This patch sets the two configuration options for
`undocumented_unsafe_blocks` to `true` by default: these are
`accept-comment-above-statement` and `accept-comment-above-attributes`.
Having these values `false` by default prevents what many users would
consider clean code, e.g. placing the `// SAFETY:` comment above a
single-line functino call, rather than directly next to the argument.
changelog: [`undocumented_unsafe_blocks`]: set
`accept-comment-above-statement` and `accept-comment-above-attributes`
to `true` by default.
Add redundant_as_str lint
This lint checks for `as_str` on a `String` immediately followed by `as_bytes` or `is_empty` as those methods are available on `String` too. This could possibly also be extended to `&[u8]` in the future.
changelog: New lint [`redundant_as_str`] #11526
move required_consts check to general post-mono-check function
This factors some code that is common between the interpreter and the codegen backends into shared helper functions. Also as a side-effect the interpreter now uses the same `eval` functions as everyone else to get the evaluated MIR constants.
Also this is in preparation for another post-mono check that will be needed for (the current hackfix for) https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/115709: ensuring that all locals are dynamically sized.
I didn't expect this to change diagnostics, but it's just cycle errors that change.
r? `@oli-obk`
Update remark CI deps
[Remark v15](https://github.com/remarkjs/remark/releases/tag/15.0.0) was just released that needs a newer node version, this updates us to 18 (the current LTS)
Also updates mdbook while we're at it
changelog: none
This lint checks for `as_str` on a `String` immediately followed by `as_bytes` or `is_empty` as those methods are available on `String` too. This could possibly also be extended to `&[u8]` in the future.
Split `needless_borrow` into two lints
Splits off the case where the borrow is used as a generic argument to a function. I think the two cases are different enough to warrant a separate lint.
The tests for the new lint have been reordered to group related parts together. Two warning have been dropped, one looked like it was testing the generic argument form, but it ends up triggering the auto-deref variant. The second was just a redundant test that didn't do anything interesting.
An issue with cycle detection is also included. The old version was checking if a cycle was reachable from a block when it should have been checking if the block is part or a cycle.
As a side note, I'm liking the style of just jamming all the tests into separate scopes in main.
changelog: Split off `needless_borrows_for_generic_args` from `needless_borrow`
[`filter_map_bool_then`]: include multiple derefs from adjustments
In #11506 this lint was improved to suggest one deref if the bool is behind references (fixed the FP #11503), however it might need multiple dereferences if the bool is behind multiple layers of references or custom derefs. E.g. `&&&bool` needs `***b`.
changelog: [`filter_map_bool_then`]: suggest as many dereferences as there are needed to get to the bool
add extra `byref` checking for the guard's local
changelog: [`redundant_guards`]: Now checks if the variable is bound using `ref` before linting.
The lint should not be emitted, when the local variable is bind by-ref in the pattern.
fixes#11465
[`useless_conversion`]: don't lint if type parameter has unsatisfiable bounds for `.into_iter()` receiver
Fixes#11300.
Before this PR, clippy assumed that if it sees a `f(x.into_iter())` call and the type at that argument position is generic over any `IntoIterator`, then the `.into_iter()` call must be useless because `x` already implements `IntoIterator`, *however* this assumption is not right if the generic parameter has more than just the `IntoIterator` bound (because other traits can be implemented for the IntoIterator target type but not the IntoIterator implementor, as can be seen in the linked issue: `<[i32; 3] as IntoIterator>::IntoIter` satisfies `ExactSizeIterator`, but `[i32; 3]` does not).
So, this PR makes it check that the type parameter only has a single `IntoIterator` bound. It *might* be possible to check if the type of `x` in `f(x.into_iter())` satisfies all the bounds on the generic type parameter as defined on the function (which would allow removing the `.into_iter()` call even with multiple bounds), however I'm not sure how to do that, and the current fix should always work.
**Edit:** This PR has been changed to check if any of the bounds don't hold for the type of the `.into_iter()` receiver, so we can still lint in some cases.
changelog: [`useless_conversion`]: don't lint `.into_iter()` if type parameter has multiple bounds
new lint: `path_ends_with_ext`
Closes#11479
Not sure if it needs more test cases. I couldn't come up with any other ones, but it is a pretty simple lint logic wise with not too many checks
changelog: new lint: [`path_ends_with_ext`]
fix filter_map_bool_then with a bool reference
changelog: [`filter_map_bool_then`]: Fix the incorrect autofix when the `bool` in question is a reference.
fix#11503
[`extra_unused_type_parameters`]: Fix edge case FP for parameters in where bounds
Generic parameters can end up being used on the left side of where-bounds if they are not directly bound but instead appear nested in some concrete generic type. Therefore, we should walk the left side of where bounds, but only if the bounded type is *not* a generic param, in which case we still need to ignore the bound.
Fixes#11302
changelog: [`extra_unused_type_parameters`]: Fix edge case false positive for parameters in where bounds
Ignore closures for some type lints
Fixes#11417
`hir_ty_to_ty` is used in a couple of the `!is_local` lints, which doesn't play nicely inside bodies
changelog: none
Truncate files when opening in metadata-collector
Fixes the issue seen here https://github.com/rust-lang/rust-clippy/pull/11483#discussion_r1324687136 and in a couple other PRs
The changelog file was opened without truncating it, so if the new version is shorter than the old one stray contents would remain at the end of the file
The other two files first removed the file so didn't have this problem, but in all cases we now use `fs::write`/`File::create` which is write + create + truncate
changelog: none