Lint against nested opaque types that don't satisfy associated type bounds
See the test failures for examples of places where this lint would fire.
r? `@oli-obk`
Don't ICE when trying to copy unsized value in const prop
When we have a trivially false where-clause predicate like `Self: Sized` where `Self = dyn Trait`, we sometimes don't throw an error during typeck for an illegal operation such as copying an unsized type.
This, unfortunately, cannot be made into an error (at least not without some migration -- see #95611 for example), but we should at least not ICE, since this function will never actually be reachable from main, for example.
r? `@RalfJung` since I think you added these assertions? but feel free to reassign.
Fixes#102553
Fix in-place collection leak when remaining element destructor panic
Fixes#101628
cc `@the8472`
I went for the drop guard route, placing it immediately before the `forget_allocation_drop_remaining` call and after the comment, as to signal they are closely related.
I also updated the test to check for the leak, though the only change really needed was removing the leak clean up for miri since now that's no longer leaked.
Implement `Ready::into_inner()`
Tracking issue: #101196.
This implements a method to unwrap the value inside a `Ready` outside an async context.
See https://docs.rs/futures/0.3.24/futures/future/struct.Ready.html#method.into_inner for previous work.
This was discussed in [Zulip beforehand](https://rust-lang.zulipchat.com/#narrow/stream/219381-t-libs/topic/.60Ready.3A.3Ainto_inner.28.29.60):
> An example I'm hitting right now:
I have a cross-platform library that provides a functions that returns a `Future`. The only reason why it returns a `Future` is because the WASM platform requires it, but the native doesn't, to make a cross-platform API that is equal for all I just return a `Ready` on the native targets.
>
> Now I would like to expose native-only functions that aren't async, that users can use to avoid having to deal with async when they are targeting native. With `into_inner` that's easily solvable now.
>
> I want to point out that some internal restructuring could be used to solve that problem too, but in this case it's not that simple, the library uses internal traits that return the `Future` already and playing around with that would introduce unnecessary `cfg` in a lot more places. So it is really only a quality-of-life feature.
Move layout_of and friends from rustc_middle to rustc_ty_utils
Breaks up the very large module that is `rustc_middle::ty::layout` by fork-lifting some queries into `rustc_ty_utils::{abi, layout}`.
This does set back `rustc_ty_utils` to having untranslatable diagnostics. I'd like to leave this as a separate task.
Rollup of 7 pull requests
Successful merges:
- #102441 (Suggest unwrap_or_else when a closure is given)
- #102547 (Migrate CSS theme for search results)
- #102567 (Delay evaluating lint primary message until after it would be suppressed)
- #102624 (rustdoc: remove font family CSS on `.rustdoc-toggle summary::before`)
- #102628 (Change the parameter name of From::from to `value`)
- #102637 (Ignore fuchsia on two compiler tests)
- #102639 (Improve spans when splitting multi-char operator tokens for proc macros.)
Failed merges:
- #102496 (Suggest `.into()` when all other coercion suggestions fail)
r? `@ghost`
`@rustbot` modify labels: rollup
Improve spans when splitting multi-char operator tokens for proc macros.
When a two-char (or three-char) operator token is split into single-char operator tokens before being passed to a proc macro, the single-char tokens are given the original span of length two (or three). This PR gives them more accurate spans.
r? `@Aaron1011`
cc `@petrochenkov`
Change the parameter name of From::from to `value`
The `From` trait is currently defined as:
```rust
pub trait From<T>: Sized {
fn from(_: T) -> Self;
}
```
The name of the argument is `_`. I am proposing to change it to `value`, ie.
```rust
pub trait From<T>: Sized {
fn from(value: T) -> Self;
}
```
This would be more consistent with the `TryFrom`, which looks like this:
```rust
pub trait TryFrom<T>: Sized {
type Error;
fn try_from(value: T) -> Result<Self, Self::Error>;
}
```
The reason for this proposal is twofold:
1. Consistency with the rest of the standard library. The `TryFrom` trait uses `value`, and no `From` implementation uses the default name (as it is quite useless).
