diff --git a/compiler/rustc_mir_build/src/thir/pattern/deconstruct_pat.rs b/compiler/rustc_mir_build/src/thir/pattern/deconstruct_pat.rs index 8d9998d17ed5b..0c7c2c6f9b4b7 100644 --- a/compiler/rustc_mir_build/src/thir/pattern/deconstruct_pat.rs +++ b/compiler/rustc_mir_build/src/thir/pattern/deconstruct_pat.rs @@ -101,7 +101,7 @@ pub(crate) enum MaybeInfiniteInt { NegInfinity, /// Encoded value. DO NOT CONSTRUCT BY HAND; use `new_finite`. Finite(u128), - /// The integer after `u128::MAX`. Used when we switch to exclusive ranges in `IntRange::split`. + /// The integer after `u128::MAX`. We need it to represent `x..=u128::MAX` as an exclusive range. JustAfterMax, PosInfinity, } @@ -140,8 +140,11 @@ impl MaybeInfiniteInt { PatRangeBoundary::PosInfinity => PosInfinity, } } + /// Used only for diagnostics. - /// This could change from finite to infinite if we got `usize::MAX+1` after range splitting. + /// Note: it is possible to get `isize/usize::MAX+1` here, as explained in the doc for + /// [`IntRange::split`]. This cannot be represented as a `Const`, so we represent it with + /// `PosInfinity`. fn to_diagnostic_pat_range_bdy<'tcx>( self, ty: Ty<'tcx>, @@ -168,20 +171,19 @@ impl MaybeInfiniteInt { } } - fn is_finite(self) -> bool { - matches!(self, Finite(_)) - } - fn minus_one(self) -> Self { + /// Note: this will not turn a finite value into an infinite one or vice-versa. + pub(crate) fn minus_one(self) -> Self { match self { Finite(n) => match n.checked_sub(1) { Some(m) => Finite(m), - None => NegInfinity, + None => bug!(), }, JustAfterMax => Finite(u128::MAX), x => x, } } - fn plus_one(self) -> Self { + /// Note: this will not turn a finite value into an infinite one or vice-versa. + pub(crate) fn plus_one(self) -> Self { match self { Finite(n) => match n.checked_add(1) { Some(m) => Finite(m), @@ -193,18 +195,15 @@ impl MaybeInfiniteInt { } } -/// An inclusive interval, used for precise integer exhaustiveness checking. `IntRange`s always +/// An exclusive interval, used for precise integer exhaustiveness checking. `IntRange`s always /// store a contiguous range. /// /// `IntRange` is never used to encode an empty range or a "range" that wraps around the (offset) -/// space: i.e., `range.lo <= range.hi`. -/// -/// Note: the range can be `NegInfinity..=NegInfinity` or `PosInfinity..=PosInfinity` to represent -/// the values before `isize::MIN` and after `isize::MAX`/`usize::MAX`. +/// space: i.e., `range.lo < range.hi`. #[derive(Clone, Copy, PartialEq, Eq)] pub(crate) struct IntRange { - pub(crate) lo: MaybeInfiniteInt, - pub(crate) hi: MaybeInfiniteInt, + pub(crate) lo: MaybeInfiniteInt, // Must not be `PosInfinity`. + pub(crate) hi: MaybeInfiniteInt, // Must not be `NegInfinity`. } impl IntRange { @@ -215,23 +214,25 @@ impl IntRange { /// Best effort; will not know that e.g. `255u8..` is a singleton. pub(super) fn is_singleton(&self) -> bool { - self.lo == self.hi && self.lo.is_finite() + // Since `lo` and `hi` can't be the same `Infinity` and `plus_one` never changes from finite + // to infinite, this correctly only detects ranges that contain exacly one `Finite(x)`. + self.lo.plus_one() == self.hi } #[inline] fn from_bits<'tcx>(tcx: TyCtxt<'tcx>, ty: Ty<'tcx>, bits: u128) -> IntRange { let x = MaybeInfiniteInt::new_finite(tcx, ty, bits); - IntRange { lo: x, hi: x } + IntRange { lo: x, hi: x.plus_one() } } #[inline] fn from_range(lo: MaybeInfiniteInt, mut hi: MaybeInfiniteInt, end: RangeEnd) -> IntRange { - if end == RangeEnd::Excluded { - hi = hi.minus_one(); + if end == RangeEnd::Included { + hi = hi.plus_one(); } - if lo > hi { + if lo >= hi { // This should have been caught earlier by E0030. - bug!