Commit Graph

6 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Alex Crichton
671d896294 rustc: Remove old #[phase] and #[plugin]
This commit removes the extra deprecation warnings and support for the old
`phase` and `plugin` attributes for loading plugins.
2015-03-26 15:43:42 -07:00
bors
1fe8f22145 Auto merge of #22899 - huonw:macro-stability, r=alexcrichton
Unstable items used in a macro expansion will now always trigger
stability warnings, *unless* the unstable items are directly inside a
macro marked with `#[allow_internal_unstable]`. IOW, the compiler warns
unless the span of the unstable item is a subspan of the definition of a
macro marked with that attribute.

E.g.

    #[allow_internal_unstable]
    macro_rules! foo {
        ($e: expr) => {{
            $e;
            unstable(); // no warning
            only_called_by_foo!();
        }}
    }

    macro_rules! only_called_by_foo {
        () => { unstable() } // warning
    }

    foo!(unstable()) // warning

The unstable inside `foo` is fine, due to the attribute. But the
`unstable` inside `only_called_by_foo` is not, since that macro doesn't
have the attribute, and the `unstable` passed into `foo` is also not
fine since it isn't contained in the macro itself (that is, even though
it is only used directly in the macro).

In the process this makes the stability tracking much more precise,
e.g. previously `println!("{}", unstable())` got no warning, but now it
does. As such, this is a bug fix that may cause [breaking-change]s.

The attribute is definitely feature gated, since it explicitly allows
side-stepping the feature gating system.

---

This updates `thread_local!` macro to use the attribute, since it uses
unstable features internally (initialising a struct with unstable
fields).
2015-03-06 05:20:11 +00:00
Huon Wilson
84b060ce29 Add #[allow_internal_unstable] to track stability for macros better.
Unstable items used in a macro expansion will now always trigger
stability warnings, *unless* the unstable items are directly inside a
macro marked with `#[allow_internal_unstable]`. IOW, the compiler warns
unless the span of the unstable item is a subspan of the definition of a
macro marked with that attribute.

E.g.

    #[allow_internal_unstable]
    macro_rules! foo {
        ($e: expr) => {{
            $e;
            unstable(); // no warning
            only_called_by_foo!();
        }}
    }

    macro_rules! only_called_by_foo {
        () => { unstable() } // warning
    }

    foo!(unstable()) // warning

The unstable inside `foo` is fine, due to the attribute. But the
`unstable` inside `only_called_by_foo` is not, since that macro doesn't
have the attribute, and the `unstable` passed into `foo` is also not
fine since it isn't contained in the macro itself (that is, even though
it is only used directly in the macro).

In the process this makes the stability tracking much more precise,
e.g. previously `println!("{}", unstable())` got no warning, but now it
does. As such, this is a bug fix that may cause [breaking-change]s.

The attribute is definitely feature gated, since it explicitly allows
side-stepping the feature gating system.
2015-03-06 00:18:28 +11:00
Ivan Radanov Ivanov
7496539a00 Change span_help calls to fileline_help where appropriate 2015-03-03 15:18:33 +02:00
Niko Matsakis
68e5bb3f2c Remove remaining uses of []. This time I tried to use deref coercions where possible. 2015-02-20 14:08:14 -05:00
Keegan McAllister
6864792df0 Separate macro and plugin loading
Now they just share a bit of code internal to creader.

Resolves #22198 to my satisfaction.
2015-02-12 12:44:31 -08:00