Glossary

TermMeaning
arena/arena allocation  An arena is a large memory buffer from which other memory allocations are made. This style of allocation is called arena allocation. See this chapter for more info.
AST  The abstract syntax tree produced by the rustc_ast crate; reflects user syntax very closely.
APIT  An argument-position impl Trait. Also known as an anonymous type parameter. (see the reference).
binder  A "binder" is a place where a variable or type is declared; for example, the <T> is a binder for the generic type parameter T in fn foo<T>(..), and |a| ... is a binder for the parameter a. See the background chapter for more.
BodyId  An identifier that refers to a specific body (definition of a function or constant) in the crate. See the HIR chapter for more.
bound variable  A "bound variable" is one that is declared within an expression/term. For example, the variable a is bound within the closure expression |a| a * 2. See the background chapter for more
codegen  The code to translate MIR into LLVM IR.
codegen unit  When we produce LLVM IR, we group the Rust code into a number of codegen units (sometimes abbreviated as CGUs). Each of these units is processed by LLVM independently from one another, enabling parallelism. They are also the unit of incremental re-use. (see more)
completeness  A technical term in type theory, it means that every type-safe program also type-checks. Having both soundness and completeness is very hard, and usually soundness is more important. (see "soundness").
control-flow graph  A representation of the control-flow of a program; see the background chapter for more
CTFE  Short for Compile-Time Function Evaluation, this is the ability of the compiler to evaluate const fns at compile time. This is part of the compiler's constant evaluation system. (see more)
cx  We tend to use "cx" as an abbreviation for context. See also tcx, infcx, etc.
ctxt  We also use "ctxt" as an abbreviation for context, e.g. TyCtxt. See also cx or tcx.
DAG  A directed acyclic graph is used during compilation to keep track of dependencies between queries. (see more)
data-flow analysis  A static analysis that figures out what properties are true at each point in the control-flow of a program; see the background chapter for more.
DeBruijn Index  A technique for describing which binder a variable is bound by using only integers. It has the benefit that it is invariant under variable renaming. (see more)
DefId  An index identifying a definition (see rustc_middle/src/hir/def_id.rs). Uniquely identifies a DefPath. See the HIR chapter for more.
discriminant  The underlying value associated with an enum variant or generator state to indicate it as "active" (but not to be confused with its "variant index"). At runtime, the discriminant of the active variant is encoded in the tag.
double pointer  A pointer with additional metadata. See "fat pointer" for more.
drop glue  (internal) compiler-generated instructions that handle calling the destructors (Drop) for data types.
DST  Short for Dynamically-Sized Type, this is a type for which the compiler cannot statically know the size in memory (e.g. str or [u8]). Such types don't implement Sized and cannot be allocated on the stack. They can only occur as the last field in a struct. They can only be used behind a pointer (e.g. &str or &[u8]).
early-bound lifetime  A lifetime region that is substituted at its definition site. Bound in an item's Generics and substituted using a GenericArgs. Contrast with late-bound lifetime. (see more)
effects  Right now only means const traits and ~const bounds. (see more)
empty type  see "uninhabited type".
fat pointer  A two word value carrying the address of some value, along with some further information necessary to put the value to use. Rust includes two kinds of "fat pointers": references to slices, and trait objects. A reference to a slice carries the starting address of the slice and its length. A trait object carries a value's address and a pointer to the trait's implementation appropriate to that value. "Fat pointers" are also known as "wide pointers", and "double pointers".
free variable  A "free variable" is one that is not bound within an expression or term; see the background chapter for more
generics  The set of generic type parameters defined on a type or item.
HIR  The High-level IR, created by lowering and desugaring the AST. (see more)
HirId  Identifies a particular node in the HIR by combining a def-id with an "intra-definition offset". See the HIR chapter for more.
HIR map  The HIR map, accessible via tcx.hir(), allows you to quickly navigate the HIR and convert between various forms of identifiers.
ICE  Short for internal compiler error, this is when the compiler crashes.
