Warn on pointless #[derive] in more places
This fixes the regression in #49934 and ensures that unused `#[derive]` invocations on statements, expressions and generic type parameters survive to trip the `unused_attributes` lint. There is a separate warning hardcoded for `#[derive]` on macro invocations since linting (even the early-lint pass) occurs after expansion. This also adds regression tests for some nodes that were already warning properly.
closes#49934
This fixes the regression in #49934 and ensures that unused `#[derive]`s on statements, expressions and generic type parameters survive to trip the `unused_attributes` lint. For `#[derive]` on macro invocations it has a hardcoded warning since linting occurs after expansion. This also adds regression testing for some nodes that were already warning properly.
closes#49934
Added warning for unused arithmetic expressions
The compiler now displays a warning when a binary arithmetic operation is evaluated but not used. This resolves#50124 by following the instructions outlined in the issue. The changes are as follows:
- Added new pattern matching for unused arithmetic expressions in `src/librustc_lint/unused.rs`
- Added `#[must_use]` attributes to the binary operation methods in `src/libcore/internal_macros.rs`
- Added `#[must_use]` attributes to the non-assigning binary operators in `src/libcore/ops/arith.rs`
Access individual fields of tuples, closures and generators on drop.
Fixes#48623, by extending the change in #47917 to closures. Also does this for tuples and generators for consistency.
Enums are unchanged because there is now way to borrow `*enum.field` without borrowing `enum.field` at the moment, so any error would be reported when the enum goes out of scope. Unions aren't changed because unions they don't automatically drop their fields.
r? @nikomatsakis
Allow variant discriminant initializers to refer to other initializer…
…s of the same enum
r? @eddyb
fixes the 2.4 failure of https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/49765
cc @durka @retep998
Edition breakage lint for absolute paths starting with modules
We plan to enable `extern_absolute_paths` in the 2018 edition. To allow for that, folks must transition their paths in a previous edition to the new one. This makes paths which import module contents via `use module::` or `::module::` obsolete, and we must edition-lint these.
https://internals.rust-lang.org/t/the-great-module-adventure-continues/6678/205?u=manishearth is the current plan for paths.
r? @nikomatsakis
Fixes#48722
don't see issue #0
The unstable-feature attribute requires an issue (neglecting it is
E0547), which gets used in the error messages. Unfortunately, there are
some cases where "0" is apparently used a placeholder where no issue
exists, directing the user to see the (nonexistent) issue #0. (It would
have been better to either let `issue` be optional—compare to how issue
is an `Option<u32>` in the feature-gate declarations in
libsyntax/feature-gate.rs—or actually require that an issue be created.)
Rather than endeavoring to change how `#[unstable]` works at this time
(given competing contributor and reviewer priorities), this simple patch
proposes the less-ambitious solution of just not adding the "(see
issue)" note when the number is zero.
Resolves#49983.
This computes the transitive closure of traits that appear in the
environment and then appends their clauses. It needs some work, but
it's in the right direction.