Commit graph

37320 commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Deadbeef
f8aa73d3dd
Coerce const FnDefs to implement const Fn traits 2021-09-15 11:48:27 +00:00
bors
cdeba02ff7 Auto merge of #88558 - fee1-dead:const-drop, r=oli-obk
Const drop

The changes are pretty primitive at this point. But at least it works. ^-^

Problems with the current change that I can think of now:
 - [x] `~const Drop` shouldn't change anything in the non-const world.
 - [x] types that do not have drop glues shouldn't fail to satisfy `~const Drop` in const contexts. `struct S { a: u8, b: u16 }` This might not fail for `needs_non_const_drop`, but it will fail in `rustc_trait_selection`.
 - [x] The current change accepts types that have `const Drop` impls but have non-const `Drop` glue.

Fixes #88424.

Significant Changes:

- `~const Drop` is no longer treated as a normal trait bound. In non-const contexts, this bound has no effect, but in const contexts, this restricts the input type and all of its transitive fields to either a) have a `const Drop` impl or b) can be trivially dropped (i.e. no drop glue)
- `T: ~const Drop` will not be linted like `T: Drop`.
- Instead of recursing and iterating through the type in `rustc_mir::transform::check_consts`, we use the trait system to special case `~const Drop`. See [`rustc_trait_selection::...::candidate_assembly#assemble_const_drop_candidates`](https://github.com/fee1-dead/rust/blob/const-drop/compiler/rustc_trait_selection/src/traits/select/candidate_assembly.rs#L817) and others.

Changes not related to `const Drop`ping and/or changes that are insignificant:

 - `Node.constness_for_typeck` no longer returns `hir::Constness::Const` for type aliases in traits. This was previously used to hack how we determine default bound constness for items. But because we now use an explicit opt-in, it is no longer needed.
 - Removed `is_const_impl_raw` query. We have `impl_constness`, and the only existing use of that query uses `HirId`, which means we can just operate it with hir.
 - `ty::Destructor` now has a field `constness`, which represents the constness of the destructor.

r? `@oli-obk`
2021-09-15 03:51:03 +00:00
bors
c3c0f80d60 Auto merge of #73314 - GuillaumeGomez:display-warnings, r=jyn514
Rename "--display-warnings" to "--display-doctest-warnings"

Fixes #41574.

cc `@ollie27`
r? `@kinnison`
2021-09-14 16:05:44 +00:00
Guillaume Gomez
b531a7f585 Add test for --display-doctest-warnings option 2021-09-14 10:49:57 +02:00
bors
ec9a1bdc45 Auto merge of #88914 - GuillaumeGomez:rollup-h5svc6w, r=GuillaumeGomez
Rollup of 7 pull requests

Successful merges:

 - #88033 (Add links for primitives in "jump to definition" feature)
 - #88722 (Make `UnsafeCell::get_mut` const)
 - #88851 (Fix duplicate bounds for const_trait_impl)
 - #88859 (interpreter PointerArithmetic: use new Size helper methods)
 - #88885 (Fix jump def background)
 - #88894 (Improve error message for missing trait in trait impl)
 - #88896 (Reduce possibility of flaky tests)

Failed merges:

r? `@ghost`
`@rustbot` modify labels: rollup
2021-09-14 08:46:22 +00:00
bors
9f85cd6f2a Auto merge of #87794 - bonega:enum_niche_prefer_zero, r=nagisa
Enum should prefer discriminant zero for niche

Given an enum with unassigned zero-discriminant, rust should prefer it for niche selection.
Zero as discriminant for `Option<Enum>` makes it possible for LLVM to optimize resulting asm.

- Eliminate branch when expected value coincides.
- Use smaller instruction `test eax, eax` instead of `cmp eax, ?`
- Possible interaction with zeroed memory?

Example:
```rust

pub enum Size {
    One = 1,
    Two = 2,
    Three = 3,
}

pub fn handle(x: Option<Size>) -> u8 {
    match x {
        None => {0}
        Some(size) => {size as u8}
    }
}
```
In this case discriminant zero is available as a niche.

Above example on nightly:
```asm
 mov     eax, edi
 cmp     al, 4
 jne     .LBB0_2
 xor     eax, eax
.LBB0_2:
 ret
```

PR:
```asm
 mov     eax, edi
 ret
```

I created this PR because I had a performance regression when I tried to use an enum to represent legal grapheme byte-length for utf8.

