Commit Graph

142069 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Mara Bos
35ebbe3e01 Rollup merge of #71531 - spastorino:move-treat-err-as-bug-tests-to-ui, r=oli-obk
Move treat err as bug tests to ui

cc `@oli-obk`
2021-02-08 19:28:09 +01:00
Jesus Rubio
4d33d41ef3 Add long explanation for E0547 2021-02-08 18:25:05 +01:00
Cameron Steffen
39ba449c2a Fix collapsible_if false positive with attributes 2021-02-08 11:00:30 -06:00
Cameron Steffen
1021327781 Simplify if_chain 2021-02-08 10:51:40 -06:00
daxpedda
6c73f989e2 Fix missing_panics_doc warning on unreachable!. 2021-02-08 17:25:10 +01:00
Cameron Steffen
37555f8f73 Use path_to_local_id 2021-02-08 09:50:13 -06:00
Cameron Steffen
5db48a382a Refactor out UnusedSelfVisitor 2021-02-08 08:56:33 -06:00
Cameron Steffen
1d30422945 Enhance LocalUsedVisitor to check closure bodies 2021-02-08 08:56:33 -06:00
Cameron Steffen
a42be8589a Fix vec_init_then_push FP 2021-02-08 08:54:04 -06:00
Cameron Steffen
c44eafdcd7 Use id instead of name 2021-02-08 08:54:04 -06:00
Laurențiu Nicola
1774ec1a68 ⬆️ rust-analyzer 2021-02-08 16:14:06 +02:00
Giles Cope
cadcf5ed99 Unify way to flip 6th bit. (Same assembly generated) 2021-02-08 12:21:36 +00:00
Jad Ghalayini
f847ff1511 Added #[repr(transparent)] to core::cmp::Reverse 2021-02-08 12:07:59 +00:00
Lzu Tao
010e194d6e Specialize slice::fill for Copy type and u8/i8/bool 2021-02-08 11:32:18 +00:00
bors
921ec4b3fc Auto merge of #81313 - LeSeulArtichaut:revert-32558, r=jyn514
Restore linking to itself in implementors section of trait page

Reverts #32558 as proposed in [this Zulip discussion](https://rust-lang.zulipchat.com/#narrow/stream/266220-rustdoc/topic/Trait.20implementation.20self-links/near/223773273)
r? `@jyn514` cc `@camelid`
2021-02-08 10:46:10 +00:00
Tri Vo
9c34c140a7 HWASan documentation 2021-02-08 00:24:45 -08:00
bors
0b96f60c07 Auto merge of #79245 - ssomers:btree_curb_ord_bound, r=dtolnay
BTree: remove Ord bound where it is absent elsewhere

Some btree methods don't really need an Ord bound and don't have one, while some methods that more obviously don't need it, do have one.

An example of the former is `iter`, even though it explicitly exposes the work of the Ord implementation (["sorted by key"](https://doc.rust-lang.org/std/collections/struct.BTreeMap.html#method.iter) - but I'm not suggesting it should have the Ord bound). An example of the latter is `new`, which doesn't involve any keys whatsoever.
2021-02-08 07:56:04 +00:00
Tri Vo
c7d9bffe76 HWASan support 2021-02-07 23:48:58 -08:00
Ömer Sinan Ağacan
6eb1bd4c3e parser: Fix panic in 'const impl' recovery
The panic happens when in recovery parsing a full `impl`
(`parse_item_impl`) fails and we drop the `DiagnosticBuilder` for the
recovery suggestion and return the `parse_item_impl` error.

We now raise the original error "expected identifier found `impl`" when
parsing the `impl` fails.

Note that the regression test is slightly simplified version of the
original repro in #81806, to make the error output smaller and more
resilient to unrelated changes in parser error messages.

Fixes #81806
2021-02-08 10:46:19 +03:00
bors
4bbd7e46ee Auto merge of #6696 - dtolnay-contrib:regex, r=Manishearth
Downgrade trivial_regex to nursery

See #6690. I think there is still value in a trivial_regex lint, but only if clippy can tell that the regex is only ever constructed and applied to a single input.

```rust
let regex = Regex::new("trivial_regex")?;
println!("{}", regex.is_match(s));
// `regex` never used again
```

---

changelog: remove `trivial_regex` from default set of enabled lints
2021-02-08 06:02:29 +00:00
Lzu Tao
446798f84b fix bootstrap 2021-02-08 05:18:47 +00:00
bors
4940dd483a Auto merge of #80962 - jhpratt:const_int_fn-stabilization, r=dtolnay
Stabilize remaining integer methods as `const fn`

This pull request stabilizes the following methods as `const fn`:

