Fix `unknown-crate` when using -Z self-profile with rustdoc
... by removing a duplicate `crate_name` field in `interface::Config`,
making it clear that rustdoc should be passing it to `config::Options` instead.
Unblocks https://github.com/rust-lang/rustc-perf/issues/797.
Revert "Auto merge of #79209
r? `@nikomatsakis`
This has caused some issues (#79560) so better to revert and try to come up with a proper fix without rush.
Rustdoc: JSON backend experimental impl, with new tests.
Based on #75114 by `@P1n3appl3`
The first commit is all of #75114, but squased to 1 commit, as that was much easier to rebase onto master.
The git history is a mess, but I think I'll edit it after review, so it's obvious whats new.
## Still to do
- [ ] Update docs.
- [ ] Add bless option to tests.
- [ ] Add test option for multiple files in same crate.
- [ ] Decide if the tests should check for json to be equal or subset.
- [ ] Go through the rest of the review for the original pr. (This is open because the test system is done(ish), but stuff like [not using a hashmap](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/75114#discussion_r519474420) and [using `CRATE_DEF_INDEX` ](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/75114#discussion_r519470764) hasn't)
I'm also sure how many of these we need to do before landing on nightly, as it would be nice to get this in tree, so it isn't effected by churn like #79125, #79041, #79061
r? `@jyn514`
Do not show negative polarity trait implementations in diagnostic messages for similar implementations
This fixes#79458.
Previously, this code:
```rust
#[derive(Clone)]
struct Foo<'a, T> {
x: &'a mut T,
}
```
would have suggested that `<&mut T as Clone>` was an implementation that was found. This is due to the fact that the standard library now has `impl<'_, T> !Clone for &'_ mut T`, and explicit negative polarity implementations were not filtered out in diagnostic output when suggesting similar implementations.
This PR fixes this issue by filtering out negative polarity trait implementations in `find_similar_impl_candidates` within `rustc_trait_selection::traits::error_reporting::InferCtxtPrivExt<'tcx>`. It also adds a UI regression test for this issue and fixes UI tests that had incorrectly been modified to expect the invalid output.
r? `@scottmcm`
Use true previous lint level when detecting overriden forbids
Previously, cap-lints was ignored when checking the previous forbid level, which
meant that it was a hard error to do so. This is different from the normal
behavior of lints, which are silenced by cap-lints; if the forbid would not take
effect regardless, there is not much point in complaining about the fact that we
are reducing its level.
It might be considered a bug that even `--cap-lints deny` would suffice to
silence the error on overriding forbid, depending on if one cares about failing
the build or precisely forbid being set. But setting cap-lints to deny is quite
odd and not really done in practice, so we don't try to handle it specially.
This also unifies the code paths for nested and same-level scopes. However, the
special case for CLI lint flags is left in place (introduced by #70918) to fix
the regression noted in #70819. That means that CLI flags do not lint on forbid
being overridden by a non-forbid level. It is unclear whether this is a bug or a
desirable feature, but it is certainly inconsistent. CLI flags are a
sufficiently different "type" of place though that this is deemed out of scope
for this commit.
r? `@pnkfelix` perhaps?
cc #77713 -- not marking as "Fixes" because of the lack of proper unused attribute handling in this PR
Add wasm32 support to inline asm
There is some contention around inline asm and wasm, and I really only made this to figure out the process of hacking on rustc, but I figured as long as the code existed, it was worth uploading.
cc `@Amanieu`
Respond to comments and start adding tests
Fix re-exports and extern-crate
Add expected output tests
Add restricted paths
Format
Fix: associated methods missing in output
Ignore stripped items
Mark stripped items
removing them creates dangling references
Fix tests and update conversions
Don't panic if JSON backend fails to create a file
Fix attribute error in JSON testsuite
Move rustdoc-json to rustdoc/
This way it doesn't have to build rustc twice. Eventually it should
probably get its own suite, like rustdoc-js, but that can be fixed in a
follow-up.
Small cleanups
Don't prettify json before printing
This fully halves the size of the emitted JSON.
Add comments
[BREAKING CHANGE] rename version -> crate_version
[BREAKING CHANGE] rename source -> span
Use exhaustive matches
Don't qualify imports for DefId
Rename clean::{ItemEnum -> ItemKind}, clean::Item::{inner -> kind}
Fix Visibility conversion
clean::Visability was changed here:
https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/77820/files#diff-df9f90aae0b7769e1eb6ea6f1d73c1c3f649e1ac48a20e169662a8930eb427beL1467-R1509
More churn catchup
Format
Remove const_fn_feature_flags test
## Overview
Helps with #76268
I found `const_fn_feature_flags` is targeting feature-gate and remove it.
r? ``@matklad``
Fix intra-doc links for `Self` on cross-crate items and primitives
- Remove the difference between `parent_item` and `current_item`; these
should never have been different.