Using an enum instead of `NonZeroU8` [here](d683304f5d/src/internal/decoder_incomplete.rs (L90))
resulted in a performance regression of about 5%.
I consider this to be a somewhat realistic benchmark.

Thanks to `@ogoffart` for pointing me in the right direction!

Edit: Updated description
2021-09-13 22:14:57 +00:00
Andreas Liljeqvist
4d66fbc4b9 enum niche allocation grows toward zero if possible 2021-09-13 21:55:14 +02:00
Guillaume Gomez
fb673bfdaa
Rollup merge of #88896 - GuillaumeGomez:flakyness, r=camelid
Reduce possibility of flaky tests

As asked in https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/88885.

r? ``@camelid``
2021-09-13 21:20:43 +02:00
Guillaume Gomez
84d65fee0e
Rollup merge of #88894 - FabianWolff:issue-88818, r=estebank
Improve error message for missing trait in trait impl

Fixes #88818. For the following example:
```rust
struct S { }
impl for S { }
```
the current output is:
```
error: missing trait in a trait impl
 --> t1.rs:2:5
  |
2 | impl for S { }
  |     ^
```
With my changes, I get:
```
error: missing trait in a trait impl
 --> t1.rs:2:5
  |
2 | impl for S { }
  |     ^
  |
help: add a trait here
  |
2 | impl Trait for S { }
  |      +++++
help: for an inherent impl, drop this `for`
  |
2 - impl for S { }
2 + impl S { }
  |
```
2021-09-13 21:20:42 +02:00
Guillaume Gomez
f10fc2152b
Rollup merge of #88885 - GuillaumeGomez:fix-jump-def-background, r=camelid
Fix jump def background

Fixes #88870.

I somehow badly wrote the color in #88111.

r? ``@camelid``
2021-09-13 21:20:41 +02:00
Guillaume Gomez
a9bc2ef894
Rollup merge of #88851 - fee1-dead:dup-bound, r=oli-obk
Fix duplicate bounds for const_trait_impl

Fixes #88383.

Compare the constness of the candidates before winnowing and removing a `~const` `BoundCandidate`.
2021-09-13 21:20:39 +02:00
Guillaume Gomez
9e482c1add * Enable generate-link-to-def feature on a rustdoc GUI test
* Add test for jump-to-def links background color
2021-09-13 20:58:06 +02:00
bors
9bb77da74d Auto merge of #87915 - estebank:fancy-spans, r=oli-obk
Use smaller spans for some structured suggestions

Use more accurate suggestion spans for

* argument parse error
* fully qualified path
* missing code block type
* numeric casts
2021-09-13 16:31:12 +00:00
Guillaume Gomez
d73c0a3d69 Add test for primitive in "jump to definition" feature 2021-09-13 17:44:39 +02:00
bors
1cd17addad Auto merge of #88745 - hnj2:allow-trait-impl-missing-code, r=GuillaumeGomez
Allow missing code examples in trait impls.

Excludes Trait implementations from the items that need to have doc code examples when using the `rustdoc::missing_doc_code_examples` lint.

For details see #88741

fixes #88741

r? `@jyn514`
2021-09-13 09:41:22 +00:00
bors
96dee2825e Auto merge of #88839 - nbdd0121:alignof, r=nagisa
Introduce NullOp::AlignOf

This PR introduces `Rvalue::NullaryOp(NullOp::AlignOf, ty)`, which will be lowered from `align_of`, similar to `size_of` lowering to `Rvalue::NullaryOp(NullOp::SizeOf, ty)`.

The changes are originally part of #88700 but since it's not dependent on other changes and could have performance impact on its own, it's separated into its own PR.
2021-09-12 23:49:24 +00:00
Gary Guo
cdec87cafa Add mir opt test for min_align_of -> AlignOf lowering 2021-09-13 00:08:35 +01:00
bors
51e514c0fb Auto merge of #88759 - Amanieu:panic_in_drop, r=nagisa,eddyb
Add -Z panic-in-drop={unwind,abort} command-line option

This PR changes `Drop` to abort if an unwinding panic attempts to escape it, making the process abort instead. This has several benefits:
- The current behavior when unwinding out of `Drop` is very unintuitive and easy to miss: unwinding continues, but the remaining drops in scope are simply leaked.
- A lot of unsafe code doesn't expect drops to unwind, which can lead to unsoundness:
  - https://github.com/servo/rust-smallvec/issues/14
  - https://github.com/bluss/arrayvec/issues/3
- There is a code size and compilation time cost to this: LLVM needs to generate extra landing pads out of all calls in a drop implementation. This can compound when functions are inlined since unwinding will then continue on to process drops in the callee, which can itself unwind, etc.
  - Initial measurements show a 3% size reduction and up to 10% compilation time reduction on some crates (`syn`).

