| Age | Commit message (Collapse) | Author | Lines |
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Add regression test for #33455
Closes #33455.
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Rollup of 10 pull requests
- Successful merges: #33753, #33815, #33829, #33858, #33865, #33866, #33870, #33874, #33891, #33898
- Failed merges:
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Fix spans and expected token lists, fix #33413 + other cosmetic improvements
Add test for #33413
Convert between `Arg` and `ExplicitSelf` precisely
Simplify pretty-printing for methods
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parser: do not try to continue with `unsafe` on foreign fns
The changed line makes it look like `unsafe` is allowed, but the first statement of `parse_item_foreign_fn` is:
```
self.expect_keyword(keywords::Fn)?;
```
So we get the strange "expected one of `fn`, `pub`, `static`, or `unsafe`, found `unsafe`".
Fixes: #27361
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parser: show a helpful note on unexpected inner comment
Fixes: #30318.
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parser: fix suppression of syntax errors in range RHS
Invalid expressions on the RHS were just swallowed without generating an error. The new version more closely mirrors the code for parsing `..x` in the `parse_prefix_range_expr` method below, where no cancel is done either.
Fixes #33262.
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Fixes: #30318.
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Fixes: #32214
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The changed line makes it look like `unsafe` is allowed, but the
first statement of `parse_item_foreign_fn` is:
`self.expect_keyword(keywords::Fn)?;`
So we get the strange "expected one of `fn`, `pub`, `static`, or
`unsafe`, found `unsafe`".
Fixes: #27361
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Invalid expressions on the RHS were just swallowed without generating
an error. The new code more closely mirrors the code for parsing
`..x` in the `parse_prefix_range_expr` method, where no cancel is done
either.
Fixes #33262.
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unexpected tokens
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syntax: Merge PathParsingMode::NoTypesAllowed and PathParsingMode::ImportPrefix
syntax: Rename PathParsingMode and its variants to better express their purpose
syntax: Remove obsolete error message about 'self lifetime
syntax: Remove ALLOW_MODULE_PATHS workaround
syntax/resolve: Adjust some error messages
resolve: Compare unhygienic (not renamed) names with keywords::Invalid, invalid identifiers may appear to be valid after renaming
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This uncovered a lot of bugs in compiletest and also some shortcomings
of our existing JSON output. We had to add information to the JSON
output, such as suggested text and macro backtraces. We also had to fix
various bugs in the existing tests.
Joint work with jntrnr.
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"Bare raw pointer" does not exist as a concept.
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This change was in 0.12.0, a year and a half ago. Let's move on!
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syntax: Extra diagnostics for `_` used in an identifier position
Closes https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/32501
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Integrate privacy into field and method selection
This PR integrates privacy checking into field and method selection so that an inaccessible field/method can not stop an accessible field/method from being used (fixes #12808 and fixes #22684).
r? @eddyb
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Gate parser recovery via debugflag
Gate parser recovery via debugflag
Put in `-Z continue_parse_after_error`
This works by adding a method, `fn abort_if_no_parse_recovery`, to the
diagnostic handler in `syntax::errors`, and calling it after each
error is emitted in the parser.
(We might consider adding a debugflag to do such aborts in other
places where we are currently attempting recovery, such as resolve,
but I think the parser is the really important case to handle in the
face of #31994 and the parser bugs of varying degrees that were
injected by parse error recovery.)
r? @nikomatsakis
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parser recovery (so that expected errors match up)
I'm opting into parser recovery in all these cases out of expediency,
not because the error messages you get with recovery enabled are
actually all that usable in all cases listed.
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Prevent bumping the parser past the EOF.
Makes `Parser::bump` after EOF into an ICE, forcing callers to avoid repeated EOF bumps.
This ICE is intended to break infinite loops where EOF wasn't stopping the loop.
For example, the handling of EOF in `parse_trait_items`' recovery loop fixes #32446.
But even without this specific fix, the ICE is triggered, which helps diagnosis and UX.
This is a `[breaking-change]` for plugins authors who eagerly eat multiple EOFs.
See https://github.com/docopt/docopt.rs/pull/171 for such an example and the necessary fix.
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melt the ICE when lowering an impossible range
Emit a fatal error instead of panicking when HIR lowering encounters a range with no `end` point.
This involved adding a method to wire up `LoweringContext::span_fatal`.
Fixes #32245 (cc @nodakai).
r? @nrc
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End-less ranges (`a...`) don't parse but bad syntax extensions could
conceivably produce them. Unbounded ranges (`...`) do parse and are
caught here.
The other panics in HIR lowering are all for unexpanded macros, which
cannot be constructed by bad syntax extensions.
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Make errors for unnecessary visibility qualifiers consistent
This PR refactors away `syntax::parse::parser::ParsePub` so that unnecessary visibility qualifiers on variant fields are reported not by the parser but by `privacy::SanePrivacyVisitor` (thanks to @petrochenkov's drive-by improvements in #31919).
r? @nikomatsakis
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Mostly copy the tests from half-open ranges, adding some more for
DoubleEndedIterator and ExactSizeIterator.
Also thoroughly (I think) test that the feature gates are working.
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Some tests just add the extra errors, others I fix by doing some simple error recovery. I've tried to avoid doing too much in the hope of doing something more principled later.
In general error messages are getting worse at this stage, but I think in the long run they will get better.
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Previously when breaking tokens into smaller pieces, the replace_token
function have been used. It replaced current token and updated span
information, but it did not clear the list of expected tokens, neither
did it update remaining info about last token. This could lead to
incorrect error message, like one described in the issue #24780:
expected one of ... `>` ... found `>`
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This is achieved by adding the scan_back method. This method looks back
through the source_text of the StringReader until it finds the target
char, returning it's offset in the source. We use this method to find
the offset of the opening single quote, and use that offset as the start
of the error.
Given this code:
```rust
fn main() {
let _ = 'abcd';
}
```
The compiler would give a message like:
```
error: character literal may only contain one codepoint: ';
let _ = 'abcd';
^~
```
With this change, the message now displays:
```
error: character literal may only contain one codepoint: 'abcd';
let _ = 'abcd';
^~~~~~~
```
Fixes #30033
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Given this code:
fn main() {
let _ = 'abcd';
}
The compiler would give a message like:
error: character literal may only contain one codepoint: ';
let _ = 'abcd';
^~
With this change, the message now displays:
error: character literal may only contain one codepoint: 'abcd'
let _ = 'abcd'
^~~~~~
Fixes #30033
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The motivation (other than removing boilerplate) is that this is a baby step towards a parser with error recovery.
[breaking-change] if you use any of the changed functions, you'll need to remove a try! or panictry!
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