- Remove `current_item` from `resolve` and `variant_field` so that
`Self` is only substituted in one place at the very start.
- Resolve the current item as a `DefId`, not a `HirId`. This is what
actually fixed the bug.
Hacks:
- `clean` uses `TypedefItem` when it _really_ should be
`AssociatedTypeItem`. I tried fixing this without success and hacked
around it instead (see comments)
- This second-guesses the `to_string()` impl since it wants
fully-qualified paths. Possibly there's a better way to do this.
Update error to reflect that integer literals can have float suffixes
For example, `1` is parsed as an integer literal, but it can be turned
into a float with the suffix `f32`. Now the error calls them "numeric
literals" and notes that you can add a float suffix since they can be
either integers or floats.
Avoid panic_bounds_check in fmt::write.
Writing any fmt::Arguments would trigger the inclusion of usize formatting and padding code in the resulting binary, because indexing used in fmt::write would generate code using panic_bounds_check, which prints the index and length.
These bounds checks are not necessary, as fmt::Arguments never contains any out-of-bounds indexes.
This change replaces them with unsafe get_unchecked, to reduce the amount of generated code, which is especially important for embedded targets.
---
Demonstration of the size of and the symbols in a 'hello world' no_std binary:
<details>
<summary>Source code</summary>
```rust
#![feature(lang_items)]
#![feature(start)]
#![no_std]
use core::fmt;
use core::fmt::Write;
#[link(name = "c")]
extern "C" {
#[allow(improper_ctypes)]
fn write(fd: i32, s: &str) -> isize;
fn exit(code: i32) -> !;
}
struct Stdout;
impl fmt::Write for Stdout {
fn write_str(&mut self, s: &str) -> fmt::Result {
unsafe { write(1, s) };
Ok(())
}
}
#[start]
fn main(_argc: isize, _argv: *const *const u8) -> isize {
let _ = writeln!(Stdout, "Hello World");
0
}
#[lang = "eh_personality"]
fn eh_personality() {}
#[panic_handler]
fn panic(_: &core::panic::PanicInfo) -> ! {
unsafe { exit(1) };
}
```
</details>
Before:
```
text data bss dec hex filename
6059 736 8 6803 1a93 before
```
```
0000000000001e00 T <T as core::any::Any>::type_id
0000000000003dd0 D core::fmt::num::DEC_DIGITS_LUT
0000000000001ce0 T core::fmt::num:👿:<impl core::fmt::Display for u64>::fmt
0000000000001ce0 T core::fmt::num:👿:<impl core::fmt::Display for usize>::fmt
0000000000001370 T core::fmt::write
0000000000001b30 t core::fmt::Formatter::pad_integral::write_prefix
0000000000001660 T core::fmt::Formatter::pad_integral
0000000000001350 T core::ops::function::FnOnce::call_once
0000000000001b80 t core::ptr::drop_in_place
0000000000001120 t core::ptr::drop_in_place
0000000000001c50 t core::iter::adapters::zip::Zip<A,B>::new
0000000000001c90 t core::iter::adapters::zip::Zip<A,B>::new
0000000000001b90 T core::panicking::panic_bounds_check
0000000000001c10 T core::panicking::panic_fmt
0000000000001130 t <&mut W as core::fmt::Write>::write_char
0000000000001200 t <&mut W as core::fmt::Write>::write_fmt
0000000000001250 t <&mut W as core::fmt::Write>::write_str
```
After:
```
text data bss dec hex filename
3068 600 8 3676 e5c after
```
```
0000000000001360 T core::fmt::write
0000000000001340 T core::ops::function::FnOnce::call_once
0000000000001120 t core::ptr::drop_in_place
0000000000001620 t core::iter::adapters::zip::Zip<A,B>::new
0000000000001660 t core::iter::adapters::zip::Zip<A,B>::new
0000000000001130 t <&mut W as core::fmt::Write>::write_char
0000000000001200 t <&mut W as core::fmt::Write>::write_fmt
0000000000001250 t <&mut W as core::fmt::Write>::write_str
```
Fix overlap detection of `usize`/`isize` range patterns
`usize` and `isize` are a bit of a special case in the match usefulness algorithm, because the range of values they contain depends on the platform. Specifically, we don't want `0..usize::MAX` to count as an exhaustive match (see also [`precise_pointer_size_matching`](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/56354)). The way this was initially implemented is by treating those ranges like float ranges, i.e. with limited cleverness. This means we didn't catch the following as unreachable:
```rust
match 0usize {
0..10 => {},
10..20 => {},
5..15 => {}, // oops, should be detected as unreachable
_ => {},
}
```
This PRs fixes this oversight. Now the only difference between `usize` and `u64` range patterns is in what ranges count as exhaustive.
r? `@varkor`
`@rustbot` label +A-exhaustiveness-checking