Commit graph

15192 commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
bors
908af5ba4a Auto merge of #134666 - matthiaskrgr:rollup-whe0chp, r=matthiaskrgr
Rollup of 6 pull requests

Successful merges:

 - #130289 (docs: Permissions.readonly() also ignores root user special permissions)
 - #134583 (docs: `transmute<&mut T, &mut MaybeUninit<T>>` is unsound when exposed to safe code)
 - #134611 (Align `{i686,x86_64}-win7-windows-msvc` to their parent targets)
 - #134629 (compiletest: Allow using a specific debugger when running debuginfo tests)
 - #134642 (Implement `PointerLike` for `isize`, `NonNull`, `Cell`, `UnsafeCell`, and `SyncUnsafeCell`.)
 - #134660 (Fix spacing of markdown code block fences in compiler rustdoc)

r? `@ghost`
`@rustbot` modify labels: rollup
2024-12-23 01:18:40 +00:00
Matthias Krüger
c16f00cff6
Rollup merge of #134642 - kpreid:pointerlike-cell, r=compiler-errors
Implement `PointerLike` for `isize`, `NonNull`, `Cell`, `UnsafeCell`, and `SyncUnsafeCell`.

* Implementing `PointerLike` for `UnsafeCell` enables the possibility of interior mutable `dyn*` values. Since this means potentially exercising new codegen behavior, I added a test for it in `tests/ui/dyn-star/cell.rs`. Please let me know if there are further sorts of tests that should be written, or other care that should be taken with this change.

  It is unfortunately not possible without compiler changes to implement `PointerLike` for `Atomic*` types, since they are not `repr(transparent)` (and, in theory if not in practice, `AtomicUsize`'s alignment may be greater than that of an ordinary pointer or `usize`).

* Implementing `PointerLike` for `NonNull` is useful for pointer types which wrap `NonNull`.

* Implementing `PointerLike` for `isize` is just for completeness; I have no use cases in mind, but I cannot think of any reason not to do this.

* Tracking issue: #102425

`@rustbot` label +F-dyn_star
(there is no label or tracking issue for F-pointer_like_trait)
2024-12-22 21:59:27 +01:00
Kevin Reid
5c04151c6c Implement PointerLike for isize, NonNull, Cell, UnsafeCell, and SyncUnsafeCell.
Implementing `PointerLike` for `UnsafeCell` enables the possibility of
interior mutable `dyn*` values. Since this means potentially exercising
new codegen behavior, I added a test for it in `tests/ui/dyn-star/cell.rs`.

Also updated UI tests to account for the `isize` implementation changing
error messages.
2024-12-22 11:18:56 -08:00
bors
e108481f74 Auto merge of #134330 - scottmcm:no-more-rvalue-len, r=matthewjasper
Delete `Rvalue::Len` 🎉

Everything's moved to `PtrMetadata`, so we can get rid of the `Len` variant now.

~~Depends on #134326, so draft until that lands~~ Ready!

r? mir
2024-12-22 18:49:18 +00:00
bors
303e8bd768 Auto merge of #131193 - EFanZh:asserts-vec-len, r=the8472
Asserts the maximum value that can be returned from `Vec::len`

Currently, casting `Vec<i32>` to `Vec<u32>` takes O(1) time:

```rust
// See <https://godbolt.org/z/hxq3hnYKG> for assembly output.
pub fn cast(vec: Vec<i32>) -> Vec<u32> {
    vec.into_iter().map(|e| e as _).collect()
}
```

But the generated assembly is not the same as the identity function, which prevents us from casting `Vec<Vec<i32>>` to `Vec<Vec<u32>>` within O(1) time:

```rust
// See <https://godbolt.org/z/7n48bxd9f> for assembly output.
pub fn cast(vec: Vec<Vec<i32>>) -> Vec<Vec<u32>> {
    vec.into_iter()
        .map(|e| e.into_iter().map(|e| e as _).collect())
        .collect()
}
```

This change tries to fix the problem. You can see the comparison here: <https://godbolt.org/z/jdManrKvx>.
2024-12-22 16:09:16 +00:00
Scott McMurray
5ba54c9e31 Delete Rvalue::Len
Everything's moved to `PtrMetadata` instead.
2024-12-22 06:12:39 -08:00
bors
b22856d192 Auto merge of #134326 - scottmcm:slice-drop-shim-ptrmetadata, r=saethlin
Use `PtrMetadata` instead of `Len` in slice drop shims

I tried to do a bigger change in #134297 which didn't work, so here's the part I really wanted: Removing another use of `Len`, in favour of `PtrMetadata`.

