rustc_mir_build/builder/matches/mod.rs
1//! Code related to match expressions. These are sufficiently complex to
2//! warrant their own module and submodules. :) This main module includes the
3//! high-level algorithm, the submodules contain the details.
4//!
5//! This also includes code for pattern bindings in `let` statements and
6//! function parameters.
7
8use std::assert_matches::debug_assert_matches;
9use std::borrow::Borrow;
10use std::mem;
11use std::sync::Arc;
12
13use itertools::{Itertools, Position};
14use rustc_abi::{FIRST_VARIANT, VariantIdx};
15use rustc_data_structures::fx::FxIndexMap;
16use rustc_data_structures::stack::ensure_sufficient_stack;
17use rustc_hir::{BindingMode, ByRef, LangItem, LetStmt, LocalSource, Node};
18use rustc_middle::middle::region::{self, TempLifetime};
19use rustc_middle::mir::*;
20use rustc_middle::thir::{self, *};
21use rustc_middle::ty::{self, CanonicalUserTypeAnnotation, Ty, ValTree, ValTreeKind};
22use rustc_middle::{bug, span_bug};
23use rustc_pattern_analysis::constructor::RangeEnd;
24use rustc_pattern_analysis::rustc::{DeconstructedPat, RustcPatCtxt};
25use rustc_span::{BytePos, Pos, Span, Symbol, sym};
26use tracing::{debug, instrument};
27
28use crate::builder::ForGuard::{self, OutsideGuard, RefWithinGuard};
29use crate::builder::expr::as_place::PlaceBuilder;
30use crate::builder::matches::buckets::PartitionedCandidates;
31use crate::builder::matches::user_ty::ProjectedUserTypesNode;
32use crate::builder::scope::DropKind;
33use crate::builder::{
34 BlockAnd, BlockAndExtension, Builder, GuardFrame, GuardFrameLocal, LocalsForNode,
35};
36
37// helper functions, broken out by category:
38mod buckets;
39mod match_pair;
40mod test;
41mod user_ty;
42mod util;
43
44/// Arguments to [`Builder::then_else_break_inner`] that are usually forwarded
45/// to recursive invocations.
46#[derive(Clone, Copy)]
47struct ThenElseArgs {
48 /// Used as the temp scope for lowering `expr`. If absent (for match guards),
49 /// `self.local_scope()` is used.
50 temp_scope_override: Option<region::Scope>,
51 variable_source_info: SourceInfo,
52 /// Determines how bindings should be handled when lowering `let` expressions.
53 ///
54 /// Forwarded to [`Builder::lower_let_expr`] when lowering [`ExprKind::Let`].
55 declare_let_bindings: DeclareLetBindings,
56}
57
58/// Should lowering a `let` expression also declare its bindings?
59///
60/// Used by [`Builder::lower_let_expr`] when lowering [`ExprKind::Let`].
61#[derive(Clone, Copy)]
62pub(crate) enum DeclareLetBindings {
63 /// Yes, declare `let` bindings as normal for `if` conditions.
64 Yes,
65 /// No, don't declare `let` bindings, because the caller declares them
66 /// separately due to special requirements.
67 ///
68 /// Used for match guards and let-else.
69 No,
70 /// Let expressions are not permitted in this context, so it is a bug to
71 /// try to lower one (e.g inside lazy-boolean-or or boolean-not).
72 LetNotPermitted,
73}
74
75/// Used by [`Builder::storage_live_binding`] and [`Builder::bind_matched_candidate_for_arm_body`]
76/// to decide whether to schedule drops.
77#[derive(Clone, Copy, Debug)]
78pub(crate) enum ScheduleDrops {
79 /// Yes, the relevant functions should also schedule drops as appropriate.
80 Yes,
81 /// No, don't schedule drops. The caller has taken responsibility for any
82 /// appropriate drops.
83 No,
84}
85
86impl<'a, 'tcx> Builder<'a, 'tcx> {
87 /// Lowers a condition in a way that ensures that variables bound in any let
88 /// expressions are definitely initialized in the if body.
89 ///
90 /// If `declare_let_bindings` is false then variables created in `let`
91 /// expressions will not be declared. This is for if let guards on arms with
92 /// an or pattern, where the guard is lowered multiple times.
93 pub(crate) fn then_else_break(
94 &mut self,
95 block: BasicBlock,
96 expr_id: ExprId,
97 temp_scope_override: Option<region::Scope>,
98 variable_source_info: SourceInfo,
99 declare_let_bindings: DeclareLetBindings,
100 ) -> BlockAnd<()> {
101 self.then_else_break_inner(
102 block,
103 expr_id,
104 ThenElseArgs { temp_scope_override, variable_source_info, declare_let_bindings },
105 )
106 }
107
108 fn then_else_break_inner(
109 &mut self,
110 block: BasicBlock, // Block that the condition and branch will be lowered into
111 expr_id: ExprId, // Condition expression to lower
112 args: ThenElseArgs,
113 ) -> BlockAnd<()> {
114 let this = self; // See "LET_THIS_SELF".
115 let expr = &this.thir[expr_id];
116 let expr_span = expr.span;
117
118 match expr.kind {
119 ExprKind::LogicalOp { op: LogicalOp::And, lhs, rhs } => {
120 let lhs_then_block = this.then_else_break_inner(block, lhs, args).into_block();
121 let rhs_then_block =
122 this.then_else_break_inner(lhs_then_block, rhs, args).into_block();
123 rhs_then_block.unit()
124 }
125 ExprKind::LogicalOp { op: LogicalOp::Or, lhs, rhs } => {
126 let local_scope = this.local_scope();
127 let (lhs_success_block, failure_block) =
128 this.in_if_then_scope(local_scope, expr_span, |this| {
129 this.then_else_break_inner(
130 block,
131 lhs,
132 ThenElseArgs {
133 declare_let_bindings: DeclareLetBindings::LetNotPermitted,
134 ..args
135 },
136 )
137 });
138 let rhs_success_block = this
139 .then_else_break_inner(
140 failure_block,
141 rhs,
142 ThenElseArgs {
143 declare_let_bindings: DeclareLetBindings::LetNotPermitted,
144 ..args
145 },
146 )
147 .into_block();
148
149 // Make the LHS and RHS success arms converge to a common block.
150 // (We can't just make LHS goto RHS, because `rhs_success_block`
151 // might contain statements that we don't want on the LHS path.)
152 let success_block = this.cfg.start_new_block();
153 this.cfg.goto(lhs_success_block, args.variable_source_info, success_block);
154 this.cfg.goto(rhs_success_block, args.variable_source_info, success_block);
155 success_block.unit()
156 }
157 ExprKind::Unary { op: UnOp::Not, arg } => {
158 // Improve branch coverage instrumentation by noting conditions
159 // nested within one or more `!` expressions.
160 // (Skipped if branch coverage is not enabled.)
161 if let Some(coverage_info) = this.coverage_info.as_mut() {
162 coverage_info.visit_unary_not(this.thir, expr_id);
163 }
164
165 let local_scope = this.local_scope();
166 let (success_block, failure_block) =
167 this.in_if_then_scope(local_scope, expr_span, |this| {
168 // Help out coverage instrumentation by injecting a dummy statement with
169 // the original condition's span (including `!`). This fixes #115468.
170 if this.tcx.sess.instrument_coverage() {
171 this.cfg.push_coverage_span_marker(block, this.source_info(expr_span));
172 }
173 this.then_else_break_inner(
174 block,
175 arg,
176 ThenElseArgs {
177 declare_let_bindings: DeclareLetBindings::LetNotPermitted,
178 ..args
179 },
180 )
181 });
182 this.break_for_else(success_block, args.variable_source_info);
183 failure_block.unit()
184 }
185 ExprKind::Scope { region_scope, lint_level, value } => {
186 let region_scope = (region_scope, this.source_info(expr_span));
187 this.in_scope(region_scope, lint_level, |this| {
188 this.then_else_break_inner(block, value, args)
189 })
190 }
191 ExprKind::Use { source } => this.then_else_break_inner(block, source, args),
192 ExprKind::Let { expr, ref pat } => this.lower_let_expr(
193 block,
194 expr,
195 pat,
196 Some(args.variable_source_info.scope),
197 args.variable_source_info.span,
198 args.declare_let_bindings,
199 ),
200 _ => {
201 let mut block = block;
202 let temp_scope = args.temp_scope_override.unwrap_or_else(|| this.local_scope());
203 let mutability = Mutability::Mut;
204
205 let place = unpack!(
206 block = this.as_temp(
207 block,
208 TempLifetime {
209 temp_lifetime: Some(temp_scope),
210 backwards_incompatible: None
211 },
212 expr_id,
213 mutability
214 )
215 );
216
217 let operand = Operand::Move(Place::from(place));
218
219 let then_block = this.cfg.start_new_block();
220 let else_block = this.cfg.start_new_block();
221 let term = TerminatorKind::if_(operand, then_block, else_block);
222
223 // Record branch coverage info for this condition.
224 // (Does nothing if branch coverage is not enabled.)
225 this.visit_coverage_branch_condition(expr_id, then_block, else_block);
226
227 let source_info = this.source_info(expr_span);
228 this.cfg.terminate(block, source_info, term);
229 this.break_for_else(else_block, source_info);
230
231 then_block.unit()
232 }
233 }
234 }
235
236 /// Generates MIR for a `match` expression.
237 ///
238 /// The MIR that we generate for a match looks like this.
239 ///
240 /// ```text
241 /// [ 0. Pre-match ]
242 /// |
243 /// [ 1. Evaluate Scrutinee (expression being matched on) ]
244 /// [ (PlaceMention of scrutinee) ]
245 /// |
246 /// [ 2. Decision tree -- check discriminants ] <--------+
247 /// | |
248 /// | (once a specific arm is chosen) |
249 /// | |
250 /// [pre_binding_block] [otherwise_block]
251 /// | |
252 /// [ 3. Create "guard bindings" for arm ] |
253 /// [ (create fake borrows) ] |
254 /// | |
255 /// [ 4. Execute guard code ] |
256 /// [ (read fake borrows) ] --(guard is false)-----------+
257 /// |
258 /// | (guard results in true)
259 /// |
260 /// [ 5. Create real bindings and execute arm ]
261 /// |
262 /// [ Exit match ]
263 /// ```
264 ///
265 /// All of the different arms have been stacked on top of each other to
266 /// simplify the diagram. For an arm with no guard the blocks marked 3 and
267 /// 4 and the fake borrows are omitted.
268 ///
269 /// We generate MIR in the following steps:
270 ///
271 /// 1. Evaluate the scrutinee and add the PlaceMention of it ([Builder::lower_scrutinee]).
272 /// 2. Create the decision tree ([Builder::lower_match_tree]).
273 /// 3. Determine the fake borrows that are needed from the places that were
274 /// matched against and create the required temporaries for them
275 /// ([util::collect_fake_borrows]).
276 /// 4. Create everything else: the guards and the arms ([Builder::lower_match_arms]).
277 ///
278 /// ## False edges
279 ///
280 /// We don't want to have the exact structure of the decision tree be visible through borrow
281 /// checking. Specifically we want borrowck to think that:
282 /// - at any point, any or none of the patterns and guards seen so far may have been tested;
283 /// - after the match, any of the patterns may have matched.
284 ///
285 /// For example, all of these would fail to error if borrowck could see the real CFG (examples
286 /// taken from `tests/ui/nll/match-cfg-fake-edges.rs`):
287 /// ```ignore (too many errors, this is already in the test suite)
288 /// let x = String::new();
289 /// let _ = match true {
290 /// _ => {},
291 /// _ => drop(x),
292 /// };
293 /// // Borrowck must not know the second arm is never run.
294 /// drop(x); //~ ERROR use of moved value
295 ///
296 /// let x;
297 /// # let y = true;
298 /// match y {
299 /// _ if { x = 2; true } => {},
300 /// // Borrowck must not know the guard is always run.
301 /// _ => drop(x), //~ ERROR used binding `x` is possibly-uninitialized
302 /// };
303 ///
304 /// let x = String::new();
305 /// # let y = true;
306 /// match y {
307 /// false if { drop(x); true } => {},
308 /// // Borrowck must not know the guard is not run in the `true` case.
309 /// true => drop(x), //~ ERROR use of moved value: `x`
310 /// false => {},
311 /// };
312 ///
313 /// # let mut y = (true, true);
314 /// let r = &mut y.1;
315 /// match y {
316 /// //~^ ERROR cannot use `y.1` because it was mutably borrowed
317 /// (false, true) => {}
318 /// // Borrowck must not know we don't test `y.1` when `y.0` is `true`.
319 /// (true, _) => drop(r),
320 /// (false, _) => {}
321 /// };
322 /// ```
323 ///
324 /// We add false edges to act as if we were naively matching each arm in order. What we need is
325 /// a (fake) path from each candidate to the next, specifically from candidate C's pre-binding
326 /// block to next candidate D's pre-binding block. For maximum precision (needed for deref
327 /// patterns), we choose the earliest node on D's success path that doesn't also lead to C (to
328 /// avoid loops).
329 ///
330 /// This turns out to be easy to compute: that block is the `start_block` of the first call to
331 /// `match_candidates` where D is the first candidate in the list.
332 ///
333 /// For example:
334 /// ```rust
335 /// # let (x, y) = (true, true);
336 /// match (x, y) {
337 /// (true, true) => 1,
338 /// (false, true) => 2,
339 /// (true, false) => 3,
340 /// _ => 4,
341 /// }
342 /// # ;
343 /// ```
344 /// In this example, the pre-binding block of arm 1 has a false edge to the block for result
345 /// `false` of the first test on `x`. The other arms have false edges to the pre-binding blocks
346 /// of the next arm.
347 ///
348 /// On top of this, we also add a false edge from the otherwise_block of each guard to the
349 /// aforementioned start block of the next candidate, to ensure borrock doesn't rely on which
350 /// guards may have run.
351 #[instrument(level = "debug", skip(self, arms))]
352 pub(crate) fn match_expr(
353 &mut self,
354 destination: Place<'tcx>,
355 mut block: BasicBlock,
356 scrutinee_id: ExprId,
357 arms: &[ArmId],
358 span: Span,
359 scrutinee_span: Span,
360 ) -> BlockAnd<()> {
361 let scrutinee_place =
362 unpack!(block = self.lower_scrutinee(block, scrutinee_id, scrutinee_span));
363
364 let match_start_span = span.shrink_to_lo().to(scrutinee_span);
365 let patterns = arms
366 .iter()
367 .map(|&arm| {
368 let arm = &self.thir[arm];
369 let has_match_guard =
370 if arm.guard.is_some() { HasMatchGuard::Yes } else { HasMatchGuard::No };
371 (&*arm.pattern, has_match_guard)
372 })
373 .collect();
374 let built_tree = self.lower_match_tree(
375 block,
376 scrutinee_span,
377 &scrutinee_place,
378 match_start_span,
379 patterns,
380 false,
381 );
382
383 self.lower_match_arms(
384 destination,
385 scrutinee_place,
386 scrutinee_span,
387 arms,
388 built_tree,
389 self.source_info(span),
390 )
391 }
392
393 /// Evaluate the scrutinee and add the PlaceMention for it.
394 pub(crate) fn lower_scrutinee(
395 &mut self,
396 mut block: BasicBlock,
397 scrutinee_id: ExprId,
398 scrutinee_span: Span,
399 ) -> BlockAnd<PlaceBuilder<'tcx>> {
400 let scrutinee_place_builder = unpack!(block = self.as_place_builder(block, scrutinee_id));
401 if let Some(scrutinee_place) = scrutinee_place_builder.try_to_place(self) {
402 let source_info = self.source_info(scrutinee_span);
403 self.cfg.push_place_mention(block, source_info, scrutinee_place);
404 }
405
406 block.and(scrutinee_place_builder)
407 }
408
409 /// Lower the bindings, guards and arm bodies of a `match` expression.
410 ///
411 /// The decision tree should have already been created
412 /// (by [Builder::lower_match_tree]).
