More accurate suggestion for `self.` and `Self::`
Detect that we can't suggest `self.` in an associated function without `&self` receiver.
Partially address #115992.
r? ``@compiler-errors``
Check that closure/generator's interior/capture types are sized
check that closure upvars and generator interiors are sized. this check is only necessary when `unsized_fn_params` or `unsized_locals` is enabled, so only check if those are active.
Fixes#93622Fixes#61335Fixes#68543
Point at cause of expectation of `break` value when possible
When encountering a type error within the value of a `break` statement, climb the HIR tree to identify if the expectation comes from an assignment or a return type (if the loop is the tail expression of a `fn`).
Fix#115905.
Rollup of 6 pull requests
Successful merges:
- #115770 (Match on elem first while building move paths)
- #115999 (Capture scrutinee of if let guards correctly)
- #116056 (Make unsized casts illegal)
- #116061 (Remove TaKO8Ki from review rotation)
- #116062 (Change `start` to `#[start]` in some diagnosis)
- #116067 (Open the FileEncoder file for reading and writing)
r? `@ghost`
`@rustbot` modify labels: rollup
Open the FileEncoder file for reading and writing
Maybe I just don't know `File` well enough, but the previous comment didn't make it clear enough to me that we can't use `File::create`. This one does.
Fixes https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/116055
r? `@WaffleLapkin`
Match on elem first while building move paths
While working on https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/115025 `@lcnr` and I observed "move_paths_for" function matched on the `Ty` instead of `Projection` which seems flawed as it's the `Projection`s that cause the problem not the type.
r? `@lcnr`
[breaking change] Validate crate name in `--extern` [MCP 650]
Reject non-ASCII-identifier crate names passed to the CLI option `--extern` (`rustc`, `rustdoc`).
Implements [MCP 650](https://github.com/rust-lang/compiler-team/issues/650) (except that we only allow ASCII identifiers not arbitrary Rust identifiers).
Fixes#113035.
[As mentioned on Zulip](https://rust-lang.zulipchat.com/#narrow/stream/233931-t-compiler.2Fmajor-changes/topic/Disallow.20non-identifier-valid.20--extern.20cr.E2.80.A6.20compiler-team.23650/near/376826988), doing a crater run probably doesn't make sense since it wouldn't yield anything. Most users don't interact with `rustc` directly but only ever through Cargo which always passes a valid crate name to `--extern` when it invokes `rustc` and `rustdoc`. In any case, the user wouldn't be able to use such a crate name in the source code anyway.
Note that I'm not using [`rustc_session::output::validate_crate_name`](https://doc.rust-lang.org/nightly/nightly-rustc/rustc_session/output/fn.validate_crate_name.html) (used for `--crate-name` and `#![crate_name]`) since the latter doesn't reject non-ASCII crate names and ones that start with a digit.
As an aside, I've also thought about getting rid of `validate_crate_name` entirely in a separate PR (with another MCP) in favor of `is_ascii_ident` to reject more weird `--crate-name`s, `#![crate_name]`s and file names but I think that would lead to a lot of actual breakage, namely because of file names starting with a digit. In `tests/ui` 9 tests would be impacted for example.
CC `@estebank`
r? `@est31`
adjust how closure/generator types are printed
I saw `&[closure@$DIR/issue-20862.rs:2:5]` and I thought it is a slice type, because that's usually what `&[_]` is... it took me a while to realize that this is just a confusing printer and actually there's no slice. Let's use something that cannot be mistaken for a regular type.
Allow `-Z treat-err-as-bug=0`
Makes `-Z treat-err-as-bug=0` behave as if the option wasn't present instead of asking the value to be ⩾ 1. This enables a quick on/off of the option, as you only need to change one character instead of removing the whole `-Z`.
Also update some text, e.g.
```bash
$ rustc -Z help | grep treat-err-as-bug
-Z treat-err-as-bug=val -- treat error number `val` that occurs as bug
```
where the value could be interpreted as an error code instead of an ordinal.
give FutureIncompatibilityReason variants more explicit names
Also make the `reason` field mandatory when declaring a lint, to make sure this is a deliberate decision.