may result in new fatal overflow errors.] (rust-lang/rust#126128) Internal Changes ---------------- These changes do not affect any public interfaces of Rust, but they represent significant improvements to the performance or internals of rustc and related tools. - [Add a Rust-for Linux `auto` CI job to check kernel builds.] (rust-lang/rust#125209)
r? lcnr
This PR reintroduces the type length limit added in #37789, which was accidentally made practically useless by the caching changes to
Ty::walk
in #72412, which caused thewalk
function to no longer walk over identical elements.Hitting this length limit is not fatal unless we are in codegen -- so it shouldn't affect passes like the mir inliner which creates potentially very large types (which we observed, for example, when the new trait solver compiles
itertools
in--release
mode).This also increases the type length limit from
1048576 == 2 ** 20
to2 ** 24
, which covers all of the code that can be reached with craterbot-check. Individual crates can increase the length limit further if desired.Perf regression is mild and I think we should accept it -- reinstating this limit is important for the new trait solver and to make sure we don't accidentally hit more type-size related regressions in the future.
Fixes #125460