413 ///
414 /// `outer_source_info` is the SourceInfo for the whole match.
415 pub(crate) fn lower_match_arms(
416 &mut self,
417 destination: Place<'tcx>,
418 scrutinee_place_builder: PlaceBuilder<'tcx>,
419 scrutinee_span: Span,
420 arms: &[ArmId],
421 built_match_tree: BuiltMatchTree<'tcx>,
422 outer_source_info: SourceInfo,
423 ) -> BlockAnd<()> {
424 let arm_end_blocks: Vec<BasicBlock> = arms
425 .iter()
426 .map(|&arm| &self.thir[arm])
427 .zip(built_match_tree.branches)
428 .map(|(arm, branch)| {
429 debug!("lowering arm {:?}\ncorresponding branch = {:?}", arm, branch);
430
431 let arm_source_info = self.source_info(arm.span);
432 let arm_scope = (arm.scope, arm_source_info);
433 let match_scope = self.local_scope();
434 let guard_scope = arm
435 .guard
436 .map(|_| region::Scope { data: region::ScopeData::MatchGuard, ..arm.scope });
437 self.in_scope(arm_scope, arm.lint_level, |this| {
438 this.opt_in_scope(guard_scope.map(|scope| (scope, arm_source_info)), |this| {
439 // `if let` guard temps needing deduplicating will be in the guard scope.
440 let old_dedup_scope =
441 mem::replace(&mut this.fixed_temps_scope, guard_scope);
442
443 // `try_to_place` may fail if it is unable to resolve the given
444 // `PlaceBuilder` inside a closure. In this case, we don't want to include
445 // a scrutinee place. `scrutinee_place_builder` will fail to be resolved
446 // if the only match arm is a wildcard (`_`).
447 // Example:
448 // ```
449 // let foo = (0, 1);
450 // let c = || {
451 // match foo { _ => () };
452 // };
453 // ```
454 let scrutinee_place = scrutinee_place_builder.try_to_place(this);
455 let opt_scrutinee_place =
456 scrutinee_place.as_ref().map(|place| (Some(place), scrutinee_span));
457 let scope = this.declare_bindings(
458 None,
459 arm.span,
460 &arm.pattern,
461 arm.guard,
462 opt_scrutinee_place,
463 );
464
465 let arm_block = this.bind_pattern(
466 outer_source_info,
467 branch,
468 &built_match_tree.fake_borrow_temps,
469 scrutinee_span,
470 Some((arm, match_scope)),
471 );
472
473 this.fixed_temps_scope = old_dedup_scope;
474
475 if let Some(source_scope) = scope {
476 this.source_scope = source_scope;
477 }
478
479 this.expr_into_dest(destination, arm_block, arm.body)
480 })
481 })
482 .into_block()
483 })
484 .collect();
485
486 // all the arm blocks will rejoin here
487 let end_block = self.cfg.start_new_block();
488
489 let end_brace = self.source_info(
490 outer_source_info.span.with_lo(outer_source_info.span.hi() - BytePos::from_usize(1)),
491 );
492 for arm_block in arm_end_blocks {
493 let block = &self.cfg.basic_blocks[arm_block];
494 let last_location = block.statements.last().map(|s| s.source_info);
495
496 self.cfg.goto(arm_block, last_location.unwrap_or(end_brace), end_block);
497 }
498
499 self.source_scope = outer_source_info.scope;
500
501 end_block.unit()
502 }
503
504 /// For a top-level `match` arm or a `let` binding, binds the variables and
505 /// ascribes types, and also checks the match arm guard (if present).
506 ///
507 /// `arm_scope` should be `Some` if and only if this is called for a
508 /// `match` arm.
509 ///
510 /// In the presence of or-patterns, a match arm might have multiple
511 /// sub-branches representing different ways to match, with each sub-branch
512 /// requiring its own bindings and its own copy of the guard. This method
513 /// handles those sub-branches individually, and then has them jump together
514 /// to a common block.
515 ///
516 /// Returns a single block that the match arm can be lowered into.
517 /// (For `let` bindings, this is the code that can use the bindings.)
518 fn bind_pattern(
519 &mut self,
520 outer_source_info: SourceInfo,
521 branch: MatchTreeBranch<'tcx>,
522 fake_borrow_temps: &[(Place<'tcx>, Local, FakeBorrowKind)],
523 scrutinee_span: Span,
524 arm_match_scope: Option<(&Arm<'tcx>, region::Scope)>,
525 ) -> BasicBlock {
526 if branch.sub_branches.len() == 1 {
527 let [sub_branch] = branch.sub_branches.try_into().unwrap();
528 // Avoid generating another `BasicBlock` when we only have one sub branch.
529 self.bind_and_guard_matched_candidate(
530 sub_branch,
531 fake_borrow_temps,
532 scrutinee_span,
533 arm_match_scope,
534 ScheduleDrops::Yes,
535 )
536 } else {
537 // It's helpful to avoid scheduling drops multiple times to save
538 // drop elaboration from having to clean up the extra drops.
539 //
540 // If we are in a `let` then we only schedule drops for the first
541 // candidate.
542 //
543 // If we're in a `match` arm then we could have a case like so:
544 //
545 // Ok(x) | Err(x) if return => { /* ... */ }
546 //
547 // In this case we don't want a drop of `x` scheduled when we
548 // return: it isn't bound by move until right before enter the arm.
549 // To handle this we instead unschedule it's drop after each time
550 // we lower the guard.
551 // As a result, we end up with the drop order of the last sub-branch we lower. To use
552 // the drop order for the first sub-branch, we lower sub-branches in reverse (#142163).
553 let target_block = self.cfg.start_new_block();
554 for (pos, sub_branch) in branch.sub_branches.into_iter().rev().with_position() {
555 debug_assert!(pos != Position::Only);
556 let schedule_drops =
557 if pos == Position::Last { ScheduleDrops::Yes } else { ScheduleDrops::No };
558 let binding_end = self.bind_and_guard_matched_candidate(
559 sub_branch,
560 fake_borrow_temps,
561 scrutinee_span,
562 arm_match_scope,
563 schedule_drops,
564 );
565 self.cfg.goto(binding_end, outer_source_info, target_block);
566 }
567
568 target_block
569 }
570 }
571
572 pub(super) fn expr_into_pattern(
573 &mut self,
574 mut block: BasicBlock,
575 irrefutable_pat: &Pat<'tcx>,
576 initializer_id: ExprId,
577 ) -> BlockAnd<()> {
578 match irrefutable_pat.kind {
579 // Optimize the case of `let x = ...` to write directly into `x`
580 PatKind::Binding { mode: BindingMode(ByRef::No, _), var, subpattern: None, .. } => {
581 let place = self.storage_live_binding(
582 block,
583 var,
584 irrefutable_pat.span,
585 false,
586 OutsideGuard,
587 ScheduleDrops::Yes,
588 );
589 block = self.expr_into_dest(place, block, initializer_id).into_block();
590
591 // Inject a fake read, see comments on `FakeReadCause::ForLet`.
592 let source_info = self.source_info(irrefutable_pat.span);
593 self.cfg.push_fake_read(block, source_info, FakeReadCause::ForLet(None), place);
594
595 self.schedule_drop_for_binding(var, irrefutable_pat.span, OutsideGuard);
596 block.unit()
597 }
598
599 // Optimize the case of `let x: T = ...` to write directly
600 // into `x` and then require that `T == typeof(x)`.
601 PatKind::AscribeUserType {
602 ref subpattern,
603 ascription: thir::Ascription { ref annotation, variance: _ },
604 } if let PatKind::Binding {
605 mode: BindingMode(ByRef::No, _),
606 var,
607 subpattern: None,
608 ..
609 } = subpattern.kind =>
610 {
611 let place = self.storage_live_binding(
612 block,
613 var,
614 irrefutable_pat.span,
615 false,
616 OutsideGuard,
617 ScheduleDrops::Yes,
618 );
619 block = self.expr_into_dest(place, block, initializer_id).into_block();
620
621 // Inject a fake read, see comments on `FakeReadCause::ForLet`.
622 let pattern_source_info = self.source_info(irrefutable_pat.span);
623 let cause_let = FakeReadCause::ForLet(None);
624 self.cfg.push_fake_read(block, pattern_source_info, cause_let, place);
625
626 let ty_source_info = self.source_info(annotation.span);
627
628 let base = self.canonical_user_type_annotations.push(annotation.clone());
629 self.cfg.push(
630 block,
631 Statement::new(
632 ty_source_info,
633 StatementKind::AscribeUserType(
634 Box::new((place, UserTypeProjection { base, projs: Vec::new() })),
635 // We always use invariant as the variance here. This is because the
636 // variance field from the ascription refers to the variance to use
637 // when applying the type to the value being matched, but this
638 // ascription applies rather to the type of the binding. e.g., in this
639 // example:
640 //
641 // ```
642 // let x: T = <expr>
643 // ```
644 //
645 // We are creating an ascription that defines the type of `x` to be
646 // exactly `T` (i.e., with invariance). The variance field, in
647 // contrast, is intended to be used to relate `T` to the type of
648 // `<expr>`.
649 ty::Invariant,
650 ),
651 ),
652 );
653
654 self.schedule_drop_for_binding(var, irrefutable_pat.span, OutsideGuard);
655 block.unit()
656 }
657
658 _ => {
659 let initializer = &self.thir[initializer_id];
660 let place_builder =
661 unpack!(block = self.lower_scrutinee(block, initializer_id, initializer.span));
662 self.place_into_pattern(block, irrefutable_pat, place_builder, true)
663 }
664 }
665 }
666
667 pub(crate) fn place_into_pattern(
668 &mut self,
669 block: BasicBlock,
670 irrefutable_pat: &Pat<'tcx>,
671 initializer: PlaceBuilder<'tcx>,
672 set_match_place: bool,
673 ) -> BlockAnd<()> {
674 let built_tree = self.lower_match_tree(
675 block,
676 irrefutable_pat.span,
677 &initializer,
678 irrefutable_pat.span,
679 vec![(irrefutable_pat, HasMatchGuard::No)],
680 false,
681 );
682 let [branch] = built_tree.branches.try_into().unwrap();
683
684 // For matches and function arguments, the place that is being matched
685 // can be set when creating the variables. But the place for
686 // let PATTERN = ... might not even exist until we do the assignment.
687 // so we set it here instead.
688 if set_match_place {
689 // `try_to_place` may fail if it is unable to resolve the given `PlaceBuilder` inside a
690 // closure. In this case, we don't want to include a scrutinee place.
691 // `scrutinee_place_builder` will fail for destructured assignments. This is because a
692 // closure only captures the precise places that it will read and as a result a closure
693 // may not capture the entire tuple/struct and rather have individual places that will
694 // be read in the final MIR.
695 // Example:
696 // ```
697 // let foo = (0, 1);
698 // let c = || {
699 // let (v1, v2) = foo;
700 // };
701 // ```
702 if let Some(place) = initializer.try_to_place(self) {
703 // Because or-alternatives bind the same variables, we only explore the first one.
704 let first_sub_branch = branch.sub_branches.first().unwrap();
705 for binding in &first_sub_branch.bindings {
706 let local = self.var_local_id(binding.var_id, OutsideGuard);
707 if let LocalInfo::User(BindingForm::Var(VarBindingForm {
708 opt_match_place: Some((ref mut match_place, _)),
709 ..
710 })) = **self.local_decls[local].local_info.as_mut().unwrap_crate_local()
711 {
712 *match_place = Some(place);
713 } else {
714 bug!("Let binding to non-user variable.")
715 };
716 }
717 }
718 }
719
720 self.bind_pattern(
721 self.source_info(irrefutable_pat.span),
722 branch,
723 &[],
724 irrefutable_pat.span,
725 None,
726 )
727 .unit()
728 }
729
730 /// Declares the bindings of the given patterns and returns the visibility
731 /// scope for the bindings in these patterns, if such a scope had to be
732 /// created. NOTE: Declaring the bindings should always be done in their
733 /// drop scope.
734 #[instrument(skip(self), level = "debug")]
735 pub(crate) fn declare_bindings(
736 &mut self,
737 mut visibility_scope: Option<SourceScope>,
738 scope_span: Span,
739 pattern: &Pat<'tcx>,
740 guard: Option<ExprId>,
741 opt_match_place: Option<(Option<&Place<'tcx>>, Span)>,
742 ) -> Option<SourceScope> {
743 self.visit_primary_bindings_special(
744 pattern,
745 &ProjectedUserTypesNode::None,
746 &mut |this, name, mode, var, span, ty, user_tys| {
747 let saved_scope = this.source_scope;
748 this.set_correct_source_scope_for_arg(var.0, saved_scope, span);
749 let vis_scope = *visibility_scope
750 .get_or_insert_with(|| this.new_source_scope(scope_span, LintLevel::Inherited));
751 let source_info = SourceInfo { span, scope: this.source_scope };
752 let user_tys = user_tys.build_user_type_projections();
753
754 this.declare_binding(
755 source_info,
756 vis_scope,
757 name,
758 mode,
759 var,
760 ty,
761 user_tys,
762 ArmHasGuard(guard.is_some()),
763 opt_match_place.map(|(x, y)| (x.cloned(), y)),
764 pattern.span,
765 );
766 this.source_scope = saved_scope;
767 },
768 );
769 if let Some(guard_expr) = guard {
770 self.declare_guard_bindings(guard_expr, scope_span, visibility_scope);
771 }
772 visibility_scope
773 }
774
775 /// Declare bindings in a guard. This has to be done when declaring bindings
776 /// for an arm to ensure that or patterns only have one version of each
777 /// variable.
778 pub(crate) fn declare_guard_bindings(
779 &mut self,
780 guard_expr: ExprId,
781 scope_span: Span,
782 visibility_scope: Option<SourceScope>,
783 ) {
784 match self.thir.exprs[guard_expr].kind {
785 ExprKind::Let { expr: _, pat: ref guard_pat } => {
786 // FIXME: pass a proper `opt_match_place`
787 self.declare_bindings(visibility_scope, scope_span, guard_pat, None, None);
788 }
789 ExprKind::Scope { value, .. } => {
790 self.declare_guard_bindings(value, scope_span, visibility_scope);
791 }
792 ExprKind::Use { source } => {
793 self.declare_guard_bindings(source, scope_span, visibility_scope);
794 }
795 ExprKind::LogicalOp { op: LogicalOp::And, lhs, rhs } => {
796 self.declare_guard_bindings(lhs, scope_span, visibility_scope);
797 self.declare_guard_bindings(rhs, scope_span, visibility_scope);
798 }
799 _ => {}
800 }
801 }
802
803 /// Emits a [`StatementKind::StorageLive`] for the given var, and also
804 /// schedules a drop if requested (and possible).
805 pub(crate) fn storage_live_binding(
806 &mut self,
807 block: BasicBlock,
808 var: LocalVarId,
809 span: Span,
810 is_shorthand: bool,
811 for_guard: ForGuard,
812 schedule_drop: ScheduleDrops,
813 ) -> Place<'tcx> {
814 let local_id = self.var_local_id(var, for_guard);
815 let source_info = self.source_info(span);
816 self.cfg.push(block, Statement::new(source_info, StatementKind::StorageLive(local_id)));
817 // Although there is almost always scope for given variable in corner cases
818 // like #92893 we might get variable with no scope.
819 if let Some(region_scope) = self.region_scope_tree.var_scope(var.0.local_id)
820 && matches!(schedule_drop, ScheduleDrops::Yes)
821 {
822 self.schedule_drop(span, region_scope, local_id, DropKind::Storage);
823 }
824 let local_info = self.local_decls[local_id].local_info.as_mut().unwrap_crate_local();
825 if let LocalInfo::User(BindingForm::Var(var_info)) = &mut **local_info {
826 var_info.introductions.push(VarBindingIntroduction { span, is_shorthand });
827 }
828 Place::from(local_id)
829 }
830
831 pub(crate) fn schedule_drop_for_binding(
832 &mut self,
833 var: LocalVarId,
834 span: Span,
835 for_guard: ForGuard,
836 ) {
837 let local_id = self.var_local_id(var, for_guard);
838 if let Some(region_scope) = self.region_scope_tree.var_scope(var.0.local_id) {
839 self.schedule_drop(span, region_scope, local_id, DropKind::Value);
840 }
841 }
842
843 /// Visits all of the "primary" bindings in a pattern, i.e. the leftmost
844 /// occurrence of each variable bound by the pattern.
