|  | //! Miscellaneous type-system utilities that are too small to deserve their own modules. | 
|  |  | 
|  | use std::{fmt, iter}; | 
|  |  | 
|  | use rustc_abi::{Float, Integer, IntegerType, Size}; | 
|  | use rustc_apfloat::Float as _; | 
|  | use rustc_data_structures::fx::{FxHashMap, FxHashSet}; | 
|  | use rustc_data_structures::stable_hasher::{HashStable, StableHasher}; | 
|  | use rustc_data_structures::stack::ensure_sufficient_stack; | 
|  | use rustc_errors::ErrorGuaranteed; | 
|  | use rustc_hashes::Hash128; | 
|  | use rustc_hir as hir; | 
|  | use rustc_hir::def::{CtorOf, DefKind, Res}; | 
|  | use rustc_hir::def_id::{CrateNum, DefId, LocalDefId}; | 
|  | use rustc_hir::limit::Limit; | 
|  | use rustc_index::bit_set::GrowableBitSet; | 
|  | use rustc_macros::{HashStable, TyDecodable, TyEncodable, extension}; | 
|  | use rustc_span::sym; | 
|  | use rustc_type_ir::solve::SizedTraitKind; | 
|  | use smallvec::{SmallVec, smallvec}; | 
|  | use tracing::{debug, instrument}; | 
|  |  | 
|  | use super::TypingEnv; | 
|  | use crate::middle::codegen_fn_attrs::CodegenFnAttrFlags; | 
|  | use crate::mir; | 
|  | use crate::query::Providers; | 
|  | use crate::traits::ObligationCause; | 
|  | use crate::ty::layout::{FloatExt, IntegerExt}; | 
|  | use crate::ty::{ | 
|  | self, Asyncness, FallibleTypeFolder, GenericArgKind, GenericArgsRef, Ty, TyCtxt, TypeFoldable, | 
|  | TypeFolder, TypeSuperFoldable, TypeVisitableExt, Upcast, | 
|  | }; | 
|  |  | 
|  | #[derive(Copy, Clone, Debug)] | 
|  | pub struct Discr<'tcx> { | 
|  | /// Bit representation of the discriminant (e.g., `-1i8` is `0xFF_u128`). | 
|  | pub val: u128, | 
|  | pub ty: Ty<'tcx>, | 
|  | } | 
|  |  | 
|  | /// Used as an input to [`TyCtxt::uses_unique_generic_params`]. | 
|  | #[derive(Copy, Clone, Debug, PartialEq, Eq)] | 
|  | pub enum CheckRegions { | 
|  | No, | 
|  | /// Only permit parameter regions. This should be used | 
|  | /// for everything apart from functions, which may use | 
|  | /// `ReBound` to represent late-bound regions. | 
|  | OnlyParam, | 
|  | /// Check region parameters from a function definition. | 
|  | /// Allows `ReEarlyParam` and `ReBound` to handle early | 
|  | /// and late-bound region parameters. | 
|  | FromFunction, | 
|  | } | 
|  |  | 
|  | #[derive(Copy, Clone, Debug)] | 
|  | pub enum NotUniqueParam<'tcx> { | 
|  | DuplicateParam(ty::GenericArg<'tcx>), | 
|  | NotParam(ty::GenericArg<'tcx>), | 
|  | } | 
|  |  | 
|  | impl<'tcx> fmt::Display for Discr<'tcx> { | 
|  | fn fmt(&self, fmt: &mut fmt::Formatter<'_>) -> fmt::Result { | 
|  | match *self.ty.kind() { | 
|  | ty::Int(ity) => { | 
|  | let size = ty::tls::with(|tcx| Integer::from_int_ty(&tcx, ity).size()); | 
|  | let x = self.val; | 
|  | // sign extend the raw representation to be an i128 | 
|  | let x = size.sign_extend(x) as i128; | 
|  | write!(fmt, "{x}") | 
|  | } | 
|  | _ => write!(fmt, "{}", self.val), | 
|  | } | 
|  | } | 
|  | } | 
|  |  | 
|  | impl<'tcx> Discr<'tcx> { | 
|  | /// Adds `1` to the value and wraps around if the maximum for the type is reached. | 
|  | pub fn wrap_incr(self, tcx: TyCtxt<'tcx>) -> Self { | 
|  | self.checked_add(tcx, 1).0 | 
|  | } | 
|  | pub fn checked_add(self, tcx: TyCtxt<'tcx>, n: u128) -> (Self, bool) { | 
|  | let (size, signed) = self.ty.int_size_and_signed(tcx); | 
|  | let (val, oflo) = if signed { | 
|  | let min = size.signed_int_min(); | 
|  | let max = size.signed_int_max(); | 
|  | let val = size.sign_extend(self.val); | 
|  | assert!(n < (i128::MAX as u128)); | 
|  | let n = n as i128; | 
|  | let oflo = val > max - n; | 
|  | let val = if oflo { min + (n - (max - val) - 1) } else { val + n }; | 
|  | // zero the upper bits | 
|  | let val = val as u128; | 
|  | let val = size.truncate(val); | 
|  | (val, oflo) | 
|  | } else { | 
|  | let max = size.unsigned_int_max(); | 
|  | let val = self.val; | 
|  | let oflo = val > max - n; | 
|  | let val = if oflo { n - (max - val) - 1 } else { val + n }; | 
|  | (val, oflo) | 
|  | }; | 
|  | (Self { val, ty: self.ty }, oflo) | 
|  | } | 
|  | } | 
|  |  | 
|  | #[extension(pub trait IntTypeExt)] | 
|  | impl IntegerType { | 
|  | fn to_ty<'tcx>(&self, tcx: TyCtxt<'tcx>) -> Ty<'tcx> { | 
|  | match self { | 
|  | IntegerType::Pointer(true) => tcx.types.isize, | 
|  | IntegerType::Pointer(false) => tcx.types.usize, | 
|  | IntegerType::Fixed(i, s) => i.to_ty(tcx, *s), | 
|  | } | 
|  | } | 
|  |  | 
|  | fn initial_discriminant<'tcx>(&self, tcx: TyCtxt<'tcx>) -> Discr<'tcx> { | 
|  | Discr { val: 0, ty: self.to_ty(tcx) } | 
|  | } | 
|  |  | 
|  | fn disr_incr<'tcx>(&self, tcx: TyCtxt<'tcx>, val: Option<Discr<'tcx>>) -> Option<Discr<'tcx>> { | 
|  | if let Some(val) = val { | 
|  | assert_eq!(self.to_ty(tcx), val.ty); | 
|  | let (new, oflo) = val.checked_add(tcx, 1); | 
|  | if oflo { None } else { Some(new) } | 
|  | } else { | 
|  | Some(self.initial_discriminant(tcx)) | 
|  | } | 
|  | } | 
|  | } | 
|  |  | 
|  | impl<'tcx> TyCtxt<'tcx> { | 
|  | /// Creates a hash of the type `Ty` which will be the same no matter what crate | 
|  | /// context it's calculated within. This is used by the `type_id` intrinsic. | 
|  | pub fn type_id_hash(self, ty: Ty<'tcx>) -> Hash128 { | 
|  | // We don't have region information, so we erase all free regions. Equal types | 
|  | // must have the same `TypeId`, so we must anonymize all bound regions as well. | 
|  | let ty = self.erase_and_anonymize_regions(ty); | 
|  |  | 
|  | self.with_stable_hashing_context(|mut hcx| { | 
|  | let mut hasher = StableHasher::new(); | 
|  | hcx.while_hashing_spans(false, |hcx| ty.hash_stable(hcx, &mut hasher)); | 
|  | hasher.finish() | 
|  | }) | 
|  | } | 
|  |  | 
|  | pub fn res_generics_def_id(self, res: Res) -> Option<DefId> { | 
|  | match res { | 
|  | Res::Def(DefKind::Ctor(CtorOf::Variant, _), def_id) => { | 
|  | Some(self.parent(self.parent(def_id))) | 
|  | } | 
|  | Res::Def(DefKind::Variant | DefKind::Ctor(CtorOf::Struct, _), def_id) => { | 
|  | Some(self.parent(def_id)) | 
|  | } | 
|  | // Other `DefKind`s don't have generics and would ICE when calling | 
|  | // `generics_of`. | 
|  | Res::Def( | 
|  | DefKind::Struct | 
|  | | DefKind::Union | 
|  | | DefKind::Enum | 
|  | | DefKind::Trait | 
|  | | DefKind::OpaqueTy | 
|  | | DefKind::TyAlias | 
|  | | DefKind::ForeignTy | 
|  | | DefKind::TraitAlias | 
|  | | DefKind::AssocTy | 
|  | | DefKind::Fn | 
|  | | DefKind::AssocFn | 
|  | | DefKind::AssocConst | 
|  | | DefKind::Impl { .. }, | 
|  | def_id, | 
|  | ) => Some(def_id), | 
|  | Res::Err => None, | 
|  | _ => None, | 
|  | } | 
|  | } | 
|  |  | 
|  | /// Checks whether `ty: Copy` holds while ignoring region constraints. | 
|  | /// | 
|  | /// This impacts whether values of `ty` are *moved* or *copied* | 
|  | /// when referenced. This means that we may generate MIR which | 
|  | /// does copies even when the type actually doesn't satisfy the | 
|  | /// full requirements for the `Copy` trait (cc #29149) -- this | 
|  | /// winds up being reported as an error during NLL borrow check. | 
|  | /// | 
|  | /// This function should not be used if there is an `InferCtxt` available. | 
|  | /// Use `InferCtxt::type_is_copy_modulo_regions` instead. | 
|  | pub fn type_is_copy_modulo_regions( | 
|  | self, | 
|  | typing_env: ty::TypingEnv<'tcx>, | 
|  | ty: Ty<'tcx>, | 
|  | ) -> bool { | 
|  | ty.is_trivially_pure_clone_copy() || self.is_copy_raw(typing_env.as_query_input(ty)) | 
|  | } | 
|  |  | 
|  | /// Checks whether `ty: UseCloned` holds while ignoring region constraints. | 
|  | /// | 
|  | /// This function should not be used if there is an `InferCtxt` available. | 
|  | /// Use `InferCtxt::type_is_copy_modulo_regions` instead. | 
|  | pub fn type_is_use_cloned_modulo_regions( | 
|  | self, | 
|  | typing_env: ty::TypingEnv<'tcx>, | 
|  | ty: Ty<'tcx>, | 
|  | ) -> bool { | 
|  | ty.is_trivially_pure_clone_copy() || self.is_use_cloned_raw(typing_env.as_query_input(ty)) | 
|  | } | 
|  |  | 
|  | /// Returns the deeply last field of nested structures, or the same type if | 
|  | /// not a structure at all. Corresponds to the only possible unsized field, | 
|  | /// and its type can be used to determine unsizing strategy. | 
|  | /// | 
|  | /// Should only be called if `ty` has no inference variables and does not | 
|  | /// need its lifetimes preserved (e.g. as part of codegen); otherwise | 
