improve [`for_loops_over_fallibles`] to detect the usage of iter, iter_mut and into_iterator
fix#6762
detects code like
```rust
for _ in option.iter() {
//..
}
```
changelog: Improve [`for_loops_over_fallibles`] to detect `for _ in option.iter() {}` or using `iter_mut()` or `into_iterator()`.
Remove the unneeded wrapping and unwrapping in suggestion creation.
Collecting to Option<Vec<_>> only returns None if one of the elements is
None and that is never the case here.
fix(manual_find_map and manual_filter_map): check clone method
close#8920
Added conditional branching when the clone method is used.
Thank you in advance.
---
changelog: check `clone()` and other variant preserving methods in [`manual_find_map`] and [`manual_filter_map`]
When setting suggestion for significant_drop_in_scrutinee, add suggestion for MoveAndClone for non-ref
When trying to set the current suggestion, if the type of the expression
is not a reference and it is not trivially pure clone copy, we should still
trigger and emit a lint message. Since this fix may require cloning an
expensive-to-clone type, do not attempt to offer a suggested fix.
This change means that matches generated from TryDesugar and AwaitDesugar
would normally trigger a lint, but they are out of scope for this lint,
so we will explicitly ignore matches with sources of TryDesugar or
AwaitDesugar.
changelog: Update for ``[`significant_drop_in_scrutinee`]`` to correctly
emit lint messages for cases where the type is not a reference *and*
not trivially pure clone copy.
changelog: [`significant_drop_in_scrutinee`]: No longer lint on Try `?`
and `await` desugared expressions.
remove `large_enum_variant` suggestion for `Copy` types
Replaces the (erroneous) suggestion on `large_enum_variant` for `Copy` types by a note. This fixes#8894.
---
changelog: none
[1/N] Implement Arithmetic lint
Assuming that https://github.com/rust-lang/rust-clippy/issues/8903 is OK, this PR starts the creation of the `Arithmetic` lint with configurable types.
My current struggle to get a rustc review inspired me to create smaller PRs in order to easy review and make merges as fast as possible. So the first step here only moves the `arithmetic.rs` file to `numeric_arithmetic.rs` to make room for the new lint.
--
changelog: none
Make docs more consistent
changelog: none
This just fixes some docs to make them more consistent. I mostly just changed `// Good`, `// Bad`, etc to `Use instead:`.
Set correct `ParamEnv` for `derive_partial_eq_without_eq`
fixes#8867
changelog: Handle differing predicates applied by `#[derive(PartialEq)]` and `#[derive(Eq)]` in `derive_partial_eq_without_eq`
new lint: `borrow_deref_ref`
changelog: ``[`borrow_deref_ref`]``
Related pr: #6837#7577
`@Jarcho` Could you please give a review?
`cargo lintcheck` gives no false negative (but tested crates are out-of-date).
TODO:
1. Not sure the name. `deref_on_immutable_ref` or some others?
`SourceFile::lines` is a big part of metadata. It's stored in a compressed form
(a difference list) to save disk space. Decoding it is a big fraction of
compile time for very small crates/programs.
This commit introduces a new type `SourceFileLines` which has a `Lines`
form and a `Diffs` form. The latter is used when the metadata is first
read, and it is only decoded into the `Lines` form when line data is
actually needed. This avoids the decoding cost for many files,
especially in `std`. It's a performance win of up to 15% for tiny
crates/programs where metadata decoding is a high part of compilation
costs.
A `Lock` is needed because the methods that access lines data (which can
trigger decoding) take `&self` rather than `&mut self`. To allow for this,
`SourceFile::lines` now takes a `FnMut` that operates on the lines slice rather
than returning the lines slice.
Fix `manual_range_contains` false negative with chains of `&&` and `||`
Fixes#8745
Since the precedence for `&&` is the same as itself the HIR for a chain of `&&` ends up with a right skewed tree like:
```
&&
/ \
&& c2
/ \
... c1
```
So only the leftmost `&&` was actually "fully" checked, the top level was just `c2` and `&&` so the `manual_range_contains` lint won't apply. This change makes it also check `c2` with `c1`.