Split into two commits where the first just adds a test, so you can look at the second commit to see how the drop shim for an array changes with this PR.

Reusing the same reviewer from the last one:
r? BoxyUwU
2024-12-22 13:28:12 +00:00
Matthias Krüger
4d166cc369
Rollup merge of #134639 - compiler-errors:negative-ambiguity-causes, r=oli-obk
Make sure we note ambiguity causes on positive/negative impl conflicts

Fixes https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/134632 by explaining why the error must be
2024-12-22 09:12:14 +01:00
Matthias Krüger
a8edf082e1
Rollup merge of #134635 - compiler-errors:dyn-dyn, r=fmease
Don't ICE on illegal `dyn*` casts

Fixes #134544
Fixes #132127
2024-12-22 09:12:13 +01:00
Matthias Krüger
87be70e2b4
Rollup merge of #134599 - dtolnay:fulldepsparser, r=fmease
Detect invalid exprs in parser used by pretty-printer tests

This PR fixes a bug in https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/133730 inherited from https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/43742. Before this fix, the test might silently only operate on a prefix of some of the test cases in this table:

13170cd787/tests/ui-fulldeps/pprust-parenthesis-insertion.rs (L57)

For example, adding the test case `1 .. 2 .. 3` (a syntactically invalid expression) into the table would unexpectedly succeed the test instead of crashing at this unwrap:

13170cd787/tests/ui-fulldeps/pprust-parenthesis-insertion.rs (L199-L200)

because `parse_expr` would successfully parse just `1 .. 2` and disregard the last `.. 3`.

This PR adds a check that `parse_expr` reaches `Eof`, ensuring all the test cases actually test the whole expression they look like they are supposed to.
2024-12-22 09:12:11 +01:00
bors
a2bcfae5c5 Auto merge of #134640 - matthiaskrgr:rollup-xlstm3o, r=matthiaskrgr
Rollup of 6 pull requests

Successful merges:

 - #134364 (Use E0665 for missing `#[default]` on enum and update doc)
 - #134601 (Support pretty-printing `dyn*` trait objects)
 - #134603 (Explain why a type is not eligible for `impl PointerLike`.)
 - #134618 (coroutine_clone: add comments)
 - #134630 (Use `&raw` for `ptr` primitive docs)
 - #134637 (Flatten effects directory now that it doesn't really test anything specific)

r? `@ghost`
`@rustbot` modify labels: rollup
2024-12-22 05:29:45 +00:00
David Tolnay
1f2028f930
Show which test case was found to be meaningless 2024-12-21 18:50:11 -08:00
David Tolnay
822e8063fd
Switch pretty-printer roundtrip test to better parser 2024-12-21 18:49:51 -08:00
Matthias Krüger
66dbfd4af3
Rollup merge of #134637 - compiler-errors:fx-test, r=fmease
Flatten effects directory now that it doesn't really test anything specific

These are just const trait tests now, after all.

There was one naming conflict between the aux-build `tests/ui/traits/const-traits/effects/auxiliary/cross-crate.rs` and `tests/ui/traits/const-traits/auxiliary/cross-crate.rs`. The former didn't really test anything useful since we no longer have an effect param, so I removed the test that owned it: `tests/ui/traits/const-traits/effects/no-explicit-const-params-cross-crate.rs`.

r? project-const-traits
2024-12-22 03:49:45 +01:00
Matthias Krüger
239b7e8337
Rollup merge of #134618 - RalfJung:coroutine-clone-comments, r=lqd
coroutine_clone: add comments

I was very surprised to learn that coroutines can be cloned. This has non-trivial semantic consequences that I do not think have been considered. Lucky enough, it's still unstable. Let's add some comments and pointers so we hopefully become aware when a MIR opt actually is in conflict with this.

