rust/tests/ui/proc-macro/issue-75930-derive-cfg.rs
Nicholas Nethercote 129fe9a998 Add a comment to tests/ui/proc-macro/issue-75930-derive-cfg.rs.
Explaining something in the output that surprised me.
2023-10-12 08:46:15 +11:00

105 lines
2.9 KiB
Rust

// check-pass
// compile-flags: -Z span-debug --error-format human
// aux-build:test-macros.rs
// Regression test for issue #75930
// Tests that we cfg-strip all targets before invoking
// a derive macro
// We need '--error-format human' to stop compiletest from
// trying to interpret proc-macro output as JSON messages
// (a pretty-printed struct may cause a line to start with '{' )
// FIXME: We currently lose spans here (see issue #43081)
#![no_std] // Don't load unnecessary hygiene information from std
extern crate std;
#[macro_use]
extern crate test_macros;
// Note: the expected output contains this sequence:
// ```
// Punct {
// ch: '<',
// spacing: Joint,
// span: $DIR/issue-75930-derive-cfg.rs:25:11: 25:12 (#0),
// },
// Ident {
// ident: "B",
// span: $DIR/issue-75930-derive-cfg.rs:25:29: 25:30 (#0),
// },
// ```
// It's surprising to see a `Joint` token tree followed by an `Ident` token
// tree, because `Joint` is supposed to only be used if the following token is
// `Punct`.
//
// It is because of this code from below:
// ```
// struct Foo<#[cfg(FALSE)] A, B>
// ```
// When the token stream is formed during parsing, `<` is followed immediately
// by `#`, which is punctuation, so it is marked `Joint`. But before being
// passed to the proc macro it is rewritten to this:
// ```
// struct Foo<B>
// ```
// But the `Joint` marker on the `<` is not updated. Perhaps it should be
// corrected before being passed to the proc macro? But a prior attempt to do
// that kind of correction caused the problem seen in #76399, so maybe not.
#[print_helper(a)] //~ WARN derive helper attribute is used before it is introduced
//~| WARN this was previously accepted
#[cfg_attr(not(FALSE), allow(dead_code))]
#[print_attr]
#[derive(Print)]
#[print_helper(b)]
struct Foo<#[cfg(FALSE)] A, B> {
#[cfg(FALSE)] first: String,
#[cfg_attr(FALSE, deny(warnings))] second: bool,
third: [u8; {
#[cfg(FALSE)] struct Bar;
#[cfg(not(FALSE))] struct Inner;
#[cfg(FALSE)] let a = 25;
match true {
#[cfg(FALSE)] true => {},
#[cfg_attr(not(FALSE), allow(warnings))] false => {},
_ => {}
};
#[print_helper(should_be_removed)]
fn removed_fn() {
#![cfg(FALSE)]
}
#[print_helper(c)] #[cfg(not(FALSE))] fn kept_fn() {
#![cfg(not(FALSE))]
let my_val = true;
}
enum TupleEnum {
Foo(
#[cfg(FALSE)] u8,
#[cfg(FALSE)] bool,
#[cfg(not(FALSE))] i32,
#[cfg(FALSE)] String, u8
)
}
struct TupleStruct(
#[cfg(FALSE)] String,
#[cfg(not(FALSE))] i32,
#[cfg(FALSE)] bool,
u8
);
fn plain_removed_fn() {
#![cfg_attr(not(FALSE), cfg(FALSE))]
}
0
}],
#[print_helper(d)]
fourth: B
}
fn main() {}