Change link_sanitizer_runtime() to check if the sanitizer library exists
in the specified/session sysroot, and if it doesn't exist, use the
default sysroot.
Add JsonDocCk Tool for rustdoc-json
Implements a new test system for rustdoc JSON output, jsondocck. Modeled after htmldocck, this tool reads directives in the test file and checks them against the output. These directives use JSONPath, a pair to XPath for json. This obsoletes the old strict subset tool, allowing both finer-grained control of what is tested and better errors on failure.
Not sure on the changes to Cargo.lock, I can back that out if needed.
r? `@jyn514`
std: Update wasi-libc commit of the wasm32-wasi target
This brings in an implementation of `current_dir` and `set_current_dir`
(emulation in `wasi-libc`) as well as an updated version of finding
relative paths. This also additionally updates clang to the latest
release to build wasi-libc with.
Serialize dependency graph directly from DepGraph
Reduce memory usage by serializing dep graph directly from `DepGraph`,
rather than copying it into `SerializedDepGraph` and serializing that.
BufWriter: Provide into_raw_parts
If something goes wrong, one might want to unpeel the layers of nested
Writers to perform recovery actions on the underlying writer, or reuse
its resources.
`into_inner` can be used for this when the inner writer is still
working. But when the inner writer is broken, and returning errors,
`into_inner` simply gives you the error from flush, and the same
`Bufwriter` back again.
Here I provide the necessary function, which I have chosen to call
`into_raw_parts`.
I had to do something with `panicked`. Returning it to the caller as
a boolean seemed rather bare. Throwing the buffered data away in this
situation also seems unfriendly: maybe the programmer knows something
about the underlying writer and can recover somehow.
So I went for a custom Error. This may be overkill, but it does have
the nice property that a caller who actually wants to look at the
buffered data, rather than simply extracting the inner writer, will be
told by the type system if they forget to handle the panicked case.
If a caller doesn't need the buffer, it can just be discarded. That
WriterPanicked is a newtype around Vec<u8> means that hopefully the
layouts of the Ok and Err variants can be very similar, with just a
boolean discriminant. So this custom error type should compile down
to nearly no code.
*If this general idea is felt appropriate, I will open a tracking issue, etc.*
BTreeMap: prefer bulk_steal functions over specialized ones
The `steal_` functions (apart from their return value) are basically specializations of the more general `bulk_steal_` functions. This PR removes the specializations. The library/alloc benchmarks say this is never slower and up to 6% faster.
r? ``@Mark-Simulacrum``
Improve search result tab handling
Fixes#80378.
If the current search result tab is empty, it picks the first non-empty one. If all are empty, the current one doesn't change. It can be tested with "-> string" (where only the "returned elements" tab is not empty).
r? `@jyn514`
Fix `unused_unsafe` label with `unsafe_block_in_unsafe_fn
Previously, the following code:
```rust
#![feature(unsafe_block_in_unsafe_fn)]
unsafe fn foo() {
unsafe { unsf() }
}
unsafe fn unsf() {}
```
Would give the following warning:
```
warning: unnecessary `unsafe` block
--> src/lib.rs:4:5
|
4 | unsafe { unsf() }
| ^^^^^^ unnecessary `unsafe` block
|
= note: `#[warn(unused_unsafe)]` on by default
```
which doesn't point out that the block is in an `unsafe fn`.
Tracking issue: #71668
cc #79208
don't suggest erroneous trailing comma after `..`
In #76612, suggestions were added for missing fields in patterns. However, the suggestions are being inserted just at the end
of the last field in the pattern—before any trailing comma after the last field. This resulted in the "if you don't care about missing fields" suggestion to recommend code with a trailing comma after the field ellipsis (`..,`), which is actually not legal ("`..` must be at the end and cannot have a trailing comma")!
Incidentally, the doc-comment on `error_unmentioned_fields` was using `you_cant_use_this_field` as an example field name (presumably copy-paste inherited from the description of Issue #76077), but the present author found this confusing, because unmentioned fields aren't necessarily unusable.
The suggested code in the diff this commit introduces to `destructuring-assignment/struct_destructure_fail.stderr` doesn't work, but it didn't work beforehand, either (because of the "found reserved identifier `_`" thing), so you can't really call it a regression; it could be fixed in a separate PR.
Resolves#78511.
r? `@davidtwco` or `@estebank`
As it was suggested in #81037 `SpecFromIter` is not
in the scope and therefore (even it should fail),
we get a warning when we try do document private
intems in `rust/library/alloc/`.
This fixes#81037 by adding the trait in the scope
and also adding an `allow(unused_imports)` flag so that
the compiler does not complain, Since the trait is not used
per se in the code, it's just needed to have properly documented
docs.
Stability oddity with const intrinsics
cc `@RalfJung`
In https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/80699#discussion_r551495670 `@usbalbin` realized we accepted some intrinsics as `const` without a `#[rustc_const_(un)stable]` attribute. I did some digging, and that example works because intrinsics inherit their stability from their parents... including `#[rustc_const_(un)stable]` attributes. While we may want to fix that (not sure, wasn't there just a MCPed PR that caused this on purpose?), we definitely want tests for it, thus this PR adding tests and some fun tracing statements.
Apparently `tidy` has a hard limit of 2830 tests in the
`src/test/ui/issues/` directory, and this test hit that limit.
`src/test/ui/consts/` is probably a better location anyway.
BTreeMap: convert search functions to methods
And further tweak the signature of `search_linear`, in preparation of a better #81094.
r? `@Mark-Simulacrum`