- `i*::checked_div`
- `i*::checked_div_euclid`
- `i*::checked_rem`
- `i*::checked_rem_euclid`
- `i*::div_euclid`
- `i*::overflowing_div`
- `i*::overflowing_div_euclid`
- `i*::overflowing_rem`
- `i*::overflowing_rem_euclid`
- `i*::rem_euclid`
- `i*::wrapping_div`
- `i*::wrapping_div_euclid`
- `i*::wrapping_rem`
- `i*::wrapping_rem_euclid`
- `u*::checked_div`
- `u*::checked_div_euclid`
- `u*::checked_rem`
- `u*::checked_rem_euclid`
- `u*::div_euclid`
- `u*::overflowing_div`
- `u*::overflowing_div_euclid`
- `u*::overflowing_rem`
- `u*::overflowing_rem_euclid`
- `u*::rem_euclid`
- `u*::wrapping_div`
- `u*::wrapping_div_euclid`
- `u*::wrapping_rem`
- `u*::wrapping_rem_euclid`

These can all be implemented on the current stable (1.49). There are two unstable details: const likely/unlikely and unchecked division/remainder. Both of these are for optimizations, and are in no way required to make the methods function; there is no exposure of these details publicly. Per comments below, it seems best practice is to stabilize the intrinsics. As such, `intrinsics::unchecked_div` and `intrinsics::unchecked_rem` have been stabilized as `const` as part of this pull request as well. The methods themselves remain unstable.

I believe part of the reason these were not stabilized previously was the behavior around division by 0 and modulo 0. After testing on nightly, the diagnostic for something like `const _: i8 = 5i8 % 0i8;` is similar to that of `const _: i8 = 5i8.rem_euclid(0i8);` (assuming the appropriate feature flag is enabled). As such, I believe these methods are ready to be stabilized as `const fn`.

This pull request represents the final methods mentioned in #53718. As such, this PR closes #53718.

`@rustbot` modify labels to +A-const-fn, +T-libs
2021-02-08 05:05:55 +00:00
Camelid
e4b83fcad4 Document smart punctuation 2021-02-07 20:19:16 -08:00
Camelid
f1581ed8fc Test that code does not get smart-punctuated 2021-02-07 20:19:01 -08:00
Camelid
a0f9d4beec Enable smart punctuation 2021-02-07 19:57:53 -08:00
Camelid
0f3e2f68d3 Clarify docs for DUMMY_NODE_ID 2021-02-07 19:42:12 -08:00
1000teslas
8412da6829 Add tests 2021-02-08 13:29:42 +11:00
1000teslas
b2eed3a559 Point out implicit deref coercions in borrow
Clean up code
2021-02-08 13:24:37 +11:00
bors
0b7a598e12 Auto merge of #72603 - jsgf:extern-loc, r=nikomatsakis
Implement `--extern-location`

This PR implements `--extern-location` as a followup to #72342 as part of the implementation of #57274. The goal of this PR is to allow rustc, in coordination with the build system, to present a useful diagnostic about how to remove an unnecessary dependency from a dependency specification file (eg Cargo.toml).

EDIT: Updated to current PR state.

The location is specified for each named crate - that is, for a given `--extern foo[=path]` there can also be `--extern-location foo=<location>`. It supports ~~three~~ two styles of location:
~~1. `--extern-location foo=file:<path>:<line>` - a file path and line specification
1. `--extern-location foo=span:<path>:<start>:<end>` - a span specified as a file and start and end byte offsets~~
1. `--extern-location foo=raw:<anything>` - a raw string which is included in the output
1. `--extern-location foo=json:<anything>` - an arbitrary Json structure which is emitted via Json diagnostics in a `tool_metadata` field.

~~1 & 2 are turned into an internal `Span`, so long as the path exists and is readable, and the location is meaningful (within the file, etc). This is used as the `Span` for a fix suggestion which is reported like other fix suggestions.~~

`raw` and `json` are for the case where the location isn't best expressed as a file and location within that file. For example, it could be a rule name and the name of a dependency within that rule. `rustc` makes no attempt to parse the raw string, and simply includes it in the output diagnostic text. `json` is only included in json diagnostics. `raw` is emitted as text and also as a json string in `tool_metadata`.

If no `--extern-location` option is specified then it will emit a default json structure consisting of `{"name": name, "path": path}` corresponding to the name and path in `--extern name=path`.

This is a prototype/RFC to make some of the earlier conversations more concrete. It doesn't stand on its own - it's only useful if implemented by Cargo and other build systems. There's also a ton of implementation details which I'd appreciate a second eye on as well.