|  | /// normalization attempt may cause compiler bugs. | 
|  | pub fn struct_tail_for_codegen( | 
|  | self, | 
|  | ty: Ty<'tcx>, | 
|  | typing_env: ty::TypingEnv<'tcx>, | 
|  | ) -> Ty<'tcx> { | 
|  | let tcx = self; | 
|  | tcx.struct_tail_raw( | 
|  | ty, | 
|  | &ObligationCause::dummy(), | 
|  | |ty| tcx.normalize_erasing_regions(typing_env, ty), | 
|  | || {}, | 
|  | ) | 
|  | } | 
|  |  | 
|  | /// Returns true if a type has metadata. | 
|  | pub fn type_has_metadata(self, ty: Ty<'tcx>, typing_env: ty::TypingEnv<'tcx>) -> bool { | 
|  | if ty.is_sized(self, typing_env) { | 
|  | return false; | 
|  | } | 
|  |  | 
|  | let tail = self.struct_tail_for_codegen(ty, typing_env); | 
|  | match tail.kind() { | 
|  | ty::Foreign(..) => false, | 
|  | ty::Str | ty::Slice(..) | ty::Dynamic(..) => true, | 
|  | _ => bug!("unexpected unsized tail: {:?}", tail), | 
|  | } | 
|  | } | 
|  |  | 
|  | /// Returns the deeply last field of nested structures, or the same type if | 
|  | /// not a structure at all. Corresponds to the only possible unsized field, | 
|  | /// and its type can be used to determine unsizing strategy. | 
|  | /// | 
|  | /// This is parameterized over the normalization strategy (i.e. how to | 
|  | /// handle `<T as Trait>::Assoc` and `impl Trait`). You almost certainly do | 
|  | /// **NOT** want to pass the identity function here, unless you know what | 
|  | /// you're doing, or you're within normalization code itself and will handle | 
|  | /// an unnormalized tail recursively. | 
|  | /// | 
|  | /// See also `struct_tail_for_codegen`, which is suitable for use | 
|  | /// during codegen. | 
|  | pub fn struct_tail_raw( | 
|  | self, | 
|  | mut ty: Ty<'tcx>, | 
|  | cause: &ObligationCause<'tcx>, | 
|  | mut normalize: impl FnMut(Ty<'tcx>) -> Ty<'tcx>, | 
|  | // This is currently used to allow us to walk a ValTree | 
|  | // in lockstep with the type in order to get the ValTree branch that | 
|  | // corresponds to an unsized field. | 
|  | mut f: impl FnMut() -> (), | 
|  | ) -> Ty<'tcx> { | 
|  | let recursion_limit = self.recursion_limit(); | 
|  | for iteration in 0.. { | 
|  | if !recursion_limit.value_within_limit(iteration) { | 
|  | let suggested_limit = match recursion_limit { | 
|  | Limit(0) => Limit(2), | 
|  | limit => limit * 2, | 
|  | }; | 
|  | let reported = self.dcx().emit_err(crate::error::RecursionLimitReached { | 
|  | span: cause.span, | 
|  | ty, | 
|  | suggested_limit, | 
|  | }); | 
|  | return Ty::new_error(self, reported); | 
|  | } | 
|  | match *ty.kind() { | 
|  | ty::Adt(def, args) => { | 
|  | if !def.is_struct() { | 
|  | break; | 
|  | } | 
|  | match def.non_enum_variant().tail_opt() { | 
|  | Some(field) => { | 
|  | f(); | 
|  | ty = field.ty(self, args); | 
|  | } | 
|  | None => break, | 
|  | } | 
|  | } | 
|  |  | 
|  | ty::Tuple(tys) if let Some((&last_ty, _)) = tys.split_last() => { | 
|  | f(); | 
|  | ty = last_ty; | 
|  | } | 
|  |  | 
|  | ty::Tuple(_) => break, | 
|  |  | 
|  | ty::Pat(inner, _) => { | 
|  | f(); | 
|  | ty = inner; | 
|  | } | 
|  |  | 
|  | ty::Alias(..) => { | 
|  | let normalized = normalize(ty); | 
|  | if ty == normalized { | 
|  | return ty; | 
|  | } else { | 
|  | ty = normalized; | 
|  | } | 
|  | } | 
|  |  | 
|  | _ => { | 
|  | break; | 
|  | } | 
|  | } | 
|  | } | 
|  | ty | 
|  | } | 
|  |  | 
|  | /// Same as applying `struct_tail` on `source` and `target`, but only | 
|  | /// keeps going as long as the two types are instances of the same | 
|  | /// structure definitions. | 
|  | /// For `(Foo<Foo<T>>, Foo<dyn Trait>)`, the result will be `(Foo<T>, dyn Trait)`, | 
|  | /// whereas struct_tail produces `T`, and `Trait`, respectively. | 
|  | /// | 
|  | /// Should only be called if the types have no inference variables and do | 
|  | /// not need their lifetimes preserved (e.g., as part of codegen); otherwise, | 
|  | /// normalization attempt may cause compiler bugs. | 
|  | pub fn struct_lockstep_tails_for_codegen( | 
|  | self, | 
|  | source: Ty<'tcx>, | 
|  | target: Ty<'tcx>, | 
|  | typing_env: ty::TypingEnv<'tcx>, | 
|  | ) -> (Ty<'tcx>, Ty<'tcx>) { | 
|  | let tcx = self; | 
|  | tcx.struct_lockstep_tails_raw(source, target, |ty| { | 
|  | tcx.normalize_erasing_regions(typing_env, ty) | 
|  | }) | 
|  | } | 
|  |  | 
|  | /// Same as applying `struct_tail` on `source` and `target`, but only | 
|  | /// keeps going as long as the two types are instances of the same | 
|  | /// structure definitions. | 
|  | /// For `(Foo<Foo<T>>, Foo<dyn Trait>)`, the result will be `(Foo<T>, Trait)`, | 
|  | /// whereas struct_tail produces `T`, and `Trait`, respectively. | 
|  | /// | 
|  | /// See also `struct_lockstep_tails_for_codegen`, which is suitable for use | 
|  | /// during codegen. | 
|  | pub fn struct_lockstep_tails_raw( | 
|  | self, | 
|  | source: Ty<'tcx>, | 
|  | target: Ty<'tcx>, | 
|  | normalize: impl Fn(Ty<'tcx>) -> Ty<'tcx>, | 
|  | ) -> (Ty<'tcx>, Ty<'tcx>) { | 
|  | let (mut a, mut b) = (source, target); | 
|  | loop { | 
|  | match (a.kind(), b.kind()) { | 
|  | (&ty::Adt(a_def, a_args), &ty::Adt(b_def, b_args)) | 
|  | if a_def == b_def && a_def.is_struct() => | 
|  | { | 
|  | if let Some(f) = a_def.non_enum_variant().tail_opt() { | 
|  | a = f.ty(self, a_args); | 
|  | b = f.ty(self, b_args); | 
|  | } else { | 
|  | break; | 
|  | } | 
|  | } | 
|  | (&ty::Tuple(a_tys), &ty::Tuple(b_tys)) if a_tys.len() == b_tys.len() => { | 
|  | if let Some(&a_last) = a_tys.last() { | 
|  | a = a_last; | 
|  | b = *b_tys.last().unwrap(); | 
|  | } else { | 
|  | break; | 
|  | } | 
|  | } | 
|  | (ty::Alias(..), _) | (_, ty::Alias(..)) => { | 
|  | // If either side is a projection, attempt to | 
|  | // progress via normalization. (Should be safe to | 
|  | // apply to both sides as normalization is | 
|  | // idempotent.) | 
|  | let a_norm = normalize(a); | 
|  | let b_norm = normalize(b); | 
|  | if a == a_norm && b == b_norm { | 
|  | break; | 
|  | } else { | 
|  | a = a_norm; | 
|  | b = b_norm; | 
|  | } | 
|  | } | 
|  |  | 
|  | _ => break, | 
|  | } | 
|  | } | 
|  | (a, b) | 
|  | } | 
|  |  | 
|  | /// Calculate the destructor of a given type. | 
|  | pub fn calculate_dtor( | 
|  | self, | 
|  | adt_did: LocalDefId, | 
|  | validate: impl Fn(Self, LocalDefId) -> Result<(), ErrorGuaranteed>, | 
|  | ) -> Option<ty::Destructor> { | 
|  | let drop_trait = self.lang_items().drop_trait()?; | 
|  | self.ensure_ok().coherent_trait(drop_trait).ok()?; | 
|  |  | 
|  | let mut dtor_candidate = None; | 
|  | // `Drop` impls can only be written in the same crate as the adt, and cannot be blanket impls | 
|  | for &impl_did in self.local_trait_impls(drop_trait) { | 
|  | let Some(adt_def) = self.type_of(impl_did).skip_binder().ty_adt_def() else { continue }; | 
|  | if adt_def.did() != adt_did.to_def_id() { | 
|  | continue; | 
|  | } | 
|  |  | 
|  | if validate(self, impl_did).is_err() { | 
|  | // Already `ErrorGuaranteed`, no need to delay a span bug here. | 
|  | continue; | 
|  | } | 
|  |  | 
|  | let Some(item_id) = self.associated_item_def_ids(impl_did).first() else { | 
|  | self.dcx() | 
|  | .span_delayed_bug(self.def_span(impl_did), "Drop impl without drop function"); | 
|  | continue; | 
|  | }; | 
|  |  | 
|  | if self.def_kind(item_id) != DefKind::AssocFn { | 
|  | self.dcx().span_delayed_bug(self.def_span(item_id), "drop is not a function"); | 
|  | continue; | 
|  | } | 
|  |  | 
|  | if let Some(old_item_id) = dtor_candidate { | 
|  | self.dcx() | 
|  | .struct_span_err(self.def_span(item_id), "multiple drop impls found") | 
|  | .with_span_note(self.def_span(old_item_id), "other impl here") | 
|  | .delay_as_bug(); | 
|  | } | 
|  |  | 
|  | dtor_candidate = Some(*item_id); | 
|  | } | 
|  |  | 
|  | let did = dtor_candidate?; | 
|  | Some(ty::Destructor { did }) | 
|  | } | 
|  |  | 
|  | /// Calculate the async destructor of a given type. | 
|  | pub fn calculate_async_dtor( | 
|  | self, | 
|  | adt_did: LocalDefId, | 
|  | validate: impl Fn(Self, LocalDefId) -> Result<(), ErrorGuaranteed>, | 
|  | ) -> Option<ty::AsyncDestructor> { | 
|  | let async_drop_trait = self.lang_items().async_drop_trait()?; | 
|  | self.ensure_ok().coherent_trait(async_drop_trait).ok()?; | 
|  |  | 
|  | let mut dtor_candidate = None; | 
|  | // `AsyncDrop` impls can only be written in the same crate as the adt, and cannot be blanket impls | 
