| //! Code for projecting associated types out of trait references. |
| |
| use super::elaborate_predicates; |
| use super::specialization_graph; |
| use super::translate_substs; |
| use super::util; |
| use super::MismatchedProjectionTypes; |
| use super::Obligation; |
| use super::ObligationCause; |
| use super::PredicateObligation; |
| use super::Selection; |
| use super::SelectionContext; |
| use super::SelectionError; |
| use super::{ |
| ImplSourceClosureData, ImplSourceDiscriminantKindData, ImplSourceFnPointerData, |
| ImplSourceGeneratorData, ImplSourceUserDefinedData, |
| }; |
| use super::{Normalized, NormalizedTy, ProjectionCacheEntry, ProjectionCacheKey}; |
| |
| use crate::infer::type_variable::{TypeVariableOrigin, TypeVariableOriginKind}; |
| use crate::infer::{InferCtxt, InferOk, LateBoundRegionConversionTime}; |
| use crate::traits::error_reporting::InferCtxtExt; |
| use rustc_data_structures::stack::ensure_sufficient_stack; |
| use rustc_errors::ErrorReported; |
| use rustc_hir::def_id::DefId; |
| use rustc_hir::lang_items::LangItem; |
| use rustc_infer::infer::resolve::OpportunisticRegionResolver; |
| use rustc_middle::ty::fold::{TypeFoldable, TypeFolder}; |
| use rustc_middle::ty::subst::Subst; |
| use rustc_middle::ty::{self, ToPolyTraitRef, ToPredicate, Ty, TyCtxt, WithConstness}; |
| use rustc_span::symbol::sym; |
| use rustc_span::DUMMY_SP; |
| |
| pub use rustc_middle::traits::Reveal; |
| |
| pub type PolyProjectionObligation<'tcx> = Obligation<'tcx, ty::PolyProjectionPredicate<'tcx>>; |
| |
| pub type ProjectionObligation<'tcx> = Obligation<'tcx, ty::ProjectionPredicate<'tcx>>; |
| |
| pub type ProjectionTyObligation<'tcx> = Obligation<'tcx, ty::ProjectionTy<'tcx>>; |
| |
| pub(super) struct InProgress; |
| |
| /// When attempting to resolve `<T as TraitRef>::Name` ... |
| #[derive(Debug)] |
| pub enum ProjectionTyError<'tcx> { |
| /// ...we found multiple sources of information and couldn't resolve the ambiguity. |
| TooManyCandidates, |
| |
| /// ...an error occurred matching `T : TraitRef` |
| TraitSelectionError(SelectionError<'tcx>), |
| } |
| |
| #[derive(PartialEq, Eq, Debug)] |
| enum ProjectionTyCandidate<'tcx> { |
| // from a where-clause in the env or object type |
| ParamEnv(ty::PolyProjectionPredicate<'tcx>), |
| |
| // from the definition of `Trait` when you have something like <<A as Trait>::B as Trait2>::C |
| TraitDef(ty::PolyProjectionPredicate<'tcx>), |
| |
| // from a "impl" (or a "pseudo-impl" returned by select) |
| Select(Selection<'tcx>), |
| } |
| |
| enum ProjectionTyCandidateSet<'tcx> { |
| None, |
| Single(ProjectionTyCandidate<'tcx>), |
| Ambiguous, |
| Error(SelectionError<'tcx>), |
| } |
| |
| impl<'tcx> ProjectionTyCandidateSet<'tcx> { |
| fn mark_ambiguous(&mut self) { |
| *self = ProjectionTyCandidateSet::Ambiguous; |
| } |
| |
| fn mark_error(&mut self, err: SelectionError<'tcx>) { |
| *self = ProjectionTyCandidateSet::Error(err); |
| } |
| |
| // Returns true if the push was successful, or false if the candidate |
| // was discarded -- this could be because of ambiguity, or because |
| // a higher-priority candidate is already there. |
| fn push_candidate(&mut self, candidate: ProjectionTyCandidate<'tcx>) -> bool { |
| use self::ProjectionTyCandidate::*; |
| use self::ProjectionTyCandidateSet::*; |
| |
| // This wacky variable is just used to try and |
| // make code readable and avoid confusing paths. |
| // It is assigned a "value" of `()` only on those |
| // paths in which we wish to convert `*self` to |
| // ambiguous (and return false, because the candidate |
| // was not used). On other paths, it is not assigned, |
| // and hence if those paths *could* reach the code that |
| // comes after the match, this fn would not compile. |
| let convert_to_ambiguous; |
| |
| match self { |
| None => { |
| *self = Single(candidate); |
| return true; |
| } |
| |
| Single(current) => { |
| // Duplicates can happen inside ParamEnv. In the case, we |
| // perform a lazy deduplication. |
| if current == &candidate { |
| return false; |
| } |
| |
| // Prefer where-clauses. As in select, if there are multiple |
| // candidates, we prefer where-clause candidates over impls. This |
| // may seem a bit surprising, since impls are the source of |
| // "truth" in some sense, but in fact some of the impls that SEEM |
| // applicable are not, because of nested obligations. Where |
| // clauses are the safer choice. See the comment on |
| // `select::SelectionCandidate` and #21974 for more details. |
| match (current, candidate) { |
| (ParamEnv(..), ParamEnv(..)) => convert_to_ambiguous = (), |
| (ParamEnv(..), _) => return false, |
| (_, ParamEnv(..)) => unreachable!(), |
| (_, _) => convert_to_ambiguous = (), |
| } |
| } |
| |
| Ambiguous | Error(..) => { |
| return false; |
| } |
| } |
| |
| // We only ever get here when we moved from a single candidate |
| // to ambiguous. |
| let () = convert_to_ambiguous; |
| *self = Ambiguous; |
| false |
| } |
| } |
| |
| /// Evaluates constraints of the form: |
| /// |
| /// for<...> <T as Trait>::U == V |
| /// |
| /// If successful, this may result in additional obligations. Also returns |
| /// the projection cache key used to track these additional obligations. |
| /// |
| /// ## Returns |
| /// |
| /// - `Err(_)`: the projection can be normalized, but is not equal to the |
| /// expected type. |
| /// - `Ok(Err(InProgress))`: this is called recursively while normalizing |
| /// the same projection. |
| /// - `Ok(Ok(None))`: The projection cannot be normalized due to ambiguity |
| /// (resolving some inference variables in the projection may fix this). |
| /// - `Ok(Ok(Some(obligations)))`: The projection bound holds subject to |
| /// the given obligations. If the projection cannot be normalized because |
| /// the required trait bound doesn't hold this returned with `obligations` |
| /// being a predicate that cannot be proven. |
| pub(super) fn poly_project_and_unify_type<'cx, 'tcx>( |
| selcx: &mut SelectionContext<'cx, 'tcx>, |
| obligation: &PolyProjectionObligation<'tcx>, |
| ) -> Result< |
| Result<Option<Vec<PredicateObligation<'tcx>>>, InProgress>, |
| MismatchedProjectionTypes<'tcx>, |
| > { |
| debug!("poly_project_and_unify_type(obligation={:?})", obligation); |
| |
| let infcx = selcx.infcx(); |
| infcx.commit_if_ok(|_snapshot| { |
| let (placeholder_predicate, _) = |
| infcx.replace_bound_vars_with_placeholders(&obligation.predicate); |
| |
| let placeholder_obligation = obligation.with(placeholder_predicate); |
| let result = project_and_unify_type(selcx, &placeholder_obligation)?; |
| Ok(result) |
| }) |
| } |
| |
| /// Evaluates constraints of the form: |
| /// |
| /// <T as Trait>::U == V |
| /// |
| /// If successful, this may result in additional obligations. |
| /// |
| /// See [poly_project_and_unify_type] for an explanation of the return value. |
| fn project_and_unify_type<'cx, 'tcx>( |
| selcx: &mut SelectionContext<'cx, 'tcx>, |
| obligation: &ProjectionObligation<'tcx>, |
| ) -> Result< |
| Result<Option<Vec<PredicateObligation<'tcx>>>, InProgress>, |
| MismatchedProjectionTypes<'tcx>, |
