We now lint on *any* use of `procedural-masquerade` crate. While this
crate still exists, its main reverse dependency (`cssparser`) no longer
depends on it. Any crates still depending off should stop doing so, as
it only exists to support very old Rust versions.
If a crate actually needs to support old versions of rustc via
`procedural-masquerade`, then they'll just need to accept the warning
until we remove it entirely (at the same time as the back-compat hack).
The latest version of `procedural-masquerade` does not work with the
latest rustc, but trying to check for the version seems like more
trouble than it's worth.
While working on this, I realized that the `proc-macro-hack` check was
never actually doing anything. The corresponding enum variant in
`proc-macro-hack` is named `Value` or `Nested` - it has never been
called `Input`. Due to a strange Crater issue, the Crater run that
tested adding this did *not* end up testing it - some of the crates that
would have failed did not actually have their tests checked, making it
seem as though the `proc-macro-hack` check was working.
The Crater issue is being discussed at
https://rust-lang.zulipchat.com/#narrow/stream/242791-t-infra/topic/Nearly.20identical.20Crater.20runs.20processed.20a.20crate.20differently/near/230406661
Despite the `proc-macro-hack` check not actually doing anything, we
haven't gotten any reports from users about their build being broken.
I went ahead and removed it entirely, since it's clear that no one is
being affected by the `proc-macro-hack` regression in practice.
use RWlock when accessing os::env (take 2)
This reverts commit acdca316c3d42299d31c1b47eb792006ffdfc29c (#82877) i.e. redoes #81850 since the invalid unlock attempts in the child process have been fixed in #82949
r? `@joshtriplett`
This better matches the appearance of this kind of snippet in the full
item view and is less jarring to read due to repeated
foreground-background changes.
Otherwise on systems where Arial is not available the system will
fallback to a serif font, rather than a sans-serif one.
This is especially relevant on acessibility-conscious setups (such as is
mine) that have web-fonts disabled and a limited set of fonts available
on the system.
Don't encode file information for span with a dummy location
Fixes#83112
The location information for a dummy span isn't real, so don't encode
it. This brings the incr comp cache code into line with the Span
`StableHash` impl, which doesn't hash the location information for dummy
spans.
Previously, we would attempt to load the 'original' file from a dummy
span - if the file id changed (e.g. due to being moved on disk), we would get an
ICE, since the Span was still valid due to its hash being unchanged.
Introduce `proc_macro_back_compat` lint, and emit for `time-macros-impl`
Now that future-incompat-report support has landed in nightly Cargo, we
can start to make progress towards removing the various proc-macro
back-compat hacks that have accumulated in the compiler.
This PR introduces a new lint `proc_macro_back_compat`, which results in
a future-incompat-report entry being generated. All proc-macro
back-compat warnings will be grouped under this lint. Note that this
lint will never actually become a hard error - instead, we will remove
the special cases for various macros, which will cause older versions of
those crates to emit some other error.
I've added code to fire this lint for the `time-macros-impl` case. This
is the easiest case out of all of our current back-compat hacks - the
crate was renamed to `time-macros`, so seeing a filename with
`time-macros-impl` guarantees that an older version of the parent `time`
crate is in use.
When Cargo's future-incompat-report feature gets stabilized, affected
users will start to see future-incompat warnings when they build their
crates.
Remove unused `opt_local_def_id_to_hir_id` function
Found while investigating #82933 - all LocalDefIds are expected to have
HirIds, there's no point in pretending otherwise.
Find more invalid doc attributes
- Lint on `#[doc(123)]`, `#[doc("hello")]`, etc.
- Lint every attribute; e.g., will now report two warnings for `#[doc(foo, bar)]`
- Add hyphen to "crate level"
- Display paths like `#[doc(foo::bar)]` correctly instead of as an empty string
Custom error on literal names from other languages
This detects all Java literal types and all single word C data types, and suggests the corresponding Rust literal type.