| Age | Commit message (Collapse) | Author | Lines |
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```
error[E0610]: `{integer}` is a primitive type and therefore doesn't have fields
--> $DIR/attempted-access-non-fatal.rs:7:15
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LL | let _ = 2.l;
| ^
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help: if intended to be a floating point literal, consider adding a `0` after the period and a `f64` suffix
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LL - let _ = 2.l;
LL + let _ = 2.0f64;
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```
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r=davidtwco,RalfJung"
This reverts commit 122a55bb442bd1995df9cf9b36e6f65ed3ef4a1d.
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This also suppresses an irrelevant warning, to avoid having to re-bless the
output snapshot.
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r=davidtwco,RalfJung"
This reverts commit b57d93d8b9525fa261404b4cd9c0670eeb1264b8, reversing
changes made to 0aeaa5eb22180fdf12a8489e63c4daa18da6f236.
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Signed-off-by: peicuiping <ezc5@sina.cn>
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Rollup of 7 pull requests
Successful merges:
- #132939 (Suggest using deref in patterns)
- #133293 (Updates Solaris target information, adds Solaris maintainer)
- #133392 (Fix ICE when multiple supertrait substitutions need assoc but only one is provided)
- #133986 (Add documentation for anonymous pipe module)
- #134022 (Doc: Extend for tuples to be stabilized in 1.85.0)
- #134259 (Clean up `infer_return_ty_for_fn_sig`)
- #134264 (Arbitrary self types v2: Weak & NonNull diagnostics)
r? `@ghost`
`@rustbot` modify labels: rollup
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Suggest using deref in patterns
Fixes #132784
This changes the following code:
```rs
use std::sync::Arc;
fn main() {
let mut x = Arc::new(Some(1));
match x {
Some(_) => {}
None => {}
}
}
```
to output
```rs
error[E0308]: mismatched types
--> src/main.rs:5:9
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LL | match x {
| - this expression has type `Arc<Option<{integer}>>`
...
LL | Some(_) => {}
| ^^^^^^^ expected `Arc<Option<{integer}>>`, found `Option<_>`
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= note: expected struct `Arc<Option<{integer}>>`
found enum `Option<_>`
help: consider dereferencing to access the inner value using the Deref trait
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LL | match *x {
| ~~
```
instead of
```rs
error[E0308]: mismatched types
--> src/main.rs:5:9
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4 | match x {
| - this expression has type `Arc<Option<{integer}>>`
5 | Some(_) => {}
| ^^^^^^^ expected `Arc<Option<{integer}>>`, found `Option<_>`
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= note: expected struct `Arc<Option<{integer}>>`
found enum `Option<_>`
```
This makes it more obvious that a Deref is available, and gives a suggestion on how to use it in order to fix the issue at hand.
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r=davidtwco,RalfJung
Bounds-check with PtrMetadata instead of Len in MIR
Rather than emitting `Len(*_n)` in array index bounds checks, emit `PtrMetadata(copy _n)` instead -- with some asterisks for arrays and `&mut` that need it to be done slightly differently.
We're getting pretty close to removing `Len` entirely, actually. I think just one more PR after this (for slice drop shims).
r? mir
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Fixes #132784
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span rendering
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Consider comments and bare delimiters the same as an "empty line" for purposes of hiding rendered code output of long multispans. This results in more aggressive shortening of rendered output without losing too much context, specially in `*.stderr` tests that have "hidden" comments.
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After:
```
error[E0005]: refutable pattern in local binding
--> $DIR/bad-pattern.rs:19:13
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LL | const PAT: u32 = 0;
| -------------- missing patterns are not covered because `PAT` is interpreted as a constant pattern, not a new variable
...
