Update mdbook to 0.4.37
This updates mdbook to 0.4.37.
Changelog: https://github.com/rust-lang/mdBook/blob/master/CHANGELOG.md#mdbook-0437
The primary change is the update to pulldown-cmark which has a large number of markdown parsing changes. There shouldn't be any significant changes to the rendering of any of the books (I have posted some PRs to fix some minor issues to the ones that were affected).
The existing regex-based HTML parsing was just too primitive to
correctly handle HTML content. Some books have legitimate `href="…"`
text which should not be validated because it is part of the text, not
actual HTML.
Actually abort in -Zpanic-abort-tests
When a test fails in panic=abort, it can be useful to have a debugger or other tooling hook into the `abort()` call for debugging. Doing this some other way would require it to hard code details of Rust's panic machinery.
There's no reason we couldn't have done this in the first place; using a single exit code for "success" or "failed" was just simpler. Now we are aware of the special exit codes for posix and windows platforms, logging a special error if an unrecognized code is used on those platforms, and falling back to just "failure" on other platforms.
This continues to account for `#[should_panic]` inside the test process itself, so there's no risk of misinterpreting a random call to `abort()` as an expected panic. Any exit code besides `TR_OK` is logged as a test failure.
As an added benefit, this would allow us to support panic=immediate_abort (but not `#[should_panic]`), without noise about unexpected exit codes when a test fails.
Fixes footnote handling in rustdoc
Fixes#100638.
You can now declare footnotes like this:
```rust
//! Reference to footnotes A[^1], B[^2] and C[^3].
//!
//! [^1]: Footnote A.
//! [^2]: Footnote B.
//! [^3]: Footnote C.
```
r? `@notriddle`
Error codes are integers, but `String` is used everywhere to represent
them. Gross!
This commit introduces `ErrCode`, an integral newtype for error codes,
replacing `String`. It also introduces a constant for every error code,
e.g. `E0123`, and removes the `error_code!` macro. The constants are
imported wherever used with `use rustc_errors::codes::*`.
With the old code, we have three different ways to specify an error code
at a use point:
```
error_code!(E0123) // macro call
struct_span_code_err!(dcx, span, E0123, "msg"); // bare ident arg to macro call
\#[diag(name, code = "E0123")] // string
struct Diag;
```
With the new code, they all use the `E0123` constant.
```
E0123 // constant
struct_span_code_err!(dcx, span, E0123, "msg"); // constant
\#[diag(name, code = E0123)] // constant
struct Diag;
```
The commit also changes the structure of the error code definitions:
- `rustc_error_codes` now just defines a higher-order macro listing the
used error codes and nothing else.
- Because that's now the only thing in the `rustc_error_codes` crate, I
moved it into the `lib.rs` file and removed the `error_codes.rs` file.
- `rustc_errors` uses that macro to define everything, e.g. the error
code constants and the `DIAGNOSTIC_TABLES`. This is in its new
`codes.rs` file.
Avoid code generation for ThinVec<Diagnostic>'s destructor in the query system
This avoids 2 instances of the destructor of `ThinVec<Diagnostic>` from being included in `execute_job`. It also outlines the cold branch in `store_side_effects` / `store_side_effects_for_anon_node`.
pat_analysis: Don't rely on contiguous `VariantId`s outside of rustc
Today's pattern_analysis uses `BitSet` and `IndexVec` on the provided enum variant ids, which only makes sense if these ids count the variants from 0. In rust-analyzer, the variant ids are global interning ids, which would make `BitSet` and `IndexVec` ridiculously wasteful. In this PR I add some shims to use `FxHashSet`/`FxHashMap` instead outside of rustc.
r? ```@compiler-errors```
Use `zip_eq` to enforce that things being zipped have equal sizes
Some `zip`s are best enforced to be equal, since size mismatches suggest deeper bugs in the compiler.
Exhaustiveness: remove the need for arena-allocation within the algorithm
After https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/119688, exhaustiveness checking doesn't need access to the arena anymore. This simplifies the lifetime story and makes it compile on stable without the extra dependency.
r? `@compiler-errors`
next solver: provisional cache
this adds the cache removed in #115843. However, it should now correctly track whether a provisional result depends on an inductive or coinductive stack.
While working on this, I was using the following doc: https://hackmd.io/VsQPjW3wSTGUSlmgwrDKOA. I don't think it's too helpful to understanding this, but am somewhat hopeful that the inline comments are more useful.
There are quite a few future perf improvements here. Given that this is already very involved I don't believe it is worth it (for now). While working on this PR one of my few attempts to significantly improve perf ended up being unsound again because I was not careful enough ✨
r? `@compiler-errors`
annotate-snippets: update to 0.10
Ports `annotate-snippets` to 0.10, temporary dupes versions; other crates left that depends on 0.9 is `ui_test` and `rustfmt`.