Commit Graph

2418 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Eric Huss
924ded6b72 Clean up some comments on lint implementation 2024-10-27 04:30:51 -07:00
bors
9b18a122f7 Auto merge of #132190 - matthiaskrgr:rollup-rsocfiz, r=matthiaskrgr
Rollup of 3 pull requests

Successful merges:

 - #131875 (Add WASM | WASI | Emscripten groups to triagebot.toml)
 - #132019 (Document `PartialEq` impl for `OnceLock`)
 - #132182 (Downgrade `untranslatable_diagnostic` and `diagnostic_outside_of_impl` to `allow`)

r? `@ghost`
`@rustbot` modify labels: rollup
2024-10-26 19:00:57 +00:00
bors
4d88de2acd Auto merge of #125116 - blyxyas:ignore-allowed-lints-final, r=cjgillot
(Big performance change) Do not run lints that cannot emit

Before this change, adding a lint was a difficult matter because it always had some overhead involved. This was because all lints would run, no matter their default level, or if the user had `#![allow]`ed them. This PR changes that. This change would improve both the Rust lint infrastructure and Clippy, but Clippy will see the most benefit, as it has about 900 registered lints (and growing!)

So yeah, with this little patch we filter all lints pre-linting, and remove any lint that is either:
- Manually `#![allow]`ed in the whole crate,
- Allowed in the command line, or
- Not manually enabled with `#[warn]` or similar, and its default level is `Allow`

As some lints **need** to run, this PR also adds **loadbearing lints**. On a lint declaration, you can use the ``@eval_always` = true` marker to label it as loadbearing. A loadbearing lint will never be filtered (it will always run)

Fixes #106983
2024-10-26 16:37:43 +00:00
Jieyou Xu
5f4739157a Downgrade untranslatable_diagnostic and diagnostic_outside_of_impl to allow
See <https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/132181> for more context.
2024-10-26 14:11:59 +00:00
Matthias Krüger
8207d89b5e
Rollup merge of #132114 - jieyouxu:features-bundle, r=fee1-dead
Use `Enabled{Lang,Lib}Feature`  instead of n-tuples

Instead of passing around e.g. `(gate_name, attr_span, stable_since)` 3-tuples for enabled lang features or `(gate_name, attr_span)` 2-tuples for enabled lib features, use `Enabled{Lang,Lib}Feature` structs with named fields.

Also did some minor code-golfing of involved iterator chains to hopefully make them easier to follow.

Follow-up to https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/132098#issuecomment-2434523431 cc `@RalfJung.`
2024-10-26 06:29:47 +02:00
Matthias Krüger
280790b9a1
Rollup merge of #132106 - maxcabrajac:ident_ref, r=petrochenkov
Pass Ident by reference in ast Visitor

`MutVisitor`'s version of `visit_ident` passes around `&Ident`, but `Visitor` copies `Ident`. This PR changes that

r? `@petrochenkov`

related to #128974
2024-10-25 20:33:11 +02:00
许杰友 Jieyou Xu (Joe)
3528149f73 Introduce Enabled{Lang,Lib}Feature
Instead of passing around random n-tuples of e.g. `(gate_name, attr_sp,
since)`.
2024-10-25 10:30:37 +08:00
bors
a93c1718c8 Auto merge of #132116 - matthiaskrgr:rollup-3a0ia4r, r=matthiaskrgr
Rollup of 4 pull requests

Successful merges:

 - #131790 (Document textual format of SocketAddrV{4,6})
 - #131983 (Stabilize shorter-tail-lifetimes)
 - #132097 (sanitizer.md: LeakSanitizer is not supported on aarch64 macOS)
 - #132107 (Remove visit_expr_post from ast Visitor)

r? `@ghost`
`@rustbot` modify labels: rollup
2024-10-24 20:28:20 +00:00
Matthias Krüger
a8cea36240
Rollup merge of #132107 - maxcabrajac:remove_expr_post, r=petrochenkov
Remove visit_expr_post from ast Visitor

`visit_expr_post` is only present in the immutable version of ast Visitors and its default implementation is a noop.
Given that its only implementer is on `rustc_lint/src/early.rs` and its name follows the same naming convention as some other lints (`_post`), it seems that `visit_expr_post` being in `Visitor` was a little mistake.

r? `@petrochenkov`

related to #128974
2024-10-24 19:39:15 +02:00
Matthias Krüger
91c025d741
Rollup merge of #131983 - dingxiangfei2009:stabilize-shorter-tail-lifetimes, r=lcnr
Stabilize shorter-tail-lifetimes

Close #131445
Tracked by #123739

We found a test case `tests/ui/drop/drop_order.rs` that had not been covered by the change. The test fixture is fixed now with the correct expectation.
2024-10-24 19:39:14 +02:00
bors
1d4a7670d4 Auto merge of #131985 - compiler-errors:const-pred, r=fee1-dead
Represent trait constness as a distinct predicate

cc `@rust-lang/project-const-traits`
r? `@ghost` for now

Also mirrored everything that is written below on this hackmd here: https://hackmd.io/`@compiler-errors/r12zoixg1l`

# Tl;dr:

* This PR removes the bulk of the old effect desugaring.
* This PR reimplements most of the effect desugaring as a new predicate and set of a couple queries. I believe it majorly simplifies the implementation and allows us to move forward more easily on its implementation.

