Merge duplicated CSS rules
I used the [stylelint](https://stylelint.io/user-guide/configure) tool to check for duplicated CSS rules in order to merge them.
r? `@notriddle`
rustdoc: remove incorrect CSS selector `.impl-items table td`
Fixes#100994
This selector was added in c7312fbae4. The bug can be seen at <https://doc.rust-lang.org/1.27.0/alloc/slice/trait.SliceIndex.html#foreign-impls>.
This rule was added to help with a `<table>` that was used for displaying the function signature [src] lockup. That lockup was changed in 34bd2b845b to use flexbox instead, leaving this selector unused (at least, for its original purpose).
rustdoc: remove unused CSS for `hidden-by-*-hider`
This CSS seems to have become obsolete with the move to `<details>` tags,
and its corresponding JavaScript was removed in aee054d05d
rustdoc: omit start/end tags for empty item description blocks
Related to #100952
This is definitely not a complete solution, but it does shrink keysyms/index.html on smithay from 620K to 516K.
Fix wrong compiletest filters on Windows
As discussed in [#79334](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/79334), when calling e.g.
```
python x.py test src/test/ui/expr/compound-assignment/eval-order.rs
```
on Windows, compiletest passes the filter `expr/compound-assignment/eval-order.rs` to libtest, which instead should be `expr\compound-assignment\eval-order.rs`, as that is the file found when collecting tests. This is what I fixed.
I'm not sure how to organize a test for this. Any suggestions?
Make forward compatibility lint deprecated_cfg_attr_crate_type_name deny by default
Turns the forward compatibility lint added by #83744 to deprecate `cfg_attr` usage with `#![crate_type]` and `#![crate_name]` attributes into deny by default. Copying the example from #83744:
```Rust
#![crate_type = "lib"] // remains working
#![cfg_attr(foo, crate_type = "bin")] // will stop working
```
Over 8 months have passed since #83744 was merged so I'd say this gives ample time for people to have been warned, so we can make the warning stronger. No usage was found via grep.app except for one, which was in an unmaintained code base that didn't seem to be used in the open source eco system. The crater run conducted in #83744 also didn't show up anything.
cc #91632 - tracking issue for the lint
Implementation of import_name_type
Fixes#96534 by implementing https://github.com/rust-lang/compiler-team/issues/525
Symbols that are exported or imported from a binary on 32bit x86 Windows can be named in four separate ways, corresponding to the [import name types](https://docs.microsoft.com/en-us/windows/win32/debug/pe-format#import-name-type) from the PE-COFF spec. The exporting and importing binaries must use the same name encoding, otherwise mismatches can lead to link failures due to "missing symbols" or to 0xc0000139 (`STATUS_ENTRYPOINT_NOT_FOUND`) errors when the executable/library is loaded. For details, see the comments on the raw-dylib feature's https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/58713. To generate the correct import libraries for these DLLs, therefore, rustc must know the import name type for each `extern` function, and there is currently no way for users to provide this information.
This change adds a new `MetaNameValueStr` key to the `#[link]` attribute called `import_name_type`, and which accepts one of three values: `decorated`, `noprefix`, and `undecorated`.
A single DLL is likely to export all its functions using the same import type name, hence `import_name_type` is a parameter of `#[link]` rather than being its own attribute that is applied per-function. It is possible to have a single DLL that exports different functions using different import name types, but users could express such cases by providing multiple export blocks for the same DLL, each with a different import name type.
Note: there is a fourth import name type defined in the PE-COFF spec, `IMPORT_ORDINAL`. This case is already handled by the `#[link_ordinal]` attribute. While it could be merged into `import_type_name`, that would not make sense as `#[link_ordinal]` provides per-function information (namely the ordinal itself).
Design decisions (these match the MCP linked above):
* For GNU, `decorated` matches the PE Spec and MSVC rather than the default behavior of `dlltool` (i.e., there will be a leading `_` for `stdcall`).
* If `import_name_type` is not present, we will keep our current behavior of matching the environment (MSVC vs GNU) default for decorating.
* Using `import_name_type` on architectures other than 32bit x86 will result in an error.
* Using `import_name_type` with link kinds other than `"raw-dylib"` will result in an error.
sugg: suggest the usage of boolean value when there is a typo in the keyword
Fixes https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/100686
This adds a new suggestion when there is a well-known typo
With the following program
```rust
fn main() {
let x = True;
}
```
Now we have the following suggestion
```
error[E0425]: cannot find value `True` in this scope
--> test.rs:2:13
|
2 | let x = True;
| ^^^^ not found in this scope
|
help: you may want to use a bool value instead
|
2 | let x = true;
| ~~~~
error: aborting due to previous error
```
Signed-off-by: Vincenzo Palazzo <vincenzopalazzodev@gmail.com>
interpret: remove support for uninitialized scalars
With Miri no longer supporting `-Zmiri-allow-uninit-numbers`, we no longer need to support storing uninit data in a `Scalar`. We anyway already only use this representation for types with *initialized* `Scalar` layout (and we have to, due to partial initialization), so let's get rid of the `ScalarMaybeUninit` type entirely.
I tried to stage this into meaningful commits, but the one that changes `read_immediate` to always trigger UB on uninit is the largest chunk of the PR and I don't see how it could be subdivided.
Fixes https://github.com/rust-lang/miri/issues/2187
r? `@oli-obk`
session: stabilize split debuginfo on linux
Stabilize the `-Csplit-debuginfo` flag...
