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34713 commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Dylan DPC
75571a5ac0
Rollup merge of #83179 - Aaron1011:actix-web-lint, r=petrochenkov
Extend `proc_macro_back_compat` lint to `actix-web`

Unlike the other cases of this lint, there's no simple way to detect if
an old version of the relevant crate (`syn`) is in use. The `actix-web`
crate only depends on `pin-project` v1.0.0, so checking the version of
`actix-web` does not guarantee that a new enough version of
`pin-project` (and therefore `syn`) is in use.

Instead, we rely on the fact that virtually all of the regressed crates
are pinned to a pre-1.0 version of `pin-project`. When this is the case,
bumping the `actix-web` dependency will pull in the *latest* version of
`pin-project`, which has an explicit dependency on a newer v dependency
on a newer version of `syn`.

The lint message tells users to update `actix-web`, since that's what
they're most likely to have control over. We could potentially tell them
to run `cargo update -p syn`, but I think it's more straightforward to
suggest an explicit change to the `Cargo.toml`

The `actori-web` fork had its last commit over a year ago, and appears
to just be a renamed fork of `actix-web`. Therefore, I've removed the
`actori-web` check entirely - any crates that actually get broken can
simply update `syn` themselves.
2021-03-19 15:03:23 +01:00
Dylan DPC
61372e1af6
Rollup merge of #82846 - GuillaumeGomez:doc-alias-list, r=jyn514
rustdoc: allow list syntax for #[doc(alias)] attributes

Fixes https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/81205.

It now allows to have:

```rust
#[doc(alias = "x")]
// and:
#[doc(alias("y", "z"))]
```

cc ``@jplatte``
r? ``@jyn514``
2021-03-19 15:03:21 +01:00
Aaron Hill
390d1ef6d0
Extend proc_macro_back_compat lint to actix-web
Unlike the other cases of this lint, there's no simple way to detect if
an old version of the relevant crate (`syn`) is in use. The `actix-web`
crate only depends on `pin-project` v1.0.0, so checking the version of
`actix-web` does not guarantee that a new enough version of
`pin-project` (and therefore `syn`) is in use.

Instead, we rely on the fact that virtually all of the regressed crates
are pinned to a pre-1.0 version of `pin-project`. When this is the case,
bumping the `actix-web` dependency will pull in the *latest* version of
`pin-project`, which has an explicit dependency on a newer v dependency
on a newer version of `syn`.

The lint message tells users to update `actix-web`, since that's what
they're most likely to have control over. We could potentially tell them
to run `cargo update -p syn`, but I think it's more straightforward to
suggest an explicit change to the `Cargo.toml`

The `actori-web` fork had its last commit over a year ago, and appears
to just be a renamed fork of `actix-web`. Therefore, I've removed the
`actori-web` check entirely - any crates that actually get broken can
simply update `syn` themselves.
2021-03-18 12:09:14 -04:00
bors
2aafe452b8 Auto merge of #82868 - petrochenkov:bto, r=estebank
Report missing cases of `bare_trait_objects`

Fixes https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/65371
2021-03-18 05:27:26 +00:00
bors
81c1d7a150 Auto merge of #76447 - pickfire:async-pub, r=estebank
Detect async visibility wrong order, `async pub`

Partially address #76437.
2021-03-18 02:32:39 +00:00
Vadim Petrochenkov
b48530bf8b Report missing cases of bare_trait_objects 2021-03-18 03:02:44 +03:00
Dylan DPC
bcb9226efb
Rollup merge of #83216 - jyn514:register-tool, r=petrochenkov
Allow registering tool lints with `register_tool`

Previously, there was no way to add a custom tool prefix, even if the tool
itself had registered a lint:

 ```rust
 #![feature(register_tool)]
 #![register_tool(xyz)]
 #![warn(xyz::my_lint)]
 ```

```
$ rustc unknown-lint.rs  --crate-type lib
error[E0710]: an unknown tool name found in scoped lint: `xyz::my_lint`
 --> unknown-lint.rs:3:9
  |
3 | #![warn(xyz::my_lint)]
  |         ^^^
```

This allows opting-in to lints from other tools using `register_tool`.

cc https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/66079#issuecomment-788589193, ``@chorman0773``
r? ``@petrochenkov``
2021-03-18 00:28:14 +01:00
Dylan DPC
7cd7dee315
Rollup merge of #83168 - Aaron1011:lint-procedural-masquerade, r=petrochenkov
Extend `proc_macro_back_compat` lint to `procedural-masquerade`

We now lint on *any* use of `procedural-masquerade` crate. While this
crate still exists, its main reverse dependency (`cssparser`) no longer
depends on it. Any crates still depending off should stop doing so, as
it only exists to support very old Rust versions.