I'm putting this up both as a request for comments and a vibe-check, but also as a legitimate implementation that I'd like to see land (though no rush of course on that last part).

## Background

### Early days

Once upon a time, we represented trait constness in the param-env and in `TraitPredicate`. This was very difficult to implement correctly; it had bugs and was also incomplete; I don't think this was anyone's fault though, it was just the limit of experimental knowledge we had at that point.

Dealing with `~const` within predicates themselves meant dealing with constness all throughout the trait solver. This was difficult to keep track of, and afaict was not handled well with all the corners of candidate assembly.

Specifically, we had to (in various places) remap constness according to the param-env constness:

574b64a97f/compiler/rustc_trait_selection/src/traits/select/mod.rs (L1498)

This was annoying and manual and also error prone.

### Beginning of the effects desugaring

Later on, #113210 reimplemented a new desugaring for const traits via a `<const HOST: bool>` predicate. This essentially "reified" the const checking and separated it from any of the remapping or separate tracking in param-envs. For example, if I was in a const-if-const environment, but I wanted to call a trait that was non-const, this reification would turn the constness mismatch into a simple *type* mismatch of the effect parameter.

While this was a monumental step towards straightening out const trait checking in the trait system, it had its own issues, since that meant that the constness of a trait (or any item within it, like an associated type) was *early-bound*. This essentially meant that `<T as Trait>::Assoc` was *distinct* from `<T as ~const Trait>::Assoc`, which was bad.

### Associated-type bound based effects desugaring

After this, #120639 implemented a new effects desugaring. This used an associated type to more clearly represent the fact that the constness is not an input parameter of a trait, but a property that could be computed of a impl. The write-up linked in that PR explains it better than I could.

However, I feel like it really reached the limits of what can comfortably be expressed in terms of associated type and trait calculus. Also, `<const HOST: bool>` remains a synthetic const parameter, which is observable in nested items like RPITs and closures, and comes with tons of its own hacks in the astconv and middle layer.

For example, there are pieces of unintuitive code that are needed to represent semantics like elaboration, and eventually will be needed to make error reporting intuitive, and hopefully in the future assist us in implementing built-in traits (eventually we'll want something like `~const Fn` trait bounds!).

elaboration hack: 8069f8d17a/compiler/rustc_type_ir/src/elaborate.rs (L133-L195)

trait bound remapping hack for diagnostics: 8069f8d17a/compiler/rustc_trait_selection/src/error_reporting/traits/fulfillment_errors.rs (L2370-L2413)

I want to be clear that I don't think this is a issue of implementation quality or anything like that; I think it's simply a very clear sign that we're using types and traits in a way that they're not fundamentally supposed to be used, especially given that constness deserves to be represented as a first-class concept.

### What now?

This PR implements a new desugaring for const traits. Specifically, it introduces a `HostEffect` predicate to represent the obligation an impl is const, rather than using associated type bounds and the compat trait that exists for effects today.

### `HostEffect` predicate

A `HostEffect` clause has two parts -- the `TraitRef` we're trying to prove, and a `HostPolarity::{Maybe, Const}`.

`HostPolarity::Const` corresponds to `T: const Trait` bounds, which must *always* be proven as const, and which can be written in any context. These are lowered directly into the predicates of an item, since they're not "context-specific".

On the other hand, `HostPolarity::Maybe` corresponds to `T: ~const Trait` bounds which must only exist in a conditionally-const context like a method in a `#[const_trait]`, or a `const fn` free function. We do not lower these immediately into the predicates of an item; instead, we collect them into a new query called the **`const_conditions`**. These are the set of trait refs that we need to prove have const implementations for an item to be const.

Notably, they're represented as bare (poly) trait refs because they are meant to be paired back together with a `HostPolarity` when they're being registered in typeck (see next section).

For example, given:

```rust
const fn foo<T: ~const A + const B>() {}
```

`foo`'s const conditions would contain `T: A`, but not `T: B`. On the flip side, foo's predicates (`predicates_of`) query would contain `HostEffect(T: B, HostPolarity::Const)` but not `HostEffect(T: A, HostPolarity::Maybe)` since we don't need to prove that predicate in a non-const environment (and it's not even the right predicate to prove in an unconditionally const environment).

### Type checking const bodies

When type checking bodies in HIR, when we encounter a call expression, we additionally register the callee item's const conditions with the `HostPolarity` from the body we're typechecking (`Const` for unconditionally const things like `const`/`static` items, and `Maybe` for conditionally const things like const fns; and we don't register `HostPolarity` predicates for non-const bodies).

When type-checking a conditionally const body, we augment its param-env with `HostEffect(..., Maybe)` predicates.

