Carbide Dies in a 9mm are hard to size with the small short tapered case. I had carbide dies for my Star Progressive reloader. I had to lube about every other case just to make it a smooth operation, so, that is so much trouble that I just lubed them all anyway. The carbide was a waste of money and as much effort as steel dies.
I'm sure that all Rifle "Straight Walls" are not cylinders. They are Tapered for ease of extraction after firing in the chamber.
However, the black powder crowd do get custom made Neck Sizing dies for all 45s, 38s and 35s. I don't know exactly where they get them, but I was a spotter for 5 years and ran with the crowd. Didn't shoot that stinking sulfur, but I was in on their conversations with first hand knowledge.
One member mentioned the Carbide for the 357 Maximum. That is a true straight wall case. It is just a little longer case than the 357 Magnum and nothing more. Love that cartridge, though.
I have worked with 45-70s, 38-55s and the various 35 Maynards and etc.. They all require lube for full length sizing. Carbide dies will require lubing the cases, as well.
My 444 Marlin cases are tapered as well. I full length size the cases with the die backed off just enough so that the neck of the case works with the expander die and still holds the bullet firmly. The cases fit in my Marlin just fine. (Who says that "Micro-grooved Marlins don't shoot well?")
Harold Clark