[`ptr_as_ptr`]: Fix duplicate diagnostics
Relates to https://github.com/rust-lang/rust-clippy/issues/12379
`ptr_as_ptr::check` is called twice in `clippy_lints/src/casts/mod.rs`
---
changelog: [`ptr_as_ptr`]: Fix duplicate diagnostics
interpret: remove outdated comment
In https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/107756, allocation became generally fallible, so the "only panic if there is provenance" no longer applies.
r? ``@oli-obk``
Change a diagnostics-path-only `DefineOpaqueTypes` to `Yes`.
This can't possibly affect compilation, so it's safe to flip, even if I couldn't come up with an affected test
r? ``@compiler-errors``
Stabilize checking of cfgs at compile-time: `--check-cfg` option
This PR stabilize the `--check-cfg` CLI option of `rustc` (and `rustdoc`) 🎉.
In particular this PR does two things:
1. it makes the `--check-cfg` option stable
2. and it moves the documentation to the stable books
FCP: https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/82450#issuecomment-1965328542Resolves#82450
``@rustbot`` labels +S-blocked +F-check-cfg
r? ``@petrochenkov``
fetch submodule before checking llvm stamp
Previously, we were checking the LLVM stamp before fetching the submodule which leads to not being able to compile llvm on submodule updates.
Fixes#122612Fixes#122787
This pull request partially reverts changes from e16c3b4a44
Original motivation for this assert was described with "A WorkProduct without a saved file is useless"
which was true at the time but now it is possible to have work products with other types of files
(llvm-ir, asm, etc) and there are bugreports for this failure:
For example: https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/123695
Fixes https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/123234
Now existing `assert` and `.unwrap_or_else` are unified into a single
check that emits slightly more user friendly error message if an object
files was meant to be produced but it's missing
rustdoc: update the module-level docs of `rustdoc::clean`
Let's update this 11-year-old documentation.
This would've helped me greatly when first starting out.
Please point out if I should add, clarify or correct anything.
I plan on looking through the rustc dev guide later to see if anything can be expanded upon over there, too.
Move size assertions for `mir::syntax` types into the same file
A redundant size assertion for `StatementKind` was added in #122937, because the existing assertion was in a different file.
This PR cleans that up, and also moves the `TerminatorKind` assertion into the same file where it belongs, to avoid the same thing happening again.
r? `@nnethercote`
Opaque types have no namespace
Opaques are never referenced by name -- even when we have `type X = impl Sized;`, `X` is the name of the type alias, not the opaque.
Make `suggest_deref_closure_return` more idiomatic/easier to understand
The only functional change here really is just making it not use a fresh type variable for upvars. I'll point that out in the code.
The rest of the changes are just stylistic, because reading this code was really confusing me (variable names were vague, ways of accessing types were unidiomatic, order of operations was kind of strange, etc).
This is stacked on #123989.
r? oli-obk since you approved #122213
Better graphviz output for SCCs and NLL constraints
This PR modifies the output for `-Z dump-mir-graphviz=yes`. Specifically, it changes the output of the files `.-------.nll.0.regioncx.all.dot` and `nll.0.regioncx.scc.dot` to be easier to read and contain some information that helped me during debugging. In particular:
- SCC indices are contracted to `SCC(n)` instead of `ConstraintSccIndex(n)` to compress the nodes
- SCC regions are in `{}` rather than `[]` (controversial since they are technically ordered by index, but I figured they're more sets than arrays conceptually since they're equivalence classes).
- For regions in other universes than the root, also show the region universe (as ?8/U1)
- For regions with external names, show the external name in parenthesis
- For the region graph where edges are locations, render the All variant of the enum without the file since it's extremely long and often destroys the rendering
- For region graph edge annotations for single locations, remove the wrapping around the Location variant and just add its contents since this can be unambiguously done
Example output (from the function `foo()` of `tests/ui/error-codes/E0582.rs`) for an SCC graph:
![a graph showing SCCs](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/assets/102855/0b998338-0379-4829-b99e-d8105c094897)
...and for the constraints:
![a graph showing regions and their constraints](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/assets/102855/e984c4ca-7aa2-4db2-9878-bf38fe8208d5)
This PR also gives `UniverseIndex`es the `is_root()` method since this is now an operation that happens three times in the borrowck crate.
Update ar_archive_writer to 0.2.0
This adds a whole bunch of tests checking for any difference with llvm's archive writer. It also fixes two mistakes in the porting from C++ to Rust. The first one causes a divergence for Mach-O archives which may or may not be harmless. The second will definitively cause issues, but only applies to thin archives, which rustc currently doesn't create.
Correct usage note on OpenOptions::append()
This PR aims to correct the following usage note in `OpenOptions::append()`, which currently contains misleading information:
> One maybe obvious note when using append-mode: make sure that all data that belongs together is written to the file in one operation. This can be done by concatenating strings before passing them to [write()](https://doc.rust-lang.org/std/io/trait.Write.html#tymethod.write), or using a buffered writer (with a buffer of adequate size), and calling [flush()](https://doc.rust-lang.org/std/io/trait.Write.html#tymethod.flush) when the message is complete.
The above is misleading because, despite appearances, neither concatenating data before passing it to `write()`, nor delaying writes using `BufWriter`, ensures atomicity. `File::write()`, as well as the underlying `write(2)` system call, makes no guarantees that the data passed to it will be written out in full. It is allowed to write out only a part of the data, and has a return value that tells you how much it has written, at which point it has already returned and modified the file with partial data. Given this limitation, the only way to ensure atomicity of appends is through external locking.
Attempting to ensure atomicity by issuing data in a single `write()` is a footgun often stumbled upon by beginners, which shouldn't be advertised in the docs. The worst thing about the footgun is that it *appears* to work at first, only failing when the string becomes sufficiently large, or when some internal properties of the output file descriptor change (e.g. it is switched from regular file to a special file that talks to a socket or TTY), making it accept smaller writes. Additionally, the suggestion to use `BufWriter` skims over the issue of buffer sizes, as well as the fact that `BufWriter::flush()` contains a *loop* that can happily issue multiple writes. This loop is completely opaque to the caller, so you can't even assert atomicity after-the-fact.
The PR makes the following changes:
* removes the paragraph that suggests concatenating strings to pass them to `write()` for atomicity or using `BufWriter`
* adds a paragraph explaining why attempting to use `write()` to append atomically is not a good idea.