Add regression test for a spurious import
This PR adds a test that verifies that the bug described in the linked issue does not creep back into the code. In essence it checks that compiling some specific code (that uses 128 bit multiplication) with a specific set of compiler options does not lead to a spurious import of a panic function.
I noticed that other wasm tests use `# only-wasm32-bare` in their `Makefile`. This will skip the test for me. I did not find out how to run this test locally. Maybe someone can help.
closes#78744
r? `@jyn514`
Fix drop handling for `if let` expressions
MIR lowering for `if let` expressions is now more complicated now that
`if let` exists in HIR. This PR adds a scope for the variables bound in
an `if let` expression and then uses an approach similar to how we
handle loops to ensure that we reliably drop the correct variables.
Closes#88307
cc `@flip1995` `@richkadel` `@c410-f3r`
remove redundant / misplaced sentence from docs
Removes sentence that seems to have drifted down into the examples section. Luckily, someone already added an explanation of what happens with packed structs back into the initial section of the doc entry and this wayward sentence can likely just be deleted.
Add an example for deriving PartialOrd on enums
For some reason, I always forget which variants are smaller and which
are larger when you derive PartialOrd on an enum. And the wording in the
current docs is not entirely clear to me.
So, I often end up making a small enum, deriving PartialOrd on it, and
then writing a `#[test]` with an assert that the top one is smaller than
the bottom one (or the other way around) to figure out which way the
deriving goes.
So then I figured, it would be great if the standard library docs just
had that example, so if I keep forgetting, at least I can figure it out
quickly by looking at std's docs.
expand: Treat more macro calls as statement macro calls
This PR implements the suggestion from https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/87981#issuecomment-906641052 and treats fn-like macro calls inside `StmtKind::Item` and `StmtKind::Semi` as statement macro calls, which is consistent with treatment of attribute invocations in the same positions and with token-based macro expansion model in general.
This also allows to remove a special case in `NodeId` assignment (previously tried in #87779), and to use statement `NodeId`s for linting (`assign_id!`).
r? `@Aaron1011`
Point at unclosed delimiters as part of the primary MultiSpan
Both the place where the parser encounters a needed closed delimiter and
the unclosed opening delimiter are important, so they should get the
same level of highlighting in the output.
_Context: https://twitter.com/mwk4/status/1430631546432675840_
Path remapping: Make behavior of diagnostics output dependent on presence of --remap-path-prefix.
This PR fixes a regression (#87745) with `--remap-path-prefix` where the flag stopped causing diagnostic messages to be remapped as well. The regression was introduced in https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/83813 where we erroneously assumed that remapping of diagnostic messages was not desired anymore (because #70642 partially undid that functionality with nobody objecting).
The issue is fixed by making `--remap-path-prefix` remap diagnostic messages again, including for paths that have been remapped in upstream crates (e.g. the standard library). This means that "sysroot-localization" (implemented in #70642) is also disabled if `rustc` is invoked with `--remap-path-prefix`. The assumption is that once someone starts explicitly remapping paths they also don't want paths to their local Rust installation in their build output.
In the future we might want to give more fine-grained control over this behavior via compiler flags (see https://github.com/rust-lang/rfcs/pull/3127 for a related RFC). For now this PR is intended as a regression fix.
This PR is an alternative to https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/88191, which makes diagnostic messages be remapped unconditionally. That approach, however, would effectively revert #70642.
Fixes https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/87745.
cc `@cbeuw`
r? `@ghost`
This cleans up the other spot I found where rustdoc was rendering bounds
into the lifetime name itself. However, in this case, I don't think it
could have actually happened because higher-ranked lifetime definitions
aren't currently allowed to have bounds.
Previously, rustdoc recorded lifetime bounds by rendering them into the
name of the lifetime parameter. Now, it leaves the name as the actual
name and instead records lifetime bounds in an `outlives` list, similar
to how type parameter bounds are recorded.
Preserve most sub-obligations in the projection cache
Fixes https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/85360
When we evaluate a projection predicate, we may produce sub-obligations. During trait evaluation, evaluating these sub-obligations might cause us to produce `EvaluatedToOkModuloRegions`.
When we cache the result of projection in our projection cache, we try to throw away some of the sub-obligations, so that we don't need to re-evaluate/process them the next time we need to perform this particular projection. However, we may end up throwing away predicates that will (recursively) evaluate to `EvaluatedToOkModuloRegions`. If we do, then the result of evaluating a predicate will depend on the state of the predicate cache - this is global untracked state, which interacts badly with incremental compilation.
To fix this, we now only discard global predicates that evaluate to `EvaluatedToOk`. This ensures that any predicates that (may) evaluate to `EvaluatedToOkModuloRegions` are kept in the cache, and influence the results of any queries which perform this projection.
Correct doc comments inside `use_expr_visitor.rs`
Just a simple update. I haven't changed any content inside the comments, as they still seem correct. Have a wonderful rest of the day 🙃
rustdoc: Don't panic on ambiguous inherent associated types
Instead, return `Type::Infer` since compilation should fail anyway.
That's how rustdoc handles `hir::TyKind::Err`s, so this just extends
that behavior to `ty::Err`s when analyzing associated types.
For some reason, the error is printed twice with rustdoc (though only
once with rustc). I'm not sure why that is, but it's better than
panicking.
This commit also makes rustdoc fail early in the non-projection,
non-error case, instead of returning a `Res::Err` that would likely
cause rustdoc to panic later on. This change is originally from #88379.
r? `@GuillaumeGomez`
Remove redundant `Span` in `QueryJobInfo`
Previously, `QueryJobInfo` was composed of two parts: a `QueryInfo` and
a `QueryJob`. However, both `QueryInfo` and `QueryJob` have a `span`
field, which seem to be the same. So, the `span` was recorded twice.
Now, `QueryJobInfo` is composed of a `QueryStackFrame` (the other field
of `QueryInfo`) and a `QueryJob`. So, now, the `span` is only recorded
once.
`fmt::Formatter::pad`: don't call chars().count() more than one time
First commit merges two branches of match to call chars().count() only once: that should be faster if this method hits place of 3rd (previous) branch, plus quarter shorter.
Second commit fixes some clippy lints while i'm here (should it be separate PR?).
Stabilize std::os::unix::fs::chroot
I've verified that this works as documented, and I've tested it in (a nightly
build of) production software as a replacement for an unsafe call to
`libc::chroot`. It's been available in nightly for a few releases. I think it's
ready to stabilize.
---
Tracking issue: https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/84715