2. When generating trait implementations with rust-analyzer/IntelliJ, the parameter name is copied, and it always has to be changed.
Optionally, another name like `x` could be used. I only propose `value` for consistency with `TryFrom`.
Changing parameter names is not a breaking change.
Note: this was originally posted as an internals thread [here](https://internals.rust-lang.org/t/change-the-argument-name-of-from-from/17480)
rustdoc: remove font family CSS on `.rustdoc-toggle summary::before`
This rule became irrelevant since c58246efe4 made it so that the `summary::before` pseudo-element contains an SVG instead of text.
errors: rename `typeck.ftl` to `hir_analysis.ftl`
In #102306, `rustc_typeck` was renamed to `rustc_hir_analysis` but the diagnostic resources were not renamed - which is what this pull request changes.
Add T to PhantomData impl Debug
This add debug information for `PhantomData`, I believe it's make sense to add this to debug impl of `PhantomData` since `T` is what define what is the `PhantomData` just write `"PhantomData"` is not very useful for debugging.
Alternative:
* `PhantomData::<{}>`
* `PhantomData { t: "str_type" }`
`@rustbot` label +T-libs-api -T-libs
introduce `{char, u8}::is_ascii_octdigit`
This feature adds two new APIs: `char::is_ascii_octdigit` and `u8::is_ascii_octdigit`, under the feature gate `is_ascii_octdigit`. These methods are shorthands for `char::is_digit(self, 8)` and `u8::is_digit(self, 8)`:
```rust
// core::char
impl char {
pub fn is_ascii_octdigit(self) -> bool;
}
// core::num
impl u8 {
pub fn is_ascii_octdigit(self) -> bool;
}
```
---
Couple of things I need help understanding:
- `const`ness: have I used the right attribute in this case?
- is there a way to run the tests for `core::char` alone, instead of `./x.py test library/core`?
docs: Improve AsRef / AsMut docs on blanket impls
There are several issues with the current state of `AsRef` and `AsMut` as [discussed here on IRLO](https://internals.rust-lang.org/t/semantics-of-asref/17016). See also #39397, #45742, #73390, #98905, and the FIXMEs [here](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/blob/1.62.0/library/core/src/convert/mod.rs#L509-L515) and [here](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/blob/1.62.0/library/core/src/convert/mod.rs#L530-L536). These issues are difficult to fix. This PR aims to update the documentation to better reflect the status-quo and to give advice on how `AsRef` and `AsMut` should be used.
In particular:
- Explicitly mention that `AsRef` and `AsMut` do not auto-dereference generally for all dereferencable types (but only if inner type is a shared and/or mutable reference)
- Give advice to not use `AsRef` or `AsMut` for the sole purpose of dereferencing
- Suggest providing a transitive `AsRef` or `AsMut` implementation for types which implement `Deref`
- Add new section "Reflexivity" in documentation comments for `AsRef` and `AsMut`
- Provide better example for `AsMut`
- Added heading "Relation to `Borrow`" in `AsRef`'s docs to improve structure
docs: be less harsh in wording for Vec::from_raw_parts
In particular, be clear that it is sound to specify memory not
originating from a previous `Vec` allocation. That is already suggested
in other parts of the documentation about zero-alloc conversions to Box<[T]>.
Incorporate a constraint from `slice::from_raw_parts` that was missing
but needs to be fulfilled, since a `Vec` can be converted into a slice.
Fixes https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/98780.
Document the conditional existence of `alloc::sync` and `alloc::task`.
`alloc` declares
```rust
#[cfg(target_has_atomic = "ptr")]
pub mod sync;
```
but there is no public documentation of this condition. This PR fixes that, so that users of `alloc` can understand how to make their code compile everywhere `alloc` does, if they are writing a library with impls for `Arc`.