("malformed range pattern: {lo:?}..={hi:?}"); + bug!("malformed range pattern: {lo:?}..{hi:?}"); } IntRange { lo, hi } } @@ -241,7 +242,7 @@ impl IntRange { } fn intersection(&self, other: &Self) -> Option { - if self.lo <= other.hi && other.lo <= self.hi { + if self.lo < other.hi && other.lo < self.hi { Some(IntRange { lo: max(self.lo, other.lo), hi: min(self.hi, other.hi) }) } else { None @@ -275,38 +276,45 @@ impl IntRange { /// ``` /// where each sequence of dashes is an output range, and dashes outside parentheses are marked /// as `Presence::Missing`. + /// + /// ## `isize`/`usize` + /// + /// Whereas a wildcard of type `i32` stands for the range `i32::MIN..=i32::MAX`, a `usize` + /// wildcard stands for `0..PosInfinity` and a `isize` wildcard stands for + /// `NegInfinity..PosInfinity`. In other words, as far as `IntRange` is concerned, there are + /// values before `isize::MIN` and after `usize::MAX`/`isize::MAX`. + /// This is to avoid e.g. `0..(u32::MAX as usize)` from being exhaustive on one architecture and + /// not others. See discussions around the `precise_pointer_size_matching` feature for more + /// details. + /// + /// These infinities affect splitting subtly: it is possible to get `NegInfinity..0` and + /// `usize::MAX+1..PosInfinity` in the output. Diagnostics must be careful to handle these + /// fictitious ranges sensibly. fn split( &self, column_ranges: impl Iterator, ) -> impl Iterator { - // Make the range into an exclusive range. - fn unpack_intrange(range: IntRange) -> [MaybeInfiniteInt; 2] { - [range.lo, range.hi.plus_one()] - } - // The boundaries of ranges in `column_ranges` intersected with `self`. // We do parenthesis matching for input ranges. A boundary counts as +1 if it starts // a range and -1 if it ends it. When the count is > 0 between two boundaries, we // are within an input range. let mut boundaries: Vec<(MaybeInfiniteInt, isize)> = column_ranges .filter_map(|r| self.intersection(&r)) - .map(unpack_intrange) - .flat_map(|[lo, hi]| [(lo, 1), (hi, -1)]) + .flat_map(|r| [(r.lo, 1), (r.hi, -1)]) .collect(); // We sort by boundary, and for each boundary we sort the "closing parentheses" first. The // order of +1/-1 for a same boundary value is actually irrelevant, because we only look at // the accumulated count between distinct boundary values. boundaries.sort_unstable(); - let [self_start, self_end] = unpack_intrange(*self); // Accumulate parenthesis counts. let mut paren_counter = 0isize; // Gather pairs of adjacent boundaries. - let mut prev_bdy = self_start; + let mut prev_bdy = self.lo; boundaries .into_iter() // End with the end of the range. The count is ignored. - .chain(once((self_end, 0))) + .chain(once((self.hi, 0))) // List pairs of adjacent boundaries and the count between them. .map(move |(bdy, delta)| { // `delta` affects the count as we cross `bdy`, so the relevant count between @@ -322,21 +330,22 @@ impl IntRange { .map(move |(prev_bdy, paren_count, bdy)| { use Presence::*; let presence = if paren_count > 0 { Seen } else { Unseen }; - // Turn back into an inclusive range. - let range = IntRange::from_range(prev_bdy, bdy, RangeEnd::Excluded); + let range = IntRange { lo: prev_bdy, hi: bdy }; (presence, range) }) } - /// Whether the range denotes the values before `isize::MIN` or the values after - /// `usize::MAX`/`isize::MAX`. + /// Whether the range denotes the fictitious values before `isize::MIN` or after + /// `usize::MAX`/`isize::MAX` (see doc of [`IntRange::split`] for why these exist). pub(crate) fn is_beyond_boundaries<'tcx>(&self, ty: Ty<'tcx>, tcx: TyCtxt<'tcx>) -> bool { - // First check if we are usize/isize to avoid unnecessary `to_diagnostic_pat_range_bdy`. ty.is_ptr_sized_integral() && !tcx.features().precise_pointer_size_matching && { + // The two invalid ranges are `NegInfinity..isize::MIN` (represented as + // `NegInfinity..0`), and `{u,i}size::MAX+1..PosInfinity`. `to_diagnostic_pat_range_bdy` + // converts `MAX+1` to `PosInfinity`, and we couldn't have `PosInfinity` in `self.lo` + // otherwise. let lo = self.lo.to_diagnostic_pat_range_bdy(ty, tcx); - let hi = self.hi.to_diagnostic_pat_range_bdy(ty, tcx); matches!(lo, PatRangeBoundary::PosInfinity) - || matches!(hi, PatRangeBoundary::NegInfinity) + || matches!(self.hi, MaybeInfiniteInt::Finite(0)) } } /// Only used for displaying the range. @@ -348,28 +357,27 @@ impl IntRange { let value = lo.as_finite().unwrap(); PatKind::Constant { value } } else { + // We convert to an inclusive range for diagnostics. + let mut end = RangeEnd::Included; let mut lo = self.lo.to_diagnostic_pat_range_bdy(ty, tcx); - let mut hi = self.hi.to_diagnostic_pat_range_bdy(ty, tcx); - let end = if hi.is_finite() { - RangeEnd::Included - } else { - // `0..=` isn't a valid pattern. - RangeEnd::Excluded - }; - if matches!(hi, PatRangeBoundary::NegInfinity) { - // The range denotes the values before `isize::MIN`. - let c = ty.numeric_min_val(tcx).unwrap(); - let value = mir::Const::from_ty_const(c, tcx); - hi = PatRangeBoundary::Finite(value); - } if matches!(lo, PatRangeBoundary::PosInfinity) { - // The range denotes the values after `usize::MAX`/`isize::MAX`. - // We represent this as `usize::MAX..` which is slightly incorrect but probably - // clear enough. + // The only reason to get `PosInfinity` here is the special case where + // `to_diagnostic_pat_range_bdy` found `{u,i}size::MAX+1`. So the range denotes the + // fictitious values after `{u,i}size::MAX` (see [`IntRange::split`] for why we do + // this). We show this to the user as `usize::MAX..` which is slightly incorrect but + // probably clear enough. let c = ty.numeric_max_val(tcx).unwrap(); let value = mir::Const::from_ty_const(c, tcx); lo = PatRangeBoundary::Finite(value); } + let hi = if matches!(self.hi, MaybeInfiniteInt::Finite(0)) { + // The range encodes `..ty::MIN`, so we can't convert it to an inclusive range. + end = RangeEnd::Excluded; + self.hi + } else { + self.hi.minus_one() + }; + let hi = hi.to_diagnostic_pat_range_bdy(ty, tcx); PatKind::Range(Box::new(PatRange { lo, hi, end, ty })) }; @@ -384,7 +392,7 @@ impl fmt::Debug for IntRange { if let Finite(lo) = self.lo { write!(f, "{lo}")?; } - write!(f, "{}", RangeEnd::Included)?; + write!(f, "{}", RangeEnd::Excluded)?; if let Finite(hi) = self.hi { write!(f, "{hi}")?; } diff --git a/compiler/rustc_mir_build/src/thir/pattern/usefulness.rs b/compiler/rustc_mir_build/src/thir/pattern/usefulness.rs index c0920a3ef5a5b..27bf5b92552f7 100644 --- a/compiler/rustc_mir_build/src/thir/pattern/usefulness.rs +++ b/compiler/rustc_mir_build/src/thir/pattern/usefulness.rs @@ -1052,7 +1052,7 @@ fn lint_overlapping_range_endpoints<'p, 'tcx>( emit_lint(overlap_range, this_span, &prefixes); } suffixes.push(this_span) - } else if this_range.hi == overlap { + } else if this_range.hi == overlap.plus_one() { // `this_range` looks like `this_range.lo..=overlap`; it overlaps with any // ranges that look like `overlap..=hi`. if !suffixes.is_empty() {