This is a fairly common attribute on methods, but is not something you
need to know when reading the method docs - the purpose of the attribute
is for the compiler to tell you about it if you forget to use a value.
Removing reclaims some valuable space in the summary of methods.
Suggest a trailing comma if a 1-tuple is expected and a parenthesized expression is found
This pull request fixes#86100. The following code:
```rust
fn main() {
let t: (i32,) = (1);
}
```
currently produces:
```
warning: unnecessary parentheses around assigned value
--> test.rs:2:21
|
2 | let t: (i32,) = (1);
| ^^^ help: remove these parentheses
|
= note: `#[warn(unused_parens)]` on by default
error[E0308]: mismatched types
--> test.rs:2:21
|
2 | let t: (i32,) = (1);
| ------ ^^^ expected tuple, found integer
| |
| expected due to this
|
= note: expected tuple `(i32,)`
found type `{integer}`
error: aborting due to previous error; 1 warning emitted
```
With my changes, I get the same warning and the following error:
```
error[E0308]: mismatched types
--> test.rs:2:21
|
2 | let t: (i32,) = (1);
| ------ ^^^ expected tuple, found integer
| |
| expected due to this
|
= note: expected tuple `(i32,)`
found type `{integer}`
help: use a trailing comma to create a tuple with one element
|
2 | let t: (i32,) = (1,);
| ^^^^
```
i.e. I have added a suggestion to add a trailing comma to create a 1-tuple. This suggestion is only issued if a 1-tuple is expected and the expression (`(1)` in the example above) is surrounded by parentheses and does not already have a tuple type. In this situation, I'd say that it is pretty likely that the user meant to create a tuple.
std: Stabilize wasm simd intrinsics
This commit performs two changes to stabilize Rust support for
WebAssembly simd intrinsics:
* The stdarch submodule is updated to pull in rust-lang/stdarch#1179.
* The `wasm_target_feature` feature gate requirement for the `simd128`
feature has been removed, stabilizing the name `simd128`.
This should conclude the FCP started on #74372 and...
Closes#74372
This commit performs two changes to stabilize Rust support for
WebAssembly simd intrinsics:
* The stdarch submodule is updated to pull in rust-lang/stdarch#1179.
* The `wasm_target_feature` feature gate requirement for the `simd128`
feature has been removed, stabilizing the name `simd128`.
This should conclude the FCP started on #74372 and...
Closes#74372
MVP for using rust-lld as part of cc
Will fix#71519. I need to figure out how to write a test showing that lld is used instead of whatever linker cc normally uses. When I manually run rustc using `echo 'fn main() {}' | RUSTC_LOG=rustc_codegen_ssa:🔙:link=debug ./rustc -Clinker-flavor=gcc-lld --crate-type bin -Clink-arg=-Wl,-v` (thanks to bjorn3 on Zulip), I can see that lld is used, but I'm not sure how to inspect that output in a test.
Add the x86_64-gnu-stable builder
During the 1.52 release process we had to deal with some commits that passed the test suite on the nightly branch but failed on the beta or stable branch. In that case it was due to some UI tests including the channel name in the output, but other changes might also be dependent on the channel.
This commit adds a new CI job that runs the Linux x86_64 test suite with the stable branch, ensuring nightly changes also work as stable. To ensure the new job works the following other changes are present:
* The `ui-fulldeps/session-derive-errors.rs` test has been disabled on beta and stable, which required adding support for `// ignore-{channel}` and `// only-{channel}`.
* The `rustdoc/intra-doc/field.rs` has been fixed.
r? `@Mark-Simulacrum`
fixes https://github.com/rust-lang/release-team/issues/11
ignore test if rust-lld not found
create ld -> rust-lld symlink at build time instead of run time
for testing in ci
copy instead of symlinking
remove linux check
test for linker, suggestions from bjorn3
fix overly restrictive lld matcher
use -Zgcc-ld flag instead of -Clinker-flavor
refactor code adding lld to gcc path
revert ci changes
suggestions from petrochenkov
rename gcc_ld to gcc-ld in dirs
Make copy/copy_nonoverlapping fn's again
Make copy/copy_nonoverlapping fn's again, rather than intrinsics.
