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use array_windows instead of windows in the compiler #76825

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merged 2 commits into from
Sep 20, 2020

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@lcnr lcnr commented Sep 17, 2020

I do think these changes are beautiful, but do have to admit that using type inference for the window length
can easily be confusing. This seems like a general issue with const generics, where inferring constants adds an additional
complexity which users have to learn and keep in mind.

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r? @varkor

(rust_highfive has picked a reviewer for you, use r? to override)

@rust-highfive rust-highfive added the S-waiting-on-review Status: Awaiting review from the assignee but also interested parties. label Sep 17, 2020
@lcnr lcnr force-pushed the array-windows-apply branch from 5318248 to 2793672 Compare September 17, 2020 07:58
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leonardo-m commented Sep 17, 2020

can easily be confusing.

If you think the code is confusing then you can add the chunk width with
array_chunks::<2>.

@varkor varkor added the F-const_generics `#![feature(const_generics)]` label Sep 17, 2020
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varkor commented Sep 17, 2020

These are such nice improvements!

@bors r+ rollup

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bors commented Sep 17, 2020

📌 Commit f193593 has been approved by varkor

@bors bors added S-waiting-on-bors Status: Waiting on bors to run and complete tests. Bors will change the label on completion. and removed S-waiting-on-review Status: Awaiting review from the assignee but also interested parties. labels Sep 17, 2020
RalfJung added a commit to RalfJung/rust that referenced this pull request Sep 19, 2020
use `array_windows` instead of `windows` in the compiler

I do think these changes are beautiful, but do have to admit that using type inference for the window length
can easily be confusing. This seems like a general issue with const generics, where inferring constants adds an additional
complexity which users have to learn and keep in mind.
Dylan-DPC-zz pushed a commit to Dylan-DPC-zz/rust that referenced this pull request Sep 19, 2020
use `array_windows` instead of `windows` in the compiler

I do think these changes are beautiful, but do have to admit that using type inference for the window length
can easily be confusing. This seems like a general issue with const generics, where inferring constants adds an additional
complexity which users have to learn and keep in mind.
Dylan-DPC-zz pushed a commit to Dylan-DPC-zz/rust that referenced this pull request Sep 19, 2020
use `array_windows` instead of `windows` in the compiler

I do think these changes are beautiful, but do have to admit that using type inference for the window length
can easily be confusing. This seems like a general issue with const generics, where inferring constants adds an additional
complexity which users have to learn and keep in mind.
Dylan-DPC-zz pushed a commit to Dylan-DPC-zz/rust that referenced this pull request Sep 19, 2020
use `array_windows` instead of `windows` in the compiler

I do think these changes are beautiful, but do have to admit that using type inference for the window length
can easily be confusing. This seems like a general issue with const generics, where inferring constants adds an additional
complexity which users have to learn and keep in mind.
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bors commented Sep 20, 2020

☔ The latest upstream changes (presumably #72632) made this pull request unmergeable. Please resolve the merge conflicts.

Note that reviewers usually do not review pull requests until merge conflicts are resolved! Once you resolve the conflicts, you should change the labels applied by bors to indicate that your PR is ready for review. Post this as a comment to change the labels:

@rustbot modify labels: +S-waiting-on-review -S-waiting-on-author

@bors bors added S-waiting-on-author Status: This is awaiting some action (such as code changes or more information) from the author. and removed S-waiting-on-bors Status: Waiting on bors to run and complete tests. Bors will change the label on completion. labels Sep 20, 2020
@lcnr lcnr force-pushed the array-windows-apply branch from f193593 to bfb221b Compare September 20, 2020 06:19
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lcnr commented Sep 20, 2020

feature gate collision

@bors r=varkor

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bors commented Sep 20, 2020

📌 Commit bfb221b has been approved by varkor

@bors bors added S-waiting-on-bors Status: Waiting on bors to run and complete tests. Bors will change the label on completion. and removed S-waiting-on-author Status: This is awaiting some action (such as code changes or more information) from the author. labels Sep 20, 2020
RalfJung added a commit to RalfJung/rust that referenced this pull request Sep 20, 2020
use `array_windows` instead of `windows` in the compiler

