Suggest character encoding is incorrect when encountering random null bytes
This adds a note whenever null bytes are seen at the start of a token unexpectedly, since those tend to come from UTF-16 encoded files without a [BOM](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Byte_order_mark) (if a UTF-16 BOM appears it won't be valid UTF-8, but if there is no BOM it be both valid UTF-16 and valid but garbled UTF-8). This approach was suggested in https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/73979#issuecomment-653976451.
Closes#73979.
This adds recovery when in array type syntax user writes
[X; Y<Z, ...>]
instead of
[X; Y::<Z, ...>]
Fixes#82566
Note that whenever we parse an expression and know that the next token
cannot be `,`, we should be calling
check_mistyped_turbofish_with_multiple_type_params for this recovery.
Previously we only did this for statement parsing (e.g. `let x = f<a,
b>;`). We now also do it when parsing the length field in array type
syntax.
check_mistyped_turbofish_with_multiple_type_params was previously
expecting type arguments between angle brackets, which is not right, as
we can also see const expressions. We now use generic argument parser
instead of type parser.
Test with one, two, and three generic arguments added to check
consistentcy between
1. check_no_chained_comparison: Called after parsing a nested binop
application like `x < A > ...` where angle brackets are interpreted as
binary operators and `A` is an expression.
2. check_mistyped_turbofish_with_multiple_type_params: called by
`parse_full_stmt` when we expect to see a semicolon after parsing an
expression but don't see it.
(In `T2<1, 2>::C;`, the expression is `T2 < 1`)
Improve anonymous lifetime note to indicate the target span
Improvement for #81650
Cc #81995
Message after this improvement:
(Improve note in the middle)
```
error[E0311]: the parameter type `T` may not live long enough
--> src/main.rs:25:11
|
24 | fn play_with<T: Animal + Send>(scope: &Scope, animal: T) {
| -- help: consider adding an explicit lifetime bound...: `T: 'a +`
25 | scope.spawn(move |_| {
| ^^^^^
|
note: the parameter type `T` must be valid for the anonymous lifetime defined on the function body at 24:40...
--> src/main.rs:24:40
|
24 | fn play_with<T: Animal + Send>(scope: &Scope, animal: T) {
| ^^^^^
note: ...so that the type `[closure@src/main.rs:25:17: 27:6]` will meet its required lifetime bounds
--> src/main.rs:25:11
|
25 | scope.spawn(move |_| {
| ^^^^^
```
r? ``````@estebank``````
Reword labels on E0308 involving async fn return type
Fix for #80658.
When someone writes code like this:
```rust
fn foo() -> u8 {
async fn async_fn() -> () {}
async_fn()
}
```
And they try to compile it, they will see an error that looks like this:
```bash
error[E0308]: mismatched types
--> test.rs:4:5
|
1 | fn foo() -> u8 {
| -- expected `u8` because of return type
2 | async fn async_fn() -> () {}
| -- checked the `Output` of this `async fn`, found opaque type
3 |
4 | async_fn()
| ^^^^^^^^^^ expected `u8`, found opaque type
|
= note: while checking the return type of this `async fn`
= note: expected type `u8`
found opaque type `impl Future`
```
Set RUST_BACKTRACE=0 when running `treat-err-as-bug` tests
These ensure that these tests pass regardless of what RUST_BACKTRACE is
set to in the user's shell.
Add #[rustc_legacy_const_generics]
This is the first step towards removing `#[rustc_args_required_const]`: a new attribute is added which rewrites function calls of the form `func(a, b, c)` to `func::<{b}>(a, c)`. This allows previously stabilized functions in `stdarch` which use `rustc_args_required_const` to use const generics instead.
This new attribute is not intended to ever be stabilized, it is only intended for use in `stdarch` as a replacement for `#[rustc_args_required_const]`.
```rust
#[rustc_legacy_const_generics(1)]
pub fn foo<const Y: usize>(x: usize, z: usize) -> [usize; 3] {
[x, Y, z]
}
fn main() {
assert_eq!(foo(0 + 0, 1 + 1, 2 + 2), [0, 2, 4]);
assert_eq!(foo::<{1 + 1}>(0 + 0, 2 + 2), [0, 2, 4]);
}
```
r? `@oli-obk`
Improve error msgs when found type is deref of expected
This improves help messages in two cases:
- When expected type is `T` and found type is `&T`, we now look through blocks
and suggest dereferencing the expression of the block, rather than the whole
block.
- In the above case, if the expression is an `&`, we not suggest removing the
`&` instead of adding `*`.