ICH  Short for incremental compilation hash, these are used as fingerprints for things such as HIR and crate metadata, to check if changes have been made. This is useful in incremental compilation to see if part of a crate has changed and should be recompiled.
infcx  The type inference context (InferCtxt). (see rustc_middle::infer)
inference variable  When doing type or region inference, an "inference variable" is a kind of special type/region that represents what you are trying to infer. Think of X in algebra. For example, if we are trying to infer the type of a variable in a program, we create an inference variable to represent that unknown type.
intern  Interning refers to storing certain frequently-used constant data, such as strings, and then referring to the data by an identifier (e.g. a Symbol) rather than the data itself, to reduce memory usage and number of allocations. See this chapter for more info.
interpreter  The heart of const evaluation, running MIR code at compile time. (see more)
intrinsic  Intrinsics are special functions that are implemented in the compiler itself but exposed (often unstably) to users. They do magical and dangerous things. (See std::intrinsics)
IR  Short for Intermediate Representation, a general term in compilers. During compilation, the code is transformed from raw source (ASCII text) to various IRs. In Rust, these are primarily HIR, MIR, and LLVM IR. Each IR is well-suited for some set of computations. For example, MIR is well-suited for the borrow checker, and LLVM IR is well-suited for codegen because LLVM accepts it.
IRLO  IRLO or irlo is sometimes used as an abbreviation for internals.rust-lang.org.
item  A kind of "definition" in the language, such as a static, const, use statement, module, struct, etc. Concretely, this corresponds to the Item type.
lang item  Items that represent concepts intrinsic to the language itself, such as special built-in traits like Sync and Send; or traits representing operations such as Add; or functions that are called by the compiler. (see more)
late-bound lifetime  A lifetime region that is substituted at its call site. Bound in a HRTB and substituted by specific functions in the compiler, such as liberate_late_bound_regions. Contrast with early-bound lifetime. (see more)
local crate  The crate currently being compiled. This is in contrast to "upstream crates" which refer to dependencies of the local crate.
LTO  Short for Link-Time Optimizations, this is a set of optimizations offered by LLVM that occur just before the final binary is linked. These include optimizations like removing functions that are never used in the final program, for example. ThinLTO is a variant of LTO that aims to be a bit more scalable and efficient, but possibly sacrifices some optimizations. You may also read issues in the Rust repo about "FatLTO", which is the loving nickname given to non-Thin LTO. LLVM documentation: here and here.
LLVM  (actually not an acronym :P) an open-source compiler backend. It accepts LLVM IR and outputs native binaries. Various languages (e.g. Rust) can then implement a compiler front-end that outputs LLVM IR and use LLVM to compile to all the platforms LLVM supports.
memoization  The process of storing the results of (pure) computations (such as pure function calls) to avoid having to repeat them in the future. This is typically a trade-off between execution speed and memory usage.
MIR  The Mid-level IR that is created after type-checking for use by borrowck and codegen. (see more)
Miri  A tool to detect Undefined Behavior in (unsafe) Rust code. (see more)
monomorphization  The process of taking generic implementations of types and functions and instantiating them with concrete types. For example, in the code we might have Vec<T>, but in the final executable, we will have a copy of the Vec code for every concrete type used in the program (e.g. a copy for Vec<usize>, a copy for Vec<MyStruct>, etc).
normalize  A general term for converting to a more canonical form, but in the case of rustc typically refers to associated type normalization.
newtype  A wrapper around some other type (e.g., struct Foo(T) is a "newtype" for T). This is commonly used in Rust to give a stronger type for indices.
niche  Invalid bit patterns for a type that can be used for layout optimizations. Some types cannot have certain bit patterns. For example, the NonZero* integers or the reference &T cannot be represented by a 0 bitstring. This means the compiler can perform layout optimizations by taking advantage of the invalid "niche value". An example application for this is the Discriminant elision on Option-like enums, which allows using a type's niche as the "tag" for an enum without requiring a separate field.
NLL  Short for non-lexical lifetimes, this is an extension to Rust's borrowing system to make it be based on the control-flow graph.
node-id or NodeId  An index identifying a particular node in the AST or HIR; gradually being phased out and replaced with HirId. See the HIR chapter for more.
obligation  Something that must be proven by the trait system. (see more)
placeholder  NOTE: skolemization is deprecated by placeholder a way of handling subtyping around "for-all" types (e.g., for<'a> fn(&'a u32)) as well as solving higher-ranked trait bounds (e.g., for<'a> T: Trait<'a>). See the chapter on placeholder and universes for more details.
point  Used in the NLL analysis to refer to some particular location in the MIR; typically used to refer to a node in the control-flow graph.
polymorphize  An optimization that avoids unnecessary monomorphisation. (see more)
projection  A general term for a "relative path", e.g. x.f is a "field projection", and T::Item is an "associated type projection".
promoted constants  Constants extracted from a function and lifted to static scope; see this section for more details.
