Rollup of 5 pull requests
Successful merges:
- #75938 (Added some `min_const_generics` revisions into `const_generics` tests)
- #76050 (Remove unused function)
- #76075 (datastructures: replace `once_cell` crate with an impl from std)
- #76115 (Restore public visibility on some parsing functions for rustfmt)
- #76127 (rustbuild: Remove one LLD workaround)
Failed merges:
r? @ghost
Restore public visibility on some parsing functions for rustfmt
In #74826 the visibility of several parsing functions was reduced. However, rustfmt is an external consumer of some of these functions as well and needs the visibility to be public, similar to other elements in rustc_parse such as `parse_ident`
db534b3ac2/src/librustc_parse/parser/mod.rs (L433-L436)
Update MinGW instructions to include ninja
Rust now requires `ninja` to build, so the MinGW build instructions are updated to reflect this.
Like for `python` and `cmake`, the `mingw-w64-x86_64-ninja` package should be used. The default package from the `msys2` subsystem doesn't handle paths correctly on windows.
GH-66816: Remove disable attr before return
Passing --disable-per-crate-search removes the create search inputs so moved code around so that the search input is enabled
first before the function returns.
Fixes#66816
Use intra-doc links for `core/src/slice.mod.rs`
partial help in #75080
r? @jyn514
- most are using primitive types links, which cannot be used with intra links at the moment
- also `std` cannot be referenced in any link, `std::ptr::NonNull` and `std::slice` could not be referenced
ty: remove obsolete pretty printer
Fixes#61139.
This PR removes the obsolete printer and replaces all uses of it with `FmtPrinter`. Of the replaced uses, all but one use was in `debug!` logging, two cases were notable:
- `MonoItem::to_string` is used in `-Z print-mono-items` and therefore affects the output of all codegen-units tests (which have been updated).
- `DefPathBasedNames` was used in `librustc_codegen_llvm/type_of.rs` with `LLVMStructCreateNamed` and that'll now get different values, but nothing will break as a result of this.
cc @eddyb (whom I've discussed this with)
Add `-Z proc-macro-backtrace` to allow showing proc-macro panics
Fixes#75050
Previously, we would unconditionally suppress the panic hook during
proc-macro execution. This commit adds a new flag
`-Z proc-macro-backtrace`, which allows running the panic hook for
easier debugging.
Fixes#75050
Previously, we would unconditionally suppress the panic hook during
proc-macro execution. This commit adds a new flag
-Z proc-macro-backtrace, which allows running the panic hook for
easier debugging.
Make some Ordering methods const
Constify the following methods of `core::cmp::Ordering`:
- `reverse`
- `then`
Possible because of #49146 (Allow `if` and `match` in constants).
Tracking issue: #76113
Added the `mingw-w64-x86_64-ninja` package to the build guide for MinGW, as well as a note not to use the `ninja` package from the `msys2` subsystem (doesn't handle paths correctly on windows).
Improve error message when typo is made in format!
The expansion of the format! built-in macro is roughly done in two steps:
- the format expression is parsed, the arguments are parsed,
- the format expression is checked to be a string literal, code is expanded.
The problem is that the expression parser can eat too much tokens, which invalidates the parsing of the next format arguments. As the format expression check happens next, the error emitted concerns the format arguments, whereas the problem is about the format expression.
This PR contains two commits. The first one actually checks that the formatting expression is a string literal before raising any error about the formatting arguments, and the second one contains some simple heuristics which allow to suggest, when the format expression is followed by a dot instead of a comma, to suggest to replace the dot with a comma.
This pull request should fix#75492.
Note: this is my first non-doc contribution to the rust ecosystem. Feel free to make any comment about my code, or whatever. I'll be very happy to fix it :)
Previous implementation used the `Parser::parse_expr` function in order
to extract the format expression. If the first comma following the
format expression was mistakenly replaced with a dot, then the next
format expression was eaten by the function, because it looked as a
syntactically valid expression, which resulted in incorrectly spanned
error messages.
The way the format expression is exctracted is changed: we first look at
the first available token in the first argument supplied to the
`format!` macro call. If it is a string literal, then it is promoted as
a format expression immediatly, otherwise we fall back to the original
`parse_expr`-related method.
This allows us to ensure that the parser won't consume too much tokens
when a typo is made.
A test has been created so that it is ensured that the issue is properly
fixed.
