Returns the requirements for clause to be well-formed.
Points the cause span of a super predicate at the relevant associated type.
Given an object type like SomeTrait + Send, computes the lifetime
bounds that must hold on the elided self type. These are derived
from the declarations of SomeTrait, Send, and friends – if
they declare trait SomeTrait : 'static, for example, then
'static would appear in the list. The hard work is done by
infer::required_region_bounds, see that for more information.
Returns the set of obligations needed to make arg well-formed.
If arg contains unresolved inference variables, this may include
further WF obligations. However, if arg IS an unresolved
inference variable, returns None, because we are not able to
make any progress at all. This is to prevent “livelock” where we
say “$0 is WF if $0 is WF”.
Given a set of predicates that apply to an object type, returns
the region bounds that the (erased) Self type must
outlive. Precisely because the Self type is erased, the
parameter erased_self_ty must be supplied to indicate what type
has been used to represent Self in the predicates
themselves. This should really be a unique type; FreshTy(0) is a
popular choice.
Returns the obligations that make this trait reference
well-formed. For example, if there is a trait Set defined like
trait Set<K: Eq>, then the trait bound Foo: Set<Bar> is WF
if Bar: Eq.
Compute the predicates that are required for a type to be well-formed.