If a crate actually needs to support old versions of rustc via
`procedural-masquerade`, then they'll just need to accept the warning
until we remove it entirely (at the same time as the back-compat hack).
The latest version of `procedural-masquerade` does work with the
latest rustc, but trying to check for the version seems like more
trouble than it's worth.

While working on this, I realized that the `proc-macro-hack` check was
never actually doing anything. The corresponding enum variant in
`proc-macro-hack` is named `Value` or `Nested` - it has never been
called `Input`. Due to a strange Crater issue, the Crater run that
tested adding this did *not* end up testing it - some of the crates that
would have failed did not actually have their tests checked, making it
seem as though the `proc-macro-hack` check was working.

The Crater issue is being discussed at
https://rust-lang.zulipchat.com/#narrow/stream/242791-t-infra/topic/Nearly.20identical.20Crater.20runs.20processed.20a.20crate.20differently/near/230406661

Despite the `proc-macro-hack` check not actually doing anything, we
haven't gotten any reports from users about their build being broken.
I went ahead and removed it entirely, since it's clear that no one is
being affected by the `proc-macro-hack` regression in practice.
2021-03-18 00:28:10 +01:00
Dylan DPC
b688b694d0
Rollup merge of #83080 - tmiasko:inline-coverage, r=wesleywiser
Make source-based code coverage compatible with MIR inlining

When codegenning code coverage use the instance that coverage data was
originally generated for, to ensure basic level of compatibility with
MIR inlining.

Fixes #83061
2021-03-18 00:28:09 +01:00
Dylan DPC
16f6583f2d
Rollup merge of #82270 - asquared31415:asm-syntax-directive-errors, r=nagisa
Emit error when trying to use assembler syntax directives in `asm!`

The `.intel_syntax` and `.att_syntax` assembler directives should not be used, in favor of not specifying a syntax for intel, and in favor of the explicit `att_syntax` option using the inline assembly options.

Closes #79869
2021-03-18 00:28:06 +01:00
Vadim Petrochenkov
dac96d45af Fix use of bare trait objects everywhere 2021-03-18 02:18:58 +03:00
bors
36f1f04f18 Auto merge of #82122 - bstrie:dep4real, r=dtolnay
Deprecate `intrinsics::drop_in_place` and `collections::Bound`, which accidentally weren't deprecated

Fixes #82080.

I've taken the liberty of updating the `since` values to 1.52, since an unobservable deprecation isn't much of a deprecation (even the detailed release notes never bothered to mention these deprecations).

As mentioned in the issue I'm *pretty* sure that using a type alias for `Bound` is semantically equivalent to the re-export; [the reference implies](https://doc.rust-lang.org/reference/items/type-aliases.html) that type aliases only observably differ from types when used on unit structs or tuple structs, whereas `Bound` is an enum.
2021-03-17 19:39:03 +00:00
bors
b4adc21c4f Auto merge of #83188 - petrochenkov:field, r=lcnr
ast/hir: Rename field-related structures

I always forget what `ast::Field` and `ast::StructField` mean despite working with AST for long time, so this PR changes the naming to less confusing and more consistent.

- `StructField` -> `FieldDef` ("field definition")
- `Field` -> `ExprField` ("expression field", not "field expression")
- `FieldPat` -> `PatField` ("pattern field", not "field pattern")

Various visiting and other methods working with the fields are renamed correspondingly too.