Cc `@rust-lang/wg-mir-opt`
2024-12-22 03:49:44 +01:00
Matthias Krüger
7cf91567c4
Rollup merge of #134603 - kpreid:pointerlike-err, r=estebank
Explain why a type is not eligible for `impl PointerLike`.

The rules were baffling when I ran in to them trying to add some impls (to `std`, not my own code, as it happens), so I made the compiler explain them to me.

The logic of the successful cases is unchanged, but I did rearrange it to reverse the order of the primitive and `Adt` cases; this makes producing the errors easier. I'm still not very familiar with `rustc` internals, so let me know if there's a better way to do any of this.

This also adds test coverage for which impls are accepted or rejected, which I didn't see any of already.

The PR template tells me I should consider mentioning a tracking issue, but there isn't one for `pointer_like_trait`, so I'll mention `dyn_star`: #102425
2024-12-22 03:49:44 +01:00
Matthias Krüger
bcdde4ea5b
Rollup merge of #134601 - dtolnay:dynstar, r=compiler-errors
Support pretty-printing `dyn*` trait objects

- Tracking issue: https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/102425
2024-12-22 03:49:43 +01:00
Matthias Krüger
3a94f4c60f
Rollup merge of #134364 - estebank:derive-docs, r=fmease
Use E0665 for missing `#[default]` on enum and update doc

The docs for E0665 when doing `#[derive(Default]` on an `enum` previously didn't mention `#[default]` at all, or made a distinction between unit variants, that can be annotated, and tuple or struct variants, which cannot.

E0665 was not being emitted, we now use it for the same error it belonged to before.

```
error[E0665]: `#[derive(Default)]` on enum with no `#[default]`
  --> $DIR/macros-nonfatal-errors.rs:42:10
   |
LL |   #[derive(Default)]
   |            ^^^^^^^
LL | / enum NoDeclaredDefault {
LL | |     Foo,
LL | |     Bar,
LL | | }
   | |_- this enum needs a unit variant marked with `#[default]`
   |
   = note: this error originates in the derive macro `Default` (in Nightly builds, run with -Z macro-backtrace for more info)
help: make this unit variant default by placing `#[default]` on it
   |
LL |     #[default] Foo,
   |     ++++++++++
help: make this unit variant default by placing `#[default]` on it
   |
LL |     #[default] Bar,
   |     ++++++++++
```
2024-12-22 03:49:43 +01:00
David Tolnay
65ba6ac9a3
Extract ui-fulldeps expression parser into module 2024-12-21 18:48:13 -08:00
bors
c1132470a6 Auto merge of #130733 - okaneco:is_ascii, r=scottmcm
Optimize `is_ascii` for `str` and `[u8]` further

Replace the existing optimized function with one that enables auto-vectorization.

This is especially beneficial on x86-64 as `pmovmskb` can be emitted with careful structuring of the code. The instruction can detect non-ASCII characters one vector register width at a time instead of the current `usize` at a time check.

The resulting implementation is completely safe.

