1 // Copyright 2014 The Rust Project Developers. See the COPYRIGHT
2 // file at the top-level directory of this distribution and at
3 // http://rust-lang.org/COPYRIGHT.
5 // Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0 <LICENSE-APACHE or
6 // http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0> or the MIT license
7 // <LICENSE-MIT or http://opensource.org/licenses/MIT>, at your
8 // option. This file may not be copied, modified, or distributed
9 // except according to those terms.
14 macro_rules! try_opt {
23 #[derive(Clone, Debug, PartialEq, Eq, PartialOrd, Ord, Hash, RustcEncodable, RustcDecodable)]
24 pub enum DepNode<D: Clone + Debug> {
25 // The `D` type is "how definitions are identified".
26 // During compilation, it is always `DefId`, but when serializing
27 // it is mapped to `DefPath`.
29 // Represents the `Krate` as a whole (the `hir::Krate` value) (as
30 // distinct from the krate module). This is basically a hash of
31 // the entire krate, so if you read from `Krate` (e.g., by calling
32 // `tcx.hir.krate()`), we will have to assume that any change
33 // means that you need to be recompiled. This is because the
34 // `Krate` value gives you access to all other items. To avoid
35 // this fate, do not call `tcx.hir.krate()`; instead, prefer
36 // wrappers like `tcx.visit_all_items_in_krate()`. If there is no
37 // suitable wrapper, you can use `tcx.dep_graph.ignore()` to gain
38 // access to the krate, but you must remember to add suitable
39 // edges yourself for the individual items that you read.
42 // Represents the HIR node with the given node-id
45 // Represents the body of a function or method. The def-id is that of the
49 // Represents the metadata for a given HIR node, typically found
50 // in an extern crate.
53 // Represents some artifact that we save to disk. Note that these
54 // do not have a def-id as part of their identifier.
55 WorkProduct(Arc<WorkProductId>),
57 // Represents different phases in the compiler.
73 CoherenceCheckTrait(D),
74 CoherenceCheckImpl(D),
75 CoherenceOverlapCheck(D),
76 CoherenceOverlapCheckSpecial(D),
77 CoherenceOverlapInherentCheck(D),
78 CoherenceOrphanCheck(D),
88 // Represents the MIR for a fn; also used as the task node for
89 // things read/modify that MIR.
106 // Nodes representing bits of computed IR in the tcx. Each shared
107 // table in the tcx (or elsewhere) maps to one of these
108 // nodes. Often we map multiple tables to the same node if there
109 // is no point in distinguishing them (e.g., both the type and
110 // predicates for an item wind up in `ItemSignature`).
113 TypeParamPredicates((D, D)),
116 AssociatedItemDefIds(D),
121 MonomorphicConstEval(D),
123 // The set of impls for a given trait. Ultimately, it would be
124 // nice to get more fine-grained here (e.g., to include a
125 // simplified type), but we can't do that until we restructure the
126 // HIR to distinguish the *header* of an impl from its body. This
127 // is because changes to the header may change the self-type of
128 // the impl and hence would require us to be more conservative
129 // than changes in the impl body.
132 // Nodes representing caches. To properly handle a true cache, we
133 // don't use a DepTrackingMap, but rather we push a task node.
134 // Otherwise the write into the map would be incorrectly
135 // attributed to the first task that happened to fill the cache,
136 // which would yield an overly conservative dep-graph.
140 // Trait selection cache is a little funny. Given a trait
141 // reference like `Foo: SomeTrait<Bar>`, there could be
142 // arbitrarily many def-ids to map on in there (e.g., `Foo`,
143 // `SomeTrait`, `Bar`). We could have a vector of them, but it
144 // requires heap-allocation, and trait sel in general can be a
145 // surprisingly hot path. So instead we pick two def-ids: the
146 // trait def-id, and the first def-id in the input types. If there
147 // is no def-id in the input types, then we use the trait def-id
148 // again. So for example:
150 // - `i32: Clone` -> `TraitSelect { trait_def_id: Clone, self_def_id: Clone }`
151 // - `u32: Clone` -> `TraitSelect { trait_def_id: Clone, self_def_id: Clone }`
152 // - `Clone: Clone` -> `TraitSelect { trait_def_id: Clone, self_def_id: Clone }`
153 // - `Vec<i32>: Clone` -> `TraitSelect { trait_def_id: Clone, self_def_id: Vec }`
154 // - `String: Clone` -> `TraitSelect { trait_def_id: Clone, self_def_id: String }`
155 // - `Foo: Trait<Bar>` -> `TraitSelect { trait_def_id: Trait, self_def_id: Foo }`
156 // - `Foo: Trait<i32>` -> `TraitSelect { trait_def_id: Trait, self_def_id: Foo }`
157 // - `(Foo, Bar): Trait` -> `TraitSelect { trait_def_id: Trait, self_def_id: Foo }`
158 // - `i32: Trait<Foo>` -> `TraitSelect { trait_def_id: Trait, self_def_id: Foo }`
160 // You can see that we map many trait refs to the same
161 // trait-select node. This is not a problem, it just means
162 // imprecision in our dep-graph tracking. The important thing is
163 // that for any given trait-ref, we always map to the **same**
164 // trait-select node.