One thing to note about `-Z panic-in-drop=abort` is that *all* crates must be built with this option for it to be sound since it makes the compiler assume that dropping `Box<dyn Any>` will never unwind.

cc https://github.com/rust-lang/lang-team/issues/97
2021-09-12 20:48:09 +00:00
Guillaume Gomez
cefa900a0f Reduce possibility of flaky tests 2021-09-12 22:44:37 +02:00
Fabian Wolff
3f0e695919 Improve error message for missing trait in trait impl 2021-09-12 22:05:52 +02:00
bors
d2dfb0eb8e Auto merge of #88811 - jackh726:issue-88446, r=nikomatsakis
Use a HashMap for UniverseInfo in mir borrowck

Fixes #88446

r? `@nikomatsakis`
2021-09-12 17:04:10 +00:00
Manish Goregaokar
b3af37ac7b
Rollup merge of #88810 - camelid:cleanup-pt1, r=jyn514
rustdoc: Cleanup `clean` part 1

Split out from #88379.

These commits are completely independent of each other, and each is a fairly
small change (the last few are new commits; they are not from #88379):

- Remove unnecessary `Cache.*_did` fields
- rustdoc: Get symbol for `TyParam` directly
- Create a valid `Res` in `external_path()`
- Remove unused `hir_id` parameter from `resolve_type`
- Fix redundant arguments in `external_path()`
- Remove unnecessary `is_trait` argument
- rustdoc: Cleanup a pattern match in `external_generic_args()`

r? ``@jyn514``
2021-09-12 03:44:58 -07:00
Manish Goregaokar
f5ac5cadd3
Rollup merge of #88709 - BoxyUwU:thir-abstract-const, r=lcnr
generic_const_exprs: use thir for abstract consts instead of mir

Changes `AbstractConst` building to use `thir` instead of `mir` so that there's less chance of consts unifying when they shouldn't because lowering to mir dropped information (see `abstract-consts-as-cast-5.rs` test)

r? `@lcnr`
2021-09-12 03:44:56 -07:00
Manish Goregaokar
6d4f27ebc7
Rollup merge of #88336 - jackh726:gats-where-constraints, r=estebank
Detect stricter constraints on gats where clauses in impls vs trait

I might try to see if I can do a bit more to improve these diagnostics, but any initial feedback is appreciated. I can also do any additional work in a followup PR.

r? `@estebank`
2021-09-12 03:44:53 -07:00
bors
0273e3bce7 Auto merge of #87073 - jyn514:primitive-docs, r=GuillaumeGomez,jyn514
Fix rustdoc handling of primitive items

This is a complicated PR and does a lot of things. I'm willing to split it up a little more if it would help reviewing, but it would be tricky and I'd rather not unless it's necessary.

 ## What does this do?

- Fixes https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/73423.
- Fixes https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/79630. I'm not sure how to test this for the standard library explicitly, but you can see from some of the diffs from the `no_std` tests. I also tested it locally and it works correctly: ![image](https://user-images.githubusercontent.com/23638587/125214383-e1fdd000-e284-11eb-8048-76b5df958aad.png)
- Fixes https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/83083.

