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c8b76bcf58
On some architectures, vector types may have a different ABI depending on whether the relevant target features are enabled. (The ABI when the feature is disabled is often not specified, but LLVM implements some de-facto ABI.) As discussed in rust-lang/lang-team#235, this turns out to very easily lead to unsound code. This commit makes it a post-monomorphization future-incompat warning to declare or call functions using those vector types in a context in which the corresponding target features are disabled, if using an ABI for which the difference is relevant. This ensures that these functions are always called with a consistent ABI. See the [nomination comment](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/127731#issuecomment-2288558187) for more discussion. Part of #116558
16 lines
338 B
Rust
16 lines
338 B
Rust
//@ known-bug: #131342
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fn main() {
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let mut items = vec![1, 2, 3, 4, 5].into_iter();
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problem_thingy(&mut items);
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}
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fn problem_thingy(items: &mut impl Iterator<Item = u8>) {
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let mut peeker = items.peekable();
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match peeker.peek() {
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Some(_) => (),
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None => return (),
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}
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problem_thingy(&mut peeker);
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}
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