Make anon params lint warn-by-default
This is intended as a followup on anonymous parameters deprecation.
Cross-posting from #41686:
> After having read a bit more of the discussion that I can find, I propose a more aggressive deprecation strategy:
> - We make the lint warn-by-default as soon as possible
> - We make anon parameters a hard error at the epoch boundary
cc @matklad @est31 @aturon
Point to the current box syntax tracking issue
The issue was used for both box syntax as well as placement new.
It got closed due to placement new being unapproved.
So a new one got created for box syntax, yet neither
the unstable book nor feature_gate.rs got updated.
We are doing this now.
r? @aidanhs
The issue was used for both box syntax as well as placement new.
It got closed due to placement new being unapproved.
So a new one got created for box syntax, yet neither
the unstable book nor feature_gate.rs got updated.
We are doing this now.
make ui tests robust with respect to NLL
This PR revises the `ui` tests that I could quickly identify that:
1. previously had successful compilations under non-lexical lifetimes (NLL) because they assumed lexical lifetimes, but
2. such assumption of lexical lifetimes was actually not necessarily part of the spirit of the original issue/bug we want to witness.
In many cases, this is simply a matter of adding a use of a borrow so that it gets extended long enough to observe a conflict.
(In some cases the revision was more subtle, such as adding a destructor, or revising the order of declaration of some variables.)
----
With these test revisions in place, I subsequently updated the expected stderr output under the NLL compiletest mode. So now we should get even more testing of NLL than we were before.
Fix#51025
Fix behaviour of divergence in while loop conditions
This fixes `'a: while break 'a {};` being treated as diverging, by tracking break expressions in the same way as in `loop` expressions.
Fixes#50856.
r? @nikomatsakis
Fail typecheck if we encounter a bogus break
Lone breaks outside of loops create errors in the
loop check pass but as they are not fatal,
compilation continues.
MIR building code assumes all HIR break statements
to point to valid locations and fires ICEs if this
assumption is violated. In normal compilation,
this causes no issues, as code apparently prevents
MIR from being built if errors are present.
However, before that, typecheck runs and with it
MIR const eval. Here we operate differently
from normal compilation: it doesn't check for any
errors except for type checker ones and then
directly builds the MIR.
This constellation causes an ICE-on-error if
bogus break statements are being put into array
length expressions.
This commit fixes this ICE by letting typecheck
fail if bogus break statements are encountered.
This way, MIR const eval fails cleanly with a
type check error.
Fixes#50576Fixes#50581
The `FatalError.raise()` might seem unmotivated (in most places in
the compiler, `err.emit()` suffices), but it's actually used to
maintain behavior (viz., stop lexing, don't emit potentially spurious
errors looking for the next token after the bad Unicodepoint in the
exponent): the previous revision's `self.err_span_` ultimately calls
`Handler::emit`, which aborts if the `Handler`'s continue_after_error
flag is set, which seems to typically be true during lexing (see
`phase_1_parse_input` and and how `CompileController::basic` has
`continue_parse_after_error: false` in librustc_driver).
Also, let's avoid apostrophes in error messages (the present author
would argue that users expect a reassuringly detached, formal,
above-it-all tone from a Serious tool like a compiler), and use an
RLS-friendly structured suggestion.
Resolves#49746.
Lone breaks outside of loops create errors in the
loop check pass but as they are not fatal,
compilation continues.
MIR building code assumes all HIR break statements
to point to valid locations and fires ICEs if this
assumption is violated. In normal compilation,
this causes no issues, as code apparently prevents
MIR from being built if errors are present.
However, before that, typecheck runs and with it
MIR const eval. Here we operate differently
from normal compilation: it doesn't check for any
errors except for type checker ones and then
directly builds the MIR.
This constellation causes an ICE-on-error if
bogus break statements are being put into array
length expressions.
This commit fixes this ICE by letting typecheck
fail if bogus break statements are encountered.
This way, MIR const eval fails cleanly with a
type check error.
Fixes#50576Fixes#50581
"crate-ify" paths that begin with a renamed crate
This does two things:
- crate-ify paths that begin with a renamed crate (i.e., add `crate::`) to the front
Fixes https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/50996
I also added tests for a few other scenarios.
r? @alexcrichton
This commit fixes another issue in the `absolute_path_not_starting_with_crate`
lint where it warns twice about an import which may contain `self`. It turns out
there were a few more locations that needed updating to use `root_id` and
`root_span` introduced in #50970 and after that it looks to work like a charm!
Closes#50978