| //@ build-pass |
| |
| // Check that a reservation impl does not force other impls to follow |
| // a lattice discipline. |
| |
| // Why did we ever want to do this? |
| // |
| // We want to eventually add an `impl<T> From<!> for T` impl. That impl conflicts |
| // with existing impls - at least the `impl<T> From<T> for T` impl. There are |
| // 2 ways we thought of for dealing with that conflict: |
| // |
| // 1. Using specialization and doing some handling for the |
| // overlap. The current thought is to require ["intersection |
| // impls"][ii], specialization", which means providing an |
| // (higher-priority) impl for the intersection of every 2 conflicting |
| // impls that determines what happens in the intersection case. That's |
| // the first thing we thought about - see e.g. |
| // https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/57012#issuecomment-452150775 |
| // |
| // 2. The other way is to notice that `impl From<!> for T` is basically a |
| // marker trait since its only method is uninhabited, and allow for "marker |
| // trait overlap", where the conflict "doesn't matter" because it can't |
| // actually cause any ambiguity. |
| // |
| // Now it turned out lattice specialization doesn't work it, because an |
| // `impl<T> From<T> for Smaht<T>` would require an `impl From<!> for Smaht<!>`, |
| // breaking backwards-compatibility in a fairly painful way. So if we want to |
| // go with a known approach, we should go with a "marker trait overlap"-style |
| // approach. |
| // |
| // [ii]: https://smallcultfollowing.com/babysteps/blog/2016/09/24/intersection-impls/ |
| |
| |
| // check that reservation impls can't be used as normal impls in positive reasoning. |
| |
| //@ revisions: old next |
| //@[next] compile-flags: -Znext-solver |
| |
| #![feature(rustc_attrs, never_type)] |
| |
| trait MyTrait {} |
| |
| impl MyTrait for ! {} |
| |
| trait MyFrom<T> { |
| fn my_from(x: T) -> Self; |
| } |
| |
| // Given the "normal" impls for From |
| #[rustc_reservation_impl="this impl is reserved"] |
| impl<T> MyFrom<!> for T { |
| fn my_from(x: !) -> Self { match x {} } |
| } |
| |
| impl<T> MyFrom<T> for T { |
| fn my_from(x: T) -> Self { x } |
| } |
| |
| // ... we *do* want to allow this common pattern, of `From<!> for MySmaht<T>` |
| struct MySmaht<T>(T); |
| impl<T> MyFrom<T> for MySmaht<T> { |
| fn my_from(x: T) -> Self { MySmaht(x) } |
| } |
| |
| fn main() {} |