### Checking that const impls are WF

We extend the logic in `compare_method_predicate_entailment` to also check the const-conditions of the impl method, to make sure that we error for:

```rust
#[const_trait] Bar {}
#[const_trait] trait Foo {
    fn method<T: Bar>();
}

impl Foo for () {
    fn method<T: ~const Bar>() {} // stronger assumption!
}
```

We also extend the WF check for impls to register the const conditions of the trait that is being implemented. This is to make sure we error for:

```rust
#[const_trait] trait Bar {}
#[const_trait] trait Foo<T> where T: ~const Bar {}

impl<T> const Foo<T> for () {}
//~^ `T: ~const Bar` is missing!
```

### Proving a `HostEffect` predicate

We have several ways of proving a `HostEffect` predicate:

1. Matching a `HostEffect` predicate from the param-env
2. From an impl - we do impl selection very similar to confirming a trait goal, except we filter for only const impls, and we additionally register the impl's const conditions (i.e. the impl's `~const` where clauses).

Later I expect that we will add more built-in implementations for things like `Fn`.

## What next?

After this PR, I'd like to split out the work more so it can proceed in parallel and probably amongst others that are not me.

* Register `HostEffect` goal for places in HIR typeck that correspond to call terminators, like autoderef.
* Make traits in libstd const again.
    * Probably need to impl host effect preds in old solver.
* Implement built-in `HostEffect` rules for traits like `Fn`.
* Rip out const checking from MIR altogether.

## So what?

This ends up being super convenient basically everywhere in the compiler. Due to the design of the new trait solver, we end up having an almost parallel structure to the existing trait and projection predicates for assembling `HostEffect` predicates; adding new candidates and especially new built-in implementations is now basically trivial, and it's quite straightforward to understand the confirmation logic for these predicates.

Same with diagnostics reporting; since we have predicates which represent the obligation to prove an impl is const, we can simplify and make these diagnostics richer without having to write a ton of logic to intercept and rewrite the existing `Compat` trait errors.

Finally, it gives us a much more straightforward path for supporting the const effect on the old trait solver. I'm personally quite passionate about getting const trait support into the hands of users without having to wait until the new solver lands[^1], so I think after this PR lands we can begin to gauge how difficult it would be to implement constness in the old trait solver too. This PR will not do this yet.

[^1]: Though this is not a prerequisite or by any means the only justification for this PR.
2024-10-24 17:33:42 +00:00
maxcabrajac
64a3451835 Pass Ident by reference in ast Visitor 2024-10-24 11:10:49 -03:00
maxcabrajac
0635916cbe Remove visit_expr_post 2024-10-24 10:59:40 -03:00
Michael Goulet
cde29b9ec9 Implement const effect predicate in new solver 2024-10-24 09:46:36 +00:00
Michael Goulet
a16d491054 Remove associated type based effects logic 2024-10-24 09:46:36 +00:00
Matthias Krüger
93bf791e8b
Rollup merge of #129248 - compiler-errors:raw-ref-deref, r=nnethercote
Taking a raw ref (`&raw (const|mut)`) of a deref of pointer (`*ptr`) is always safe

T-opsem decided in https://github.com/rust-lang/reference/pull/1387 that `*ptr` is only unsafe if the place is accessed. This means that taking a raw ref of a deref expr is always safe, since it doesn't constitute a read.

This also relaxes the `DEREF_NULLPTR` lint to stop warning in the case of raw ref of a deref'd nullptr, and updates its docs to reflect that change in the UB specification.

This does not change the behavior of `addr_of!((*ptr).field)`, since field projections still require the projection is in-bounds.

I'm on the fence whether this requires an FCP, since it's something that is guaranteed by the reference you could ostensibly call this a bugfix since we were counting truly safe operations as unsafe. Perhaps someone on opsem has a strong opinion? cc `@rust-lang/opsem`
2024-10-24 10:35:39 +02:00
Greg Echelberger
cc0ec046b1 Fix #131977 parens mangled in shared mut static lint suggestion 2024-10-24 03:34:37 +00:00
Ding Xiang Fei
6d569f769c
stabilize if_let_rescope 2024-10-24 04:33:14 +08:00
Ding Xiang Fei
0689b2139f
stabilize shorter-tail-lifetimes 2024-10-24 01:56:08 +08:00
Ralf Jung
ad3991d303 nightly feature tracking: get rid of the per-feature bool fields 2024-10-23 09:14:41 +01:00
Michael Goulet
febb3f7c88 Represent TraitBoundModifiers as distinct parts in HIR 2024-10-22 19:48:44 +00:00
bors
bca5fdebe0 Auto merge of #131321 - RalfJung:feature-activation, r=nnethercote
terminology: #[feature] *enables* a feature (instead of "declaring" or "activating" it)

Mostly, we currently call a feature that has a corresponding `#[feature(name)]` attribute in the current crate a "declared" feature. I think that is confusing as it does not align with what "declaring" usually means. Furthermore, we *also* refer to `#[stable]`/`#[unstable]` as *declaring* a feature (e.g. in [these diagnostics](f25e5abea2/compiler/rustc_passes/messages.ftl (L297-L301))), which aligns better with what "declaring" usually means. To make things worse, the functions  `tcx.features().active(...)` and  `tcx.features().declared(...)` both exist and they are doing almost the same thing (testing whether a corresponding `#[feature(name)]`  exists) except that `active` would ICE if the feature is not an unstable lang feature. On top of this, the callback when a feature is activated/declared is called `set_enabled`, and many comments also talk about "enabling" a feature.