This a short-term change to address issue #84297.
It effectively reverts PRs #81167#81238 (and part of #82967), #83091, and parts of #79684.
Peephole optimize `x == false` and `x != true`
This adds peephole optimizations to make `x == false`, `false == x`, `x != true`, and `true != x` get optimized to `!x` in the `instcombine` MIR pass. That pass currently handles `x == true` -> `x` already.
Include macro name in 'local ambiguity' error
Currently, we only point at the span of the macro argument. When the
macro call is itself generated by another macro, this can make it
difficult or impossible to determine which macro is responsible for
producing the error.
Enable rustdoc to document safe wasm intrinsics
This commit fixes an issue not found during #84988 where rustdoc is used
to document cross-platform intrinsics but it was requiring that
functions which use `#[target_feature]` are `unsafe` erroneously, even
if they're WebAssembly specific. Rustdoc today, for example, already has
a special case where it enables annotations like
`#[target_feature(enable = "simd128")]` on platforms other than
WebAssembly. The purpose of this commit is to relax the "require all
`#[target_feature]` functions are `unsafe`" requirement for all targets
whenever rustdoc is running, enabling all targets to fully document
other targets, such as WebAssembly, where intrinsics functions aren't
always `unsafe`.
Comment out unused error codes and add description for E0316
I have added an extended description of `E0316` and commented out a bunch of unused error codes to make clear the fact that they are no longer in use. You can check for yourself with
```shell
for ec in \
E0314 E0315 E0473 E0474 E0475 E0479 E0480 E0481 \
E0483 E0484 E0485 E0486 E0487 E0488 E0489
do
if [ ! -z "`grep -r $ec compiler/* --exclude-dir=rustc_error_codes`" ]
then
echo $ec
false
fi
done
```
i.e. these error codes appear nowhere in the compiler code and thus cannot be emitted.
r? ```@GuillaumeGomez```
Default panic message should print Box<dyn Any>
Closes#86039
Prior to this patch, the panic message from running the following code would be `thread 'main' panicked at 'Box<Any>'...`
```rust
use std::panic::panic_any;
fn main() {
panic_any(42);
}
```
This patch updates the phrasing to be more consistent. It now instead shows the following panic message:
```
thread 'main' panicked at 'Box<dyn Any>', ...
```
It's a very small fix 😄
Currently, we only point at the span of the macro argument. When the
macro call is itself generated by another macro, this can make it
difficult or impossible to determine which macro is responsible for
producing the error.
This commit fixes an issue not found during #84988 where rustdoc is used
to document cross-platform intrinsics but it was requiring that
functions which use `#[target_feature]` are `unsafe` erroneously, even
if they're WebAssembly specific. Rustdoc today, for example, already has
a special case where it enables annotations like
`#[target_feature(enable = "simd128")]` on platforms other than
WebAssembly. The purpose of this commit is to relax the "require all
`#[target_feature]` functions are `unsafe`" requirement for all targets
whenever rustdoc is running, enabling all targets to fully document
other targets, such as WebAssembly, where intrinsics functions aren't
always `unsafe`.
The session-derive-errors test ensures the internal SessionDiagnostic
derive macro outputs the right error messages when misused.
The macro relies on the proc_macro2 crate though, which changes its span
behavior depending on whether the channel is nightly or not. This caused
test failures when bumping the channel from nightly to beta/stable.
Since SessionDiagnostic is internal-only we don't care about its
diagnostics quality outside of nightly, as the compiler itself is
developed on nightly. Thus the easiest solution is to ignore that test
on the beta and stable channels.
This also implements `// only-{channel}` and `// ignore-{channel}` in
compiletest to properly support the change.
Fix ICE during type layout when there's a `[type error]`
Fixes#84108.
Based on estebank's [comment], except I used `delay_span_bug` because it
should work in more cases, and I think it expresses its intent more
clearly.
r? `@estebank`
[comment]: https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/84108#issuecomment-818916848
Driver improvements
This PR contains a couple of cleanups for the driver and a few small improvements for the custom codegen backend interface. It also implements `--version` and `-Cpasses=list` support for custom codegen backends.
