Commit Graph

14 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Mara Bos
a6da55c70e Silence non_fmt_panic from external macros. 2021-08-12 14:33:30 +02:00
Vadim Petrochenkov
28f4dba438 rustc_span: Revert addition of proc_macro field to ExpnKind::Macro
The flag has a vague meaning and is used for a single diagnostic change that is low benefit and appears only under `-Z macro_backtrace`.
2021-07-10 23:03:35 +03:00
Ryan Levick
a902e25f58 Add s to non_fmt_panic 2021-07-06 20:12:56 +02:00
Mara Bos
934e6058eb Turn non_fmt_panic into a future_incompatible edition lint. 2021-06-27 14:47:26 +00:00
Aaron Hill
f916b0474a
Implement span quoting for proc-macros
This PR implements span quoting, allowing proc-macros to produce spans
pointing *into their own crate*. This is used by the unstable
`proc_macro::quote!` macro, allowing us to get error messages like this:

```
error[E0412]: cannot find type `MissingType` in this scope
  --> $DIR/auxiliary/span-from-proc-macro.rs:37:20
   |
LL | pub fn error_from_attribute(_args: TokenStream, _input: TokenStream) -> TokenStream {
   | ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------- in this expansion of procedural macro `#[error_from_attribute]`
...
LL |             field: MissingType
   |                    ^^^^^^^^^^^ not found in this scope
   |
  ::: $DIR/span-from-proc-macro.rs:8:1
   |
LL | #[error_from_attribute]
   | ----------------------- in this macro invocation
```

Here, `MissingType` occurs inside the implementation of the proc-macro
`#[error_from_attribute]`. Previosuly, this would always result in a
span pointing at `#[error_from_attribute]`

This will make many proc-macro-related error message much more useful -
when a proc-macro generates code containing an error, users will get an
error message pointing directly at that code (within the macro
definition), instead of always getting a span pointing at the macro
invocation site.

This is implemented as follows:
* When a proc-macro crate is being *compiled*, it causes the `quote!`
  macro to get run. This saves all of the sapns in the input to `quote!`
  into the metadata of *the proc-macro-crate* (which we are currently
  compiling). The `quote!` macro then expands to a call to
  `proc_macro::Span::recover_proc_macro_span(id)`, where `id` is an
opaque identifier for the span in the crate metadata.
* When the same proc-macro crate is *run* (e.g. it is loaded from disk
  and invoked by some consumer crate), the call to
`proc_macro::Span::recover_proc_macro_span` causes us to load the span
from the proc-macro crate's metadata. The proc-macro then produces a
`TokenStream` containing a `Span` pointing into the proc-macro crate
itself.

The recursive nature of 'quote!' can be difficult to understand at
first. The file `src/test/ui/proc-macro/quote-debug.stdout` shows
the output of the `quote!` macro, which should make this eaier to
understand.

This PR also supports custom quoting spans in custom quote macros (e.g.
the `quote` crate). All span quoting goes through the
`proc_macro::quote_span` method, which can be called by a custom quote
macro to perform span quoting. An example of this usage is provided in
`src/test/ui/proc-macro/auxiliary/custom-quote.rs`

Custom quoting currently has a few limitations:

In order to quote a span, we need to generate a call to
`proc_macro::Span::recover_proc_macro_span`. However, proc-macros
support renaming the `proc_macro` crate, so we can't simply hardcode
this path. Previously, the `quote_span` method used the path
`crate::Span` - however, this only works when it is called by the
builtin `quote!` macro in the same crate. To support being called from
arbitrary crates, we need access to the name of the `proc_macro` crate
to generate a path. This PR adds an additional argument to `quote_span`
to specify the name of the `proc_macro` crate. Howver, this feels kind
of hacky, and we may want to change this before stabilizing anything
quote-related.

Additionally, using `quote_span` currently requires enabling the
`proc_macro_internals` feature. The builtin `quote!` macro
has an `#[allow_internal_unstable]` attribute, but this won't work for
custom quote implementations. This will likely require some additional
tricks to apply `allow_internal_unstable` to the span of
`proc_macro::Span::recover_proc_macro_span`.
2021-05-12 00:51:31 -04:00
Paul Trojahn
8f14592aa2 Improve "panic message is not a string literal" warning
This warning always referenced panic! even in case of an
assert. Related to #84656
2021-05-09 17:56:50 +02:00
Guillaume Gomez
039b1b62ac
Rollup merge of #82456 - klensy:or-else, r=estebank
Replaced some unwrap_or and map_or with lazy variants

Replaced some `unwrap_or` and `map_or` with `unwrap_or_else` and `map_or_else`.
2021-02-26 15:52:31 +01:00
klensy
5ff1be197e replaced some unwrap_or with unwrap_or_else 2021-02-23 23:56:04 +03:00
Mara Bos
ad93f48d77 Add comment about how we find the right span in non_fmt_panic. 2021-02-17 10:51:22 +01:00
Mara Bos
2a0c42450e Formatting. 2021-02-14 19:51:15 +01:00
Mara Bos
37c532c010 Suggest correct replacement for panic![123].
Before this change, the suggestion was `std::panic::panic_any(123]`,
changing the opening brace but not the closing one.
2021-02-14 19:44:48 +01:00
Mara Bos
a428ab17ab Improve suggestion for panic!(format!(..)). 2021-02-14 18:52:47 +01:00
Mara Bos
ef778e7965 Fix span in non_fmt_panic for panic!(some_macro!()). 2021-02-14 18:14:23 +01:00
Mara Bos
a616f8267e Add lint for panic!(123) which is not accepted in Rust 2021.
This extends the `panic_fmt` lint to warn for all cases where the first
argument cannot be interpreted as a format string, as will happen in
Rust 2021.

It suggests to add `"{}", ` to format the message as a string. In the
case of `std::panic!()`, it also suggests the recently stabilized
`std::panic::panic_any()` function as an alternative.

It renames the lint to `non_fmt_panic` to match the lint naming
guidelines.
2021-02-03 22:42:53 +01:00