So really, our terminology is just a mess.

I would suggest we use "declaring a feature" for saying that something is/was guarded by a feature (e.g. `#[stable]`/`#[unstable]`), and "enabling a feature" for  `#[feature(name)]`. This PR implements that.
2024-10-22 11:02:35 +00:00
Ralf Jung
1381773e01 make some rustc_feature internals private, and ensure invariants with debug assertions 2024-10-22 07:37:55 +01:00
Ralf Jung
46ce5cbf33 terminology: #[feature] *enables* a feature (instead of "declaring" or "activating" it) 2024-10-22 07:37:54 +01:00
bors
1de57a5ce9 Auto merge of #129935 - RalfJung:unsupported_calling_conventions, r=compiler-errors
make unsupported_calling_conventions a hard error

This has been a future-compat lint (not shown in dependencies) since Rust 1.55, released 3 years ago. Hopefully that was enough time so this can be made a hard error now. Given that long timeframe, I think it's justified to skip the "show in dependencies" stage. There were [not many crates hitting this](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/86231#issuecomment-866300943) even when the lint was originally added.

This should get cratered, and I assume then it needs a t-compiler FCP. (t-compiler because this looks entirely like an implementation oversight -- for the vast majority of ABIs, we already have a hard error, but some were initially missed, and we are finally fixing that.)

Fixes https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/87678
2024-10-22 03:24:40 +00:00
blyxyas
1dcfa27144 Move COGNITIVE_COMPLEXITY to use macro again 2024-10-21 19:27:34 +02:00
bors
3e33bda032 Auto merge of #130628 - workingjubilee:clean-up-result-ffi-guarantees, r=RalfJung
Finish stabilization of `result_ffi_guarantees`

The internal linting has been changed, so all that is left is making sure we stabilize what we want to stabilize.
2024-10-21 08:38:45 +00:00
bors
f2ba41113d Auto merge of #130950 - compiler-errors:yeet-eval, r=BoxyUwU
Continue to get rid of `ty::Const::{try_}eval*`

This PR mostly does:

* Removes all of the `try_eval_*` and `eval_*` helpers from `ty::Const`, and replace their usages with `try_to_*`.
* Remove `ty::Const::eval`.
* Rename `ty::Const::normalize` to `ty::Const::normalize_internal`. This function is still used in the normalization code itself.
* Fix some weirdness around the `TransmuteFrom` goal.

I'm happy to split it out further; for example, I could probably land the first part which removes the helpers, or the changes to codegen which are more obvious than the changes to tools.

r? BoxyUwU

Part of https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/130704
2024-10-21 03:46:28 +00:00
Matthias Krüger
7b714d4735
Rollup merge of #121560 - Noratrieb:stop-lint-macro-nonsense, r=jieyouxu
Allow `#[deny]` inside `#[forbid]` as a no-op

Forbid cannot be overriden. When someome tries to do this anyways, it results in a hard error. That makes sense.

Except it doesn't, because macros. Macros may reasonably use `#[deny]` (or `#[warn]` for an allow-by-default lint) in their expansion to assert that their expanded code follows the lint. This is doesn't work when the output gets expanded into a `forbid()` context. This is pretty silly, since both the macros and the code agree on the lint!

By making it a warning instead, we remove the problem with the macro, which is now nothing as warnings are suppressed in macro expanded code, while still telling users that something is up.

fixes #121483
2024-10-20 16:54:08 +02:00
Ralf Jung
de3cbf3c56 make unsupported_calling_conventions a hard error 2024-10-20 15:22:21 +02:00
Jubilee Young
1f81242558 compiler: Remove outdated comment 2024-10-19 13:01:30 -07:00
Jubilee Young
fa18606b17 compiler: Fully stabilize result_ffi_guarantees 2024-10-19 13:01:30 -07:00
Matthias Krüger
b2d132f10e
Rollup merge of #116863 - workingjubilee:non-exhaustive-is-not-ffi-unsafe, r=jieyouxu
warn less about non-exhaustive in ffi

Bindgen allows generating `#[non_exhaustive] #[repr(u32)]` enums. This results in nonintuitive nonlocal `improper_ctypes` warnings, even when the types are otherwise perfectly valid in C.

Adjust for actual tooling expectations by avoiding warning on simple enums with only unit variants.

Closes https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/116831
2024-10-19 22:00:54 +02:00
Michael Goulet
e83e4e8112 Get rid of const eval_* and try_eval_* helpers 2024-10-19 18:07:35 +00:00
blyxyas
ddad55f6c2 Apply review comments + use shallow_lint_levels_on 2024-10-19 16:20:52 +02:00
blyxyas
8a40884e1c Unify syntax (all to @eval_always) 2024-10-19 16:20:52 +02:00
blyxyas
637d5cc56f Remove module passes filtering 2024-10-19 16:20:51 +02:00
blyxyas
71b4d108c7 Follow review comments (optimize the filtering) 2024-10-19 16:20:33 +02:00
blyxyas
edc6577627 Change lints_to_emit to lints_that_actually_run 2024-10-19 16:19:44 +02:00
blyxyas
b4da058595 Do not run lints that cannot emit
Before this change, adding a lint was a difficult matter
because it always had some overhead involved. This was
because all lints would run, no matter their default level,
or if the user had #![allow]ed them. This PR changes that
2024-10-19 16:19:44 +02:00
Jubilee Young
62aa8f0740 compiler: Embed consensus in lint::types::improper_ctypes
Extracting this logic into a module makes it easier to write down, and
more importantly, later find, the actual decisions we've made.
2024-10-18 21:59:29 -07:00
Noratrieb
e78d78868a Allow #[deny(..)] inside #[forbid(..)] as a no-op with a warning
Forbid cannot be overriden. When someome tries to do this anyways,
it results in a hard error. That makes sense.

