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2024-09-13Add a machine-applicable suggestion to "unreachable pattern"Nadrieril-84/+433
2024-09-11Revert warning empty patterns as unreachableNadrieril-427/+57
2024-08-20Move the "matches no value" note to be a span labelNadrieril-248/+124
2024-08-19Cap the number of patterns pointed to by the lintNadrieril-9/+52
2024-08-19Add a note with a link to explain empty typesNadrieril-17/+148
2024-08-19Reword the "unreachable pattern" explanationsNadrieril-391/+391
2024-08-13Remove a no-longer-true `assert`Nadrieril-95/+132
2024-08-10Test that 0/unknown-length arrays are nonemptyNadrieril-47/+144
2024-08-10Update testsNadrieril-451/+612
2024-08-10Stabilize `min_exhaustive_patterns`Nadrieril-1/+0
2024-07-24Improve "covered_by_many" errorNadrieril-21/+102
2024-07-24Explain why a given pattern is considered unreachableNadrieril-122/+824
2024-07-21Explain why we require `_` for empty patternsNadrieril-0/+10
2024-06-23Replace `f16` and `f128` pattern matching stubs with real implementationsTrevor Gross-23/+97
This section of code depends on `rustc_apfloat` rather than our internal types, so this is one potential ICE that we should be able to melt now. This also fixes some missing range and match handling in `rustc_middle`.
2024-05-26Auto merge of #124661 - RalfJung:only-structural-consts-in-patterns, r=pnkfelixbors-176/+24
Turn remaining non-structural-const-in-pattern lints into hard errors This completes the implementation of https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/120362 by turning our remaining future-compat lints into hard errors: indirect_structural_match and pointer_structural_match. They have been future-compat lints for a while (indirect_structural_match for many years, pointer_structural_match since Rust 1.75 (released Dec 28, 2023)), and have shown up in dependency breakage reports since Rust 1.78 (just released on May 2, 2024). I don't expect a lot of code will still depend on them, but we will of course do a crater run. A lot of cleanup is now possible in const_to_pat, but that is deferred to a later PR. Fixes https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/70861
2024-05-03turn pointer_structural_match into a hard errorRalf Jung-164/+24
2024-05-03remove IndirectStructuralMatch lint, emit the usual hard error insteadRalf Jung-12/+0
2024-05-02Stabilize exclusive_rangeRoss Smyth-96/+89
2024-04-01Fix union handling in exhaustivenessNadrieril-11/+12
2024-03-31Add testsNadrieril-0/+68
2024-03-18Rollup merge of #121823 - Nadrieril:never-witnesses, r=compiler-errorsMatthias Krüger-187/+880
never patterns: suggest `!` patterns on non-exhaustive matches When a match is non-exhaustive we now suggest never patterns whenever it makes sense. r? ``@compiler-errors``
2024-03-13Remove `MaybeInfiniteInt::JustAfterMax`Nadrieril-4/+4
It was inherited from before half-open ranges, but it doesn't pull its weight anymore. We lose a tiny bit of diagnostic precision.
2024-03-13Rollup merge of #121908 - Nadrieril:dynamic-variant-collection, r=matthewjasperMatthias Krüger-0/+14
match lowering: don't collect test alternatives ahead of time I'm very happy with this one. Before this, when sorting candidates into the possible test branches, we manually computed `usize` indices to determine in which branch each candidate goes. To make this work we had a first pass that collected the possible alternatives we'd have to deal with, and a second pass that actually sorts the candidates. In this PR, I replace `usize` indices with a dedicated enum. This makes `sort_candidates` easier to follow, and we don't need the first pass anymore. r? ``@matthewjasper``
2024-03-12Don't suggest an arm when suggesting a never patternNadrieril-15/+15
2024-03-12Suggest never pattern instead of `_` for empty typesNadrieril-57/+57
2024-03-12Run the empty_types tests with never_patterns tooNadrieril-187/+880
2024-03-09Lint small gaps between rangesNadrieril-0/+310
2024-03-09Allow lint where we don't careNadrieril-38/+40
2024-03-03Add and update tests to use `pattern_complexity`Guillaume Gomez-0/+3
2024-03-02Fix a subtle regressionNadrieril-0/+14
Before, the SwitchInt cases were computed in two passes: if the first pass accepted e.g. 0..=5 and then 1, the second pass would not accept 0..=5 anymore because 1 would be listed in the SwitchInt options. Now there's a single pass, so if we sort 0..=5 we must take care to not sort a subsequent 1.