I do think these changes are beautiful, but do have to admit that using type inference for the window length
can easily be confusing. This seems like a general issue with const generics, where inferring constants adds an additional
complexity which users have to learn and keep in mind.
bors added a commit to rust-lang-ci/rust that referenced this pull request Sep 20, 2020
Rollup of 15 pull requests

Successful merges:

 - rust-lang#76722 (Test and fix Send and Sync traits of BTreeMap artefacts)
 - rust-lang#76766 (Extract some intrinsics out of rustc_codegen_llvm)
 - rust-lang#76800 (Don't generate bootstrap usage unless it's needed)
 - rust-lang#76809 (simplfy condition in ItemLowerer::with_trait_impl_ref())
 - rust-lang#76815 (Fix wording in mir doc)
 - rust-lang#76818 (Don't compile regex at every function call.)
 - rust-lang#76821 (Remove redundant nightly features)
 - rust-lang#76823 (black_box: silence unused_mut warning when building with cfg(miri))
 - rust-lang#76825 (use `array_windows` instead of `windows` in the compiler)
 - rust-lang#76827 (fix array_windows docs)
 - rust-lang#76828 (use strip_prefix over starts_with and manual slicing based on pattern length (clippy::manual_strip))
 - rust-lang#76840 (Move to intra doc links in core/src/future)
 - rust-lang#76845 (Use intra docs links in core::{ascii, option, str, pattern, hash::map})
 - rust-lang#76853 (Use intra-doc links in library/core/src/task/wake.rs)
 - rust-lang#76871 (support panic=abort in Miri)

Failed merges:

r? `@ghost`
@bors bors merged commit 50d56bc into rust-lang:master Sep 20, 2020
@rustbot rustbot added this to the 1.48.0 milestone Sep 20, 2020
@lcnr lcnr deleted the array-windows-apply branch September 20, 2020 14:36
bors added a commit to rust-lang-ci/rust that referenced this pull request Dec 27, 2020
…ination, r=varkor

stabilize `#![feature(min_const_generics)]` in 1.51

*A new Kind*
*A Sort long Prophesized*
*Once Fragile, now Eternal*

blocked on rust-lang#79073.

# Stabilization report

This is the stabilization report for `#![feature(min_const_generics)]` (tracking issue rust-lang#74878), a subset of `#![feature(const_generics)]` (tracking issue rust-lang#44580), based on rust-lang/rfcs#2000.

The [version target](https://forge.rust-lang.org/#current-release-versions) is ~~1.50 (2020-12-31 => beta, 2021-02-11 => stable)~~ 1.51 (2021-02-111 => beta, 2021-03-25 => stable).

This report is a collaborative effort of `@varkor,` `@shepmaster` and `@lcnr.`

## Summary

It is currently possible to parameterize functions, type aliases, types, traits and implementations by types and lifetimes.
With `#![feature(min_const_generics)]`, it becomes possible, in addition, to parameterize these by constants.

This is done using the syntax `const IDENT: Type` in the parameter listing. Unlike full const generics, `min_const_generics` is limited to parameterization by integers, and constants of type `char` or `bool`.

We already use `#![feature(min_const_generics)]` on stable to implement many common traits for arrays. See [the documentation](https://doc.rust-lang.org/nightly/std/primitive.array.html) for specific examples.

Generic const arguments, for now, are not permitted to involve computations depending on generic parameters. This means that const parameters may only be instantiated using either:

1. const expressions that do not depend on any generic parameters, e.g. `{ foo() + 1 }`, where `foo` is a `const fn`
1. standalone const parameters, e.g. `{N}`