Except it doesn't, because macros. Macros may reasonably use `#[deny]`
in their expansion to assert
that their expanded code follows the lint. This is doesn't work when the
output gets expanded into a `forbid()` context. This is pretty silly,
since both the macros and the code agree on the lint!

Therefore, we allow `#[deny(..)]`ing a lint that's already forbidden,
keeping the level at forbid.
2024-10-18 18:18:41 +02:00
Josh Stone
acb09bf741 update bootstrap configs 2024-10-15 20:30:23 -07:00
Matthias Krüger
4d53a28cac
Rollup merge of #131652 - compiler-errors:modifiers, r=Nadrieril,jieyouxu
Move polarity into `PolyTraitRef` rather than storing it on the side

Arguably we could move these modifiers into `TraitRef` instead of `PolyTraitRef`, but I see `TraitRef` as simply the *path* part of the trait ref. It doesn't really matter -- refactoring this further is much easier now.
2024-10-15 05:11:37 +02:00
Michael Goulet
7500e09b8b Move trait bound modifiers into hir::PolyTraitRef 2024-10-14 09:20:38 -04:00
Urgau
b5e91a00c8 Also use outermost const-anon for impl items in non_local_defs lint 2024-10-13 18:14:29 +02:00
Trevor Gross
1f31925345
Rollup merge of #131565 - Urgau:non_local_def-rm-deprecate, r=compiler-errors
Remove deprecation note in the `non_local_definitions` lint

This PR removes the edition deprecation note emitted by the `non_local_definitions` lint.

Specifically this part:

```
= note: this lint may become deny-by-default in the edition 2024 and higher, see the tracking issue <https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/120363>
```

because it [didn't make the cut](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/120363#issuecomment-2407833300) for the 2024 edition.

`@rustbot` label +L-non_local_definitions
2024-10-11 23:57:47 -04:00
Trevor Gross
fcbf4ac6f9
Rollup merge of #131546 - surechen:fix_129833, r=jieyouxu
Make unused_parens's suggestion considering expr's attributes.

For the expr with attributes,
like `let _ = (#[inline] || println!("Hello!"));`,
the suggestion's span should contains the attributes, or the suggestion will remove them.

fixes #129833
2024-10-11 23:57:46 -04:00
surechen
1e8d6d1ec3 Make unused_parens's suggestion considering expr's attributes
For the expr with attributes, like `let _ = (#[inline] || println!("Hello!"));`, the suggestion's span should contains the attributes, or the suggestion will remove them.

fixes #129833
2024-10-12 09:32:25 +08:00
Urgau
77b3065ed2 Remove deprecation note in the non_local_definitions warning 2024-10-11 21:21:32 +02:00
Matthias Krüger
e00f49db17
Rollup merge of #131498 - Urgau:transparent-const-anons, r=lcnr
Consider outermost const-anon in `non_local_def` lint

This PR change the logic for finding the parent of the `impl` definition in the `non_local_definitions` lint to consider multiple level of const-anon items, instead of only one currently.

I also took the opportunity to cleanup the related code.

cc ``@traviscross``
Fixes https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/131474
2024-10-11 12:21:07 +02:00
Urgau
7e05da8d42 Consider outermost const-anon in non_local_def lint 2024-10-11 09:39:53 +02:00
Peter Jaszkowiak
321a5db7d4 Reserve guarded string literals (RFC 3593) 2024-10-08 18:21:16 -06:00
bors
7caad69253 Auto merge of #131354 - matthiaskrgr:rollup-hprnng2, r=matthiaskrgr
Rollup of 4 pull requests

Successful merges:

 - #131331 (Revert "warn_old_master_branch" check)
 - #131344 (Avoid `&Lrc<T>` in various places)
 - #131346 (Restrict `ignore-mode-*` directives)
 - #131353 (Add documentation for `runtest::check_rustdoc_test_option` method)

r? `@ghost`
`@rustbot` modify labels: rollup
2024-10-07 11:30:33 +00:00
bors
0b16baa570 Auto merge of #131235 - codemountains:rename-nestedmetaitem-to-metaitemlnner, r=nnethercote
Rename `NestedMetaItem` to `MetaItemInner`

Fixes #131087

r? `@nnethercote`
2024-10-07 08:59:55 +00:00
Nicholas Nethercote
2123509351 Remove an unnecessary &Lrc<_> local variable. 2024-10-07 13:58:29 +11:00
Michael Goulet
367183bc0c Don't emit null pointer lint for raw ref of null deref 2024-10-06 22:36:51 -04:00
bors
8422e27b27 Auto merge of #129670 - est31:cfg_attr_crate_type_name_error, r=Urgau
Make deprecated_cfg_attr_crate_type_name a hard error

Turns the forward compatibility lint added by #83744 into a hard error, so now, while the `#![crate_name]` and `#![crate_type]` attributes are still allowed in raw form, they are now forbidden to be nested inside a `#![cfg_attr()]` attribute.

