Rollup of 7 pull requests
Successful merges:
- #135542 (Add the concrete syntax for precise capturing to 1.82 release notes.)
- #135700 (Emit single privacy error for struct literal with multiple private fields and add test for `default_field_values` privacy)
- #135722 (make it possible to use ci-rustc on tarball sources)
- #135729 (Add debug assertions to compiler profile)
- #135736 (rustdoc: Fix flaky doctest test)
- #135738 (Replace usages of `map_or(bool, ...)` with `is_{some_and|none_or|ok_and}`)
- #135747 (Rename FileName::QuoteExpansion to CfgSpec)
r? `@ghost`
`@rustbot` modify labels: rollup
Always force non-trimming of path in `unreachable_patterns` lint
Creating a "trimmed DefID path" when no error is being emitted is an ICE (on purpose). If we create a trimmed path for a lint that is then silenced before being emitted causes a known ICE. This side-steps the issue by always using `with_no_trimmed_path!`.
This was verified to fix https://github.com/quinn-rs/quinn/, but couldn't write a repro case for the test suite.
Fix#135289.
When we encounter a constant in a pattern, we check if it is non-structural. If so, we check if the type implements `PartialEq`, but for types with escaping bound vars the check would be incorrect as is, so we break early. This is ok because these types would be filtered anyways.
Fix#134764.
Creating a "trimmed DefID path" when no error is being emitted is an ICE (on purpose). If we create a trimmed path for a lint that is then silenced before being emitted causes a known ICE. This side-steps the issue by always using `with_no_trimmed_path!`.
This was verified to fix https://github.com/quinn-rs/quinn/, but couldn't write a repro case for the test suite.
Fix#135289.
turn rustc_box into an intrinsic
I am not entirely sure why this was made a special magic attribute, but an intrinsic seems like a more natural way to add magic expressions to the language.
rustc_intrinsic: support functions without body
We synthesize a HIR body `loop {}` but such bodyless intrinsics.
Most of the diff is due to turning `ItemKind::Fn` into a brace (named-field) enum variant, because it carries a `bool`-typed field now. This is to remember whether the function has a body. MIR building panics to avoid ever translating the fake `loop {}` body, and the intrinsic logic uses the lack of a body to implicitly mark that intrinsic as must-be-overridden.
I first tried actually having no body rather than generating the fake body, but there's a *lot* of code that assumes that all function items have HIR and MIR, so this didn't work very well. Then I noticed that even `rustc_intrinsic_must_be_overridden` intrinsics have MIR generated (they are filled with an `Unreachable` terminator) so I guess I am not the first to discover this. ;)
r? `@oli-obk`
Make sure we handle `backwards_incompatible_lint` drops appropriately in drop elaboration
In #131326, a new kind of scheduled drop (`drop_kind: DropKind::Value` + `backwards_incompatible_lint: true`) was added so that we could insert a new kind of no-op MIR statement (`backward incompatible drop`) for linting purposes.
These drops were intended to have *no side-effects*, but drop elaboration code forgot to handle these drops specially and they were handled otherwise as normal drops in most of the code. This ends up being **unsound** since we insert more than one drop call for some values, which means that `Drop::drop` could be called more than once.
This PR fixes this by splitting out the `DropKind::ForLint` and adjusting the code. I'm not totally certain if all of the places I've adjusted are either reachable or correct, but I'm pretty certain that it's *more* correct than it was previously.
cc `@dingxiangfei2009`
r? nikomatsakis
Fixes#134482
Do not do if ! else, use unnegated cond and swap the branches instead
I'm tidying up my ergonomic ref counting PR and I'm going to make some small, simple and unrelated changes outside that PR, so the main PR sticks more straight to the point.
Clarify the match ergonomics 2024 migration lint's output
This makes a few changes:
- Rather than using the whole pattern as a span for the lint, this collects spans for each problematic default binding mode reset and labels them with why they're problems.
- The lint's suggestions are now verbose-styled, so that it's clear what's being suggested vs. what's problematic.
- The wording is now less technical, and the hard error version of this diagnostic now links to the same reference material as the lint (currently an unwritten page of the edition guide).
I'm not totally confident in the wording or formatting, so I'd appreciate feedback on that in particular. I tried to draw a connection with word choice between the labels and the suggestion, but it might be imprecise, unclear, or cluttered. If so, it might be worth making the labels more terse and adding notes that explain them, but that's harder to read in a way too.
cc ```@Nadrieril``` ```@Jules-Bertholet```
Closes#133854. For reference, the error from that issue becomes:
```
error: pattern uses features incompatible with edition 2024
--> $DIR/remove-me.rs:6:25
|
LL | map.iter().filter(|(&(_x, _y), &_c)| false);
| ^ ^ cannot implicitly match against multiple layers of reference
| |
| cannot implicitly match against multiple layers of reference
|
help: make the implied reference pattern explicit
|
LL | map.iter().filter(|&(&(_x, _y), &_c)| false);
| +
```
`rustc_span::symbol` defines some things that are re-exported from
`rustc_span`, such as `Symbol` and `sym`. But it doesn't re-export some
closely related things such as `Ident` and `kw`. So you can do `use
rustc_span::{Symbol, sym}` but you have to do `use
rustc_span::symbol::{Ident, kw}`, which is inconsistent for no good
reason.
This commit re-exports `Ident`, `kw`, and `MacroRulesNormalizedIdent`,
and changes many `rustc_span::symbol::` qualifiers in `compiler/` to
`rustc_span::`. This is a 200+ net line of code reduction, mostly
because many files with two `use rustc_span` items can be reduced to
one.