Do not emit note suggesting to implement operation trait to foreign type
When a binary operation isn't valid, you will get a lint proposing to add a trait implementation to make the operation possible. However, this cannot be done for foreign types, such as types from `core` or `std`.
For example:
```
= note: an implementation of `std::ops::Add` might be missing for `std::option::Option<i8>`
```
As mentioned in https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/60497#issuecomment-562665539:
> The note suggesting implementing Add<i8> should only be emitted if Option<i8> were local to the current crate, which it isn't, so in this case it shouldn't be emitted.
(I will use the CI to check tests for me, or my computer will just burn... and running IDEs is not possible on a pile of ashes)
r? @estebank
parser: Simplify treatment of macro variables in `Parser::bump`
Follow-up to https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/69006.
Token normalization for `$ident` and `$lifetime` is merged directly into `bump`.
Special "unknown macro variable" diagnostic for unexpected `$`s is removed as preventing legal code from compiling (as a result `bump` also doesn't call itself recursively anymore and can't make `prev_token` inconsistent).
r? @Centril
parse: fuse associated and extern items up to defaultness
Language changes:
- The grammar of extern `type` aliases is unified with associated ones, and becomes:
```rust
TypeItem = "type" ident generics {":" bounds}? where_clause {"=" type}? ";" ;
```
Semantic restrictions (`ast_validation`) are added to forbid any parameters in `generics`, any bounds in `bounds`, and any predicates in `where_clause`, as well as the presence of a type expression (`= u8`).
(Work still remains to fuse this with free `type` aliases, but this can be done later.)
- The grammar of constants and static items (free, associated, and extern) now permits the absence of an expression, and becomes:
```rust
GlobalItem = {"const" {ident | "_"} | "static" "mut"? ident} {"=" expr}? ";" ;
```
- A semantic restriction is added to enforce the presence of the expression (the body).
- A semantic restriction is added to reject `const _` in associated contexts.
Together, these changes allow us to fuse the grammar of associated items and extern items up to `default`ness which is the main goal of the PR.
-----------------------
We are now very close to fully fusing the entirely of item parsing and their ASTs. To progress further, we must make a decision: should we parse e.g. `default use foo::bar;` and whatnot? Accepting that is likely easiest from a parsing perspective, as it does not require using look-ahead, but it is perhaps not too onerous to only accept it for `fn`s (and all their various qualifiers), `const`s, `static`s, and `type`s.
r? @petrochenkov
Token normalization is merged directly into `bump`.
Special "unknown macro variable" diagnostic for unexpected `$`s is removed as preventing legal code from compiling.
miri: improve and simplify overflow detection
This simplifies the overflow detection for signed binary operators, and adds overflow detection to unary operators so that const-prop doesn't have to crudely hand-roll that.
It also fixes some bugs in the operator implementation that however, I think, were not observable.
r? @oli-obk @wesleywiser
Improve reporting errors and suggestions for trait bounds
Fix#66802
- When printing errors for unsized function parameter, properly point at the parameter instead of function's body.
- Improve `consider further restricting this bound` (and related) messages by separating human-oriented hints from the machine-oriented ones.
When suggesting associated fn with type parameters, include in the structured suggestion
Address #50734.
```
error[E0046]: not all trait items implemented, missing: `foo`, `bar`, `baz`
--> file.rs:14:1
|
14 | impl TraitA<()> for S {
| ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ missing `foo`, `bar`, `baz` in implementation
|
= help: implement the missing item: `fn foo<T>(_: T) -> Self where T: TraitB, TraitB::Item = A { unimplemented!() }`
= help: implement the missing item: `fn bar<T>(_: T) -> Self { unimplemented!() }`
= help: implement the missing item: `fn baz<T>(_: T) -> Self where T: TraitB, <T as TraitB>::Item: std::marker::Copy { unimplemented!() }`
```
It doesn't work well for associated types with `ty::Predicate::Projection`s as we need to resugar `T: Trait, Trait::Assoc = K` → `T: Trait<Assoc = K>`.
Initial implementation of `#![feature(move_ref_pattern)]`
Following up on #45600, under the gate `#![feature(move_ref_pattern)]`, `(ref x, mut y)` is allowed subject to restrictions necessary for soundness. The match checking implementation and tests for `#![feature(bindings_after_at)]` is also adjusted as necessary.
Closes#45600.
Tracking issue: #68354.
r? @matthewjasper
Towards unified `fn` grammar
Part of https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/68728.
- Syntactically, `fn` items in `extern { ... }` blocks can now have bodies (`fn foo() { ... }` as opposed to `fn foo();`). As above, we use semantic restrictions instead.
- Syntactically, `fn` items in free contexts (directly in a file or a module) can now be without bodies (`fn foo();` as opposed to `fn foo() { ... }`. As above, we use semantic restrictions instead, including for non-ident parameter patterns.
- We move towards unifying the `fn` front matter; this is fully realized in https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/68728.
r? @petrochenkov
Account for HR lifetimes when suggesting introduction of named lifetime
```
error[E0106]: missing lifetime specifier
--> src/test/ui/suggestions/fn-missing-lifetime-in-item.rs:2:32
|
2 | struct S2<F: Fn(&i32, &i32) -> &i32>(F);
| ---- ---- ^ expected named lifetime parameter
|
= help: this function's return type contains a borrowed value, but the signature does not say whether it is borrowed from argument 1 or argument 2
= note: for more information on higher-ranked polymorphism, visit https://doc.rust-lang.org/nomicon/hrtb.html
help: consider making the bound lifetime-generic with a new `'a` lifetime
|
2 | struct S2<F: for<'a> Fn(&'a i32, &'a i32) -> &'a i32>(F);
| ^^^^^^^ ^^^^^^^ ^^^^^^^ ^^^
help: consider introducing a named lifetime parameter
|
2 | struct S2<'a, F: Fn(&'a i32, &'a i32) -> &'a i32>(F);=
| ^^^ ^^^^^^^ ^^^^^^^ ^^^
```
Follow up to #68267. Addresses the diagnostics part of #49287.
Tweak obligation error output
- Point at arguments or output when fn obligations come from them, or ident when they don't
- Point at `Sized` bound (fix#47990)
- When object unsafe trait uses itself in associated item suggest using `Self` (fix#66424, fix#33375, partially address #38376, cc #61525)
- Point at reason in object unsafe trait with `Self` in supertraits or `where`-clause (cc #40533, cc #68377)
- On implicit type parameter `Sized` obligations, suggest `?Sized` (fix#57744, fix#46683)
Implement MIR lowering for or-patterns
This is the last thing needed to get meaningful run-pass tests for or-patterns. There probably need to be more tests before stabilizing this, but the most important cases should have been covered.
Note: we can generate exponentially large MIR CFGs when using or-patterns containing bindings, type ascriptions, or that are for a match arm with a guard. `src/test/mir-opt/exponential-or.rs` shows the best case for what we currently do.
cc #54883closes#60350closes#67514
cc @Centril
r? @pnkfelix