|  | for &impl_did in self.local_trait_impls(async_drop_trait) { | 
|  | let Some(adt_def) = self.type_of(impl_did).skip_binder().ty_adt_def() else { continue }; | 
|  | if adt_def.did() != adt_did.to_def_id() { | 
|  | continue; | 
|  | } | 
|  |  | 
|  | if validate(self, impl_did).is_err() { | 
|  | // Already `ErrorGuaranteed`, no need to delay a span bug here. | 
|  | continue; | 
|  | } | 
|  |  | 
|  | if let Some(old_impl_did) = dtor_candidate { | 
|  | self.dcx() | 
|  | .struct_span_err(self.def_span(impl_did), "multiple async drop impls found") | 
|  | .with_span_note(self.def_span(old_impl_did), "other impl here") | 
|  | .delay_as_bug(); | 
|  | } | 
|  |  | 
|  | dtor_candidate = Some(impl_did); | 
|  | } | 
|  |  | 
|  | Some(ty::AsyncDestructor { impl_did: dtor_candidate?.into() }) | 
|  | } | 
|  |  | 
|  | /// Returns the set of types that are required to be alive in | 
|  | /// order to run the destructor of `def` (see RFCs 769 and | 
|  | /// 1238). | 
|  | /// | 
|  | /// Note that this returns only the constraints for the | 
|  | /// destructor of `def` itself. For the destructors of the | 
|  | /// contents, you need `adt_dtorck_constraint`. | 
|  | pub fn destructor_constraints(self, def: ty::AdtDef<'tcx>) -> Vec<ty::GenericArg<'tcx>> { | 
|  | let dtor = match def.destructor(self) { | 
|  | None => { | 
|  | debug!("destructor_constraints({:?}) - no dtor", def.did()); | 
|  | return vec![]; | 
|  | } | 
|  | Some(dtor) => dtor.did, | 
|  | }; | 
|  |  | 
|  | let impl_def_id = self.parent(dtor); | 
|  | let impl_generics = self.generics_of(impl_def_id); | 
|  |  | 
|  | // We have a destructor - all the parameters that are not | 
|  | // pure_wrt_drop (i.e, don't have a #[may_dangle] attribute) | 
|  | // must be live. | 
|  |  | 
|  | // We need to return the list of parameters from the ADTs | 
|  | // generics/args that correspond to impure parameters on the | 
|  | // impl's generics. This is a bit ugly, but conceptually simple: | 
|  | // | 
|  | // Suppose our ADT looks like the following | 
|  | // | 
|  | //     struct S<X, Y, Z>(X, Y, Z); | 
|  | // | 
|  | // and the impl is | 
|  | // | 
|  | //     impl<#[may_dangle] P0, P1, P2> Drop for S<P1, P2, P0> | 
|  | // | 
|  | // We want to return the parameters (X, Y). For that, we match | 
|  | // up the item-args <X, Y, Z> with the args on the impl ADT, | 
|  | // <P1, P2, P0>, and then look up which of the impl args refer to | 
|  | // parameters marked as pure. | 
|  |  | 
|  | let impl_args = match *self.type_of(impl_def_id).instantiate_identity().kind() { | 
|  | ty::Adt(def_, args) if def_ == def => args, | 
|  | _ => span_bug!(self.def_span(impl_def_id), "expected ADT for self type of `Drop` impl"), | 
|  | }; | 
|  |  | 
|  | let item_args = ty::GenericArgs::identity_for_item(self, def.did()); | 
|  |  | 
|  | let result = iter::zip(item_args, impl_args) | 
|  | .filter(|&(_, arg)| { | 
|  | match arg.kind() { | 
|  | GenericArgKind::Lifetime(region) => match region.kind() { | 
|  | ty::ReEarlyParam(ebr) => { | 
|  | !impl_generics.region_param(ebr, self).pure_wrt_drop | 
|  | } | 
|  | // Error: not a region param | 
|  | _ => false, | 
|  | }, | 
|  | GenericArgKind::Type(ty) => match *ty.kind() { | 
|  | ty::Param(pt) => !impl_generics.type_param(pt, self).pure_wrt_drop, | 
|  | // Error: not a type param | 
|  | _ => false, | 
|  | }, | 
|  | GenericArgKind::Const(ct) => match ct.kind() { | 
|  | ty::ConstKind::Param(pc) => { | 
|  | !impl_generics.const_param(pc, self).pure_wrt_drop | 
|  | } | 
|  | // Error: not a const param | 
|  | _ => false, | 
|  | }, | 
|  | } | 
|  | }) | 
|  | .map(|(item_param, _)| item_param) | 
|  | .collect(); | 
|  | debug!("destructor_constraint({:?}) = {:?}", def.did(), result); | 
|  | result | 
|  | } | 
|  |  | 
|  | /// Checks whether each generic argument is simply a unique generic parameter. | 
|  | pub fn uses_unique_generic_params( | 
|  | self, | 
|  | args: &[ty::GenericArg<'tcx>], | 
|  | ignore_regions: CheckRegions, | 
|  | ) -> Result<(), NotUniqueParam<'tcx>> { | 
|  | let mut seen = GrowableBitSet::default(); | 
|  | let mut seen_late = FxHashSet::default(); | 
|  | for arg in args { | 
|  | match arg.kind() { | 
|  | GenericArgKind::Lifetime(lt) => match (ignore_regions, lt.kind()) { | 
|  | (CheckRegions::FromFunction, ty::ReBound(di, reg)) => { | 
|  | if !seen_late.insert((di, reg)) { | 
|  | return Err(NotUniqueParam::DuplicateParam(lt.into())); | 
|  | } | 
|  | } | 
|  | (CheckRegions::OnlyParam | CheckRegions::FromFunction, ty::ReEarlyParam(p)) => { | 
|  | if !seen.insert(p.index) { | 
|  | return Err(NotUniqueParam::DuplicateParam(lt.into())); | 
|  | } | 
|  | } | 
|  | (CheckRegions::OnlyParam | CheckRegions::FromFunction, _) => { | 
|  | return Err(NotUniqueParam::NotParam(lt.into())); | 
|  | } | 
|  | (CheckRegions::No, _) => {} | 
|  | }, | 
|  | GenericArgKind::Type(t) => match t.kind() { | 
|  | ty::Param(p) => { | 
|  | if !seen.insert(p.index) { | 
|  | return Err(NotUniqueParam::DuplicateParam(t.into())); | 
|  | } | 
|  | } | 
|  | _ => return Err(NotUniqueParam::NotParam(t.into())), | 
|  | }, | 
|  | GenericArgKind::Const(c) => match c.kind() { | 
|  | ty::ConstKind::Param(p) => { | 
|  | if !seen.insert(p.index) { | 
|  | return Err(NotUniqueParam::DuplicateParam(c.into())); | 
|  | } | 
|  | } | 
|  | _ => return Err(NotUniqueParam::NotParam(c.into())), | 
|  | }, | 
|  | } | 
|  | } | 
|  |  | 
|  | Ok(()) | 
|  | } | 
|  |  | 
|  | /// Returns `true` if `def_id` refers to a closure, coroutine, or coroutine-closure | 
|  | /// (i.e. an async closure). These are all represented by `hir::Closure`, and all | 
|  | /// have the same `DefKind`. | 
|  | /// | 
|  | /// Note that closures have a `DefId`, but the closure *expression* also has a | 
|  | // `HirId` that is located within the context where the closure appears (and, sadly, | 
|  | // a corresponding `NodeId`, since those are not yet phased out). The parent of | 
|  | // the closure's `DefId` will also be the context where it appears. | 
|  | pub fn is_closure_like(self, def_id: DefId) -> bool { | 
|  | matches!(self.def_kind(def_id), DefKind::Closure) | 
|  | } | 
|  |  | 
|  | /// Returns `true` if `def_id` refers to a definition that does not have its own | 
|  | /// type-checking context, i.e. closure, coroutine or inline const. | 
|  | pub fn is_typeck_child(self, def_id: DefId) -> bool { | 
|  | self.def_kind(def_id).is_typeck_child() | 
|  | } | 
|  |  | 
|  | /// Returns `true` if `def_id` refers to a trait (i.e., `trait Foo { ... }`). | 
|  | pub fn is_trait(self, def_id: DefId) -> bool { | 
|  | self.def_kind(def_id) == DefKind::Trait | 
|  | } | 
|  |  | 
|  | /// Returns `true` if `def_id` refers to a trait alias (i.e., `trait Foo = ...;`), | 
|  | /// and `false` otherwise. | 
|  | pub fn is_trait_alias(self, def_id: DefId) -> bool { | 
|  | self.def_kind(def_id) == DefKind::TraitAlias | 
|  | } | 
|  |  | 
|  | /// Returns `true` if this `DefId` refers to the implicit constructor for | 
|  | /// a tuple struct like `struct Foo(u32)`, and `false` otherwise. | 
|  | pub fn is_constructor(self, def_id: DefId) -> bool { | 
|  | matches!(self.def_kind(def_id), DefKind::Ctor(..)) | 
|  | } | 
|  |  | 
|  | /// Given the `DefId`, returns the `DefId` of the innermost item that | 
|  | /// has its own type-checking context or "inference environment". | 
|  | /// | 
|  | /// For example, a closure has its own `DefId`, but it is type-checked | 
|  | /// with the containing item. Similarly, an inline const block has its | 
|  | /// own `DefId` but it is type-checked together with the containing item. | 
|  | /// | 
|  | /// Therefore, when we fetch the | 
|  | /// `typeck` the closure, for example, we really wind up | 
|  | /// fetching the `typeck` the enclosing fn item. | 
|  | pub fn typeck_root_def_id(self, def_id: DefId) -> DefId { | 
|  | let mut def_id = def_id; | 
|  | while self.is_typeck_child(def_id) { | 
|  | def_id = self.parent(def_id); | 
|  | } | 
|  | def_id | 
|  | } | 
|  |  | 
|  | /// Given the `DefId` and args a closure, creates the type of | 
|  | /// `self` argument that the closure expects. For example, for a | 
|  | /// `Fn` closure, this would return a reference type `&T` where | 
|  | /// `T = closure_ty`. | 
|  | /// | 
|  | /// Returns `None` if this closure's kind has not yet been inferred. | 
|  | /// This should only be possible during type checking. | 
