Commit graph

5722 commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Michael Howell
28f17d97a9 rustdoc-search: make primitives and keywords less special
The search sorting code already sorts by item type discriminant,
putting things with smaller discriminants first. There was
also a special case for sorting keywords and primitives earlier,
and this commit removes it by giving them lower discriminants.

The sorting code has another criteria where items with descriptions
appear earlier than items without, and that criteria has higher
priority than the item type. This shouldn't matter, though,
because primitives and keywords normally only appear in the
standard library, and it always gives them descriptions.
2023-11-21 13:59:26 -07:00
Michael Howell
d82a08537a rustdoc-search: clean up checkPath
This computes the same result with less code by computing many of
the old checks at once:

* It won't enter the loop if clength > length, because then the
  result of length - clength will be negative and the
  loop conditional will fail.
* i + clength will never be greater than length, because it
  starts out as i = length - clength, implying that i + clength
  equals length, and it only goes down from there.
* The aborted variable is replaced with control flow.
2023-11-21 13:09:53 -07:00
Michael Howell
63c50712f4 rustdoc-search: add support for associated types 2023-11-19 18:54:36 -07:00
Michael Howell
d82b3748d5 rustdoc-search: switch to recursive backtracking
This is significantly faster, because

- It allows the one-element fast path to kick in on multi-
  element queries.
- It constructs intermediate data structures more lazily
  than the old system did.

It's measurably faster than the old algo even without the fast path, but
that fast path still helps significantly.
2023-11-18 16:12:43 -07:00
Michael Howell
a66972d551 rustdoc-search: fix accidental shared, mutable map 2023-11-17 18:22:31 -07:00
Michael Howell
c76c2e71f0 rustdoc-search: fast path for 1-query unification
Short queries, in addition to being common, are also the base
case for a lot of more complicated queries. We can avoid
most of the backtracking data structures, and use simple
recursive matching instead, by special casing them.

Profile output:
https://notriddle.com/rustdoc-html-demo-5/profile-3/index.html
2023-11-17 18:22:30 -07:00
Michael Howell
6d59452841 rustdoc-search: less new Maps in unifyFunctionType
This is a major source of expense on generic queries,
and this commit reduces them.

Profile output:
https://notriddle.com/rustdoc-html-demo-5/profile-2/index.html
2023-11-17 18:22:09 -07:00
bors
1be1e84872 Auto merge of #117875 - Mark-Simulacrum:bootstrap-bump, r=clubby789
Bootstrap bump

Bumps bootstrap compiler to just-released beta.

https://forge.rust-lang.org/release/process.html#master-bootstrap-update-t-2-day-tuesday
2023-11-16 12:45:27 +00:00
Mark Rousskov
917f6540ed Re-format code with new rustfmt 2023-11-15 21:45:48 -05:00
Michael Howell
512aa5ed0f rustdoc-search: simplify the checkTypes fast path
This reduces code size while still matching the common case
for plain, concrete types.
2023-11-15 15:20:56 -07:00
bors
8d57ad1ade Auto merge of #117849 - compiler-errors:cycle, r=cjgillot
make `LayoutError::Cycle` carry `ErrorGuaranteed`

Addresses a FIXME, and also I think it's wise for error variants to carry their `ErrorGuaranteed` -- makes it easier to use that `ErrorGuaranteed` for creating, e.g. `TyKind::Error` and other error kinds. Splitting out from #117703.
2023-11-14 16:04:29 +00:00
Michael Howell
8b1bcc8d5b rustdoc: use .rustdoc class instead of body
This didn't show up in our local tests, because the problem is actually
caused by docs.rs rewritten HTML (which relocates the classes that this
code looked for from the body tag to a child div).

Fixes #117290
2023-11-12 23:21:21 -07:00
Michael Goulet
121d9f5b16 make LayoutError::Cycle carry ErrorGuaranteed 2023-11-12 18:59:18 +00:00
Nicholas Nethercote
e8cf29b584 rustdoc: minor changes suggested by clippy perf lints. 2023-11-08 09:35:35 +11:00
bors
9bd71afb90 Auto merge of #115904 - notriddle:notriddle/preload-bold, r=GuillaumeGomez
rustdoc: stop preloading Source Serif 4 Bold

According to #91170, italic fonts are not preloaded because they're rarely used, but bold fonts are. This seems to be true of bold Source Code Pro and bold Fira Sans, but bold and italic Source Serif Pro seem to be equally heavily used.