| > { |
| debug!("project_and_unify_type(obligation={:?})", obligation); |
| |
| let mut obligations = vec![]; |
| let normalized_ty = match opt_normalize_projection_type( |
| selcx, |
| obligation.param_env, |
| obligation.predicate.projection_ty, |
| obligation.cause.clone(), |
| obligation.recursion_depth, |
| &mut obligations, |
| ) { |
| Ok(Some(n)) => n, |
| Ok(None) => return Ok(Ok(None)), |
| Err(InProgress) => return Ok(Err(InProgress)), |
| }; |
| |
| debug!( |
| "project_and_unify_type: normalized_ty={:?} obligations={:?}", |
| normalized_ty, obligations |
| ); |
| |
| let infcx = selcx.infcx(); |
| match infcx |
| .at(&obligation.cause, obligation.param_env) |
| .eq(normalized_ty, obligation.predicate.ty) |
| { |
| Ok(InferOk { obligations: inferred_obligations, value: () }) => { |
| obligations.extend(inferred_obligations); |
| Ok(Ok(Some(obligations))) |
| } |
| Err(err) => { |
| debug!("project_and_unify_type: equating types encountered error {:?}", err); |
| Err(MismatchedProjectionTypes { err }) |
| } |
| } |
| } |
| |
| /// Normalizes any associated type projections in `value`, replacing |
| /// them with a fully resolved type where possible. The return value |
| /// combines the normalized result and any additional obligations that |
| /// were incurred as result. |
| pub fn normalize<'a, 'b, 'tcx, T>( |
| selcx: &'a mut SelectionContext<'b, 'tcx>, |
| param_env: ty::ParamEnv<'tcx>, |
| cause: ObligationCause<'tcx>, |
| value: &T, |
| ) -> Normalized<'tcx, T> |
| where |
| T: TypeFoldable<'tcx>, |
| { |
| let mut obligations = Vec::new(); |
| let value = normalize_to(selcx, param_env, cause, value, &mut obligations); |
| Normalized { value, obligations } |
| } |
| |
| pub fn normalize_to<'a, 'b, 'tcx, T>( |
| selcx: &'a mut SelectionContext<'b, 'tcx>, |
| param_env: ty::ParamEnv<'tcx>, |
| cause: ObligationCause<'tcx>, |
| value: &T, |
| obligations: &mut Vec<PredicateObligation<'tcx>>, |
| ) -> T |
| where |
| T: TypeFoldable<'tcx>, |
| { |
| normalize_with_depth_to(selcx, param_env, cause, 0, value, obligations) |
| } |
| |
| /// As `normalize`, but with a custom depth. |
| pub fn normalize_with_depth<'a, 'b, 'tcx, T>( |
| selcx: &'a mut SelectionContext<'b, 'tcx>, |
| param_env: ty::ParamEnv<'tcx>, |
| cause: ObligationCause<'tcx>, |
| depth: usize, |
| value: &T, |
| ) -> Normalized<'tcx, T> |
| where |
| T: TypeFoldable<'tcx>, |
| { |
| let mut obligations = Vec::new(); |
| let value = normalize_with_depth_to(selcx, param_env, cause, depth, value, &mut obligations); |
| Normalized { value, obligations } |
| } |
| |
| pub fn normalize_with_depth_to<'a, 'b, 'tcx, T>( |
| selcx: &'a mut SelectionContext<'b, 'tcx>, |
| param_env: ty::ParamEnv<'tcx>, |
| cause: ObligationCause<'tcx>, |
| depth: usize, |
| value: &T, |
| obligations: &mut Vec<PredicateObligation<'tcx>>, |
| ) -> T |
| where |
| T: TypeFoldable<'tcx>, |
| { |
| debug!("normalize_with_depth(depth={}, value={:?})", depth, value); |
| let mut normalizer = AssocTypeNormalizer::new(selcx, param_env, cause, depth, obligations); |
| let result = ensure_sufficient_stack(|| normalizer.fold(value)); |
| debug!( |
| "normalize_with_depth: depth={} result={:?} with {} obligations", |
| depth, |
| result, |
| normalizer.obligations.len() |
| ); |
| debug!("normalize_with_depth: depth={} obligations={:?}", depth, normalizer.obligations); |
| result |
| } |
| |
| struct AssocTypeNormalizer<'a, 'b, 'tcx> { |
| selcx: &'a mut SelectionContext<'b, 'tcx>, |
| param_env: ty::ParamEnv<'tcx>, |
| cause: ObligationCause<'tcx>, |
| obligations: &'a mut Vec<PredicateObligation<'tcx>>, |
| depth: usize, |
| } |
| |
| impl<'a, 'b, 'tcx> AssocTypeNormalizer<'a, 'b, 'tcx> { |
| fn new( |
| selcx: &'a mut SelectionContext<'b, 'tcx>, |
| param_env: ty::ParamEnv<'tcx>, |
| cause: ObligationCause<'tcx>, |
| depth: usize, |
| obligations: &'a mut Vec<PredicateObligation<'tcx>>, |
| ) -> AssocTypeNormalizer<'a, 'b, 'tcx> { |
| AssocTypeNormalizer { selcx, param_env, cause, obligations, depth } |
| } |
| |
| fn fold<T: TypeFoldable<'tcx>>(&mut self, value: &T) -> T { |
| let value = self.selcx.infcx().resolve_vars_if_possible(value); |
| |
| if !value.has_projections() { value } else { value.fold_with(self) } |
| } |
| } |
| |
| impl<'a, 'b, 'tcx> TypeFolder<'tcx> for AssocTypeNormalizer<'a, 'b, 'tcx> { |
| fn tcx<'c>(&'c self) -> TyCtxt<'tcx> { |
| self.selcx.tcx() |
| } |
| |
| fn fold_ty(&mut self, ty: Ty<'tcx>) -> Ty<'tcx> { |
| if !ty.has_projections() { |
| return ty; |
| } |
| // We don't want to normalize associated types that occur inside of region |
| // binders, because they may contain bound regions, and we can't cope with that. |
| // |
| // Example: |
| // |
| // for<'a> fn(<T as Foo<&'a>>::A) |
| // |
| // Instead of normalizing `<T as Foo<&'a>>::A` here, we'll |
| // normalize it when we instantiate those bound regions (which |
| // should occur eventually). |
| |
| let ty = ty.super_fold_with(self); |
| match *ty.kind() { |
| ty::Opaque(def_id, substs) if !substs.has_escaping_bound_vars() => { |
| // Only normalize `impl Trait` after type-checking, usually in codegen. |
| match self.param_env.reveal() { |
| Reveal::UserFacing => ty, |
| |
| Reveal::All => { |
| let recursion_limit = self.tcx().sess.recursion_limit(); |
| if !recursion_limit.value_within_limit(self.depth) { |
| let obligation = Obligation::with_depth( |
| self.cause.clone(), |
| recursion_limit.0, |
| self.param_env, |
| ty, |
| ); |
| self.selcx.infcx().report_overflow_error(&obligation, true); |
| } |
| |
| let generic_ty = self.tcx().type_of(def_id); |
| let concrete_ty = generic_ty.subst(self.tcx(), substs); |
| self.depth += 1; |
| let folded_ty = self.fold_ty(concrete_ty); |
| self.depth -= 1; |
| folded_ty |
| } |
| } |
| } |
| |
| ty::Projection(ref data) if !data.has_escaping_bound_vars() => { |
| // This is kind of hacky -- we need to be able to |
| // handle normalization within binders because |
| // otherwise we wind up a need to normalize when doing |
| // trait matching (since you can have a trait |
| // obligation like `for<'a> T::B: Fn(&'a i32)`), but |
| // we can't normalize with bound regions in scope. So |
| // far now we just ignore binders but only normalize |
| // if all bound regions are gone (and then we still |
| // have to renormalize whenever we instantiate a |
| // binder). It would be better to normalize in a |
| // binding-aware fashion. |
| |
| let normalized_ty = normalize_projection_type( |
| self.selcx, |
| self.param_env, |
| *data, |
| self.cause.clone(), |
| self.depth, |
| &mut self.obligations, |
| ); |
| debug!( |
| "AssocTypeNormalizer: depth={} normalized {:?} to {:?}, \ |
| now with {} obligations", |
| self.depth, |
| ty, |
| normalized_ty, |
| self.obligations.len() |
| ); |
| normalized_ty |
| } |
| |
| _ => ty, |
| } |
| } |
| |
| fn fold_const(&mut self, constant: &'tcx ty::Const<'tcx>) -> &'tcx ty::Const<'tcx> { |
| if self.selcx.tcx().lazy_normalization() { |
| constant |
| } else { |
| let constant = constant.super_fold_with(self); |
| constant.eval(self.selcx.tcx(), self.param_env) |
| } |