The second commit reduces the size of `ExprKind` by boxing fields of `ExprKind::Struct` in preparation for https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/80080.
2021-03-17 16:49:46 +00:00
bors
2c7490379d Auto merge of #83225 - JohnTitor:rollup-4hnuhb8, r=JohnTitor
Rollup of 8 pull requests

Successful merges:

 - #82774 (Fix bad diagnostics for anon params with ref and/or qualified paths)
 - #82826 ((std::net::parser): Fix capitalization of IP version names)
 - #83092 (More precise spans for HIR paths)
 - #83124 (Do not insert impl_trait_in_bindings opaque definitions twice.)
 - #83202 (Show details in cfg version unstable book)
 - #83203 (Don't warn about old rustdoc lint names (temporarily))
 - #83206 (Update books)
 - #83219 (Update cargo)

Failed merges:

r? `@ghost`
`@rustbot` modify labels: rollup
2021-03-17 08:27:16 +00:00
Yuki Okushi
42e6d429c6
Rollup merge of #83203 - jyn514:rustdoc-warnings, r=Manishearth
Don't warn about old rustdoc lint names (temporarily)

Since https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/80527, rustdoc users have an unpleasant situation: they can either use the new tool lint names (`rustdoc::non_autolinks`) or they can use the old names (`non_autolinks`). If they use the tool lints, they get a hard error on stable compilers, because rustc rejects all tool names it doesn't recognize (https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/66079#issuecomment-788589193). If they use the old name, they get a warning to rename the lint to the new name. The only way to compile without warnings is to add `#[allow(renamed_removed_lints)]`, which defeats the whole point of the change: we *want* people to switch to the new name.

To avoid people silencing the lint and never migrating to the tool lint, this avoids warning about the old name, while still allowing you to use the new name. Once the new `rustdoc` tool name makes it to the stable channel, we can change these lints to warn again.

This adds the new lint functions `register_alias` and `register_ignored` - I didn't see an existing way to do this.

r? `@Manishearth` cc `@rust-lang/rustdoc`
2021-03-17 15:20:58 +09:00
Yuki Okushi
70edab895d
Rollup merge of #83092 - petrochenkov:qspan, r=estebank
More precise spans for HIR paths

`Ty::assoc_item` is lowered to `<Ty>::assoc_item` in HIR, but `Ty` got span from the whole path.
This PR fixes that, and adjusts some diagnostic code that relied on `Ty` having the whole path span.

This is a pre-requisite for https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/82868 (we cannot report suggestions like `Tr::assoc` -> `<dyn Tr>::assoc` with the current imprecise spans).
r? ````@estebank````
2021-03-17 15:20:54 +09:00
bors
0c341226ad Auto merge of #83084 - nagisa:nagisa/features-native, r=petrochenkov
Adjust `-Ctarget-cpu=native` handling in cg_llvm

When cg_llvm encounters the `-Ctarget-cpu=native` it computes an
explciit set of features that applies to the target in order to
correctly compile code for the host CPU (because e.g. `skylake` alone is
not sufficient to tell if some of the instructions are available or
not).

However there were a couple of issues with how we did this. Firstly, the
order in which features were overriden wasn't quite right – conceptually
you'd expect `-Ctarget-cpu=native` option to override the features that
are implicitly set by the target definition. However due to how other
`-Ctarget-cpu` values are handled we must adopt the following order
of priority:

* Features from -Ctarget-cpu=*; are overriden by
* Features implied by --target; are overriden by
* Features from -Ctarget-feature; are overriden by
* function specific features.

Another problem was in that the function level `target-features`
attribute would overwrite the entire set of the globally enabled
features, rather than just the features the
`#[target_feature(enable/disable)]` specified. With something like
`-Ctarget-cpu=native` we'd end up in a situation wherein a function
without `#[target_feature(enable)]` annotation would have a broader
set of features compared to a function with one such attribute. This
turned out to be a cause of heavy run-time regressions in some code
using these function-level attributes in conjunction with
`-Ctarget-cpu=native`, for example.

With this PR rustc is more careful about specifying the entire set of
features for functions that use `#[target_feature(enable/disable)]` or
`#[instruction_set]` attributes.