provider  The function that executes a query. (see more)
quantified  In math or logic, existential and universal quantification are used to ask questions like "is there any type T for which is true?" or "is this true for all types T?"; see the background chapter for more.
query  A sub-computation during compilation. Query results can be cached in the current session or to disk for incremental compilation. (see more)
recovery  Recovery refers to handling invalid syntax during parsing (e.g. a missing comma) and continuing to parse the AST. This avoid showing spurious errors to the user (e.g. showing 'missing field' errors when the struct definition contains errors).
region  Another term for "lifetime" often used in the literature and in the borrow checker.
rib  A data structure in the name resolver that keeps track of a single scope for names. (see more)
RPIT  A return-position impl Trait. (see the reference).
RPITIT  A return-position impl Trait in trait. Unlike RPIT, this is desugared to a generic associated type (GAT). Introduced in RFC 3425. (see more)
scrutinee  A scrutinee is the expression that is matched on in match expressions and similar pattern matching constructs. For example, in match x { A => 1, B => 2 }, the expression x is the scrutinee.
sess  The compiler session, which stores global data used throughout compilation
side tables  Because the AST and HIR are immutable once created, we often carry extra information about them in the form of hashtables, indexed by the id of a particular node.
sigil  Like a keyword but composed entirely of non-alphanumeric tokens. For example, & is a sigil for references.
soundness  A technical term in type theory. Roughly, if a type system is sound, then a program that type-checks is type-safe. That is, one can never (in safe rust) force a value into a variable of the wrong type. (see "completeness").
span  A location in the user's source code, used for error reporting primarily. These are like a file-name/line-number/column tuple on steroids: they carry a start/end point, and also track macro expansions and compiler desugaring. All while being packed into a few bytes (really, it's an index into a table). See the Span datatype for more.
substs  The substitutions for a given generic type or item (e.g. the i32, u32 in HashMap<i32, u32>).
sysroot  The directory for build artifacts that are loaded by the compiler at runtime. (see more)
tag  The "tag" of an enum/generator encodes the discriminant of the active variant/state. Tags can either be "direct" (simply storing the discriminant in a field) or use a "niche".
TAIT  A type-alias impl Trait. Introduced in RFC 2515.
tcx  Standard variable name for the "typing context" (TyCtxt), main data structure of the compiler. (see more)
'tcx  The lifetime of the allocation arenas used by TyCtxt. Most data interned during a compilation session will use this lifetime with the exception of HIR data which uses the 'hir lifetime. (see more)
token  The smallest unit of parsing. Tokens are produced after lexing (see more).
TLS  Thread-Local Storage. Variables may be defined so that each thread has its own copy (rather than all threads sharing the variable). This has some interactions with LLVM. Not all platforms support TLS.
trait reference  The name of a trait along with a suitable set of input type/lifetimes. (see more)
trans  Short for "translation", the code to translate MIR into LLVM IR. Renamed to codegen.
Ty  The internal representation of a type. (see more)
TyCtxt  The data structure often referred to as tcx in code which provides access to session data and the query system.
UFCS  Short for Universal Function Call Syntax, this is an unambiguous syntax for calling a method. (see more)
uninhabited type  A type which has no values. This is not the same as a ZST, which has exactly 1 value. An example of an uninhabited type is enum Foo {}, which has no variants, and so, can never be created. The compiler can treat code that deals with uninhabited types as dead code, since there is no such value to be manipulated. ! (the never type) is an uninhabited type. Uninhabited types are also called "empty types".
upvar  A variable captured by a closure from outside the closure.
variance  Determines how changes to a generic type/lifetime parameter affect subtyping; for example, if T is a subtype of U, then Vec<T> is a subtype Vec<U> because Vec is covariant in its generic parameter. See the background chapter for a more general explanation. See the variance chapter for an explanation of how type checking handles variance.
variant index  In an enum, identifies a variant by assigning them indices starting at 0. This is purely internal and not to be confused with the "discriminant" which can be overwritten by the user (e.g. enum Bool { True = 42, False = 0 }).
Well-formedness  Semantically:An expression that evaluates to meaningful result. In Type Systems: A type related construct which follows rules of the type system.
wide pointer  A pointer with additional metadata. See "fat pointer" for more.
ZST  Zero-Sized Type. A type whose values have size 0 bytes. Since 2^0 = 1, such types can have exactly one value. For example, () (unit) is a ZST. struct Foo; is also a ZST. The compiler can do some nice optimizations around ZSTs.