The following will now be an error:

```Rust
#![cfg_attr(foo, crate_name = "foobar")]
#![cfg_attr(foo, crate_type = "bin")]
```

This code will continue working and is not deprecated:

```Rust
#![crate_name = "foobar"]
#![crate_type = "lib"]
```

The reasoning for this is explained in #83744: it allows us to not have to cfg-expand in order to determine the crate's type and name.

As of filing the PR, exactly two years have passed since #99784 has been merged, which has turned the lint's default warning level into an error, so there has been ample time to move off the now-forbidden syntax.

cc #91632 - tracking issue for the lint
2024-10-06 17:00:02 +00:00
codemountains
6dfc4a0473 Rename NestedMetaItem to MetaItemInner 2024-10-06 23:28:30 +09:00
bors
5a4ee43c38 Auto merge of #129244 - cjgillot:opaque-hir, r=compiler-errors
Make opaque types regular HIR nodes

Having opaque types as HIR owner introduces all sorts of complications. This PR proposes to make them regular HIR nodes instead.

I haven't gone through all the test changes yet, so there may be a few surprises.

Many thanks to `@camelid` for the first draft.
Fixes https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/129023

Fixes #129099
Fixes #125843
Fixes #119716
Fixes #121422
2024-10-05 06:19:35 +00:00
est31
00ed47b849 Make deprecated_cfg_attr_crate_type_name a hard error 2024-10-05 04:29:46 +02:00
Noah Lev
d6f247f3d5 rm ItemKind::OpaqueTy
This introduce an additional collection of opaques on HIR, as they can no
longer be listed using the free item list.
2024-10-04 23:28:22 +00:00
Jubilee
5a8fcab713
Rollup merge of #130518 - scottmcm:stabilize-controlflow-extra, r=dtolnay
Stabilize the `map`/`value` methods on `ControlFlow`

And fix the stability attribute on the `pub use` in `core::ops`.

libs-api in https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/75744#issuecomment-2231214910 seemed reasonably happy with naming for these, so let's try for an FCP.

Summary:
```rust
impl<B, C> ControlFlow<B, C> {
    pub fn break_value(self) -> Option<B>;
    pub fn map_break<T>(self, f: impl FnOnce(B) -> T) -> ControlFlow<T, C>;
    pub fn continue_value(self) -> Option<C>;
    pub fn map_continue<T>(self, f: impl FnOnce(C) -> T) -> ControlFlow<B, T>;
}
```

Resolves #75744

``@rustbot`` label +needs-fcp +t-libs-api -t-libs

---

Aside, in case it keeps someone else from going down the same dead end: I looked at the `{break,continue}_value` methods and tried to make them `const` as part of this, but that's disallowed because of not having `const Drop`, so put it back to not even unstably-const.
2024-10-04 14:11:34 -07:00
bors
14f303bc14 Auto merge of #130157 - eduardosm:stabilize-const_float_classify, r=RalfJung
Stabilize `const_float_classify`

Tracking issue: https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/72505

Also reverts https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/114486

Closes https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/72505

Stabilized const API:

```rust
impl f32 {
    pub const fn is_nan(self) -> bool;
    pub const fn is_infinite(self) -> bool;
    pub const fn is_finite(self) -> bool;
    pub const fn is_subnormal(self) -> bool;
    pub const fn is_normal(self) -> bool;
    pub const fn classify(self) -> FpCategory;
    pub const fn is_sign_positive(self) -> bool;
    pub const fn is_sign_negative(self) -> bool;
}

impl f64 {
    pub const fn is_nan(self) -> bool;
    pub const fn is_infinite(self) -> bool;
    pub const fn is_finite(self) -> bool;
    pub const fn is_subnormal(self) -> bool;
    pub const fn is_normal(self) -> bool;
    pub const fn classify(self) -> FpCategory;
    pub const fn is_sign_positive(self) -> bool;
    pub const fn is_sign_negative(self) -> bool;
}
```

cc `@rust-lang/wg-const-eval` `@rust-lang/libs-api`
2024-10-04 18:03:16 +00:00
Michael Goulet
7cd466a036 Move in_trait into OpaqueTyOrigin 2024-10-02 22:48:26 -04:00
Michael Goulet
cb7e3695e8 Use named fields for OpaqueTyOrigin 2024-10-02 22:04:18 -04:00
Matthias Krüger
dc1ccc5264
Rollup merge of #131035 - dingxiangfei2009:tweak-if-let-rescope-lint, r=jieyouxu
Preserve brackets around if-lets and skip while-lets

r? `@jieyouxu`

Tracked by #124085

Fresh out of #129466, we have discovered 9 crates that the lint did not successfully migrate because the span of `if let` includes the surrounding brackets `(..)` like the following, which surprised me a bit.

```rust
if (if let .. { .. } else { .. }) {
// ^~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
// the span somehow includes the surrounding brackets
}
```

There is one crate that failed the migration because some suggestion spans cross the macro expansion boundaries. Surely there is no way to patch them with `match` rewrite. To handle this case, we will instead require all spans to be tested for admissibility as suggestion spans.