~~**NOTE** The first commit in this PR is #72342 and should be ignored for the purposes of review. The first commit is a very simplistic implementation which is basically raw-only, presented as a MVP. The second implements the full thing, and subsequent commits are incremental fixes.~~

cc `@ehuss` `@est31` `@petrochenkov` `@estebank`
2021-02-08 02:23:17 +00:00
Ibraheem Ahmed
1dac9a1d78 fix formatting of std::iter::Map 2021-02-07 21:16:25 -05:00
David Tolnay
fd35517bd4 Downgrade trivial_regex to nursery 2021-02-07 16:54:09 -08:00
Dániel Buga
37cbc08a92 Clean up weird option mapping 2021-02-08 00:24:36 +01:00
Jeremy Fitzhardinge
91d8c3b521 Make sure all fields are accounted for in encode_fields!
This will make sure the encoder will get updated if any new fields are
added to Diagnostic.
2021-02-07 14:54:22 -08:00
Jeremy Fitzhardinge
50572d6629 Implement Encoder for Diagnostic manually
...so we can skip serializing `tool_metadata` if it hasn't been set.
This makes the output a bit cleaner, and avoiding having to update a
bunch of unrelated tests.
2021-02-07 14:54:22 -08:00
Jeremy Fitzhardinge
82ccb6582a Add --extern-loc to augment unused crate dependency diagnostics
This allows a build system to indicate a location in its own dependency
specification files (eg Cargo's `Cargo.toml`) which can be reported
along side any unused crate dependency.

This supports several types of location:
 - 'json' - provide some json-structured data, which is included in the json diagnostics
     in a `tool_metadata` field
 - 'raw' - emit the provided string into the output. This also appears as a json string in
     `tool_metadata`.

If no `--extern-location` is explicitly provided then a default json entry of the form
`"tool_metadata":{"name":<cratename>,"path":<cratepath>}` is emitted.
2021-02-07 14:54:20 -08:00
bors
bb587b1a17 Auto merge of #80652 - calebzulawski:simd-lanes, r=nagisa
Improve SIMD type element count validation

Resolves rust-lang/stdsimd#53.

These changes are motivated by `stdsimd` moving in the direction of const generic vectors, e.g.:
```rust
#[repr(simd)]
struct SimdF32<const N: usize>([f32; N]);
```

This makes a few changes:
* Establishes a maximum SIMD lane count of 2^16 (65536).  This value is arbitrary, but attempts to validate lane count before hitting potential errors in the backend.  It's not clear what LLVM's maximum lane count is, but cranelift's appears to be much less than `usize::MAX`, at least.
* Expands some SIMD intrinsics to support arbitrary lane counts.  This resolves the ICE in the linked issue.
* Attempts to catch invalid-sized vectors during typeck when possible.

Unresolved questions:
* Generic-length vectors can't be validated in typeck and are only validated after monomorphization while computing layout.  This "works", but the errors simply bail out with no context beyond the name of the type.  Should these errors instead return `LayoutError` or otherwise provide context in some way?  As it stands, users of `stdsimd` could trivially produce monomorphization errors by making zero-length vectors.

cc `@bjorn3`
2021-02-07 22:25:14 +00:00
Dániel Buga
46f30455f4 Optimize Borrows
Reuse as much memory as possible, reduce number of allocations.
Use BitSet instead of a HashMap, since only a single bit of
information was used as the map's value.
2021-02-07 22:26:21 +01:00
Ömer Sinan Ağacan
7e94641ee9 Fix SourceMap::start_point
`start_point` needs to return the *first* character's span, but it would
previously call `find_width_of_character_at_span` which returns the span
of the *last* character. The implementation is now fixed.

Other changes:

- Docs for start_point, end_point, find_width_of_character_at_span
  updated

- Minor simplification in find_width_of_character_at_span code

Fixes #81800
2021-02-07 23:23:09 +03:00
bors
9778068cbc Auto merge of #79078 - petrochenkov:derattr, r=Aaron1011
expand/resolve: Turn `#[derive]` into a regular macro attribute

This PR turns `#[derive]` into a regular attribute macro declared in libcore and defined in `rustc_builtin_macros`, like it was previously done with other "active" attributes in https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/62086, https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/62735 and other PRs.
This PR is also a continuation of #65252, #69870 and other PRs linked from them, which layed the ground for converting `#[derive]` specifically.

`#[derive]` still asks `rustc_resolve` to resolve paths inside `derive(...)`, and `rustc_expand` gets those resolution results through some backdoor (which I'll try to address later), but otherwise `#[derive]` is treated as any other macro attributes, which simplifies the resolution-expansion infra pretty significantly.

The change has several observable effects on language and library.
Some of the language changes are **feature-gated** by [`feature(macro_attributes_in_derive_output)`](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/81119).

