# Canonicalization Canonicalization is the process of *isolating* a value from its context and is necessary for global caching of goals which include inference variables. The idea is that given the goals `u32: Trait` and `u32: Trait`, where `?x` and `?y` are two different currently unconstrained inference variables, we should get the same result for both goals. We can therefore prove *the canonical query* `exists u32: Trait` once and reuse the result. Let's first go over the way canonical queries work and then dive into the specifics of how canonicalization works. ## A walkthrough of canonical queries To make this a bit easier, let's use the trait goal `u32: Trait` as an example with the assumption that the only relevant impl is `impl Trait> for u32`. ### Canonicalizing the input We start by *canonicalizing* the goal, replacing inference variables with existential and placeholders with universal bound variables. This would result in the *canonical goal* `exists u32: Trait`. We remember the original values of all bound variables in the original context. Here this would map `T` back to `?x`. These original values are used later on when dealing with the query response. We now call the canonical query with the canonical goal. ### Instantiating the canonical goal inside of the query To actually try to prove the canonical goal we start by instantiating the bound variables with inference variables and placeholders again. This happens inside of the query in a completely separate `InferCtxt`. Inside of the query we now have a goal `u32: Trait`. We also remember which value we've used to instantiate the bound variables in the canonical goal, which maps `T` to `?0`. We now compute the goal `u32: Trait` and figure out that this holds, but we've constrained `?0` to `Vec`. We finally convert this result to something useful to the caller. ### Canonicalizing the query response We have to return to the caller both whether the goal holds, and the inference constraints from inside of the query. To return the inference results to the caller we canonicalize the mapping from bound variables to the instantiated values in the query. This means that the query response is `Certainty::Yes` and a mapping from `T` to `exists Vec`. ### Instantiating the query response The caller now has to apply the constraints returned by the query. For this they first instantiate the bound variables of the canonical response with inference variables and placeholders again, so the mapping in the response is now from `T` to `Vec`. It now equates the original value of `T` (`?x`) with the value for `T` in the response (`Vec`), which correctly constrains `?x` to `Vec`. ## `ExternalConstraints` Computing a trait goal may not only constrain inference variables, it can also add region obligations, e.g. given a goal `(): AOutlivesB<'a, 'b>` we would like to return the fact that `'a: 'b` has to hold. This is done by not only returning the mapping from bound variables to the instantiated values from the query but also extracting additional `ExternalConstraints` from the `InferCtxt` context while building the response. ## How exactly does canonicalization work TODO: link to code once the PR lands and elaborate - types and consts: infer to existentially bound var, placeholder to universally bound var, considering universes - generic parameters in the input get treated as placeholders in the root universe - all regions in the input get all mapped to existentially bound vars and we "uniquify" them. `&'a (): Trait<'a>` gets canonicalized to `exists<'0, '1> &'0 (): Trait<'1>`. We do not care about their universes and simply put all regions into the highest universe of the input. - once we collected all canonical vars we compress their universes, see comment in `finalize`. - in the output everything in a universe of the caller gets put into the root universe and only gets its correct universe when we unify the var values with the orig values of the caller - we do not uniquify regions in the response and don't canonicalize `'static`