// This checks diagnostic quality for cases where AST-borrowck treated // `Box` as other types (see rust-lang/rfcs#130). NLL again treats // `Box` specially. We capture the differences via revisions. // revisions: ast nll //[ast]compile-flags: -Z borrowck=ast //[nll]compile-flags: -Z borrowck=migrate -Z two-phase-borrows // don't worry about the --compare-mode=nll on this test. // ignore-compare-mode-nll #![feature(box_syntax, rustc_attrs)] struct Foo { a: isize, b: isize } #[rustc_error] // rust-lang/rust#49855 fn main() { //[nll]~ ERROR compilation successful let mut x: Box<_> = box Foo { a: 1, b: 2 }; let (a, b) = (&mut x.a, &mut x.b); //[ast]~^ ERROR cannot borrow `x` (via `x.b`) as mutable more than once at a time let mut foo: Box<_> = box Foo { a: 1, b: 2 }; let (c, d) = (&mut foo.a, &foo.b); //[ast]~^ ERROR cannot borrow `foo` (via `foo.b`) as immutable // We explicitly use the references created above to illustrate // that NLL is accepting this code *not* because of artificially // short lifetimes, but rather because it understands that all the // references are of disjoint parts of memory. use_imm(d); use_mut(c); use_mut(b); use_mut(a); } fn use_mut(_: &mut T) { } fn use_imm(_: &T) { }