LL | let PAT = v1;
| ^^^
| |
| pattern `1_u32..=u32::MAX` not covered
| help: introduce a variable instead: `PAT_var`
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= note: `let` bindings require an "irrefutable pattern", like a `struct` or an `enum` with only one variant
= note: for more information, visit https://doc.rust-lang.org/book/ch18-02-refutability.html
= note: the matched value is of type `u32`
```
Before:
```
error[E0005]: refutable pattern in local binding
--> $DIR/bad-pattern.rs:19:13
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LL | let PAT = v1;
| ^^^
| |
| pattern `1_u32..=u32::MAX` not covered
| missing patterns are not covered because `PAT` is interpreted as a constant pattern, not a new variable
| help: introduce a variable instead: `PAT_var`
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= note: `let` bindings require an "irrefutable pattern", like a `struct` or an `enum` with only one variant
= note: for more information, visit https://doc.rust-lang.org/book/ch18-02-refutability.html
= note: the matched value is of type `u32`
```
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This subsumes the suggestions to borrow arguments with `AsRef`/`Borrow` bounds and those to borrow
arguments with `Fn` and `FnMut` bounds. It works for other traits implemented on references as well,
such as `std::io::Read`, `std::io::Write`, and `core::fmt::Write`.
Incidentally, by making the logic for suggesting borrowing closures general, this removes some
spurious suggestions to mutably borrow `FnMut` closures in assignments, as well as an unhelpful
suggestion to add a `Clone` constraint to an `impl Fn` argument.
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check_expr_has_type_or_error
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When we have long code skips, we write `...` in the line number gutter.
For suggestions, we were "centering" the `...` with the line, but that was consistent with what we do in every other case.
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mark `min_exhaustive_patterns` as complete
This is step 1 and 2 of my [proposal](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/119612#issuecomment-1918097361) to move `min_exhaustive_patterns` forward. The vast majority of in-tree use cases of `exhaustive_patterns` are covered by `min_exhaustive_patterns`. There are a few cases that still require `exhaustive_patterns` in tests and they're all behind references.
r? ``@ghost``
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Make `min_exhaustive_patterns` match `exhaustive_patterns` better
Split off from https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/120742.
There remained two edge cases where `min_exhaustive_patterns` wasn't behaving like `exhaustive_patterns`. This fixes them, and tests the feature in a bunch more cases. I essentially went through all uses of `exhaustive_patterns` to see which ones would be interesting to compare between the two features.
r? `@compiler-errors`
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and bless a test I missed
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reports
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Update tests
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Use Expr instead. Use `ExprKind::Let` to represent if let guards.
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Co-authored-by: Adrian <adrian.iosdev@gmail.com>
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patterns: reject raw pointers that are not just integers
Matching against `0 as *const i32` is fine, matching against `&42 as *const i32` is not.
This extends the existing check against function pointers and wide pointers: we now uniformly reject all these pointer types during valtree construction, and then later lint because of that. See [here](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/116930#issuecomment-1784654073) for some more explanation and context.
Also fixes https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/116929.
Cc `@oli-obk` `@lcnr`
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Previously we were always capturing by value.
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closure field capturing: don't depend on alignment of packed fields
This fixes the closure field capture part of https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/115305: field capturing always stops at projections into packed structs, no matter the alignment of the field. This means changing a private field type from `u8` to `u64` can never change how closures capture fields, which is probably what we want.
Here's an example where, before this PR, changing the type of a private field in a repr(Rust) struct can change the output of a program:
```rust
#![allow(dead_code)]
mod m {
// before patch
#[derive(Default)]
pub struct S1(u8);
// after patch
#[derive(Default)]
pub struct S2(u64);
}
struct NoisyDrop;
impl Drop for NoisyDrop {
fn drop(&mut self) {
eprintln!("dropped!");
}
}
#[repr(packed)]
struct MyType {
field: m::S1, // output changes when this becomes S2
other_field: NoisyDrop,
third_field: Vec<()>,
}
fn test(r: MyType) {
let c = || {
let _val = std::ptr::addr_of!(r.field);
let _val = r.third_field;
};
drop(c);
eprintln!("before dropping");
}
fn main() {
test(MyType {
field: Default::default(),
other_field: NoisyDrop,
third_field: Vec::new(),
});
}
```
Of course this is a breaking change for the same reason that doing field capturing in the first place was a breaking change. Packed fields are relatively rare and depending on drop order is relatively rare, so I don't expect this to have much impact, but it's hard to be sure and even a crater run will only tell us so much.
Also see the [nomination comment](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/115315#issuecomment-1702807825).
Cc `@rust-lang/wg-rfc-2229` `@ehuss`
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