There's a bit of a hacky solution in the [second commit](257f09776a) to check if the number of open/closing parens in the snippet match. This is to prevent a case like `((x % 2 == 0) || (x < 0)) || (x >= 10)` from offering a suggestion like `((x % 2 == 0) || !(0..10).contains(&x)` which now won't compile.
Any suggestions for that paren hack welcome, kinda new to working on this so not too sure about possible solutions :) it's weird because I don't know how else to check for parens in HIR considering they're removed when lowering AST.
changelog: Fix [`manual_range_contains`] false negative with chains of `&&` and `||`
Don't lint `useless_transmute` on types with erased regions
fixes#6356fixes#3340fixes#2906
This should get a proper fix at some point, but this at least gets the lint running on some types.
cc #5343
changelog: Don't lint `useless_transmute` on types with erased regions
`cast_abs_to_unsigned`: do not remove cast if it's required
Fixes#8873
If `iX` is not cast to `uX` then keep the cast rather than removing it
changelog: [`cast_abs_to_unsigned`]: do not remove cast if it's required
needless_late_init: fix ICE when all branches return the never type
Fixes#8911
When the assignment is done in a match guard or the if condition and all of the branches return the never type `assignment_suggestions` would return an empty `Vec` which caused the ICE. It now returns `None` in that scenario
Also moves some tests to the top of the file
changelog: ICE Fixes: [`needless_late_init`] #8911
Fix `[use_self]` false negative with on struct and tuple struct patterns
fixes#8845
changelog: Triggered the warning for ``[`use_self`]`` on `TupleStruct` and `Struct` patterns, whereas currently it's only triggered for `Path` patterns
Fix `empty_line_after_outer_attribute` false positive
This PR fixes a false positive in `empty_line_after_outer_attribute`.
Here is a minimal example that trigger the FP:
```rust
#[derive(clap::Parser)]
#[clap(after_help = "This ia a help message.
You're welcome.
")]
pub struct Args;
```
changelog: PF: [`empty_line_after_outer_attribute`]: No longer lints empty lines in inner string values.
Introduce `allow-dbg-in-tests` config value
related to: Issue #8758, PR https://github.com/rust-lang/rust-clippy/pull/8838
changelog: Introduced `allow-dbg-in-tests` config value. [dbg_macro] does not allow `dbg!` in test code by default.
When trying to set the current suggestion, if the type of the expression
is not a reference and it is not trivially pure clone copy, we should still
trigger and emit a lint message. Since this fix may require cloning an
expensive-to-clone type, do not attempt to offer a suggested fix.
This change means that matches generated from TryDesugar and AwaitDesugar
would normally trigger a lint, but they are out of scope for this lint,
so we will explicitly ignore matches with sources of TryDesugar or
AwaitDesugar.
changelog: Update for [`significant_drop_in_scrutinee`] to correctly
emit lint messages for cases where the type is not a reference and
not trivially pure clone copy.
`get_last_with_len`: lint `VecDeque` and any deref to slice
changelog: [`get_last_with_len`]: lint `VecDeque` and any deref to slice
Previously only `Vec`s were linted, this will now catch any usages on slices, arrays, etc. It also suggests `.back()` for `VecDeque`s
Also moves the lint into `methods/`
`identity_op`: add parenthesis to suggestions where required
changelog: [`identity_op`]: add parenthesis to suggestions where required
Follow up to #8730, wraps the cases we can't lint as-is in parenthesis rather than ignoring them
Catches a couple new FPs with mixed operator precedences and `as` casts
```rust
// such as
0 + { a } * 2;
0 + a as usize;
```
The suggestions are now applied using `span_lint_and_sugg` rather than appearing in just the message and have a `run-rustfix` test
Refactor call terminator to always include destination place
In #71117 people seemed to agree that call terminators should always have a destination place, even if the call was guaranteed to diverge. This implements that. Unsurprisingly, the diff touches a lot of code, but thankfully I had to do almost nothing interesting. The only interesting thing came up in const prop, where the stack frame having no return place was also used to indicate that the layout could not be computed (or similar). I replaced this with a ZST allocation, which should continue to do the right things.
cc `@RalfJung` `@eddyb` who were involved in the original conversation
r? rust-lang/mir-opt