845 /// See [`PatKind::Binding::is_primary`] for more context.
846 ///
847 /// This variant provides only the limited subset of binding data needed
848 /// by its callers, and should be a "pure" visit without side-effects.
849 pub(super) fn visit_primary_bindings(
850 &mut self,
851 pattern: &Pat<'tcx>,
852 f: &mut impl FnMut(&mut Self, LocalVarId, Span),
853 ) {
854 pattern.walk_always(|pat| {
855 if let PatKind::Binding { var, is_primary: true, .. } = pat.kind {
856 f(self, var, pat.span);
857 }
858 })
859 }
860
861 /// Visits all of the "primary" bindings in a pattern, while preparing
862 /// additional user-type-annotation data needed by `declare_bindings`.
863 ///
864 /// This also has the side-effect of pushing all user type annotations
865 /// onto `canonical_user_type_annotations`, so that they end up in MIR
866 /// even if they aren't associated with any bindings.
867 #[instrument(level = "debug", skip(self, f))]
868 fn visit_primary_bindings_special(
869 &mut self,
870 pattern: &Pat<'tcx>,
871 user_tys: &ProjectedUserTypesNode<'_>,
872 f: &mut impl FnMut(
873 &mut Self,
874 Symbol,
875 BindingMode,
876 LocalVarId,
877 Span,
878 Ty<'tcx>,
879 &ProjectedUserTypesNode<'_>,
880 ),
881 ) {
882 // Avoid having to write the full method name at each recursive call.
883 let visit_subpat = |this: &mut Self, subpat, user_tys: &_, f: &mut _| {
884 this.visit_primary_bindings_special(subpat, user_tys, f)
885 };
886
887 match pattern.kind {
888 PatKind::Binding { name, mode, var, ty, ref subpattern, is_primary, .. } => {
889 if is_primary {
890 f(self, name, mode, var, pattern.span, ty, user_tys);
891 }
892 if let Some(subpattern) = subpattern.as_ref() {
893 visit_subpat(self, subpattern, user_tys, f);
894 }
895 }
896
897 PatKind::Array { ref prefix, ref slice, ref suffix }
898 | PatKind::Slice { ref prefix, ref slice, ref suffix } => {
899 let from = u64::try_from(prefix.len()).unwrap();
900 let to = u64::try_from(suffix.len()).unwrap();
901 for subpattern in prefix.iter() {
902 visit_subpat(self, subpattern, &user_tys.index(), f);
903 }
904 if let Some(subpattern) = slice {
905 visit_subpat(self, subpattern, &user_tys.subslice(from, to), f);
906 }
907 for subpattern in suffix.iter() {
908 visit_subpat(self, subpattern, &user_tys.index(), f);
909 }
910 }
911
912 PatKind::Constant { .. }
913 | PatKind::Range { .. }
914 | PatKind::Missing
915 | PatKind::Wild
916 | PatKind::Never
917 | PatKind::Error(_) => {}
918
919 PatKind::Deref { ref subpattern } => {
920 visit_subpat(self, subpattern, &user_tys.deref(), f);
921 }
922
923 PatKind::DerefPattern { ref subpattern, .. } => {
924 visit_subpat(self, subpattern, &ProjectedUserTypesNode::None, f);
925 }
926
927 PatKind::AscribeUserType {
928 ref subpattern,
929 ascription: thir::Ascription { ref annotation, variance: _ },
930 } => {
931 // This corresponds to something like
932 //
933 // ```
934 // let A::<'a>(_): A<'static> = ...;
935 // ```
936 //
937 // Note that the variance doesn't apply here, as we are tracking the effect
938 // of `user_ty` on any bindings contained with subpattern.
939
940 // Caution: Pushing this user type here is load-bearing even for
941 // patterns containing no bindings, to ensure that the type ends
942 // up represented in MIR _somewhere_.
943 let base_user_ty = self.canonical_user_type_annotations.push(annotation.clone());
944 let subpattern_user_tys = user_tys.push_user_type(base_user_ty);
945 visit_subpat(self, subpattern, &subpattern_user_tys, f)
946 }
947
948 PatKind::ExpandedConstant { ref subpattern, .. } => {
949 visit_subpat(self, subpattern, user_tys, f)
950 }
951
952 PatKind::Leaf { ref subpatterns } => {
953 for subpattern in subpatterns {
954 let subpattern_user_tys = user_tys.leaf(subpattern.field);
955 debug!("visit_primary_bindings: subpattern_user_tys={subpattern_user_tys:?}");
956 visit_subpat(self, &subpattern.pattern, &subpattern_user_tys, f);
957 }
958 }
959
960 PatKind::Variant { adt_def, args: _, variant_index, ref subpatterns } => {
961 for subpattern in subpatterns {
962 let subpattern_user_tys =
963 user_tys.variant(adt_def, variant_index, subpattern.field);
964 visit_subpat(self, &subpattern.pattern, &subpattern_user_tys, f);
965 }
966 }
967 PatKind::Or { ref pats } => {
968 // In cases where we recover from errors the primary bindings
969 // may not all be in the leftmost subpattern. For example in
970 // `let (x | y) = ...`, the primary binding of `y` occurs in
971 // the right subpattern
972 for subpattern in pats.iter() {
973 visit_subpat(self, subpattern, user_tys, f);
974 }
975 }
976 }
977 }
978}
979
980/// Data extracted from a pattern that doesn't affect which branch is taken. Collected during
981/// pattern simplification and not mutated later.
982#[derive(Debug, Clone)]
983struct PatternExtraData<'tcx> {
984 /// [`Span`] of the original pattern.
985 span: Span,
986
987 /// Bindings that must be established.
988 bindings: Vec<SubpatternBindings<'tcx>>,
989
990 /// Types that must be asserted.
991 ascriptions: Vec<Ascription<'tcx>>,
992
993 /// Whether this corresponds to a never pattern.
994 is_never: bool,
995}
996
997impl<'tcx> PatternExtraData<'tcx> {
998 fn is_empty(&self) -> bool {
999 self.bindings.is_empty() && self.ascriptions.is_empty()
1000 }
1001}
1002
1003#[derive(Debug, Clone)]
1004enum SubpatternBindings<'tcx> {
1005 /// A single binding.
1006 One(Binding<'tcx>),
1007 /// Holds the place for an or-pattern's bindings. This ensures their drops are scheduled in the
1008 /// order the primary bindings appear. See rust-lang/rust#142163 for more information.
1009 FromOrPattern,
1010}
1011
1012/// A pattern in a form suitable for lowering the match tree, with all irrefutable
1013/// patterns simplified away.
1014///
1015/// Here, "flat" indicates that irrefutable nodes in the pattern tree have been
1016/// recursively replaced with their refutable subpatterns. They are not
1017/// necessarily flat in an absolute sense.
1018///
1019/// Will typically be incorporated into a [`Candidate`].
1020#[derive(Debug, Clone)]
1021struct FlatPat<'tcx> {
1022 /// To match the pattern, all of these must be satisfied...
1023 match_pairs: Vec<MatchPairTree<'tcx>>,
1024
1025 extra_data: PatternExtraData<'tcx>,
1026}
1027
1028impl<'tcx> FlatPat<'tcx> {
1029 /// Creates a `FlatPat` containing a simplified [`MatchPairTree`] list/forest
1030 /// for the given pattern.
1031 fn new(place: PlaceBuilder<'tcx>, pattern: &Pat<'tcx>, cx: &mut Builder<'_, 'tcx>) -> Self {
1032 // Recursively build a tree of match pairs for the given pattern.
1033 let mut match_pairs = vec![];
1034 let mut extra_data = PatternExtraData {
1035 span: pattern.span,
1036 bindings: Vec::new(),
1037 ascriptions: Vec::new(),
1038 is_never: pattern.is_never_pattern(),
1039 };
1040 MatchPairTree::for_pattern(place, pattern, cx, &mut match_pairs, &mut extra_data);
1041
1042 Self { match_pairs, extra_data }
1043 }
1044}
1045
1046/// Candidates are a generalization of (a) top-level match arms, and
1047/// (b) sub-branches of or-patterns, allowing the match-lowering process to handle
1048/// them both in a mostly-uniform way. For example, the list of candidates passed
1049/// to [`Builder::match_candidates`] will often contain a mixture of top-level
1050/// candidates and or-pattern subcandidates.
1051///
1052/// At the start of match lowering, there is one candidate for each match arm.
1053/// During match lowering, arms with or-patterns will be expanded into a tree
1054/// of candidates, where each "leaf" candidate represents one of the ways for
1055/// the arm pattern to successfully match.
1056#[derive(Debug)]
1057struct Candidate<'tcx> {
1058 /// For the candidate to match, all of these must be satisfied...
1059 ///
1060 /// ---
1061 /// Initially contains a list of match pairs created by [`FlatPat`], but is
1062 /// subsequently mutated (in a queue-like way) while lowering the match tree.
1063 /// When this list becomes empty, the candidate is fully matched and becomes
1064 /// a leaf (see [`Builder::select_matched_candidate`]).
1065 ///
1066 /// Key mutations include:
1067 ///
1068 /// - When a match pair is fully satisfied by a test, it is removed from the
1069 /// list, and its subpairs are added instead (see [`Builder::choose_bucket_for_candidate`]).
1070 /// - During or-pattern expansion, any leading or-pattern is removed, and is
1071 /// converted into subcandidates (see [`Builder::expand_and_match_or_candidates`]).
1072 /// - After a candidate's subcandidates have been lowered, a copy of any remaining
1073 /// or-patterns is added to each leaf subcandidate
1074 /// (see [`Builder::test_remaining_match_pairs_after_or`]).
1075 ///
1076 /// Invariants:
1077 /// - All or-patterns ([`TestableCase::Or`]) have been sorted to the end.
1078 match_pairs: Vec<MatchPairTree<'tcx>>,
1079
1080 /// ...and if this is non-empty, one of these subcandidates also has to match...
1081 ///
1082 /// ---
1083 /// Initially a candidate has no subcandidates; they are added (and then immediately
1084 /// lowered) during or-pattern expansion. Their main function is to serve as _output_
1085 /// of match tree lowering, allowing later steps to see the leaf candidates that
1086 /// represent a match of the entire match arm.
1087 ///
1088 /// A candidate no subcandidates is either incomplete (if it has match pairs left),
1089 /// or is a leaf in the match tree. A candidate with one or more subcandidates is
1090 /// an internal node in the match tree.
1091 ///
1092 /// Invariant: at the end of match tree lowering, this must not contain an
1093 /// `is_never` candidate, because that would break binding consistency.
1094 /// - See [`Builder::remove_never_subcandidates`].
1095 subcandidates: Vec<Candidate<'tcx>>,
1096
1097 /// ...and if there is a guard it must be evaluated; if it's `false` then branch to `otherwise_block`.
1098 ///
1099 /// ---
1100 /// For subcandidates, this is copied from the parent candidate, so it indicates
1101 /// whether the enclosing match arm has a guard.
1102 has_guard: bool,
1103
1104 /// Holds extra pattern data that was prepared by [`FlatPat`], including bindings and
1105 /// ascriptions that must be established if this candidate succeeds.
1106 extra_data: PatternExtraData<'tcx>,
1107
1108 /// When setting `self.subcandidates`, we store here the span of the or-pattern they came from.
1109 ///
1110 /// ---
1111 /// Invariant: it is `None` iff `subcandidates.is_empty()`.
1112 /// - FIXME: We sometimes don't unset this when clearing `subcandidates`.
1113 or_span: Option<Span>,
1114
1115 /// The block before the `bindings` have been established.
1116 ///
1117 /// After the match tree has been lowered, [`Builder::lower_match_arms`]
1118 /// will use this as the start point for lowering bindings and guards, and
1119 /// then jump to a shared block containing the arm body.
1120 pre_binding_block: Option<BasicBlock>,
1121
1122 /// The block to branch to if the guard or a nested candidate fails to match.
1123 otherwise_block: Option<BasicBlock>,
1124
1125 /// The earliest block that has only candidates >= this one as descendents. Used for false
1126 /// edges, see the doc for [`Builder::match_expr`].
1127 false_edge_start_block: Option<BasicBlock>,
1128}
1129
1130impl<'tcx> Candidate<'tcx> {
1131 fn new(
1132 place: PlaceBuilder<'tcx>,
1133 pattern: &Pat<'tcx>,
1134 has_guard: HasMatchGuard,
1135 cx: &mut Builder<'_, 'tcx>,
1136 ) -> Self {
1137 // Use `FlatPat` to build simplified match pairs, then immediately
1138 // incorporate them into a new candidate.
1139 Self::from_flat_pat(
1140 FlatPat::new(place, pattern, cx),
1141 matches!(has_guard, HasMatchGuard::Yes),
1142 )
1143 }
1144
1145 /// Incorporates an already-simplified [`FlatPat`] into a new candidate.
1146 fn from_flat_pat(flat_pat: FlatPat<'tcx>, has_guard: bool) -> Self {
1147 let mut this = Candidate {
1148 match_pairs: flat_pat.match_pairs,
1149 extra_data: flat_pat.extra_data,
1150 has_guard,
1151 subcandidates: Vec::new(),
1152 or_span: None,
1153 otherwise_block: None,
1154 pre_binding_block: None,
1155 false_edge_start_block: None,
1156 };
1157 this.sort_match_pairs();
1158 this
1159 }
1160
1161 /// Restores the invariant that or-patterns must be sorted to the end.
1162 fn sort_match_pairs(&mut self) {
1163 self.match_pairs.sort_by_key(|pair| matches!(pair.testable_case, TestableCase::Or { .. }));
1164 }
1165
1166 /// Returns whether the first match pair of this candidate is an or-pattern.
1167 fn starts_with_or_pattern(&self) -> bool {
1168 matches!(
1169 &*self.match_pairs,
1170 [MatchPairTree { testable_case: TestableCase::Or { .. }, .. }, ..]
1171 )
1172 }
1173
1174 /// Visit the leaf candidates (those with no subcandidates) contained in
1175 /// this candidate.
1176 fn visit_leaves<'a>(&'a mut self, mut visit_leaf: impl FnMut(&'a mut Self)) {
1177 traverse_candidate(
1178 self,
1179 &mut (),
1180 &mut move |c, _| visit_leaf(c),
1181 move |c, _| c.subcandidates.iter_mut(),
1182 |_| {},
1183 );
1184 }
1185
1186 /// Visit the leaf candidates in reverse order.
1187 fn visit_leaves_rev<'a>(&'a mut self, mut visit_leaf: impl FnMut(&'a mut Self)) {
1188 traverse_candidate(
1189 self,
1190 &mut (),
1191 &mut move |c, _| visit_leaf(c),
1192 move |c, _| c.subcandidates.iter_mut().rev(),
1193 |_| {},
1194 );
1195 }
1196}
1197
1198/// A depth-first traversal of the `Candidate` and all of its recursive
1199/// subcandidates.
1200///
1201/// This signature is very generic, to support traversing candidate trees by
1202/// reference or by value, and to allow a mutable "context" to be shared by the
1203/// traversal callbacks. Most traversals can use the simpler
1204/// [`Candidate::visit_leaves`] wrapper instead.
1205fn traverse_candidate<'tcx, C, T, I>(
1206 candidate: C,
1207 context: &mut T,
1208 // Called when visiting a "leaf" candidate (with no subcandidates).
1209 visit_leaf: &mut impl FnMut(C, &mut T),
1210 // Called when visiting a "node" candidate (with one or more subcandidates).
