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bounds.rs
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// Copyright 2012-2014 The Rust Project Developers. See the COPYRIGHT
// file at the top-level directory of this distribution and at
// http://rust-lang.org/COPYRIGHT.
//
// Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0 <LICENSE-APACHE or
// http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0> or the MIT license
// <LICENSE-MIT or http://opensource.org/licenses/MIT>, at your
// option. This file may not be copied, modified, or distributed
// except according to those terms.
use infer::InferCtxt;
use syntax::ast;
use syntax::codemap::Span;
use traits::FulfillmentContext;
use ty::{self, Ty, TypeFoldable};
use ty::outlives::Component;
use ty::wf;
/// Outlives bounds are relationships between generic parameters,
/// whether they both be regions (`'a: 'b`) or whether types are
/// involved (`T: 'a`). These relationships can be extracted from the
/// full set of predicates we understand or also from types (in which
/// case they are called implied bounds). They are fed to the
/// `OutlivesEnv` which in turn is supplied to the region checker and
/// other parts of the inference system.
#[derive(Debug)]
pub enum OutlivesBound<'tcx> {
RegionSubRegion(ty::Region<'tcx>, ty::Region<'tcx>),
RegionSubParam(ty::Region<'tcx>, ty::ParamTy),
RegionSubProjection(ty::Region<'tcx>, ty::ProjectionTy<'tcx>),
}
impl<'cx, 'gcx, 'tcx> InferCtxt<'cx, 'gcx, 'tcx> {
/// Implied bounds are region relationships that we deduce
/// automatically. The idea is that (e.g.) a caller must check that a
/// function's argument types are well-formed immediately before
/// calling that fn, and hence the *callee* can assume that its
/// argument types are well-formed. This may imply certain relationships
/// between generic parameters. For example:
///
/// fn foo<'a,T>(x: &'a T)
///
/// can only be called with a `'a` and `T` such that `&'a T` is WF.
/// For `&'a T` to be WF, `T: 'a` must hold. So we can assume `T: 'a`.
///
/// # Parameters
///
/// - `param_env`, the where-clauses in scope
/// - `body_id`, the body-id to use when normalizing assoc types.
/// Note that this may cause outlives obligations to be injected
/// into the inference context with this body-id.
/// - `ty`, the type that we are supposed to assume is WF.
/// - `span`, a span to use when normalizing, hopefully not important,
/// might be useful if a `bug!` occurs.
pub fn implied_outlives_bounds(
&self,
param_env: ty::ParamEnv<'tcx>,
body_id: ast::NodeId,
ty: Ty<'tcx>,
span: Span,
) -> Vec<OutlivesBound<'tcx>> {
let tcx = self.tcx;
// Sometimes when we ask what it takes for T: WF, we get back that
// U: WF is required; in that case, we push U onto this stack and
// process it next. Currently (at least) these resulting
// predicates are always guaranteed to be a subset of the original
// type, so we need not fear non-termination.
let mut wf_types = vec![ty];
let mut implied_bounds = vec![];
let mut fulfill_cx = FulfillmentContext::new();
while let Some(ty) = wf_types.pop() {
// Compute the obligations for `ty` to be well-formed. If `ty` is
// an unresolved inference variable, just substituted an empty set
// -- because the return type here is going to be things we *add*
// to the environment, it's always ok for this set to be smaller
// than the ultimate set. (Note: normally there won't be
// unresolved inference variables here anyway, but there might be
// during typeck under some circumstances.)
let obligations = wf::obligations(self, param_env, body_id, ty, span).unwrap_or(vec![]);
// NB: All of these predicates *ought* to be easily proven
// true. In fact, their correctness is (mostly) implied by
// other parts of the program. However, in #42552, we had
// an annoying scenario where:
//
// - Some `T::Foo` gets normalized, resulting in a
// variable `_1` and a `T: Trait<Foo=_1>` constraint
// (not sure why it couldn't immediately get
// solved). This result of `_1` got cached.
// - These obligations were dropped on the floor here,
// rather than being registered.
