Make diangostic item naming consistent
Right now there is about a 50/50 split of naming diagnostic items as `vec_type` vs `Vec`. So it is hard to guess a diagnostic item name with confidence. I know it's not great to change these retroactively, but I think it will be much easier to maintain consistency after consistency is established.
Make *const (), *mut () okay for FFI
Pointer-to-() is used occasionally in the standard library to mean "pointer to none-of-your-business". Examples:
- `RawWakerVTable::new` https://doc.rust-lang.org/1.51.0/std/task/struct.RawWakerVTable.html#method.new
- `<*const T>::to_raw_parts` https://doc.rust-lang.org/nightly/std/primitive.pointer.html#method.to_raw_parts
I believe it's useful for the same purpose in FFI signatures, even while `()` itself is not FFI safe. The following should be allowed:
```rust
extern "C" {
fn demo(pc: *const (), pm: *mut ());
}
```
Prior to this PR, those pointers were not considered okay for an extern signature.
```console
warning: `extern` block uses type `()`, which is not FFI-safe
--> src/main.rs:2:17
|
2 | fn demo(pc: *const (), pm: *mut ());
| ^^^^^^^^^ not FFI-safe
|
= note: `#[warn(improper_ctypes)]` on by default
= help: consider using a struct instead
= note: tuples have unspecified layout
warning: `extern` block uses type `()`, which is not FFI-safe
--> src/main.rs:2:32
|
2 | fn demo(pc: *const (), pm: *mut ());
| ^^^^^^^ not FFI-safe
|
= help: consider using a struct instead
= note: tuples have unspecified layout
```
Deriving: Include bound generic params in type parameters for where clause
Fixes#89188.
The `derive` macro ignored the `for<'s>` needed with the `Fn` trait in that code example.
edit: I'm unsure if this might cause regressions. I'm not an experienced compiler developer so I'm not used to thinking about unwanted side effects code changes like this might have.
It was previously cached for modules loaded from `fn get_module`, but not for modules loaded from `fn build_reduced_graph_for_external_crate_res`.
This also makes all foreign modules use their real parent, span and expansion instead of possibly a parent/span/expansion of their reexport.
An ICE happening on attempt to decode expansions for foreign enums and traits is avoided.
Also local enums and traits are now added to the module map.
Rollup of 7 pull requests
Successful merges:
- #85223 (rustdoc: Clarified the attribute which prompts the warning)
- #88847 (platform-support.md: correct ARMv7+MUSL platform triple notes)
- #88963 (Coerce const FnDefs to implement const Fn traits )
- #89376 (Fix use after drop in self-profile with llvm events)
- #89422 (Replace whitespaces in doctests' name with dashes)
- #89440 (Clarify a sentence in the documentation of Vec (#84488))
- #89441 (Normalize after substituting via `field.ty()`)
Failed merges:
r? `@ghost`
`@rustbot` modify labels: rollup
Normalize after substituting via `field.ty()`
Back in https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/72476 I hadn't understood where the problem was coming from, and only worked around the issue. What happens is that calling `field.ty()` on a field of a generic struct substitutes the appropriate generics but doesn't normalize the resulting type.
As a consumer of types I'm surprised that one would substitute without normalizing, feels like a footgun, so I added a comment.
Fixes https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/89393.
Replace whitespaces in doctests' name with dashes
Fixes#88263.
Instead of handling white spaces when we filter tests (which would be quite complicated since we split on them!), I propose to instead replace them with dashes.
So for example, this:
```console
test foo.rs - Iter2<T, P>::len (line 13) ... ok
test foo.rs - Iter<T, P>::len (line 4) ... ok
```
becomes:
```console
test foo.rs - Iter<T,-P>::len (line 4) ... ok
test foo.rs - Iter2<T,-P>::len (line 13) ... ok
```
r? `@jyn514`
Coerce const FnDefs to implement const Fn traits
You can now pass a FnDef to a function expecting `F` where `F: ~const FnTrait`.
r? ``@oli-obk``
``@rustbot`` label T-compiler F-const_trait_impl
platform-support.md: correct ARMv7+MUSL platform triple notes
This PR fixes two minor inconsistencies in the platform support list.
- use "with MUSL" suffix for "armv7-unknown-linux-musleabi"
- add "hardfloat" suffix for "armv7-unknown-linux-musleabihf"
r? `@steveklabnik`
rustdoc: Clarified the attribute which prompts the warning
The example call was lacking clarification of the `#![warn(rustdoc::invalid_codeblock_attributes)]` attribute which generates the specified warning.
Rework HIR API to make invocations of the hir_crate query harder.
`hir_crate` forces the recomputation of queries that depend on it.
This PR aims at avoiding useless invocations of `hir_crate` by making dependent code go through `tcx.hir()`.