#### Library

- `derive` is now available through standard library as `{core,std}::prelude::v1::derive`.

#### Language

- `derive` now goes through name resolution, so it can now be renamed - `use derive as my_derive; #[my_derive(Debug)] struct S;`.
- `derive` now goes through name resolution, so this resolution can fail in corner cases. Crater found one such regression, where import `use foo as derive` goes into a cycle with `#[derive(Something)]`.
- **[feature-gated]** `#[derive]` is now expanded as any other attributes in left-to-right order. This allows to remove the restriction on other macro attributes following `#[derive]` (https://github.com/rust-lang/reference/issues/566). The following macro attributes become a part of the derive's input (this is not a change, non-macro attributes following `#[derive]` were treated in the same way previously).
- `#[derive]` is now expanded as any other attributes in left-to-right order. This means two derive attributes `#[derive(Foo)] #[derive(Bar)]` are now expanded separately rather than together. It doesn't generally make difference, except for esoteric cases. For example `#[derive(Foo)]` can now produce an import bringing `Bar` into scope, but previously both `Foo` and `Bar` were required to be resolved before expanding any of them.
- **[feature-gated]** `#[derive()]` (with empty list in parentheses) actually becomes useful. For historical reasons `#[derive]` *fully configures* its input, eagerly evaluating `cfg` everywhere in its target, for example on fields.
Expansion infra doesn't do that for other attributes, but now when macro attributes attributes are allowed to be written after `#[derive]`, it means that derive can *fully configure* items for them.
    ```rust
	#[derive()]
	#[my_attr]
	struct S {
		#[cfg(FALSE)] // this field in removed by `#[derive()]` and not observed by `#[my_attr]`
		field: u8
	}
    ```
- `#[derive]` on some non-item targets is now prohibited. This was accidentally allowed as noop in the past, but was warned about since early 2018 (#50092), despite that crater found a few such cases in unmaintained crates.
- Derive helper attributes used before their introduction are now reported with a deprecation lint. This change is long overdue (since macro modularization, https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/52226#issuecomment-422605033), but it was hard to do without fixing expansion order for derives. The deprecation is tracked by #79202.
```rust
    #[trait_helper] // warning: derive helper attribute is used before it is introduced
    #[derive(Trait)]
    struct S {}
```

Crater analysis: https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/79078#issuecomment-731436821
2021-02-07 19:36:10 +00:00
Santiago Pastorino
6d9efd17e5 Remove treat-err-as-bug delay_span_bug test from run-make-fulldeps 2021-02-07 16:13:59 -03:00
Santiago Pastorino
1d35960fe1 Create ui test for -Ztreat-err-as-bug delay_span_bug 2021-02-07 16:13:53 -03:00
bors
de35c297bf Auto merge of #6694 - matthiaskrgr:lintcheck-cfg, r=Manishearth
lintcheck: add a cmdline option --crates-toml <TOML PATH> to override crate sources file to use.

Fixes #6691

changelog: lintcheck: add --crates-toml  cmdline option to override default crates.toml file.
2021-02-07 19:04:00 +00:00
Vadim Petrochenkov
d8af6de911 Address review comments 2021-02-07 20:08:45 +03:00
Vadim Petrochenkov
f6caae52c1 Feature gate macro attributes in #[derive] output 2021-02-07 20:08:45 +03:00
Vadim Petrochenkov
dbdbd30bf2 expand/resolve: Turn #[derive] into a regular macro attribute 2021-02-07 20:08:45 +03:00
bors
36ecbc94eb Auto merge of #80632 - Nadrieril:fix-80501, r=varkor
Identify unreachable subpatterns more reliably

In https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/80104 I used `Span`s to identify unreachable sub-patterns in the presence of or-patterns during exhaustiveness checking. In https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/80501 it was revealed that `Span`s are complicated and that this was not a good idea.
Instead, this PR identifies subpatterns logically: as a path in the tree of subpatterns of a given pattern. I made a struct that captures a set of such subpatterns. This is a bit complex, but thankfully self-contained; the rest of the code does not need to know anything about it.
Fixes https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/80501. I think I managed to keep the perf neutral.

r? `@varkor`
2021-02-07 16:48:57 +00:00
Takayuki Maeda
1c3033d5cf add a new lint bytes_nth 2021-02-08 01:34:59 +09:00
Smitty
ed8c68644c Bless tests with new error wording 2021-02-07 11:11:38 -05:00
Smitty
c6cb014ad6 Clarify error message wording 2021-02-07 11:02:53 -05:00
Matthias Krüger
6f3eeac83c lintcheck: add a cmdline option --crates-toml <TOML PATH> to override crate sources file to use.
Fixes #6691
2021-02-07 16:14:43 +01:00