- Added a few more variants which are needed for various attributes
- Previously a trait method with default block had the same target representation as a method in a `impl trait for` block, this has been changed (See `MethodKind`)
- Added `plural_name` for more precision on the form of the name
Stabilize `sse4a` and `tbm` target features
This PR stabilizes the feature flag `sse4a_target_feature` and `tbm_target_feature` (tracking issue rust-lang/rust#44839).
# Public API
The 2 `x86` target features `sse4a` and `tbm`
Also, these were added in LLVM2.6 and LLVM3.4-rc1, respectively, and as the minimum LLVM required for rustc is LLVM19, we are safe in that front too!
As all of the required tasks have been done (adding the target features to rustc, implementing their runtime detection in std_detect and implementing the associated intrinsics in core_arch), these target features can be stabilized now. The intrinsics were stabilized *long* ago, in 1.27.0
Reference PR:
- https://github.com/rust-lang/reference/pull/1949
cc `@rust-lang/lang`
`@rustbot` label I-lang-nominated
r? lang
Currently they are skipped, which is a bit weird, and it sometimes
causes malformed output like `Foo<>` and `dyn Bar<, A = u32>`.
Most regions are erased by the time `type_name` does its work. So all
regions are now printed as `'_` in non-optional places. Not perfect, but
better than the status quo.
`c_name` is updated to trim lifetimes from MIR pass names, so that the
`PASS_NAMES` sanity check still works. It is also renamed as
`simplify_pass_type_name` and made non-const, because it doesn't need
to be const and the non-const implementation is much shorter.
The commit also renames `should_print_region` as
`should_print_optional_region`, which makes it clearer that it only
applies to some regions.
Fixes#145168.
Rollup of 13 pull requests
Successful merges:
- rust-lang/rust#140434 (rustdoc: Allow multiple references to a single footnote)
- rust-lang/rust#142372 (Improve `--remap-path-prefix` documentation)
- rust-lang/rust#142741 (Fix unsoundness in some tests)
- rust-lang/rust#144515 (Implement `ptr_cast_array`)
- rust-lang/rust#144727 (Add tracing to resolve-related functions)
- rust-lang/rust#144959 (fix(unicode-table-generator): fix duplicated unique indices)
- rust-lang/rust#145179 (Avoid abbreviating "numerator" as "numer", to allow catching typo "numer" elsewhere)
- rust-lang/rust#145250 (Add regression test for a former ICE involving helper attributes containing interpolated tokens)
- rust-lang/rust#145266 (Reduce some queries around associated items)
- rust-lang/rust#145299 (doc test: fix mpsc.rs try_send doc test)
- rust-lang/rust#145323 (Port the `#[linkage]` attribute to the new attribute system)
- rust-lang/rust#145361 (Suppress wrapper suggestion when expected and actual ty are the same adt and the variant is unresolved)
- rust-lang/rust#145372 (resolve: Miscellaneous cleanups)
r? `@ghost`
`@rustbot` modify labels: rollup
Suppress wrapper suggestion when expected and actual ty are the same adt and the variant is unresolved
Fixesrust-lang/rust#145294
I initially tried the desired suggestion in this issue, but since that suggestion occurs in the expected type, it is inappropriate to suggest for expected expressions (see other suggest methods in the same file). I believe that suppressing the incorrect suggestion is the more appropriate choice here.
I opted for a slightly more general approach: when the expected type and actual type are the same ADT (e.g., both are Result in this example), we assume that code tend to compare the internal generic parameters(i.e. `Option<&str>` vs `Option<String>`, instead of `E = _` vs `Result<Option<String>>>`). When `E` is an unresolved infer type in the expected type (`_` in this example), we should not wrapp the actual type.
Two commits show the difference.
r? compiler
doc test: fix mpsc.rs try_send doc test
This Pr want to fix the doctest, to make https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/145293 's CI pass:
r? ``@Zalathar``
https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/actions/runs/16903356990/job/47887354221
```bash
2025-08-12T10:19:32.3873237Z test library/std/src/thread/scoped.rs - thread::scoped::ScopedJoinHandle<'scope,T>::join (line 302) ... ok
2025-08-12T10:19:32.4370250Z test library/std/src/time.rs - time::SystemTimeError::duration (line 688) ... ok
2025-08-12T10:19:32.5121966Z test library/std/src/time.rs - time::UNIX_EPOCH (line 664) ... ok
2025-08-12T10:19:32.5122586Z
2025-08-12T10:19:32.5122738Z failures:
2025-08-12T10:19:32.5122973Z
2025-08-12T10:19:32.5123482Z ---- library/std/src/sync/mpsc.rs - sync::mpsc::SyncSender<T>::try_send (line 691) stdout ----
2025-08-12T10:19:32.5124286Z Test executable failed (exit status: 1).