The wording is copied from `std::sync::atomic::AtomicPtr`, with additional advice on how to `#[cfg]` for it.
I feel quite uncertain about whether the paragraph I added to `Arc`'s documentation should actually be there, as it is a distraction for anyone using `std`. On the other hand, maybe more reminders that no_std exists would benefit the ecosystem.
Note: `target_has_atomic` is [stabilized](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/32976) but [not yet documented in the reference](https://github.com/rust-lang/reference/pull/1171).
Cleanup some error code explanations
E0045: Use a stable non-C ABI instead
E0092: Use an atomic intrinsic that actually exists
E0161: Don't use box_syntax
E0579: Format ranges in the rustfmt style
E0622: Use the rustfmt style
E0743: Remove feature gate as it's not needed
Fix ICE #101739
Fixes a part of #101739
This cannot cover the following case. It causes `too many args provided` error and obligation does not have references error. I want your advice to solve the following cases as well in this pull request or a follow-up.
```rust
#![crate_type = "lib"]
#![feature(transmutability)]
#![allow(dead_code, incomplete_features, non_camel_case_types)]
mod assert {
use std::mem::BikeshedIntrinsicFrom;
pub fn is_transmutable<
Src,
Dst,
Context,
const ASSUME_ALIGNMENT: bool,
const ASSUME_LIFETIMES: bool,
const ASSUME_VALIDITY: bool,
const ASSUME_VISIBILITY: bool,
>()
where
Dst: BikeshedIntrinsicFrom<
Src,
Context,
ASSUME_ALIGNMENT,
ASSUME_LIFETIMES,
ASSUME_VALIDITY,
ASSUME_VISIBILITY,
>,
{}
}
fn via_const() {
struct Context;
#[repr(C)] struct Src;
#[repr(C)] struct Dst;
const FALSE: bool = false;
assert::is_transmutable::<Src, Dst, Context, FALSE, FALSE, FALSE, FALSE>();
}
```
Improve documentation of `slice::{from_ptr_range, from_ptr_range_mut}`
Document panic conditions (`T` is a ZST) and sync docs of shared/unique version.
cc `@wx-csy`
Improve `FromStr` example
The `from_str` implementation from the example had an `unwrap` that would make it panic on invalid input strings. Instead of panicking, it nows returns an error to better reflect the intented behavior of the `FromStr` trait.
rustdoc: re-sugar more cross-crate trait bounds
Previously, we would only ever re-sugar cross-crate predicates like `Type: Trait, <Type as Trait>::Name == Rhs` to `Type: Trait<Name = Rhs>` if the `Type` was a generic parameter like `Self` or `T`. With this PR, `Type` can be any type.
Most notably, this means that we now re-sugar predicates involving associated types (where `Type` is of the form `Self::Name`) which are then picked up by the pre-existing logic that re-sugars them into bounds. As a result of that, the associated type `IntoIter` of `std`'s `IntoIterator` trait (re-exported from `core`) is no longer rendered as:
```rust
type IntoIter: Iterator
where
<Self::IntoIter as Iterator>::Item == Self::Item;
```
but as one would expect: `type IntoIter: Iterator<Item = Self::Item>;`.
Cross-crate closure bounds like `F: Fn(i32) -> bool` are now also rendered properly (previously, the return type (`Self::Output`) would not be rendered and we would show the underlying equality predicate).
Fixes#77763.
Fixes#84579.
Fixes#102142.
`@rustbot` label T-rustdoc A-cross-crate-reexports
r? rustdoc
re-add git-commit-hash file to tarballs
rust-lang/rust#100557 removed the `git-commit-hash` file and replaced it with `git-commit-info`. However, build-manifest relies on the `git-commit-hash` file being present, so this adds it back.
r? `@Mark-Simulacrum`
In #102306, `rustc_typeck` was renamed to `rustc_hir_analysis` but the
diagnostic resources were not renamed - which is what this commit
changes.
Signed-off-by: David Wood <david.wood@huawei.com>