Skip `dsymutil` by default for compiler bootstrap
`dsymutil` adds time to builds on Apple platforms for no clear benefit, and also makes it more difficult for debuggers to find debug info (which `@pnkfelix` highlighted on [Zulip](https://rust-lang.zulipchat.com/#narrow/stream/131828-t-compiler/topic/does.20lldb.20%28or.20gdb%29.20work.20on.20rustc.20on.20Mac.3F/near/220482092)). The compiler currently defaults to running `dsymutil` to preserve its historical default, but when compiling the compiler itself, we skip it by default since we know it's safe to do so in that case.
r? `@nagisa`
`PatKind::Ref(PatKind::Ident(BindingMode::ByValue(Mutability::Mut), ..), ..)`
is an AST representing `&(mut ident)`. It was errorneously printed as
`&mut ident` which reparsed into a syntactically different AST.
This affected help diagnostics in the parser.
Fix memory leak in test "mem::uninit_write_slice_cloned_no_drop"
This fixes#80116. I replaced the `Rc` based method I was using with a type that panics when dropped.
Make BoundRegion have a kind of BoungRegionKind
Split from #76814
Also includes making `replace_escaping_bound_vars` only return `T`
Going to r? `@lcnr`
Feel free to reassign
or_patterns: implement :pat edition-specific behavior
cc #54883 `@joshtriplett`
This PR implements the edition-specific behavior of `:pat` wrt or-patterns, as determined by the crater runs and T-lang consensus in https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/54883#issuecomment-745509090.
I believe this can unblock stabilization of or_patterns.
r? `@petrochenkov`
`dsymutil` adds time to builds on Apple platforms for no clear benefit, and also
makes it more difficult for debuggers to find debug info. The compiler currently
defaults to running `dsymutil` to preserve its historical default, but when
compiling the compiler itself, we skip it by default since we know it's safe to
do so in that case.
const_evaluatable_checked: fix occurs check
fixes#79615
this is kind of a hack because we use `TypeRelation` for both the `Generalizer` and the `ConstInferUnifier` but i am not sure if there is a useful way to disentangle this without unnecessarily duplicating some code.
The error in the added test is kind of unavoidable until we erase the unused substs of `ConstKind::Unevaluated`. We talked a bit about this in the cg lazy norm meeting (https://rust-lang.zulipchat.com/#narrow/stream/260443-project-const-generics/topic/lazy_normalization_consts)
Adapted the website search for better matching
* This adds the ability to search for ids with dashes and spaces in the name.
* Example: `missing-errors-doc` and `missing errors doc` are now valid aliases for lint names
* It also improves the fuzzy search in the description. This search will now match any lint that where all searched words are inside the description.
* Example: `doc section` finds two lints in our selection
This was suggested/discussed on [Zulip](https://rust-lang.zulipchat.com/#narrow/stream/257328-clippy/topic/Enable.20lint.20search.20with.20dashes/near/220469464)
### Testing
These changes can be tested locally by:
1. Clone this branch
2. Download the current lint index from the [gh-pages branch](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust-clippy/blob/gh-pages/master/lints.json)
3. Put it next to the `util/gh-pages/index.html` and open the html file. Make sure that it can load the lint data. (Browsers can be a bit iffy when opening a loacl html page and loading data)
### Note
I found that searching only a few characters (< 3) seams slow and deleting one even more as almost every lint description contains them. This also happens in our current [lint list](https://rust-lang.github.io/rust-clippy/master/index.html). We could change the search to only be triggered if the search field contains more than 3 letters to slightly improve performance.
---
changelog: Adapted the website search for better matching
Move {f32,f64}::clamp to core.
`clamp` was recently stabilized (tracking issue: https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/44095). But although `Ord::clamp` was added in `core` (because `Ord` is in `core`), the versions for the `f32` and `f64` primitives were added in `std` (together with `floor`, `sin`, etc.), not in `core` (together with `min`, `max`, `from_bits`, etc.).
This change moves them to `core`, such that `clamp` on floats is available in `no_std` programs as well.
Lint also in trait def for `wrong_self_convention`
Extends `wrong_self_convention` to lint also in trait definition.
By the way, I think the `wrong_pub_self_convention` [example](dd826b4626/clippy_lints/src/methods/mod.rs (L197)) is misleading.
On [playground](https://play.rust-lang.org/?version=stable&mode=debug&edition=2018&gist=32615ab3f6009e7e42cc3754be0ca17f), it fires `wrong_self_convention`, so the example (or the lint maybe?) needs to be reworked.