## Why are these changes interconnected?

- Allowing anchors (https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/83083) without fixing the online/offline problem (https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/79630) will actually just silently discard the anchors, that's not a fix. The online/offline problem is directly related to the fragment hack; links need to go through `fn href()` to be fixed.
- Technically I could fix the online/offline problem without removing the error on anchors; I am willing to separate that out if it would be helpful for reviewing. However I can't fix the anchor problem without adding docs to core, since rustdoc needs all those primitives to have docs to avoid a fallback, and currently `#![no_std]` crates don't have docs for primitives. I also can't fix the online/offline problem without removing the fragment hack, since otherwise diffs like this will be wrong for some primitives but not others:
```diff
`@@` -385,7 +381,7 `@@` fn resolve_primitive_associated_item(
                         ty::AssocKind::Const => "associatedconstant",
                         ty::AssocKind::Type => "associatedtype",
                     };
-                    let fragment = format!("{}#{}.{}", prim_ty.as_sym(), out, item_name);
+                    let fragment = format!("{}.{}", out, item_name);
                     (Res::Primitive(prim_ty), fragment, Some((kind.as_def_kind(), item.def_id)))
                 })
         })
```
- Adding primitive docs to core without making any other change will cause links to go to `core` instead of `std`, even for crates with `extern crate std`. See "Breaking changes to doc(primitive)" below for why this is the case. That said, I could add some special casing to rustdoc at the same time that would let me separate this change from the others (it would fix https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/73423 but still special-case intra-doc links). I'm willing to separate that out if helpful for reviewing.

### Add primitive documentation to libcore

This works by reusing the same `include!("primitive_docs.rs")` file in both core and std, and then special-casing links in core to use relative links instead of intra-doc links. This doesn't use purely intra-doc links because some of the primitive docs links to items only in std; this doesn't use purely relative links because that introduces new broken links when the docs are re-exported (e.g. String's `&str` deref impl, or Vec's slice deref impl).

Note that this copies the whole file to core, to avoid anyone compiling core to have to set `CARGO_PKG_NAME`. See https://rust-lang.zulipchat.com/#narrow/stream/122651-general/topic/Who.20should.20review.20changes.20to.20linkchecker.3F/near/249939598 for more context. It also adds a tidy check to make sure the two files are kept in sync.

### Fix inconsistent online/offline primitive docs

This does four things:
- Records modules with `doc(primitive)` in `cache.external_paths`. This is necessary for `href()` to find them later.
- Makes `cache.primitive_locations` available to the intra-doc link pass, by refactoring out a `PrimitiveType::primitive_locations` function that only uses `TyCtxt`.
- Special cases modules with `doc(primitive)` to be treated as always public for the purpose of links.
- Removes the fragment hack. cc `@notriddle,` I know you added some comments about this in the code (thank you for that!)

### Breaking changes to `doc(primitive)`

"Breaking" is a little misleading here - these are changes in behavior, none of them will cause code to fail to compile.

Let me preface this by saying I think stabilizing `doc(primitive)` was a uniquely terrible idea. As far as I can tell, it was stabilized by oversight; it's been stable since 1.0. No one should have need to use it except the standard library, and a crater run shows that in fact no one is using it: https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/87050#issuecomment-886166706. I hope to actually make `doc(primitive)` a no-op unless you opt-in with a nightly feature, which will keep crates compiling without forcing rustdoc into trying to keep somewhat arbitrary behavior guarantees; but for now, this just subtly changes some of the behavior if you use `doc(primitive)` in a dependency.

That said, here are the changes:
-  Refactoring out `primitive_locations()` is technically a change in behavior, since it no longer looks for primitives in crates that were passed through `--extern`, but not used by the crate; however, that seems like such an unlikely edge case it's not worth dealing with.
- The precedence given to primitive locations is no longer just arbitrary, it can also be inconsistent from run to run. Let me explain that more: previously, primitive locations were sorted by the `CrateNum`; the comment on that sort said "Favor linking to as local extern as possible, so iterate all crates in reverse topological order." Unfortunately, that's not actually what CrateNum tracks: it measures the order crates are loaded, not the number of intermediate crates between that dependency and the root crate. It happened to work as intended before because the compiler injects `extern crate std;` at the top of every crate, which ensured it would have the first CrateNum other than the current, but every other CrateNum was completely arbitrary (for example, `core` often had a later CrateNum than `std`). This now removes the sort on CrateNum completely and special-cases core instead. In particular, if you depend on both `std` and a crate which defines a `doc(primitive)` module, it's arbitrary whether rustdoc will use the docs from std or the ones from the other crate. cc `@alexcrichton,` you wrote this originally.