This is, I assume, the result of using Fira Sans Bold and Source Code Bold headings, so you only get bold Serif text when the doc author uses strong `**` emphasis (or within certain kinds of tooltip, which shouldn't be preloaded because they only show up long after the page is loaded).

To check this, run these two commands in the browser console to measure how much they're used. The measurement is extremely rough, but it gets the idea across: the two styles are about equally popular.

    // count bold elements
    Array.prototype.slice.call(document.querySelectorAll("*")).filter(x => { const y = document.defaultView.getComputedStyle(x); return y.fontFamily.indexOf("Source Serif 4") !== -1 && y.fontWeight > 400 }).length
    // count italic elements
    Array.prototype.slice.call(document.querySelectorAll("*")).filter(x => { const y = document.defaultView.getComputedStyle(x); return y.fontFamily.indexOf("Source Serif 4") !== -1 && y.fontStyle == "italic" }).length

| URL          | Bold | Italic |
|--------------|-----:|-------:|
| [std]        |    2 |      9 |
| [Vec]        |    8 |     89 |
| [regex]      |   33 |     17 |
| [test_suite] |    0 |      0 |

[std]: https://doc.rust-lang.org/nightly/std/index.html
[Vec]: https://doc.rust-lang.org/nightly/std/vec/struct.Vec.html
[regex]: https://docs.rs/regex/1.9.5/regex/index.html
[test_suite]: https://docs.rs/test-suite/3.2.9/test_suite/
2023-11-07 15:14:59 +00:00
bors
f1b104f523 Auto merge of #117540 - matthiaskrgr:baby_dont_clone_me_dont_clone_me_no_more, r=est31
clone less
2023-11-04 00:29:52 +00:00
bors
9c20ddd956 Auto merge of #117507 - nnethercote:rustc_span, r=Nilstrieb
`rustc_span` cleanups

Just some things I found while looking over this crate.

r? `@oli-obk`
2023-11-03 14:57:40 +00:00
Matthias Krüger
1ba97cb1cc clone less 2023-11-03 13:23:26 +01:00
Guillaume Gomez
aa9d1d87fa Fix order of implementations in the "implementations on foreign types" section 2023-11-02 18:02:14 +01:00
Nicholas Nethercote
f405ce86c2 Minimize pub usage in source_map.rs.
Most notably, this commit changes the `pub use crate::*;` in that file
to `use crate::*;`. This requires a lot of `use` items in other crates
to be adjusted, because everything defined within `rustc_span::*` was
also available via `rustc_span::source_map::*`, which is bizarre.

The commit also removes `SourceMap::span_to_relative_line_string`, which
is unused.
2023-11-02 19:35:00 +11:00
Matthias Krüger
51b275bff8
Rollup merge of #113241 - poliorcetics:85138-doc-object-safety, r=GuillaumeGomez
rustdoc: Document lack of object safety on affected traits

Closes #85138

I saw the issue didn't have any recent activity, if there is another MR for it I missed it.

I want the issue to move forward so here is my proposition.

It takes some space just before the "Implementors" section and only if the trait is **not** object
safe since it is the only case where special care must be taken in some cases and this has the
benefit of avoiding generation of HTML in (I hope) the common case.
2023-10-31 19:03:20 +01:00
David Tolnay
dccf10e989
Descriptive variant name deprecation versions outside the standard library 2023-10-30 17:13:26 -07:00
David Tolnay
e8868af75b
Represent absence of 'since' attribute as a variant of DeprecatedSince 2023-10-30 16:46:02 -07:00
David Tolnay
b106167673
Add a DeprecatedSince::Err variant for versions that fail to parse 2023-10-30 15:41:18 -07:00
David Tolnay
1e10fe9eb6
Move deprecation_in_effect to inherent method on Deprecation 2023-10-30 09:02:32 -07:00
David Tolnay
2fe7d17bd9
Store version of deprecated attribute in structured form 2023-10-29 22:42:32 -07:00
David Tolnay
1e5b2da94b
Rename Since -> StableSince in preparation for a DeprecatedSince 2023-10-29 21:39:57 -07:00
Alexis (Poliorcetics) Bourget
40556b968c feat: Add 'object-safety' ID to init_id_map() in rustdoc 2023-10-29 22:57:45 +01:00
Alexis (Poliorcetics) Bourget
51e22be682 feat: render Object Safety informations non-object safe traits 2023-10-29 22:57:45 +01:00
Jubilee
1db8c9d6e2
Rollup merge of #117256 - dtolnay:currentversion, r=compiler-errors
Parse rustc version at compile time