// - Then later we would get a request to normalize
// `T::Foo` which would result in `_1` being used from
// the cache, but hence without the `T: Trait<Foo=_1>`
// constraint. As a result, `_1` never gets resolved,
// and we get an ICE (in dropck).
//
// Therefore, we register any predicates involving
// inference variables. We restrict ourselves to those
// involving inference variables both for efficiency and
// to avoids duplicate errors that otherwise show up.
fulfill_cx.register_predicate_obligations(
self,
obligations
.iter()
.filter(|o| o.predicate.has_infer_types())
.cloned(),
);
// From the full set of obligations, just filter down to the
// region relationships.
implied_bounds.extend(obligations.into_iter().flat_map(|obligation| {
assert!(!obligation.has_escaping_regions());
match obligation.predicate {
ty::Predicate::Trait(..) |
ty::Predicate::Subtype(..) |
ty::Predicate::Projection(..) |
ty::Predicate::ClosureKind(..) |
ty::Predicate::ObjectSafe(..) |
ty::Predicate::ConstEvaluatable(..) => vec![],
ty::Predicate::WellFormed(subty) => {
wf_types.push(subty);
vec![]
}
ty::Predicate::RegionOutlives(ref data) => match data.no_late_bound_regions() {
None => vec![],
Some(ty::OutlivesPredicate(r_a, r_b)) => {
vec![OutlivesBound::RegionSubRegion(r_b, r_a)]
}
},
ty::Predicate::TypeOutlives(ref data) => match data.no_late_bound_regions() {
None => vec![],
Some(ty::OutlivesPredicate(ty_a, r_b)) => {
let ty_a = self.resolve_type_vars_if_possible(&ty_a);
let components = tcx.outlives_components(ty_a);
Self::implied_bounds_from_components(r_b, components)
}
},
}
}));
}
// Ensure that those obligations that we had to solve
// get solved *here*.
match fulfill_cx.select_all_or_error(self) {
Ok(()) => (),
Err(errors) => self.report_fulfillment_errors(&errors, None, false),
}
implied_bounds
}
/// When we have an implied bound that `T: 'a`, we can further break
/// this down to determine what relationships would have to hold for
/// `T: 'a` to hold. We get to assume that the caller has validated
/// those relationships.
fn implied_bounds_from_components(
sub_region: ty::Region<'tcx>,
sup_components: Vec<Component<'tcx>>,
) -> Vec<OutlivesBound<'tcx>> {
sup_components
.into_iter()
.flat_map(|component| {
match component {
Component::Region(r) =>
vec![OutlivesBound::RegionSubRegion(sub_region, r)],
Component::Param(p) =>
vec![OutlivesBound::RegionSubParam(sub_region, p)],
Component::Projection(p) =>
vec![OutlivesBound::RegionSubProjection(sub_region, p)],
Component::EscapingProjection(_) =>
// If the projection has escaping regions, don't
// try to infer any implied bounds even for its
// free components. This is conservative, because
// the caller will still have to prove that those
// free components outlive `sub_region`. But the
// idea is that the WAY that the caller proves
// that may change in the future and we want to
// give ourselves room to get smarter here.
vec![],
Component::UnresolvedInferenceVariable(..) =>
vec![],
}
})
.collect()
}
}
pub fn explicit_outlives_bounds<'tcx>(
param_env: ty::ParamEnv<'tcx>,
) -> impl Iterator<Item = OutlivesBound<'tcx>> + 'tcx {
debug!("explicit_outlives_bounds()");
param_env
.caller_bounds
.into_iter()
.filter_map(move |predicate| match predicate {
ty::Predicate::Projection(..) |
ty::Predicate::Trait(..) |
ty::Predicate::Subtype(..) |
ty::Predicate::WellFormed(..) |
ty::Predicate::ObjectSafe(..) |
ty::Predicate::ClosureKind(..) |
ty::Predicate::TypeOutlives(..) |
ty::Predicate::ConstEvaluatable(..) => None,
ty::Predicate::RegionOutlives(ref data) => data.no_late_bound_regions().map(
|ty::OutlivesPredicate(r_a, r_b)| OutlivesBound::RegionSubRegion(r_b, r_a),
),
})
}