|  | /// | 
|  | /// Note that the return value is a late-bound region and hence | 
|  | /// wrapped in a binder. | 
|  | pub fn closure_env_ty( | 
|  | self, | 
|  | closure_ty: Ty<'tcx>, | 
|  | closure_kind: ty::ClosureKind, | 
|  | env_region: ty::Region<'tcx>, | 
|  | ) -> Ty<'tcx> { | 
|  | match closure_kind { | 
|  | ty::ClosureKind::Fn => Ty::new_imm_ref(self, env_region, closure_ty), | 
|  | ty::ClosureKind::FnMut => Ty::new_mut_ref(self, env_region, closure_ty), | 
|  | ty::ClosureKind::FnOnce => closure_ty, | 
|  | } | 
|  | } | 
|  |  | 
|  | /// Returns `true` if the node pointed to by `def_id` is a `static` item. | 
|  | #[inline] | 
|  | pub fn is_static(self, def_id: DefId) -> bool { | 
|  | matches!(self.def_kind(def_id), DefKind::Static { .. }) | 
|  | } | 
|  |  | 
|  | #[inline] | 
|  | pub fn static_mutability(self, def_id: DefId) -> Option<hir::Mutability> { | 
|  | if let DefKind::Static { mutability, .. } = self.def_kind(def_id) { | 
|  | Some(mutability) | 
|  | } else { | 
|  | None | 
|  | } | 
|  | } | 
|  |  | 
|  | /// Returns `true` if this is a `static` item with the `#[thread_local]` attribute. | 
|  | pub fn is_thread_local_static(self, def_id: DefId) -> bool { | 
|  | self.codegen_fn_attrs(def_id).flags.contains(CodegenFnAttrFlags::THREAD_LOCAL) | 
|  | } | 
|  |  | 
|  | /// Returns `true` if the node pointed to by `def_id` is a mutable `static` item. | 
|  | #[inline] | 
|  | pub fn is_mutable_static(self, def_id: DefId) -> bool { | 
|  | self.static_mutability(def_id) == Some(hir::Mutability::Mut) | 
|  | } | 
|  |  | 
|  | /// Returns `true` if the item pointed to by `def_id` is a thread local which needs a | 
|  | /// thread local shim generated. | 
|  | #[inline] | 
|  | pub fn needs_thread_local_shim(self, def_id: DefId) -> bool { | 
|  | !self.sess.target.dll_tls_export | 
|  | && self.is_thread_local_static(def_id) | 
|  | && !self.is_foreign_item(def_id) | 
|  | } | 
|  |  | 
|  | /// Returns the type a reference to the thread local takes in MIR. | 
|  | pub fn thread_local_ptr_ty(self, def_id: DefId) -> Ty<'tcx> { | 
|  | let static_ty = self.type_of(def_id).instantiate_identity(); | 
|  | if self.is_mutable_static(def_id) { | 
|  | Ty::new_mut_ptr(self, static_ty) | 
|  | } else if self.is_foreign_item(def_id) { | 
|  | Ty::new_imm_ptr(self, static_ty) | 
|  | } else { | 
|  | // FIXME: These things don't *really* have 'static lifetime. | 
|  | Ty::new_imm_ref(self, self.lifetimes.re_static, static_ty) | 
|  | } | 
|  | } | 
|  |  | 
|  | /// Get the type of the pointer to the static that we use in MIR. | 
|  | pub fn static_ptr_ty(self, def_id: DefId, typing_env: ty::TypingEnv<'tcx>) -> Ty<'tcx> { | 
|  | // Make sure that any constants in the static's type are evaluated. | 
|  | let static_ty = | 
|  | self.normalize_erasing_regions(typing_env, self.type_of(def_id).instantiate_identity()); | 
|  |  | 
|  | // Make sure that accesses to unsafe statics end up using raw pointers. | 
|  | // For thread-locals, this needs to be kept in sync with `Rvalue::ty`. | 
|  | if self.is_mutable_static(def_id) { | 
|  | Ty::new_mut_ptr(self, static_ty) | 
|  | } else if self.is_foreign_item(def_id) { | 
|  | Ty::new_imm_ptr(self, static_ty) | 
|  | } else { | 
|  | Ty::new_imm_ref(self, self.lifetimes.re_erased, static_ty) | 
|  | } | 
|  | } | 
|  |  | 
|  | /// Expands the given impl trait type, stopping if the type is recursive. | 
|  | #[instrument(skip(self), level = "debug", ret)] | 
|  | pub fn try_expand_impl_trait_type( | 
|  | self, | 
|  | def_id: DefId, | 
|  | args: GenericArgsRef<'tcx>, | 
|  | ) -> Result<Ty<'tcx>, Ty<'tcx>> { | 
|  | let mut visitor = OpaqueTypeExpander { | 
|  | seen_opaque_tys: FxHashSet::default(), | 
|  | expanded_cache: FxHashMap::default(), | 
|  | primary_def_id: Some(def_id), | 
|  | found_recursion: false, | 
|  | found_any_recursion: false, | 
|  | check_recursion: true, | 
|  | tcx: self, | 
|  | }; | 
|  |  | 
|  | let expanded_type = visitor.expand_opaque_ty(def_id, args).unwrap(); | 
|  | if visitor.found_recursion { Err(expanded_type) } else { Ok(expanded_type) } | 
|  | } | 
|  |  | 
|  | /// Query and get an English description for the item's kind. | 
|  | pub fn def_descr(self, def_id: DefId) -> &'static str { | 
|  | self.def_kind_descr(self.def_kind(def_id), def_id) | 
|  | } | 
|  |  | 
|  | /// Get an English description for the item's kind. | 
|  | pub fn def_kind_descr(self, def_kind: DefKind, def_id: DefId) -> &'static str { | 
|  | match def_kind { | 
|  | DefKind::AssocFn if self.associated_item(def_id).is_method() => "method", | 
|  | DefKind::AssocTy if self.opt_rpitit_info(def_id).is_some() => "opaque type", | 
|  | DefKind::Closure if let Some(coroutine_kind) = self.coroutine_kind(def_id) => { | 
|  | match coroutine_kind { | 
|  | hir::CoroutineKind::Desugared( | 
|  | hir::CoroutineDesugaring::Async, | 
|  | hir::CoroutineSource::Fn, | 
|  | ) => "async fn", | 
|  | hir::CoroutineKind::Desugared( | 
|  | hir::CoroutineDesugaring::Async, | 
|  | hir::CoroutineSource::Block, | 
|  | ) => "async block", | 
|  | hir::CoroutineKind::Desugared( | 
|  | hir::CoroutineDesugaring::Async, | 
|  | hir::CoroutineSource::Closure, | 
|  | ) => "async closure", | 
|  | hir::CoroutineKind::Desugared( | 
|  | hir::CoroutineDesugaring::AsyncGen, | 
|  | hir::CoroutineSource::Fn, | 
|  | ) => "async gen fn", | 
|  | hir::CoroutineKind::Desugared( | 
|  | hir::CoroutineDesugaring::AsyncGen, | 
|  | hir::CoroutineSource::Block, | 
|  | ) => "async gen block", | 
|  | hir::CoroutineKind::Desugared( | 
|  | hir::CoroutineDesugaring::AsyncGen, | 
|  | hir::CoroutineSource::Closure, | 
|  | ) => "async gen closure", | 
|  | hir::CoroutineKind::Desugared( | 
|  | hir::CoroutineDesugaring::Gen, | 
|  | hir::CoroutineSource::Fn, | 
|  | ) => "gen fn", | 
|  | hir::CoroutineKind::Desugared( | 
|  | hir::CoroutineDesugaring::Gen, | 
|  | hir::CoroutineSource::Block, | 
|  | ) => "gen block", | 
|  | hir::CoroutineKind::Desugared( | 
|  | hir::CoroutineDesugaring::Gen, | 
|  | hir::CoroutineSource::Closure, | 
|  | ) => "gen closure", | 
|  | hir::CoroutineKind::Coroutine(_) => "coroutine", | 
|  | } | 
|  | } | 
|  | _ => def_kind.descr(def_id), | 
|  | } | 
|  | } | 
|  |  | 
|  | /// Gets an English article for the [`TyCtxt::def_descr`]. | 
|  | pub fn def_descr_article(self, def_id: DefId) -> &'static str { | 
|  | self.def_kind_descr_article(self.def_kind(def_id), def_id) | 
|  | } | 
|  |  | 
|  | /// Gets an English article for the [`TyCtxt::def_kind_descr`]. | 
|  | pub fn def_kind_descr_article(self, def_kind: DefKind, def_id: DefId) -> &'static str { | 
|  | match def_kind { | 
|  | DefKind::AssocFn if self.associated_item(def_id).is_method() => "a", | 
|  | DefKind::Closure if let Some(coroutine_kind) = self.coroutine_kind(def_id) => { | 
|  | match coroutine_kind { | 
|  | hir::CoroutineKind::Desugared(hir::CoroutineDesugaring::Async, ..) => "an", | 
|  | hir::CoroutineKind::Desugared(hir::CoroutineDesugaring::AsyncGen, ..) => "an", | 
|  | hir::CoroutineKind::Desugared(hir::CoroutineDesugaring::Gen, ..) => "a", | 
|  | hir::CoroutineKind::Coroutine(_) => "a", | 
|  | } | 
|  | } | 
|  | _ => def_kind.article(), | 
|  | } | 
|  | } | 
|  |  | 
|  | /// Return `true` if the supplied `CrateNum` is "user-visible," meaning either a [public] | 
|  | /// dependency, or a [direct] private dependency. This is used to decide whether the crate can | 
|  | /// be shown in `impl` suggestions. | 
|  | /// | 
|  | /// [public]: TyCtxt::is_private_dep | 
|  | /// [direct]: rustc_session::cstore::ExternCrate::is_direct | 
|  | pub fn is_user_visible_dep(self, key: CrateNum) -> bool { | 
|  | // `#![rustc_private]` overrides defaults to make private dependencies usable. | 
|  | if self.features().enabled(sym::rustc_private) { | 
|  | return true; | 
|  | } | 
|  |  | 
|  | // | Private | Direct | Visible |                    | | 
|  | // |---------|--------|---------|--------------------| | 
|  | // | Yes     | Yes    | Yes     | !true || true   | | 
|  | // | No      | Yes    | Yes     | !false || true  | | 
|  | // | Yes     | No     | No      | !true || false  | | 
|  | // | No      | No     | Yes     | !false || false | | 
|  | !self.is_private_dep(key) | 
|  | // If `extern_crate` is `None`, then the crate was injected (e.g., by the allocator). | 
