//! Code that handles "type-outlives" constraints like `T: 'a`. This //! is based on the `push_outlives_components` function defined in rustc_infer, //! but it adds a bit of heuristics on top, in particular to deal with //! associated types and projections. //! //! When we process a given `T: 'a` obligation, we may produce two //! kinds of constraints for the region inferencer: //! //! - Relationships between inference variables and other regions. //! For example, if we have `&'?0 u32: 'a`, then we would produce //! a constraint that `'a <= '?0`. //! - "Verifys" that must be checked after inferencing is done. //! For example, if we know that, for some type parameter `T`, //! `T: 'a + 'b`, and we have a requirement that `T: '?1`, //! then we add a "verify" that checks that `'?1 <= 'a || '?1 <= 'b`. //! - Note the difference with the previous case: here, the region //! variable must be less than something else, so this doesn't //! affect how inference works (it finds the smallest region that //! will do); it's just a post-condition that we have to check. //! //! **The key point is that once this function is done, we have //! reduced all of our "type-region outlives" obligations into relationships //! between individual regions.** //! //! One key input to this function is the set of "region-bound pairs". //! These are basically the relationships between type parameters and //! regions that are in scope at the point where the outlives //! obligation was incurred. **When type-checking a function, //! particularly in the face of closures, this is not known until //! regionck runs!** This is because some of those bounds come //! from things we have yet to infer. //! //! Consider: //! //! ``` //! fn bar(a: T, b: impl for<'a> Fn(&'a T)) {} //! fn foo(x: T) { //! bar(x, |y| { /* ... */}) //! // ^ closure arg //! } //! ``` //! //! Here, the type of `y` may involve inference variables and the //! like, and it may also contain implied bounds that are needed to //! type-check the closure body (e.g., here it informs us that `T` //! outlives the late-bound region `'a`). //! //! Note that by delaying the gathering of implied bounds until all //! inference information is known, we may find relationships between //! bound regions and other regions in the environment. For example, //! when we first check a closure like the one expected as argument //! to `foo`: //! //! ``` //! fn foo FnMut(&'a U)>(_f: F) {} //! ``` //! //! the type of the closure's first argument would be `&'a ?U`. We //! might later infer `?U` to something like `&'b u32`, which would //! imply that `'b: 'a`. use crate::infer::outlives::components::{push_outlives_components, Component}; use crate::infer::outlives::env::RegionBoundPairs; use crate::infer::outlives::verify::VerifyBoundCx; use crate::infer::{ self, GenericKind, InferCtxt, RegionObligation, SubregionOrigin, UndoLog, VerifyBound, }; use crate::traits::{ObligationCause, ObligationCauseCode}; use rustc_data_structures::undo_log::UndoLogs; use rustc_middle::mir::ConstraintCategory; use rustc_middle::ty::subst::GenericArgKind; use rustc_middle::ty::{self, Region, SubstsRef, Ty, TyCtxt, TypeVisitable}; use smallvec::smallvec; impl<'tcx> InferCtxt<'tcx> { /// Registers that the given region obligation must be resolved /// from within the scope of `body_id`. These regions are enqueued /// and later processed by regionck, when full type information is /// available (see `region_obligations` field for more /// information). #[instrument(level = "debug", skip(self))] pub fn register_region_obligation(&self, obligation: RegionObligation<'tcx>) { let mut inner = self.inner.borrow_mut(); inner.undo_log.push(UndoLog::PushRegionObligation); inner.region_obligations.push(obligation); } pub fn register_region_obligation_with_cause( &self, sup_type: Ty<'tcx>, sub_region: Region<'tcx>, cause: &ObligationCause<'tcx>, ) { debug!