1211 // Returns an iterator over the candidate's children (by value or reference).
1212 // Can perform setup before visiting the node's children.
1213 get_children: impl Copy + Fn(C, &mut T) -> I,
1214 // Called after visiting a "node" candidate's children.
1215 complete_children: impl Copy + Fn(&mut T),
1216) where
1217 C: Borrow<Candidate<'tcx>>, // Typically `Candidate` or `&mut Candidate`
1218 I: Iterator<Item = C>,
1219{
1220 if candidate.borrow().subcandidates.is_empty() {
1221 visit_leaf(candidate, context)
1222 } else {
1223 for child in get_children(candidate, context) {
1224 traverse_candidate(child, context, visit_leaf, get_children, complete_children);
1225 }
1226 complete_children(context)
1227 }
1228}
1229
1230#[derive(Clone, Copy, Debug)]
1231struct Binding<'tcx> {
1232 span: Span,
1233 source: Place<'tcx>,
1234 var_id: LocalVarId,
1235 binding_mode: BindingMode,
1236 is_shorthand: bool,
1237}
1238
1239/// Indicates that the type of `source` must be a subtype of the
1240/// user-given type `user_ty`; this is basically a no-op but can
1241/// influence region inference.
1242#[derive(Clone, Debug)]
1243struct Ascription<'tcx> {
1244 source: Place<'tcx>,
1245 annotation: CanonicalUserTypeAnnotation<'tcx>,
1246 variance: ty::Variance,
1247}
1248
1249/// Partial summary of a [`thir::Pat`], indicating what sort of test should be
1250/// performed to match/reject the pattern, and what the desired test outcome is.
1251/// This avoids having to perform a full match on [`thir::PatKind`] in some places,
1252/// and helps [`TestKind::Switch`] and [`TestKind::SwitchInt`] know what target
1253/// values to use.
1254///
1255/// Created by [`MatchPairTree::for_pattern`], and then inspected primarily by:
1256/// - [`Builder::pick_test_for_match_pair`] (to choose a test)
1257/// - [`Builder::choose_bucket_for_candidate`] (to see how the test interacts with a match pair)
1258///
1259/// Note that or-patterns are not tested directly like the other variants.
1260/// Instead they participate in or-pattern expansion, where they are transformed into
1261/// subcandidates. See [`Builder::expand_and_match_or_candidates`].
1262#[derive(Debug, Clone)]
1263enum TestableCase<'tcx> {
1264 Variant { adt_def: ty::AdtDef<'tcx>, variant_index: VariantIdx },
1265 Constant { value: ty::Value<'tcx>, kind: PatConstKind },
1266 Range(Arc<PatRange<'tcx>>),
1267 Slice { len: u64, op: SliceLenOp },
1268 Deref { temp: Place<'tcx>, mutability: Mutability },
1269 Never,
1270 Or { pats: Box<[FlatPat<'tcx>]> },
1271}
1272
1273impl<'tcx> TestableCase<'tcx> {
1274 fn as_range(&self) -> Option<&PatRange<'tcx>> {
1275 if let Self::Range(v) = self { Some(v.as_ref()) } else { None }
1276 }
1277}
1278
1279/// Sub-classification of [`TestableCase::Constant`], which helps to avoid
1280/// some redundant ad-hoc checks when preparing and lowering tests.
1281#[derive(Debug, Clone)]
1282enum PatConstKind {
1283 /// The primitive `bool` type, which is like an integer but simpler,
1284 /// having only two values.
1285 Bool,
1286 /// Primitive unsigned/signed integer types, plus `char`.
1287 /// These types interact nicely with `SwitchInt`.
1288 IntOrChar,
1289 /// Floating-point primitives, e.g. `f32`, `f64`.
1290 /// These types don't support `SwitchInt` and require an equality test,
1291 /// but can also interact with range pattern tests.
1292 Float,
1293 /// Any other constant-pattern is usually tested via some kind of equality
1294 /// check. Types that might be encountered here include:
1295 /// - `&str`
1296 /// - raw pointers derived from integer values
1297 /// - pattern types, e.g. `pattern_type!(u32 is 1..)`
1298 Other,
1299}
1300
1301/// Node in a tree of "match pairs", where each pair consists of a place to be
1302/// tested, and a test to perform on that place.
1303///
1304/// Each node also has a list of subpairs (possibly empty) that must also match,
1305/// and a reference to the THIR pattern it represents.
1306#[derive(Debug, Clone)]
1307pub(crate) struct MatchPairTree<'tcx> {
1308 /// This place...
1309 ///
1310 /// ---
1311 /// This can be `None` if it referred to a non-captured place in a closure.
1312 ///
1313 /// Invariant: Can only be `None` when `testable_case` is `Or`.
1314 /// Therefore this must be `Some(_)` after or-pattern expansion.
1315 place: Option<Place<'tcx>>,
1316
1317 /// ... must pass this test...
1318 testable_case: TestableCase<'tcx>,
1319
1320 /// ... and these subpairs must match.
1321 ///
1322 /// ---
1323 /// Subpairs typically represent tests that can only be performed after their
1324 /// parent has succeeded. For example, the pattern `Some(3)` might have an
1325 /// outer match pair that tests for the variant `Some`, and then a subpair
1326 /// that tests its field for the value `3`.
1327 subpairs: Vec<Self>,
1328
1329 /// Type field of the pattern this node was created from.
1330 pattern_ty: Ty<'tcx>,
1331 /// Span field of the pattern this node was created from.
1332 pattern_span: Span,
1333}
1334
1335/// A runtime test to perform to determine which candidates match a scrutinee place.
1336///
1337/// The kind of test to perform is indicated by [`TestKind`].
1338#[derive(Debug)]
1339pub(crate) struct Test<'tcx> {
1340 span: Span,
1341 kind: TestKind<'tcx>,
1342}
1343
1344/// The kind of runtime test to perform to determine which candidates match a
1345/// scrutinee place. This is the main component of [`Test`].
1346///
1347/// Some of these variants don't contain the constant value(s) being tested
1348/// against, because those values are stored in the corresponding bucketed
1349/// candidates instead.
1350#[derive(Clone, Debug, PartialEq)]
1351enum TestKind<'tcx> {
1352 /// Test what enum variant a value is.
1353 ///
1354 /// The subset of expected variants is not stored here; instead they are
1355 /// extracted from the [`TestableCase`]s of the candidates participating in the
1356 /// test.
1357 Switch {
1358 /// The enum type being tested.
1359 adt_def: ty::AdtDef<'tcx>,
1360 },
1361
1362 /// Test what value an integer or `char` has.
1363 ///
1364 /// The test's target values are not stored here; instead they are extracted
1365 /// from the [`TestableCase`]s of the candidates participating in the test.
1366 SwitchInt,
1367
1368 /// Test whether a `bool` is `true` or `false`.
1369 If,
1370
1371 /// Test for equality with value, possibly after an unsizing coercion to
1372 /// `cast_ty`,
1373 Eq {
1374 value: ty::Value<'tcx>,
1375 // Integer types are handled by `SwitchInt`, and constants with ADT
1376 // types and `&[T]` types are converted back into patterns, so this can
1377 // only be `&str` or floats.
1378 cast_ty: Ty<'tcx>,
1379 },
1380
1381 /// Test whether the value falls within an inclusive or exclusive range.
1382 Range(Arc<PatRange<'tcx>>),
1383
1384 /// Test that the length of the slice is `== len` or `>= len`.
1385 SliceLen { len: u64, op: SliceLenOp },
1386
1387 /// Call `Deref::deref[_mut]` on the value.
1388 Deref {
1389 /// Temporary to store the result of `deref()`/`deref_mut()`.
1390 temp: Place<'tcx>,
1391 mutability: Mutability,
1392 },
1393
1394 /// Assert unreachability of never patterns.
1395 Never,
1396}
1397
1398/// Indicates the kind of slice-length constraint imposed by a slice pattern,
1399/// or its corresponding test.
1400#[derive(Debug, Clone, Copy, PartialEq)]
1401enum SliceLenOp {
1402 /// The slice pattern can only match a slice with exactly `len` elements.
1403 Equal,
1404 /// The slice pattern can match a slice with `len` or more elements
1405 /// (i.e. it contains a `..` subpattern in the middle).
1406 GreaterOrEqual,
1407}
1408
1409/// The branch to be taken after a test.
1410#[derive(Debug, Clone, Copy, PartialEq, Eq, Hash)]
1411enum TestBranch<'tcx> {
1412 /// Success branch, used for tests with two possible outcomes.
1413 Success,
1414 /// Branch corresponding to this constant. Must be a scalar.
1415 Constant(ty::Value<'tcx>),
1416 /// Branch corresponding to this variant.
1417 Variant(VariantIdx),
1418 /// Failure branch for tests with two possible outcomes, and "otherwise" branch for other tests.
1419 Failure,
1420}
1421
1422impl<'tcx> TestBranch<'tcx> {
1423 fn as_constant(&self) -> Option<ty::Value<'tcx>> {
1424 if let Self::Constant(v) = self { Some(*v) } else { None }
1425 }
1426}
1427
1428/// `ArmHasGuard` is a wrapper around a boolean flag. It indicates whether
1429/// a match arm has a guard expression attached to it.
1430#[derive(Copy, Clone, Debug)]
1431pub(crate) struct ArmHasGuard(pub(crate) bool);
1432
1433///////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
1434// Main matching algorithm
1435
1436/// A sub-branch in the output of match lowering. Match lowering has generated MIR code that will
1437/// branch to `success_block` when the matched value matches the corresponding pattern. If there is
1438/// a guard, its failure must continue to `otherwise_block`, which will resume testing patterns.
1439#[derive(Debug, Clone)]
1440struct MatchTreeSubBranch<'tcx> {
1441 span: Span,
1442 /// The block that is branched to if the corresponding subpattern matches.
1443 success_block: BasicBlock,
1444 /// The block to branch to if this arm had a guard and the guard fails.
1445 otherwise_block: BasicBlock,
1446 /// The bindings to set up in this sub-branch.
1447 bindings: Vec<Binding<'tcx>>,
1448 /// The ascriptions to set up in this sub-branch.
1449 ascriptions: Vec<Ascription<'tcx>>,
1450 /// Whether the sub-branch corresponds to a never pattern.
1451 is_never: bool,
1452}
1453
1454/// A branch in the output of match lowering.
1455#[derive(Debug, Clone)]
1456struct MatchTreeBranch<'tcx> {
1457 sub_branches: Vec<MatchTreeSubBranch<'tcx>>,
1458}
1459
1460/// The result of generating MIR for a pattern-matching expression. Each input branch/arm/pattern
1461/// gives rise to an output `MatchTreeBranch`. If one of the patterns matches, we branch to the
1462/// corresponding `success_block`. If none of the patterns matches, we branch to `otherwise_block`.
1463///
1464/// Each branch is made of one of more sub-branches, corresponding to or-patterns. E.g.
1465/// ```ignore(illustrative)
1466/// match foo {
1467/// (x, false) | (false, x) => {}
1468/// (true, true) => {}
1469/// }
1470/// ```
1471/// Here the first arm gives the first `MatchTreeBranch`, which has two sub-branches, one for each
1472/// alternative of the or-pattern. They are kept separate because each needs to bind `x` to a
1473/// different place.
1474#[derive(Debug, Clone)]
1475pub(crate) struct BuiltMatchTree<'tcx> {
1476 branches: Vec<MatchTreeBranch<'tcx>>,
1477 otherwise_block: BasicBlock,
1478 /// If any of the branches had a guard, we collect here the places and locals to fakely borrow
1479 /// to ensure match guards can't modify the values as we match them. For more details, see
1480 /// [`util::collect_fake_borrows`].
1481 fake_borrow_temps: Vec<(Place<'tcx>, Local, FakeBorrowKind)>,
1482}
1483
1484impl<'tcx> MatchTreeSubBranch<'tcx> {
1485 fn from_sub_candidate(
1486 candidate: Candidate<'tcx>,
1487 parent_data: &Vec<PatternExtraData<'tcx>>,
1488 ) -> Self {
1489 debug_assert!(candidate.match_pairs.is_empty());
1490 MatchTreeSubBranch {
1491 span: candidate.extra_data.span,
1492 success_block: candidate.pre_binding_block.unwrap(),
1493 otherwise_block: candidate.otherwise_block.unwrap(),
1494 bindings: sub_branch_bindings(parent_data, &candidate.extra_data.bindings),
1495 ascriptions: parent_data
1496 .iter()
1497 .flat_map(|d| &d.ascriptions)
1498 .cloned()
1499 .chain(candidate.extra_data.ascriptions)
1500 .collect(),
1501 is_never: candidate.extra_data.is_never,
1502 }
1503 }
1504}
1505
1506impl<'tcx> MatchTreeBranch<'tcx> {
1507 fn from_candidate(candidate: Candidate<'tcx>) -> Self {
1508 let mut sub_branches = Vec::new();
1509 traverse_candidate(
1510 candidate,
1511 &mut Vec::new(),
1512 &mut |candidate: Candidate<'_>, parent_data: &mut Vec<PatternExtraData<'_>>| {
1513 sub_branches.push(MatchTreeSubBranch::from_sub_candidate(candidate, parent_data));
1514 },
1515 |inner_candidate, parent_data| {
1516 parent_data.push(inner_candidate.extra_data);
1517 inner_candidate.subcandidates.into_iter()
1518 },
1519 |parent_data| {
1520 parent_data.pop();
1521 },
1522 );
1523 MatchTreeBranch { sub_branches }
1524 }
1525}
1526
1527/// Collects the bindings for a [`MatchTreeSubBranch`], preserving the order they appear in the
1528/// pattern, as though the or-alternatives chosen in this sub-branch were inlined.
1529fn sub_branch_bindings<'tcx>(
1530 parents: &[PatternExtraData<'tcx>],
1531 leaf_bindings: &[SubpatternBindings<'tcx>],
1532) -> Vec<Binding<'tcx>> {
1533 // In the common case, all bindings will be in leaves. Allocate to fit the leaf's bindings.
1534 let mut all_bindings = Vec::with_capacity(leaf_bindings.len());
1535 let mut remainder = parents
1536 .iter()
1537 .map(|parent| parent.bindings.as_slice())
1538 .chain([leaf_bindings])
1539 // Skip over unsimplified or-patterns without bindings.
1540 .filter(|bindings| !bindings.is_empty());
1541 if let Some(candidate_bindings) = remainder.next() {
1542 push_sub_branch_bindings(&mut all_bindings, candidate_bindings, &mut remainder);
1543 }
1544 // Make sure we've included all bindings. For ill-formed patterns like `(x, _ | y)`, we may not
1545 // have collected all bindings yet, since we only check the first alternative when determining
1546 // whether to inline subcandidates' bindings.
1547 // FIXME(@dianne): prevent ill-formed patterns from getting here
1548 while let Some(candidate_bindings) = remainder.next() {
1549 ty::tls::with(|tcx| {
1550 tcx.dcx().delayed_bug("mismatched or-pattern bindings but no error emitted")
1551 });
1552 // To recover, we collect the rest in an arbitrary order.
1553 push_sub_branch_bindings(&mut all_bindings, candidate_bindings, &mut remainder);
1554 }
1555 all_bindings
1556}
1557
1558/// Helper for [`sub_branch_bindings`]. Collects bindings from `candidate_bindings` into
1559/// `flattened`. Bindings in or-patterns are collected recursively from `remainder`.
1560fn push_sub_branch_bindings<'c, 'tcx: 'c>(
1561 flattened: &mut Vec<Binding<'tcx>>,
1562 candidate_bindings: &'c [SubpatternBindings<'tcx>],
1563 remainder: &mut impl Iterator<Item = &'c [SubpatternBindings<'tcx>]>,
1564) {
1565 for subpat_bindings in candidate_bindings {
1566 match subpat_bindings {
1567 SubpatternBindings::One(binding) => flattened.push(*binding),
1568 SubpatternBindings::FromOrPattern => {
1569 // Inline bindings from an or-pattern. By construction, this always
1570 // corresponds to a subcandidate and its closest descendants (i.e. those
1571 // from nested or-patterns, but not adjacent or-patterns). To handle
1572 // adjacent or-patterns, e.g. `(x | x, y | y)`, we update the `remainder` to
1573 // point to the first descendant candidate from outside this or-pattern.