| } |
| } |
| |
| /// The guts of `normalize`: normalize a specific projection like `<T |
| /// as Trait>::Item`. The result is always a type (and possibly |
| /// additional obligations). If ambiguity arises, which implies that |
| /// there are unresolved type variables in the projection, we will |
| /// substitute a fresh type variable `$X` and generate a new |
| /// obligation `<T as Trait>::Item == $X` for later. |
| pub fn normalize_projection_type<'a, 'b, 'tcx>( |
| selcx: &'a mut SelectionContext<'b, 'tcx>, |
| param_env: ty::ParamEnv<'tcx>, |
| projection_ty: ty::ProjectionTy<'tcx>, |
| cause: ObligationCause<'tcx>, |
| depth: usize, |
| obligations: &mut Vec<PredicateObligation<'tcx>>, |
| ) -> Ty<'tcx> { |
| opt_normalize_projection_type( |
| selcx, |
| param_env, |
| projection_ty, |
| cause.clone(), |
| depth, |
| obligations, |
| ) |
| .ok() |
| .flatten() |
| .unwrap_or_else(move || { |
| // if we bottom out in ambiguity, create a type variable |
| // and a deferred predicate to resolve this when more type |
| // information is available. |
| |
| let tcx = selcx.infcx().tcx; |
| let def_id = projection_ty.item_def_id; |
| let ty_var = selcx.infcx().next_ty_var(TypeVariableOrigin { |
| kind: TypeVariableOriginKind::NormalizeProjectionType, |
| span: tcx.def_span(def_id), |
| }); |
| let projection = ty::Binder::dummy(ty::ProjectionPredicate { projection_ty, ty: ty_var }); |
| let obligation = |
| Obligation::with_depth(cause, depth + 1, param_env, projection.to_predicate(tcx)); |
| obligations.push(obligation); |
| ty_var |
| }) |
| } |
| |
| /// The guts of `normalize`: normalize a specific projection like `<T |
| /// as Trait>::Item`. The result is always a type (and possibly |
| /// additional obligations). Returns `None` in the case of ambiguity, |
| /// which indicates that there are unbound type variables. |
| /// |
| /// This function used to return `Option<NormalizedTy<'tcx>>`, which contains a |
| /// `Ty<'tcx>` and an obligations vector. But that obligation vector was very |
| /// often immediately appended to another obligations vector. So now this |
| /// function takes an obligations vector and appends to it directly, which is |
| /// slightly uglier but avoids the need for an extra short-lived allocation. |
| fn opt_normalize_projection_type<'a, 'b, 'tcx>( |
| selcx: &'a mut SelectionContext<'b, 'tcx>, |
| param_env: ty::ParamEnv<'tcx>, |
| projection_ty: ty::ProjectionTy<'tcx>, |
| cause: ObligationCause<'tcx>, |
| depth: usize, |
| obligations: &mut Vec<PredicateObligation<'tcx>>, |
| ) -> Result<Option<Ty<'tcx>>, InProgress> { |
| let infcx = selcx.infcx(); |
| |
| let projection_ty = infcx.resolve_vars_if_possible(&projection_ty); |
| let cache_key = ProjectionCacheKey::new(projection_ty); |
| |
| debug!( |
| "opt_normalize_projection_type(\ |
| projection_ty={:?}, \ |
| depth={})", |
| projection_ty, depth |
| ); |
| |
| // FIXME(#20304) For now, I am caching here, which is good, but it |
| // means we don't capture the type variables that are created in |
| // the case of ambiguity. Which means we may create a large stream |
| // of such variables. OTOH, if we move the caching up a level, we |
| // would not benefit from caching when proving `T: Trait<U=Foo>` |
| // bounds. It might be the case that we want two distinct caches, |
| // or else another kind of cache entry. |
| |
| let cache_result = infcx.inner.borrow_mut().projection_cache().try_start(cache_key); |
| match cache_result { |
| Ok(()) => {} |
| Err(ProjectionCacheEntry::Ambiguous) => { |
| // If we found ambiguity the last time, that means we will continue |
| // to do so until some type in the key changes (and we know it |
| // hasn't, because we just fully resolved it). |
| debug!( |
| "opt_normalize_projection_type: \ |
| found cache entry: ambiguous" |
| ); |
| return Ok(None); |
| } |
| Err(ProjectionCacheEntry::InProgress) => { |
| // If while normalized A::B, we are asked to normalize |
| // A::B, just return A::B itself. This is a conservative |
| // answer, in the sense that A::B *is* clearly equivalent |
| // to A::B, though there may be a better value we can |
| // find. |
| |
| // Under lazy normalization, this can arise when |
| // bootstrapping. That is, imagine an environment with a |
| // where-clause like `A::B == u32`. Now, if we are asked |
| // to normalize `A::B`, we will want to check the |
| // where-clauses in scope. So we will try to unify `A::B` |
| // with `A::B`, which can trigger a recursive |
| // normalization. |
| |
| debug!( |
| "opt_normalize_projection_type: \ |
| found cache entry: in-progress" |
| ); |
| |
| return Err(InProgress); |
| } |
| Err(ProjectionCacheEntry::NormalizedTy(ty)) => { |
| // This is the hottest path in this function. |
| // |
| // If we find the value in the cache, then return it along |
| // with the obligations that went along with it. Note |
| // that, when using a fulfillment context, these |
| // obligations could in principle be ignored: they have |
| // already been registered when the cache entry was |
| // created (and hence the new ones will quickly be |
| // discarded as duplicated). But when doing trait |
| // evaluation this is not the case, and dropping the trait |
| // evaluations can causes ICEs (e.g., #43132). |
| debug!( |
| "opt_normalize_projection_type: \ |
| found normalized ty `{:?}`", |
| ty |
| ); |
| |
| // Once we have inferred everything we need to know, we |
| // can ignore the `obligations` from that point on. |
| if infcx.unresolved_type_vars(&ty.value).is_none() { |
| infcx.inner.borrow_mut().projection_cache().complete_normalized(cache_key, &ty); |
| // No need to extend `obligations`. |
| } else { |
| obligations.extend(ty.obligations); |
| } |
| |
| obligations.push(get_paranoid_cache_value_obligation( |
| infcx, |
| param_env, |
| projection_ty, |
| cause, |
| depth, |
| )); |
| return Ok(Some(ty.value)); |
| } |
| Err(ProjectionCacheEntry::Error) => { |
| debug!( |
| "opt_normalize_projection_type: \ |
| found error" |
| ); |
| let result = normalize_to_error(selcx, param_env, projection_ty, cause, depth); |
| obligations.extend(result.obligations); |
| return Ok(Some(result.value)); |
| } |
| } |
| |
| let obligation = Obligation::with_depth(cause.clone(), depth, param_env, projection_ty); |
| match project_type(selcx, &obligation) { |
| Ok(ProjectedTy::Progress(Progress { |
| ty: projected_ty, |
| obligations: mut projected_obligations, |
| })) => { |
| // if projection succeeded, then what we get out of this |
| // is also non-normalized (consider: it was derived from |
| // an impl, where-clause etc) and hence we must |
| // re-normalize it |
| |
| debug!( |
| "opt_normalize_projection_type: \ |
| projected_ty={:?} \ |
| depth={} \ |
| projected_obligations={:?}", |
| projected_ty, depth, projected_obligations |
| ); |
| |
| let result = if projected_ty.has_projections() { |
| let mut normalizer = AssocTypeNormalizer::new( |
| selcx, |
| param_env, |
| cause, |
| depth + 1, |
| &mut projected_obligations, |
| ); |
| let normalized_ty = normalizer.fold(&projected_ty); |
| |
| debug!( |