This PR eliminates a couple awkward codepaths where it was not clear how the compiler should proceed if its own version number is incomprehensible.

dab715641e/src/tools/clippy/clippy_utils/src/qualify_min_const_fn.rs (L385)

dab715641e/compiler/rustc_attr/src/builtin.rs (L630)

We can guarantee that every compiled rustc comes with a working version number, so the ICE codepaths above shouldn't need to be written.
2023-10-28 01:07:38 -07:00
bors
6f349cdbfa Auto merge of #116471 - notriddle:notriddle/js-trait-alias, r=GuillaumeGomez
rustdoc: use JS to inline target type impl docs into alias

Preview docs:

- https://notriddle.com/rustdoc-html-demo-5/js-trait-alias/std/io/type.Result.html

- https://notriddle.com/rustdoc-html-demo-5/js-trait-alias-compiler/rustc_middle/ty/type.PolyTraitRef.html

This pull request also includes a bug fix for trait alias inlining across crates. This means more documentation is generated, and is why ripgrep runs slower (it's a thin wrapper on top of the `grep` crate, so 5% of its docs are now the Result type).

- Before, built with rustdoc 1.75.0-nightly (aa1a71e9e 2023-10-26), Result type alias method docs are missing: http://notriddle.com/rustdoc-html-demo-5/ripgrep-js-nightly/rg/type.Result.html
- After, built with this branch, all the methods on Result are shown: http://notriddle.com/rustdoc-html-demo-5/ripgrep-js-trait-alias/rg/type.Result.html

*Review note: This is mostly just reverting https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/115201. The last commit has the new work in it.*

Fixes #115718

This is an attempt to balance three problems, each of which would
be violated by a simpler implementation:

- A type alias should show all the `impl` blocks for the target
  type, and vice versa, if they're applicable. If nothing was
  done, and rustdoc continues to match them up in HIR, this
  would not work.

- Copying the target type's docs into its aliases' HTML pages
  directly causes far too much redundant HTML text to be generated
  when a crate has large numbers of methods and large numbers
  of type aliases.

- Using JavaScript exclusively for type alias impl docs would
  be a functional regression, and could make some docs very hard
  to find for non-JS readers.

- Making sure that only applicable docs are show in the
  resulting page requires a type checkers. Do not reimplement
  the type checker in JavaScript.

So, to make it work, rustdoc stashes these type-alias-inlined docs
in a JSONP "database-lite". The file is generated in `write_shared.rs`,
included in a `<script>` tag added in `print_item.rs`, and `main.js`
takes care of patching the additional docs into the DOM.

The format of `trait.impl` and `type.impl` JS files are superficially
similar. Each line, except the JSONP wrapper itself, belongs to a crate,
and they are otherwise separate (rustdoc should be idempotent). The
"meat" of the file is HTML strings, so the frontend code is very simple.
Links are relative to the doc root, though, so the frontend needs to fix
that up, and inlined docs can reuse these files.

However, there are a few differences, caused by the sophisticated
features that type aliases have. Consider this crate graph:

```text
 ---------------------------------
 | crate A: struct Foo<T>        |
 |          type Bar = Foo<i32>  |
 |          impl X for Foo<i8>   |
 |          impl Y for Foo<i32>  |
 ---------------------------------
     |
 ----------------------------------
 | crate B: type Baz = A::Foo<i8> |
 |          type Xyy = A::Foo<i8> |
 |          impl Z for Xyy        |
 ----------------------------------
```

The type.impl/A/struct.Foo.js JS file has a structure kinda like this:

```js
JSONP({
"A": [["impl Y for Foo<i32>", "Y", "A::Bar"]],
"B": [["impl X for Foo<i8>", "X", "B::Baz", "B::Xyy"], ["impl Z for Xyy", "Z", "B::Baz"]],
});
```

When the type.impl file is loaded, only the current crate's docs are
actually used. The main reason to bundle them together is that there's
enough duplication in them for DEFLATE to remove the redundancy.