cc `@rust-lang/rustdoc`
cc `@rust-lang/libs` for the addition to `core` (the commit you're interested in is https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/87073/commits/91346c8293bb5f41d8e1d2ec9336433664652c53)
2021-09-12 02:36:01 +00:00
Guillaume Gomez
86fd2505c2 Fix no_core and no_std rustdoc tests on Windows
This prevents the following (very strange) errors:

```
error: linking with `link.exe` failed: exit code: 1120
  |
  = note: "C:\\Program Files (x86)\\Microsoft Visual Studio\\2019\\Enterprise\\VC\\Tools\\MSVC\\14.29.30133\\bin\\HostX64\\x86\\link.exe" "/DEF:C:\\Users\\runneradmin\\AppData\\Local\\Temp\\rustcJih4fa\\lib.def" "/NOLOGO" "/LARGEADDRESSAWARE" "/SAFESEH" "D:\\a\\rust\\rust\\build\\i686-pc-windows-msvc\\test\\rustdoc\\issue-15318-2\\auxiliary\\issue-15318.issue_15318.0a2a8554-cgu.0.rcgu.o" "D:\\a\\rust\\rust\\build\\i686-pc-windows-msvc\\test\\rustdoc\\issue-15318-2\\auxiliary\\issue-15318.1na9aylmt25n6w3f.rcgu.o" "/LIBPATH:D:\\a\\rust\\rust\\build\\i686-pc-windows-msvc\\native\\rust-test-helpers" "/LIBPATH:D:\\a\\rust\\rust\\build\\i686-pc-windows-msvc\\test\\rustdoc\\issue-15318-2\\auxiliary" "/LIBPATH:D:\\a\\rust\\rust\\build\\i686-pc-windows-msvc\\stage2\\lib\\rustlib\\i686-pc-windows-msvc\\lib" "vcruntime.lib" "ucrt.lib" "/WHOLEARCHIVE:D:\\a\\rust\\rust\\build\\i686-pc-windows-msvc\\stage2\\lib\\rustlib\\i686-pc-windows-msvc\\lib\\librustc_std_workspace_core-78744e1360284b1e.rlib" "/WHOLEARCHIVE:D:\\a\\rust\\rust\\build\\i686-pc-windows-msvc\\stage2\\lib\\rustlib\\i686-pc-windows-msvc\\lib\\libcore-a900fa3d16956226.rlib" "D:\\a\\rust\\rust\\build\\i686-pc-windows-msvc\\stage2\\lib\\rustlib\\i686-pc-windows-msvc\\lib\\libcompiler_builtins-eb97e6b4dfd2f421.rlib" "/NXCOMPAT" "/LIBPATH:D:\\a\\rust\\rust\\build\\i686-pc-windows-msvc\\stage2\\lib\\rustlib\\i686-pc-windows-msvc\\lib" "/OUT:D:\\a\\rust\\rust\\build\\i686-pc-windows-msvc\\test\\rustdoc\\issue-15318-2\\auxiliary\\issue_15318.dll" "/OPT:REF,ICF" "/DLL" "/IMPLIB:D:\\a\\rust\\rust\\build\\i686-pc-windows-msvc\\test\\rustdoc\\issue-15318-2\\auxiliary\\issue_15318.dll.lib" "/DEBUG" "/NATVIS:D:\\a\\rust\\rust\\build\\i686-pc-windows-msvc\\stage2\\lib\\rustlib\\etc\\intrinsic.natvis" "/NATVIS:D:\\a\\rust\\rust\\build\\i686-pc-windows-msvc\\stage2\\lib\\rustlib\\etc\\liballoc.natvis" "/NATVIS:D:\\a\\rust\\rust\\build\\i686-pc-windows-msvc\\stage2\\lib\\rustlib\\etc\\libcore.natvis" "/NATVIS:D:\\a\\rust\\rust\\build\\i686-pc-windows-msvc\\stage2\\lib\\rustlib\\etc\\libstd.natvis"
  = note: LINK : warning LNK4216: Exported entry point __DllMainCRTStartup@12
             Creating library D:\a\rust\rust\build\i686-pc-windows-msvc\test\rustdoc\issue-15318-2\auxiliary\issue_15318.dll.lib and object D:\a\rust\rust\build\i686-pc-windows-msvc\test\rustdoc\issue-15318-2\auxiliary\issue_15318.dll.exp
          libcore-a900fa3d16956226.rlib(core-a900fa3d16956226.core.95dedc69-cgu.0.rcgu.o) : error LNK2019: unresolved external symbol __aulldiv referenced in function __ZN4core3num7dec2flt7decimal7Decimal10left_shift17hfb9b6c23d6ff0383E
          libcompiler_builtins-eb97e6b4dfd2f421.rlib(compiler_builtins-eb97e6b4dfd2f421.compiler_builtins.a5ef280a-cgu.51.rcgu.o) : error LNK2001: unresolved external symbol __aulldiv
          libcore-a900fa3d16956226.rlib(core-a900fa3d16956226.core.95dedc69-cgu.0.rcgu.o) : error LNK2019: unresolved external symbol __aullrem referenced in function __ZN4core3fmt3num14parse_u64_into17h90eb20517ec3bd86E
          D:\a\rust\rust\build\i686-pc-windows-msvc\test\rustdoc\issue-15318-2\auxiliary\issue_15318.dll : fatal error LNK1120: 2 unresolved externals