| "opt_normalize_projection_type: \ |
| normalized_ty={:?} depth={}", |
| normalized_ty, depth |
| ); |
| |
| Normalized { value: normalized_ty, obligations: projected_obligations } |
| } else { |
| Normalized { value: projected_ty, obligations: projected_obligations } |
| }; |
| |
| let cache_value = prune_cache_value_obligations(infcx, &result); |
| infcx.inner.borrow_mut().projection_cache().insert_ty(cache_key, cache_value); |
| obligations.extend(result.obligations); |
| Ok(Some(result.value)) |
| } |
| Ok(ProjectedTy::NoProgress(projected_ty)) => { |
| debug!( |
| "opt_normalize_projection_type: \ |
| projected_ty={:?} no progress", |
| projected_ty |
| ); |
| let result = Normalized { value: projected_ty, obligations: vec![] }; |
| infcx.inner.borrow_mut().projection_cache().insert_ty(cache_key, result.clone()); |
| // No need to extend `obligations`. |
| Ok(Some(result.value)) |
| } |
| Err(ProjectionTyError::TooManyCandidates) => { |
| debug!( |
| "opt_normalize_projection_type: \ |
| too many candidates" |
| ); |
| infcx.inner.borrow_mut().projection_cache().ambiguous(cache_key); |
| Ok(None) |
| } |
| Err(ProjectionTyError::TraitSelectionError(_)) => { |
| debug!("opt_normalize_projection_type: ERROR"); |
| // if we got an error processing the `T as Trait` part, |
| // just return `ty::err` but add the obligation `T : |
| // Trait`, which when processed will cause the error to be |
| // reported later |
| |
| infcx.inner.borrow_mut().projection_cache().error(cache_key); |
| let result = normalize_to_error(selcx, param_env, projection_ty, cause, depth); |
| obligations.extend(result.obligations); |
| Ok(Some(result.value)) |
| } |
| } |
| } |
| |
| /// If there are unresolved type variables, then we need to include |
| /// any subobligations that bind them, at least until those type |
| /// variables are fully resolved. |
| fn prune_cache_value_obligations<'a, 'tcx>( |
| infcx: &'a InferCtxt<'a, 'tcx>, |
| result: &NormalizedTy<'tcx>, |
| ) -> NormalizedTy<'tcx> { |
| if infcx.unresolved_type_vars(&result.value).is_none() { |
| return NormalizedTy { value: result.value, obligations: vec![] }; |
| } |
| |
| let mut obligations: Vec<_> = result |
| .obligations |
| .iter() |
| .filter(|obligation| { |
| match obligation.predicate.skip_binders() { |
| // We found a `T: Foo<X = U>` predicate, let's check |
| // if `U` references any unresolved type |
| // variables. In principle, we only care if this |
| // projection can help resolve any of the type |
| // variables found in `result.value` -- but we just |
| // check for any type variables here, for fear of |
| // indirect obligations (e.g., we project to `?0`, |
| // but we have `T: Foo<X = ?1>` and `?1: Bar<X = |
| // ?0>`). |
| ty::PredicateAtom::Projection(data) => { |
| infcx.unresolved_type_vars(&ty::Binder::bind(data.ty)).is_some() |
| } |
| |
| // We are only interested in `T: Foo<X = U>` predicates, whre |
| // `U` references one of `unresolved_type_vars`. =) |
| _ => false, |
| } |
| }) |
| .cloned() |
| .collect(); |
| |
| obligations.shrink_to_fit(); |
| |
| NormalizedTy { value: result.value, obligations } |
| } |
| |
| /// Whenever we give back a cache result for a projection like `<T as |
| /// Trait>::Item ==> X`, we *always* include the obligation to prove |
| /// that `T: Trait` (we may also include some other obligations). This |
| /// may or may not be necessary -- in principle, all the obligations |
| /// that must be proven to show that `T: Trait` were also returned |
| /// when the cache was first populated. But there are some vague concerns, |
| /// and so we take the precautionary measure of including `T: Trait` in |
| /// the result: |
| /// |
| /// Concern #1. The current setup is fragile. Perhaps someone could |
| /// have failed to prove the concerns from when the cache was |
| /// populated, but also not have used a snapshot, in which case the |
| /// cache could remain populated even though `T: Trait` has not been |
| /// shown. In this case, the "other code" is at fault -- when you |
| /// project something, you are supposed to either have a snapshot or |
| /// else prove all the resulting obligations -- but it's still easy to |
| /// get wrong. |
| /// |
| /// Concern #2. Even within the snapshot, if those original |
| /// obligations are not yet proven, then we are able to do projections |
| /// that may yet turn out to be wrong. This *may* lead to some sort |
| /// of trouble, though we don't have a concrete example of how that |
| /// can occur yet. But it seems risky at best. |
| fn get_paranoid_cache_value_obligation<'a, 'tcx>( |
| infcx: &'a InferCtxt<'a, 'tcx>, |
| param_env: ty::ParamEnv<'tcx>, |
| projection_ty: ty::ProjectionTy<'tcx>, |
| cause: ObligationCause<'tcx>, |
| depth: usize, |
| ) -> PredicateObligation<'tcx> { |
| let trait_ref = projection_ty.trait_ref(infcx.tcx).to_poly_trait_ref(); |
| Obligation { |
| cause, |
| recursion_depth: depth, |
| param_env, |
| predicate: trait_ref.without_const().to_predicate(infcx.tcx), |
| } |
| } |
| |
| /// If we are projecting `<T as Trait>::Item`, but `T: Trait` does not |
| /// hold. In various error cases, we cannot generate a valid |
| /// normalized projection. Therefore, we create an inference variable |
| /// return an associated obligation that, when fulfilled, will lead to |
| /// an error. |
| /// |
| /// Note that we used to return `Error` here, but that was quite |
| /// dubious -- the premise was that an error would *eventually* be |
| /// reported, when the obligation was processed. But in general once |
| /// you see a `Error` you are supposed to be able to assume that an |
| /// error *has been* reported, so that you can take whatever heuristic |
| /// paths you want to take. To make things worse, it was possible for |
| /// cycles to arise, where you basically had a setup like `<MyType<$0> |
| /// as Trait>::Foo == $0`. Here, normalizing `<MyType<$0> as |
| /// Trait>::Foo> to `[type error]` would lead to an obligation of |
| /// `<MyType<[type error]> as Trait>::Foo`. We are supposed to report |
| /// an error for this obligation, but we legitimately should not, |
| /// because it contains `[type error]`. Yuck! (See issue #29857 for |
| /// one case where this arose.) |
| fn normalize_to_error<'a, 'tcx>( |
| selcx: &mut SelectionContext<'a, 'tcx>, |
| param_env: ty::ParamEnv<'tcx>, |
| projection_ty: ty::ProjectionTy<'tcx>, |
| cause: ObligationCause<'tcx>, |
| depth: usize, |
| ) -> NormalizedTy<'tcx> { |
| let trait_ref = projection_ty.trait_ref(selcx.tcx()).to_poly_trait_ref(); |
| let trait_obligation = Obligation { |
| cause, |
| recursion_depth: depth, |
| param_env, |
| predicate: trait_ref.without_const().to_predicate(selcx.tcx()), |
| }; |
| let tcx = selcx.infcx().tcx; |
| let def_id = projection_ty.item_def_id; |
| let new_value = selcx.infcx().next_ty_var(TypeVariableOrigin { |
| kind: TypeVariableOriginKind::NormalizeProjectionType, |
| span: tcx.def_span(def_id), |
| }); |
| Normalized { value: new_value, obligations: vec![trait_obligation] } |
| } |
| |
| enum ProjectedTy<'tcx> { |
| Progress(Progress<'tcx>), |
