use rustc_hir::lang_items::LangItem; use rustc_middle::ty::query::Providers; use rustc_middle::ty::{self, Ty, TyCtxt}; use rustc_infer::infer::TyCtxtInferExt; use rustc_trait_selection::traits::{ObligationCause, ObligationCtxt}; /// This method returns true if and only if `adt_ty` itself has been marked as /// eligible for structural-match: namely, if it implements both /// `StructuralPartialEq` and `StructuralEq` (which are respectively injected by /// `#[derive(PartialEq)]` and `#[derive(Eq)]`). /// /// Note that this does *not* recursively check if the substructure of `adt_ty` /// implements the traits. fn has_structural_eq_impls<'tcx>(tcx: TyCtxt<'tcx>, adt_ty: Ty<'tcx>) -> bool { let ref infcx = tcx.infer_ctxt().build(); let cause = ObligationCause::dummy(); let ocx = ObligationCtxt::new(infcx); // require `#[derive(PartialEq)]` let structural_peq_def_id = infcx.tcx.require_lang_item(LangItem::StructuralPeq, Some(cause.span)); ocx.register_bound(cause.clone(), ty::ParamEnv::empty(), adt_ty, structural_peq_def_id); // for now, require `#[derive(Eq)]`. (Doing so is a hack to work around // the type `for<'a> fn(&'a ())` failing to implement `Eq` itself.) let structural_teq_def_id = infcx.tcx.require_lang_item(LangItem::StructuralTeq, Some(cause.span)); ocx.register_bound(cause, ty::ParamEnv::empty(), adt_ty, structural_teq_def_id); // We deliberately skip *reporting* fulfillment errors (via // `report_fulfillment_errors`), for two reasons: // // 1. The error messages would mention `std::marker::StructuralPartialEq` // (a trait which is solely meant as an implementation detail // for now), and // // 2. We are sometimes doing future-incompatibility lints for // now, so we do not want unconditional errors here. ocx.select_all_or_error().is_empty() } pub fn provide(providers: &mut Providers) { providers.has_structural_eq_impls = has_structural_eq_impls; }