| Age | Commit message (Collapse) | Author | Lines |
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(cherry picked from commit 1b068a0dea794373301f4ddbfb35a378c6805276)
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Provide structured suggestion for `impl Default` of type where all fields have defaults
```
error: `Default` impl doesn't use the declared default field values
--> $DIR/manual-default-impl-could-be-derived.rs:28:1
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LL | / impl Default for B {
LL | | fn default() -> Self {
LL | | B {
LL | | x: s(),
| | --- this field has a default value
LL | | y: 0,
| | - this field has a default value
... |
LL | | }
| |_^
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help: to avoid divergence in behavior between `Struct { .. }` and `<Struct as Default>::default()`, derive the `Default`
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LL ~ #[derive(Default)] struct B {
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```
Note that above the structured suggestion also includes completely removing the manual `impl`, but the rendering doesn't.
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have defaults
```
error: `Default` impl doesn't use the declared default field values
--> $DIR/manual-default-impl-could-be-derived.rs:28:1
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LL | / impl Default for B {
LL | | fn default() -> Self {
LL | | B {
LL | | x: s(),
| | --- this field has a default value
LL | | y: 0,
| | - this field has a default value
... |
LL | | }
| |_^
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help: to avoid divergence in behavior between `Struct { .. }` and `<Struct as Default>::default()`, derive the `Default`
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LL ~ #[derive(Default)] struct B {
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```
Note that above the structured suggestion also includes completely removing the manual `impl`, but the rendering doesn't.
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r=compiler-errors
Implement `default_overrides_default_fields` lint
Detect when a manual `Default` implementation isn't using the existing default field values and suggest using `..` instead:
```
error: `Default` impl doesn't use the declared default field values
--> $DIR/manual-default-impl-could-be-derived.rs:14:1
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LL | / impl Default for A {
LL | | fn default() -> Self {
LL | | A {
LL | | y: 0,
| | - this field has a default value
... |
LL | | }
| |_^
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= help: use the default values in the `impl` with `Struct { mandatory_field, .. }` to avoid them diverging over time
note: the lint level is defined here
--> $DIR/manual-default-impl-could-be-derived.rs:5:9
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LL | #![deny(default_overrides_default_fields)]
| ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
```
r? `@compiler-errors`
This is a simpler version of #134441, detecting the simpler case when a field with a default should have not been specified in the manual `Default::default()`, instead using `..` for it. It doesn't provide any suggestions, nor the checks for "equivalences" nor whether the value used in the imp being used would be suitable as a default field value.
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Detect when a manual `Default` implementation isn't using the existing default field values and suggest using `..` instead:
```
error: `Default` impl doesn't use the declared default field values
--> $DIR/manual-default-impl-could-be-derived.rs:14:1
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LL | / impl Default for A {
LL | | fn default() -> Self {
LL | | A {
LL | | y: 0,
| | - this field has a default value
... |
LL | | }
| |_^
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= help: use the default values in the `impl` with `Struct { mandatory_field, .. }` to avoid them diverging over time
note: the lint level is defined here
--> $DIR/manual-default-impl-could-be-derived.rs:5:9
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LL | #![deny(default_overrides_default_fields)]
| ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
```
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Begin to implement type system layer of unsafe binders
Mostly TODOs, but there's a lot of match arms that are basically just noops so I wanted to split these out before I put up the MIR lowering/projection part of this logic.
r? oli-obk
Tracking:
- https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/130516
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Also lint on option of function pointer comparisons
This PR is the first part of #134536, ie. the linting on `Option<{fn ptr}>` in the `unpredictable_function_pointer_comparisons` lint, which isn't part of the lang nomination that the second part is going trough, and so should be able to be approved independently.
Related to https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/134527
r? `@compiler-errors`
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cleanup region handling: add `LateParamRegionKind`
The second commit is to enable a split between `BoundRegionKind` and `LateParamRegionKind`, by avoiding `BoundRegionKind` where it isn't necessary.
The third comment then adds `LateParamRegionKind` to avoid having the same late-param region for separate bound regions. This fixes #124021.
r? `@compiler-errors`
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Point at lint name instead of whole attr for gated lints
```
warning: unknown lint: `test_unstable_lint`
--> $DIR/warn-unknown-unstable-lint-inline.rs:4:10
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LL | #![allow(test_unstable_lint, another_unstable_lint)]
| ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
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= note: the `test_unstable_lint` lint is unstable
= help: add `#![feature(test_unstable_lint)]` to the crate attributes to enable
= note: this compiler was built on YYYY-MM-DD; consider upgrading it if it is out of date
note: the lint level is defined here
--> $DIR/warn-unknown-unstable-lint-inline.rs:3:9
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LL | #![warn(unknown_lints)]
| ^^^^^^^^^^^^^
warning: unknown lint: `test_unstable_lint`
--> $DIR/warn-unknown-unstable-lint-inline.rs:4:29
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LL | #![allow(test_unstable_lint, another_unstable_lint)]
| ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
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= note: the `another_unstable_lint` lint is unstable
= help: add `#![feature(another_unstable_lint)]` to the crate attributes to enable
= note: this compiler was built on YYYY-MM-DD; consider upgrading it if it is out of date
```
This is particularly relevant when there are multiple lints in the same `warn` attribute. Pointing at the smaller span makes it clearer which one the warning is complaining about.