Sadly testing the original reproducer for this behaviour is quite
impossible – we cannot rely on `-Ctarget-cpu=native` to be anything in
particular on developer or CI machines.

cc https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/83027 `@BurntSushi`
2021-03-17 05:46:08 +00:00
Yuki Okushi
55bdf7f188 Add more test case 2021-03-17 11:41:05 +09:00
Ivan Tham
21c157442c Add pub as optional check_front_matter
async-pub check created a regression for default
2021-03-17 09:04:08 +08:00
Ivan Tham
c44a5feb05 Add help assertion for async pub test 2021-03-17 09:02:19 +08:00
Ivan Tham
9321efd8f7 Detect pub fn attr wrong order like async pub
Redirects `const? async? unsafe? pub` to `pub const? async? unsafe?`.

Fix #76437
2021-03-17 09:02:19 +08:00
Yuki Okushi
2d99e68940 Emit more pretty diagnostics for qualified paths 2021-03-17 09:57:58 +09:00
Yuki Okushi
8240f1a3d3 Fix bad diagnostics for anon params with qualified paths 2021-03-17 07:45:19 +09:00
Yuki Okushi
ea355bc6be Fix bad diagnostics for anon params with ref 2021-03-17 07:45:19 +09:00
Joshua Nelson
e3031fe22a Allow registering tool lints with register_tool
Previously, there was no way to add a custom tool prefix, even if the tool
itself had registered a lint:

 ```
 #![feature(register_tool)]
 #![register_tool(xyz)]
 #![warn(xyz::my_lint)]
 ```

```
$ rustc unknown-lint.rs  --crate-type lib
error[E0710]: an unknown tool name found in scoped lint: `xyz::my_lint`
 --> unknown-lint.rs:3:9
  |
3 | #![warn(xyz::my_lint)]
  |         ^^^
```

This allows opting-in to lints from other tools using `register_tool`.
2021-03-16 17:33:03 -04:00
Simonas Kazlauskas
72fb4379d5 Adjust -Ctarget-cpu=native handling in cg_llvm
When cg_llvm encounters the `-Ctarget-cpu=native` it computes an
explciit set of features that applies to the target in order to
correctly compile code for the host CPU (because e.g. `skylake` alone is
not sufficient to tell if some of the instructions are available or
not).

However there were a couple of issues with how we did this. Firstly, the
order in which features were overriden wasn't quite right – conceptually
you'd expect `-Ctarget-cpu=native` option to override the features that
are implicitly set by the target definition. However due to how other
`-Ctarget-cpu` values are handled we must adopt the following order
of priority:

* Features from -Ctarget-cpu=*; are overriden by
* Features implied by --target; are overriden by
* Features from -Ctarget-feature; are overriden by
* function specific features.

Another problem was in that the function level `target-features`
attribute would overwrite the entire set of the globally enabled
features, rather than just the features the
`#[target_feature(enable/disable)]` specified. With something like
`-Ctarget-cpu=native` we'd end up in a situation wherein a function
without `#[target_feature(enable)]` annotation would have a broader
set of features compared to a function with one such attribute. This
turned out to be a cause of heavy run-time regressions in some code
using these function-level attributes in conjunction with
`-Ctarget-cpu=native`, for example.

With this PR rustc is more careful about specifying the entire set of
features for functions that use `#[target_feature(enable/disable)]` or
`#[instruction_set]` attributes.

Sadly testing the original reproducer for this behaviour is quite
impossible – we cannot rely on `-Ctarget-cpu=native` to be anything in
particular on developer or CI machines.
2021-03-16 21:32:55 +02:00
bors
f5d8117c33 Auto merge of #82536 - sexxi-goose:handle-patterns-take-2, r=nikomatsakis
2229: Handle patterns within closures correctly when `capture_disjoint_fields` is enabled

This PR fixes several issues related to handling patterns within closures when `capture_disjoint_fields` is enabled.
1. Matching is always considered a use of the place, even with `_` patterns
2. Compiler ICE when capturing fields in closures through `let` assignments

To do so, we

- Introduced new Fake Reads
- Delayed use of `Place` in favor of `PlaceBuilder`
- Ensured that `PlaceBuilder` can be resolved before attempting to extract `Place` in any of the pattern matching code

Closes rust-lang/project-rfc-2229/issues/27
Closes rust-lang/project-rfc-2229/issues/24
r? `@nikomatsakis`
2021-03-16 19:19:06 +00:00
Joshua Nelson
c1b99f0b90 Don't warn about old rustdoc lint names (temporarily)
Right now, rustdoc users have an unpleasant situation: they can either
use the new tool lint names (`rustdoc::non_autolinks`) or they can use
the old names (`non_autolinks`). If they use the tool lints, they get a
hard error on stable compilers, because rustc rejects all tool names it
doesn't recognize. If they use the old name, they get a warning to
rename the lint to the new name. The only way to compile without
warnings is to add `#[allow(renamed_removed_lints)]`, which defeats the
whole point of the change: we *want* people to switch to the new name.

