When a function argument bound by `Pointer` is an associated type, we only
perform substitutions using the parameters from the callsite but don't attempt
to normalize since it may not succeed. A simplified version of the scenario that
triggered this error was added as a test case. Also fixed `Pointer::fmt` which
was being double-counted when called outside of macros and added a test case for
this.
Removed test for the unhandled case of calls to `fn f<T>(x: &T)` where `x` is a
function reference and is formatted as a pointer in `f`. This compiles since
`&T` implements `Pointer`, but is unlikely to occur in practice. Also tweaked
the lint's wording and modified tests accordingly.
The lint checks arguments in calls to `transmute` or functions that have
`Pointer` as a trait bound and displays a warning if the argument is a function
reference. Also checks for `std::fmt::Pointer::fmt` to handle formatting macros
although it doesn't depend on the exact expansion of the macro or formatting
internals. `std::fmt::Pointer` and `std::fmt::Pointer::fmt` were also added as
diagnostic items and symbols.
Working with MIR let's us exclude expressions like `&fn_name as &dyn Something`
and `(&fn_name)()`. Also added ABI, unsafety and whether a function is variadic
in the lint suggestion, included the `&` in the span of the lint and updated the
test.
Capture output from threads spawned in tests
This is revival of #75172.
Original text:
> Fixes#42474.
>
> r? `@dtolnay` since you expressed interest in this, but feel free to redirect if you aren't the right person anymore.
---
Closes#75172.
New internal lint: Invalid paths
Add a new internal lint that detects invalid paths in the `util::paths` and fix some invalid paths found.
This commit partially addresses #6047 but the lint would have to be run before running tests to close that issue.
changelog: none
Suggest that expressions that look like const generic arguments should be enclosed in brackets
I pulled out the changes for const expressions from https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/71592 (without the trait object diagnostic changes) and made some small changes; the implementation is `@estebank's.`
We're also going to want to make some changes separately to account for trait objects (they result in poor diagnostics, as is evident from one of the test cases here), such as an adaption of https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/72273.
Fixes https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/70753.
r? `@petrochenkov`
BTreeMap: move generic support functions out of navigate.rs
A preparatory step chipped off #78104, useful in general (if at all).
r? `@Mark-Simulacrum`
The test change is because we used to treat `&str` like other `&T`s, ie
as having a single constructor. That's not quite true though since we
consider `&str` constants as atomic instead of refs to `str` constants.
Also removes the ugly caching that was introduced in #76918. It was
bolted on without deeper knowledge of the workings of the algorithm.
This commit manages to be more performant without any of the complexity.
It should be better on representative workloads too.
Add compiler support for LLVM's x86_64 ERMSB feature
This change is needed for compiler-builtins to check for this feature
when implementing memcpy/memset. See:
https://github.com/rust-lang/compiler-builtins/pull/365
Without this change, the following code compiles, but does nothing:
```rust
#[cfg(target_feature = "ermsb")]
pub unsafe fn ermsb_memcpy() { ... }
```
The change just does compile-time detection. I think that runtime
detection will have to come in a follow-up CL to std-detect.
Like all the CPU feature flags, this just references #44839
Signed-off-by: Joe Richey <joerichey@google.com>