This patch fixes tests from failing that were matching on `Box<Any>`,
which was the old panic message. Since the new panic message is `Box<dyn
Any>`, the tests have been updated to match against this instead.
Fix two ICEs in the parser
This pull request fixes#84104 and fixes#84148. The latter is caused by an invalid `assert_ne!()` in the parser, which I have simply removed because the error is then caught in another part of the parser.
#84104 is somewhat more subtle and has to do with a suggestion to remove extraneous `<` characters; for instance:
```rust
fn main() {
foo::<Ty<<<i32>();
}
```
currently leads to
```
error: unmatched angle brackets
--> unmatched-langle.rs:2:10
|
2 | foo::<Ty<<<i32>();
| ^^^ help: remove extra angle brackets
```
which is obviously wrong and stems from the fact that the code for issuing the above suggestion does not consider the possibility that there might be other tokens in between the opening angle brackets. In #84104, this has led to a span being generated that ends in the middle of a multi-byte character (because the code issuing the suggestion thought that it was only skipping over `<`, which are single-byte), causing an ICE.
parser: Ensure that all nonterminals have tokens after parsing
`parse_nonterminal` should always result in something with tokens.
This requirement wasn't satisfied in two cases:
- `stmt` nonterminal with expression statements (e.g. `0`, or `{}`, or `path + 1`) because `fn parse_stmt_without_recovery` forgot to propagate `force_collect` in some cases.
- `expr` nonterminal with expressions with built-in attributes (e.g. `#[allow(warnings)] 0`) due to an incorrect optimization in `fn parse_expr_force_collect`, it assumed that all expressions starting with `#` have their tokens collected during parsing, but that's not true if all the attributes on that expression are built-in and inert.
(Discovered when trying to implement eager `cfg` expansion for all attributes https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/83824#issuecomment-817317170.)
r? `@Aaron1011`
Update standard library for IntoIterator implementation of arrays
This PR partially resolves issue #84513 of updating the standard library part.
I haven't found any remaining doctest examples which are using iterators over e.g. &i32 instead of just i32 in the standard library. Can anyone point me to them if there's remaining any?
Thanks!
r? ```@m-ou-se```
Show test type during prints
Test output can sometimes be confusing. For example doctest with the no_run argument are displayed the same way than test that are run.
During #83857 I got the feedback that test output can be confusing.
For the moment test output is
```
test $DIR/test-type.rs - f (line 12) ... ignored
test $DIR/test-type.rs - f (line 15) ... ok
test $DIR/test-type.rs - f (line 21) ... ok
test $DIR/test-type.rs - f (line 6) ... ok
```
I propose to change output by indicating the test type as
```
test $DIR/test-type.rs - f (line 12) ... ignored
test $DIR/test-type.rs - f (line 15) - compile ... ok
test $DIR/test-type.rs - f (line 21) - compile fail ... ok
test $DIR/test-type.rs - f (line 6) ... ok
```
by indicating the test type after the test name (and in the case of doctest after the function name and line) and before the "...".
------------
Note: this is a proof of concept, the implementation is probably not optimal as the properties added in `TestDesc` are only use in the display and does not represent actual change of behavior, maybe `TestType::DocTest` could have fields
Partial support for raw-dylib linkage
First cut of functionality for issue #58713: add support for `#[link(kind = "raw-dylib")]` on `extern` blocks in lib crates compiled to .rlib files. Does not yet support `#[link_name]` attributes on functions, or the `#[link_ordinal]` attribute, or `#[link(kind = "raw-dylib")]` on `extern` blocks in bin crates; I intend to publish subsequent PRs to fill those gaps. It's also not yet clear whether this works for functions in `extern "stdcall"` blocks; I also intend to investigate that shortly and make any necessary changes as a follow-on PR.
This implementation calls out to an LLVM function to construct the actual `.idata` sections as temporary `.lib` files on disk and then links those into the generated .rlib.