`case00_libcore` is the current implementation, `case04_while_loop` is this PR.
```
benchmarks:
    ascii::is_ascii_slice::long::case00_libcore                             22.25/iter  +/- 1.09
    ascii::is_ascii_slice::long::case04_while_loop                           6.78/iter  +/- 0.92
    ascii::is_ascii_slice::medium::case00_libcore                            2.81/iter  +/- 0.39
    ascii::is_ascii_slice::medium::case04_while_loop                         1.56/iter  +/- 0.78
    ascii::is_ascii_slice::short::case00_libcore                             5.55/iter  +/- 0.85
    ascii::is_ascii_slice::short::case04_while_loop                          3.75/iter  +/- 0.22
    ascii::is_ascii_slice::unaligned_both_long::case00_libcore              26.59/iter  +/- 0.66
    ascii::is_ascii_slice::unaligned_both_long::case04_while_loop            5.78/iter  +/- 0.16
    ascii::is_ascii_slice::unaligned_both_medium::case00_libcore             2.97/iter  +/- 0.32
    ascii::is_ascii_slice::unaligned_both_medium::case04_while_loop          2.41/iter  +/- 0.10
    ascii::is_ascii_slice::unaligned_head_long::case00_libcore              23.71/iter  +/- 0.79
    ascii::is_ascii_slice::unaligned_head_long::case04_while_loop            7.83/iter  +/- 1.31
    ascii::is_ascii_slice::unaligned_head_medium::case00_libcore             3.69/iter  +/- 0.54
    ascii::is_ascii_slice::unaligned_head_medium::case04_while_loop          7.05/iter  +/- 0.32
    ascii::is_ascii_slice::unaligned_tail_long::case00_libcore              24.44/iter  +/- 1.41
    ascii::is_ascii_slice::unaligned_tail_long::case04_while_loop            5.12/iter  +/- 0.18
    ascii::is_ascii_slice::unaligned_tail_medium::case00_libcore             3.24/iter  +/- 0.40
    ascii::is_ascii_slice::unaligned_tail_medium::case04_while_loop          2.86/iter  +/- 0.14

```

`unaligned_head_medium` is the main regression in the benchmarks. It is a 32 byte string being sliced `bytes[1..]`.

The first commit can be used to run the benchmarks against the current core implementation.

Previous implementation was done in #74066

---

Two potential drawbacks of this implementation are that it increases instruction count and may regress other platforms/architectures. The benches here may also be too artificial to glean much insight from.
https://rust.godbolt.org/z/G9znGfY36
2024-12-22 02:44:13 +00:00
Michael Goulet
62d1f4faa1 Make sure we note ambiguity causes on positive/negative impl conflicts 2024-12-22 02:04:14 +00:00
Michael Goulet
582167a2fc Flatten effects directory now that it doesn't really test anything specific 2024-12-22 01:12:15 +00:00
Michael Goulet
f67a739611 Don't ICE on illegal dyn* casts 2024-12-21 23:43:52 +00:00
Esteban Küber
94812f1c8f Use E0665 for missing #[default] error
Use orphaned error code for the same error it belonged to before.

```
error[E0665]: `#[derive(Default)]` on enum with no `#[default]`
  --> $DIR/macros-nonfatal-errors.rs:42:10
   |
LL |   #[derive(Default)]
   |            ^^^^^^^
LL | / enum NoDeclaredDefault {
LL | |     Foo,
LL | |     Bar,
LL | | }
   | |_- this enum needs a unit variant marked with `#[default]`
   |
   = note: this error originates in the derive macro `Default` (in Nightly builds, run with -Z macro-backtrace for more info)
help: make this unit variant default by placing `#[default]` on it
   |
LL |     #[default] Foo,
   |     ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
help: make this unit variant default by placing `#[default]` on it
   |
LL |     #[default] Bar,
   |     ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
```
2024-12-21 19:14:58 +00:00
Ralf Jung
8f9fede0b8 coroutine_clone: add comments 2024-12-21 17:01:36 +01:00
Jacob Pratt
ea8bc3b4be
Rollup merge of #134600 - dtolnay:chainedcomparison, r=oli-obk
Fix parenthesization of chained comparisons by pretty-printer

Example:

```rust
macro_rules! repro {
    () => {
        1 < 2
    };
}

fn main() {
    let _ = repro!() == false;
}
```

Previously `-Zunpretty=expanded` would pretty-print this syntactically invalid output: `fn main() { let _ = 1 < 2 == false; }`

```console
error: comparison operators cannot be chained
 --> <anon>:8:23
  |
8 | fn main() { let _ = 1 < 2 == false; }
  |                       ^   ^^
  |
help: parenthesize the comparison
  |
8 | fn main() { let _ = (1 < 2) == false; }
  |                     +     +
```

With the fix, it will print `fn main() { let _ = (1 < 2) == false; }`.