(?sup_type, ?sub_region, ?cause); let origin = SubregionOrigin::from_obligation_cause(cause, || { infer::RelateParamBound( cause.span, sup_type, match cause.code().peel_derives() { ObligationCauseCode::BindingObligation(_, span) | ObligationCauseCode::ExprBindingObligation(_, span, ..) => Some(*span), _ => None, }, ) }); self.register_region_obligation(RegionObligation { sup_type, sub_region, origin }); } /// Trait queries just want to pass back type obligations "as is" pub fn take_registered_region_obligations(&self) -> Vec> { std::mem::take(&mut self.inner.borrow_mut().region_obligations) } /// NOTE: Prefer using `TypeErrCtxt::check_region_obligations_and_report_errors` /// instead of calling this directly. /// /// Process the region obligations that must be proven (during /// `regionck`) for the given `body_id`, given information about /// the region bounds in scope and so forth. This function must be /// invoked for all relevant body-ids before region inference is /// done (or else an assert will fire). /// /// See the `region_obligations` field of `InferCtxt` for some /// comments about how this function fits into the overall expected /// flow of the inferencer. The key point is that it is /// invoked after all type-inference variables have been bound -- /// towards the end of regionck. This also ensures that the /// region-bound-pairs are available (see comments above regarding /// closures). /// /// # Parameters /// /// - `region_bound_pairs_map`: the set of region bounds implied by /// the parameters and where-clauses. In particular, each pair /// `('a, K)` in this list tells us that the bounds in scope /// indicate that `K: 'a`, where `K` is either a generic /// parameter like `T` or a projection like `T::Item`. /// - `param_env` is the parameter environment for the enclosing function. /// - `body_id` is the body-id whose region obligations are being /// processed. #[instrument(level = "debug", skip(self, region_bound_pairs))] pub fn process_registered_region_obligations( &self, region_bound_pairs: &RegionBoundPairs<'tcx>, param_env: ty::ParamEnv<'tcx>, ) { assert!( !self.in_snapshot.get(), "cannot process registered region obligations in a snapshot" ); let my_region_obligations = self.take_registered_region_obligations(); for RegionObligation { sup_type, sub_region, origin } in my_region_obligations { debug!( "process_registered_region_obligations: sup_type={:?} sub_region={:?} origin={:?}", sup_type, sub_region, origin ); let sup_type = self.resolve_vars_if_possible(sup_type); let outlives = &mut TypeOutlives::new(self, self.tcx, ®ion_bound_pairs, None, param_env); let category = origin.to_constraint_category(); outlives.type_must_outlive(origin, sup_type, sub_region, category); } } } /// The `TypeOutlives` struct has the job of "lowering" a `T: 'a` /// obligation into a series of `'a: 'b` constraints and "verify"s, as /// described on the module comment. The final constraints are emitted /// via a "delegate" of type `D` -- this is usually the `infcx`, which /// accrues them into the `region_obligations` code, but for NLL we /// use something else. pub struct TypeOutlives<'cx, 'tcx, D> where D: TypeOutlivesDelegate<'tcx>, { // See the comments on `process_registered_region_obligations` for the meaning // of these fields. delegate: D, tcx: TyCtxt<'tcx>, verify_bound: VerifyBoundCx<'cx, 'tcx>, } pub trait TypeOutlivesDelegate<'tcx> { fn push_sub_region_constraint( &mut self, origin: SubregionOrigin<'tcx>, a: ty::Region<'tcx>, b: ty::Region<'tcx>, constraint_category: ConstraintCategory<'tcx>, ); fn push_verify( &mut self, origin: SubregionOrigin<'tcx>, kind: GenericKind<'tcx>, a: ty::Region<'tcx>, bound: VerifyBound<'tcx>, ); } impl<'cx, 'tcx, D> TypeOutlives<'cx, 'tcx, D> where D: TypeOutlivesDelegate<'tcx>, { pub fn new( delegate: D, tcx: TyCtxt<'tcx>, region_bound_pairs: &'cx RegionBoundPairs<'tcx>, implicit_region_bound: Option>, param_env: ty::ParamEnv<'tcx>, ) -> Self { Self { delegate, tcx, verify_bound: VerifyBoundCx::new( tcx, region_bound_pairs, implicit_region_bound, param_env, ), } } /// Adds constraints to inference such that `T: 'a` holds (or /// reports an error if it cannot). /// /// # Parameters /// /// - `origin`, the reason we need this constraint /// - `ty`, the type `T` /// - `region`, the region `'a` #[instrument(level = "debug", skip(self))] pub fn type_must_outlive( &mut self, origin: infer::SubregionOrigin<'tcx>, ty: Ty<'tcx>, region: ty::Region<'tcx>, category: ConstraintCategory<'tcx>, ) { assert!