165 TraitSelect { trait_def_id: D, input_def_id: D },
167 // For proj. cache, we just keep a list of all def-ids, since it is
169 ProjectionCache { def_ids: Vec<D> },
172 impl<D: Clone + Debug> DepNode<D> {
174 pub fn from_label_string(label: &str, data: D) -> Result<DepNode<D>, ()> {
176 ($($name:ident,)*) => {
178 $(stringify!($name) => Ok(DepNode::$name(data)),)*
184 if label == "Krate" {
186 return Ok(DepNode::Krate);
198 AssociatedItemDefIds,
207 pub fn map_def<E, OP>(&self, mut op: OP) -> Option<DepNode<E>>
208 where OP: FnMut(&D) -> Option<E>, E: Clone + Debug
210 use self::DepNode::*;
213 Krate => Some(Krate),
214 BorrowCheckKrate => Some(BorrowCheckKrate),
215 MirKrate => Some(MirKrate),
216 TypeckBodiesKrate => Some(TypeckBodiesKrate),
217 CollectLanguageItems => Some(CollectLanguageItems),
218 CheckStaticRecursion => Some(CheckStaticRecursion),
219 ResolveLifetimes => Some(ResolveLifetimes),
220 RegionResolveCrate => Some(RegionResolveCrate),
221 CheckLoops => Some(CheckLoops),
222 PluginRegistrar => Some(PluginRegistrar),
223 StabilityIndex => Some(StabilityIndex),
224 Coherence => Some(Coherence),
225 EffectCheck => Some(EffectCheck),
226 Liveness => Some(Liveness),
227 Resolve => Some(Resolve),
228 EntryPoint => Some(EntryPoint),
229 CheckEntryFn => Some(CheckEntryFn),
230 Variance => Some(Variance),
231 UnusedTraitCheck => Some(UnusedTraitCheck),
232 Privacy => Some(Privacy),
233 Reachability => Some(Reachability),
234 DeadCheck => Some(DeadCheck),
235 LateLintCheck => Some(LateLintCheck),
236 TransCrate => Some(TransCrate),
237 TransWriteMetadata => Some(TransWriteMetadata),
238 LinkBinary => Some(LinkBinary),
240 // work product names do not need to be mapped, because
241 // they are always absolute.
242 WorkProduct(ref id) => Some(WorkProduct(id.clone())),
244 Hir(ref d) => op(d).map(Hir),
245 HirBody(ref d) => op(d).map(HirBody),
246 MetaData(ref d) => op(d).map(MetaData),
247 CollectItem(ref d) => op(d).map(CollectItem),
248 CollectItemSig(ref d) => op(d).map(CollectItemSig),
249 CoherenceCheckTrait(ref d) => op(d).map(CoherenceCheckTrait),
250 CoherenceCheckImpl(ref d) => op(d).map(CoherenceCheckImpl),
251 CoherenceOverlapCheck(ref d) => op(d).map(CoherenceOverlapCheck),
252 CoherenceOverlapCheckSpecial(ref d) => op(d).map(CoherenceOverlapCheckSpecial),
253 CoherenceOverlapInherentCheck(ref d) => op(d).map(CoherenceOverlapInherentCheck),
254 CoherenceOrphanCheck(ref d) => op(d).map(CoherenceOrphanCheck),
255 WfCheck(ref d) => op(d).map(WfCheck),
256 TypeckItemType(ref d) => op(d).map(TypeckItemType),
257 CheckConst(ref d) => op(d).map(CheckConst),
258 IntrinsicCheck(ref d) => op(d).map(IntrinsicCheck),
259 MatchCheck(ref d) => op(d).map(MatchCheck),
260 Mir(ref d) => op(d).map(Mir),
261 BorrowCheck(ref d) => op(d).map(BorrowCheck),
262 RvalueCheck(ref d) => op(d).map(RvalueCheck),
263 StabilityCheck(ref d) => op(d).map(StabilityCheck),
264 TransCrateItem(ref d) => op(d).map(TransCrateItem),
265 TransInlinedItem(ref d) => op(d).map(TransInlinedItem),
266 AssociatedItems(ref d) => op(d).map(AssociatedItems),
267 ItemSignature(ref d) => op(d).map(ItemSignature),
268 TypeParamPredicates((ref item, ref param)) => {
269 Some(TypeParamPredicates((try_opt!(op(item)), try_opt!(op(param)))))
271 SizedConstraint(ref d) => op(d).map(SizedConstraint),
272 AdtDestructor(ref d) => op(d).map(AdtDestructor),
273 AssociatedItemDefIds(ref d) => op(d).map(AssociatedItemDefIds),
274 InherentImpls(ref d) => op(d).map(InherentImpls),
275 TypeckTables(ref d) => op(d).map(TypeckTables),
276 UsedTraitImports(ref d) => op(d).map(UsedTraitImports),
277 MonomorphicConstEval(ref d) => op(d).map(MonomorphicConstEval),
278 TraitImpls(ref d) => op(d).map(TraitImpls),
279 TraitItems(ref d) => op(d).map(TraitItems),
280 ReprHints(ref d) => op(d).map(ReprHints),
281 TraitSelect { ref trait_def_id, ref input_def_id } => {
282 op(trait_def_id).and_then(|trait_def_id| {
283 op(input_def_id).and_then(|input_def_id| {
284 Some(TraitSelect { trait_def_id: trait_def_id,
285 input_def_id: input_def_id })
289 ProjectionCache { ref def_ids } => {
290 let def_ids: Option<Vec<E>> = def_ids.iter().map(op).collect();
291 def_ids.map(|d| ProjectionCache { def_ids: d })
297 /// A "work product" corresponds to a `.o` (or other) file that we
298 /// save in between runs. These ids do not have a DefId but rather
299 /// some independent path or string that persists between runs without
300 /// the need to be mapped or unmapped. (This ensures we can serialize
301 /// them even in the absence of a tcx.)
302 #[derive(Clone, Debug, PartialEq, Eq, PartialOrd, Ord, Hash, RustcEncodable, RustcDecodable)]
303 pub struct WorkProductId(pub String);