Besides, there are 4 false negative cases discovered with desugared-`while let`. We don't need to lint them, because the `else` branch surely contains exactly one statement because the drop order is not changed whatsoever in this case.

```rust
while let Some(value) = droppy().get() {
..
}
// is desugared into
loop {
    if let Some(value) = droppy().get() {
        ..
    } else {
        break;
        // here can be nothing observable in this block
    }
}
```

I believe this is the one and only false positive that I have found. I think we have finally nailed all the corner cases this time.
2024-09-30 18:25:14 +02:00
Ding Xiang Fei
ed5443fcdf
apply suggestions 2024-09-30 22:21:45 +08:00
Ding Xiang Fei
6d1a25ad7e
preserve brackets around if-lets and skip while-lets 2024-09-30 04:21:10 +08:00
Matthias Krüger
e963568585 cleanup: don't .into() identical types 2024-09-29 12:18:11 +02:00
Matthias Krüger
2df6b0773e
Rollup merge of #130924 - surechen:fix_130851, r=compiler-errors
Make clashing_extern_declarations considering generic args for ADT field

In following example, G<u16> should be recognized as different from G<u32> :

```rust
#[repr(C)] pub struct G<T> { g: [T; 4] }

pub mod x { extern "C" { pub fn g(_: super::G<u16>); } }
pub mod y { extern "C" { pub fn g(_: super::G<u32>); } }
```

fixes #130851
2024-09-28 09:35:10 +02:00
Matthias Krüger
a935064fae
Rollup merge of #130826 - fmease:compiler-mv-obj-safe-dyn-compat, r=compiler-errors
Compiler: Rename "object safe" to "dyn compatible"

Completed T-lang FCP: https://github.com/rust-lang/lang-team/issues/286#issuecomment-2338905118.
Tracking issue: https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/130852

Excludes `compiler/rustc_codegen_cranelift` (to be filed separately).
Includes Stable MIR.

Regarding https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/labels/relnotes, I guess I will manually open a https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/labels/relnotes-tracking-issue since this change affects everything (compiler, library, tools, docs, books, everyday language).

r? ghost
2024-09-27 21:35:08 +02:00
surechen
0bf928968b Make clashing_extern_declarations considering generic args for ADT field
fixes #130851
2024-09-27 16:37:43 +08:00
makai410
58921874cb Fix the misleading diagnostic for let_underscore_drop on type without Drop implementation 2024-09-26 10:18:18 +08:00
Scott McMurray
fd5aa07f4f Stabilize the map/value methods on ControlFlow
And fix the stability attribute on the `pub use` in `core::ops`.
2024-09-25 19:00:17 -07:00
Eduardo Sánchez Muñoz
c39ae569d6 Revert "Avoid invalid NaN lint machine-applicable suggestion in const context"
Reverts PR https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/114486 (commit 1305a43d0a)
2024-09-25 18:54:33 +02:00
León Orell Valerian Liehr
01a063f9df
Compiler: Rename "object safe" to "dyn compatible" 2024-09-25 13:26:48 +02:00
bors
4cadeda932 Auto merge of #130768 - compiler-errors:rollup-8ncjy55, r=compiler-errors
Rollup of 7 pull requests

Successful merges:

 - #129545 (rustdoc: redesign toolbar and disclosure widgets)
 - #130618 (Skip query in get_parent_item when possible.)
 - #130727 (Check vtable projections for validity in miri)
 - #130750 (Add new Tier-3 target: `loongarch64-unknown-linux-ohos`)
 - #130758 (Revert "Add recursion limit to FFI safety lint")
 - #130759 (Update books)
 - #130762 (stabilize const_intrinsic_copy)

r? `@ghost`
`@rustbot` modify labels: rollup
2024-09-24 06:02:43 +00:00
Michael Goulet
fa1bd9b06a
Rollup merge of #130758 - compiler-errors:ctype-recursion-limit, r=jieyouxu
Revert "Add recursion limit to FFI safety lint"

It's not necessarily clear if warning when we hit the recursion limit is the right thing to do, first of all.

**More importantly**, this PR was implemented incorrectly in the first place; it was not decrementing the recursion limit when stepping out of a type, so it would trigger when a ctype has more than RECURSION_LIMIT fields *anywhere* in the type's set of recursively reachable fields.

Reverts #130598
Reopens #130310
Fixes #130757
2024-09-23 23:49:13 -04:00
bors
f5cd2c5888 Auto merge of #127117 - Urgau:non_local_def-syntactic, r=BoxyUwU
Rework `non_local_definitions` lint to only use a syntactic heuristic

This PR reworks the `non_local_definitions` lint to only use a syntactic heuristic, i.e. not use a type-system logic for whenever an `impl` is local or not.

