Currently rustdoc does not forward `-Z` options to rustc when building
test executables. This makes impossible to use rustdoc to run test
samples when crate under test is instrumented with one of sanitizers
`-Zsanitizer=...`, since the final linking step will not include
sanitizer runtime library.
Forward `-Z` options to rustc to solve the issue.
Helps with #43031.
Fixes#58700Fixes#58696Fixes#49553Fixes#52210
This commit removes the special rustdoc handling for proc macros, as we
can now
retrieve their span and attributes just like any other item.
A new command-line option is added to rustdoc: `--crate-type`. This
takes the same options as rustc's `--crate-type` option. However, all
values other than `proc-macro` are treated the same. This allows Rustdoc
to enable 'proc macro mode' when handling a proc macro crate.
In compiletest, a new 'rustdoc-flags' option is added. This allows us to
pass in the '--proc-macro-crate' flag in the absence of Cargo.
I've opened [an additional PR to
Cargo](https://github.com/rust-lang/cargo/pull/7159) to support passing
in this flag.
These two PRS can be merged in any order - the Cargo changes will not
take effect until the 'cargo' submodule is updated in this repository.
This commit completely removes usage of the `panictry!` macro from
outside libsyntax. The macro causes parse errors to be fatal, so using
it in libsyntax_ext caused parse failures *within* a syntax extension to
be fatal, which is probably not intended.
Furthermore, this commit adds spans to diagnostics emitted by empty
extensions if they were missing, à la #56491.
Esteban Kuber requested that the panic message make it clear
that `RUST_BACKTRACE=1` is an environment variable. This change
makes that clear. Wording provided in part by David Tolnay.