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Remove a HACK by instead inferring opaque types during expected/formal type checking #123864
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@bors try let's still crater it |
Remove a HACK by instead inferring opaque types during expected/formal type checking I was wondering why I couldn't come up with a test that hits the code path of the argument check checking the types we inferred from the return type... Turns out we reject those attempts early during fudging. I have absolutely no information for you as to what kind of type inference changes this may incur, but I think we should just land this out of two reasons: * had I found the other place to use opaque type inference on before I added the hack, we'd be using that today and this PR would never have happened * if it is possible to hit this path, it requires some god awful recursive RPIT logic that I doubt anyone would have written without actively trying to write obscure code r? `@ghost`
☀️ Try build successful - checks-actions |
@craterbot check |
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🚧 Experiment ℹ️ Crater is a tool to run experiments across parts of the Rust ecosystem. Learn more |
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All of the regressions are spurious (either repro on master or are just disk out of space) |
Yeah, I'm happy with landing this now. @bors r+ |
…mpiler-errors Remove a HACK by instead inferring opaque types during expected/formal type checking I was wondering why I couldn't come up with a test that hits the code path of the argument check checking the types we inferred from the return type... Turns out we reject those attempts early during fudging. I have absolutely no information for you as to what kind of type inference changes this may incur, but I think we should just land this out of two reasons: * had I found the other place to use opaque type inference on before I added the hack, we'd be using that today and this PR would never have happened * if it is possible to hit this path, it requires some god awful recursive RPIT logic that I doubt anyone would have written without actively trying to write obscure code r? `@ghost`
Rollup of 12 pull requests Successful merges: - rust-lang#123423 (Distribute LLVM bitcode linker as a preview component) - rust-lang#123548 (libtest: also measure time in Miri) - rust-lang#123666 (Fix some typos in doc) - rust-lang#123864 (Remove a HACK by instead inferring opaque types during expected/formal type checking) - rust-lang#123896 (Migrate some diagnostics in `rustc_resolve` to session diagnostic) - rust-lang#123919 (builtin-derive: tag → discriminant) - rust-lang#123922 (Remove magic constants when using `base_n`.) - rust-lang#123931 (Don't leak unnameable types in `-> _` recover) - rust-lang#123933 (move the LargeAssignments lint logic into its own file) - rust-lang#123934 (`rustc_data_structures::graph` mini refactor) - rust-lang#123941 (Fix UB in LLVM FFI when passing zero or >1 bundle) - rust-lang#123957 (disable create_dir_all_bare test on all(miri, windows)) r? `@ghost` `@rustbot` modify labels: rollup
Rollup merge of rust-lang#123864 - oli-obk:define_opaque_types3, r=compiler-errors Remove a HACK by instead inferring opaque types during expected/formal type checking I was wondering why I couldn't come up with a test that hits the code path of the argument check checking the types we inferred from the return type... Turns out we reject those attempts early during fudging. I have absolutely no information for you as to what kind of type inference changes this may incur, but I think we should just land this out of two reasons: * had I found the other place to use opaque type inference on before I added the hack, we'd be using that today and this PR would never have happened * if it is possible to hit this path, it requires some god awful recursive RPIT logic that I doubt anyone would have written without actively trying to write obscure code r? ``@ghost``
I was wondering why I couldn't come up with a test that hits the code path of the argument check checking the types we inferred from the return type... Turns out we reject those attempts early during fudging.
I have absolutely no information for you as to what kind of type inference changes this may incur, but I think we should just land this out of two reasons:
r? @ghost