### Example

```rust
#![feature(min_const_generics)]

trait Foo<const N: usize> {
    fn method<const M: usize>(&mut self, arr: [[u8; M]; N]);
}

struct Bar<T, const N: usize> {
    inner: [T; N],
}

impl<const N: usize> Foo<N> for Bar<u8, N> {
    fn method<const M: usize>(&mut self, arr: [[u8; M]; N]) {
        for (elem, s) in self.inner.iter_mut().zip(arr.iter()) {
            for &x in s {
                *elem &= x;
            }
        }
    }
}

fn function<const N: u16>() -> u16 {
    // Const parameters can be used freely inside of functions.
    (N + 1) / 2 * N
}

fn main() {
    let mut bar = Bar { inner: [0xff; 3] };
    // This infers the value of `M` from the type of the function argument.
    bar.method([[0b11_00, 0b01_00], [0b00_11, 0b00_01], [0b11_00, 0b00_11]]);
    assert_eq!(bar.inner, [0b01_00, 0b00_01, 0b00_00]);

    // You can also explicitly specify the value of `N`.
    assert_eq!(function::<17>(), 153);
}
```

## Motivation

Rust has the built-in array type, which is parametric over a constant. Without const generics, this type can be quite cumbersome to use as it is not possible to generically implement a trait for arrays of different lengths. For example, this meant that, for a long time, the standard library only contained trait implementations for arrays up to a length of 32. This restriction has since been lifted through the use of const generics.

Const parameters allow users to naturally specify variants of a generic type which are more naturally parameterized by values, rather than by types. For example, using const generics, many of the uses of the crate [typenum](https://crates.io/crates/typenum) may now be replaced with const parameters, improving compilation time as well as code readability and diagnostics.

The subset described by `min_const_generics` is self-contained, but extensive enough to help with the most frequent issues: implementing traits for arrays and using arbitrarily-sized arrays inside of other types. Furthermore, it extends naturally to full `const_generics` once the remaining design and implementation questions have been resolved.

## In-depth feature description

### Declaring const parameters

*Const parameters* are allowed in all places where types and lifetimes are supported. They use the syntax `const IDENT: Type`. Currently, const parameters must be declared after lifetime and type parameters. Their scope is equal to the scope of other generic parameters. They live in the value namespace.

`Type` must be one of `u8`, `u16`, `u32`, `u64`, `u128`, `usize`, `i8`, `i16`, `i32`, `i64`, `i128`, `isize`, `char` and `bool`. This restriction is implemented in two places:

1. during name resolution, where we forbid generic parameters
1. during well-formedness checking, where we only allow the types listed above

The updated syntax of parameter listings is:

```
GenericParams:
    (OuterAttr* LifetimeParam),* (OuterAttr* TypeParam),* (OuterAttr* ConstParam),*

OuterAttr: '#[' ... ']'
LifetimeParam: ...
TypeParam: ...
ConstParam: 'const' IDENT ':' Type
```

Unlike type and lifetime parameters, const parameters of types can be used without being mentioned inside of a parameterized type because const parameters do not have issues concerning variance. This means that the following types are allowed:

```rust
struct Foo<const N: usize>;
enum Bar<const M: usize> { A, B }
```

### Const arguments

Const parameters are instantiated using *const arguments*. Any concrete const expression or const parameter as a standalone argument can be used. When applying an expression as const parameter, most expressions must be contained within a block, with two exceptions:

1. literals and single-segment path expressions
1. array lengths

This syntactic restriction is necessary to avoid ambiguity, or requiring infinite lookahead when parsing an expression as a generic argument.

In the cases where a generic argument could be resolved as either a type or const argument, we always interpret it as a type. This causes the following test to fail:

```rust
type N = u32;
struct Foo<const N: usize>;
fn foo<const N: usize>() -> Foo<N> { todo!() } // ERR
```

To circumvent this, the user may wrap the const parameter with braces, at which point it is unambiguously accepted.

```rust
type N = u32;
struct Foo<const N: usize>;
fn bar<const N: usize>() -> Foo<{ N }> { todo!() } // ok
```

Operations depending on generic parameters are **not** allowed, which is enforced during well-formedness checking. Allowing generic unevaluated constants would require a way to check if they would always evaluate successfully to prevent errors that are not caught at declaration time. This ability forms part of `#![feature(const_evaluatable_checked)]`, which is not yet being stabilised.

Since we are not yet stabilizing `#![feature(lazy_normalization_consts)]`, we must not supply the parent generics to anonymous constants except for repeat expressions. Doing so can cause cycle errors for arrays used in `where`-bounds. Not supplying the parent generics can however lead to ICEs occurring before well-formedness checking when trying to use a generic parameter. See rust-lang#56445 for details.