Both of these are demonstrated in the regression test. Before this patch the
first error in the test would be:
error[E0308]: `if` and `else` have incompatible types
--> test.rs:8:9
|
5 | / if true {
6 | | a
| | - expected because of this
7 | | } else {
8 | | b
| | ^ expected `usize`, found `&usize`
9 | | };
| |_____- `if` and `else` have incompatible types
|
help: consider dereferencing the borrow
|
7 | } else *{
8 | b
9 | };
|
Now:
error[E0308]: `if` and `else` have incompatible types
--> test.rs:8:9
|
5 | / if true {
6 | | a
| | - expected because of this
7 | | } else {
8 | | b
| | ^
| | |
| | expected `usize`, found `&usize`
| | help: consider dereferencing the borrow: `*b`
9 | | };
| |_____- `if` and `else` have incompatible types
The second error:
error[E0308]: `if` and `else` have incompatible types
--> test.rs:14:9
|
11 | / if true {
12 | | 1
| | - expected because of this
13 | | } else {
14 | | &1
| | ^^ expected integer, found `&{integer}`
15 | | };
| |_____- `if` and `else` have incompatible types
|
help: consider dereferencing the borrow
|
13 | } else *{
14 | &1
15 | };
|
now:
error[E0308]: `if` and `else` have incompatible types
--> test.rs:14:9
|
11 | / if true {
12 | | 1
| | - expected because of this
13 | | } else {
14 | | &1
| | ^-
| | ||
| | |help: consider removing the `&`: `1`
| | expected integer, found `&{integer}`
15 | | };
| |_____- `if` and `else` have incompatible types
Fixes#82361
---
r? ````@estebank````
fix the false 'defined here' messages
Closes#80853.
Take this code:
```rust
struct S;
fn repro_ref(thing: S) {
thing();
}
```
Previously, the error message would be this:
```
error[E0618]: expected function, found `S`
--> src/lib.rs:4:5
|
3 | fn repro_ref(thing: S) {
| ----- `S` defined here
4 | thing();
| ^^^^^--
| |
| call expression requires function
error: aborting due to previous error
```
This is incorrect as `S` is not defined in the function arguments, `thing` is defined there. With this change, the following is emitted:
```
error[E0618]: expected function, found `S`
--> $DIR/80853.rs:4:5
|
LL | fn repro_ref(thing: S) {
| ----- is of type `S`
LL | thing();
| ^^^^^--
| |
| call expression requires function
|
= note: local variable `S` is not a function
error: aborting due to previous error
```
As you can see, this error message points out that `thing` is of type `S` and later in a note, that `S` is not a function. This change does seem like a downside for some error messages. Take this example:
```
LL | struct Empty2;
| -------------- is of type `Empty2`
```
As you can see, the error message shows that the definition of `Empty2` is of type `Empty2`. Although this isn't wrong, it would be more helpful if it would say something like this (which was there previously):
```
LL | struct Empty2;
| -------------- `Empty2` defined here
```
If there is a better way of doing this, where the `Empty2` example would stay the same as without this change, please inform me.
**Update: This is now fixed**
CC `@camelid`
Fix ICE caused by suggestion with no code substitutions
Change suggestion logic to filter and checking _before_ creating
specific resolution suggestion.
Assert earlier that suggestions contain code substitions to make it
easier in the future to debug invalid uses. If we find this becomes too
noisy in the wild, we can always make the emitter resilient to these
cases and remove the assertions.
Fix#78651.
Remove is_spotlight field from `Trait`
Small PR, only the last commit is relevant here. The rest is coming from #80883 because I need the `TyCtxt` stored inside `Cache`.
The point is to make ItemKind looks as close as possible to the compiler type so that it makes the switch simpler (which is why I make all these "small" PRs).
r? `@jyn514`
Jsondocck improvements
Adds 2 new commands, ```@is``` and ```@set`.``
```@is``` works like ```@has`,`` except instead of checking if any value matches, it checks that there is exactly one value, and it matches. This allows more precise testing.
```@set``` gets a value, and saves it to be used later. This makes it possible to check that an item appears in the correct module.
Once this lands, the rest of the test suite can be upgraded to use these.
cc ``@CraftSpider``
``@rustbot`` modify labels: +T-rustdoc +A-rustdoc-json +A-testsuite
Consider auto derefs before warning about write only fields
Changes from #81473 extended the dead code lint with an ability to detect
fields that are written to but never read from. The implementation skips
over fields on the left hand side of an assignment, without marking them
as live.
A field access might involve an automatic dereference and de-facto read
the field. Conservatively mark expressions with deref adjustments as
live to avoid generating false positive warnings.
Closes#81626.