Making `-Zunpretty=expanded` consistently produce syntactically valid Rust output is important because that is what makes it possible for `cargo expand` to format and perform filtering on the expanded code.

## Review notes

According to `rg '\.fixity\(\)' compiler/` the `fixity` function is called only 3 places:

- 13170cd787/compiler/rustc_ast_pretty/src/pprust/state/expr.rs (L283-L287)

- 13170cd787/compiler/rustc_hir_pretty/src/lib.rs (L1295-L1299)

- 13170cd787/compiler/rustc_parse/src/parser/expr.rs (L282-L289)

The 2 pretty printers definitely want to treat comparisons using `Fixity::None`. That's the whole bug being fixed. Meanwhile, the parser's `Fixity::None` codepath is previously unreachable as indicated by the comment, so as long as `Fixity::None` here behaves exactly the way that `Fixity::Left` used to behave, you can tell that this PR definitely does not constitute any behavior change for the parser.

My guess for why comparison operators were set to `Fixity::Left` instead of `Fixity::None` is that it's a very old workaround for giving a good chained comparisons diagnostic (like what I pasted above). Nowadays that is handled by a different dedicated codepath.
2024-12-21 01:18:43 -05:00
Jacob Pratt
307fe498eb
Rollup merge of #134575 - compiler-errors:drop-lint-coro, r=nikomatsakis
Handle `DropKind::ForLint` in coroutines correctly

Fixes #134566
Fixes #134541
2024-12-21 01:18:40 -05:00
Jacob Pratt
36485acdac
Rollup merge of #133087 - estebank:stmt-misparse, r=chenyukang
Detect missing `.` in method chain in `let` bindings and statements

On parse errors where an ident is found where one wasn't expected, see if the next elements might have been meant as method call or field access.

```
error: expected one of `.`, `;`, `?`, `else`, or an operator, found `map`
  --> $DIR/missing-dot-on-statement-expression.rs:7:29
   |
LL |     let _ = [1, 2, 3].iter()map(|x| x);
   |                             ^^^ expected one of `.`, `;`, `?`, `else`, or an operator
   |
help: you might have meant to write a method call
   |
LL |     let _ = [1, 2, 3].iter().map(|x| x);
   |                             +
```
2024-12-21 01:18:40 -05:00
David Tolnay
23a250738b
Relocate dyn* test out of parenthesis insertion test 2024-12-20 21:31:21 -08:00
David Tolnay
1cc8289791
Support pretty-printing dyn* trait objects 2024-12-20 21:31:21 -08:00
Kevin Reid
7b500d852d Explain why a type is not eligible for impl PointerLike.
The rules were baffling when I ran in to them trying to add some impls,
so I made the compiler explain them to me.

The logic of the successful cases is unchanged, but I did rearrange it
to reverse the order of the primitive and `Adt` cases; this makes
producing the errors easier.
2024-12-20 20:49:09 -08:00
David Tolnay
fe65e886f3
Change comparison operators to have Fixity::None 2024-12-20 20:12:22 -08:00
David Tolnay
d748d1d953
Add some parenthesization test cases with operators that are not left-associative 2024-12-20 20:12:20 -08:00
David Tolnay
3f98f76d70
Check that pretty-printer parenthesis test operates on the whole test case 2024-12-20 19:59:10 -08:00
Esteban Küber
1549af29c3 Do not suggest foo.Bar 2024-12-21 03:02:07 +00:00
Esteban Küber
cbbc7becc8 Account for missing . in macros to avoid incorrect suggestion 2024-12-21 02:46:33 +00:00
Esteban Küber
1ce0fa98c7 Detect missing . in method chain in let bindings and statements
On parse errors where an ident is found where one wasn't expected, see if the next elements might have been meant as method call or field access.

```
error: expected one of `.`, `;`, `?`, `else`, or an operator, found `map`
  --> $DIR/missing-dot-on-statement-expression.rs:7:29
   |
LL |     let _ = [1, 2, 3].iter()map(|x| x);
   |                             ^^^ expected one of `.`, `;`, `?`, `else`, or an operator
   |
help: you might have meant to write a method call
   |
LL |     let _ = [1, 2, 3].iter().map(|x| x);
   |                             +
```
2024-12-21 02:46:33 +00:00
Matthias Krüger
b7ac8d78c5
Rollup merge of #134586 - Urgau:fn-ptr-lint-option, r=compiler-errors
Also lint on option of function pointer comparisons

This PR is the first part of #134536, ie. the linting on `Option<{fn ptr}>` in the `unpredictable_function_pointer_comparisons` lint, which isn't part of the lang nomination that the second part is going trough, and so should be able to be approved independently.