1574 if let Some(subcandidate_bindings) = remainder.next() {
1575 push_sub_branch_bindings(flattened, subcandidate_bindings, remainder);
1576 } else {
1577 // For ill-formed patterns like `x | _`, we may not have any subcandidates left
1578 // to inline bindings from.
1579 // FIXME(@dianne): prevent ill-formed patterns from getting here
1580 ty::tls::with(|tcx| {
1581 tcx.dcx().delayed_bug("mismatched or-pattern bindings but no error emitted")
1582 });
1583 };
1584 }
1585 }
1586 }
1587}
1588
1589#[derive(Debug, Clone, Copy, PartialEq, Eq)]
1590pub(crate) enum HasMatchGuard {
1591 Yes,
1592 No,
1593}
1594
1595impl<'a, 'tcx> Builder<'a, 'tcx> {
1596 /// The entrypoint of the matching algorithm. Create the decision tree for the match expression,
1597 /// starting from `block`.
1598 ///
1599 /// `patterns` is a list of patterns, one for each arm. The associated boolean indicates whether
1600 /// the arm has a guard.
1601 ///
1602 /// `refutable` indicates whether the candidate list is refutable (for `if let` and `let else`)
1603 /// or not (for `let` and `match`). In the refutable case we return the block to which we branch
1604 /// on failure.
1605 pub(crate) fn lower_match_tree(
1606 &mut self,
1607 block: BasicBlock,
1608 scrutinee_span: Span,
1609 scrutinee_place_builder: &PlaceBuilder<'tcx>,
1610 match_start_span: Span,
1611 patterns: Vec<(&Pat<'tcx>, HasMatchGuard)>,
1612 refutable: bool,
1613 ) -> BuiltMatchTree<'tcx> {
1614 // Assemble the initial list of candidates. These top-level candidates are 1:1 with the
1615 // input patterns, but other parts of match lowering also introduce subcandidates (for
1616 // sub-or-patterns). So inside the algorithm, the candidates list may not correspond to
1617 // match arms directly.
1618 let mut candidates: Vec<Candidate<'_>> = patterns
1619 .into_iter()
1620 .map(|(pat, has_guard)| {
1621 Candidate::new(scrutinee_place_builder.clone(), pat, has_guard, self)
1622 })
1623 .collect();
1624
1625 let fake_borrow_temps = util::collect_fake_borrows(
1626 self,
1627 &candidates,
1628 scrutinee_span,
1629 scrutinee_place_builder.base(),
1630 );
1631
1632 // This will generate code to test scrutinee_place and branch to the appropriate arm block.
1633 // If none of the arms match, we branch to `otherwise_block`. When lowering a `match`
1634 // expression, exhaustiveness checking ensures that this block is unreachable.
1635 let mut candidate_refs = candidates.iter_mut().collect::<Vec<_>>();
1636 let otherwise_block =
1637 self.match_candidates(match_start_span, scrutinee_span, block, &mut candidate_refs);
1638
1639 // Set up false edges so that the borrow-checker cannot make use of the specific CFG we
1640 // generated. We falsely branch from each candidate to the one below it to make it as if we
1641 // were testing match branches one by one in order. In the refutable case we also want a
1642 // false edge to the final failure block.
1643 let mut next_candidate_start_block = if refutable { Some(otherwise_block) } else { None };
1644 for candidate in candidates.iter_mut().rev() {
1645 let has_guard = candidate.has_guard;
1646 candidate.visit_leaves_rev(|leaf_candidate| {
1647 if let Some(next_candidate_start_block) = next_candidate_start_block {
1648 let source_info = self.source_info(leaf_candidate.extra_data.span);
1649 // Falsely branch to `next_candidate_start_block` before reaching pre_binding.
1650 let old_pre_binding = leaf_candidate.pre_binding_block.unwrap();
1651 let new_pre_binding = self.cfg.start_new_block();
1652 self.false_edges(
1653 old_pre_binding,
1654 new_pre_binding,
1655 next_candidate_start_block,
1656 source_info,
1657 );
1658 leaf_candidate.pre_binding_block = Some(new_pre_binding);
1659 if has_guard {
1660 // Falsely branch to `next_candidate_start_block` also if the guard fails.
1661 let new_otherwise = self.cfg.start_new_block();
1662 let old_otherwise = leaf_candidate.otherwise_block.unwrap();
1663 self.false_edges(
1664 new_otherwise,
1665 old_otherwise,
1666 next_candidate_start_block,
1667 source_info,
1668 );
1669 leaf_candidate.otherwise_block = Some(new_otherwise);
1670 }
1671 }
1672 assert!(leaf_candidate.false_edge_start_block.is_some());
1673 next_candidate_start_block = leaf_candidate.false_edge_start_block;
1674 });
1675 }
1676
1677 if !refutable {
1678 // Match checking ensures `otherwise_block` is actually unreachable in irrefutable
1679 // cases.
1680 let source_info = self.source_info(scrutinee_span);
1681
1682 // Matching on a scrutinee place of an uninhabited type doesn't generate any memory
1683 // reads by itself, and so if the place is uninitialized we wouldn't know. In order to
1684 // disallow the following:
1685 // ```rust
1686 // let x: !;
1687 // match x {}
1688 // ```
1689 // we add a dummy read on the place.
1690 //
1691 // NOTE: If we require never patterns for empty matches, those will check that the place
1692 // is initialized, and so this read would no longer be needed.
1693 let cause_matched_place = FakeReadCause::ForMatchedPlace(None);
1694
1695 if let Some(scrutinee_place) = scrutinee_place_builder.try_to_place(self) {
1696 self.cfg.push_fake_read(
1697 otherwise_block,
1698 source_info,
1699 cause_matched_place,
1700 scrutinee_place,
1701 );
1702 }
1703
1704 self.cfg.terminate(otherwise_block, source_info, TerminatorKind::Unreachable);
1705 }
1706
1707 BuiltMatchTree {
1708 branches: candidates.into_iter().map(MatchTreeBranch::from_candidate).collect(),
1709 otherwise_block,
1710 fake_borrow_temps,
1711 }
1712 }
1713
1714 /// The main match algorithm. It begins with a set of candidates `candidates` and has the job of
1715 /// generating code that branches to an appropriate block if the scrutinee matches one of these
1716 /// candidates. The
1717 /// candidates are ordered such that the first item in the list
1718 /// has the highest priority. When a candidate is found to match
1719 /// the value, we will set and generate a branch to the appropriate
1720 /// pre-binding block.
1721 ///
1722 /// If none of the candidates apply, we continue to the returned `otherwise_block`.
1723 ///
1724 /// Note that while `match` expressions in the Rust language are exhaustive,
1725 /// candidate lists passed to this method are often _non-exhaustive_.
1726 /// For example, the match lowering process will frequently divide up the
1727 /// list of candidates, and recursively call this method with a non-exhaustive
1728 /// subset of candidates.
1729 /// See [`Builder::test_candidates`] for more details on this
1730 /// "backtracking automata" approach.
1731 ///
1732 /// For an example of how we use `otherwise_block`, consider:
1733 /// ```
1734 /// # fn foo((x, y): (bool, bool)) -> u32 {
1735 /// match (x, y) {
1736 /// (true, true) => 1,
1737 /// (_, false) => 2,
1738 /// (false, true) => 3,
1739 /// }
1740 /// # }
1741 /// ```
1742 /// For this match, we generate something like:
1743 /// ```
1744 /// # fn foo((x, y): (bool, bool)) -> u32 {
1745 /// if x {
1746 /// if y {
1747 /// return 1
1748 /// } else {
1749 /// // continue
1750 /// }
1751 /// } else {
1752 /// // continue
1753 /// }
1754 /// if y {
1755 /// if x {
1756 /// // This is actually unreachable because the `(true, true)` case was handled above,
1757 /// // but we don't know that from within the lowering algorithm.
1758 /// // continue
1759 /// } else {
1760 /// return 3
1761 /// }
1762 /// } else {
1763 /// return 2
1764 /// }
1765 /// // this is the final `otherwise_block`, which is unreachable because the match was exhaustive.
1766 /// unreachable!()
1767 /// # }
1768 /// ```
1769 ///
1770 /// Every `continue` is an instance of branching to some `otherwise_block` somewhere deep within
1771 /// the algorithm. For more details on why we lower like this, see [`Builder::test_candidates`].
1772 ///
1773 /// Note how we test `x` twice. This is the tradeoff of backtracking automata: we prefer smaller
1774 /// code size so we accept non-optimal code paths.
1775 #[instrument(skip(self), level = "debug")]
1776 fn match_candidates(
1777 &mut self,
1778 span: Span,
1779 scrutinee_span: Span,
1780 start_block: BasicBlock,
1781 candidates: &mut [&mut Candidate<'tcx>],
1782 ) -> BasicBlock {
1783 ensure_sufficient_stack(|| {
1784 self.match_candidates_inner(span, scrutinee_span, start_block, candidates)
1785 })
1786 }
1787
1788 /// Construct the decision tree for `candidates`. Don't call this, call `match_candidates`
1789 /// instead to reserve sufficient stack space.
1790 fn match_candidates_inner(
1791 &mut self,
1792 span: Span,
1793 scrutinee_span: Span,
1794 mut start_block: BasicBlock,
1795 candidates: &mut [&mut Candidate<'tcx>],
1796 ) -> BasicBlock {
1797 if let [first, ..] = candidates {
1798 if first.false_edge_start_block.is_none() {
1799 first.false_edge_start_block = Some(start_block);
1800 }
1801 }
1802
1803 // Process a prefix of the candidates.
1804 let rest = match candidates {
1805 [] => {
1806 // If there are no candidates that still need testing, we're done.
1807 return start_block;
1808 }
1809 [first, remaining @ ..] if first.match_pairs.is_empty() => {
1810 // The first candidate has satisfied all its match pairs.
1811 // We record the blocks that will be needed by match arm lowering,
1812 // and then continue with the remaining candidates.
1813 let remainder_start = self.select_matched_candidate(first, start_block);
1814 remainder_start.and(remaining)
1815 }
1816 candidates if candidates.iter().any(|candidate| candidate.starts_with_or_pattern()) => {
1817 // If any candidate starts with an or-pattern, we want to expand or-patterns
1818 // before we do any more tests.
1819 //
1820 // The only candidate we strictly _need_ to expand here is the first one.
1821 // But by expanding other candidates as early as possible, we unlock more
1822 // opportunities to include them in test outcomes, making the match tree
1823 // smaller and simpler.
1824 self.expand_and_match_or_candidates(span, scrutinee_span, start_block, candidates)
1825 }
1826 candidates => {
1827 // The first candidate has some unsatisfied match pairs; we proceed to do more tests.
1828 self.test_candidates(span, scrutinee_span, candidates, start_block)
1829 }
1830 };
1831
1832 // Process any candidates that remain.
1833 let remaining_candidates = unpack!(start_block = rest);
1834 self.match_candidates(span, scrutinee_span, start_block, remaining_candidates)
1835 }
1836
1837 /// Link up matched candidates.
1838 ///
1839 /// For example, if we have something like this:
1840 ///
1841 /// ```ignore (illustrative)
1842 /// ...
1843 /// Some(x) if cond1 => ...
1844 /// Some(x) => ...
1845 /// Some(x) if cond2 => ...
1846 /// ...
1847 /// ```
1848 ///
1849 /// We generate real edges from:
1850 ///
1851 /// * `start_block` to the [pre-binding block] of the first pattern,
1852 /// * the [otherwise block] of the first pattern to the second pattern,
1853 /// * the [otherwise block] of the third pattern to a block with an
1854 /// [`Unreachable` terminator](TerminatorKind::Unreachable).
1855 ///
1856 /// In addition, we later add fake edges from the otherwise blocks to the
1857 /// pre-binding block of the next candidate in the original set of
1858 /// candidates.
1859 ///
1860 /// [pre-binding block]: Candidate::pre_binding_block
1861 /// [otherwise block]: Candidate::otherwise_block
1862 fn select_matched_candidate(
1863 &mut self,
1864 candidate: &mut Candidate<'tcx>,
1865 start_block: BasicBlock,
1866 ) -> BasicBlock {
1867 assert!(candidate.otherwise_block.is_none());
1868 assert!(candidate.pre_binding_block.is_none());
1869 assert!(candidate.subcandidates.is_empty());
1870
1871 candidate.pre_binding_block = Some(start_block);
1872 let otherwise_block = self.cfg.start_new_block();
1873 // Create the otherwise block for this candidate, which is the
1874 // pre-binding block for the next candidate.
1875 candidate.otherwise_block = Some(otherwise_block);
1876 otherwise_block
1877 }
1878
1879 /// Takes a list of candidates such that some of the candidates' first match pairs are
1880 /// or-patterns. This expands as many or-patterns as possible and processes the resulting
1881 /// candidates. Returns the unprocessed candidates if any.
1882 fn expand_and_match_or_candidates<'b, 'c>(
1883 &mut self,
1884 span: Span,
1885 scrutinee_span: Span,
1886 start_block: BasicBlock,
1887 candidates: &'b mut [&'c mut Candidate<'tcx>],
1888 ) -> BlockAnd<&'b mut [&'c mut Candidate<'tcx>]> {
1889 // We can't expand or-patterns freely. The rule is:
1890 // - If a candidate doesn't start with an or-pattern, we include it in
1891 // the expansion list as-is (i.e. it "expands" to itself).
1892 // - If a candidate has an or-pattern as its only remaining match pair,
1893 // we can expand it.
1894 // - If it starts with an or-pattern but also has other match pairs,
1895 // we can expand it, but we can't process more candidates after it.
1896 //
1897 // If we didn't stop, the `otherwise` cases could get mixed up. E.g. in the
1898 // following, or-pattern simplification (in `merge_trivial_subcandidates`) makes it
1899 // so the `1` and `2` cases branch to a same block (which then tests `false`). If we
1900 // took `(2, _)` in the same set of candidates, when we reach the block that tests
1901 // `false` we don't know whether we came from `1` or `2`, hence we can't know where
1902 // to branch on failure.
1903 //
1904 // ```ignore(illustrative)
1905 // match (1, true) {
1906 // (1 | 2, false) => {},
1907 // (2, _) => {},
1908 // _ => {}
1909 // }
1910 // ```
1911 //
1912 // We therefore split the `candidates` slice in two, expand or-patterns in the first part,
1913 // and process the rest separately.
1914 let expand_until = candidates
1915 .iter()
1916 .position(|candidate| {
1917 // If a candidate starts with an or-pattern and has more match pairs,
1918 // we can expand it, but we must stop expanding _after_ it.
1919 candidate.match_pairs.len() > 1 && candidate.starts_with_or_pattern()
1920 })
1921 .map(|pos| pos + 1) // Stop _after_ the found candidate
1922 .unwrap_or(candidates.len()); // Otherwise, include all candidates
1923 let (candidates_to_expand, remaining_candidates) = candidates.split_at_mut(expand_until);
1924
1925 // Expand one level of or-patterns for each candidate in `candidates_to_expand`.
1926 // We take care to preserve the relative ordering of candidates, so that
1927 // or-patterns are expanded in their parent's relative position.
1928 let mut expanded_candidates = Vec::new();
1929 for candidate in candidates_to_expand.iter_mut() {
1930 if candidate.starts_with_or_pattern() {
1931 let or_match_pair = candidate.match_pairs.remove(0);
1932 // Expand the or-pattern into subcandidates.
1933 self.create_or_subcandidates(candidate, or_match_pair);
1934 // Collect the newly created subcandidates.
