-
Notifications
You must be signed in to change notification settings - Fork 12.9k
New issue
Have a question about this project? Sign up for a free GitHub account to open an issue and contact its maintainers and the community.
By clicking “Sign up for GitHub”, you agree to our terms of service and privacy statement. We’ll occasionally send you account related emails.
Already on GitHub? Sign in to your account
Store the types of ty::Expr
arguments in the ty::Expr
#125968
Conversation
changes to the core type system |
This comment has been minimized.
This comment has been minimized.
@bors r+ rollup |
Remove the `ty` field from type system `Const`s Part of the work on `adt_const_params`/`generic_const_param_types`/`min_generic_const_exprs`/generally making the compiler nicer. cc rust-lang/project-const-generics#44 Please review commit-by-commit otherwise I wasted a lot of time not just squashing this into a giant mess (and also it'll be SO much nicer because theres a lot of fluff changes mixed in with other more careful changes if looking via File Changes) This is based on top of rust-lang#125967 and rust-lang#125968, and as such should not be merged until those are merged. --- Why do this? - The `ty` field keeps causing ICEs and weird behaviour due to it either being treated as "part of the const" or it being forgotten about leading to ICEs. - As we move forward with `adt_const_params` and a potential `min_generic_const_exprs` it's going to become more complex to actually lower the correct `Ty<'tcx>` - It muddles the idea behind how we check `Const` arguments have the correct type. By having the `ty` field it may seem like we ought to be relating it when we relate two types, or that its generally important information about the `Const`. - Brings the compiler more in line with `a-mir-formality` as that also tracks the type of type system `Const`s via `ConstArgHasType` bounds in the env instead of on the `Const` itself. - A lot of stuff is a lot nicer when you dont have to pass around the type of a const lol. Everywhere we construct `Const` is now significantly nicer 😅 See rust-lang#125671's description for some more information about the `ty` field --- General summary of changes in this PR: - Change how we represent `ty::Expr` from `generic_const_exprs` to not explode the size of `Const` in this PR (This doesn't really matter, I just didn't want to Completely break generic const exprs just yet) - Add `Ty` to `ConstKind::Value` as otherwise there is no way to implement `ConstArgHasType` to ensure that const arguments are correctly typed for the parameter when we stop creating anon consts for all const args. It's also just incredibly difficult/annoying to thread the correct `Ty` around to a bunch of ctfe functions otherwise. - Fully implement `ConstArgHasType` in both the old and new solver. Since it now has no reliance on the `ty` field it serves its originally intended purpose of being able to act as a double check that trait vs impls have correctly typed const parameters. It also will now be able to be responsible for checking types of const arguments to parameters under `min_generic_const_exprs`. - Add `Ty` to `mir::Const::Ty`. I dont have a great understanding of why mir constants are setup like this to be honest. Regardless they need to be able to determine the type of the const and the easiest way to make this happen was to simply store the `Ty` along side the `ty::Const`. Maybe we can do better here in the future but I'd have to spend way more time looking at everywhere we use `mir::Const`. - SMIR represents mir consts and ty consts using the same `Const` type. This... does not work at all anymore so I have split them into two different types in SMIR and it seems to make everything a lot nicer regardless of this PR. - rustdoc has its own `Const` which also has a `ty` field. It was relatively easy to remove this. --- r? `@lcnr` `@compiler-errors`
…mpiler-errors Rollup of 8 pull requests Successful merges: - rust-lang#125667 (Silence follow-up errors directly based on error types and regions) - rust-lang#125717 (Refactor `#[diagnostic::do_not_recommend]` support) - rust-lang#125795 (Improve renaming suggestion for names with leading underscores) - rust-lang#125865 (Fix ICE caused by ignoring EffectVars in type inference) - rust-lang#125953 (Streamline `nested` calls.) - rust-lang#125959 (Reduce `pub` exposure in `rustc_mir_build`) - rust-lang#125967 (Split smir `Const` into `TyConst` and `MirConst`) - rust-lang#125968 (Store the types of `ty::Expr` arguments in the `ty::Expr`) r? `@ghost` `@rustbot` modify labels: rollup
Rollup merge of rust-lang#125968 - BoxyUwU:shrink_ty_expr, r=oli-obk Store the types of `ty::Expr` arguments in the `ty::Expr` Part of rust-lang#125958 In attempting to remove the `ty` field on `Const` it will become necessary to store the `Ty<'tcx>` inside of `Expr<'tcx>`. In order to do this without blowing up the size of `ConstKind`, we start storing the type/const args as `GenericArgs` r? `@oli-obk`
@rust-timer build 6f46db0 |
This comment has been minimized.