- ...on Linux for all values of the flag. Split DWARF has been implemented for a few months, hasn't had any bug reports and has had some promising benchmarking for incremental debug build performance.
- ..on other platforms for the default value. It doesn't make any sense that `-Csplit-debuginfo=packed` is unstable on Windows MSVC when that's the default behaviour, but keep the other values unstable.
rustdoc: remove unused CSS for `.variants_table`
Continuation of #100938 and #101010. This rule was added to support the old, table-based style for displaying enum variants, which are now displayed using headers and paragraphs.
Fix doc cfg on reexports
Fixes#83428.
The problem was that the newly inlined item cfg propagation was not working since its real parent is different than its current one.
For the implementation, I decided to put it directly into `CfgPropagation` instead of inside `inline.rs` because I thought it would be simpler to maintain and to not forget if new kind of items are added if it's all done in one place.
r? `@notriddle`
Reduce right-side DOM size
This is another follow-up of https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/100429 but not in code blocks this time.
So the idea is: if there is only one element in the `.rightside` element, there is no need to wrap it, we can just create one node.
On each page, I run this JS: `document.getElementsByTagName('*').length`. Important to note: the bigger the number of elements inside the page, the greater the gain. It also doesn't work very nicely on std docs because there are a lot of version annotations. So with this PR, It allows to get the following results:
| file name | before this PR | with this PR | diff |
|-|-|-|-|
| std/default/trait.Default.html | 2189 | 1331 | 39.2% |
| std/vec/struct.Vec.html | 14073 | 13842 | 1.7% |
| std/fmt/trait.Debug.html | 5313 | 4907 | 7.7% |
| std/ops/trait.Index.html | 642 | 630 | 1.9% |
| gtk4/WidgetExt | 3269 | 3061 | 6.4% |
You can test it [here](https://rustdoc.crud.net/imperio/reduce-rightsize-dom-size/gtk4/prelude/trait.WidgetExt.html).
r? `@notriddle`
Avoid reporting overflow in `is_impossible_method`
Fixes#100620
We're evaluating a new predicate in a different param-env than it was checked during typeck, so be more careful about handling overflow errors. Instead of using `FulfillmentCtxt`, using `InferCtxt::evaluate_obligation` by itself will give us back the overflow error, so we can throw it away properly.
This may give us more false-positives, but it doesn't regress the `<HashMap as Iterator>::rev` example that originally motivated adding `is_impossible_method` in the first place.
distinguish the method and associated function diagnostic information
Methods are defined within the context of a struct and their first parameter is always self
Associated functions don’t take self as a parameter
```
modified: compiler/rustc_typeck/src/check/method/suggest.rs
modified: src/test/ui/auto-ref-slice-plus-ref.stderr
modified: src/test/ui/block-result/issue-3563.stderr
modified: src/test/ui/issues/issue-28344.stderr
modified: src/test/ui/suggestions/dont-suggest-pin-array-dot-set.stderr
modified: src/test/ui/suggestions/suggest-methods.stderr
modified: src/test/ui/traits/trait-upcasting/subtrait-method.stderr
```
is_whitespace() performance improvements
This is my first rust PR, so if I miss anything obvious please let me know and I'll do my best to fix it.
This was a bit more of a challenge than I realized because, while I made working code locally and tested it against the native `is_whitespace()`, this PR required changing `src/tools/unicode-table-generator`, the code that generated the code.
I have benchmarked this locally, using criterion, and have seen meaningful performance improvements. I can add those outputs to this if you'd like, but am guessing that the perf run that `@fmease` recommended is what's needed.
I have run ` ./x.py test --stage 0 library/std` after building it locally after executing `./x.py build library`. I didn't try to build the whole compiler, but maybe I should have - any guidance would be appreciated.
If this general approach makes sense, I'll take a look at some other candidate categories, e.g., `Cc`, in the future.
Oh, and I wasn't sure whether the generated code should be included in this PR or not. I did include it.
Continuation of #100938 and #101010. This rule was added to support the old,
table-based style for displaying enum variants, which are now displayed using
headers and paragraphs.
Check projection types before inlining MIR
Fixes https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/100550
I'm very unhappy with this solution, having to duplicate MIR validation code, but at least it removes the ICE.
r? `@compiler-errors`
Elide superfluous storage markers
Follow the existing strategy of omitting the storage markers for temporaries
introduced for internal usage when elaborating derefs and deref projections.
Those temporaries are simple scalars which are used immediately after being
defined and never have their address taken. There is no benefit from storage
markers from either liveness analysis or code generation perspective.
Sync rustc_codegen_cranelift
The main highlights this time are support for parallel compilation of codegen units (by me) and improved windows support (by ``@afonso360)`` In addition ``@afonso360`` added abi-checker to cg_clif's CI. This has already catched an abi compatibility issue with AArch64. The fix has landed on Cranelift's main branch, but doesn't yet have a release. ``@uweigand`` also submitted a couple of PR's that will are prerequisites for supporting IBM's s390x architecture.
r? ``@ghost``
``@rustbot`` label +A-codegen +A-cranelift +T-compiler
rustdoc: ayu code color selector more specific
According to https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/100960#issuecomment-1225970579, this selector is only really intended to apply to item info. However, it's so broad that it's hard to tell when it deliberately applies vs where it accidentally applies.