Commit graph

613 commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Ethan Brierley
67db0ea4a7 suggestions from camelid review 2020-12-06 21:30:30 +00:00
Ethan Brierley
0c13a9c020 smarter E0390 2020-12-06 20:30:07 +00:00
Tim Diekmann
9274b37d99 Rename AllocRef to Allocator and (de)alloc to (de)allocate 2020-12-04 14:47:15 +01:00
bors
5be3f9f10e Auto merge of #79620 - JohnTitor:label-name-sugg, r=davidtwco
Tweak diagnostics on shadowing lifetimes/labels

Fixes #79610

Skip adding a new test assuming we have already sufficient tests.
2020-12-03 18:55:01 +00:00
Yuki Okushi
cdcce11504 Tweak diagnostics on shadowing lifetimes/labels 2020-12-02 11:39:42 +09:00
bors
eb4860c7e1 Auto merge of #78864 - Mark-Simulacrum:warn-on-forbids, r=pnkfelix
Use true previous lint level when detecting overriden forbids

Previously, cap-lints was ignored when checking the previous forbid level, which
meant that it was a hard error to do so. This is different from the normal
behavior of lints, which are silenced by cap-lints; if the forbid would not take
effect regardless, there is not much point in complaining about the fact that we
are reducing its level.

It might be considered a bug that even `--cap-lints deny` would suffice to
silence the error on overriding forbid, depending on if one cares about failing
the build or precisely forbid being set. But setting cap-lints to deny is quite
odd and not really done in practice, so we don't try to handle it specially.

This also unifies the code paths for nested and same-level scopes. However, the
special case for CLI lint flags is left in place (introduced by #70918) to fix
the regression noted in #70819. That means that CLI flags do not lint on forbid
being overridden by a non-forbid level. It is unclear whether this is a bug or a
desirable feature, but it is certainly inconsistent. CLI flags are a
sufficiently different "type" of place though that this is deemed out of scope
for this commit.

r? `@pnkfelix` perhaps?

cc #77713 -- not marking as "Fixes" because of the lack of proper unused attribute handling in this PR
2020-12-02 02:07:45 +00:00
bors
760430e6fd Auto merge of #78863 - KodrAus:feat/simd-array, r=oli-obk
Support repr(simd) on ADTs containing a single array field

This is a squash and rebase of `@gnzlbg's` #63531

I've never actually written code in the compiler before so just fumbled my way around until it would build 😅

I imagine there'll be some work we need to do in `rustc_codegen_cranelift` too for this now, but might need some input from `@bjorn3` to know what that is.

cc `@rust-lang/project-portable-simd`

-----

This PR allows using `#[repr(simd)]` on ADTs containing a single array field:

```rust
 #[repr(simd)] struct S0([f32; 4]);
 #[repr(simd)] struct S1<const N: usize>([f32; N]);
 #[repr(simd)] struct S2<T, const N: usize>([T; N]);
```

This should allow experimenting with portable packed SIMD abstractions on nightly that make use of const generics.
2020-11-29 09:28:09 +00:00
Lzu Tao
6bfe27a3e0 Drop support for cloudabi targets 2020-11-22 17:11:41 -05:00
Esteban Küber
2098ade771 Remove redundant notes in E0275
Fix #58964.
2020-11-18 09:05:48 -08:00
Mark Rousskov
64efcbe0e9 Use true previous lint level when detecting overriden forbids
Previously, cap-lints was ignored when checking the previous forbid level, which
meant that it was a hard error to do so. This is different from the normal
behavior of lints, which are silenced by cap-lints; if the forbid would not take
effect regardless, there is not much point in complaining about the fact that we
are reducing its level.

It might be considered a bug that even `--cap-lints deny` would suffice to
silence the error on overriding forbid, depending on if one cares about failing
the build or precisely forbid being set. But setting cap-lints to deny is quite
odd and not really done in practice, so we don't try to handle it specially.