1935 for subcandidate in candidate.subcandidates.iter_mut() {
1936 expanded_candidates.push(subcandidate);
1937 }
1938 // Note that the subcandidates have been added to `expanded_candidates`,
1939 // but `candidate` itself has not. If the last candidate has more match pairs,
1940 // they are handled separately by `test_remaining_match_pairs_after_or`.
1941 } else {
1942 // A candidate that doesn't start with an or-pattern has nothing to
1943 // expand, so it is included in the post-expansion list as-is.
1944 expanded_candidates.push(candidate);
1945 }
1946 }
1947
1948 // Recursively lower the part of the match tree represented by the
1949 // expanded candidates. This is where subcandidates actually get lowered!
1950 let remainder_start = self.match_candidates(
1951 span,
1952 scrutinee_span,
1953 start_block,
1954 expanded_candidates.as_mut_slice(),
1955 );
1956
1957 // Postprocess subcandidates, and process any leftover match pairs.
1958 // (Only the last candidate can possibly have more match pairs.)
1959 debug_assert!({
1960 let mut all_except_last = candidates_to_expand.iter().rev().skip(1);
1961 all_except_last.all(|candidate| candidate.match_pairs.is_empty())
1962 });
1963 for candidate in candidates_to_expand.iter_mut() {
1964 if !candidate.subcandidates.is_empty() {
1965 self.merge_trivial_subcandidates(candidate);
1966 self.remove_never_subcandidates(candidate);
1967 }
1968 }
1969 // It's important to perform the above simplifications _before_ dealing
1970 // with remaining match pairs, to avoid exponential blowup if possible
1971 // (for trivial or-patterns), and avoid useless work (for never patterns).
1972 if let Some(last_candidate) = candidates_to_expand.last_mut() {
1973 self.test_remaining_match_pairs_after_or(span, scrutinee_span, last_candidate);
1974 }
1975
1976 remainder_start.and(remaining_candidates)
1977 }
1978
1979 /// Given a match-pair that corresponds to an or-pattern, expand each subpattern into a new
1980 /// subcandidate. Any candidate that has been expanded this way should also be postprocessed
1981 /// at the end of [`Self::expand_and_match_or_candidates`].
1982 fn create_or_subcandidates(
1983 &mut self,
1984 candidate: &mut Candidate<'tcx>,
1985 match_pair: MatchPairTree<'tcx>,
1986 ) {
1987 let TestableCase::Or { pats } = match_pair.testable_case else { bug!() };
1988 debug!("expanding or-pattern: candidate={:#?}\npats={:#?}", candidate, pats);
1989 candidate.or_span = Some(match_pair.pattern_span);
1990 candidate.subcandidates = pats
1991 .into_iter()
1992 .map(|flat_pat| Candidate::from_flat_pat(flat_pat, candidate.has_guard))
1993 .collect();
1994 candidate.subcandidates[0].false_edge_start_block = candidate.false_edge_start_block;
1995 }
1996
1997 /// Try to merge all of the subcandidates of the given candidate into one. This avoids
1998 /// exponentially large CFGs in cases like `(1 | 2, 3 | 4, ...)`. The candidate should have been
1999 /// expanded with `create_or_subcandidates`.
2000 ///
2001 /// Given a pattern `(P | Q, R | S)` we (in principle) generate a CFG like
2002 /// so:
2003 ///
2004 /// ```text
2005 /// [ start ]
2006 /// |
2007 /// [ match P, Q ]
2008 /// |
2009 /// +----------------------------------------+------------------------------------+
2010 /// | | |
2011 /// V V V
2012 /// [ P matches ] [ Q matches ] [ otherwise ]
2013 /// | | |
2014 /// V V |
2015 /// [ match R, S ] [ match R, S ] |
2016 /// | | |
2017 /// +--------------+------------+ +--------------+------------+ |
2018 /// | | | | | | |
2019 /// V V V V V V |
2020 /// [ R matches ] [ S matches ] [otherwise ] [ R matches ] [ S matches ] [otherwise ] |
2021 /// | | | | | | |
2022 /// +--------------+------------|------------+--------------+ | |
2023 /// | | | |
2024 /// | +----------------------------------------+--------+
2025 /// | |
2026 /// V V
2027 /// [ Success ] [ Failure ]
2028 /// ```
2029 ///
2030 /// In practice there are some complications:
2031 ///
2032 /// * If there's a guard, then the otherwise branch of the first match on
2033 /// `R | S` goes to a test for whether `Q` matches, and the control flow
2034 /// doesn't merge into a single success block until after the guard is
2035 /// tested.
2036 /// * If neither `P` or `Q` has any bindings or type ascriptions and there
2037 /// isn't a match guard, then we create a smaller CFG like:
2038 ///
2039 /// ```text
2040 /// ...
2041 /// +---------------+------------+
2042 /// | | |
2043 /// [ P matches ] [ Q matches ] [ otherwise ]
2044 /// | | |
2045 /// +---------------+ |
2046 /// | ...
2047 /// [ match R, S ]
2048 /// |
2049 /// ...
2050 /// ```
2051 ///
2052 /// Note that this takes place _after_ the subcandidates have participated
2053 /// in match tree lowering.
2054 fn merge_trivial_subcandidates(&mut self, candidate: &mut Candidate<'tcx>) {
2055 assert!(!candidate.subcandidates.is_empty());
2056 if candidate.has_guard {
2057 // FIXME(or_patterns; matthewjasper) Don't give up if we have a guard.
2058 return;
2059 }
2060
2061 // FIXME(or_patterns; matthewjasper) Try to be more aggressive here.
2062 let can_merge = candidate.subcandidates.iter().all(|subcandidate| {
2063 subcandidate.subcandidates.is_empty() && subcandidate.extra_data.is_empty()
2064 });
2065 if !can_merge {
2066 return;
2067 }
2068
2069 let mut last_otherwise = None;
2070 let shared_pre_binding_block = self.cfg.start_new_block();
2071 // This candidate is about to become a leaf, so unset `or_span`.
2072 let or_span = candidate.or_span.take().unwrap();
2073 let source_info = self.source_info(or_span);
2074
2075 if candidate.false_edge_start_block.is_none() {
2076 candidate.false_edge_start_block = candidate.subcandidates[0].false_edge_start_block;
2077 }
2078
2079 // Remove the (known-trivial) subcandidates from the candidate tree,
2080 // so that they aren't visible after match tree lowering, and wire them
2081 // all to join up at a single shared pre-binding block.
2082 // (Note that the subcandidates have already had their part of the match
2083 // tree lowered by this point, which is why we can add a goto to them.)
2084 for subcandidate in mem::take(&mut candidate.subcandidates) {
2085 let subcandidate_block = subcandidate.pre_binding_block.unwrap();
2086 self.cfg.goto(subcandidate_block, source_info, shared_pre_binding_block);
2087 last_otherwise = subcandidate.otherwise_block;
2088 }
2089 candidate.pre_binding_block = Some(shared_pre_binding_block);
2090 assert!(last_otherwise.is_some());
2091 candidate.otherwise_block = last_otherwise;
2092 }
2093
2094 /// Never subcandidates may have a set of bindings inconsistent with their siblings,
2095 /// which would break later code. So we filter them out. Note that we can't filter out
2096 /// top-level candidates this way.
2097 fn remove_never_subcandidates(&mut self, candidate: &mut Candidate<'tcx>) {
2098 if candidate.subcandidates.is_empty() {
2099 return;
2100 }
2101
2102 let false_edge_start_block = candidate.subcandidates[0].false_edge_start_block;
2103 candidate.subcandidates.retain_mut(|candidate| {
2104 if candidate.extra_data.is_never {
2105 candidate.visit_leaves(|subcandidate| {
2106 let block = subcandidate.pre_binding_block.unwrap();
2107 // That block is already unreachable but needs a terminator to make the MIR well-formed.
2108 let source_info = self.source_info(subcandidate.extra_data.span);
2109 self.cfg.terminate(block, source_info, TerminatorKind::Unreachable);
2110 });
2111 false
2112 } else {
2113 true
2114 }
2115 });
2116 if candidate.subcandidates.is_empty() {
2117 // If `candidate` has become a leaf candidate, ensure it has a `pre_binding_block` and `otherwise_block`.
2118 let next_block = self.cfg.start_new_block();
2119 candidate.pre_binding_block = Some(next_block);
2120 candidate.otherwise_block = Some(next_block);
2121 // In addition, if `candidate` doesn't have `false_edge_start_block`, it should be assigned here.
2122 if candidate.false_edge_start_block.is_none() {
2123 candidate.false_edge_start_block = false_edge_start_block;
2124 }
2125 }
2126 }
2127
2128 /// If more match pairs remain, test them after each subcandidate.
2129 /// We could have added them to the or-candidates during or-pattern expansion, but that
2130 /// would make it impossible to detect simplifiable or-patterns. That would guarantee
2131 /// exponentially large CFGs for cases like `(1 | 2, 3 | 4, ...)`.
2132 fn test_remaining_match_pairs_after_or(
2133 &mut self,
2134 span: Span,
2135 scrutinee_span: Span,
2136 candidate: &mut Candidate<'tcx>,
2137 ) {
2138 if candidate.match_pairs.is_empty() {
2139 return;
2140 }
2141
2142 let or_span = candidate.or_span.unwrap_or(candidate.extra_data.span);
2143 let source_info = self.source_info(or_span);
2144 let mut last_otherwise = None;
2145 candidate.visit_leaves(|leaf_candidate| {
2146 last_otherwise = leaf_candidate.otherwise_block;
2147 });
2148
2149 let remaining_match_pairs = mem::take(&mut candidate.match_pairs);
2150 // We're testing match pairs that remained after an `Or`, so the remaining
2151 // pairs should all be `Or` too, due to the sorting invariant.
2152 debug_assert!(
2153 remaining_match_pairs
2154 .iter()
2155 .all(|match_pair| matches!(match_pair.testable_case, TestableCase::Or { .. }))
2156 );
2157
2158 // Visit each leaf candidate within this subtree, add a copy of the remaining
2159 // match pairs to it, and then recursively lower the rest of the match tree
2160 // from that point.
2161 candidate.visit_leaves(|leaf_candidate| {
2162 // At this point the leaf's own match pairs have all been lowered
2163 // and removed, so `extend` and assignment are equivalent,
2164 // but extending can also recycle any existing vector capacity.
2165 assert!(leaf_candidate.match_pairs.is_empty());
2166 leaf_candidate.match_pairs.extend(remaining_match_pairs.iter().cloned());
2167
2168 let or_start = leaf_candidate.pre_binding_block.unwrap();
2169 let otherwise =
2170 self.match_candidates(span, scrutinee_span, or_start, &mut [leaf_candidate]);
2171 // In a case like `(P | Q, R | S)`, if `P` succeeds and `R | S` fails, we know `(Q,
2172 // R | S)` will fail too. If there is no guard, we skip testing of `Q` by branching
2173 // directly to `last_otherwise`. If there is a guard,
2174 // `leaf_candidate.otherwise_block` can be reached by guard failure as well, so we
2175 // can't skip `Q`.
2176 let or_otherwise = if leaf_candidate.has_guard {
2177 leaf_candidate.otherwise_block.unwrap()
2178 } else {
2179 last_otherwise.unwrap()
2180 };
2181 self.cfg.goto(otherwise, source_info, or_otherwise);
2182 });
2183 }
2184
2185 /// Pick a test to run. Which test doesn't matter as long as it is guaranteed to fully match at
2186 /// least one match pair. We currently simply pick the test corresponding to the first match
2187 /// pair of the first candidate in the list.
2188 ///
2189 /// *Note:* taking the first match pair is somewhat arbitrary, and we might do better here by
2190 /// choosing more carefully what to test.
2191 ///
2192 /// For example, consider the following possible match-pairs:
2193 ///
2194 /// 1. `x @ Some(P)` -- we will do a [`Switch`] to decide what variant `x` has
2195 /// 2. `x @ 22` -- we will do a [`SwitchInt`] to decide what value `x` has
2196 /// 3. `x @ 3..5` -- we will do a [`Range`] test to decide what range `x` falls in
2197 /// 4. etc.
2198 ///
2199 /// [`Switch`]: TestKind::Switch
2200 /// [`SwitchInt`]: TestKind::SwitchInt
2201 /// [`Range`]: TestKind::Range
2202 fn pick_test(&mut self, candidates: &[&mut Candidate<'tcx>]) -> (Place<'tcx>, Test<'tcx>) {
2203 // Extract the match-pair from the highest priority candidate
2204 let match_pair = &candidates[0].match_pairs[0];
2205 let test = self.pick_test_for_match_pair(match_pair);
2206 // Unwrap is ok after simplification.
2207 let match_place = match_pair.place.unwrap();
2208 debug!(?test, ?match_pair);
2209
2210 (match_place, test)
2211 }
2212
2213 /// This is the most subtle part of the match lowering algorithm. At this point, there are
2214 /// no fully-satisfied candidates, and no or-patterns to expand, so we actually need to
2215 /// perform some sort of test to make progress.
2216 ///
2217 /// Once we pick what sort of test we are going to perform, this test will help us winnow down
2218 /// our candidates. So we walk over the candidates (from high to low priority) and check. We
2219 /// compute, for each outcome of the test, a list of (modified) candidates. If a candidate
2220 /// matches in exactly one branch of our test, we add it to the corresponding outcome. We also
2221 /// **mutate its list of match pairs** if appropriate, to reflect the fact that we know which
2222 /// outcome occurred.
2223 ///
2224 /// For example, if we are testing `x.0`'s variant, and we have a candidate `(x.0 @ Some(v), x.1
2225 /// @ 22)`, then we would have a resulting candidate of `((x.0 as Some).0 @ v, x.1 @ 22)` in the
2226 /// branch corresponding to `Some`. To ensure we make progress, we always pick a test that
2227 /// results in simplifying the first candidate.
2228 ///
2229 /// But there may also be candidates that the test doesn't
2230 /// apply to. The classical example is wildcards:
2231 ///
2232 /// ```
2233 /// # let (x, y, z) = (true, true, true);
2234 /// match (x, y, z) {
2235 /// (true , _ , true ) => true, // (0)
2236 /// (false, false, _ ) => false, // (1)
2237 /// (_ , true , _ ) => true, // (2)
2238 /// (true , _ , false) => false, // (3)
2239 /// }
2240 /// # ;
2241 /// ```
2242 ///
2243 /// Here, the traditional "decision tree" method would generate 2 separate code-paths for the 2
2244 /// possible values of `x`. This would however duplicate some candidates, which would need to be
2245 /// lowered several times.
2246 ///
2247 /// In some cases, this duplication can create an exponential amount of
2248 /// code. This is most easily seen by noticing that this method terminates
2249 /// with precisely the reachable arms being reachable - but that problem
2250 /// is trivially NP-complete:
2251 ///
2252 /// ```ignore (illustrative)
2253 /// match (var0, var1, var2, var3, ...) {
2254 /// (true , _ , _ , false, true, ...) => false,
2255 /// (_ , true, true , false, _ , ...) => false,
2256 /// (false, _ , false, false, _ , ...) => false,
2257 /// ...
2258 /// _ => true
2259 /// }
2260 /// ```
2261 ///
2262 /// Here the last arm is reachable only if there is an assignment to
2263 /// the variables that does not match any of the literals. Therefore,
2264 /// compilation would take an exponential amount of time in some cases.
2265 ///
2266 /// In rustc, we opt instead for the "backtracking automaton" approach. This guarantees we never
2267 /// duplicate a candidate (except in the presence of or-patterns). In fact this guarantee is
2268 /// ensured by the fact that we carry around `&mut Candidate`s which can't be duplicated.
2269 ///
2270 /// To make this work, whenever we decide to perform a test, if we encounter a candidate that
2271 /// could match in more than one branch of the test, we stop. We generate code for the test and
2272 /// for the candidates in its branches; the remaining candidates will be tested if the
2273 /// candidates in the branches fail to match.