| NoProgress(Ty<'tcx>), |
| } |
| |
| struct Progress<'tcx> { |
| ty: Ty<'tcx>, |
| obligations: Vec<PredicateObligation<'tcx>>, |
| } |
| |
| impl<'tcx> Progress<'tcx> { |
| fn error(tcx: TyCtxt<'tcx>) -> Self { |
| Progress { ty: tcx.ty_error(), obligations: vec![] } |
| } |
| |
| fn with_addl_obligations(mut self, mut obligations: Vec<PredicateObligation<'tcx>>) -> Self { |
| debug!( |
| "with_addl_obligations: self.obligations.len={} obligations.len={}", |
| self.obligations.len(), |
| obligations.len() |
| ); |
| |
| debug!( |
| "with_addl_obligations: self.obligations={:?} obligations={:?}", |
| self.obligations, obligations |
| ); |
| |
| self.obligations.append(&mut obligations); |
| self |
| } |
| } |
| |
| /// Computes the result of a projection type (if we can). |
| /// |
| /// IMPORTANT: |
| /// - `obligation` must be fully normalized |
| fn project_type<'cx, 'tcx>( |
| selcx: &mut SelectionContext<'cx, 'tcx>, |
| obligation: &ProjectionTyObligation<'tcx>, |
| ) -> Result<ProjectedTy<'tcx>, ProjectionTyError<'tcx>> { |
| debug!("project(obligation={:?})", obligation); |
| |
| if !selcx.tcx().sess.recursion_limit().value_within_limit(obligation.recursion_depth) { |
| debug!("project: overflow!"); |
| return Err(ProjectionTyError::TraitSelectionError(SelectionError::Overflow)); |
| } |
| |
| let obligation_trait_ref = &obligation.predicate.trait_ref(selcx.tcx()); |
| |
| debug!("project: obligation_trait_ref={:?}", obligation_trait_ref); |
| |
| if obligation_trait_ref.references_error() { |
| return Ok(ProjectedTy::Progress(Progress::error(selcx.tcx()))); |
| } |
| |
| let mut candidates = ProjectionTyCandidateSet::None; |
| |
| // Make sure that the following procedures are kept in order. ParamEnv |
| // needs to be first because it has highest priority, and Select checks |
| // the return value of push_candidate which assumes it's ran at last. |
| assemble_candidates_from_param_env(selcx, obligation, &obligation_trait_ref, &mut candidates); |
| |
| assemble_candidates_from_trait_def(selcx, obligation, &obligation_trait_ref, &mut candidates); |
| |
| assemble_candidates_from_impls(selcx, obligation, &obligation_trait_ref, &mut candidates); |
| |
| match candidates { |
| ProjectionTyCandidateSet::Single(candidate) => Ok(ProjectedTy::Progress( |
| confirm_candidate(selcx, obligation, &obligation_trait_ref, candidate), |
| )), |
| ProjectionTyCandidateSet::None => Ok(ProjectedTy::NoProgress( |
| selcx |
| .tcx() |
| .mk_projection(obligation.predicate.item_def_id, obligation.predicate.substs), |
| )), |
| // Error occurred while trying to processing impls. |
| ProjectionTyCandidateSet::Error(e) => Err(ProjectionTyError::TraitSelectionError(e)), |
| // Inherent ambiguity that prevents us from even enumerating the |
| // candidates. |
| ProjectionTyCandidateSet::Ambiguous => Err(ProjectionTyError::TooManyCandidates), |
| } |
| } |
| |
| /// The first thing we have to do is scan through the parameter |
| /// environment to see whether there are any projection predicates |
| /// there that can answer this question. |
| fn assemble_candidates_from_param_env<'cx, 'tcx>( |
| selcx: &mut SelectionContext<'cx, 'tcx>, |
| obligation: &ProjectionTyObligation<'tcx>, |
| obligation_trait_ref: &ty::TraitRef<'tcx>, |
| candidate_set: &mut ProjectionTyCandidateSet<'tcx>, |
| ) { |
| debug!("assemble_candidates_from_param_env(..)"); |
| assemble_candidates_from_predicates( |
| selcx, |
| obligation, |
| obligation_trait_ref, |
| candidate_set, |
| ProjectionTyCandidate::ParamEnv, |
| obligation.param_env.caller_bounds().iter(), |
| ); |
| } |
| |
| /// In the case of a nested projection like <<A as Foo>::FooT as Bar>::BarT, we may find |
| /// that the definition of `Foo` has some clues: |
| /// |
| /// ``` |
| /// trait Foo { |
| /// type FooT : Bar<BarT=i32> |
| /// } |
| /// ``` |
| /// |
| /// Here, for example, we could conclude that the result is `i32`. |
| fn assemble_candidates_from_trait_def<'cx, 'tcx>( |
| selcx: &mut SelectionContext<'cx, 'tcx>, |
| obligation: &ProjectionTyObligation<'tcx>, |
| obligation_trait_ref: &ty::TraitRef<'tcx>, |
| candidate_set: &mut ProjectionTyCandidateSet<'tcx>, |
| ) { |
| debug!("assemble_candidates_from_trait_def(..)"); |
| |
| let tcx = selcx.tcx(); |
| // Check whether the self-type is itself a projection. |
| // If so, extract what we know from the trait and try to come up with a good answer. |
| let bounds = match *obligation_trait_ref.self_ty().kind() { |
| ty::Projection(ref data) => { |
| tcx.projection_predicates(data.item_def_id).subst(tcx, data.substs) |
| } |
| ty::Opaque(def_id, substs) => tcx.projection_predicates(def_id).subst(tcx, substs), |
| ty::Infer(ty::TyVar(_)) => { |
| // If the self-type is an inference variable, then it MAY wind up |
| // being a projected type, so induce an ambiguity. |
| candidate_set.mark_ambiguous(); |
| return; |
| } |
| _ => return, |
| }; |
| |
| assemble_candidates_from_predicates( |
| selcx, |
| obligation, |
| obligation_trait_ref, |
| candidate_set, |
| ProjectionTyCandidate::TraitDef, |
| bounds.iter(), |
| ) |
| } |
| |
| fn assemble_candidates_from_predicates<'cx, 'tcx>( |
| selcx: &mut SelectionContext<'cx, 'tcx>, |
| obligation: &ProjectionTyObligation<'tcx>, |
| obligation_trait_ref: &ty::TraitRef<'tcx>, |
| candidate_set: &mut ProjectionTyCandidateSet<'tcx>, |
| ctor: fn(ty::PolyProjectionPredicate<'tcx>) -> ProjectionTyCandidate<'tcx>, |
| env_predicates: impl Iterator<Item = ty::Predicate<'tcx>>, |
| ) { |
| debug!("assemble_candidates_from_predicates(obligation={:?})", obligation); |
| let infcx = selcx.infcx(); |
| for predicate in env_predicates { |
| debug!("assemble_candidates_from_predicates: predicate={:?}", predicate); |
| if let ty::PredicateAtom::Projection(data) = predicate.skip_binders() { |
| let data = ty::Binder::bind(data); |
| let same_def_id = data.projection_def_id() == obligation.predicate.item_def_id; |
| |
| let is_match = same_def_id |
| && infcx.probe(|_| { |
| let data_poly_trait_ref = data.to_poly_trait_ref(infcx.tcx); |
| let obligation_poly_trait_ref = obligation_trait_ref.to_poly_trait_ref(); |
| infcx |
| .at(&obligation.cause, obligation.param_env) |
| .sup(obligation_poly_trait_ref, data_poly_trait_ref) |
| .map(|InferOk { obligations: _, value: () }| { |
| // FIXME(#32730) -- do we need to take obligations |
| // into account in any way? At the moment, no. |
| }) |
| .is_ok() |
| }); |
| |
| debug!( |
| "assemble_candidates_from_predicates: candidate={:?} \ |
| is_match={} same_def_id={}", |
| data, is_match, same_def_id |
| ); |
| |
| if is_match { |
| candidate_set.push_candidate(ctor(data)); |
| } |
| } |
| } |
| } |
| |
| fn assemble_candidates_from_impls<'cx, 'tcx>( |
| selcx: &mut SelectionContext<'cx, 'tcx>, |
| obligation: &ProjectionTyObligation<'tcx>, |
| obligation_trait_ref: &ty::TraitRef<'tcx>, |
| candidate_set: &mut ProjectionTyCandidateSet<'tcx>, |
| ) { |
| // If we are resolving `<T as TraitRef<...>>::Item == Type`, |
| // start out by selecting the predicate `T as TraitRef<...>`: |
| let poly_trait_ref = obligation_trait_ref.to_poly_trait_ref(); |