To avoid people silencing the lint and never migrating to the tool lint,
this avoids warning about the old name, while still allowing you to use
the new name. Once the new `rustdoc` tool name makes it to the stable
channel, we can change these lints to warn again.

This adds the new lint functions `register_alias` and `register_ignored`
- I didn't see an existing way to do this.
2021-03-16 13:13:59 -04:00
Yuki Okushi
ec074276ab
Rollup merge of #83196 - tmiasko:valid-range-delay-span-bug, r=oli-obk
Use delay_span_bug instead of panic in layout_scalar_valid_range

#83054 introduced validation of scalar range attributes, but panicking
code that uses the attribute remained reachable. Use `delay_span_bug`
instead to avoid the ICE.

Fixes #83180.
2021-03-16 23:54:03 +09:00
bors
f24ce9b014 Auto merge of #82838 - Amanieu:rustdoc_asm, r=nagisa
Allow rustdoc to handle asm! of foreign architectures

This allows rustdoc to process code containing `asm!` for architectures other than the current one. Since this never reaches codegen, we just replace target-specific registers and register classes with a dummy one.

Fixes #82869
2021-03-16 10:05:46 +00:00
Vadim Petrochenkov
d1522b39dd ast: Reduce size of ExprKind by boxing fields of ExprKind::Struct 2021-03-16 11:41:24 +03:00
bors
195ad4830e Auto merge of #82898 - oli-obk:tait_🧊, r=nikomatsakis
Add a `min_type_alias_impl_trait` feature gate

This new feature gate only permits type alias impl trait to be constrained by function and trait method return types. All other possible constraining sites like const/static types, closure return types and binding types are now forbidden and gated under the `type_alias_impl_trait` and `impl_trait_in_bindings` feature gates (which are both marked as incomplete, as they have various ways to ICE the compiler or cause query cycles where they shouldn't).

r? `@nikomatsakis`

This is best reviewed commit-by-commit
2021-03-16 04:24:48 +00:00
Tomasz Miąsko
0d84e0b68c Add test case for -Zinline-mir & -Zinstrument-coverage 2021-03-16 00:00:00 +00:00
Tomasz Miąsko
335427a3db Use delay_span_bug instead of panic in layout_scalar_valid_range
83054 introduced validation of scalar range attributes, but panicking
code that uses the attribute remained reachable. Use `delay_span_bug`
instead to avoid the ICE.
2021-03-16 00:00:00 +00:00
Tomasz Miąsko
4b6cc0c204 Add support for compile-flags in coverage tests 2021-03-15 23:26:03 +01:00
Tomasz Miąsko
ad8f9af7cb Remove inline-instrument-coverage-fail.rs test case 2021-03-15 23:26:03 +01:00
Aaron Hill
d6a7c1d47f
Extend proc_macro_back_compat lint to procedural-masquerade
We now lint on *any* use of `procedural-masquerade` crate. While this
crate still exists, its main reverse dependency (`cssparser`) no longer
depends on it. Any crates still depending off should stop doing so, as
it only exists to support very old Rust versions.

If a crate actually needs to support old versions of rustc via
`procedural-masquerade`, then they'll just need to accept the warning
until we remove it entirely (at the same time as the back-compat hack).
The latest version of `procedural-masquerade` does not work with the
latest rustc, but trying to check for the version seems like more
trouble than it's worth.

While working on this, I realized that the `proc-macro-hack` check was
never actually doing anything. The corresponding enum variant in
`proc-macro-hack` is named `Value` or `Nested` - it has never been
called `Input`. Due to a strange Crater issue, the Crater run that
tested adding this did *not* end up testing it - some of the crates that
would have failed did not actually have their tests checked, making it
seem as though the `proc-macro-hack` check was working.