Improve error message for `printf`-style format strings
Fixes#89173. The following is actually supported today:
```rust
fn main() {
let num = 5;
let width = 20;
print!("%*2$x", num, width);
}
```
```
error: multiple unused formatting arguments
--> src/main.rs:4:21
|
4 | print!("%*2$x", num, width);
| ------- ^^^ ^^^^^ argument never used
| || |
| || argument never used
| |help: format specifiers use curly braces: `{:1$x}`
| multiple missing formatting specifiers
|
= note: printf formatting not supported; see the documentation for `std::fmt`
```
However, as noted in #89173, something like
```rust
print!("%0*x", width, num);
```
does not give a helpful suggestion. I think this is partly intended, because there actually _is_ no Rust equivalent to this; you always have to use a positional or named argument to specify the width (instead of just using the "next" argument, as `printf` or even `.*` as a precision specifier in Rust would). Therefore, I have added a note:
```
[...]
note: format specifiers use curly braces, and you have to use a positional or named parameter for the width
--> t2.rs:4:13
|
4 | print!("%0*x", width, num);
| ^^^^
= note: printf formatting not supported; see the documentation for `std::fmt`
```
This is not perfect, but it should at least point the user in the right direction, instead of issuing no explanation at all.
cc ```@lcnr```
Added -Z randomize-layout flag
An implementation of #77316, it currently randomly shuffles the fields of `repr(rust)` types based on their `DefPathHash`
r? ``@eddyb``
Rollup of 7 pull requests
Successful merges:
- #88838 (Do not suggest importing inaccessible items)
- #89251 (Detect when negative literal indices are used and suggest appropriate code)
- #89321 (Rebase resume argument projections during state transform)
- #89327 (Pick one possible lifetime in case there are multiple choices)
- #89344 (Cleanup lower_generics_mut and make span be the bound itself)
- #89397 (Update `llvm` submodule to fix function name mangling on x86 Windows)
- #89412 (Add regression test for issues #88969 and #89119 )
Failed merges:
r? `@ghost`
`@rustbot` modify labels: rollup
Cleanup lower_generics_mut and make span be the bound itself
Closes#86298 (supersedes those changes)
r? `@cjgillot` since you reviewed the other PR
(Used wrong branch for #89338)
Pick one possible lifetime in case there are multiple choices
In case a lifetime variable is created, but doesn't have an obvious lifetime in the list of named lifetimes that it should be inferred to, just pick the first one for the diagnostic.
This happens e.g. in
```rust
fn foo<'a, 'b>(a: Struct<'a>, b: Struct<'b>) -> impl Trait<'a, 'b> {
if bar() { a } else { b }
}
```
where we get a lifetime variable that combines the lifetimes of `a` and `b` creating a lifetime that is the intersection of both. Right now the type system cannot express this and thus we get an error, but that error also can't express this.
I can also create an entirely new diagnostic that mentions all involved lifetimes, so it would actually mention `'a` and `'b` instead of just `'b`.
Rebase resume argument projections during state transform
When remapping a resume argument with projections rebase them on top of
the new base.
The case where resume argument has projections is unusual, but might
arise with box syntax where the assignment is performed directly into
the box without an intermediate temporary.
Fixes#85635.
Do not suggest importing inaccessible items
Fixes#88472. For this example:
```rust
mod a {
struct Foo;
}
mod b {
type Bar = Foo;
}
```
rustc currently emits:
```
error[E0412]: cannot find type `Foo` in this scope
--> test.rs:6:16
|
6 | type Bar = Foo;
| ^^^ not found in this scope
|
help: consider importing this struct
|
6 | use a::Foo;
|
```
this is incorrect, as applying this suggestion leads to
```
error[E0603]: struct `Foo` is private
--> test.rs:6:12
|
6 | use a::Foo;
| ^^^ private struct
|
note: the struct `Foo` is defined here
--> test.rs:2:5
|
2 | struct Foo;
| ^^^^^^^^^^^
```
With my changes, I get:
```
error[E0412]: cannot find type `Foo` in this scope
--> test.rs:6:16
|
6 | type Bar = Foo;
| ^^^ not found in this scope
|
= note: this struct exists but is inaccessible:
a::Foo
```
As for the wildcard mentioned in #88472, I would argue that the warning is actually correct, since the import _is_ unused. I think the real issue is the wrong suggestion, which I have fixed here.
bootstrap: Update comment in config.library.toml.
Downloading LLVM from CI works for all platforms now.
All other templates in this directory already have the proper comment. Seems this one was neglected.
fix(lint): don't suggest refutable patterns to "fix" irrefutable bind
In function arguments and let bindings, do not suggest changing `C` to `Foo::C` unless `C` is the only variant of `Foo`, because it won't work.
The general warning is still kept, because code like this is confusing.
Fixes#88730
p.s. `src/test/ui/lint/lint-uppercase-variables.rs` already tests the one-variant case.
Suggest similarly named associated items in trait impls
Fix#85942
Previously, the compiler didn't suggest similarly named associated items unlike we do in many situations. This patch adds such diagnostics for associated functions, types, and constants.
Fix ICE when `start` lang item has wrong generics
In my previous pr #87875 I missed the requirements on the `start` lang item due to its relative difficulty to test and opting for more conservative estimates. This fixes that by updating the requirement to be exactly one generic type.
The `start` lang item should have exactly one generic type for the return type of the `main` fn ptr passed to it. I believe having zero would previously *sometimes* compile (often with the use of `fn() -> ()` as the fn ptr but it was likely UB to call if the return type of `main` was not `()` as far as I know) however it also sometimes would not for various errors including ICEs and LLVM errors depending on exact situations. Having more than 1 generic has always failed with an ICE because only the one generic type is expected and provided.
Fixes#79559, fixes#73584, fixes#83117 (all duplicates)
Relevant to #9307
r? ````@cjgillot````
Move encode_metadata out of CrateStore.
`rustc_metadata` is already accessible by all client crates. It does not need to be called trough a trait object.
2229: Consume IfLet expr
When using the IfLet guard feature, we can ICE when attempting to resolve PlaceBuilders.
For pattern matching, we currently don't consume the IfLet expression when "visiting" the arms leading us to not "read" all variables and hence not being able to resolve them.
r? `@nikomatsakis`
Closes https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/88118