| let trait_obligation = obligation.with(poly_trait_ref.to_poly_trait_predicate()); |
| let _ = selcx.infcx().commit_if_ok(|_| { |
| let impl_source = match selcx.select(&trait_obligation) { |
| Ok(Some(impl_source)) => impl_source, |
| Ok(None) => { |
| candidate_set.mark_ambiguous(); |
| return Err(()); |
| } |
| Err(e) => { |
| debug!("assemble_candidates_from_impls: selection error {:?}", e); |
| candidate_set.mark_error(e); |
| return Err(()); |
| } |
| }; |
| |
| let eligible = match &impl_source { |
| super::ImplSource::Closure(_) |
| | super::ImplSource::Generator(_) |
| | super::ImplSource::FnPointer(_) |
| | super::ImplSource::Object(_) |
| | super::ImplSource::TraitAlias(_) => { |
| debug!("assemble_candidates_from_impls: impl_source={:?}", impl_source); |
| true |
| } |
| super::ImplSource::UserDefined(impl_data) => { |
| // We have to be careful when projecting out of an |
| // impl because of specialization. If we are not in |
| // codegen (i.e., projection mode is not "any"), and the |
| // impl's type is declared as default, then we disable |
| // projection (even if the trait ref is fully |
| // monomorphic). In the case where trait ref is not |
| // fully monomorphic (i.e., includes type parameters), |
| // this is because those type parameters may |
| // ultimately be bound to types from other crates that |
| // may have specialized impls we can't see. In the |
| // case where the trait ref IS fully monomorphic, this |
| // is a policy decision that we made in the RFC in |
| // order to preserve flexibility for the crate that |
| // defined the specializable impl to specialize later |
| // for existing types. |
| // |
| // In either case, we handle this by not adding a |
| // candidate for an impl if it contains a `default` |
| // type. |
| // |
| // NOTE: This should be kept in sync with the similar code in |
| // `rustc_ty::instance::resolve_associated_item()`. |
| let node_item = |
| assoc_ty_def(selcx, impl_data.impl_def_id, obligation.predicate.item_def_id) |
| .map_err(|ErrorReported| ())?; |
| |
| if node_item.is_final() { |
| // Non-specializable items are always projectable. |
| true |
| } else { |
| // Only reveal a specializable default if we're past type-checking |
| // and the obligation is monomorphic, otherwise passes such as |
| // transmute checking and polymorphic MIR optimizations could |
| // get a result which isn't correct for all monomorphizations. |
| if obligation.param_env.reveal() == Reveal::All { |
| // NOTE(eddyb) inference variables can resolve to parameters, so |
| // assume `poly_trait_ref` isn't monomorphic, if it contains any. |
| let poly_trait_ref = |
| selcx.infcx().resolve_vars_if_possible(&poly_trait_ref); |
| !poly_trait_ref.still_further_specializable() |
| } else { |
| debug!( |
| "assemble_candidates_from_impls: not eligible due to default: \ |
| assoc_ty={} predicate={}", |
| selcx.tcx().def_path_str(node_item.item.def_id), |
| obligation.predicate, |
| ); |
| false |
| } |
| } |
| } |
| super::ImplSource::DiscriminantKind(..) => { |
| // While `DiscriminantKind` is automatically implemented for every type, |
| // the concrete discriminant may not be known yet. |
| // |
| // Any type with multiple potential discriminant types is therefore not eligible. |
| let self_ty = selcx.infcx().shallow_resolve(obligation.predicate.self_ty()); |
| |
| match self_ty.kind() { |
| ty::Bool |
| | ty::Char |
| | ty::Int(_) |
| | ty::Uint(_) |
| | ty::Float(_) |
| | ty::Adt(..) |
| | ty::Foreign(_) |
| | ty::Str |
| | ty::Array(..) |
| | ty::Slice(_) |
| | ty::RawPtr(..) |
| | ty::Ref(..) |
| | ty::FnDef(..) |
| | ty::FnPtr(..) |
| | ty::Dynamic(..) |
| | ty::Closure(..) |
| | ty::Generator(..) |
| | ty::GeneratorWitness(..) |
| | ty::Never |
| | ty::Tuple(..) |
| // Integers and floats always have `u8` as their discriminant. |
| | ty::Infer(ty::InferTy::IntVar(_) | ty::InferTy::FloatVar(..)) => true, |
| |
| ty::Projection(..) |
| | ty::Opaque(..) |
| | ty::Param(..) |
| | ty::Bound(..) |
| | ty::Placeholder(..) |
| | ty::Infer(..) |
| | ty::Error(_) => false, |
| } |
| } |
| super::ImplSource::Param(..) => { |
| // This case tell us nothing about the value of an |
| // associated type. Consider: |
| // |
| // ``` |
| // trait SomeTrait { type Foo; } |
| // fn foo<T:SomeTrait>(...) { } |
| // ``` |
| // |
| // If the user writes `<T as SomeTrait>::Foo`, then the `T |
| // : SomeTrait` binding does not help us decide what the |
| // type `Foo` is (at least, not more specifically than |
| // what we already knew). |
| // |
| // But wait, you say! What about an example like this: |
| // |
| // ``` |
| // fn bar<T:SomeTrait<Foo=usize>>(...) { ... } |
| // ``` |
| // |
| // Doesn't the `T : Sometrait<Foo=usize>` predicate help |
| // resolve `T::Foo`? And of course it does, but in fact |
| // that single predicate is desugared into two predicates |
| // in the compiler: a trait predicate (`T : SomeTrait`) and a |
| // projection. And the projection where clause is handled |
| // in `assemble_candidates_from_param_env`. |
| false |
| } |
| super::ImplSource::AutoImpl(..) | super::ImplSource::Builtin(..) => { |
| // These traits have no associated types. |
| selcx.tcx().sess.delay_span_bug( |
| obligation.cause.span, |
| &format!("Cannot project an associated type from `{:?}`", impl_source), |
| ); |
| return Err(()); |
| } |
| }; |
| |
| if eligible { |
| if candidate_set.push_candidate(ProjectionTyCandidate::Select(impl_source)) { |
| Ok(()) |
| } else { |
| Err(()) |
| } |
| } else { |
| Err(()) |
| } |
| }); |
| } |
| |
| fn confirm_candidate<'cx, 'tcx>( |
| selcx: &mut SelectionContext<'cx, 'tcx>, |
| obligation: &ProjectionTyObligation<'tcx>, |
| obligation_trait_ref: &ty::TraitRef<'tcx>, |
| candidate: ProjectionTyCandidate<'tcx>, |
| ) -> Progress<'tcx> { |
| debug!("confirm_candidate(candidate={:?}, obligation={:?})", candidate, obligation); |
| |
| let mut progress = match candidate { |
| ProjectionTyCandidate::ParamEnv(poly_projection) |
| | ProjectionTyCandidate::TraitDef(poly_projection) => { |
| confirm_param_env_candidate(selcx, obligation, poly_projection) |
| } |
| |
| ProjectionTyCandidate::Select(impl_source) => { |
| confirm_select_candidate(selcx, obligation, obligation_trait_ref, impl_source) |
| } |
| }; |
| // When checking for cycle during evaluation, we compare predicates with |
| // "syntactic" equality. Since normalization generally introduces a type |
| // with new region variables, we need to resolve them to existing variables |
| // when possible for this to work. See `auto-trait-projection-recursion.rs` |
| // for a case where this matters. |
| if progress.ty.has_infer_regions() { |
| progress.ty = OpportunisticRegionResolver::new(selcx.infcx()).fold_ty(progress.ty); |
| } |
| progress |
| } |
| |
| fn confirm_select_candidate<'cx, 'tcx>( |
| selcx: &mut SelectionContext<'cx, 'tcx>, |
| obligation: &ProjectionTyObligation<'tcx>, |
| obligation_trait_ref: &ty::TraitRef<'tcx>, |
| impl_source: Selection<'tcx>, |
| ) -> Progress<'tcx> { |
| match impl_source { |
| super::ImplSource::UserDefined(data) => confirm_impl_candidate(selcx, obligation, data), |