This commit removes the obsolete printer and replaces all uses of it
with `FmtPrinter`. Of the replaced uses, all but one use was in `debug!`
logging, two cases were notable:
- `MonoItem::to_string` is used in `-Z print-mono-items` and therefore
affects the output of all codegen-units tests.
- `DefPathBasedNames` was used in `librustc_codegen_llvm/type_of.rs`
with `LLVMStructCreateNamed` and that'll now get different values, but
this should result in no functional change.
Signed-off-by: David Wood <david@davidtw.co>
StringReader is an intornal abstraction which at the moment changes a
lot, so these unit tests cause quite a bit of friction.
Moving them to rustc_lexer and more ingerated-testing style should
make them much less annoying, hopefully without decreasing their
usefulness much.
Note that coloncolon tests are removed (it's unclear what those are
testing).
\r\n tests are removed as well, as we normalize line endings even
before lexing.
Move almost all compiler crates to compiler/
This PR implements https://github.com/rust-lang/compiler-team/issues/336 and moves all `rustc_*` crates from `src` to the new `compiler` directory.
`librustc_foo` directories are renamed to `rustc_foo`.
`src` directories are introduced inside `rustc_*` directories to mirror the scheme already use for `library` crates.
Fix intra-doc links for cross-crate re-exports of default trait methods
The original fix for this was very simple: https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/58972 ignored `extern_traits` because before https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/65983 was fixed, they would always fail to resolve, giving spurious warnings. So the first commit just undoes that change, so extern traits are now seen by the `collect_intra_doc_links` pass. There are also some minor changes in `librustdoc/fold.rs` to avoid borrowing the `extern_traits` RefCell more than once at a time.
However, that brought up a much more thorny problem. `rustc_resolve` started giving 'error: cannot find a built-in macro with name `cfg`' when documenting `libproc_macro` (I still haven't been able to reproduce on anything smaller than the full standard library). The chain of events looked like this (thanks @eddyb for the help debugging!):
0. `x.py build --stage 1` builds the standard library and creates a sysroot
1. `cargo doc` does something like `cargo check` to create `rmeta`s for all the crates (unrelated to what was built above)
2. the `cargo check`-like `libcore-*.rmeta` is loaded as a transitive dependency *and claims ownership* of builtin macros
3. `rustdoc` later tries to resolve some path in a doc link
4. suggestion logic fires and loads "extern prelude" crates by name
5. the sysroot `libcore-*.rlib` is loaded and *fails to claim ownership* of builtin macros
`rustc_resolve` gives the error after step 5. However, `rustdoc` doesn't need suggestions at all - `resolve_str_path_error` completely discards the `ResolutionError`! The fix implemented in this PR is to skip the suggestion logic for `resolve_ast_path`: pass `record_used: false` and skip `lookup_import_candidates` when `record_used` isn't set.
It's possible that if/when https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/74207 is implemented this will need a more in-depth fix which returns a `ResolutionError` from `compile_macro`, to allow rustdoc to reuse the suggestions from rustc_resolve. However, that's a much larger change and there's no need for it yet, so I haven't implemented it here.
Fixes https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/73829.
r? @GuillaumeGomez
This avoids a rare rustdoc bug where loading `core` twice caused a
'cannot find a built-in macro' error:
1. `x.py build --stage 1` builds the standard library and creates a sysroot
2. `cargo doc` does something like `cargo check` to create `rmeta`s for all the crates (unrelated to what was built above)
3. the `cargo check`-like `libcore-*.rmeta` is loaded as a transitive dependency *and claims ownership* of builtin macros
4. `rustdoc` later tries to resolve some path in a doc link
5. suggestion logic fires and loads "extern prelude" crates by name
6. the sysroot `libcore-*.rlib` is loaded and *fails to claim ownership* of builtin macros
This fixes step 5. by not running suggestion logic if this is a
speculative resolution. Additionally, it marks `resolve_ast_path` as a
speculative resolution.
`alloc::slice` uses `core::slice` functions, documentation are copied
from there and the links as well without resolution. `crate::ptr...`
cannot be resolved in `alloc::slice`, but `ptr` itself is imported in
both `alloc::slice` and `core::slice`, so we used that instead.
Fix intra-doc links for associated constants
Previously, only associated functions would be resolved. Fixes the issues in https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/75969#discussion_r477898003.
I'm a little uncomfortable hard-coding the string constants, but it looks like that's how it's done elsewhere. I might make a follow-up PR at some point putting it in one place.
Not sure how to test associated types, since AFAIK there aren't any on primitives.
r? @Manishearth