2274 ///
2275 /// For example, if we test on `x` in the following:
2276 /// ```
2277 /// # fn foo((x, y, z): (bool, bool, bool)) -> u32 {
2278 /// match (x, y, z) {
2279 /// (true , _ , true ) => 0,
2280 /// (false, false, _ ) => 1,
2281 /// (_ , true , _ ) => 2,
2282 /// (true , _ , false) => 3,
2283 /// }
2284 /// # }
2285 /// ```
2286 /// this function generates code that looks more of less like:
2287 /// ```
2288 /// # fn foo((x, y, z): (bool, bool, bool)) -> u32 {
2289 /// if x {
2290 /// match (y, z) {
2291 /// (_, true) => return 0,
2292 /// _ => {} // continue matching
2293 /// }
2294 /// } else {
2295 /// match (y, z) {
2296 /// (false, _) => return 1,
2297 /// _ => {} // continue matching
2298 /// }
2299 /// }
2300 /// // the block here is `remainder_start`
2301 /// match (x, y, z) {
2302 /// (_ , true , _ ) => 2,
2303 /// (true , _ , false) => 3,
2304 /// _ => unreachable!(),
2305 /// }
2306 /// # }
2307 /// ```
2308 ///
2309 /// We return the unprocessed candidates.
2310 fn test_candidates<'b, 'c>(
2311 &mut self,
2312 span: Span,
2313 scrutinee_span: Span,
2314 candidates: &'b mut [&'c mut Candidate<'tcx>],
2315 start_block: BasicBlock,
2316 ) -> BlockAnd<&'b mut [&'c mut Candidate<'tcx>]> {
2317 // Choose a match pair from the first candidate, and use it to determine a
2318 // test to perform that will confirm or refute that match pair.
2319 let (match_place, test) = self.pick_test(candidates);
2320
2321 // For each of the N possible test outcomes, build the vector of candidates that applies if
2322 // the test has that particular outcome. This also mutates the candidates to remove match
2323 // pairs that are fully satisfied by the relevant outcome.
2324 let PartitionedCandidates { target_candidates, remaining_candidates } =
2325 self.partition_candidates_into_buckets(match_place, &test, candidates);
2326
2327 // The block that we should branch to if none of the `target_candidates` match.
2328 let remainder_start = self.cfg.start_new_block();
2329
2330 // For each outcome of the test, recursively lower the rest of the match tree
2331 // from that point. (Note that we haven't lowered the actual test yet!)
2332 let target_blocks: FxIndexMap<_, _> = target_candidates
2333 .into_iter()
2334 .map(|(branch, mut candidates)| {
2335 let branch_start = self.cfg.start_new_block();
2336 // Recursively lower the rest of the match tree after the relevant outcome.
2337 let branch_otherwise =
2338 self.match_candidates(span, scrutinee_span, branch_start, &mut *candidates);
2339
2340 // Link up the `otherwise` block of the subtree to `remainder_start`.
2341 let source_info = self.source_info(span);
2342 self.cfg.goto(branch_otherwise, source_info, remainder_start);
2343 (branch, branch_start)
2344 })
2345 .collect();
2346
2347 // Perform the chosen test, branching to one of the N subtrees prepared above
2348 // (or to `remainder_start` if no outcome was satisfied).
2349 self.perform_test(
2350 span,
2351 scrutinee_span,
2352 start_block,
2353 remainder_start,
2354 match_place,
2355 &test,
2356 target_blocks,
2357 );
2358
2359 remainder_start.and(remaining_candidates)
2360 }
2361}
2362
2363///////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
2364// Pat binding - used for `let` and function parameters as well.
2365
2366impl<'a, 'tcx> Builder<'a, 'tcx> {
2367 /// Lowers a `let` expression that appears in a suitable context
2368 /// (e.g. an `if` condition or match guard).
2369 ///
2370 /// Also used for lowering let-else statements, since they have similar
2371 /// needs despite not actually using `let` expressions.
2372 ///
2373 /// Use [`DeclareLetBindings`] to control whether the `let` bindings are
2374 /// declared or not.
2375 pub(crate) fn lower_let_expr(
2376 &mut self,
2377 mut block: BasicBlock,
2378 expr_id: ExprId,
2379 pat: &Pat<'tcx>,
2380 source_scope: Option<SourceScope>,
2381 scope_span: Span,
2382 declare_let_bindings: DeclareLetBindings,
2383 ) -> BlockAnd<()> {
2384 let expr_span = self.thir[expr_id].span;
2385 let scrutinee = unpack!(block = self.lower_scrutinee(block, expr_id, expr_span));
2386 let built_tree = self.lower_match_tree(
2387 block,
2388 expr_span,
2389 &scrutinee,
2390 pat.span,
2391 vec![(pat, HasMatchGuard::No)],
2392 true,
2393 );
2394 let [branch] = built_tree.branches.try_into().unwrap();
2395
2396 self.break_for_else(built_tree.otherwise_block, self.source_info(expr_span));
2397
2398 match declare_let_bindings {
2399 DeclareLetBindings::Yes => {
2400 let expr_place = scrutinee.try_to_place(self);
2401 let opt_expr_place = expr_place.as_ref().map(|place| (Some(place), expr_span));
2402 self.declare_bindings(
2403 source_scope,
2404 pat.span.to(scope_span),
2405 pat,
2406 None,
2407 opt_expr_place,
2408 );
2409 }
2410 DeclareLetBindings::No => {} // Caller is responsible for bindings.
2411 DeclareLetBindings::LetNotPermitted => {
2412 self.tcx.dcx().span_bug(expr_span, "let expression not expected in this context")
2413 }
2414 }
2415
2416 let success = self.bind_pattern(self.source_info(pat.span), branch, &[], expr_span, None);
2417
2418 // If branch coverage is enabled, record this branch.
2419 self.visit_coverage_conditional_let(pat, success, built_tree.otherwise_block);
2420
2421 success.unit()
2422 }
2423
2424 /// Initializes each of the bindings from the candidate by
2425 /// moving/copying/ref'ing the source as appropriate. Tests the guard, if
2426 /// any, and then branches to the arm. Returns the block for the case where
2427 /// the guard succeeds.
2428 ///
2429 /// Note: we do not check earlier that if there is a guard,
2430 /// there cannot be move bindings. We avoid a use-after-move by only
2431 /// moving the binding once the guard has evaluated to true (see below).
2432 fn bind_and_guard_matched_candidate(
2433 &mut self,
2434 sub_branch: MatchTreeSubBranch<'tcx>,
2435 fake_borrows: &[(Place<'tcx>, Local, FakeBorrowKind)],
2436 scrutinee_span: Span,
2437 arm_match_scope: Option<(&Arm<'tcx>, region::Scope)>,
2438 schedule_drops: ScheduleDrops,
2439 ) -> BasicBlock {
2440 debug!("bind_and_guard_matched_candidate(subbranch={:?})", sub_branch);
2441
2442 let block = sub_branch.success_block;
2443
2444 if sub_branch.is_never {
2445 // This arm has a dummy body, we don't need to generate code for it. `block` is already
2446 // unreachable (except via false edge).
2447 let source_info = self.source_info(sub_branch.span);
2448 self.cfg.terminate(block, source_info, TerminatorKind::Unreachable);
2449 return self.cfg.start_new_block();
2450 }
2451
2452 self.ascribe_types(block, sub_branch.ascriptions);
2453
2454 // Lower an instance of the arm guard (if present) for this candidate,
2455 // and then perform bindings for the arm body.
2456 if let Some((arm, match_scope)) = arm_match_scope
2457 && let Some(guard) = arm.guard
2458 {
2459 let tcx = self.tcx;
2460
2461 // Bindings for guards require some extra handling to automatically
2462 // insert implicit references/dereferences.
2463 // This always schedules storage drops, so we may need to unschedule them below.
2464 self.bind_matched_candidate_for_guard(block, sub_branch.bindings.iter());
2465 let guard_frame = GuardFrame {
2466 locals: sub_branch
2467 .bindings
2468 .iter()
2469 .map(|b| GuardFrameLocal::new(b.var_id))
2470 .collect(),
2471 };
2472 debug!("entering guard building context: {:?}", guard_frame);
2473 self.guard_context.push(guard_frame);
2474
2475 let re_erased = tcx.lifetimes.re_erased;
2476 let scrutinee_source_info = self.source_info(scrutinee_span);
2477 for &(place, temp, kind) in fake_borrows {
2478 let borrow = Rvalue::Ref(re_erased, BorrowKind::Fake(kind), place);
2479 self.cfg.push_assign(block, scrutinee_source_info, Place::from(temp), borrow);
2480 }
2481
2482 let mut guard_span = rustc_span::DUMMY_SP;
2483
2484 let (post_guard_block, otherwise_post_guard_block) =
2485 self.in_if_then_scope(match_scope, guard_span, |this| {
2486 guard_span = this.thir[guard].span;
2487 this.then_else_break(
2488 block,
2489 guard,
2490 None, // Use `self.local_scope()` as the temp scope
2491 this.source_info(arm.span),
2492 DeclareLetBindings::No, // For guards, `let` bindings are declared separately
2493 )
2494 });
2495
2496 // If this isn't the final sub-branch being lowered, we need to unschedule drops of
2497 // bindings and temporaries created for and by the guard. As a result, the drop order
2498 // for the arm will correspond to the binding order of the final sub-branch lowered.
2499 if matches!(schedule_drops, ScheduleDrops::No) {
2500 self.clear_match_arm_and_guard_scopes(arm.scope);
2501 }
2502
2503 let source_info = self.source_info(guard_span);
2504 let guard_end = self.source_info(tcx.sess.source_map().end_point(guard_span));
2505 let guard_frame = self.guard_context.pop().unwrap();
2506 debug!("Exiting guard building context with locals: {:?}", guard_frame);
2507
2508 for &(_, temp, _) in fake_borrows {
2509 let cause = FakeReadCause::ForMatchGuard;
2510 self.cfg.push_fake_read(post_guard_block, guard_end, cause, Place::from(temp));
2511 }
2512
2513 self.cfg.goto(otherwise_post_guard_block, source_info, sub_branch.otherwise_block);
2514
2515 // We want to ensure that the matched candidates are bound
2516 // after we have confirmed this candidate *and* any
2517 // associated guard; Binding them on `block` is too soon,
2518 // because that would be before we've checked the result
2519 // from the guard.
2520 //
2521 // But binding them on the arm is *too late*, because
2522 // then all of the candidates for a single arm would be
2523 // bound in the same place, that would cause a case like:
2524 //
2525 // ```rust
2526 // match (30, 2) {
2527 // (mut x, 1) | (2, mut x) if { true } => { ... }
2528 // ... // ^^^^^^^ (this is `arm_block`)
2529 // }
2530 // ```
2531 //
2532 // would yield an `arm_block` something like:
2533 //
2534 // ```
2535 // StorageLive(_4); // _4 is `x`
2536 // _4 = &mut (_1.0: i32); // this is handling `(mut x, 1)` case
2537 // _4 = &mut (_1.1: i32); // this is handling `(2, mut x)` case
2538 // ```
2539 //
2540 // and that is clearly not correct.
2541 let by_value_bindings = sub_branch
2542 .bindings
2543 .iter()
2544 .filter(|binding| matches!(binding.binding_mode.0, ByRef::No));
2545 // Read all of the by reference bindings to ensure that the
2546 // place they refer to can't be modified by the guard.
2547 for binding in by_value_bindings.clone() {
2548 let local_id = self.var_local_id(binding.var_id, RefWithinGuard);
2549 let cause = FakeReadCause::ForGuardBinding;
2550 self.cfg.push_fake_read(post_guard_block, guard_end, cause, Place::from(local_id));
2551 }
2552 // Only schedule drops for the last sub-branch we lower.
2553 self.bind_matched_candidate_for_arm_body(
2554 post_guard_block,
2555 schedule_drops,
2556 by_value_bindings,
2557 );
2558
2559 post_guard_block
2560 } else {
2561 // (Here, it is not too early to bind the matched
2562 // candidate on `block`, because there is no guard result
2563 // that we have to inspect before we bind them.)
2564 self.bind_matched_candidate_for_arm_body(
2565 block,
2566 schedule_drops,
2567 sub_branch.bindings.iter(),
2568 );
2569 block
2570 }
2571 }
2572
2573 /// Append `AscribeUserType` statements onto the end of `block`
2574 /// for each ascription
2575 fn ascribe_types(
2576 &mut self,
2577 block: BasicBlock,
2578 ascriptions: impl IntoIterator<Item = Ascription<'tcx>>,
2579 ) {
2580 for ascription in ascriptions {
2581 let source_info = self.source_info(ascription.annotation.span);
2582
2583 let base = self.canonical_user_type_annotations.push(ascription.annotation);
2584 self.cfg.push(
2585 block,
2586 Statement::new(
2587 source_info,
2588 StatementKind::AscribeUserType(
2589 Box::new((
2590 ascription.source,
2591 UserTypeProjection { base, projs: Vec::new() },
2592 )),
2593 ascription.variance,
2594 ),
2595 ),
2596 );
2597 }
2598 }
2599
2600 /// Binding for guards is a bit different from binding for the arm body,
2601 /// because an extra layer of implicit reference/dereference is added.
2602 ///
2603 /// The idea is that any pattern bindings of type T will map to a `&T` within
2604 /// the context of the guard expression, but will continue to map to a `T`
2605 /// in the context of the arm body. To avoid surfacing this distinction in
2606 /// the user source code (which would be a severe change to the language and
2607 /// require far more revision to the compiler), any occurrence of the
2608 /// identifier in the guard expression will automatically get a deref op
2609 /// applied to it. (See the caller of [`Self::is_bound_var_in_guard`].)
2610 ///
2611 /// So an input like:
2612 ///
2613 /// ```ignore (illustrative)
2614 /// let place = Foo::new();
2615 /// match place { foo if inspect(foo)
2616 /// => feed(foo), ... }
2617 /// ```
2618 ///
2619 /// will be treated as if it were really something like:
2620 ///
2621 /// ```ignore (illustrative)
2622 /// let place = Foo::new();
2623 /// match place { Foo { .. } if { let tmp1 = &place; inspect(*tmp1) }
2624 /// => { let tmp2 = place; feed(tmp2) }, ... }
2625 /// ```
2626 ///
2627 /// And an input like:
2628 ///
2629 /// ```ignore (illustrative)
2630 /// let place = Foo::new();
2631 /// match place { ref mut foo if inspect(foo)
2632 /// => feed(foo), ... }
2633 /// ```
2634 ///
2635 /// will be treated as if it were really something like:
2636 ///
2637 /// ```ignore (illustrative)
2638 /// let place = Foo::new();
2639 /// match place { Foo { .. } if { let tmp1 = & &mut place; inspect(*tmp1) }
2640 /// => { let tmp2 = &mut place; feed(tmp2) }, ... }
2641 /// ```
2642 /// ---
2643 ///
2644 /// ## Implementation notes
2645 ///
2646 /// To encode the distinction above, we must inject the
2647 /// temporaries `tmp1` and `tmp2`.
2648 ///
2649 /// There are two cases of interest: binding by-value, and binding by-ref.
2650 ///
2651 /// 1. Binding by-value: Things are simple.
2652 ///
2653 /// * Establishing `tmp1` creates a reference into the
2654 /// matched place. This code is emitted by
2655 /// [`Self::bind_matched_candidate_for_guard`].
2656 ///
2657 /// * `tmp2` is only initialized "lazily", after we have
2658 /// checked the guard. Thus, the code that can trigger
2659 /// moves out of the candidate can only fire after the
2660 /// guard evaluated to true. This initialization code is
2661 /// emitted by [`Self::bind_matched_candidate_for_arm_body`].
2662 ///
2663 /// 2. Binding by-reference: Things are tricky.
2664 ///
2665 /// * Here, the guard expression wants a `&&` or `&&mut`
2666 /// into the original input. This means we need to borrow
2667 /// the reference that we create for the arm.
