Implement rust-lang/compiler-team#578.
When an ICE is encountered on nightly releases, the new rustc panic
handler will also write the contents of the backtrace to disk. If any
`delay_span_bug`s are encountered, their backtrace is also added to the
file. The platform and rustc version will also be collected.
[`manual_filter_map`]: lint on `matches` and pattern matching
Fixes#8010
Previously this lint only worked specifically for a very limited set of methods on the filter call (`.filter(|opt| opt.is_some())` and `.filter(|res| res.is_ok())`). This PR extends it to also recognize `matches!` in the `filter` and pattern matching with `if let` or `match` in the `map`.
Example:
```rs
enum Enum {
A(i32),
B,
}
let _ = [Enum::A(123), Enum::B].into_iter()
.filter(|x| matches!(x, Enum::A(_)))
.map(|x| if let Enum::A(s) = x { s } else { unreachable!() });
```
Now suggests:
```diff
- .filter(|x| matches!(x, Enum::A(_))).map(if let Enum::A(s) = x { s } else { unreachable!() })
+ .filter_map(|x| match x { Enum::A(s) => Some(s), _ => None })
```
Adding this required a somewhat large change in code because it originally seemed to be specifically written with only method calls in the filter in mind, and `matches!` has different behavior in the map, so this new setup should make it possible to support more "generic" cases that need different handling for the filter and map calls.
changelog: [`manual_filter_map`]: lint on `matches` and pattern matching (and some internal refactoring)
Fix `unwrap_or_else_default` false positive
This PR fixes a false positive in the handling of `unwrap_or_else` with a default value when the value is needed for type inference.
An easy example to exhibit the false positive is the following:
```rust
let option = None;
option.unwrap_or_else(Vec::new).push(1);
```
The following code would not compile, because the fact that the value is a `Vec` has been lost:
```rust
let option = None;
option.unwrap_or_default().push(1);
```
The fix is to:
- implement a heuristic to tell whether an expression's type can be determined purely from its subexpressions, and the arguments and locals they use;
- apply the heuristic to `unwrap_or_else`'s receiver.
The heuristic returns false when applied to `option` in the above example, but it returns true when applied to `option` in either of the following examples:
```rust
let option: Option<Vec<u64>> = None;
option.unwrap_or_else(Vec::new).push(1);
```
```rust
let option = None::<Vec<u64>>;
option.unwrap_or_else(Vec::new).push(1);
```
(Aside: https://github.com/rust-lang/rust-clippy/pull/10120 unfairly contained multiple changes in one PR. I am trying to break that PR up into smaller pieces.)
---
changelog: FP: [`unwrap_or_else_default`]: No longer lints if the default value is needed for type inference
Remove `#![allow(unused)]` and `--crate-name` from `cargo dev new_lint` generated tests
changelog: none
Also removes some unused flags from `ui-cargo` tests because the entrypoint is now the `Cargo.toml`, not the `.rs` files
New lint [`iter_skip_zero`]
Idea came from my contribution to `unnecessary_cast` recently. Sorry about that 😅
Could be an issue if somebody manually implements `skip`, but I don't think anybody will (and this would be an issue with other lints too, afaik)
changelog: New lint [`iter_skip_zero`]
New lint [`string_lit_chars_any`]
Closes#10389
This lint can probably be deprecated if/when rustc optimizes `.chars().any(...)`.
changelog: New lint [`string_lit_chars_any`]
Rewrite [`tuple_array_conversions`]
Fixes#11100Fixes#11144Fixes#11124#11082 still needs discussion and #11085 likely can't be fixed.
changelog: [`tuple_array_conversions`]: Move to `pedantic`
changelog: [`tuple_array_conversions`]: Don't lint if mutability of references changes
changelog: [`tuple_array_conversions`]: Don't lint if bindings don't come from the exact same pattern
changelog: [`tuple_array_conversions`]: Don't lint if bindings are used for more than just the conversion
new lint: `format_collect`
A perf lint that looks for `format!`ing inside of `map`, then collecting it into a `String`. Did a quick benchmark locally and it's a bit more than 2x faster with fold.
`write!` is still not optimal (presumably because the fmt stuff goes through dynamic dispatch), but it's still a lot better than creating a new string on every element.
I thought about making a machine applicable suggestion, but there's a lot of suggestions that need to be made here, so I decided to just add help messages.
changelog: new lint: `format_collect`
don't hide lifetimes for `LateContext`
Running `cargo dev new_lint --type methods` creates the lint file with hidden lifetimes for the `LateContext` parameter (i.e. `&LateContext`, when it should be `&LateContext<'_>`). This is already warned on with `#![warn(rust_2018_idioms)]`, so clippy should not use hidden lifetimes
changelog: none