Struct rustc_middle::mir::LocalDecl [−][src]
pub struct LocalDecl<'tcx> {
pub mutability: Mutability,
pub local_info: Option<Box<LocalInfo<'tcx>>>,
pub internal: bool,
pub is_block_tail: Option<BlockTailInfo>,
pub ty: Ty<'tcx>,
pub user_ty: Option<Box<UserTypeProjections>>,
pub source_info: SourceInfo,
}
Expand description
A MIR local.
This can be a binding declared by the user, a temporary inserted by the compiler, a function argument, or the return place.
Fields
mutability: Mutability
Whether this is a mutable binding (i.e., let x
or let mut x
).
Temporaries and the return place are always mutable.
local_info: Option<Box<LocalInfo<'tcx>>>
internal: bool
true
if this is an internal local.
These locals are not based on types in the source code and are only used for a few desugarings at the moment.
The generator transformation will sanity check the locals which are live across a suspension point against the type components of the generator which type checking knows are live across a suspension point. We need to flag drop flags to avoid triggering this check as they are introduced after typeck.
This should be sound because the drop flags are fully algebraic, and therefore don’t affect the auto-trait or outlives properties of the generator.
is_block_tail: Option<BlockTailInfo>
If this local is a temporary and is_block_tail
is Some
,
then it is a temporary created for evaluation of some
subexpression of some block’s tail expression (with no
intervening statement context).
ty: Ty<'tcx>
The type of this local.
user_ty: Option<Box<UserTypeProjections>>
If the user manually ascribed a type to this variable,
e.g., via let x: T
, then we carry that type here. The MIR
borrow checker needs this information since it can affect
region inference.
source_info: SourceInfo
The syntactic (i.e., not visibility) source scope the local is defined in. If the local was defined in a let-statement, this is within the let-statement, rather than outside of it.
This is needed because the visibility source scope of locals within a let-statement is weird.
The reason is that we want the local to be within the let-statement for lint purposes, but we want the local to be after the let-statement for names-in-scope purposes.
That’s it, if we have a let-statement like the one in this function:
fn foo(x: &str) {
#[allow(unused_mut)]
let mut x: u32 = { // <- one unused mut
let mut y: u32 = x.parse().unwrap();
y + 2
};
drop(x);
}
Then, from a lint point of view, the declaration of x: u32
(and y: u32
) are within the #[allow(unused_mut)]
scope - the
lint scopes are the same as the AST/HIR nesting.
However, from a name lookup point of view, the scopes look more like
as if the let-statements were match
expressions:
fn foo(x: &str) {
match {
match x.parse().unwrap() {
y => y + 2
}
} {
x => drop(x)
};
}
We care about the name-lookup scopes for debuginfo - if the
debuginfo instruction pointer is at the call to x.parse()
, we
want x
to refer to x: &str
, but if it is at the call to
drop(x)
, we want it to refer to x: u32
.
To allow both uses to work, we need to have more than a single scope
for a local. We have the source_info.scope
represent the “syntactic”
lint scope (with a variable being under its let block) while the
var_debug_info.source_info.scope
represents the “local variable”
scope (where the “rest” of a block is under all prior let-statements).
The end result looks like this:
ROOT SCOPE
│{ argument x: &str }
│
│ │{ #[allow(unused_mut)] } // This is actually split into 2 scopes
│ │ // in practice because I'm lazy.
│ │
│ │← x.source_info.scope
│ │← `x.parse().unwrap()`
│ │
│ │ │← y.source_info.scope
│ │
│ │ │{ let y: u32 }
│ │ │
│ │ │← y.var_debug_info.source_info.scope
│ │ │← `y + 2`
│
│ │{ let x: u32 }
│ │← x.var_debug_info.source_info.scope
│ │← `drop(x)` // This accesses `x: u32`.
Implementations
Returns true
only if local is a binding that can itself be
made mutable via the addition of the mut
keyword, namely
something like the occurrences of x
in:
fn foo(x: Type) { ... }
,let x = ...
,- or
match ... { C(x) => ... }
Returns true
if local is definitely not a ref ident
or
ref mut ident
binding. (Such bindings cannot be made into
mutable bindings, but the inverse does not necessarily hold).
Returns true
if this variable is a named variable or function
parameter declared by the user.
Returns true
if this is a reference to a variable bound in a match
expression that is used to access said variable for the guard of the
match arm.
Returns Some
if this is a reference to a static item that is used to
access that static.
Returns Some
if this is a reference to a thread-local static item that is used to
access that static.
Returns true
is the local is from a compiler desugaring, e.g.,
__next
from a for
loop.
Creates a new LocalDecl
for a temporary: mutable, non-internal.
Like LocalDecl::new
, but takes a SourceInfo
instead of a Span
.
Converts self
into same LocalDecl
except tagged as internal temporary.
Trait Implementations
fn super_visit_with<__F: TypeVisitor<'tcx>>(
&self,
__folder: &mut __F
) -> ControlFlow<__F::BreakTy>
Returns true
if self
has any late-bound regions that are either
bound by binder
or bound by some binder outside of binder
.
If binder
is ty::INNERMOST
, this indicates whether
there are any late-bound regions that appear free. Read more
Returns true
if this self
has any regions that escape binder
(and
hence are not bound by it). Read more
“Free” regions in this context means that it has any region that is not (a) erased or (b) late-bound. Read more
True if there are any un-erased free regions.
Indicates whether this value definitely references only ‘global’ generic parameters that are the same regardless of what fn we are in. This is used for caching. Read more
Indicates whether this value references only ‘global’ generic parameters that are the same regardless of what fn we are in. This is used for caching. Read more
True if there are any late-bound regions
Indicates whether this value still has parameters/placeholders/inference variables
which could be replaced later, in a way that would change the results of impl
specialization. Read more
Auto Trait Implementations
impl<'tcx> !RefUnwindSafe for LocalDecl<'tcx>
impl<'tcx> !UnwindSafe for LocalDecl<'tcx>
Blanket Implementations
Mutably borrows from an owned value. Read more
impl<Ctxt, T> DepNodeParams<Ctxt> for T where
Ctxt: DepContext,
T: for<'a> HashStable<StableHashingContext<'a>> + Debug,
impl<Ctxt, T> DepNodeParams<Ctxt> for T where
Ctxt: DepContext,
T: for<'a> HashStable<StableHashingContext<'a>> + Debug,
This method turns the parameters of a DepNodeConstructor into an opaque Fingerprint to be used in DepNode. Not all DepNodeParams support being turned into a Fingerprint (they don’t need to if the corresponding DepNode is anonymous). Read more
This method tries to recover the query key from the given DepNode
,
something which is needed when forcing DepNode
s during red-green
evaluation. The query system will only call this method if
fingerprint_style()
is not FingerprintStyle::Opaque
.
It is always valid to return None
here, in which case incremental
compilation will treat the query as having changed instead of forcing it. Read more
Layout
Note: Most layout information is completely unstable and may even differ between compilations. The only exception is types with certain repr(...)
attributes. Please see the Rust Reference’s “Type Layout” chapter for details on type layout guarantees.
Size: 56 bytes