(!ty.has_escaping_bound_vars()); let mut components = smallvec![]; push_outlives_components(self.tcx, ty, &mut components); self.components_must_outlive(origin, &components, region, category); } fn components_must_outlive( &mut self, origin: infer::SubregionOrigin<'tcx>, components: &[Component<'tcx>], region: ty::Region<'tcx>, category: ConstraintCategory<'tcx>, ) { for component in components.iter() { let origin = origin.clone(); match component { Component::Region(region1) => { self.delegate.push_sub_region_constraint(origin, region, *region1, category); } Component::Param(param_ty) => { self.param_ty_must_outlive(origin, region, *param_ty); } Component::Alias(alias_ty) => self.alias_ty_must_outlive(origin, region, *alias_ty), Component::EscapingAlias(subcomponents) => { self.components_must_outlive(origin, &subcomponents, region, category); } Component::UnresolvedInferenceVariable(v) => { // ignore this, we presume it will yield an error // later, since if a type variable is not resolved by // this point it never will be self.tcx.sess.delay_span_bug( origin.span(), &format!("unresolved inference variable in outlives: {:?}", v), ); } } } } #[instrument(level = "debug", skip(self))] fn param_ty_must_outlive( &mut self, origin: infer::SubregionOrigin<'tcx>, region: ty::Region<'tcx>, param_ty: ty::ParamTy, ) { let verify_bound = self.verify_bound.param_bound(param_ty); self.delegate.push_verify(origin, GenericKind::Param(param_ty), region, verify_bound); } #[instrument(level = "debug", skip(self))] fn alias_ty_must_outlive( &mut self, origin: infer::SubregionOrigin<'tcx>, region: ty::Region<'tcx>, alias_ty: ty::AliasTy<'tcx>, ) { // An optimization for a common case with opaque types. if alias_ty.substs.is_empty() { return; } // This case is thorny for inference. The fundamental problem is // that there are many cases where we have choice, and inference // doesn't like choice (the current region inference in // particular). :) First off, we have to choose between using the // OutlivesProjectionEnv, OutlivesProjectionTraitDef, and // OutlivesProjectionComponent rules, any one of which is // sufficient. If there are no inference variables involved, it's // not hard to pick the right rule, but if there are, we're in a // bit of a catch 22: if we picked which rule we were going to // use, we could add constraints to the region inference graph // that make it apply, but if we don't add those constraints, the // rule might not apply (but another rule might). For now, we err // on the side of adding too few edges into the graph. // Compute the bounds we can derive from the trait definition. // These are guaranteed to apply, no matter the inference // results. let trait_bounds: Vec<_> = self.verify_bound.declared_bounds_from_definition(alias_ty).collect(); debug!(?trait_bounds); // Compute the bounds we can derive from the environment. This // is an "approximate" match -- in some cases, these bounds // may not apply. let mut approx_env_bounds = self.verify_bound.approx_declared_bounds_from_env(alias_ty); debug!(?approx_env_bounds); // Remove outlives bounds that we get from the environment but // which are also deducible from the trait. This arises (cc // #55756) in cases where you have e.g., `>::Item: // 'a` in the environment but `trait Foo<'b> { type Item: 'b // }` in the trait definition. approx_env_bounds.retain(|bound_outlives| { // OK to skip binder because we only manipulate and compare against other // values from the same binder. e.g. if we have (e.g.) `for<'a> >::Item: 'a` // in `bound`, the `'a` will be a `^1` (bound, debruijn index == innermost) region. // If the declaration is `trait Trait<'b> { type Item: 'b; }`, then `projection_declared_bounds_from_trait` // will be invoked with `['b => ^1]` and so we will get `^1` returned. let bound = bound_outlives.skip_binder(); let ty::Alias(_, alias_ty) = bound.0.kind() else { bug!