|  | // Treat that kind of crate as "indirect", since it's an implementation detail of | 
|  | // the language. | 
|  | || self.extern_crate(key).is_some_and(|e| e.is_direct()) | 
|  | } | 
|  |  | 
|  | /// Expand any [free alias types][free] contained within the given `value`. | 
|  | /// | 
|  | /// This should be used over other normalization routines in situations where | 
|  | /// it's important not to normalize other alias types and where the predicates | 
|  | /// on the corresponding type alias shouldn't be taken into consideration. | 
|  | /// | 
|  | /// Whenever possible **prefer not to use this function**! Instead, use standard | 
|  | /// normalization routines or if feasible don't normalize at all. | 
|  | /// | 
|  | /// This function comes in handy if you want to mimic the behavior of eager | 
|  | /// type alias expansion in a localized manner. | 
|  | /// | 
|  | /// <div class="warning"> | 
|  | /// This delays a bug on overflow! Therefore you need to be certain that the | 
|  | /// contained types get fully normalized at a later stage. Note that even on | 
|  | /// overflow all well-behaved free alias types get expanded correctly, so the | 
|  | /// result is still useful. | 
|  | /// </div> | 
|  | /// | 
|  | /// [free]: ty::Free | 
|  | pub fn expand_free_alias_tys<T: TypeFoldable<TyCtxt<'tcx>>>(self, value: T) -> T { | 
|  | value.fold_with(&mut FreeAliasTypeExpander { tcx: self, depth: 0 }) | 
|  | } | 
|  |  | 
|  | /// Peel off all [free alias types] in this type until there are none left. | 
|  | /// | 
|  | /// This only expands free alias types in “head” / outermost positions. It can | 
|  | /// be used over [expand_free_alias_tys] as an optimization in situations where | 
|  | /// one only really cares about the *kind* of the final aliased type but not | 
|  | /// the types the other constituent types alias. | 
|  | /// | 
|  | /// <div class="warning"> | 
|  | /// This delays a bug on overflow! Therefore you need to be certain that the | 
|  | /// type gets fully normalized at a later stage. | 
|  | /// </div> | 
|  | /// | 
|  | /// [free]: ty::Free | 
|  | /// [expand_free_alias_tys]: Self::expand_free_alias_tys | 
|  | pub fn peel_off_free_alias_tys(self, mut ty: Ty<'tcx>) -> Ty<'tcx> { | 
|  | let ty::Alias(ty::Free, _) = ty.kind() else { return ty }; | 
|  |  | 
|  | let limit = self.recursion_limit(); | 
|  | let mut depth = 0; | 
|  |  | 
|  | while let ty::Alias(ty::Free, alias) = ty.kind() { | 
|  | if !limit.value_within_limit(depth) { | 
|  | let guar = self.dcx().delayed_bug("overflow expanding free alias type"); | 
|  | return Ty::new_error(self, guar); | 
|  | } | 
|  |  | 
|  | ty = self.type_of(alias.def_id).instantiate(self, alias.args); | 
|  | depth += 1; | 
|  | } | 
|  |  | 
|  | ty | 
|  | } | 
|  |  | 
|  | // Computes the variances for an alias (opaque or RPITIT) that represent | 
|  | // its (un)captured regions. | 
|  | pub fn opt_alias_variances( | 
|  | self, | 
|  | kind: impl Into<ty::AliasTermKind>, | 
|  | def_id: DefId, | 
|  | ) -> Option<&'tcx [ty::Variance]> { | 
|  | match kind.into() { | 
|  | ty::AliasTermKind::ProjectionTy => { | 
|  | if self.is_impl_trait_in_trait(def_id) { | 
|  | Some(self.variances_of(def_id)) | 
|  | } else { | 
|  | None | 
|  | } | 
|  | } | 
|  | ty::AliasTermKind::OpaqueTy => Some(self.variances_of(def_id)), | 
|  | ty::AliasTermKind::InherentTy | 
|  | | ty::AliasTermKind::InherentConst | 
|  | | ty::AliasTermKind::FreeTy | 
|  | | ty::AliasTermKind::FreeConst | 
|  | | ty::AliasTermKind::UnevaluatedConst | 
|  | | ty::AliasTermKind::ProjectionConst => None, | 
|  | } | 
|  | } | 
|  | } | 
|  |  | 
|  | struct OpaqueTypeExpander<'tcx> { | 
|  | // Contains the DefIds of the opaque types that are currently being | 
|  | // expanded. When we expand an opaque type we insert the DefId of | 
|  | // that type, and when we finish expanding that type we remove the | 
|  | // its DefId. | 
|  | seen_opaque_tys: FxHashSet<DefId>, | 
|  | // Cache of all expansions we've seen so far. This is a critical | 
|  | // optimization for some large types produced by async fn trees. | 
|  | expanded_cache: FxHashMap<(DefId, GenericArgsRef<'tcx>), Ty<'tcx>>, | 
|  | primary_def_id: Option<DefId>, | 
|  | found_recursion: bool, | 
|  | found_any_recursion: bool, | 
|  | /// Whether or not to check for recursive opaque types. | 
|  | /// This is `true` when we're explicitly checking for opaque type | 
|  | /// recursion, and 'false' otherwise to avoid unnecessary work. | 
|  | check_recursion: bool, | 
|  | tcx: TyCtxt<'tcx>, | 
|  | } | 
|  |  | 
|  | impl<'tcx> OpaqueTypeExpander<'tcx> { | 
|  | fn expand_opaque_ty(&mut self, def_id: DefId, args: GenericArgsRef<'tcx>) -> Option<Ty<'tcx>> { | 
|  | if self.found_any_recursion { | 
|  | return None; | 
|  | } | 
|  | let args = args.fold_with(self); | 
|  | if !self.check_recursion || self.seen_opaque_tys.insert(def_id) { | 
|  | let expanded_ty = match self.expanded_cache.get(&(def_id, args)) { | 
|  | Some(expanded_ty) => *expanded_ty, | 
|  | None => { | 
|  | let generic_ty = self.tcx.type_of(def_id); | 
|  | let concrete_ty = generic_ty.instantiate(self.tcx, args); | 
|  | let expanded_ty = self.fold_ty(concrete_ty); | 
|  | self.expanded_cache.insert((def_id, args), expanded_ty); | 
|  | expanded_ty | 
|  | } | 
|  | }; | 
|  | if self.check_recursion { | 
|  | self.seen_opaque_tys.remove(&def_id); | 
|  | } | 
|  | Some(expanded_ty) | 
|  | } else { | 
|  | // If another opaque type that we contain is recursive, then it | 
|  | // will report the error, so we don't have to. | 
|  | self.found_any_recursion = true; | 
|  | self.found_recursion = def_id == *self.primary_def_id.as_ref().unwrap(); | 
|  | None | 
|  | } | 
|  | } | 
|  | } | 
|  |  | 
|  | impl<'tcx> TypeFolder<TyCtxt<'tcx>> for OpaqueTypeExpander<'tcx> { | 
|  | fn cx(&self) -> TyCtxt<'tcx> { | 
|  | self.tcx | 
|  | } | 
|  |  | 
|  | fn fold_ty(&mut self, t: Ty<'tcx>) -> Ty<'tcx> { | 
|  | if let ty::Alias(ty::Opaque, ty::AliasTy { def_id, args, .. }) = *t.kind() { | 
|  | self.expand_opaque_ty(def_id, args).unwrap_or(t) | 
|  | } else if t.has_opaque_types() { | 
|  | t.super_fold_with(self) | 
|  | } else { | 
|  | t | 
|  | } | 
|  | } | 
|  |  | 
|  | fn fold_predicate(&mut self, p: ty::Predicate<'tcx>) -> ty::Predicate<'tcx> { | 
|  | if let ty::PredicateKind::Clause(clause) = p.kind().skip_binder() | 
|  | && let ty::ClauseKind::Projection(projection_pred) = clause | 
|  | { | 
|  | p.kind() | 
|  | .rebind(ty::ProjectionPredicate { | 
|  | projection_term: projection_pred.projection_term.fold_with(self), | 
|  | // Don't fold the term on the RHS of the projection predicate. | 
|  | // This is because for default trait methods with RPITITs, we | 
|  | // install a `NormalizesTo(Projection(RPITIT) -> Opaque(RPITIT))` | 
|  | // predicate, which would trivially cause a cycle when we do | 
|  | // anything that requires `TypingEnv::with_post_analysis_normalized`. | 
|  | term: projection_pred.term, | 
|  | }) | 
|  | .upcast(self.tcx) | 
|  | } else { | 
|  | p.super_fold_with(self) | 
|  | } | 
|  | } | 
|  | } | 
|  |  | 
|  | struct FreeAliasTypeExpander<'tcx> { | 
|  | tcx: TyCtxt<'tcx>, | 
|  | depth: usize, | 
|  | } | 
|  |  | 
|  | impl<'tcx> TypeFolder<TyCtxt<'tcx>> for FreeAliasTypeExpander<'tcx> { | 
|  | fn cx(&self) -> TyCtxt<'tcx> { | 
|  | self.tcx | 
|  | } | 
|  |  | 
|  | fn fold_ty(&mut self, ty: Ty<'tcx>) -> Ty<'tcx> { | 
|  | if !ty.has_type_flags(ty::TypeFlags::HAS_TY_FREE_ALIAS) { | 
|  | return ty; | 
|  | } | 
|  | let ty::Alias(ty::Free, alias) = ty.kind() else { | 
|  | return ty.super_fold_with(self); | 
|  | }; | 
|  | if !self.tcx.recursion_limit().value_within_limit(self.depth) { | 
|  | let guar = self.tcx.dcx().delayed_bug("overflow expanding free alias type"); | 
|  | return Ty::new_error(self.tcx, guar); | 
|  | } | 
|  |  | 
|  | self.depth += 1; | 
|  | let ty = ensure_sufficient_stack(|| { | 
|  | self.tcx.type_of(alias.def_id).instantiate(self.tcx, alias.args).fold_with(self) | 
|  | }); | 
|  | self.depth -= 1; | 
|  | ty | 
|  | } | 
|  |  | 
|  | fn fold_const(&mut self, ct: ty::Const<'tcx>) -> ty::Const<'tcx> { | 
|  | if !ct.has_type_flags(ty::TypeFlags::HAS_TY_FREE_ALIAS) { | 
|  | return ct; | 
|  | } | 
|  | ct.super_fold_with(self) | 
|  | } | 
|  | } | 
|  |  | 
|  | impl<'tcx> Ty<'tcx> { | 
|  | /// Returns the `Size` for primitive types (bool, uint, int, char, float). | 