| super::ImplSource::Generator(data) => confirm_generator_candidate(selcx, obligation, data), |
| super::ImplSource::Closure(data) => confirm_closure_candidate(selcx, obligation, data), |
| super::ImplSource::FnPointer(data) => confirm_fn_pointer_candidate(selcx, obligation, data), |
| super::ImplSource::DiscriminantKind(data) => { |
| confirm_discriminant_kind_candidate(selcx, obligation, data) |
| } |
| super::ImplSource::Object(_) => { |
| confirm_object_candidate(selcx, obligation, obligation_trait_ref) |
| } |
| super::ImplSource::AutoImpl(..) |
| | super::ImplSource::Param(..) |
| | super::ImplSource::Builtin(..) |
| | super::ImplSource::TraitAlias(..) => |
| // we don't create Select candidates with this kind of resolution |
| { |
| span_bug!( |
| obligation.cause.span, |
| "Cannot project an associated type from `{:?}`", |
| impl_source |
| ) |
| } |
| } |
| } |
| |
| fn confirm_object_candidate<'cx, 'tcx>( |
| selcx: &mut SelectionContext<'cx, 'tcx>, |
| obligation: &ProjectionTyObligation<'tcx>, |
| obligation_trait_ref: &ty::TraitRef<'tcx>, |
| ) -> Progress<'tcx> { |
| let self_ty = obligation_trait_ref.self_ty(); |
| let object_ty = selcx.infcx().shallow_resolve(self_ty); |
| debug!("confirm_object_candidate(object_ty={:?})", object_ty); |
| let data = match object_ty.kind() { |
| ty::Dynamic(data, ..) => data, |
| _ => span_bug!( |
| obligation.cause.span, |
| "confirm_object_candidate called with non-object: {:?}", |
| object_ty |
| ), |
| }; |
| let env_predicates = data |
| .projection_bounds() |
| .map(|p| p.with_self_ty(selcx.tcx(), object_ty).to_predicate(selcx.tcx())); |
| let env_predicate = { |
| let env_predicates = elaborate_predicates(selcx.tcx(), env_predicates); |
| |
| // select only those projections that are actually projecting an |
| // item with the correct name |
| |
| let env_predicates = env_predicates.filter_map(|o| match o.predicate.skip_binders() { |
| ty::PredicateAtom::Projection(data) |
| if data.projection_ty.item_def_id == obligation.predicate.item_def_id => |
| { |
| Some(ty::Binder::bind(data)) |
| } |
| _ => None, |
| }); |
| |
| // select those with a relevant trait-ref |
| let mut env_predicates = env_predicates.filter(|data| { |
| let data_poly_trait_ref = data.to_poly_trait_ref(selcx.tcx()); |
| let obligation_poly_trait_ref = obligation_trait_ref.to_poly_trait_ref(); |
| selcx.infcx().probe(|_| { |
| selcx |
| .infcx() |
| .at(&obligation.cause, obligation.param_env) |
| .sup(obligation_poly_trait_ref, data_poly_trait_ref) |
| .is_ok() |
| }) |
| }); |
| |
| // select the first matching one; there really ought to be one or |
| // else the object type is not WF, since an object type should |
| // include all of its projections explicitly |
| match env_predicates.next() { |
| Some(env_predicate) => env_predicate, |
| None => { |
| debug!( |
| "confirm_object_candidate: no env-predicate \ |
| found in object type `{:?}`; ill-formed", |
| object_ty |
| ); |
| return Progress::error(selcx.tcx()); |
| } |
| } |
| }; |
| |
| confirm_param_env_candidate(selcx, obligation, env_predicate) |
| } |
| |
| fn confirm_generator_candidate<'cx, 'tcx>( |
| selcx: &mut SelectionContext<'cx, 'tcx>, |
| obligation: &ProjectionTyObligation<'tcx>, |
| impl_source: ImplSourceGeneratorData<'tcx, PredicateObligation<'tcx>>, |
| ) -> Progress<'tcx> { |
| let gen_sig = impl_source.substs.as_generator().poly_sig(); |
| let Normalized { value: gen_sig, obligations } = normalize_with_depth( |
| selcx, |
| obligation.param_env, |
| obligation.cause.clone(), |
| obligation.recursion_depth + 1, |
| &gen_sig, |
| ); |
| |
| debug!( |
| "confirm_generator_candidate: obligation={:?},gen_sig={:?},obligations={:?}", |
| obligation, gen_sig, obligations |
| ); |
| |
| let tcx = selcx.tcx(); |
| |
| let gen_def_id = tcx.require_lang_item(LangItem::Generator, None); |
| |
| let predicate = super::util::generator_trait_ref_and_outputs( |
| tcx, |
| gen_def_id, |
| obligation.predicate.self_ty(), |
| gen_sig, |
| ) |
| .map_bound(|(trait_ref, yield_ty, return_ty)| { |
| let name = tcx.associated_item(obligation.predicate.item_def_id).ident.name; |
| let ty = if name == sym::Return { |
| return_ty |
| } else if name == sym::Yield { |
| yield_ty |
| } else { |
| bug!() |
| }; |
| |
| ty::ProjectionPredicate { |
| projection_ty: ty::ProjectionTy { |
| substs: trait_ref.substs, |
| item_def_id: obligation.predicate.item_def_id, |
| }, |
| ty, |
| } |
| }); |
| |
| confirm_param_env_candidate(selcx, obligation, predicate) |
| .with_addl_obligations(impl_source.nested) |
| .with_addl_obligations(obligations) |
| } |
| |
| fn confirm_discriminant_kind_candidate<'cx, 'tcx>( |
| selcx: &mut SelectionContext<'cx, 'tcx>, |
| obligation: &ProjectionTyObligation<'tcx>, |
| _: ImplSourceDiscriminantKindData, |
| ) -> Progress<'tcx> { |
| let tcx = selcx.tcx(); |
| |
| let self_ty = selcx.infcx().shallow_resolve(obligation.predicate.self_ty()); |
| let substs = tcx.mk_substs([self_ty.into()].iter()); |
| |
| let discriminant_def_id = tcx.require_lang_item(LangItem::Discriminant, None); |
| |
| let predicate = ty::ProjectionPredicate { |
| projection_ty: ty::ProjectionTy { substs, item_def_id: discriminant_def_id }, |
| ty: self_ty.discriminant_ty(tcx), |
| }; |
| |
| confirm_param_env_candidate(selcx, obligation, ty::Binder::bind(predicate)) |
| } |
| |
| fn confirm_fn_pointer_candidate<'cx, 'tcx>( |
| selcx: &mut SelectionContext<'cx, 'tcx>, |
| obligation: &ProjectionTyObligation<'tcx>, |
| fn_pointer_impl_source: ImplSourceFnPointerData<'tcx, PredicateObligation<'tcx>>, |
| ) -> Progress<'tcx> { |
| let fn_type = selcx.infcx().shallow_resolve(fn_pointer_impl_source.fn_ty); |
| let sig = fn_type.fn_sig(selcx.tcx()); |
| let Normalized { value: sig, obligations } = normalize_with_depth( |
| selcx, |
| obligation.param_env, |
| obligation.cause.clone(), |
| obligation.recursion_depth + 1, |
| &sig, |
| ); |
| |
| confirm_callable_candidate(selcx, obligation, sig, util::TupleArgumentsFlag::Yes) |
| .with_addl_obligations(fn_pointer_impl_source.nested) |
| .with_addl_obligations(obligations) |
| } |
| |
| fn confirm_closure_candidate<'cx, 'tcx>( |
| selcx: &mut SelectionContext<'cx, 'tcx>, |
| obligation: &ProjectionTyObligation<'tcx>, |
| impl_source: ImplSourceClosureData<'tcx, PredicateObligation<'tcx>>, |
| ) -> Progress<'tcx> { |
| let closure_sig = impl_source.substs.as_closure().sig(); |
| let Normalized { value: closure_sig, obligations } = normalize_with_depth( |
| selcx, |
| obligation.param_env, |
| obligation.cause.clone(), |
| obligation.recursion_depth + 1, |
| &closure_sig, |
| ); |
| |
| debug!( |
| "confirm_closure_candidate: obligation={:?},closure_sig={:?},obligations={:?}", |
| obligation, closure_sig, obligations |
| ); |
| |
| confirm_callable_candidate(selcx, obligation, closure_sig, util::TupleArgumentsFlag::No) |
| .with_addl_obligations(impl_source.nested) |
| .with_addl_obligations(obligations) |
| } |
| |
| fn confirm_callable_candidate<'cx, 'tcx>( |
| selcx: &mut SelectionContext<'cx, 'tcx>, |
| obligation: &ProjectionTyObligation<'tcx>, |