("expected AliasTy") }; self.verify_bound.declared_bounds_from_definition(*alias_ty).all(|r| r != bound.1) }); // If declared bounds list is empty, the only applicable rule is // OutlivesProjectionComponent. If there are inference variables, // then, we can break down the outlives into more primitive // components without adding unnecessary edges. // // If there are *no* inference variables, however, we COULD do // this, but we choose not to, because the error messages are less // good. For example, a requirement like `T::Item: 'r` would be // translated to a requirement that `T: 'r`; when this is reported // to the user, it will thus say "T: 'r must hold so that T::Item: // 'r holds". But that makes it sound like the only way to fix // the problem is to add `T: 'r`, which isn't true. So, if there are no // inference variables, we use a verify constraint instead of adding // edges, which winds up enforcing the same condition. if approx_env_bounds.is_empty() && trait_bounds.is_empty() && (alias_ty.needs_infer() || alias_ty.kind(self.tcx) == ty::Opaque) { debug!("no declared bounds"); self.substs_must_outlive(alias_ty.substs, origin, region); return; } // If we found a unique bound `'b` from the trait, and we // found nothing else from the environment, then the best // action is to require that `'b: 'r`, so do that. // // This is best no matter what rule we use: // // - OutlivesProjectionEnv: these would translate to the requirement that `'b:'r` // - OutlivesProjectionTraitDef: these would translate to the requirement that `'b:'r` // - OutlivesProjectionComponent: this would require `'b:'r` // in addition to other conditions if !trait_bounds.is_empty() && trait_bounds[1..] .iter() .map(|r| Some(*r)) .chain( // NB: The environment may contain `for<'a> T: 'a` style bounds. // In that case, we don't know if they are equal to the trait bound // or not (since we don't *know* whether the environment bound even applies), // so just map to `None` here if there are bound vars, ensuring that // the call to `all` will fail below. approx_env_bounds.iter().map(|b| b.map_bound(|b| b.1).no_bound_vars()), ) .all(|b| b == Some(trait_bounds[0])) { let unique_bound = trait_bounds[0]; debug!(?unique_bound); debug!("unique declared bound appears in trait ref"); let category = origin.to_constraint_category(); self.delegate.push_sub_region_constraint(origin, region, unique_bound, category); return; } // Fallback to verifying after the fact that there exists a // declared bound, or that all the components appearing in the // projection outlive; in some cases, this may add insufficient // edges into the inference graph, leading to inference failures // even though a satisfactory solution exists. let verify_bound = self.verify_bound.alias_bound(alias_ty, &mut Default::default()); debug!("alias_must_outlive: pushing {:?}", verify_bound); self.delegate.push_verify(origin, GenericKind::Alias(alias_ty), region, verify_bound); } fn substs_must_outlive( &mut self, substs: SubstsRef<'tcx>, origin: infer::SubregionOrigin<'tcx>, region: ty::Region<'tcx>, ) { let constraint = origin.to_constraint_category(); for k in substs { match k.unpack() { GenericArgKind::Lifetime(lt) => { self.delegate.push_sub_region_constraint( origin.clone(), region, lt, constraint, ); } GenericArgKind::Type(ty) => { self.type_must_outlive(origin.clone(), ty, region, constraint); } GenericArgKind::Const(_) => { // Const parameters don't impose constraints. } } } } } impl<'cx, 'tcx> TypeOutlivesDelegate<'tcx> for &'cx InferCtxt<'tcx> { fn push_sub_region_constraint( &mut self, origin: SubregionOrigin<'tcx>, a: ty::Region<'tcx>, b: ty::Region<'tcx>, _constraint_category: ConstraintCategory<'tcx>, ) { self.sub_regions(origin, a, b) } fn push_verify( &mut self, origin: SubregionOrigin<'tcx>, kind: GenericKind<'tcx>, a: ty::Region<'tcx>, bound: VerifyBound<'tcx>, ) { self.verify_generic_bound(origin, kind, a, bound) } }