|  | pub fn primitive_size(self, tcx: TyCtxt<'tcx>) -> Size { | 
|  | match *self.kind() { | 
|  | ty::Bool => Size::from_bytes(1), | 
|  | ty::Char => Size::from_bytes(4), | 
|  | ty::Int(ity) => Integer::from_int_ty(&tcx, ity).size(), | 
|  | ty::Uint(uty) => Integer::from_uint_ty(&tcx, uty).size(), | 
|  | ty::Float(fty) => Float::from_float_ty(fty).size(), | 
|  | _ => bug!("non primitive type"), | 
|  | } | 
|  | } | 
|  |  | 
|  | pub fn int_size_and_signed(self, tcx: TyCtxt<'tcx>) -> (Size, bool) { | 
|  | match *self.kind() { | 
|  | ty::Int(ity) => (Integer::from_int_ty(&tcx, ity).size(), true), | 
|  | ty::Uint(uty) => (Integer::from_uint_ty(&tcx, uty).size(), false), | 
|  | _ => bug!("non integer discriminant"), | 
|  | } | 
|  | } | 
|  |  | 
|  | /// Returns the minimum and maximum values for the given numeric type (including `char`s) or | 
|  | /// returns `None` if the type is not numeric. | 
|  | pub fn numeric_min_and_max_as_bits(self, tcx: TyCtxt<'tcx>) -> Option<(u128, u128)> { | 
|  | use rustc_apfloat::ieee::{Double, Half, Quad, Single}; | 
|  | Some(match self.kind() { | 
|  | ty::Int(_) | ty::Uint(_) => { | 
|  | let (size, signed) = self.int_size_and_signed(tcx); | 
|  | let min = if signed { size.truncate(size.signed_int_min() as u128) } else { 0 }; | 
|  | let max = | 
|  | if signed { size.signed_int_max() as u128 } else { size.unsigned_int_max() }; | 
|  | (min, max) | 
|  | } | 
|  | ty::Char => (0, std::char::MAX as u128), | 
|  | ty::Float(ty::FloatTy::F16) => ((-Half::INFINITY).to_bits(), Half::INFINITY.to_bits()), | 
|  | ty::Float(ty::FloatTy::F32) => { | 
|  | ((-Single::INFINITY).to_bits(), Single::INFINITY.to_bits()) | 
|  | } | 
|  | ty::Float(ty::FloatTy::F64) => { | 
|  | ((-Double::INFINITY).to_bits(), Double::INFINITY.to_bits()) | 
|  | } | 
|  | ty::Float(ty::FloatTy::F128) => ((-Quad::INFINITY).to_bits(), Quad::INFINITY.to_bits()), | 
|  | _ => return None, | 
|  | }) | 
|  | } | 
|  |  | 
|  | /// Returns the maximum value for the given numeric type (including `char`s) | 
|  | /// or returns `None` if the type is not numeric. | 
|  | pub fn numeric_max_val(self, tcx: TyCtxt<'tcx>) -> Option<mir::Const<'tcx>> { | 
|  | let typing_env = TypingEnv::fully_monomorphized(); | 
|  | self.numeric_min_and_max_as_bits(tcx) | 
|  | .map(|(_, max)| mir::Const::from_bits(tcx, max, typing_env, self)) | 
|  | } | 
|  |  | 
|  | /// Returns the minimum value for the given numeric type (including `char`s) | 
|  | /// or returns `None` if the type is not numeric. | 
|  | pub fn numeric_min_val(self, tcx: TyCtxt<'tcx>) -> Option<mir::Const<'tcx>> { | 
|  | let typing_env = TypingEnv::fully_monomorphized(); | 
|  | self.numeric_min_and_max_as_bits(tcx) | 
|  | .map(|(min, _)| mir::Const::from_bits(tcx, min, typing_env, self)) | 
|  | } | 
|  |  | 
|  | /// Checks whether values of this type `T` have a size known at | 
|  | /// compile time (i.e., whether `T: Sized`). Lifetimes are ignored | 
|  | /// for the purposes of this check, so it can be an | 
|  | /// over-approximation in generic contexts, where one can have | 
|  | /// strange rules like `<T as Foo<'static>>::Bar: Sized` that | 
|  | /// actually carry lifetime requirements. | 
|  | pub fn is_sized(self, tcx: TyCtxt<'tcx>, typing_env: ty::TypingEnv<'tcx>) -> bool { | 
|  | self.has_trivial_sizedness(tcx, SizedTraitKind::Sized) | 
|  | || tcx.is_sized_raw(typing_env.as_query_input(self)) | 
|  | } | 
|  |  | 
|  | /// Checks whether values of this type `T` implement the `Freeze` | 
|  | /// trait -- frozen types are those that do not contain an | 
|  | /// `UnsafeCell` anywhere. This is a language concept used to | 
|  | /// distinguish "true immutability", which is relevant to | 
|  | /// optimization as well as the rules around static values. Note | 
|  | /// that the `Freeze` trait is not exposed to end users and is | 
|  | /// effectively an implementation detail. | 
|  | pub fn is_freeze(self, tcx: TyCtxt<'tcx>, typing_env: ty::TypingEnv<'tcx>) -> bool { | 
|  | self.is_trivially_freeze() || tcx.is_freeze_raw(typing_env.as_query_input(self)) | 
|  | } | 
|  |  | 
|  | /// Fast path helper for testing if a type is `Freeze`. | 
|  | /// | 
|  | /// Returning true means the type is known to be `Freeze`. Returning | 
|  | /// `false` means nothing -- could be `Freeze`, might not be. | 
|  | pub fn is_trivially_freeze(self) -> bool { | 
|  | match self.kind() { | 
|  | ty::Int(_) | 
|  | | ty::Uint(_) | 
|  | | ty::Float(_) | 
|  | | ty::Bool | 
|  | | ty::Char | 
|  | | ty::Str | 
|  | | ty::Never | 
|  | | ty::Ref(..) | 
|  | | ty::RawPtr(_, _) | 
|  | | ty::FnDef(..) | 
|  | | ty::Error(_) | 
|  | | ty::FnPtr(..) => true, | 
|  | ty::Tuple(fields) => fields.iter().all(Self::is_trivially_freeze), | 
|  | ty::Pat(ty, _) | ty::Slice(ty) | ty::Array(ty, _) => ty.is_trivially_freeze(), | 
|  | ty::Adt(..) | 
|  | | ty::Bound(..) | 
|  | | ty::Closure(..) | 
|  | | ty::CoroutineClosure(..) | 
|  | | ty::Dynamic(..) | 
|  | | ty::Foreign(_) | 
|  | | ty::Coroutine(..) | 
|  | | ty::CoroutineWitness(..) | 
|  | | ty::UnsafeBinder(_) | 
|  | | ty::Infer(_) | 
|  | | ty::Alias(..) | 
|  | | ty::Param(_) | 
|  | | ty::Placeholder(_) => false, | 
|  | } | 
|  | } | 
|  |  | 
|  | /// Checks whether values of this type `T` implement the `Unpin` trait. | 
|  | pub fn is_unpin(self, tcx: TyCtxt<'tcx>, typing_env: ty::TypingEnv<'tcx>) -> bool { | 
|  | self.is_trivially_unpin() || tcx.is_unpin_raw(typing_env.as_query_input(self)) | 
|  | } | 
|  |  | 
|  | /// Fast path helper for testing if a type is `Unpin`. | 
|  | /// | 
|  | /// Returning true means the type is known to be `Unpin`. Returning | 
|  | /// `false` means nothing -- could be `Unpin`, might not be. | 
|  | fn is_trivially_unpin(self) -> bool { | 
|  | match self.kind() { | 
|  | ty::Int(_) | 
|  | | ty::Uint(_) | 
|  | | ty::Float(_) | 
|  | | ty::Bool | 
|  | | ty::Char | 
|  | | ty::Str | 
|  | | ty::Never | 
|  | | ty::Ref(..) | 
|  | | ty::RawPtr(_, _) | 
|  | | ty::FnDef(..) | 
|  | | ty::Error(_) | 
|  | | ty::FnPtr(..) => true, | 
|  | ty::Tuple(fields) => fields.iter().all(Self::is_trivially_unpin), | 
|  | ty::Pat(ty, _) | ty::Slice(ty) | ty::Array(ty, _) => ty.is_trivially_unpin(), | 
|  | ty::Adt(..) | 
|  | | ty::Bound(..) | 
|  | | ty::Closure(..) | 
|  | | ty::CoroutineClosure(..) | 
|  | | ty::Dynamic(..) | 
|  | | ty::Foreign(_) | 
|  | | ty::Coroutine(..) | 
|  | | ty::CoroutineWitness(..) | 
|  | | ty::UnsafeBinder(_) | 
|  | | ty::Infer(_) | 
|  | | ty::Alias(..) | 
|  | | ty::Param(_) | 
|  | | ty::Placeholder(_) => false, | 
|  | } | 
|  | } | 
|  |  | 
|  | /// Checks whether this type is an ADT that has unsafe fields. | 
|  | pub fn has_unsafe_fields(self) -> bool { | 
|  | if let ty::Adt(adt_def, ..) = self.kind() { | 
|  | adt_def.all_fields().any(|x| x.safety.is_unsafe()) | 
|  | } else { | 
|  | false | 
|  | } | 
|  | } | 
|  |  | 
|  | /// Checks whether values of this type `T` implement the `AsyncDrop` trait. | 
|  | pub fn is_async_drop(self, tcx: TyCtxt<'tcx>, typing_env: ty::TypingEnv<'tcx>) -> bool { | 
|  | !self.is_trivially_not_async_drop() | 
|  | && tcx.is_async_drop_raw(typing_env.as_query_input(self)) | 
|  | } | 
|  |  | 
|  | /// Fast path helper for testing if a type is `AsyncDrop`. | 
|  | /// | 
|  | /// Returning true means the type is known to be `!AsyncDrop`. Returning | 
|  | /// `false` means nothing -- could be `AsyncDrop`, might not be. | 
|  | fn is_trivially_not_async_drop(self) -> bool { | 
|  | match self.kind() { | 
|  | ty::Int(_) | 
|  | | ty::Uint(_) | 
|  | | ty::Float(_) | 
|  | | ty::Bool | 
|  | | ty::Char | 
|  | | ty::Str | 
|  | | ty::Never | 
|  | | ty::Ref(..) | 
|  | | ty::RawPtr(..) | 
|  | | ty::FnDef(..) | 
|  | | ty::Error(_) | 
|  | | ty::FnPtr(..) => true, | 
|  | // FIXME(unsafe_binders): | 
|  | ty::UnsafeBinder(_) => todo!(), | 
|  | ty::Tuple(fields) => fields.iter().all(Self::is_trivially_not_async_drop), | 
|  | ty::Pat(elem_ty, _) | ty::Slice(elem_ty) | ty::Array(elem_ty, _) => { | 
|  | elem_ty.is_trivially_not_async_drop() | 
|  | } | 
|  | ty::Adt(..) | 
|  | | ty::Bound(..) | 
|  | | ty::Closure(..) | 
|  | | ty::CoroutineClosure(..) | 
|  | | ty::Dynamic(..) | 
|  | | ty::Foreign(_) | 
|  | | ty::Coroutine(..) | 
|  | | ty::CoroutineWitness(..) | 
|  | | ty::Infer(_) | 
|  | | ty::Alias(..) | 
|  | | ty::Param(_) | 