```
2021-09-12 02:30:24 +00:00
Joshua Nelson
7b46920218 Fix linkcheck issues
Most of these are because alloc uses `#[lang_item]` to define methods,
but core documents primitives before those methods are available.

- Fix rustdoc-js-std test

  For some reason this change made CStr not show up in the results for
  `str,u8`. Since it still shows up for str, and since it wasn't a great
  match for that query anyway, I think this is ok to let slide.

- Add test that all primitives can be linked to
- Enable `doc(primitive)` in `core` as well
- Add linkcheck exception specifically for Windows

  Ideally this would be done automatically by the linkchecker by
  replacing `\\` with forward slashes, but this PR is already a ton of
  work ...

- Don't forcibly fail linkchecking if there's a broken intra-doc link on Windows

  Previously, it would exit with a hard error if a missing file had `::`
  in it. This changes it to report a missing file instead, which allows
  adding an exception.
2021-09-12 02:30:24 +00:00
Joshua Nelson
cb7e527692 Fix broken handling of primitive items
- Fix broken handling of primitive associated items
- Remove fragment hack

  Fixes 83083

- more logging
- Update CrateNum hacks

  The CrateNum has no relation to where in the dependency tree the crate
  is, only when it's loaded. Explicitly special-case core instead of
  assuming it will be the first DefId.

- Update and add tests
- Cache calculation of primitive locations

  This could possibly be avoided by passing a Cache into
  collect_intra_doc_links; but that's a much larger change, and doesn't
  seem valuable other than for this.
2021-09-12 02:30:24 +00:00
Joshua Nelson
69fe39e8a8 Add primitive documentation to libcore
This works by doing two things:
- Adding links that are specific to the crate. Since not all primitive
  items are defined in `core` (due to lang_items), these need to use
  relative links and not intra-doc links.
- Duplicating `primitive_docs` in both core and std. This allows not needing CARGO_PKG_NAME to build the standard library. It also adds a tidy check to make sure they stay the same.
2021-09-12 02:23:08 +00:00
bors
547d9374d2 Auto merge of #84373 - cjgillot:resolve-span, r=michaelwoerister,petrochenkov
Encode spans relative to the enclosing item

The aim of this PR is to avoid recomputing queries when code is moved without modification.

MCP at https://github.com/rust-lang/compiler-team/issues/443

This is achieved by :
1. storing the HIR owner LocalDefId information inside the span;
2. encoding and decoding spans relative to the enclosing item in the incremental on-disk cache;
3. marking a dependency to the `source_span(LocalDefId)` query when we translate a span from the short (`Span`) representation to its explicit (`SpanData`) representation.

Since all client code uses `Span`, step 3 ensures that all manipulations
of span byte positions actually create the dependency edge between
the caller and the `source_span(LocalDefId)`.
This query return the actual absolute span of the parent item.
As a consequence, any source code motion that changes the absolute byte position of a node will either:
- modify the distance to the parent's beginning, so change the relative span's hash;
- dirty `source_span`, and trigger the incremental recomputation of all code that
  depends on the span's absolute byte position.

With this scheme, I believe the dependency tracking to be accurate.

For the moment, the spans are marked during lowering.
I'd rather do this during def-collection,
but the AST MutVisitor is not practical enough just yet.
The only difference is that we attach macro-expanded spans
to their expansion point instead of the macro itself.
2021-09-11 23:35:28 +00:00
Noah Lev
6a84d34784 Create a valid Res in external_path()
The order of the `where` bounds on auto trait impls changed because
rustdoc currently sorts auto trait `where` bounds based on the `Debug`
output for the bound. Now that the bounds have an actual `Res`, they are
being unintentionally sorted by their `DefId` rather than their path.
So, I had to update a test for the change in ordering of the rendered
bounds.
2021-09-11 11:24:53 -07:00
Camille GILLOT
7842b80478 Rebase fallout. 2021-09-11 17:52:39 +02:00
Jubilee
5648859e50
Rollup merge of #88779 - estebank:unused-delims, r=davidtwco
Use more accurate spans for "unused delimiter" lint
2021-09-11 08:23:43 -07:00
Jubilee
08cbb7dbe1
Rollup merge of #88757 - andrewhickman:master, r=jackh726
Suggest wapping expr in parentheses on invalid unary negation

