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Avoid ICE by using delay_span_bug #60721

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May 11, 2019
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Fix #59406, fix #53498.

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r? @cramertj

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@rust-highfive rust-highfive added the S-waiting-on-review Status: Awaiting review from the assignee but also interested parties. label May 11, 2019
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varkor commented May 11, 2019

@bors r+

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bors commented May 11, 2019

📌 Commit adc18eb 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 May 11, 2019
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bors commented May 11, 2019

⌛ Testing commit adc18eb with merge 7519eac...

bors added a commit that referenced this pull request May 11, 2019
Avoid ICE by using delay_span_bug

Fix #59406, fix #53498.
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bors commented May 11, 2019

☀️ Test successful - checks-travis, status-appveyor
Approved by: varkor
Pushing 7519eac to master...

@bors bors added the merged-by-bors This PR was explicitly merged by bors. label May 11, 2019
@bors bors merged commit adc18eb into rust-lang:master May 11, 2019
compiler-errors added a commit to compiler-errors/rust that referenced this pull request Jun 4, 2024
…ompiler-errors

Winnow private method candidates instead of assuming any candidate of the right name will apply

partially reverts rust-lang#60721

My original motivation was just to avoid the `delay_span_bug` (by attempting to thread the `ErrorGuaranteed` through to here). But then I realized that the error message is wrong. It refers to the `Foo<A>::foo` instead of `Foo<B>::foo`. This is almost invisible, because both functions are the same, but on different lines, so `-Zui-testing` makes it so the test is the same no matter which of these two functions is referenced.

But there's a much more obvious bug: If `Foo<B>` does not have a `foo` method at all, but `Foo<A>` has a private `foo` method, then we'll refer to that one. This has now been fixed, and we report a normal `method not found` error.

The way this is done is by creating a list of all possible private functions (just like we create a list of the public functions that can actually be called), and then winnowing it by analyzing where bounds and `Self` types to see if any of the found methods can actually apply (again, just like with the list of public functions).

I wonder if there is room for doing the same thing with unstable functions instead of running all of method resolution twice.

r? `@compiler-errors` for method resolution stuff
fmease added a commit to fmease/rust that referenced this pull request Jun 4, 2024
…ompiler-errors

Winnow private method candidates instead of assuming any candidate of the right name will apply

partially reverts rust-lang#60721

My original motivation was just to avoid the `delay_span_bug` (by attempting to thread the `ErrorGuaranteed` through to here). But then I realized that the error message is wrong. It refers to the `Foo<A>::foo` instead of `Foo<B>::foo`. This is almost invisible, because both functions are the same, but on different lines, so `-Zui-testing` makes it so the test is the same no matter which of these two functions is referenced.

But there's a much more obvious bug: If `Foo<B>` does not have a `foo` method at all, but `Foo<A>` has a private `foo` method, then we'll refer to that one. This has now been fixed, and we report a normal `method not found` error.

The way this is done is by creating a list of all possible private functions (just like we create a list of the public functions that can actually be called), and then winnowing it by analyzing where bounds and `Self` types to see if any of the found methods can actually apply (again, just like with the list of public functions).

I wonder if there is room for doing the same thing with unstable functions instead of running all of method resolution twice.

r? `@compiler-errors` for method resolution stuff
matthiaskrgr added a commit to matthiaskrgr/rust that referenced this pull request Jun 5, 2024
…ompiler-errors

Winnow private method candidates instead of assuming any candidate of the right name will apply

partially reverts rust-lang#60721

My original motivation was just to avoid the `delay_span_bug` (by attempting to thread the `ErrorGuaranteed` through to here). But then I realized that the error message is wrong. It refers to the `Foo<A>::foo` instead of `Foo<B>::foo`. This is almost invisible, because both functions are the same, but on different lines, so `-Zui-testing` makes it so the test is the same no matter which of these two functions is referenced.

But there's a much more obvious bug: If `Foo<B>` does not have a `foo` method at all, but `Foo<A>` has a private `foo` method, then we'll refer to that one. This has now been fixed, and we report a normal `method not found` error.

The way this is done is by creating a list of all possible private functions (just like we create a list of the public functions that can actually be called), and then winnowing it by analyzing where bounds and `Self` types to see if any of the found methods can actually apply (again, just like with the list of public functions).

I wonder if there is room for doing the same thing with unstable functions instead of running all of method resolution twice.

r? ``@compiler-errors`` for method resolution stuff
rust-timer added a commit to rust-lang-ci/rust that referenced this pull request Jun 5, 2024
Rollup merge of rust-lang#125622 - oli-obk:define_opaque_types15, r=compiler-errors

Winnow private method candidates instead of assuming any candidate of the right name will apply

partially reverts rust-lang#60721

My original motivation was just to avoid the `delay_span_bug` (by attempting to thread the `ErrorGuaranteed` through to here). But then I realized that the error message is wrong. It refers to the `Foo<A>::foo` instead of `Foo<B>::foo`. This is almost invisible, because both functions are the same, but on different lines, so `-Zui-testing` makes it so the test is the same no matter which of these two functions is referenced.

But there's a much more obvious bug: If `Foo<B>` does not have a `foo` method at all, but `Foo<A>` has a private `foo` method, then we'll refer to that one. This has now been fixed, and we report a normal `method not found` error.

The way this is done is by creating a list of all possible private functions (just like we create a list of the public functions that can actually be called), and then winnowing it by analyzing where bounds and `Self` types to see if any of the found methods can actually apply (again, just like with the list of public functions).

I wonder if there is room for doing the same thing with unstable functions instead of running all of method resolution twice.

r? ``@compiler-errors`` for method resolution stuff
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