The contents of a crate are a list of impl blocks, themselves
represented as lists. The first item in the sublist is the HTML block,
the second item is the name of the trait (which goes in the sidebar),
and all others are the names of type aliases that successfully match.

This way:

- There's no need to generate these files for types that have no aliases
  in the current crate. If a dependent crate makes a type alias, it'll
  take care of generating its own docs.
- There's no need to reimplement parts of the type checker in
  JavaScript. The Rust backend does the checking, and includes its
  results in the file.
- Docs defined directly on the type alias are dropped directly in the
  HTML by `render_assoc_items`, and are accessible without JavaScript.
  The JSONP file will not list impl items that are known to be part
  of the main HTML file already.

[JSONP]: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/JSONP
2023-10-27 23:08:24 +00:00
David Tolnay
b7debe34e6
Parse rustc version at compile time 2023-10-26 18:55:05 -07:00
David Tolnay
1a9ea1f1a5
Expose a non-Symbol way to access current rustc version string 2023-10-24 18:11:20 -07:00
David Tolnay
6933a671d3
Handle structured stable attribute 'since' version in rustdoc 2023-10-24 17:34:59 -07:00
Matthias Krüger
e86f9b6fce
Rollup merge of #105666 - notriddle:notriddle/stab-baseline, r=GuillaumeGomez
rustdoc: align stability badge to baseline instead of bottom

| desc | img |
|------|-----|
| before | ![image](https://user-images.githubusercontent.com/1593513/207412598-3a6468ca-a169-4810-a689-4797688385df.png) |
| | |
| after | ![image](https://user-images.githubusercontent.com/1593513/207412720-b120269a-48a3-40e9-a9b0-6769bb05e104.png) |

Preview: http://notriddle.com/notriddle-rustdoc-demos/stab-baseline/test_dingus/index.html

Based on comment from https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/105509#discussion_r1044816673

r? ``@joshtriplett``
2023-10-23 08:12:39 +02:00
Michael Howell
46fdeb24fd rustdoc: make JS trait impls act more like HTML 2023-10-22 16:51:32 -07:00
Michael Howell
62c67a6438 rustdoc: clean up and comment main.js register_type_impls 2023-10-22 15:56:15 -07:00
Michael Howell
fd9ab34785 rustdoc: clean up sidebar.html block class
This line is longer than 100 characters, but apparently,
[tidy's list of checked extensions] doesn't include html,
so the line length doesn't matter.

[tidy's list of checked extensions]: 31be8cc411/src/tools/tidy/src/style.rs (L245)
2023-10-22 15:56:15 -07:00
Michael Howell
fa10e4d667 rustdoc: use JS to inline target type impl docs into alias
This is an attempt to balance three problems, each of which would
be violated by a simpler implementation:

- A type alias should show all the `impl` blocks for the target
  type, and vice versa, if they're applicable. If nothing was
  done, and rustdoc continues to match them up in HIR, this
  would not work.

- Copying the target type's docs into its aliases' HTML pages
  directly causes far too much redundant HTML text to be generated
  when a crate has large numbers of methods and large numbers
  of type aliases.

- Using JavaScript exclusively for type alias impl docs would
  be a functional regression, and could make some docs very hard
  to find for non-JS readers.

- Making sure that only applicable docs are show in the
  resulting page requires a type checkers. Do not reimplement
  the type checker in JavaScript.

So, to make it work, rustdoc stashes these type-alias-inlined docs
in a JSONP "database-lite". The file is generated in `write_shared.rs`,
included in a `<script>` tag added in `print_item.rs`, and `main.js`
takes care of patching the additional docs into the DOM.

The format of `trait.impl` and `type.impl` JS files are superficially
similar. Each line, except the JSONP wrapper itself, belongs to a crate,
and they are otherwise separate (rustdoc should be idempotent). The
"meat" of the file is HTML strings, so the frontend code is very simple.
Links are relative to the doc root, though, so the frontend needs to fix
that up, and inlined docs can reuse these files.