Fixes #88701
2021-09-11 08:23:42 -07:00
Jubilee
746eb1d84d
Rollup merge of #88733 - Noble-Mushtak:88577, r=estebank
Fix ICE for functions with more than 65535 arguments

This pull request fixes #88577 by changing the `param_idx` field in the `Param` variant of `WellFormedLoc` from `u16` to `u32`, thus allowing for more than 65,535 arguments in a function. Note that I also added a regression test, but needed to add `// ignore-tidy-filelength` because the test is more than 8000 lines long.
2021-09-11 08:23:41 -07:00
Jubilee
3af42a897f
Rollup merge of #88209 - Amanieu:asm_in_underscore, r=nagisa
Improve error message when _ is used for in/inout asm operands

As suggested by ```@Commeownist``` in https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/72016#issuecomment-903102415.
2021-09-11 08:23:40 -07:00
Jubilee
94cbefb52a
Rollup merge of #88147 - FabianWolff:issue-88097, r=jackh726
Fix non-capturing closure return type coercion

Fixes #88097. For the example given there:
```rust
fn peculiar() -> impl Fn(u8) -> u8 {
    return |x| x + 1
}
```
which incorrectly reports an error, I noticed something weird in the debug log:
```
DEBUG rustc_typeck::check::coercion coercion::try_find_coercion_lub([closure@test.rs:2:12: 2:21], [closure@test.rs:2:12: 2:21], exprs=1 exprs)
```
Apparently, `try_find_coercion_lub()` thinks that the LUB for two closure types always has to be a function pointer (which explains the `expected closure, found fn pointer` error in #88097). There is one corner case where that isn't true, though — namely, when the two closure types are equal, in which case the trivial LUB is the type itself. This PR fixes this by inserting an explicit check for type equality in `try_find_coercion_lub()`.
2021-09-11 08:23:39 -07:00
Amanieu d'Antras
5862a0004a Add test for -Z panic-in-drop=abort 2021-09-11 16:13:30 +01:00
Deadbeef
a0b83f542f
Fix duplicate bounds for const_trait_impl 2021-09-11 09:40:19 +00:00
bors
4e880f8cbc Auto merge of #88214 - notriddle:notriddle/for-loop-span-drop-temps-mut, r=nagisa
rustc: use more correct span data in for loop desugaring

Fixes #82462

Before:

      help: consider adding semicolon after the expression so its temporaries are dropped sooner, before the local variables declared by the block are dropped
         |
      LL |     for x in DroppingSlice(&*v).iter(); {
         |                                       +

After:

      help: consider adding semicolon after the expression so its temporaries are dropped sooner, before the local variables declared by the block are dropped
         |
      LL |     };
         |      +

This seems like a reasonable fix: since the desugared "expr_drop_temps_mut" contains the entire desugared loop construct, its span should contain the entire loop construct as well.
2021-09-11 07:11:01 +00:00
bors
22719efcc5 Auto merge of #88824 - Manishearth:rollup-7bzk9h6, r=Manishearth
Rollup of 15 pull requests

Successful merges:

 - #85200 (Ignore derived Clone and Debug implementations during dead code analysis)
 - #86165 (Add proc_macro::Span::{before, after}.)
 - #87088 (Fix stray notes when the source code is not available)
 - #87441 (Emit suggestion when passing byte literal to format macro)
 - #88546 (Emit proper errors when on missing closure braces)
 - #88578 (fix(rustc): suggest `items` be borrowed in `for i in items[x..]`)
 - #88632 (Fix issues with Markdown summary options)
 - #88639 (rustdoc: Fix ICE with `doc(hidden)` on tuple variant fields)
 - #88667 (Tweak `write_fmt` doc.)
 - #88720 (Rustdoc coverage fields count)
 - #88732 (RustWrapper: avoid deleted unclear attribute methods)
 - #88742 (Fix table in docblocks)
 - #88776 (Workaround blink/chromium grid layout limitation of 1000 rows)
 - #88807 (Fix typo in docs for iterators)
 - #88812 (Fix typo `option` -> `options`.)