|  | | ty::Placeholder(_) => false, | 
|  | } | 
|  | } | 
|  |  | 
|  | /// If `ty.needs_drop(...)` returns `true`, then `ty` is definitely | 
|  | /// non-copy and *might* have a destructor attached; if it returns | 
|  | /// `false`, then `ty` definitely has no destructor (i.e., no drop glue). | 
|  | /// | 
|  | /// (Note that this implies that if `ty` has a destructor attached, | 
|  | /// then `needs_drop` will definitely return `true` for `ty`.) | 
|  | /// | 
|  | /// Note that this method is used to check eligible types in unions. | 
|  | #[inline] | 
|  | pub fn needs_drop(self, tcx: TyCtxt<'tcx>, typing_env: ty::TypingEnv<'tcx>) -> bool { | 
|  | // Avoid querying in simple cases. | 
|  | match needs_drop_components(tcx, self) { | 
|  | Err(AlwaysRequiresDrop) => true, | 
|  | Ok(components) => { | 
|  | let query_ty = match *components { | 
|  | [] => return false, | 
|  | // If we've got a single component, call the query with that | 
|  | // to increase the chance that we hit the query cache. | 
|  | [component_ty] => component_ty, | 
|  | _ => self, | 
|  | }; | 
|  |  | 
|  | // This doesn't depend on regions, so try to minimize distinct | 
|  | // query keys used. If normalization fails, we just use `query_ty`. | 
|  | debug_assert!(!typing_env.param_env.has_infer()); | 
|  | let query_ty = tcx | 
|  | .try_normalize_erasing_regions(typing_env, query_ty) | 
|  | .unwrap_or_else(|_| tcx.erase_and_anonymize_regions(query_ty)); | 
|  |  | 
|  | tcx.needs_drop_raw(typing_env.as_query_input(query_ty)) | 
|  | } | 
|  | } | 
|  | } | 
|  |  | 
|  | /// If `ty.needs_async_drop(...)` returns `true`, then `ty` is definitely | 
|  | /// non-copy and *might* have a async destructor attached; if it returns | 
|  | /// `false`, then `ty` definitely has no async destructor (i.e., no async | 
|  | /// drop glue). | 
|  | /// | 
|  | /// (Note that this implies that if `ty` has an async destructor attached, | 
|  | /// then `needs_async_drop` will definitely return `true` for `ty`.) | 
|  | /// | 
|  | // FIXME(zetanumbers): Note that this method is used to check eligible types | 
|  | // in unions. | 
|  | #[inline] | 
|  | pub fn needs_async_drop(self, tcx: TyCtxt<'tcx>, typing_env: ty::TypingEnv<'tcx>) -> bool { | 
|  | // Avoid querying in simple cases. | 
|  | match needs_drop_components(tcx, self) { | 
|  | Err(AlwaysRequiresDrop) => true, | 
|  | Ok(components) => { | 
|  | let query_ty = match *components { | 
|  | [] => return false, | 
|  | // If we've got a single component, call the query with that | 
|  | // to increase the chance that we hit the query cache. | 
|  | [component_ty] => component_ty, | 
|  | _ => self, | 
|  | }; | 
|  |  | 
|  | // This doesn't depend on regions, so try to minimize distinct | 
|  | // query keys used. | 
|  | // If normalization fails, we just use `query_ty`. | 
|  | debug_assert!(!typing_env.has_infer()); | 
|  | let query_ty = tcx | 
|  | .try_normalize_erasing_regions(typing_env, query_ty) | 
|  | .unwrap_or_else(|_| tcx.erase_and_anonymize_regions(query_ty)); | 
|  |  | 
|  | tcx.needs_async_drop_raw(typing_env.as_query_input(query_ty)) | 
|  | } | 
|  | } | 
|  | } | 
|  |  | 
|  | /// Checks if `ty` has a significant drop. | 
|  | /// | 
|  | /// Note that this method can return false even if `ty` has a destructor | 
|  | /// attached; even if that is the case then the adt has been marked with | 
|  | /// the attribute `rustc_insignificant_dtor`. | 
|  | /// | 
|  | /// Note that this method is used to check for change in drop order for | 
|  | /// 2229 drop reorder migration analysis. | 
|  | #[inline] | 
|  | pub fn has_significant_drop(self, tcx: TyCtxt<'tcx>, typing_env: ty::TypingEnv<'tcx>) -> bool { | 
|  | // Avoid querying in simple cases. | 
|  | match needs_drop_components(tcx, self) { | 
|  | Err(AlwaysRequiresDrop) => true, | 
|  | Ok(components) => { | 
|  | let query_ty = match *components { | 
|  | [] => return false, | 
|  | // If we've got a single component, call the query with that | 
|  | // to increase the chance that we hit the query cache. | 
|  | [component_ty] => component_ty, | 
|  | _ => self, | 
|  | }; | 
|  |  | 
|  | // FIXME | 
|  | // We should be canonicalizing, or else moving this to a method of inference | 
|  | // context, or *something* like that, | 
|  | // but for now just avoid passing inference variables | 
|  | // to queries that can't cope with them. | 
|  | // Instead, conservatively return "true" (may change drop order). | 
|  | if query_ty.has_infer() { | 
|  | return true; | 
|  | } | 
|  |  | 
|  | // This doesn't depend on regions, so try to minimize distinct | 
|  | // query keys used. | 
|  | let erased = tcx.normalize_erasing_regions(typing_env, query_ty); | 
|  | tcx.has_significant_drop_raw(typing_env.as_query_input(erased)) | 
|  | } | 
|  | } | 
|  | } | 
|  |  | 
|  | /// Returns `true` if equality for this type is both reflexive and structural. | 
|  | /// | 
|  | /// Reflexive equality for a type is indicated by an `Eq` impl for that type. | 
|  | /// | 
|  | /// Primitive types (`u32`, `str`) have structural equality by definition. For composite data | 
|  | /// types, equality for the type as a whole is structural when it is the same as equality | 
|  | /// between all components (fields, array elements, etc.) of that type. For ADTs, structural | 
|  | /// equality is indicated by an implementation of `StructuralPartialEq` for that type. | 
|  | /// | 
|  | /// This function is "shallow" because it may return `true` for a composite type whose fields | 
|  | /// are not `StructuralPartialEq`. For example, `[T; 4]` has structural equality regardless of `T` | 
|  | /// because equality for arrays is determined by the equality of each array element. If you | 
|  | /// want to know whether a given call to `PartialEq::eq` will proceed structurally all the way | 
|  | /// down, you will need to use a type visitor. | 
|  | #[inline] | 
|  | pub fn is_structural_eq_shallow(self, tcx: TyCtxt<'tcx>) -> bool { | 
|  | match self.kind() { | 
|  | // Look for an impl of `StructuralPartialEq`. | 
|  | ty::Adt(..) => tcx.has_structural_eq_impl(self), | 
|  |  | 
|  | // Primitive types that satisfy `Eq`. | 
|  | ty::Bool | ty::Char | ty::Int(_) | ty::Uint(_) | ty::Str | ty::Never => true, | 
|  |  | 
|  | // Composite types that satisfy `Eq` when all of their fields do. | 
|  | // | 
|  | // Because this function is "shallow", we return `true` for these composites regardless | 
|  | // of the type(s) contained within. | 
|  | ty::Pat(..) | ty::Ref(..) | ty::Array(..) | ty::Slice(_) | ty::Tuple(..) => true, | 
|  |  | 
|  | // Raw pointers use bitwise comparison. | 
|  | ty::RawPtr(_, _) | ty::FnPtr(..) => true, | 
|  |  | 
|  | // Floating point numbers are not `Eq`. | 
|  | ty::Float(_) => false, | 
|  |  | 
|  | // Conservatively return `false` for all others... | 
|  |  | 
|  | // Anonymous function types | 
|  | ty::FnDef(..) | 
|  | | ty::Closure(..) | 
|  | | ty::CoroutineClosure(..) | 
|  | | ty::Dynamic(..) | 
|  | | ty::Coroutine(..) => false, | 
|  |  | 
|  | // Generic or inferred types | 
|  | // | 
|  | // FIXME(ecstaticmorse): Maybe we should `bug` here? This should probably only be | 
|  | // called for known, fully-monomorphized types. | 
|  | ty::Alias(..) | ty::Param(_) | ty::Bound(..) | ty::Placeholder(_) | ty::Infer(_) => { | 
|  | false | 
|  | } | 
|  |  | 
|  | ty::Foreign(_) | ty::CoroutineWitness(..) | ty::Error(_) | ty::UnsafeBinder(_) => false, | 
|  | } | 
|  | } | 
|  |  | 
|  | /// Peel off all reference types in this type until there are none left. | 
|  | /// | 
|  | /// This method is idempotent, i.e. `ty.peel_refs().peel_refs() == ty.peel_refs()`. | 
|  | /// | 
|  | /// # Examples | 
|  | /// | 
|  | /// - `u8` -> `u8` | 
|  | /// - `&'a mut u8` -> `u8` | 
|  | /// - `&'a &'b u8` -> `u8` | 
|  | /// - `&'a *const &'b u8 -> *const &'b u8` | 
|  | pub fn peel_refs(self) -> Ty<'tcx> { | 
|  | let mut ty = self; | 
|  | while let ty::Ref(_, inner_ty, _) = ty.kind() { | 
|  | ty = *inner_ty; | 
|  | } | 
|  | ty | 
|  | } | 
|  |  | 
|  | // FIXME(compiler-errors): Think about removing this. | 
|  | #[inline] | 
|  | pub fn outer_exclusive_binder(self) -> ty::DebruijnIndex { | 
|  | self.0.outer_exclusive_binder | 
|  | } | 
|  | } | 
|  |  | 
|  | /// Returns a list of types such that the given type needs drop if and only if | 