Related to https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/134527
r? `@compiler-errors`
2024-12-21 01:30:18 +01:00
Matthias Krüger
fea6c4eb07
Rollup merge of #134539 - estebank:restrict-non_exhaustive, r=jieyouxu
Restrict `#[non_exaustive]` on structs with default field values

Do not allow users to apply `#[non_exaustive]` to a struct when they have also used default field values.
2024-12-21 01:30:17 +01:00
Matthias Krüger
3201fe9893
Rollup merge of #134524 - adetaylor:getref, r=compiler-errors
Arbitrary self types v2: no deshadow pre feature.

The arbitrary self types v2 work introduces a check for shadowed methods, whereby a method in some "outer" smart pointer type may called in preference to a method in the inner referent. This is bad if the outer pointer adds a method later, as it may change behavior, so we ensure we error in this circumstance.

It was intended that this new shadowing detection system only comes into play for users who enable the `arbitrary_self_types` feature (or of course everyone later if it's stabilized). It was believed that the new deshadowing code couldn't be reached without building the custom smart pointers that `arbitrary_self_types` enables, and therefore there was no risk of this code impacting existing users.

However, it turns out that cunning use of `Pin::get_ref` can cause this type of shadowing error to be emitted now. This commit adds a test for this case.

As we want this test to pass without arbitrary_self_types, but fail with it, I've split it into two files (one with run-pass and one without). If there's a better way I can amend it.

Part of #44874

r? ```@wesleywiser```
2024-12-21 01:30:16 +01:00
Matthias Krüger
aea7c1d8d7
Rollup merge of #134509 - adetaylor:niche-deshadowing-tests, r=wesleywiser
Arbitrary self types v2: niche deshadowing test

Arbitrary self types v2 attempts to detect cases where methods in an "outer" type (e.g. a smart pointer) might "shadow" methods in the referent.

There are a couple of cases where the current code makes no attempt to detect such shadowing. Both of these cases only apply if other unstable features are enabled.

Add a test, mostly for illustrative purposes, so we can see the shadowing cases that can occur.

Part of #44874
r? ```@wesleywiser```
2024-12-21 01:30:15 +01:00
Matthias Krüger
f3b19f54fa
Rollup merge of #133782 - dtolnay:closuresjumps, r=spastorino,traviscross
Precedence improvements: closures and jumps

This PR fixes some cases where rustc's pretty printers would redundantly parenthesize expressions that didn't need it.

<table>
<tr><th>Before</th><th>After</th></tr>
<tr><td><code>return (|x: i32| x)</code></td><td><code>return |x: i32| x</code></td></tr>
<tr><td><code>(|| -> &mut () { std::process::abort() }).clone()</code></td><td><code>|| -> &mut () { std::process::abort() }.clone()</code></td></tr>
<tr><td><code>(continue) + 1</code></td><td><code>continue + 1</code></td></tr>
</table>

Tested by `echo "fn main() { let _ = $AFTER; }" | rustc -Zunpretty=expanded /dev/stdin`.

The pretty-printer aims to render the syntax tree as it actually exists in rustc, as faithfully as possible, in Rust syntax. It can insert parentheses where forced by Rust's grammar in order to preserve the meaning of a macro-generated syntax tree, for example in the case of `a * $rhs` where $rhs is `b + c`. But for any expression parsed from source code, without a macro involved, there should never be a reason for inserting additional parentheses not present in the original.