2024-02-23Rollup merge of #120742 - Nadrieril:use-min_exh_pats, r=compiler-errorsMatthias Krüger-220/+180
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``
2024-02-16[AUTO-GENERATED] Migrate ui tests from `//` to `//@` directives许杰友 Jieyou Xu (Joe)-36/+36
2024-02-13Do not point at `#[allow(_)]` as the reason for compat lint triggeringEsteban Küber-6/+0
Fix #121009.
2024-02-13Prefer `min_exhaustive_patterns` in testsNadrieril-2/+2
2024-02-13Unmark the feature gate as incompleteNadrieril-218/+178
2024-02-08Rollup merge of #120775 - Nadrieril:more-min_exh_pats, r=compiler-errorsMatthias Krüger-16/+138
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`
2024-02-08Test `min_exhaustive_patterns` in more casesNadrieril-16/+138
2024-02-07Prefer "0..MAX not covered" to "_ not covered"Nadrieril-29/+29
2024-02-07Add testsNadrieril-32/+176
2024-02-05update the tracking issue for structural match violationsRalf Jung-17/+17
and bless a test I missed
2024-02-05show indirect_structural_match and pointer_structural_match in future compat ↵Ralf Jung-0/+106
reports
2024-02-05Rollup merge of #116284 - RalfJung:no-nan-match, r=cjgillotMatthias Krüger-22/+19
make matching on NaN a hard error, and remove the rest of illegal_floating_point_literal_pattern These arms would never be hit anyway, so the pattern makes little sense. We have had a future-compat lint against float matches in general for a *long* time, so I hope we can get away with immediately making this a hard error. This is part of implementing https://github.com/rust-lang/rfcs/pull/3535. Closes https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/41620 by removing the lint. https://github.com/rust-lang/reference/pull/1456 updates the reference to match.
2024-01-26remove illegal_floating_point_literal_pattern lintRalf Jung-22/+19
2024-01-26Classify closure arguments in refutable pattern in argument errorDeadbeef-2/+2
2024-01-26Rollup merge of #118803 - Nadrieril:min-exhaustive-patterns, r=compiler-errorsMatthias Krüger-139/+773
Add the `min_exhaustive_patterns` feature gate ## Motivation Pattern-matching on empty types is tricky around unsafe code. For that reason, current stable rust conservatively requires arms for empty types in all but the simplest case. It has long been the intention to allow omitting empty arms when it's safe to do so. The [`exhaustive_patterns`](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/51085) feature allows the omission of all empty arms, but hasn't been stabilized because that was deemed dangerous around unsafe code. ## Proposal This feature aims to stabilize an uncontroversial subset of exhaustive_patterns. Namely: when `min_exhaustive_patterns` is enabled and the data we're matching on is guaranteed to be valid by rust's operational semantics, then we allow empty arms to be omitted. E.g.: ```rust let x: Result<T, !> = foo(); match x { // ok Ok(y) => ..., } let Ok(y) = x; // ok ``` If the place is not guaranteed to hold valid data (namely ptr dereferences, ref dereferences (conservatively) and union field accesses), then we keep stable behavior i.e. we (usually) require arms for the empty cases. ```rust unsafe { let ptr: *const Result<u32, !> = ...; match *ptr { Ok(x) => { ... } Err(_) => { ... } // still required } } let foo: Result<u32, &!> = ...; match foo { Ok(x) => { ... } Err(&_) => { ... } // still required because of the dereference } unsafe { let ptr: *const ! = ...; match *ptr {} // already allowed on stable } ``` Note that we conservatively consider that a valid reference can point to invalid data, hence we don't allow arms of type `&!` and similar cases to be omitted. This could eventually change depending on [opsem decisions](https://github.com/rust-lang/unsafe-code-guidelines/issues/413). Whenever opsem is undecided on a case, we conservatively keep today's stable behavior. I proposed this behavior in the [`never_patterns`](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/118155) feature gate but it makes sense on its own and could be stabilized more quickly. The two proposals nicely complement each other. ## Unresolved Questions Part of the question is whether this requires an RFC. I'd argue this doesn't need one since there is no design question beyond the intent to omit unreachable patterns, but I'm aware the problem can be framed in ways that require design (I'm thinking of the [original never patterns proposal](https://smallcultfollowing.com/babysteps/blog/2018/08/13/never-patterns-exhaustive-matching-and-uninhabited-types-oh-my/), which would frame this behavior as "auto-nevering" happening). EDIT: I initially proposed a future-compatibility lint as part of this feature, I don't anymore.
2024-01-25Implement feature gate logicNadrieril-139/+773
2024-01-24remove StructuralEq traitRalf Jung-122/+102
2024-01-13Bless testsGeorge-lewis-0/+2
Update tests
2024-01-11Only lint ranges that really overlapNadrieril-25/+19
2024-01-10Add test case for #119778Nadrieril-0/+48