2025-08-12T10:19:32.5124518Z
2025-08-12T10:19:32.5124605Z stdout:
2025-08-12T10:19:32.5124810Z message 3 received
2025-08-12T10:19:32.5125043Z message 1 received
2025-08-12T10:19:32.5125288Z the third message was never sent
2025-08-12T10:19:32.5125497Z
2025-08-12T10:19:32.5125581Z stderr:
2025-08-12T10:19:32.5125701Z
2025-08-12T10:19:32.5125935Z thread '<unnamed>' (203874) panicked at library/std/src/sync/mpsc.rs:14:25:
2025-08-12T10:19:32.5126459Z called `Result::unwrap()` on an `Err` value: SendError { .. }
2025-08-12T10:19:32.5126836Z stack backtrace:
2025-08-12T10:19:32.5127568Z ␛[0m␛[1m␛[38;5;9merror␛[0m␛[0m␛[1m: the main thread terminated without waiting for all remaining threads␛[0m
2025-08-12T10:19:32.5127971Z
2025-08-12T10:19:32.5128335Z ␛[0m␛[1m␛[38;5;10mnote␛[0m␛[0m␛[1m: set `MIRIFLAGS=-Zmiri-ignore-leaks` to disable this check␛[0m
2025-08-12T10:19:32.5128694Z
2025-08-12T10:19:32.5128943Z ␛[0m␛[1m␛[38;5;9merror␛[0m␛[0m␛[1m: aborting due to 1 previous error␛[0m
2025-08-12T10:19:32.5129519Z
2025-08-12T10:19:32.5129527Z
2025-08-12T10:19:32.5129532Z
2025-08-12T10:19:32.5129537Z
2025-08-12T10:19:32.5129631Z failures:
2025-08-12T10:19:32.5130018Z library/std/src/sync/mpsc.rs - sync::mpsc::SyncSender<T>::try_send (line 691)
2025-08-12T10:19:32.5130396Z
2025-08-12T10:19:32.5130713Z test result: FAILED. 999 passed; 1 failed; 16 ignored; 0 measured; 344 filtered out; finished in 105.92s
```
Avoid abbreviating "numerator" as "numer", to allow catching typo "numer" elsewhere
`typos.toml` has an exception for "numer", to avoid flagging its use as an abbreviation for "numerator". Remove the use of that abbrevation, spelling out "numerator" instead, and remove the exception, so that typo checks can find future instances of "numer" as a typo for "number".
fix(unicode-table-generator): fix duplicated unique indices
unicode-table-generator panicked while populating `distinct_indices` because of duplicated indices. This was introduced in rust-lang/rust#144134, where the order of `canonical_words.push(...)` and `canonical_words.len()` was swapped.
Fixes: rust-lang/rust#144134
Add tracing to resolve-related functions
Resolve-related functions are not called often but still make up for ~3% of execution time for non-repetitive programs (as seen in the first table below, obtained from running the rust snippet at the bottom with `n=1`). On the other hand, for repetitive programs they become less relevant (I tested the same snippet but with `n=100` and got ~1.5%), and it appears that only `try_resolve` is called more often (see the last two tables).
The first table was obtained by opening the trace file in https://ui.perfetto.dev and running the following query:
```sql
select "TOTAL PROGRAM DURATION" as name, count(*), max(ts + dur) as "sum(dur)", 100.0 as "%", null as "min(dur)", null as "max(dur)", null as "avg(dur)", null as "stddev(dur)" from slices union select "TOTAL OVER ALL SPANS (excluding events)" as name, count(*), sum(dur), cast(cast(sum(dur) as float) / (select max(ts + dur) from slices) * 1000 as int) / 10.0 as "%", min(dur), max(dur), cast(avg(dur) as int) as "avg(dur)", cast(sqrt(avg(dur*dur)-avg(dur)*avg(dur)) as int) as "stddev(dur)" from slices where parent_id is null and name != "frame" and name != "step" and dur > 0 union select name, count(*), sum(dur), cast(cast(sum(dur) as float) / (select max(ts + dur) from slices) * 1000 as int) / 10.0 as "%", min(dur), max(dur), cast(avg(dur) as int) as "avg(dur)", cast(sqrt(avg(dur*dur)-avg(dur)*avg(dur)) as int) as "stddev(dur)" from slices where parent_id is null and name != "frame" and name != "step" group by name order by sum(dur) desc, count(*) desc
```
<img width="1687" height="242" alt="image" src="https://github.com/user-attachments/assets/4d4bd890-869b-40f3-a473-8e4c42b02da4" />
The following two tables show how many `resolve` spans there per subname/subcategory, and how much time is spent in each. The first is for `n=1` and the second for `n=100`. The query that was used is:
```sql
select args.string_value as name, count(*), max(dur), avg(dur), sum(dur) from slices inner join args USING (arg_set_id) where args.key = "args." || slices.name and name = "resolve" group by args.string_value
```
<img width="1688" height="159" alt="image" src="https://github.com/user-attachments/assets/a8749856-c099-492e-a86e-6d67b146af9c" />
<img width="1688" height="159" alt="image" src="https://github.com/user-attachments/assets/ce3ac1b5-5c06-47d9-85a6-9b921aea348e" />
The snippet I tested with Miri to obtain the above traces is:
```rust
fn main() {
let n: usize = std::env::args().nth(1).unwrap().parse().unwrap();
let mut v = (0..n).into_iter().collect::<Vec<_>>();
for i in &mut v {
*i += 1;
}
}
```