For closures and jumps (return, break, continue, yield, do yeet, become) the unneeded parentheses came from the precedence of some of these expressions being misidentified. In the same order as the table above:

- Jumps and closures are supposed to have equal precedence. The [Rust Reference](https://doc.rust-lang.org/1.83.0/reference/expressions.html#expression-precedence) says so, and in Syn they do. There is no Rust syntax that would require making a precedence distinction between jumps and closures. But in rustc these were previously 2 distinct levels with the closure being lower, hence the parentheses around a closure inside a jump (but not a jump inside a closure).

- When a closure is written with an explicit return type, the grammar [requires](https://doc.rust-lang.org/1.83.0/reference/expressions/closure-expr.html) that the closure body consists of exactly one block expression, not any other arbitrary expression as usual for closures. Parsing of the closure body does not continue after the block expression. So in `|| { 0 }.clone()` the clone is inside the closure body and applies to `{ 0 }`, whereas in `|| -> _ { 0 }.clone()` the clone is outside and applies to the closure as a whole.

- Continue never needs parentheses. It was previously marked as having the lowest possible precedence but it should have been the highest, next to paths and loops and function calls, not next to jumps.
2024-12-21 01:30:15 +01:00
Matthias Krüger
472bbb9f0c
Rollup merge of #128780 - GuillaumeGomez:rustflags-doctests, r=rustdoc
Add `--doctest-compilation-args` option to add compilation flags to doctest compilation

Fixes #67533.
Tracking issue: https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/134172

It's been something I meant to take a look at for a long time and actually completely forgot... The idea is to allow to give more control over how doctests are compiled to users. To do so, this PR adds a new `--doctest-compilation-args` option which provides extra compilation flags.

r? `@notriddle`
2024-12-21 01:30:14 +01:00
Urgau
9965ad7620 Also lint on option of function pointer comparisons 2024-12-20 23:48:46 +01:00
Guillaume Gomez
2d914bed2d Add test to ensure passing --doctest_compilation_args multiple times work 2024-12-20 22:35:00 +01:00
Guillaume Gomez
24fafe7d14 Update run-make/rustdoc-default-output test 2024-12-20 22:35:00 +01:00
Matthias Krüger
0b1834d66b
Rollup merge of #134573 - lukas-code:unimpl-dyn-pointerlike, r=compiler-errors
unimplement `PointerLike` for trait objects

Values of type `dyn* PointerLike` or `dyn PointerLike` are not pointer-like so these types should not implement `PointerLike`.

After https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/133226, `PointerLike` allows user implementations, so we can't just mark it with `#[rustc_deny_explicit_impl(implement_via_object = false)]`. Instead, this PR splits the `#[rustc_deny_explicit_impl(implement_via_object = ...)]` attribute into two separate attributes `#[rustc_deny_explicit_impl]` and `#[rustc_do_not_implement_via_object]` so that we opt out of the automatic `impl PointerLike for dyn PointerLike` and still allow user implementations.

For traits that are marked with `#[do_not_implement_via_object]` but not `#[rustc_deny_explicit_impl]` I've also made it possible to add a manual `impl Trait for dyn Trait`. There is no immediate need for this, but it was one line to implement and seems nice to have.

fixes https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/134545
fixes https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/134543

r? `@compiler-errors`
2024-12-20 21:32:33 +01:00
Matthias Krüger
17f6690eff
Rollup merge of #134562 - taiki-e:codegen-asm-minicore, r=jieyouxu
tests/codegen/asm: Remove uses of rustc_attrs and lang_items features by using minicore

Similar to https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/134385 (for tests/ui/asm) and https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/134436 (for tests/assembly/asm), but for tests/codegen/asm.

r? jieyouxu
2024-12-20 21:32:31 +01:00
Michael Goulet
42d1a4c48b Handle DropKind::ForLint in coroutines correctly 2024-12-20 18:18:06 +00:00
Esteban Küber
b3cc9b9620 Restrict #[non_exaustive] on structs with default field values
Do not allow users to apply `#[non_exaustive]` to a struct when they have also used default field values.
2024-12-20 17:18:54 +00:00