| fn_sig: ty::PolyFnSig<'tcx>, |
| flag: util::TupleArgumentsFlag, |
| ) -> Progress<'tcx> { |
| let tcx = selcx.tcx(); |
| |
| debug!("confirm_callable_candidate({:?},{:?})", obligation, fn_sig); |
| |
| let fn_once_def_id = tcx.require_lang_item(LangItem::FnOnce, None); |
| let fn_once_output_def_id = tcx.require_lang_item(LangItem::FnOnceOutput, None); |
| |
| let predicate = super::util::closure_trait_ref_and_return_type( |
| tcx, |
| fn_once_def_id, |
| obligation.predicate.self_ty(), |
| fn_sig, |
| flag, |
| ) |
| .map_bound(|(trait_ref, ret_type)| ty::ProjectionPredicate { |
| projection_ty: ty::ProjectionTy { |
| substs: trait_ref.substs, |
| item_def_id: fn_once_output_def_id, |
| }, |
| ty: ret_type, |
| }); |
| |
| confirm_param_env_candidate(selcx, obligation, predicate) |
| } |
| |
| fn confirm_param_env_candidate<'cx, 'tcx>( |
| selcx: &mut SelectionContext<'cx, 'tcx>, |
| obligation: &ProjectionTyObligation<'tcx>, |
| poly_cache_entry: ty::PolyProjectionPredicate<'tcx>, |
| ) -> Progress<'tcx> { |
| let infcx = selcx.infcx(); |
| let cause = &obligation.cause; |
| let param_env = obligation.param_env; |
| |
| let (cache_entry, _) = infcx.replace_bound_vars_with_fresh_vars( |
| cause.span, |
| LateBoundRegionConversionTime::HigherRankedType, |
| &poly_cache_entry, |
| ); |
| |
| let cache_trait_ref = cache_entry.projection_ty.trait_ref(infcx.tcx); |
| let obligation_trait_ref = obligation.predicate.trait_ref(infcx.tcx); |
| match infcx.at(cause, param_env).eq(cache_trait_ref, obligation_trait_ref) { |
| Ok(InferOk { value: _, obligations }) => Progress { ty: cache_entry.ty, obligations }, |
| Err(e) => { |
| let msg = format!( |
| "Failed to unify obligation `{:?}` with poly_projection `{:?}`: {:?}", |
| obligation, poly_cache_entry, e, |
| ); |
| debug!("confirm_param_env_candidate: {}", msg); |
| let err = infcx.tcx.ty_error_with_message(obligation.cause.span, &msg); |
| Progress { ty: err, obligations: vec![] } |
| } |
| } |
| } |
| |
| fn confirm_impl_candidate<'cx, 'tcx>( |
| selcx: &mut SelectionContext<'cx, 'tcx>, |
| obligation: &ProjectionTyObligation<'tcx>, |
| impl_impl_source: ImplSourceUserDefinedData<'tcx, PredicateObligation<'tcx>>, |
| ) -> Progress<'tcx> { |
| let tcx = selcx.tcx(); |
| |
| let ImplSourceUserDefinedData { impl_def_id, substs, nested } = impl_impl_source; |
| let assoc_item_id = obligation.predicate.item_def_id; |
| let trait_def_id = tcx.trait_id_of_impl(impl_def_id).unwrap(); |
| |
| let param_env = obligation.param_env; |
| let assoc_ty = match assoc_ty_def(selcx, impl_def_id, assoc_item_id) { |
| Ok(assoc_ty) => assoc_ty, |
| Err(ErrorReported) => return Progress { ty: tcx.ty_error(), obligations: nested }, |
| }; |
| |
| if !assoc_ty.item.defaultness.has_value() { |
| // This means that the impl is missing a definition for the |
| // associated type. This error will be reported by the type |
| // checker method `check_impl_items_against_trait`, so here we |
| // just return Error. |
| debug!( |
| "confirm_impl_candidate: no associated type {:?} for {:?}", |
| assoc_ty.item.ident, obligation.predicate |
| ); |
| return Progress { ty: tcx.ty_error(), obligations: nested }; |
| } |
| // If we're trying to normalize `<Vec<u32> as X>::A<S>` using |
| //`impl<T> X for Vec<T> { type A<Y> = Box<Y>; }`, then: |
| // |
| // * `obligation.predicate.substs` is `[Vec<u32>, S]` |
| // * `substs` is `[u32]` |
| // * `substs` ends up as `[u32, S]` |
| let substs = obligation.predicate.substs.rebase_onto(tcx, trait_def_id, substs); |
| let substs = |
| translate_substs(selcx.infcx(), param_env, impl_def_id, substs, assoc_ty.defining_node); |
| let ty = tcx.type_of(assoc_ty.item.def_id); |
| if substs.len() != tcx.generics_of(assoc_ty.item.def_id).count() { |
| let err = tcx.ty_error_with_message( |
| DUMMY_SP, |
| "impl item and trait item have different parameter counts", |
| ); |
| Progress { ty: err, obligations: nested } |
| } else { |
| Progress { ty: ty.subst(tcx, substs), obligations: nested } |
| } |
| } |
| |
| /// Locate the definition of an associated type in the specialization hierarchy, |
| /// starting from the given impl. |
| /// |
| /// Based on the "projection mode", this lookup may in fact only examine the |
| /// topmost impl. See the comments for `Reveal` for more details. |
| fn assoc_ty_def( |
| selcx: &SelectionContext<'_, '_>, |
| impl_def_id: DefId, |
| assoc_ty_def_id: DefId, |
| ) -> Result<specialization_graph::LeafDef, ErrorReported> { |
| let tcx = selcx.tcx(); |
| let assoc_ty_name = tcx.associated_item(assoc_ty_def_id).ident; |
| let trait_def_id = tcx.impl_trait_ref(impl_def_id).unwrap().def_id; |
| let trait_def = tcx.trait_def(trait_def_id); |
| |
| // This function may be called while we are still building the |
| // specialization graph that is queried below (via TraitDef::ancestors()), |
| // so, in order to avoid unnecessary infinite recursion, we manually look |
| // for the associated item at the given impl. |
| // If there is no such item in that impl, this function will fail with a |
| // cycle error if the specialization graph is currently being built. |
| let impl_node = specialization_graph::Node::Impl(impl_def_id); |
| for item in impl_node.items(tcx) { |
| if matches!(item.kind, ty::AssocKind::Type) |
| && tcx.hygienic_eq(item.ident, assoc_ty_name, trait_def_id) |
| { |
| return Ok(specialization_graph::LeafDef { |
| item: *item, |
| defining_node: impl_node, |
| finalizing_node: if item.defaultness.is_default() { None } else { Some(impl_node) }, |
| }); |
| } |
| } |
| |
| let ancestors = trait_def.ancestors(tcx, impl_def_id)?; |
| if let Some(assoc_item) = ancestors.leaf_def(tcx, assoc_ty_name, ty::AssocKind::Type) { |
| Ok(assoc_item) |
| } else { |
| // This is saying that neither the trait nor |
| // the impl contain a definition for this |
| // associated type. Normally this situation |
| // could only arise through a compiler bug -- |
| // if the user wrote a bad item name, it |
| // should have failed in astconv. |
| bug!("No associated type `{}` for {}", assoc_ty_name, tcx.def_path_str(impl_def_id)) |
| } |
| } |
| |
| crate trait ProjectionCacheKeyExt<'tcx>: Sized { |
| fn from_poly_projection_predicate( |
| selcx: &mut SelectionContext<'cx, 'tcx>, |
| predicate: ty::PolyProjectionPredicate<'tcx>, |
| ) -> Option<Self>; |
| } |
| |
| impl<'tcx> ProjectionCacheKeyExt<'tcx> for ProjectionCacheKey<'tcx> { |
| fn from_poly_projection_predicate( |
| selcx: &mut SelectionContext<'cx, 'tcx>, |
| predicate: ty::PolyProjectionPredicate<'tcx>, |
| ) -> Option<Self> { |
| let infcx = selcx.infcx(); |
| // We don't do cross-snapshot caching of obligations with escaping regions, |
| // so there's no cache key to use |
| predicate.no_bound_vars().map(|predicate| { |
| ProjectionCacheKey::new( |
| // We don't attempt to match up with a specific type-variable state |
| // from a specific call to `opt_normalize_projection_type` - if |
| // there's no precise match, the original cache entry is "stranded" |
| // anyway. |
| infcx.resolve_vars_if_possible(&predicate.projection_ty), |
| ) |
| }) |
| } |
| } |