This also unifies the code paths for nested and same-level scopes. However, the
special case for CLI lint flags is left in place (introduced by #70918) to fix
the regression noted in #70819. That means that CLI flags do not lint on forbid
being overridden by a non-forbid level. It is unclear whether this is a bug or a
desirable feature, but it is certainly inconsistent. CLI flags are a
sufficiently different "type" of place though that this is deemed out of scope
for this commit.
2020-11-14 15:56:07 -05:00
gnzlbg
6e88e96ccf Support repr(simd) on ADTs containing a single array field
This PR allows using `#[repr(simd)]` on ADTs containing a
single array field:

```rust
 #[repr(simd)] struct S0([f32; 4]);
 #[repr(simd)] struct S1<const N: usize>([f32; N]);
 #[repr(simd)] struct S2<T, const N: usize>([T; N]);
```

This should allow experimenting with portable packed SIMD
abstractions on nightly that make use of const generics.
2020-11-08 12:01:48 +10:00
ankushduacodes
0af959d3a2 Fixing Spelling Typos 2020-11-06 09:25:58 +05:30
Santiago Pastorino
953d7a64a5
Add unsized_locals to INCOMPLETE_FEATURES list 2020-10-27 14:45:28 -03:00
Santiago Pastorino
708fc3b1a2
Add unsized_fn_params feature 2020-10-27 14:45:02 -03:00
Tim Diekmann
06e4497a04 Merge remote-tracking branch 'upstream/master' into box-alloc 2020-10-25 16:32:28 +01:00
bors
7bade6ef73 Auto merge of #77015 - davidtwco:check-attr-variant-closure-expr, r=lcnr
passes: `check_attr` on more targets

This PR modifies `check_attr` so that:

- Enum variants are now checked (some attributes would not have been prohibited on variants previously).
- `check_expr_attributes` and `check_stmt_attributes` are removed as `check_attributes` can perform the same checks. This means that codegen attribute errors aren't shown if there are other errors first (e.g. from other attributes, as shown in `src/test/ui/macros/issue-68060.rs` changes below).
2020-10-23 17:32:04 +00:00
bors
1eaadebb3d Auto merge of #78077 - petrochenkov:qvis, r=davidtwco
Calculate visibilities once in resolve

Then use them through a query based on resolver outputs.

Item visibilities were previously calculated in three places - initially in `rustc_resolve`, then in `rustc_privacy` during type privacy checkin, and then in `rustc_metadata` during metadata encoding.
The visibility logic is not entirely trivial, especially for things like constructors or enum variants, and all of it was duplicated.

This PR deduplicates all the visibility calculations, visibilities are determined once during early name resolution and then stored in `ResolverOutputs` and are later available through `tcx` as a query `tcx.visibility(def_id)`.
(This query existed previously, but only worked for other crates.)

Some special cases (e.g. visibilities for closure types, which are needed for type privacy checking) are not processed in resolve, but deferred and performed directly in the query instead.
2020-10-21 20:23:26 +00:00
Esteban Küber
88f5e110db review comments 2020-10-20 09:26:15 -07:00
Esteban Küber
ae0e3d0511 Tweak "object unsafe" errors
Fix #77598.
2020-10-20 09:26:14 -07:00
Vadim Petrochenkov
cee5521a03 Calculate visibilities once in resolve
Then use them through a query based on resolver outputs
2020-10-19 11:57:50 +03:00
Yuki Okushi
57e38dd4fb
Rollup merge of #78048 - blyxxyz:e0424-improve-self-placement, r=lcnr
Suggest correct place to add `self` parameter when inside closure

It would incorrectly suggest adding it as a parameter to the closure instead of the containing function.

[For example](https://play.rust-lang.org/?version=stable&mode=debug&edition=2018&gist=1936bcd1e5f981573386e0cee985c3c0):
```
help: add a `self` receiver parameter to make the associated `fn` a method
  |
5 |         let _ = || self&self;
  |                        ^^^^^
```

`DiagnosticMetadata.current_function` is only used for these messages so tweaking its behavior should be ok.
2020-10-18 04:11:11 +09:00
Yuki Okushi
407bba4676
Rollup merge of #78043 - willcrozi:e0210-error-note-fix, r=lcnr
Fix grammar in note for orphan-rule error [E0210]

Fixes the grammar in the error note for [E0210] from:

_"= note: implementing a foreign trait is only possible if at least one of the types for which **is it** implemented is local"_

to:

_"= note: implementing a foreign trait is only possible if at least one of the types for which **it is** implemented is local"_

The content of this commit is the result of running the following command at the repository root:

`find . \( -type d -name .git -prune \) -o -type f -print0 | xargs -0 sed -i 's/which is it implemented/which it is implemented/g'`
2020-10-18 04:11:09 +09:00
Jan Verbeek
e701ae376a Suggest correct place to add self parameter when inside closure
It would incorrectly suggest adding it as a parameter to the closure instead of the
containing function.
2020-10-17 13:36:59 +02:00
Will Crozier
786e3ea31a Fix grammar in note for orphan-rule error [E0210] 2020-10-17 11:03:45 +01:00
Yuki Okushi
f7150be674 Suggest minimal subset features in incomplete_features lint 2020-10-17 02:01:08 +09:00
Tim Diekmann
955b37b305
Merge branch 'master' into box-alloc 2020-10-16 08:54:38 +02:00
Dylan DPC
85dbb03490
Rollup merge of #76119 - Amjad50:stabilizing-move_ref_pattern, r=nikomatsakis
Stabilize move_ref_pattern

# Implementation
- Initially the rule was added in the run-up to 1.0. The AST-based borrow checker was having difficulty correctly enforcing match expressions that combined ref and move bindings, and so it was decided to simplify forbid the combination out right.
- The move to MIR-based borrow checking made it possible to enforce the rules in a finer-grained level, but we kept the rule in place in an effort to be conservative in our changes.
- In #68376, @Centril lifted the restriction but required a feature-gate.
- This PR removes the feature-gate.

Tracking issue: #68354.

# Description
This PR is to stabilize the feature `move_ref_pattern`, which allows patterns
containing both `by-ref` and `by-move` bindings at the same time.

For example: `Foo(ref x, y)`, where `x` is `by-ref`,
and `y` is `by-move`.

The rules of moving a variable also apply here when moving *part* of a variable,
such as it can't be referenced or moved before.

If this pattern is used, it would result in *partial move*, which means that
part of the variable is moved. The variable that was partially moved from
cannot be used as a whole in this case, only the parts that are still
not moved can be used.

## Documentation
- The reference (rust-lang/reference#881)
- Rust by example (rust-lang/rust-by-example#1377)

## Tests
There are many tests, but I think one of the comperhensive ones:
- [borrowck-move-ref-pattern-pass.rs](85fbf49ce0/src/test/ui/pattern/move-ref-patterns/borrowck-move-ref-pattern-pass.rs)
- [borrowck-move-ref-pattern.rs](85fbf49ce0/src/test/ui/pattern/move-ref-patterns/borrowck-move-ref-pattern.rs)

# Examples

```rust
#[derive(PartialEq, Eq)]
struct Finished {}

#[derive(PartialEq, Eq)]
struct Processing {
    status: ProcessStatus,
}

#[derive(PartialEq, Eq)]
enum ProcessStatus {
    One,
    Two,
    Three,
}

#[derive(PartialEq, Eq)]
enum Status {
    Finished(Finished),
    Processing(Processing),
}

fn check_result(_url: &str) -> Status {
    // fetch status from some server
    Status::Processing(Processing {
        status: ProcessStatus::One,
    })
}

fn wait_for_result(url: &str) -> Finished {
    let mut previous_status = None;
    loop {
        match check_result(url) {
            Status::Finished(f) => return f,
            Status::Processing(p) => {
                match (&mut previous_status, p.status) {
                    (None, status) => previous_status = Some(status), // first status
                    (Some(previous), status) if *previous == status => {} // no change, ignore
                    (Some(previous), status) => { // Now it can be used
                        // new status
                        *previous = status;
                    }
                }
            }
        }
    }
}
```

Before, we would have used:
```rust
                match (&previous_status, p.status) {
                    (Some(previous), status) if *previous == status => {} // no change, ignore
                    (_, status) => {
                        // new status
                        previous_status = Some(status);
                    }
                }
```