The Crater issue is being discussed at
https://rust-lang.zulipchat.com/#narrow/stream/242791-t-infra/topic/Nearly.20identical.20Crater.20runs.20processed.20a.20crate.20differently/near/230406661

Despite the `proc-macro-hack` check not actually doing anything, we
haven't gotten any reports from users about their build being broken.
I went ahead and removed it entirely, since it's clear that no one is
being affected by the `proc-macro-hack` regression in practice.
2021-03-15 16:00:49 -04:00
Vadim Petrochenkov
7e66e9d6b0 More precise spans for HIR paths 2021-03-15 22:13:45 +03:00
Oli Scherer
e67594166e Run tests in nll mode 2021-03-15 18:35:47 +00:00
Oli Scherer
6109d73112 🍼 for tidy 2021-03-15 17:39:13 +00:00
Oli Scherer
4a6dc8e203 Only allow tait defining uses in function and method return position 2021-03-15 17:36:57 +00:00
Oli Scherer
3abdb08351 Add a test showing how impl_trait_in_bindings is a breaking change 2021-03-15 17:33:20 +00:00
Oli Scherer
1f7df1956a Replace type_alias_impl_trait by min_type_alias_impl_trait with no actual changes in behaviour
This makes `type_alias_impl_trait` not actually do anything anymore
2021-03-15 17:32:43 +00:00
Roxane
22eaffe71a Add comments with examples and tests 2021-03-15 13:16:04 -04:00
Oli Scherer
5553301137 Make regression test succeed as long as it ICEs 2021-03-15 16:56:12 +00:00
Oli Scherer
327cc62b0d Add reproduction test 2021-03-15 16:46:45 +00:00
Dylan DPC
2816c110e0
Rollup merge of #83144 - hyd-dev:parse-sess-created, r=oli-obk
Introduce `rustc_interface::interface::Config::parse_sess_created` callback

Resolves #82900.

cc `@oli-obk`
2021-03-15 16:23:00 +01:00
Dylan DPC
9b16c7a712
Rollup merge of #83132 - Aaron1011:fix/incr-cache-dummy, r=estebank
Don't encode file information for span with a dummy location

Fixes #83112

The location information for a dummy span isn't real, so don't encode
it. This brings the incr comp cache code into line with the Span
`StableHash` impl, which doesn't hash the location information for dummy
spans.

Previously, we would attempt to load the 'original' file from a dummy
span - if the file id changed (e.g. due to being moved on disk), we would get an
ICE, since the Span was still valid due to its hash being unchanged.
2021-03-15 16:22:58 +01:00
Dylan DPC
d1f5f1d156
Rollup merge of #83127 - Aaron1011:time-macros-impl-warn, r=petrochenkov
Introduce `proc_macro_back_compat` lint, and emit for `time-macros-impl`

Now that future-incompat-report support has landed in nightly Cargo, we
can start to make progress towards removing the various proc-macro
back-compat hacks that have accumulated in the compiler.

This PR introduces a new lint `proc_macro_back_compat`, which results in
a future-incompat-report entry being generated. All proc-macro
back-compat warnings will be grouped under this lint. Note that this
lint will never actually become a hard error - instead, we will remove
the special cases for various macros, which will cause older versions of
those crates to emit some other error.

I've added code to fire this lint for the `time-macros-impl` case. This
is the easiest case out of all of our current back-compat hacks - the
crate was renamed to `time-macros`, so seeing a filename with
`time-macros-impl` guarantees that an older version of the parent `time`
crate is in use.

When Cargo's future-incompat-report feature gets stabilized, affected
users will start to see future-incompat warnings when they build their
crates.
2021-03-15 16:22:57 +01:00
Dylan DPC
75a15bf275
Rollup merge of #83098 - camelid:more-doc-attr-check, r=davidtwco
Find more invalid doc attributes

- Lint on `#[doc(123)]`, `#[doc("hello")]`, etc.
- Lint every attribute; e.g., will now report two warnings for `#[doc(foo, bar)]`
- Add hyphen to "crate level"
- Display paths like `#[doc(foo::bar)]` correctly instead of as an empty string
2021-03-15 16:22:52 +01:00