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Rollup merge of rust-lang#128443 - compiler-errors:async-unreachable,…
… r=fmease Properly mark loop as diverging if it has no breaks Due to specifics about the desugaring of the `.await` operator, HIR typeck doesn't recognize that `.await`ing an `impl Future<Output = !>` will diverge in the same way as calling a `fn() -> !`. This is because the await operator desugars to approximately: ```rust loop { match future.poll(...) { Poll::Ready(x) => break x, Poll::Pending => {} } } ``` We know that the value of `x` is `!`, however since `break` is a coercion site, we coerce `!` to some `?0` (the type of the loop expression). Then since the type of the `loop {...}` expression is `?0`, we will not detect the loop as diverging like we do with other expressions that evaluate to `!`: https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/blob/0b5eb7ba7bd796fb39c8bb6acd9ef6c140f28b65/compiler/rustc_hir_typeck/src/expr.rs#L240-L243 We can technically fix this in two ways: 1. Make coercion of loop exprs more eagerly result in a type of `!` when the only break expressions have type `!`. 2. Make loops understand that all of that if they have only diverging break values, then the loop diverges as well. (1.) likely has negative effects on inference, and seems like a weird special case to drill into coercion. However, it turns out that (2.) is very easy to implement, we already record whether a loop has any break expressions, and when we do so, we actually skip over any break expressions with diverging values!: https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/blob/0b5eb7ba7bd796fb39c8bb6acd9ef6c140f28b65/compiler/rustc_hir_typeck/src/expr.rs#L713-L716 Thus, we can consider the loop as diverging if we see that it has no breaks, which is the change implemented in this PR. This is not usually a problem in regular code for two reasons: 1. In regular code, we already mark `break diverging()` as unreachable if `diverging()` is unreachable. We don't do this for `.await`, since we suppress unreachable errors within `.await` (rust-lang#64930). Un-suppressing this code will result in spurious unreachable expression errors pointing to internal await machinery. 3. In loops that truly have no breaks (e.g. `loop {}`), we already evaluate the type of the loop to `!`, so this special case is kinda moot. This only affects loops that have `break`s with values of type `!`. Thus, this seems like a change that may affect more code than just `.await`, but it likely does not in meaningful ways; if it does, it's certainly correct to apply. Fixes rust-lang#128434
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