2668 /// * So we eagerly create the reference for the arm and then take a
2669 /// reference to that.
2670 ///
2671 /// ---
2672 ///
2673 /// See these PRs for some historical context:
2674 /// - <https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/49870> (introduction of autoref)
2675 /// - <https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/59114> (always use autoref)
2676 fn bind_matched_candidate_for_guard<'b>(
2677 &mut self,
2678 block: BasicBlock,
2679 bindings: impl IntoIterator<Item = &'b Binding<'tcx>>,
2680 ) where
2681 'tcx: 'b,
2682 {
2683 debug!("bind_matched_candidate_for_guard(block={:?})", block);
2684
2685 // Assign each of the bindings. Since we are binding for a
2686 // guard expression, this will never trigger moves out of the
2687 // candidate.
2688 let re_erased = self.tcx.lifetimes.re_erased;
2689 for binding in bindings {
2690 debug!("bind_matched_candidate_for_guard(binding={:?})", binding);
2691 let source_info = self.source_info(binding.span);
2692
2693 // For each pattern ident P of type T, `ref_for_guard` is
2694 // a reference R: &T pointing to the location matched by
2695 // the pattern, and every occurrence of P within a guard
2696 // denotes *R.
2697 // Drops must be scheduled to emit `StorageDead` on the guard's failure/break branches.
2698 let ref_for_guard = self.storage_live_binding(
2699 block,
2700 binding.var_id,
2701 binding.span,
2702 binding.is_shorthand,
2703 RefWithinGuard,
2704 ScheduleDrops::Yes,
2705 );
2706 match binding.binding_mode.0 {
2707 ByRef::No => {
2708 // The arm binding will be by value, so for the guard binding
2709 // just take a shared reference to the matched place.
2710 let rvalue = Rvalue::Ref(re_erased, BorrowKind::Shared, binding.source);
2711 self.cfg.push_assign(block, source_info, ref_for_guard, rvalue);
2712 }
2713 ByRef::Yes(pinnedness, mutbl) => {
2714 // The arm binding will be by reference, so eagerly create it now // be scheduled to emit `StorageDead` on the guard's failure/break branches.
2715 let value_for_arm = self.storage_live_binding(
2716 block,
2717 binding.var_id,
2718 binding.span,
2719 binding.is_shorthand,
2720 OutsideGuard,
2721 ScheduleDrops::Yes,
2722 );
2723
2724 let rvalue =
2725 Rvalue::Ref(re_erased, util::ref_pat_borrow_kind(mutbl), binding.source);
2726 let rvalue = match pinnedness {
2727 ty::Pinnedness::Not => rvalue,
2728 ty::Pinnedness::Pinned => {
2729 self.pin_borrowed_local(block, value_for_arm.local, rvalue, source_info)
2730 }
2731 };
2732 self.cfg.push_assign(block, source_info, value_for_arm, rvalue);
2733 // For the guard binding, take a shared reference to that reference.
2734 let rvalue = Rvalue::Ref(re_erased, BorrowKind::Shared, value_for_arm);
2735 self.cfg.push_assign(block, source_info, ref_for_guard, rvalue);
2736 }
2737 }
2738 }
2739 }
2740
2741 fn bind_matched_candidate_for_arm_body<'b>(
2742 &mut self,
2743 block: BasicBlock,
2744 schedule_drops: ScheduleDrops,
2745 bindings: impl IntoIterator<Item = &'b Binding<'tcx>>,
2746 ) where
2747 'tcx: 'b,
2748 {
2749 debug!("bind_matched_candidate_for_arm_body(block={:?})", block);
2750
2751 let re_erased = self.tcx.lifetimes.re_erased;
2752 // Assign each of the bindings. This may trigger moves out of the candidate.
2753 for binding in bindings {
2754 let source_info = self.source_info(binding.span);
2755 let local = self.storage_live_binding(
2756 block,
2757 binding.var_id,
2758 binding.span,
2759 binding.is_shorthand,
2760 OutsideGuard,
2761 schedule_drops,
2762 );
2763 if matches!(schedule_drops, ScheduleDrops::Yes) {
2764 self.schedule_drop_for_binding(binding.var_id, binding.span, OutsideGuard);
2765 }
2766 let rvalue = match binding.binding_mode.0 {
2767 ByRef::No => Rvalue::Use(self.consume_by_copy_or_move(binding.source)),
2768 ByRef::Yes(pinnedness, mutbl) => {
2769 let rvalue =
2770 Rvalue::Ref(re_erased, util::ref_pat_borrow_kind(mutbl), binding.source);
2771 match pinnedness {
2772 ty::Pinnedness::Not => rvalue,
2773 ty::Pinnedness::Pinned => {
2774 self.pin_borrowed_local(block, local.local, rvalue, source_info)
2775 }
2776 }
2777 }
2778 };
2779 self.cfg.push_assign(block, source_info, local, rvalue);
2780 }
2781 }
2782
2783 /// Given an rvalue `&[mut]borrow` and a local `local`, generate the pinned borrow for it:
2784 /// ```ignore (illustrative)
2785 /// pinned_temp = &borrow;
2786 /// local = Pin { __pointer: move pinned_temp };
2787 /// ```
2788 fn pin_borrowed_local(
2789 &mut self,
2790 block: BasicBlock,
2791 local: Local,
2792 borrow: Rvalue<'tcx>,
2793 source_info: SourceInfo,
2794 ) -> Rvalue<'tcx> {
2795 debug_assert_matches!(borrow, Rvalue::Ref(..));
2796
2797 let local_ty = self.local_decls[local].ty;
2798
2799 let pinned_ty = local_ty.pinned_ty().unwrap_or_else(|| {
2800 span_bug!(
2801 source_info.span,
2802 "expect type `Pin` for a pinned binding, found type {:?}",
2803 local_ty
2804 )
2805 });
2806 let pinned_temp =
2807 Place::from(self.local_decls.push(LocalDecl::new(pinned_ty, source_info.span)));
2808 self.cfg.push_assign(block, source_info, pinned_temp, borrow);
2809 Rvalue::Aggregate(
2810 Box::new(AggregateKind::Adt(
2811 self.tcx.require_lang_item(LangItem::Pin, source_info.span),
2812 FIRST_VARIANT,
2813 self.tcx.mk_args(&[pinned_ty.into()]),
2814 None,
2815 None,
2816 )),
2817 std::iter::once(Operand::Move(pinned_temp)).collect(),
2818 )
2819 }
2820
2821 /// Each binding (`ref mut var`/`ref var`/`mut var`/`var`, where the bound
2822 /// `var` has type `T` in the arm body) in a pattern maps to 2 locals. The
2823 /// first local is a binding for occurrences of `var` in the guard, which
2824 /// will have type `&T`. The second local is a binding for occurrences of
2825 /// `var` in the arm body, which will have type `T`.
2826 #[instrument(skip(self), level = "debug")]
2827 fn declare_binding(
2828 &mut self,
2829 source_info: SourceInfo,
2830 visibility_scope: SourceScope,
2831 name: Symbol,
2832 mode: BindingMode,
2833 var_id: LocalVarId,
2834 var_ty: Ty<'tcx>,
2835 user_ty: Option<Box<UserTypeProjections>>,
2836 has_guard: ArmHasGuard,
2837 opt_match_place: Option<(Option<Place<'tcx>>, Span)>,
2838 pat_span: Span,
2839 ) {
2840 let tcx = self.tcx;
2841 let debug_source_info = SourceInfo { span: source_info.span, scope: visibility_scope };
2842 let local = LocalDecl {
2843 mutability: mode.1,
2844 ty: var_ty,
2845 user_ty,
2846 source_info,
2847 local_info: ClearCrossCrate::Set(Box::new(LocalInfo::User(BindingForm::Var(
2848 VarBindingForm {
2849 binding_mode: mode,
2850 // hypothetically, `visit_primary_bindings` could try to unzip
2851 // an outermost hir::Ty as we descend, matching up
2852 // idents in pat; but complex w/ unclear UI payoff.
2853 // Instead, just abandon providing diagnostic info.
2854 opt_ty_info: None,
2855 opt_match_place,
2856 pat_span,
2857 introductions: Vec::new(),
2858 },
2859 )))),
2860 };
2861 let for_arm_body = self.local_decls.push(local);
2862 if self.should_emit_debug_info_for_binding(name, var_id) {
2863 self.var_debug_info.push(VarDebugInfo {
2864 name,
2865 source_info: debug_source_info,
2866 value: VarDebugInfoContents::Place(for_arm_body.into()),
2867 composite: None,
2868 argument_index: None,
2869 });
2870 }
2871 let locals = if has_guard.0 {
2872 let ref_for_guard = self.local_decls.push(LocalDecl::<'tcx> {
2873 // This variable isn't mutated but has a name, so has to be
2874 // immutable to avoid the unused mut lint.
2875 mutability: Mutability::Not,
2876 ty: Ty::new_imm_ref(tcx, tcx.lifetimes.re_erased, var_ty),
2877 user_ty: None,
2878 source_info,
2879 local_info: ClearCrossCrate::Set(Box::new(LocalInfo::User(
2880 BindingForm::RefForGuard(for_arm_body),
2881 ))),
2882 });
2883 if self.should_emit_debug_info_for_binding(name, var_id) {
2884 self.var_debug_info.push(VarDebugInfo {
2885 name,
2886 source_info: debug_source_info,
2887 value: VarDebugInfoContents::Place(ref_for_guard.into()),
2888 composite: None,
2889 argument_index: None,
2890 });
2891 }
2892 LocalsForNode::ForGuard { ref_for_guard, for_arm_body }
2893 } else {
2894 LocalsForNode::One(for_arm_body)
2895 };
2896 debug!(?locals);
2897 self.var_indices.insert(var_id, locals);
2898 }
2899
2900 /// Some bindings are introduced when producing HIR from the AST and don't
2901 /// actually exist in the source. Skip producing debug info for those when
2902 /// we can recognize them.
2903 fn should_emit_debug_info_for_binding(&self, name: Symbol, var_id: LocalVarId) -> bool {
2904 // For now we only recognize the output of desugaring assigns.
2905 if name != sym::lhs {
2906 return true;
2907 }
2908
2909 let tcx = self.tcx;
2910 for (_, node) in tcx.hir_parent_iter(var_id.0) {
2911 // FIXME(khuey) at what point is it safe to bail on the iterator?
2912 // Can we stop at the first non-Pat node?
2913 if matches!(node, Node::LetStmt(&LetStmt { source: LocalSource::AssignDesugar, .. })) {
2914 return false;
2915 }
2916 }
2917
2918 true
2919 }
2920
2921 /// Attempt to statically pick the `BasicBlock` that a value would resolve to at runtime.
2922 pub(crate) fn static_pattern_match(
2923 &self,
2924 cx: &RustcPatCtxt<'_, 'tcx>,
2925 valtree: ValTree<'tcx>,
2926 arms: &[ArmId],
2927 built_match_tree: &BuiltMatchTree<'tcx>,
2928 ) -> Option<BasicBlock> {
2929 let it = arms.iter().zip(built_match_tree.branches.iter());
2930 for (&arm_id, branch) in it {
2931 let pat = cx.lower_pat(&*self.thir.arms[arm_id].pattern);
2932
2933 // Peel off or-patterns if they exist.
2934 if let rustc_pattern_analysis::rustc::Constructor::Or = pat.ctor() {
2935 for pat in pat.iter_fields() {
2936 // For top-level or-patterns (the only ones we accept right now), when the
2937 // bindings are the same (e.g. there are none), the sub_branch is stored just
2938 // once.
2939 let sub_branch = branch
2940 .sub_branches
2941 .get(pat.idx)
2942 .or_else(|| branch.sub_branches.last())
2943 .unwrap();
2944
2945 match self.static_pattern_match_inner(valtree, &pat.pat) {
2946 true => return Some(sub_branch.success_block),
2947 false => continue,
2948 }
2949 }
2950 } else if self.static_pattern_match_inner(valtree, &pat) {
2951 return Some(branch.sub_branches[0].success_block);
2952 }
2953 }
2954
2955 None
2956 }
2957
2958 /// Helper for [`Self::static_pattern_match`], checking whether the value represented by the
2959 /// `ValTree` matches the given pattern. This function does not recurse, meaning that it does
2960 /// not handle or-patterns, or patterns for types with fields.
2961 fn static_pattern_match_inner(
2962 &self,
2963 valtree: ty::ValTree<'tcx>,
2964 pat: &DeconstructedPat<'_, 'tcx>,
2965 ) -> bool {
2966 use rustc_pattern_analysis::constructor::{IntRange, MaybeInfiniteInt};
2967 use rustc_pattern_analysis::rustc::Constructor;
2968
2969 match pat.ctor() {
2970 Constructor::Variant(variant_index) => {
2971 let ValTreeKind::Branch(box [actual_variant_idx]) = *valtree else {
2972 bug!("malformed valtree for an enum")
2973 };
2974
2975 let ValTreeKind::Leaf(actual_variant_idx) = *actual_variant_idx.to_value().valtree
2976 else {
2977 bug!("malformed valtree for an enum")
2978 };
2979
2980 *variant_index == VariantIdx::from_u32(actual_variant_idx.to_u32())
2981 }
2982 Constructor::IntRange(int_range) => {
2983 let size = pat.ty().primitive_size(self.tcx);
2984 let actual_int = valtree.to_leaf().to_bits(size);
2985 let actual_int = if pat.ty().is_signed() {
2986 MaybeInfiniteInt::new_finite_int(actual_int, size.bits())
2987 } else {
2988 MaybeInfiniteInt::new_finite_uint(actual_int)
2989 };
2990 IntRange::from_singleton(actual_int).is_subrange(int_range)
2991 }
2992 Constructor::Bool(pattern_value) => match valtree.to_leaf().try_to_bool() {
2993 Ok(actual_value) => *pattern_value == actual_value,
2994 Err(()) => bug!("bool value with invalid bits"),
2995 },
2996 Constructor::F16Range(l, h, end) => {
2997 let actual = valtree.to_leaf().to_f16();
2998 match end {
2999 RangeEnd::Included => (*l..=*h).contains(&actual),
3000 RangeEnd::Excluded => (*l..*h).contains(&actual),
3001 }
3002 }
3003 Constructor::F32Range(l, h, end) => {
3004 let actual = valtree.to_leaf().to_f32();
3005 match end {
3006 RangeEnd::Included => (*l..=*h).contains(&actual),
3007 RangeEnd::Excluded => (*l..*h).contains(&actual),
3008 }
3009 }
3010 Constructor::F64Range(l, h, end) => {
3011 let actual = valtree.to_leaf().to_f64();
3012 match end {
3013 RangeEnd::Included => (*l..=*h).contains(&actual),
3014 RangeEnd::Excluded => (*l..*h).contains(&actual),
3015 }
3016 }
3017 Constructor::F128Range(l, h, end) => {
3018 let actual = valtree.to_leaf().to_f128();
3019 match end {
3020 RangeEnd::Included => (*l..=*h).contains(&actual),
3021 RangeEnd::Excluded => (*l..*h).contains(&actual),
3022 }
3023 }
3024 Constructor::Wildcard => true,
3025
3026 // Opaque patterns must not be matched on structurally.
3027 Constructor::Opaque(_) => false,
3028
3029 // These we may eventually support:
3030 Constructor::Struct
3031 | Constructor::Ref
3032 | Constructor::DerefPattern(_)
3033 | Constructor::Slice(_)
3034 | Constructor::UnionField
3035 | Constructor::Or
3036 | Constructor::Str(_) => bug!("unsupported pattern constructor {:?}", pat.ctor()),
3037
3038 // These should never occur here:
3039 Constructor::Never
3040 | Constructor::NonExhaustive
3041 | Constructor::Hidden
3042 | Constructor::Missing
3043 | Constructor::PrivateUninhabited => {
3044 bug!("unsupported pattern constructor {:?}", pat.ctor())
3045 }
3046 }
3047 }
3048}