The posix_spawnattr_init & posix_spawn_file_actions_init might fail,
but their return code is not checked.
Check for non-zero return code and destroy only succesfully initialized
objects.
The cvt function compares the argument with -1 and when equal returns a new
io::Error constructed from errno. It is used together posix_spawn_* functions.
This is incorrect. Those functions do not set errno. Instead they return
non-zero error code directly.
Check for non-zero return code and use it to construct a new io::Error.
Downgrade string_lit_as_bytes to nursery
Between #1402 (regarding `to_owned`) and #4494 (regarding `impl Read`), as well as other confusion I've seen hit in my work codebase involving string_lit_as_bytes (`"...".as_bytes().into()`), I don't think this lint is at a quality to be enabled by default.
I would consider re-enabling this lint after it is updated to understand when the surrounding type information is sufficient to unsize `b"..."` to &\[u8\] without causing a type error.
As currently implemented, this lint is pushing people to write `&b"_"[..]` which is not an improvement over `"_".as_bytes()` as far as I am concerned.
---
changelog: Remove string_lit_as_bytes from default set of enabled lints
Add compile fail test for issue 27675
A recently merged PR (#73905) strengthened the checks on bounds of associated items. This rejects the attack path of #27675 which consisted of constructing a `dyn Trait<Item=T>` where `T` would not fulfill the bounds required on `Item` of the `Trait` behind the dyn object.
This regression test, extracted from [the weaponized instance](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/27675#issuecomment-696956878), checks that this is rejected.
(docs): make mutex error comment consistent with codebase
Although exceptionally minor, I found this stands out from other error reporting language used in doc comments. With the existence of the `failure` crate, I suppose this could be slightly ambiguous. In any case, this change brings the particular comment into a consistent state with other mentions of returning errors.
BTreeMap: comment why drain_filter's size_hint is somewhat pessimistic
The `size_hint` of the `DrainFilter` iterator doesn't adjust as you iterate. This hardly seems important to me, but there has been a comparable PR #64383 in the past. I guess a scenario is that you first iterate half the map manually and keep most of the key/value pairs in the map, and then tell the predicate to drain most of the key/value pairs and `.collect` the iterator over the remaining half of the map.
I am totally ambivalent whether this is better or not.
r? @Mark-Simulacrum
RunCompiler::new takes non-optional params, and optional
params can be set using set_*field_name* method.
finally `run` will forward all fields to `run_compiler`.
Upgrade to tracing-subscriber 0.2.13
The primary motivation is to get the changes from
https://github.com/tokio-rs/tracing/pull/990. Example output:
```
$ RUSTDOC_LOG=debug rustdoc +rustc2
warning: some trace filter directives would enable traces that are disabled statically
| `debug` would enable the DEBUG level for all targets
= note: the static max level is `info`
= help: to enable DEBUG logging, remove the `max_level_info` feature
```
r? `@Mark-Simulacrum`
cc `@hawkw` ❤️
Use `pretty::create_dump_file` for dumping dataflow results
The old code wasn't incorporating promoteds into the path, meaning other `dot` files could get clobbered. Use the MIR dump infrastructure to generate paths so that this doesn't occur in the future.
Fix unicode regexen with bytes::Regex
fixes#6005
The rationale for this is that since we wrote that lint, `bytes::Regex` was extended to be able to use unicode character classes.
---
changelog: [`invalid_regex`]: allow unicode character classes in bytes regex.
- Make the parent module conditional on whether the docs are on a re-export
- Make `resolve_link` take `&Item` instead of `&mut Item`
Previously the borrow checker gave an error about multiple mutable
borrows, because `dox` borrowed from `item`.
- Fix `crate::` for re-exports
`crate` means something different depending on where the attribute
came from.
- Make it work for `#[doc]` attributes too
This required combining several attributes as one so they would keep
the links.
- Add `parent_module` to `DocFragment`
- Require the `parent_module` of the item being inlined
- Preserve the hir_id for ExternCrates so rustdoc can find the parent module later
- Take an optional `parent_module` for `build_impl` and `merge_attrs`.
Preserve the difference between parent modules for each doc-comment.
- Support arbitrarily many re-exports in from_ast. In retrospect this is
probably not used and could be simplified to a single
`Option<(Attrs, DefId)>`.
- Don't require the parent_module for all `impl`s, just inlined items
In particular, this will be `None` whenever the attribute is not on a
re-export.
- Only store the parent_module, not the HirId
When re-exporting a re-export, the HirId is not available. Fortunately,
`collect_intra_doc_links` doesn't actually need all the info from a
HirId, just the parent module.
Unset GIT_DIR in pre-commit hook
Works around https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/77620. This won't help any other hooks you write manually, but hopefully people won't feel the need to do that now there's an 'official' one.
r? `@Mark-Simulacrum`
cc `@caass`
Detect blocks that could be struct expr bodies
This approach lives exclusively in the parser, so struct expr bodies
that are syntactically correct on their own but are otherwise incorrect
will still emit confusing errors, like in the following case:
```rust
fn foo() -> Foo {
bar: Vec::new()
}
```
```
error[E0425]: cannot find value `bar` in this scope
--> src/file.rs:5:5
|
5 | bar: Vec::new()
| ^^^ expecting a type here because of type ascription
error[E0214]: parenthesized type parameters may only be used with a `Fn` trait
--> src/file.rs:5:15
|
5 | bar: Vec::new()
| ^^^^^ only `Fn` traits may use parentheses
error[E0107]: wrong number of type arguments: expected 1, found 0
--> src/file.rs:5:10
|
5 | bar: Vec::new()
| ^^^^^^^^^^ expected 1 type argument
```
If that field had a trailing comma, that would be a parse error and it
would trigger the new, more targetted, error:
```
error: struct literal body without path
--> file.rs:4:17
|
4 | fn foo() -> Foo {
| _________________^
5 | | bar: Vec::new(),
6 | | }
| |_^
|
help: you might have forgotten to add the struct literal inside the block
|
4 | fn foo() -> Foo { Path {
5 | bar: Vec::new(),
6 | } }
|
```
Partially address last remaining part of #34255.