Instead the new logic wanted by T-lang in https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/126768#issuecomment-2192634762, which is to consider every paths in `Self` and `Trait` and to no longer use the type-system inference trick.

`@rustbot` labels +L-non_local_definitions
Fixes #126768
2024-09-24 03:43:01 +00:00
Michael Goulet
de66639bbc Revert "Add recursion limit to FFI safety lint"
This reverts commit 716044751b.
2024-09-23 12:43:44 -04:00
Ralf Jung
584c5cf7ae add unqualified_local_imports lint 2024-09-23 11:57:28 +02:00
Urgau
9195d65725 Remove with/without trait and bounds consideration 2024-09-23 10:01:59 +02:00
Urgau
0f665e2bf3 Point to every relevant types in the main diag 2024-09-23 10:00:42 +02:00
Urgau
00a6ebfbf5 Rework non_local_definitions lint to only be a syntactic heuristic 2024-09-23 09:59:31 +02:00
Urgau
cb58668748 Revert "Switch back non_local_definitions lint to allow-by-default"
This reverts commit 0c0dfb88ee.
2024-09-23 09:23:04 +02:00
Michael Goulet
c682aa162b Reformat using the new identifier sorting from rustfmt 2024-09-22 19:11:29 -04:00
Jubilee Young
93993c77f5 compiler: Accept "improper" ctypes in extern "rust-cold" fn 2024-09-21 08:59:52 -07:00
bors
f48c99a004 Auto merge of #130599 - jieyouxu:snake_case_binary_cleanup, r=petrochenkov
Explain why `non_snake_case` is skipped for binary crates and cleanup tests

- Explain `non_snake_case` lint is skipped for bin crate names because binaries are not intended to be distributed or consumed like library crates (#45127).
- Coalesce the bunch of tests into a single one but with revisions, which is easier to compare the differences for `non_snake_case` behavior with respect to crate types.

Follow-up to #121749 with some more comments and test cleanup.

cc `@saethlin` who bumped into one of the tests and was confused why it was `only-x86_64-unknown-linux-gnu`.

try-job: dist-i586-gnu-i586-i686-musl
2024-09-21 11:16:38 +00:00
许杰友 Jieyou Xu (Joe)
43ede7331d Explain why non_snake_case is skipped for binary crates 2024-09-21 05:24:26 +00:00
Matthias Krüger
5770ba8686
Rollup merge of #130646 - workingjubilee:literally-factorize-int-lint, r=compiler-errors
compiler: factor out `OVERFLOWING_LITERALS` impl

This puts it into `rustc_lint/src/types/literal.rs`. It then uses the fact that it's easier to navigate the logic to identify something that can easily be factored out, as an instance of "why".
2024-09-21 07:22:50 +02:00
Matthias Krüger
28ace83b11
Rollup merge of #130598 - gurry:130310-improper-types-stack-overflow, r=compiler-errors
Add recursion limit to FFI safety lint

Fixes #130310

Now we check against `tcx.recursion_limit()` and raise an error if it the limit is reached instead of overflowing the stack.
2024-09-21 07:22:47 +02:00
Jubilee Young
844edfe449 compiler: reuse {un,}signed_fit in get_type_suggestion (nfc)
no need for a weird macro when a self-explanatory `match` will do.
2024-09-20 17:19:27 -07:00
Jubilee Young
2db62e6893 compiler: factor OVERFLOWING_LITERALS impl into a file (nfc)
no functional changes should arise, just moves the lint impl details out
of a very crowded file with lots of different lints in it.
2024-09-20 15:26:01 -07:00
bors
5ba6db1b64 Auto merge of #124895 - obeis:static-mut-hidden-ref, r=compiler-errors
Disallow hidden references to mutable static

Closes #123060

Tracking:
- https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/123758
2024-09-20 17:25:34 +00:00
Gurinder Singh
716044751b Add recursion limit to FFI safety lint
Fixes stack overflow in the case of recursive types
2024-09-20 18:57:59 +05:30
Jubilee Young
e9cf280ef2 warn less about non-exhaustive in ffi
Bindgen allows generating `#[non_exhaustive] #[repr(u32)]` enums.
This results in nonintuitive nonlocal `improper_ctypes` warnings,
even when the types are otherwise perfectly valid in C.

Adjust for actual tooling expectations by avoiding warning on
simple enums with only unit variants.
2024-09-19 12:56:31 -07:00
Matthias Krüger
00c4be3df8
Rollup merge of #130507 - Urgau:check-cfg-raw-keywords, r=jieyouxu
Improve handling of raw-idents in check-cfg

This PR improves the handling of raw-idents in the check-cfg diagnostics.

In particular the list of expected names and the suggestion now correctly take into account the "keyword-ness" of the ident, and correctly prefix the ident with `r#` when necessary.

`@rustbot` labels +F-check-cfg
2024-09-18 17:49:44 +02:00
Urgau
89f04c2521 Improve handling of raw-idents in check-cfg 2024-09-18 11:07:32 +02:00
Matthias Krüger
065690e186
Rollup merge of #130469 - compiler-errors:wc-obj-safety, r=jackh726
Mark `where_clauses_object_safety` as removed

r? lcnr
2024-09-17 17:28:35 +02:00