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```
warning: unknown lint: `test_unstable_lint`
--> $DIR/warn-unknown-unstable-lint-inline.rs:4:10
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LL | #![allow(test_unstable_lint, another_unstable_lint)]
| ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
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= note: the `test_unstable_lint` lint is unstable
= help: add `#![feature(test_unstable_lint)]` to the crate attributes to enable
= note: this compiler was built on YYYY-MM-DD; consider upgrading it if it is out of date
note: the lint level is defined here
--> $DIR/warn-unknown-unstable-lint-inline.rs:3:9
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LL | #![warn(unknown_lints)]
| ^^^^^^^^^^^^^
warning: unknown lint: `test_unstable_lint`
--> $DIR/warn-unknown-unstable-lint-inline.rs:4:29
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LL | #![allow(test_unstable_lint, another_unstable_lint)]
| ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
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= note: the `test_unstable_lint` lint is unstable
= help: add `#![feature(test_unstable_lint)]` to the crate attributes to enable
= note: this compiler was built on YYYY-MM-DD; consider upgrading it if it is out of date
note: the lint level is defined here
--> $DIR/warn-unknown-unstable-lint-inline.rs:3:9
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LL | #![warn(unknown_lints)]
| ^^^^^^^^^^^^^
```
This is particularly relevant when there are multiple lints in the same `warn` attribute. Pointing at the smaller span makes it clearer which one the warning is complaining about.
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r=lqd,tgross35,nnethercote
Use field init shorthand where possible
Field init shorthand allows writing initializers like `tcx: tcx` as
`tcx`. The compiler already uses it extensively. Fix the last few places
where it isn't yet used.
EDIT: this PR also updates `rustfmt.toml` to set
`use_field_init_shorthand = true`.
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Merge some patterns together
just something I noticed while browsing code. No change in functionality, deduplicates the 100% equal match arms by creating one big or pattern
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Overhaul token cursors
Some nice cleanups here.
r? `````@davidtwco`````
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Re-export more `rustc_span::symbol` things from `rustc_span`.
`rustc_span::symbol` defines some things that are re-exported from `rustc_span`, such as `Symbol` and `sym`. But it doesn't re-export some closely related things such as `Ident` and `kw`. So you can do `use rustc_span::{Symbol, sym}` but you have to do `use rustc_span::symbol::{Ident, kw}`, which is inconsistent for no good reason.
This commit re-exports `Ident`, `kw`, and `MacroRulesNormalizedIdent`, and changes many `rustc_span::symbol::` qualifiers to `rustc_span::`. This is a 300+ net line of code reduction, mostly because many files with two `use rustc_span` items can be reduced to one.
r? `@jieyouxu`
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`rustc_span::symbol` defines some things that are re-exported from
`rustc_span`, such as `Symbol` and `sym`. But it doesn't re-export some
closely related things such as `Ident` and `kw`. So you can do `use
rustc_span::{Symbol, sym}` but you have to do `use
rustc_span::symbol::{Ident, kw}`, which is inconsistent for no good
reason.
This commit re-exports `Ident`, `kw`, and `MacroRulesNormalizedIdent`,
and changes many `rustc_span::symbol::` qualifiers in `compiler/` to
`rustc_span::`. This is a 200+ net line of code reduction, mostly
because many files with two `use rustc_span` items can be reduced to
one.
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Because `TokenStreamIter` is a much better name for a `TokenStream`
iterator. Also rename the `TokenStream::trees` method as
`TokenStream::iter`, and some local variables.
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Field init shorthand allows writing initializers like `tcx: tcx` as
`tcx`. The compiler already uses it extensively. Fix the last few places
where it isn't yet used.
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Add a range argument to vec.extract_if
tracking issue: #43244
This adds the range argument requested in https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/43244#issuecomment-2486160659
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Split up attribute parsing code and move data types to `rustc_attr_data_structures`
This change renames `rustc_attr` to `rustc_attr_parsing`, and splits up the parsing code. At the same time, all the data types used move to `rustc_attr_data_structures`. This is in preparation of also having a third crate: `rustc_attr_validation`
I initially envisioned this as two separate PRs, but I think doing it in one go reduces the number of ways others would have to rebase their changes on this. However, I can still split them.
r? `@oli-obk` (we already discussed how this is a first step in a larger plan)
For a more detailed plan on how attributes are going to change, see https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/131229
Edit: this looks like a giant PR, but the changes are actually rather trivial. Each commit is reviewable on its own, and mostly moves code around. No new logic is added.