The difference with `wrong_self_convention` [example](dd826b4626/clippy_lints/src/methods/mod.rs (L172)) is mainly the `pub` keyword on the method `as_str`, but the lint doesn't use the function visibility as condition to choose which lint to fire (in fact it uses the visibility of the impl item).
fixes: #6307
changelog: Lint `wrong_self_convention` lint in trait def also
Improve and fix diagnostics of exhaustiveness checking
Primarily, this fixes https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/56379. This also fixes incorrect interactions between or-patterns and slice patterns that I discovered while working on #56379. Those two examples show the incorrect diagnostics:
```rust
match &[][..] {
[true] => {}
[true // detected as unreachable but that's not true
| false, ..] => {}
_ => {}
}
match (true, None) {
(true, Some(_)) => {}
(false, Some(true)) => {}
(true | false, None | Some(true // should be detected as unreachable
| false)) => {}
}
```
I did not measure any perf impact. However, I suspect that [`616ba9f`](616ba9f9f7) should have a negative impact on large or-patterns. I'll see what the perf run says; I have optimization ideas up my sleeve if needed.
EDIT: I initially had a noticeable perf impact that I thought unavoidable. I then proceeded to avoid it x)
r? `@varkor`
`@rustbot` label +A-exhaustiveness-checking
UI Tests: Separate suspicious_else_formatting tests
Was briefly looking into https://github.com/rust-lang/rust-clippy/issues/3864 when I saw that the tests could benefit from being in their own file.
---
changelog: none
Stabilize all stable methods of `Ipv4Addr`, `Ipv6Addr` and `IpAddr` as const
This PR stabilizes all currently stable methods of `Ipv4Addr`, `Ipv6Addr` and `IpAddr` as const.
Tracking issue: #76205
`Ipv4Addr` (`const_ipv4`):
- `octets`
- `is_loopback`
- `is_private`
- `is_link_local`
- `is_multicast`
- `is_broadcast`
- `is_docmentation`
- `to_ipv6_compatible`
- `to_ipv6_mapped`
`Ipv6Addr` (`const_ipv6`):
- `segments`
- `is_unspecified`
- `is_loopback`
- `is_multicast`
- `to_ipv4`
`IpAddr` (`const_ip`):
- `is_unspecified`
- `is_loopback`
- `is_multicast`
## Motivation
The ip methods seem like prime candidates to be made const: their behavior is defined by an external spec, and based solely on the byte contents of an address. These methods have been made unstable const in the beginning of September, after the necessary const integer arithmetic was stabilized.
There is currently a PR open (#78802) to change the internal representation of `IpAddr{4,6}` from `libc` types to a byte array. This does not have any impact on the constness of the methods.
## Implementation
Most of the stabilizations are straightforward, with the exception of `Ipv6Addr::segments`, which uses the unstable feature `const_fn_transmute`. The code could be rewritten to equivalent stable code, but this leads to worse code generation (#75085).
This is why `segments` gets marked with `#[rustc_allow_const_fn_unstable(const_fn_transmute)]`, like the already const-stable `Ipv6Addr::new`, the justification being that a const-stable alternative implementation exists https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/76206#issuecomment-685044184.
## Future posibilities
This PR const-stabilizes all currently stable ip methods, however there are also a number of unstable methods under the `ip` feature (#27709). These methods are already unstable const. There is a PR open (#76098) to stabilize those methods, which could include const-stabilization. However, stabilizing those methods as const is dependent on `Ipv4Addr::octets` and `Ipv6Addr::segments` (covered by this PR).
Fix blessing of new reference files
Adding of new reference files wasn't handled correctly. It was trying to
read a file that didn't exist yet.
Instead of unwrapping, we now treat a missing reference file as empty
(`Vec::new`). This makes the following conditional work. We then also
have to re-read the reference file after it was being copied. This
second read is technically the same as in the old shell script, but
wasn't really obvious there. The shell script did a `-s` test which
reads the file as well.
changelog: internal: Fix `cargo dev bless` when new reference files are added
Adding of new reference files wasn't handled correctly. It was trying to
read a file that didn't exist yet.
Instead of unwrapping, we now treat a missing reference file as empty
(`Vec::new`). This makes the following conditional work. We then also
have to re-read the reference file after it was being copied. This
second read is technically the same as in the old shell script, but
wasn't really obvious. The shell script did a `-s` test which reads the
file.
Add the "async" and "promise" doc aliases to `core::future::Future`
Adds the "async" and "promise" doc aliases to `core::future::Future`. This enables people who search for "async" or "promise" to find `Future`, which is Rust's core primitive for async programming. Thanks!
Stabilize or_insert_with_key
Stabilizes the `or_insert_with_key` feature from https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/71024. This allows inserting key-derived values when a `HashMap`/`BTreeMap` entry is vacant.
The difference between this and `.or_insert_with(|| ... )` is that this provides a reference to the key to the closure after it is moved with `.entry(key_being_moved)`, avoiding the need to copy or clone the key.
passes: prohibit invalid attrs on generic params
Fixes#78957.
This PR modifies the `check_attr` pass so that attribute placement on generic parameters is checked for validity.
r? `@lcnr`