Change vtable memory representation to use tcx allocated allocations.
This fixes https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/86324. However i suspect there's more to change before it can land.
r? `@bjorn3`
cc `@rust-lang/miri`
Fix garbled suggestion for missing lifetime specifier
This PR fixes#86667. The suggestion code currently checks whether there is a generic parameter that is not a synthetic `impl Trait` parameter and, if so, suggests to insert a new lifetime `'a` before that generic parameter. However, it does not make sense to insert `'a` in front of an elided lifetime parameter, since these are synthetic as well, which leads to the garbled suggestion in #86667.
Turn non_fmt_panic into a future_incompatible edition lint.
This turns the `non_fmt_panic` lint into a future_incompatible edition lint, so it becomes part of the `rust_2021_compatibility` group. See https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/85894.
This lint produces both warnings about semantical changes (e.g. `panic!("{{")`) and things that will become hard errors (e.g. `panic!("{")`). So I added a `explain_reason: false` that supresses the default "this will become a hard error" or "the semantics will change" message, and instead added a note depending on the situation. (cc `@rylev)`
r? `@nikomatsakis`
Fix `future_prelude_collision` false positive
Fixes#86633
The lint for checking if method resolution of methods named `try_into` will fail in 2021 edition previously would fire on all inherent methods, however for inherent methods that consume `self`, this takes priority over `TryInto::try_into` due to being inherent, while trait method and methods that take `&self` or `&mut self` don't take priority, and thus aren't affected by this false positive.
This fix is rather simple: simply checking if the inherent method doesn't auto-deref or auto-ref (and thus takes `self`) and if so, prevents the lint from firing.
Don't run a publically reachable server in tests
This causes Windows Defender's firewall to pop up during tests to ask if I want to allow the test program to access the public Internet, since it was listening on `0.0.0.0` (the test passes regardless of how you respond to the modal, since the firewall only affects traffic outside of the computer, none of which actually happens in the test). The test server doesn't actually need to be publicly reachable, so this makes it so it is only reachable locally, which makes Windows Defender happy.
Fix type checking of return expressions outside of function bodies
This pull request fixes#86188. The problem is that the current code for type-checking `return` expressions stops if the `return` occurs outside of a function body, while the correct behavior is to continue type-checking the return value expression (otherwise an ICE happens later on because variables declared in the return value expression don't have a type).
Also, I have noticed that it is sometimes not obvious why a `return` is outside of a function body; for instance, in the example from #86188 (which currently causes an ICE):
```rust
fn main() {
[(); return || {
let tx;
}]
}
```
I have changed the error message to also explain why the `return` is considered outside of the function body:
```
error[E0572]: return statement outside of function body
--> ice0.rs:2:10
|
1 | / fn main() {
2 | | [(); return || {
| |__________^
3 | || let tx;
4 | || }]
| ||_____^ the return is part of this body...
5 | | }
| |_- ...not the enclosing function body
```
Reserve prefixed identifiers and literals (RFC 3101)
This PR denies any identifiers immediately followed by one of three tokens `"`, `'` or `#`, which is stricter than the requirements of RFC 3101 but may be necessary according to the discussion at [Zulip].
[Zulip]: https://rust-lang.zulipchat.com/#narrow/stream/268952-edition-2021/topic/reserved.20prefixes/near/238470099
The tracking issue #84599 says we'll add a feature gate named `reserved_prefixes`, but I don't think I can do this because it is impossible for the lexer to know whether a feature is enabled or not. I guess determining the behavior by the edition information should be enough.
Fixes#84599
2229: Capture box completely in move closures
Even if the content from box is used in a sharef-ref context,
we capture the box entirerly.
This is motivated by:
1) We only capture data that is on the stack.
2) Capturing data from within the box might end up moving more data than
the user anticipated.
Closes https://github.com/rust-lang/project-rfc-2229/issues/50
r? `@nikomatsakis`
This causes Windows Defender's firewall to pop up during tests to ask if
I want to allow the test program to access the public Internet, since it
was listening on `0.0.0.0`. The test server doesn't actually need to be
publically reachable, so this makes it so it is only reachable locally,
which makes Windows Defender happy.
Add debug info tests for range, fix-sized array, and cell types
This PR add several debug info tests to guarantee that the displays of fixed sized arrays, range types, cell types, threads, locks, and mutexes in CDB are correct.
It also updates CDB tests for slices in pretty-std.rs after string visualization in WinDbg is fixed by this PR: #81898.
Fix ICE with `-Zunpretty=hir,typed`
This PR fixes#82328. The `-Zunpretty=hir,typed` pretty-printer maintains an `Option` with type-checking results and sets the `Option` to `Some` when entering a body. However, this leads to an ICE if an expression occurs in a function signature (i.e. outside of a body), such as `128` in
```rust
fn foo(-128..=127: i8) {}
```
This PR fixes the ICE by checking (if necessary) whether the expression's owner has a body, and retrieving type-checking results for that on the fly.
rustdoc: Render `<Self as X>::Y` type casts properly across crate bounds
My last PR that introduced the type casting did not work for cross-crate re-exported traits, which is fixed in this PR.
Fully resolves#85454
Update array_into_iter lint for 1.53 and edition changes.
This updates the array_into_iter lint for Rust 1.53 and the edition changes.
See https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/84513
r? `@estebank`
Properly render HRTBs
```rust
pub fn test<T>()
where
for<'a> &'a T: Iterator,
{}
```
This will now render properly including the `for<'a>`

I do not know if this covers all cases, it only covers everything that I could think of that includes `for` and lifetimes in where bounds.
Also someone need to mentor me on how to add a proper rustdoc test for this.
Resolves#78482