fallback to dir_path when relative external mod resolution fails

We only want to fall back if two conditions are met:

1) Initial module resolution is performed relative to some nested
   directory.
2) Module resolution fails because of a ModError::FileNotFound error.

When these conditions are met we can try to fallback to searching for
the module's file relative to the dir_path instead of the nested
relative directory.

Fixes 5198

As demonstrated by 5198, it's possible that a directory name conflicts
with a rust file name. For example, src/lib/ and src/lib.rs.

If src/lib.rs references an external module like ``mod foo;``, then
module resolution will try to resolve ``foo`` to src/lib/foo.rs or
src/lib/foo/mod.rs. Module resolution would fail with a file not
found error if the ``foo`` module were defined at src/foo.rs.

When encountering these kinds of module resolution issues we now fall
back to the current directory and attempt to resolve the module again.

Given the current example, this means that if we can't find the module
``foo`` at src/lib/foo.rs or src/lib/foo/mod.rs, we'll attempt
to resolve the module to src/foo.rs.
This commit is contained in:
Yacin Tmimi 2022-01-30 13:46:53 -05:00 committed by Caleb Cartwright
parent 89ca3f3a10
commit 12048e444f
12 changed files with 82 additions and 2 deletions

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@ -12,6 +12,7 @@
use crate::config::file_lines::LineRange;
use crate::ignore_path::IgnorePathSet;
use crate::parse::parser::{ModError, ModulePathSuccess};
use crate::source_map::LineRangeUtils;
use crate::utils::starts_with_newline;
use crate::visitor::SnippetProvider;
@ -145,13 +146,30 @@ pub(crate) fn new(config: &Config) -> Result<ParseSess, ErrorKind> {
})
}
/// Determine the submodule path for the given module identifier.
///
/// * `id` - The name of the module
/// * `relative` - If Some(symbol), the symbol name is a directory relative to the dir_path.
/// If relative is Some, resolve the submodle at {dir_path}/{symbol}/{id}.rs
/// or {dir_path}/{symbol}/{id}/mod.rs. if None, resolve the module at {dir_path}/{id}.rs.
/// * `dir_path` - Module resolution will occur relative to this direcotry.
pub(crate) fn default_submod_path(
&self,
id: symbol::Ident,
relative: Option<symbol::Ident>,
dir_path: &Path,
) -> Result<rustc_expand::module::ModulePathSuccess, rustc_expand::module::ModError<'_>> {
rustc_expand::module::default_submod_path(&self.parse_sess, id, relative, dir_path)
) -> Result<ModulePathSuccess, ModError<'_>> {
rustc_expand::module::default_submod_path(&self.parse_sess, id, relative, dir_path).or_else(
|e| {
// If resloving a module relative to {dir_path}/{symbol} fails because a file
// could not be found, then try to resolve the module relative to {dir_path}.
if matches!(e, ModError::FileNotFound(..)) && relative.is_some() {
rustc_expand::module::default_submod_path(&self.parse_sess, id, None, dir_path)
} else {
Err(e)
}
},
)
}
pub(crate) fn is_file_parsed(&self, path: &Path) -> bool {

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@ -64,3 +64,19 @@ fn fmt_out_of_line_test_modules() {
],
)
}
#[test]
fn fallback_and_try_to_resolve_external_submod_relative_to_current_dir_path() {
// See also https://github.com/rust-lang/rustfmt/issues/5198
verify_mod_resolution(
"tests/mod-resolver/issue-5198/lib.rs",
&[
"tests/mod-resolver/issue-5198/a.rs",
"tests/mod-resolver/issue-5198/lib/b.rs",
"tests/mod-resolver/issue-5198/lib/c/mod.rs",
"tests/mod-resolver/issue-5198/lib/c/e.rs",
"tests/mod-resolver/issue-5198/lib/c/d/f.rs",
"tests/mod-resolver/issue-5198/lib/c/d/g/mod.rs",
],
)
}

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@ -0,0 +1 @@
fn main( ) { println!("Hello World!") }

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@ -0,0 +1,3 @@
mod a;
mod b;
mod c;

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@ -0,0 +1 @@
fn main( ) { println!("Hello World!") }

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@ -0,0 +1,3 @@
mod e;
mod f;
mod g;

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@ -0,0 +1,16 @@
This file is contained in the './lib/c/d/' directory.
The directory name './lib/c/d/' conflicts with the './lib/c/d.rs' file name.
'./lib/c/d.rs' defines 3 external modules:
* mod e;
* mod f;
* mod g;
Module resolution will fail if we look for './lib/c/d/e.rs' or './lib/c/d/e/mod.rs',
so we should fall back to looking for './lib/c/e.rs', which correctly finds the modlue, that
rustfmt should format.
'./lib/c/d/f.rs' and './lib/c/d/g/mod.rs' exist at the default submodule paths so we should be able
to resolve these modules with no problems.

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@ -0,0 +1 @@
fn main( ) { println!("Hello World!") }

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@ -0,0 +1 @@
fn main( ) { println!("Hello World!") }

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@ -0,0 +1 @@
fn main( ) { println!("Hello World!") }

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@ -0,0 +1,3 @@
mod d;
fn main( ) { println!("Hello World!") }

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@ -0,0 +1,16 @@
This file is contained in the './lib' directory.
The directory name './lib' conflicts with the './lib.rs' file name.
'lib.rs' defines 3 external modules:
* mod a;
* mod b;
* mod c;
Module resolution will fail if we look for './lib/a.rs' or './lib/a/mod.rs',
so we should fall back to looking for './a.rs', which correctly finds the modlue that
rustfmt should format.
'./lib/b.rs' and './lib/c/mod.rs' exist at the default submodule paths so we should be able
to resolve these modules with no problems.