Stop collecting unmentioned constants
This avoids generating useless dead LLVM IR. This appears to have regressed and/or been introduced in rust-lang/rust#53821 (unfortunately a very large PR - I don't see any direct discussion there of this particular change), but as far as I can tell is at least no longer necessary -- or we lack test coverage -- because none of our UI tests indicate diagnostics regressions. The adjusted codegen-units test has comments explicitly noting that these items should *not* be collected ("These are not referenced, so they do not produce mono-items").
I noticed this while looking at libcore LLVM IR we generate, which contained dead code references to the NOOP Waker item, which is never used inside libcore. Producing LLVM IR for it during libcore's compilation, only for that IR to get deleted by LLVM as unused, isn't useful. Note that the IR is generally all marked internal, too.
Since 122662 this no longer gets used in vtables, so we're safe to fully
drop generating these empty functions. Those are eventually cleaned up
by LLVM, but it's wasteful to produce them in the first place.
This also adds a missing test for fn-ptr casts, which do still need to
generate no-op drop glue. It's possible a future optimization could
point all of those at the same drop glue (e.g., for *mut ()) rather than
for each separate type, but that would require extra work for CFI and
isn't particularly easy to do anyway.
Previously `-Zprint-mono-items` would override the mono item collection
strategy. When debugging one doesn't want to change the behaviour, so
this was counter productive. Additionally, the produced behaviour was
artificial and might never arise without using the option in the first
place (`-Zprint-mono-items=eager` without `-Clink-dead-code`). Finally,
the option was incorrectly marked as `UNTRACKED`.
Resolve those issues, by turning `-Zprint-mono-items` into a boolean
flag that prints results of mono item collection without changing the
behaviour of mono item collection.
For codegen-units test incorporate `-Zprint-mono-items` flag directly
into compiletest tool.
Test changes are mechanical. `-Zprint-mono-items=lazy` was removed
without additional changes, and `-Zprint-mono-items=eager` was turned
into `-Clink-dead-code`. Linking dead code disables internalization, so
tests have been updated accordingly.
Rollup of 7 pull requests
Successful merges:
- #134216 (Enable "jump to def" feature on patterns)
- #134880 (Made `Path::name` only have item name rather than full name)
- #135466 (Leak check in `impossible_predicates` to avoid monomorphizing impossible instances)
- #135476 (Remove remnant of asmjs)
- #135479 (mir borrowck: cleanup late-bound region handling)
- #135493 (Fix legacy symbol mangling of closures)
- #135495 (Add missing closing backtick in commit hook message 🐸)
r? `@ghost`
`@rustbot` modify labels: rollup
Eagerly mono drop for structs with lifetimes
That is, use `!generics.requires_monomorphization()` rather than `generics.is_empty()` like the rest of the mono collector code.
Field init shorthand allows writing initializers like `tcx: tcx` as
`tcx`. The compiler already uses it extensively. Fix the last few places
where it isn't yet used.
This reduces code sizes and better respects programmer intent when
marking inline(never). Previously such a marking was essentially ignored
for generic functions, as we'd still inline them in remote crates.
In 126578 we ended up with more binary size increases than expected.
This change attempts to avoid inlining large things into small things, to avoid that kind of increase, in cases when top-down inlining will still be able to do that inlining later.
This replaces the drop_in_place reference with null in vtables. On
librustc_driver.so, this drops about ~17k dynamic relocations from the
output, since many vtables can now be placed in read-only memory, rather
than having a relocated pointer included.
This makes a tradeoff by adding a null check at vtable call sites.
That's hard to avoid without changing the vtable format (e.g., to use a
pc-relative relocation instead of an absolute address, and avoid the
dynamic relocation that way). But it seems likely that the check is
cheap at runtime.
This skips emitting extra arguments at every callsite (of which there
can be many). For a librustc_driver build with overflow checks enabled,
this cuts 0.7MB from the resulting binary.