Since we expect cases like this to occur more frequently once `min_const_generics` is stabilized, we have chosen to forbid generic parameters in anonymous constants during name resolution. While this changes the ICE in the situation above to an ordinary error, this is theoretically a breaking change, as early-bound lifetimes were previously permitted in repeat expressions but now are disallowed, causing the following snippet to break:

```rust
fn late_bound<'a>() {
    let _ = [0; {
        let _: &'a (); // ICE ==> ERR
        3
    }];
}

fn early_bound<'a>() where &'a (): Sized {
    let _ = [0; {
        let _: &'a (); // ok ==> ERR
        3
    }];
}
```

### Using const parameters

Const parameters can be used almost everywhere ordinary constants are allowed, except that they may not be used in the construction of consts, statics, functions, or types inside a function body and are subject to the generic argument restrictions mentioned above.

Expressions containing const parameters are eligible for promotion:

```rust
fn test<const N: usize>() -> &'static usize {
    &(3 + N)
}
```

### Symbol mangling

See the [Rust symbol name mangling RFC](https://rust-lang.github.io/rfcs/2603-rust-symbol-name-mangling-v0.html) for an overview. Generic const parameters take the form `K[type][value]` when the value is known, or `Kp` where the value is not known, where:
- `[type]` is any integral type, `bool`, or `char`.
- `[value]` is the unsigned hex value for integers, preceded by `n` when negative; is `0` or `1` for `bool`; is the hex value for `char`.

### Exhaustiveness checking

We do not check the exhaustiveness of impls, meaning that the following example does **not** compile:

```rust
struct Foo<const B: bool>;
trait Bar {}
impl Bar for Foo<true> {}
impl Bar for Foo<false> {}

fn needs_bar(_: impl Bar) {}
fn generic<const B: bool>() {
    let v = Foo::<B>;
    needs_bar(v);
}
```

### Type inference

The value of const parameters can be inferred during typeck. One interesting case is the length of generic arrays, which can also be inferred from patterns (implemented in rust-lang#70562). Practical usage of this can be seen in rust-lang#76825.

### Equality of constants

`#![feature(min_const_generics)]` only permits generic parameters to be used as standalone generic arguments. We compare two parameters to be equal if they are literally the same generic parameter.

### Associated constants

Associated constants can use const parameters without restriction, see rust-lang#79135 (comment) for more details.

## Future work

As this is a limited subset of rust-lang/rfcs#2000, there are quite a few extensions we will be looking into next.

### Lazy normalization of constants

Stabilizing `#![feature(lazy_normalization_consts)]` (tracking issue rust-lang#72219) will remove some special cases that are currently necessary for `min_const_generics`, and unblocks operations on const parameters.

### Relaxing ordering requirements between const and type parameters

We currently restrict the order of generic parameters so that types must come before consts. We could relax this, as is currently done with `const_generics`. Without this it is not possible to use both type defaults and const parameters at the same time.

Unrestricting the order will require us to improve some diagnostics that expect there to be a strict order between type and const parameters.

### Allowing more parameter types

We would like to support const parameters of more types, especially`&str` and user-defined types. Both are blocked on [valtrees]. There are also open questions regarding the design of `structural_match` concerning the latter. Supporting generic const parameter types such as `struct Foo<T, const N: T>` will be a lot harder and is unlikely to be implemented in the near future.

### Default values of const parameters

We do not yet support default values for const parameters. There is work in progress to enable this on nightly (see rust-lang#75384).

### Generic const operations

With `#![feature(min_const_generics)]`, only concrete const expressions and parameters as standalone arguments are allowed in types and repeat expressions. However, supporting generic const operations, such as `N + 1` or `std::mem::size_of::<T>()` is highly desirable. This feature is in early development under `#![feature(const_evaluatable_checked)]`.

## Implementation history

Many people have contributed to the design and implementation of const generics over the last three years. See rust-lang#44580 (comment) for a summary. Once again thank you to everybody who helped out here!

[valtrees]: rust-lang#72396

---

r? `@varkor`
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