Failed merges:

r? `@ghost`
`@rustbot` modify labels: rollup
2021-09-11 03:30:55 +00:00
Camille GILLOT
11a999e634 Duplicate tests for incremental spans mode. 2021-09-10 20:19:38 +02:00
Manish Goregaokar
130e2e1edf
Rollup merge of #88742 - GuillaumeGomez:fix-table-in-docblocks, r=nbdd0121
Fix table in docblocks

"Overwrite" of #88702.

Instead of adding a z-index to the sidebar (which only hides the issue, doesn't fix it), I wrap `<table>` elements inside a `<div>` and limit all chidren of `.docblock` elements' width to prevent having the scrollbar on the whole doc block.

![Screenshot from 2021-09-08 15-11-24](https://user-images.githubusercontent.com/3050060/132515740-71796515-e74f-429f-ba98-2596bdbf781c.png)

Thanks `@nbdd0121` for `overflow-x: auto;`. ;)

r? `@notriddle`
2021-09-10 08:23:24 -07:00
Manish Goregaokar
e0e3d85ec3
Rollup merge of #88720 - GuillaumeGomez:rustdoc-coverage-fields-count, r=Manishearth
Rustdoc coverage fields count

Follow-up of #88688.

Instead of requiring enum tuple variant fields and tuple struct fields to be documented, we count them if they are documented, otherwise we don't include them in the count.

r? `@Manishearth`
2021-09-10 08:23:22 -07:00
Manish Goregaokar
04380482b9
Rollup merge of #88639 - Emilgardis:fix-issue-88600, r=GuillaumeGomez
rustdoc: Fix ICE with `doc(hidden)` on tuple variant fields

Fixes #88600.

```rust
pub struct H;
pub struct S;

pub enum FooEnum {
    HiddenTupleItem(#[doc(hidden)] H),
    MultipleHidden(#[doc(hidden)] H, #[doc(hidden)] H),
    MixedHiddenFirst(#[doc(hidden)] H, S),
    MixedHiddenLast(S, #[doc(hidden)] H),
    HiddenStruct {
        #[doc(hidden)]
        h: H,
        s: S,
    },
}
```

Generates
![image](https://user-images.githubusercontent.com/1502855/132259152-382f9517-c2a0-41d8-acd0-64e5993931fc.png)
2021-09-10 08:23:20 -07:00
Manish Goregaokar
257f5adf0e
Rollup merge of #88578 - notriddle:notriddle/suggest-add-reference-to-for-loop-iter, r=nagisa
fix(rustc): suggest `items` be borrowed in `for i in items[x..]`

Fixes #87994
2021-09-10 08:23:18 -07:00
Manish Goregaokar
dc003dd49e
Rollup merge of #88546 - scrabsha:scrabsha/closure-missing-braces, r=estebank
Emit proper errors when on missing closure braces

This commit focuses on emitting clean errors for the following syntax
error:

```
Some(42).map(|a|
    dbg!(a);
    a
);
```

Previous implementation tried to recover after parsing the closure body
(the `dbg` expression) by replacing the next `;` with a `,`, which made
the next expression belong to the next function argument. As such, the
following errors were emitted (among others):
  - the semicolon token was not expected,
  - a is not in scope,
  - Option::map is supposed to take one argument, not two.

This commit allows us to gracefully handle this situation by adding
giving the parser the ability to remember when it has just parsed a
closure body inside a function call. When this happens, we can treat the
unexpected `;` specifically and try to parse as much statements as
possible in order to eat the whole block. When we can't parse statements
anymore, we generate a clean error indicating that the braces are
missing, and return an ExprKind::Err.

Closes #88065.

r? `@estebank`
2021-09-10 08:23:17 -07:00
Manish Goregaokar
358a018292
Rollup merge of #87441 - ibraheemdev:i-86865, r=cjgillot
Emit suggestion when passing byte literal to format macro

Closes #86865
2021-09-10 08:23:15 -07:00
Mara Bos
8059bc1069 Temporarily ignore some debuginfo tests on windows. 2021-09-10 14:08:19 +02:00
Guillaume Gomez
eda4cfb132 Add test for enum tuple variants and tuple struct doc count 2021-09-10 10:49:42 +02:00