Demonstrating *partial move*
```rust
fn main() {
    #[derive(Debug)]
    struct Person {
        name: String,
        age: u8,
    }

    let person = Person {
        name: String::from("Alice"),
        age: 20,
    };

    // `name` is moved out of person, but `age` is referenced
    let Person { name, ref age } = person;

    println!("The person's age is {}", age);

    println!("The person's name is {}", name);

    // Error! borrow of partially moved value: `person` partial move occurs
    //println!("The person struct is {:?}", person);

    // `person` cannot be used but `person.age` can be used as it is not moved
    println!("The person's age from person struct is {}", person.age);
}
```
2020-10-16 02:10:07 +02:00
Andy Russell
14b2d16c5c
ensure arguments are included in count mismatch span 2020-10-15 10:22:39 -04:00
xd009642
bdb3f7716b Fix typo in error code 2020-10-08 23:56:59 +01:00
xd009642
a6e2b636e6 Implement the instruction_set attribute 2020-10-08 23:32:20 +01:00
Tim Diekmann
f288cd2e17 Support custom allocators in Box
Remove `Box::leak_with_alloc`


Add leak-test for box with allocator


Rename `AllocErr` to `AllocError` in leak-test


Add `Box::alloc` and adjust examples to use the new API
2020-10-07 03:07:02 +02:00
Guillaume Gomez
d1d94ba026 Improve E0777 help message 2020-10-02 16:33:44 +02:00
Guillaume Gomez
de21c3df0e Create E0777 error code for "invalid literal in derive" 2020-10-01 20:41:57 +02:00
Dylan MacKenzie
51fbd555f0 Bless tests 2020-09-29 19:20:33 -07:00
David Wood
57e8fc5685
passes: check_attr on more targets
This commit modifies `check_attr` so that:

- Enum variants are now checked (some attributes would not have been
  prohibited on variants previously).
- `check_expr_attributes` and `check_stmt_attributes` are removed as
  `check_attributes` can perform the same checks.

Signed-off-by: David Wood <david@davidtw.co>
2020-09-28 12:18:52 +01:00
varkor
94c789b275 char not char 2020-09-26 13:34:49 +01:00
varkor
8eb42ba0fb Make invalid integer operation messages consistent 2020-09-26 13:34:49 +01:00
bors
95386b656e Auto merge of #76028 - aticu:improve_e0118, r=estebank,jyn514,GuillaumeGomez
Improve E0118

- Changes the "base type" terminology to "nominal type" (according to the [reference](https://doc.rust-lang.org/stable/reference/items/implementations.html#inherent-implementations)).
- Suggests removing a reference, if one is present on the type.
- Clarify what is meant by a "nominal type".

closes #69392

This is my first not-entirely-trivial PR, so please let me know if I missed anything or if something could be improved. Though I probably won't be able to fix anything in the upcoming week.
2020-09-17 03:56:38 +00:00
Amjad Alsharafi
da700cba08 Stabilize move_ref_pattern 2020-09-15 14:23:05 +08:00
Esteban Küber
21f8326cec Provide suggestion for missing fields in patterns 2020-09-11 13:47:33 -07:00
aticu
1c1bb1309f Improve E0118 description 2020-09-11 19:48:43 +02:00
bors
88197214b8 Auto merge of #75573 - Aaron1011:feature/const-mutation-lint, r=oli-obk
Add CONST_ITEM_MUTATION lint

Fixes #74053
Fixes #55721

This PR adds a new lint `CONST_ITEM_MUTATION`.
Given an item `const FOO: SomeType = ..`, this lint fires on:

* Attempting to write directly to a field (`FOO.field = some_val`) or
  array entry (`FOO.array_field[0] = val`)
* Taking a mutable reference to the `const` item (`&mut FOO`), including
  through an autoderef `FOO.some_mut_self_method()`

The lint message explains that since each use of a constant creates a
new temporary, the original `const` item will not be modified.
2020-09-10 05:54:26 +00:00
Tyler Mandry
5ea55518bc
Rollup merge of #75984 - kornelski:typeormodule, r=matthewjasper
Improve unresolved use error message

"use of undeclared type or module `foo`" doesn't mention that it could be a crate.