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Use links to edition guide for edition migrations
This switches the migration lints for the 2024 edition to point to the edition guide documentation instead of the tracking issues. I expect the documentation should be easier to understand for a user, compared to most of the issues which don't have any direct information, and can be a bit confusing to navigate, or have outdated information.
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Remove `rustc::existing_doc_keyword` lint
The check doesn't require a lint.
r? ``@GuillaumeGomez``
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`CheckAttrVisitor::check_doc_keyword` checks `#[doc(keyword = "..")]`
attributes to ensure they are on an empty module, and that the value is
a non-empty identifier.
The `rustc::existing_doc_keyword` lint checks these attributes to ensure
that the value is the name of a keyword.
It's silly to have two different checking mechanisms for these
attributes. This commit does the following.
- Changes `check_doc_keyword` to check that the value is the name of a
keyword (avoiding the need for the identifier check, which removes a
dependency on `rustc_lexer`).
- Removes the lint.
- Updates tests accordingly.
There is one hack: the `SelfTy` FIXME case used to used to be handled by
disabling the lint, but now is handled with a special case in
`is_doc_keyword`. That hack will go away if/when the FIXME is fixed.
Co-Authored-By: Guillaume Gomez <guillaume1.gomez@gmail.com>
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Update spelling of "referring"
I noticed that `referring` was spelled incorrectly in the output of `unexpected 'cfg' condition name` warnings; it looks like it was also incorrectly spelled in a doc comment. I've update both instances.
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Fix `trimmed_def_paths` ICE in the function ptr comparison lint
This PR fixes an ICE with `trimmed_def_paths` ICE in the function ptr comparison lint, specifically when pretty-printing user types but then not using the resulting pretty-printing.
Fixes #134345
r? `@saethlin`
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Hir attributes
This PR needs some explanation, it's somewhat large.
- This is step one as described in https://github.com/rust-lang/compiler-team/issues/796. I've added a new `hir::Attribute` which is a lowered version of `ast::Attribute`. Right now, this has few concrete effects, however every place that after this PR parses a `hir::Attribute` should later get a pre-parsed attribute as described in https://github.com/rust-lang/compiler-team/issues/796 and transitively https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/131229.
- an extension trait `AttributeExt` is added, which is implemented for both `ast::Attribute` and `hir::Atribute`. This makes `hir::Attributes` mostly compatible with code that used to parse `ast::Attribute`. All its methods are also added as inherent methods to avoid having to import the trait everywhere in the compiler.
- Incremental can not not hash `ast::Attribute` at all.
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Add external macros specific diagnostics for check-cfg
This PR adds specific check-cfg diagnostics for unexpected cfg in external macros.
As well as hiding the some of the Cargo specific help/suggestions as they distraction for external macros and are generally not the right solution.
Follow-up to #132577
`@rustbot` label +L-unexpected_cfgs
r? compiler
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Add AST support for unsafe binders
I'm splitting up #130514 into pieces. It's impossible for me to keep up with a huge PR like that. I'll land type system support for this next, probably w/o MIR lowering, which will come later.
r? `@oli-obk`
cc `@BoxyUwU` and `@lcnr` who also may want to look at this, though this PR doesn't do too much yet
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estebank:silence-resolve-errors-from-mod-with-parse-errors, r=davidtwco
Keep track of parse errors in `mod`s and don't emit resolve errors for paths involving them
When we expand a `mod foo;` and parse `foo.rs`, we now track whether that file had an unrecovered parse error that reached the end of the file. If so, we keep that information around in the HIR and mark its `DefId` in the `Resolver`. When resolving a path like `foo::bar`, we do not emit any errors for "`bar` not found in `foo`", as we know that the parse error might have caused `bar` to not be parsed and accounted for.
When this happens in an existing project, every path referencing `foo` would be an irrelevant compile error. Instead, we now skip emitting anything until `foo.rs` is fixed. Tellingly enough, we didn't have any test for errors caused by expansion of `mod`s with parse errors.
Fix https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/97734.
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r=jieyouxu
allow `symbol_intern_string_literal` lint in test modules
Since #133545, `x check compiler --stage 1` no longer works because compiler test modules trigger `symbol_intern_string_literal` lint errors. Bootstrap shouldn't control when to ignore or enable this lint in the compiler tree (using `Kind != Test` was ineffective for obvious reasons).
Also, conditionally adding this rustflag invalidates the build cache between `x test` and other commands.
This PR removes the `Kind` check from bootstrap and handles it directly in the compiler tree in a more natural way.
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Signed-off-by: onur-ozkan <work@onurozkan.dev>
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