|  | /// *any* of the returned types need drop. Returns `Err(AlwaysRequiresDrop)` if | 
|  | /// this type always needs drop. | 
|  | // | 
|  | // FIXME(zetanumbers): consider replacing this with only | 
|  | // `needs_drop_components_with_async` | 
|  | #[inline] | 
|  | pub fn needs_drop_components<'tcx>( | 
|  | tcx: TyCtxt<'tcx>, | 
|  | ty: Ty<'tcx>, | 
|  | ) -> Result<SmallVec<[Ty<'tcx>; 2]>, AlwaysRequiresDrop> { | 
|  | needs_drop_components_with_async(tcx, ty, Asyncness::No) | 
|  | } | 
|  |  | 
|  | /// Returns a list of types such that the given type needs drop if and only if | 
|  | /// *any* of the returned types need drop. Returns `Err(AlwaysRequiresDrop)` if | 
|  | /// this type always needs drop. | 
|  | pub fn needs_drop_components_with_async<'tcx>( | 
|  | tcx: TyCtxt<'tcx>, | 
|  | ty: Ty<'tcx>, | 
|  | asyncness: Asyncness, | 
|  | ) -> Result<SmallVec<[Ty<'tcx>; 2]>, AlwaysRequiresDrop> { | 
|  | match *ty.kind() { | 
|  | ty::Infer(ty::FreshIntTy(_)) | 
|  | | ty::Infer(ty::FreshFloatTy(_)) | 
|  | | ty::Bool | 
|  | | ty::Int(_) | 
|  | | ty::Uint(_) | 
|  | | ty::Float(_) | 
|  | | ty::Never | 
|  | | ty::FnDef(..) | 
|  | | ty::FnPtr(..) | 
|  | | ty::Char | 
|  | | ty::RawPtr(_, _) | 
|  | | ty::Ref(..) | 
|  | | ty::Str => Ok(SmallVec::new()), | 
|  |  | 
|  | // Foreign types can never have destructors. | 
|  | ty::Foreign(..) => Ok(SmallVec::new()), | 
|  |  | 
|  | // FIXME(zetanumbers): Temporary workaround for async drop of dynamic types | 
|  | ty::Dynamic(..) | ty::Error(_) => { | 
|  | if asyncness.is_async() { | 
|  | Ok(SmallVec::new()) | 
|  | } else { | 
|  | Err(AlwaysRequiresDrop) | 
|  | } | 
|  | } | 
|  |  | 
|  | ty::Pat(ty, _) | ty::Slice(ty) => needs_drop_components_with_async(tcx, ty, asyncness), | 
|  | ty::Array(elem_ty, size) => { | 
|  | match needs_drop_components_with_async(tcx, elem_ty, asyncness) { | 
|  | Ok(v) if v.is_empty() => Ok(v), | 
|  | res => match size.try_to_target_usize(tcx) { | 
|  | // Arrays of size zero don't need drop, even if their element | 
|  | // type does. | 
|  | Some(0) => Ok(SmallVec::new()), | 
|  | Some(_) => res, | 
|  | // We don't know which of the cases above we are in, so | 
|  | // return the whole type and let the caller decide what to | 
|  | // do. | 
|  | None => Ok(smallvec![ty]), | 
|  | }, | 
|  | } | 
|  | } | 
|  | // If any field needs drop, then the whole tuple does. | 
|  | ty::Tuple(fields) => fields.iter().try_fold(SmallVec::new(), move |mut acc, elem| { | 
|  | acc.extend(needs_drop_components_with_async(tcx, elem, asyncness)?); | 
|  | Ok(acc) | 
|  | }), | 
|  |  | 
|  | // These require checking for `Copy` bounds or `Adt` destructors. | 
|  | ty::Adt(..) | 
|  | | ty::Alias(..) | 
|  | | ty::Param(_) | 
|  | | ty::Bound(..) | 
|  | | ty::Placeholder(..) | 
|  | | ty::Infer(_) | 
|  | | ty::Closure(..) | 
|  | | ty::CoroutineClosure(..) | 
|  | | ty::Coroutine(..) | 
|  | | ty::CoroutineWitness(..) | 
|  | | ty::UnsafeBinder(_) => Ok(smallvec![ty]), | 
|  | } | 
|  | } | 
|  |  | 
|  | /// Does the equivalent of | 
|  | /// ```ignore (illustrative) | 
|  | /// let v = self.iter().map(|p| p.fold_with(folder)).collect::<SmallVec<[_; 8]>>(); | 
|  | /// folder.tcx().intern_*(&v) | 
|  | /// ``` | 
|  | pub fn fold_list<'tcx, F, L, T>( | 
|  | list: L, | 
|  | folder: &mut F, | 
|  | intern: impl FnOnce(TyCtxt<'tcx>, &[T]) -> L, | 
|  | ) -> L | 
|  | where | 
|  | F: TypeFolder<TyCtxt<'tcx>>, | 
|  | L: AsRef<[T]>, | 
|  | T: TypeFoldable<TyCtxt<'tcx>> + PartialEq + Copy, | 
|  | { | 
|  | let slice = list.as_ref(); | 
|  | let mut iter = slice.iter().copied(); | 
|  | // Look for the first element that changed | 
|  | match iter.by_ref().enumerate().find_map(|(i, t)| { | 
|  | let new_t = t.fold_with(folder); | 
|  | if new_t != t { Some((i, new_t)) } else { None } | 
|  | }) { | 
|  | Some((i, new_t)) => { | 
|  | // An element changed, prepare to intern the resulting list | 
|  | let mut new_list = SmallVec::<[_; 8]>::with_capacity(slice.len()); | 
|  | new_list.extend_from_slice(&slice[..i]); | 
|  | new_list.push(new_t); | 
|  | for t in iter { | 
|  | new_list.push(t.fold_with(folder)) | 
|  | } | 
|  | intern(folder.cx(), &new_list) | 
|  | } | 
|  | None => list, | 
|  | } | 
|  | } | 
|  |  | 
|  | /// Does the equivalent of | 
|  | /// ```ignore (illustrative) | 
|  | /// let v = self.iter().map(|p| p.try_fold_with(folder)).collect::<SmallVec<[_; 8]>>(); | 
|  | /// folder.tcx().intern_*(&v) | 
|  | /// ``` | 
|  | pub fn try_fold_list<'tcx, F, L, T>( | 
|  | list: L, | 
|  | folder: &mut F, | 
|  | intern: impl FnOnce(TyCtxt<'tcx>, &[T]) -> L, | 
|  | ) -> Result<L, F::Error> | 
|  | where | 
|  | F: FallibleTypeFolder<TyCtxt<'tcx>>, | 
|  | L: AsRef<[T]>, | 
|  | T: TypeFoldable<TyCtxt<'tcx>> + PartialEq + Copy, | 
|  | { | 
|  | let slice = list.as_ref(); | 
|  | let mut iter = slice.iter().copied(); | 
|  | // Look for the first element that changed | 
|  | match iter.by_ref().enumerate().find_map(|(i, t)| match t.try_fold_with(folder) { | 
|  | Ok(new_t) if new_t == t => None, | 
|  | new_t => Some((i, new_t)), | 
|  | }) { | 
|  | Some((i, Ok(new_t))) => { | 
|  | // An element changed, prepare to intern the resulting list | 
|  | let mut new_list = SmallVec::<[_; 8]>::with_capacity(slice.len()); | 
|  | new_list.extend_from_slice(&slice[..i]); | 
|  | new_list.push(new_t); | 
|  | for t in iter { | 
|  | new_list.push(t.try_fold_with(folder)?) | 
|  | } | 
|  | Ok(intern(folder.cx(), &new_list)) | 
|  | } | 
|  | Some((_, Err(err))) => { | 
|  | return Err(err); | 
|  | } | 
|  | None => Ok(list), | 
|  | } | 
|  | } | 
|  |  | 
|  | #[derive(Copy, Clone, Debug, HashStable, TyEncodable, TyDecodable)] | 
|  | pub struct AlwaysRequiresDrop; | 
|  |  | 
|  | /// Reveals all opaque types in the given value, replacing them | 
|  | /// with their underlying types. | 
|  | pub fn reveal_opaque_types_in_bounds<'tcx>( | 
|  | tcx: TyCtxt<'tcx>, | 
|  | val: ty::Clauses<'tcx>, | 
|  | ) -> ty::Clauses<'tcx> { | 
|  | assert!(!tcx.next_trait_solver_globally()); | 
|  | let mut visitor = OpaqueTypeExpander { | 
|  | seen_opaque_tys: FxHashSet::default(), | 
|  | expanded_cache: FxHashMap::default(), | 
|  | primary_def_id: None, | 
|  | found_recursion: false, | 
|  | found_any_recursion: false, | 
|  | check_recursion: false, | 
|  | tcx, | 
|  | }; | 
|  | val.fold_with(&mut visitor) | 
|  | } | 
|  |  | 
|  | /// Determines whether an item is directly annotated with `doc(hidden)`. | 
|  | fn is_doc_hidden(tcx: TyCtxt<'_>, def_id: LocalDefId) -> bool { | 
|  | tcx.get_attrs(def_id, sym::doc) | 
|  | .filter_map(|attr| attr.meta_item_list()) | 
|  | .any(|items| items.iter().any(|item| item.has_name(sym::hidden))) | 
|  | } | 
|  |  | 
|  | /// Determines whether an item is annotated with `doc(notable_trait)`. | 
|  | pub fn is_doc_notable_trait(tcx: TyCtxt<'_>, def_id: DefId) -> bool { | 
|  | tcx.get_attrs(def_id, sym::doc) | 
|  | .filter_map(|attr| attr.meta_item_list()) | 
|  | .any(|items| items.iter().any(|item| item.has_name(sym::notable_trait))) | 
|  | } | 
|  |  | 
|  | /// Determines whether an item is an intrinsic (which may be via Abi or via the `rustc_intrinsic` attribute). | 
|  | /// | 
|  | /// We double check the feature gate here because whether a function may be defined as an intrinsic causes | 
|  | /// the compiler to make some assumptions about its shape; if the user doesn't use a feature gate, they may | 
|  | /// cause an ICE that we otherwise may want to prevent. | 
|  | pub fn intrinsic_raw(tcx: TyCtxt<'_>, def_id: LocalDefId) -> Option<ty::IntrinsicDef> { | 
|  | if tcx.features().intrinsics() && tcx.has_attr(def_id, sym::rustc_intrinsic) { | 
|  | let must_be_overridden = match tcx.hir_node_by_def_id(def_id) { | 
|  | hir::Node::Item(hir::Item { kind: hir::ItemKind::Fn { has_body, .. }, .. }) => { | 
|  | !has_body | 
|  | } | 
|  | _ => true, | 
|  | }; | 
|  | Some(ty::IntrinsicDef { | 
|  | name: tcx.item_name(def_id), | 
|  | must_be_overridden, | 
|  | const_stable: tcx.has_attr(def_id, sym::rustc_intrinsic_const_stable_indirect), | 
|  | }) | 
|  | } else { | 
|  | None | 
|  | } | 
|  | } | 
|  |  | 
|  | pub fn provide(providers: &mut Providers) { | 
|  | *providers = Providers { | 
|  | reveal_opaque_types_in_bounds, | 
|  | is_doc_hidden, | 
|  | is_doc_notable_trait, | 
|  | intrinsic_raw, | 
|  | ..*providers | 
|  | } | 
|  | } |