This error can happen when users forget to add a dependency to `Cargo.toml`, so I think it's important to mention that it could be a missing crate.

I've used a heuristic based on Rust's naming conventions. It complains about an unknown type if the ident starts with an upper-case letter, and crate or module otherwise. It seems to work very well. The expanded error help covers both an unknown type and a missing crate case.
2020-09-09 15:05:45 -07:00
Aaron Hill
f422ef141a
Add CONST_ITEM_MUTATION lint
Fixes #74053
Fixes #55721

This PR adds a new lint `CONST_ITEM_MUTATION`.
Given an item `const FOO: SomeType = ..`, this lint fires on:

* Attempting to write directly to a field (`FOO.field = some_val`) or
  array entry (`FOO.array_field[0] = val`)
* Taking a mutable reference to the `const` item (`&mut FOO`), including
  through an autoderef `FOO.some_mut_self_method()`

The lint message explains that since each use of a constant creates a
new temporary, the original `const` item will not be modified.
2020-09-07 08:44:35 -04:00
Dan Aloni
51742be6d8 specialization_graph: avoid trimmed paths for OverlapError 2020-09-03 14:09:50 +03:00
Dan Aloni
07e7823c01 pretty: trim paths of unique symbols
If a symbol name can only be imported from one place for a type, and
as long as it was not glob-imported anywhere in the current crate, we
can trim its printed path and print only the name.

This has wide implications on error messages with types, for example,
shortening `std::vec::Vec` to just `Vec`, as long as there is no other
`Vec` importable anywhere.

This adds a new '-Z trim-diagnostic-paths=false' option to control this
feature.

On the good path, with no diagnosis printed, we should try to avoid
issuing this query, so we need to prevent trimmed_def_paths query on
several cases.

This change also relies on a previous commit that differentiates
between `Debug` and `Display` on various rustc types, where the latter
is trimmed and presented to the user and the former is not.
2020-09-02 22:26:37 +03:00
Kornel
7ec1de062a Clarify message about unresolved use 2020-09-01 18:38:14 +01:00
Esteban Küber
07112ca62d Suggest if let x = y when encountering if x = y
Detect potential cases where `if let` was meant but `let` was left out.

Fix #44990.
2020-08-30 15:01:06 -07:00
Aaron Hill
e3cd43eb00
Use smaller def span for functions
Currently, the def span of a funtion encompasses the entire function
signature and body. However, this is usually unnecessarily verbose - when we are
pointing at an entire function in a diagnostic, we almost always want to
point at the signature. The actual contents of the body tends to be
irrelevant to the diagnostic we are emitting, and just takes up
additional screen space.

This commit changes the `def_span` of all function items (freestanding
functions, `impl`-block methods, and `trait`-block methods) to be the
span of the signature. For example, the function

```rust
pub fn foo<T>(val: T) -> T { val }
```

now has a `def_span` corresponding to `pub fn foo<T>(val: T) -> T`
(everything before the opening curly brace).

Trait methods without a body have a `def_span` which includes the
trailing semicolon. For example:

```rust
trait Foo {
    fn bar();
}```

the function definition `Foo::bar` has a `def_span` of `fn bar();`

This makes our diagnostic output much shorter, and emphasizes
information that is relevant to whatever diagnostic we are reporting.

We continue to use the full span (including the body) in a few of
places:

* MIR building uses the full span when building source scopes.
* 'Outlives suggestions' use the full span to sort the diagnostics being
  emitted.
* The `#[rustc_on_unimplemented(enclosing_scope="in this scope")]`
attribute points the entire scope body.
* The 'unconditional recursion' lint uses the full span to show
  additional context for the recursive call.

All of these cases work only with local items, so we don't need to
add anything extra to crate metadata.
2020-08-22 18:41:49 -04:00
bors
97ba0c7171 Auto merge of #75536 - estebank:e0255-suggestion, r=varkor
Tweak output of E0225

When encountering multiple non-auto trait bounds suggest creating a new
trait and explain what auto-traits are.

_Inspired by https://fasterthanli.me/articles/frustrated-its-not-you-its-rust_
2020-08-16 11:16:44 +00:00