However, there are a few differences, caused by the sophisticated
features that type aliases have. Consider this crate graph:

```text
 ---------------------------------
 | crate A: struct Foo<T>        |
 |          type Bar = Foo<i32>  |
 |          impl X for Foo<i8>   |
 |          impl Y for Foo<i32>  |
 ---------------------------------
     |
 ----------------------------------
 | crate B: type Baz = A::Foo<i8> |
 |          type Xyy = A::Foo<i8> |
 |          impl Z for Xyy        |
 ----------------------------------
```

The type.impl/A/struct.Foo.js JS file has a structure kinda like this:

```js
JSONP({
"A": [["impl Y for Foo<i32>", "Y", "A::Bar"]],
"B": [["impl X for Foo<i8>", "X", "B::Baz", "B::Xyy"], ["impl Z for Xyy", "Z", "B::Baz"]],
});
```

When the type.impl file is loaded, only the current crate's docs are
actually used. The main reason to bundle them together is that there's
enough duplication in them for DEFLATE to remove the redundancy.

The contents of a crate are a list of impl blocks, themselves
represented as lists. The first item in the sublist is the HTML block,
the second item is the name of the trait (which goes in the sidebar),
and all others are the names of type aliases that successfully match.

This way:

- There's no need to generate these files for types that have no aliases
  in the current crate. If a dependent crate makes a type alias, it'll
  take care of generating its own docs.
- There's no need to reimplement parts of the type checker in
  JavaScript. The Rust backend does the checking, and includes its
  results in the file.
- Docs defined directly on the type alias are dropped directly in the
  HTML by `render_assoc_items`, and are accessible without JavaScript.
  The JSONP file will not list impl items that are known to be part
  of the main HTML file already.

[JSONP]: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/JSONP
2023-10-22 15:56:14 -07:00
Michael Howell
e701e64d59 Revert "rustdoc: list matching impls on type aliases"
This reverts commit 19edb3ce80.
2023-10-22 15:55:43 -07:00
Michael Howell
77da7c655e Revert "Add note about lazy_type_alias"
This reverts commit b3686c2fd6.
2023-10-22 15:54:36 -07:00
Michael Howell
36b8d58b41 Revert "rustdoc: add impl items from aliased type into sidebar"
This reverts commit d882b2118e.
2023-10-22 15:54:36 -07:00
Michael Howell
ab125a2e0b Revert "rustdoc: factor all-impls-for-item out into its own method"
This reverts commit c3e5ad448b.
2023-10-22 15:54:35 -07:00
Michael Howell
aa76a59bf0 Revert "rustdoc: filter before storing in vec"
This reverts commit c79b960747.
2023-10-22 15:47:34 -07:00
Michael Howell
ade7ecf909 rustdoc: rename /implementors to /impl.trait
This is shorter, avoids potential conflicts with a crate
named `implementors`[^1], and will be less confusing when JS
include files are added for type aliases.

[^1]: AFAIK, this couldn't actually cause any problems right now,
but it's simpler just to make it impossible than relying on never
having a file named `trait.Foo.js` in the crate data area.
2023-10-22 15:47:34 -07:00
Michael Howell
4851cc9380 rustdoc: avoid allocating strings primitive link printing
This is aimed at hitting the allocator less in a function that
gets called a lot.
2023-10-21 07:48:23 -07:00
Urgau
dcde31ad1e [RFC 3127 - Trim Paths]: Fix building tools (rustdoc, clippy, ...) 2023-10-17 10:11:31 +02:00
Matthias Krüger
4dd4d9b489
Rollup merge of #115439 - fmease:rustdoc-priv-repr-transparent-heuristic, r=GuillaumeGomez
rustdoc: hide `#[repr(transparent)]` if it isn't part of the public ABI

Fixes #90435.

This hides `#[repr(transparent)]` when the non-1-ZST field the struct is "transparent" over is private.

CC `@RalfJung`

Tentatively nominating it for the release notes, feel free to remove the nomination.
`@rustbot` label needs-fcp relnotes A-rustdoc-ui
2023-10-14 19:22:16 +02:00
Oli Scherer
c4e61faf2e Hide host effect params from docs 2023-10-12 16:14:54 +00:00
Guillaume Gomez
00c3de96e6 Improve code documentation a bit 2023-10-11 23:46:11 +02:00