Implement rust-lang/compiler-team#578.
When an ICE is encountered on nightly releases, the new rustc panic
handler will also write the contents of the backtrace to disk. If any
`delay_span_bug`s are encountered, their backtrace is also added to the
file. The platform and rustc version will also be collected.
This test case currently fails on s390x, and probably other
platforms where the last line of a backtrace does not contain
and " at <source location>" specification.
The problem with the existing normalization lines
// normalize-stderr-test "\s*\d{1,}: .*\n" -> ""
// normalize-stderr-test "\s at .*\n" -> ""
is that \s matches all whitespace, including newlines, so the
first (but not second) of these regexes may merge multiple
lines. Thus the output differs depending on which of these
matches on the last line of a backtrace.
As the whitespace used in backtraces is just normal space
characters, change both regexes to just match at least one
space character instead:
// normalize-stderr-test " +\d{1,}: .*\n" -> ""
// normalize-stderr-test " + at .*\n" -> ""
Make the BUG_REPORT_URL configurable by tools
This greatly simplifies how hard it is to set a custom bug report url; previously tools had to copy
the entire hook implementation.
I haven't changed clippy in case they want to make the change upstream instead of the subtree, but
I'm happy to do so here if the maintainers want - cc ````@rust-lang/clippy````
Fixes https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/109486.
This greatly simplifies how hard it is to set a custom bug report url; previously tools had to copy
the entire hook implementation.
- Switch clippy to the new hook
This also adds a `extra_info` callback so clippy can include its own version number, which differs
from rustc's.
- Call `install_ice_hook` in rustfmt
rustdoc: catch and don't blow up on impl Trait cycles
Fixes#110629
An odd feature of Rust is that `Foo` is invalid, but `Bar` is okay:
type Foo<'a, 'b> = Box<dyn PartialEq<Foo<'a, 'b>>>;
type Bar<'a, 'b> = impl PartialEq<Bar<'a, 'b>>;
To get it right, track every time rustdoc descends into a type alias, so if it shows up twice, it can be write the path instead of infinitely expanding it.
An odd feature of Rust is that `Foo` is invalid, but `Bar` is okay:
type Foo<'a, 'b> = Box<dyn PartialEq<Foo<'a, 'b>>>;
type Bar<'a, 'b> = impl PartialEq<Bar<'a, 'b>>;
To get it right, track every time rustdoc descends into a type alias,
so if it shows up twice, it can be write the path instead of
infinitely expanding it.
Move most rustdoc-ui tests into subdirectories
This makes it easier to know where to add a new test, and makes the top-level directory less overwhelming.
Improve tests for #110138
These should live in rustdoc-json, not rustdoc-ui, so we can run assertions, and not just check there's no ICE
CC #100515, as we never document this suite
r? rustdoc
rustdoc: Fix invalid handling of nested items with `--document-private-items`
Fixes#110422.
The problem is that only impl block and re-exported `macro_rules!` items are "visible" as nested items. This PR adds the missing checks to handle this correctly.
cc `@compiler-errors`
r? `@notriddle`
Replace rustdoc-ui/{c,z}-help tests with a stable run-make test
This make rustdoc resilient to changes in the debugging options while still testing that it matches rustc.
Fixes https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/109391.
Move `doc(primitive)` future incompat warning to `invalid_doc_attributes`
Fixes#88070.
It's been a while since this was turned into a "future incompatible lint" so I think we can now turn it into a hard error without problem.
r? `@jyn514`
rustdoc: Fix invalid suggestions on ambiguous intra doc links v2
Fixes https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/108653.
This is another approach to fixing the same issue. This time, we keep the computed information around instead of re-computing it.
Strangely enough, the order for ambiguities seem to have been changed. Not an issue but it creates a lot of diff...
So which version do you prefer?
r? `@notriddle`
`-Cdebuginfo=1` was never line tables only and
can't be due to backwards compatibility issues.
This was clarified and an option for line tables only
was added. Additionally an option for line info
directives only was added, which is well needed for
some targets. The debug info options should now
behave the same as clang's debug info options.
rustdoc: Fix ICE for intra-doc link on intermediate re-export
Fixes https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/109282.
This PR is based on #109266 as it includes its commit to make this work.
`@petrochenkov:` It was exactly as you predicted, adding the `DefId` to the attributes fixed the error for intermediate re-exports as well. Thanks a lot!
r? `@petrochenkov`
Add `-Z time-passes-format` to allow specifying a JSON output for `-Z time-passes`
This adds back the `-Z time` option as that is useful for [my rustc benchmark tool](https://github.com/Zoxc/rcb), reverting https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/102725. It now uses nanoseconds and bytes as the units so it is renamed to `time-precise`.
