This modules contains the implementation of doctests, and not the
tests of rustdoc itself. This name is confusing, so let's rename it to
doctest for clarity.
`run()` returns `Result<(), String>`. But on failure it always returns
an empty string, and then `wrap_return()` treats an empty string
specially, by not reporting the error.
It turns out we already have the `ErrorReported` type for this sort of
behaviour. This commit changes `run()` to use it.
rustdoc's `main()` immediately spawns a thread, M, with a large stack
(16MiB or 32MiB) on which it runs `main_args()`. `main_args()` does a
small amount of options processing and then calls
`setup_callbacks_and_run_in_default_thread_pool_with_globals()`, which
spawns it own thread, and M is not used further.
So, thread M seems unnecessary. However, it does serve a purpose: if the
options processing in `main_args()` panics, that panic is caught when M
is joined. So M can't simply be removed.
However, `main_options()`, which is called by `main_args()`, has a
`catch_fatal_errors()` call within it. We can move that call to `main()`
and change it to the very similar `catch_with_exit_code()`. With that in
place, M can be removed, and panics from options processing will still
be caught appropriately.
Even better, this makes rustdoc's `main()` match rustc's `main()`, which
also uses `catch_with_exit_code()`.
(Also note that the use of a 16MiB/32MiB stack was eliminated from rustc
in #55617.)
`evaluate_obligation` can only be run on types that are already valid.
So rustdoc still has to run typeck even though it doesn't care about the
result.
Instead, report the error.
This emits the errors on-demand, without special-casing `impl Trait`, so
it should catch all ICEs of this kind, including ones that haven't been
found yet.
Since the error is emitted during type-checking there is less info about
the error; see comments in the code for details.
- Add test case for -> impl Trait
- Add test for impl trait with alias
- Move EmitIgnoredResolutionErrors to rustdoc
This makes `fn typeck_item_bodies` public, which is not desired behavior.
That change should be removed once
https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/74070 is merged.
- Don't visit nested closures twice
Move more of `rustc::lint` into `rustc_lint`
Based on https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/67806.
Here we try to consolidate more of the linting infra into `rustc::lint`. Some high-level notes:
- We now store an `Lrc<dyn Any + Send + Sync>` as opposed to `Lrc<LintStore>` in the `GlobalCtxt`. This enables us to avoid referring to the type, breaking a cyclic dependency, and so we can move things from `rustc::lint` to `rustc_lint`.
- `in_derive_expansion` is, and needs to, be moved as a method on `Span`.
- We reduce the number of ways on `tcx` to emit a lint so that the developer UX is more streamlined.
- `LintLevelsBuilder` is moved to `rustc_lint::levels`, leaving behind `LintLevelMap/Set` in a purified form due to current constraints (hopefully fixable in the future after https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/68133).
- `struct_lint_level` is moved to `rustc::lint` due to current dependency constraints.
- `rustc::lint::context` is moved to `rustc_lint::context`.
- The visitors in `rustc::lint` are moved to `rustc_lint::passes`.
Don't require `allow_internal_unstable` unless `staged_api` is enabled.
#63770 changed `qualify_min_const_fn` to require `allow_internal_unstable` for *all* crates that used an unstable feature, regardless of whether `staged_api` was enabled or the `fn` that used that feature was stably const. In practice, this meant that every crate in the ecosystem that wanted to use nightly features added `#![feature(const_fn)]`, which skips `qualify_min_const_fn` entirely.
After this PR, crates that do not have `#![feature(staged_api)]` will only need to enable the feature they are interested in. For example, `#![feature(const_if_match)]` will be enough to enable `if` and `match` in constants. Crates with `staged_api` (e.g., `libstd`) require `#[allow_internal_unstable]` to be added to a function if it uses nightly features unless that function is also marked `#[rustc_const_unstable]`. This prevents proliferation of `#[allow_internal_unstable]` into functions that are not callable in a `const` context on stable.
r? @oli-obk (author of #63770)
cc @Centril
This flag opts out of the min-const-fn checks entirely, which is usually
not what we want. The few cases where the flag is still necessary have
been annotated.