This comment has been minimized.
…InTheVoid Remove the `ty` field from type system `Const`s Part of the work on `adt_const_params`/`generic_const_param_types`/`min_generic_const_exprs`/generally making the compiler nicer. cc rust-lang/project-const-generics#44 Please review commit-by-commit otherwise I wasted a lot of time not just squashing this into a giant mess (and also it'll be SO much nicer because theres a lot of fluff changes mixed in with other more careful changes if looking via File Changes) This is based on top of rust-lang#125967 and rust-lang#125968, and as such should not be merged until those are merged. --- Why do this? - The `ty` field keeps causing ICEs and weird behaviour due to it either being treated as "part of the const" or it being forgotten about leading to ICEs. - As we move forward with `adt_const_params` and a potential `min_generic_const_exprs` it's going to become more complex to actually lower the correct `Ty<'tcx>` - It muddles the idea behind how we check `Const` arguments have the correct type. By having the `ty` field it may seem like we ought to be relating it when we relate two types, or that its generally important information about the `Const`. - Brings the compiler more in line with `a-mir-formality` as that also tracks the type of type system `Const`s via `ConstArgHasType` bounds in the env instead of on the `Const` itself. - A lot of stuff is a lot nicer when you dont have to pass around the type of a const lol. Everywhere we construct `Const` is now significantly nicer 😅 See rust-lang#125671's description for some more information about the `ty` field --- General summary of changes in this PR: - Change how we represent `ty::Expr` from `generic_const_exprs` to not explode the size of `Const` in this PR (This doesn't really matter, I just didn't want to Completely break generic const exprs just yet) - Add `Ty` to `ConstKind::Value` as otherwise there is no way to implement `ConstArgHasType` to ensure that const arguments are correctly typed for the parameter when we stop creating anon consts for all const args. It's also just incredibly difficult/annoying to thread the correct `Ty` around to a bunch of ctfe functions otherwise. - Fully implement `ConstArgHasType` in both the old and new solver. Since it now has no reliance on the `ty` field it serves its originally intended purpose of being able to act as a double check that trait vs impls have correctly typed const parameters. It also will now be able to be responsible for checking types of const arguments to parameters under `min_generic_const_exprs`. - Add `Ty` to `mir::Const::Ty`. I dont have a great understanding of why mir constants are setup like this to be honest. Regardless they need to be able to determine the type of the const and the easiest way to make this happen was to simply store the `Ty` along side the `ty::Const`. Maybe we can do better here in the future but I'd have to spend way more time looking at everywhere we use `mir::Const`. - SMIR represents mir consts and ty consts using the same `Const` type. This... does not work at all anymore so I have split them into two different types in SMIR and it seems to make everything a lot nicer regardless of this PR. - rustdoc has its own `Const` which also has a `ty` field. It was relatively easy to remove this. --- r? `@lcnr` `@compiler-errors`
Finished benchmarking commit (6f46db0): comparison URL. Overall result: ❌ regressions - 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 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)Results (primary 2.2%)This is a less reliable metric that may be of interest but was not used to determine the overall result at the top of this comment.
CyclesResults (primary -3.7%, secondary 6.2%)This is a less reliable metric that may be of interest but was not used to determine the overall result at the top of this comment.
Binary sizeThis benchmark run did not return any relevant results for this metric. Bootstrap: 669.797s -> 668.959s (-0.13%) |
This.... made |
Just a cycles regression, no wall time changes. Likely just code shifted around by the optimizer |
Part of #125958
In attempting to remove the
ty
field onConst
it will become necessary to store theTy<'tcx>
inside ofExpr<'tcx>
. In order to do this without blowing up the size ofConstKind
, we start storing the type/const args asGenericArgs
r? @oli-obk