Rollup of 8 pull requests
Successful merges:
- #107062 (Do some cleanup of doc/index.md)
- #107890 (Lint against `Iterator::map` receiving a callable that returns `()`)
- #108431 (Add regression test for #107918)
- #108432 (test: drop unused deps)
- #108436 (make "proc macro panicked" translatable)
- #108444 (docs/test: add UI test and docs for `E0476`)
- #108449 (Do not lint ineffective unstable trait impl for unresolved trait)
- #108456 (Complete migrating `ast_passes` to derive diagnostics)
Failed merges:
r? `@ghost`
`@rustbot` modify labels: rollup
Implement -Zlink-directives=yes/no
`-Zlink-directives=no` will ignored `#[link]` directives while compiling a crate, so nothing is emitted into the crate's metadata. The assumption is that the build system already knows about the crate's native dependencies and can provide them at link time without these directives.
This is another way to address issue # #70093, which is currently addressed by `-Zlink-native-libraries` (implemented in #70095). The latter is implemented at link time, which has the effect of ignoring `#[link]` in *every* crate. This makes it a very large hammer as it requires all native dependencies to be known to the build system to be at all usable, including those in sysroot libraries. I think this means its effectively unused, and definitely under-used.
Being able to control this on a crate-by-crate basis should make it much easier to apply when needed.
I'm not sure if we need both mechanisms, but we can decide that later.
cc `@pcwalton` `@cramertj`
[breaking change] Remove a rustdoc back compat warning
This warning was introduced in https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/62855 for users who use `rustdoc` directly on proc macro crates (instead of using `cargo doc`) without passing `--crate-type proc-macro` (which `cargo doc` passed automatically).
`-Zlink-directives=no` will ignored `#[link]` directives while compiling a
crate, so nothing is emitted into the crate's metadata. The assumption is
that the build system already knows about the crate's native dependencies
and can provide them at link time without these directives.
This is another way to address issue # #70093, which is currently addressed
by `-Zlink-native-libraries` (implemented in #70095). The latter is
implemented at link time, which has the effect of ignoring `#[link]`
in *every* crate. This makes it a very large hammer as it requires all
native dependencies to be known to the build system to be at all usable,
including those in sysroot libraries. I think this means its effectively
unused, and definitely under-used.
Being able to control this on a crate-by-crate basis should make it much
easier to apply when needed.
I'm not sure if we need both mechanisms, but we can decide that later.
remove unstable `pick_stable_methods_before_any_unstable` flag
This flag was only added in #90329 in case there was any issue with the impl so that it would be easy to tell nightly users to use the flag to disable the new logic to fix their code. It's now been enabled for two years and also I can't find any issues corresponding to this new functionality? This flag made it way harder to understand how this code works so it would be nice to remove it and simplify what's going on.
cc `@nbdd0121`
r? `@oli-obk`
Including unstable lints in the lint group produces unintuitive behavior
on stable (see #106289). Meanwhile, if we only included unstable lints
on nightly and not on stable, we could end up with confusing bugs that
were hard to compare across versions of Rust that lacked code changes.
I think that only including stable lints in `rustdoc::all`, no matter
the release channel, is the most intuitive option. Users can then
control unstable lints individually, which is reasonable since they have
to enable the feature gates individually anyway.
Most tests involving save-analysis were removed, but I kept a few where
the `-Zsave-analysis` was an add-on to the main thing being tested,
rather than the main thing being tested.
For `x.py install`, the `rust-analysis` target has been removed.
For `x.py dist`, the `rust-analysis` target has been kept in a
degenerate form: it just produces a single file `reduced.json`
indicating that save-analysis has been removed. This is necessary for
rustup to keep working.
Closes#43606.
Introduce `-Zterminal-urls` to use OSC8 for error codes
Terminals supporting the OSC8 Hyperlink Extension can support inline anchors where the text is user defineable but clicking on it opens a browser to a specified URLs, just like `<a href="URL">` does in HTML.
https://gist.github.com/egmontkob/eb114294efbcd5adb1944c9f3cb5feda
Terminals supporting the OSC8 Hyperlink Extension can support inline
anchors where the text is user defineable but clicking on it opens a
browser to a specified URLs, just like `<a href="URL">` does in HTML.
https://gist.github.com/egmontkob/eb114294efbcd5adb1944c9f3cb5feda
Recognize all bells and whistles that LLVM's XRay pass is capable of.
The always/never settings are a bit dumb without attributes but they're
still there. The default instruction count is chosen by the compiler,
not LLVM pass. We'll do it later.
Use stable metric for const eval limit instead of current terminator-based logic
This patch adds a `MirPass` that inserts a new MIR instruction `ConstEvalCounter` to any loops and function calls in the CFG. This instruction is used during Const Eval to count against the `const_eval_limit`, and emit the `StepLimitReached` error, replacing the current logic which uses Terminators only.
The new method of counting loops and function calls should be more stable across compiler versions (i.e., not cause crates that compiled successfully before, to no longer compile when changes to the MIR generation/optimization are made).
Also see: #103877
Emit a single error for contiguous sequences of unknown tokens
Closes#106101
On encountering a sequence of identical source characters which are unknown tokens, note the amount of subsequent characters and advance past them silently. The old behavior was to emit an error and 'help' note for every single one.
`@rustbot` label +A-diagnostics +A-parser