Use variant names rather than descriptions for identifying desugarings in `#[rustc_on_unimplemented]`.
Both are highly unstable, but variant name is at least a single identifier.
Creating a fresh expansion and immediately generating a span from it is the most common scenario.
Also avoid allocating `allow_internal_unstable` lists for derive markers repeatedly.
And rename `ExpnInfo::with_unstable` to `ExpnInfo::allow_unstable`, seems to be a better fitting name.
Ok, it's hard to explain what happens, but identifier's hygienic contexts need to be "adjusted" to modules/scopes before they are resolved in them.
To be resolved in all kinds on preludes the identifier needs to be adjusted to the root expansion (aka "no expansion").
Previously this was done for the `macro m() { ::my_crate::foo }` case, but forgotten for all other cases.
Also move macro stability checking closer to other checks performed on obtained resolutions.
Tighten the stability spans as well, it is an error to *refer* to and unstable entity in any way, not only "call" it.
This way we are processing all of them in a single point, rather than separately for each syntax extension kind.
Also, the standard expected/found wording is used.
It either returns the indeterminacy error, or valid (but perhaps dummy) `SyntaxExtension`.
With this change enum `Determinacy` is no longer used in libsyntax and can be moved to resolve.
The regressions in diagnosics are fixed in the next commits.
Create real working and registered (even if dummy) `SyntaxExtension`s for them.
This improves error recovery and allows to avoid all special cases for proc macro stubs (except for the error on use, of course).
The introduced dummy `SyntaxExtension`s can be used for any other inappropriately resolved macros as well.
Avoid the tricky scheme with callbacks and keep the invocation parent data where it logically belongs - in `Definitions`.
This also allows to create `InvocationData` entries in resolve when the data is actually ready, and remove cells and "uninitialized" variants from it.
We have to deal with dummy spans anyway
Remove def-site span from expander interfaces.
It's not used by the expansion infra, only by specific expanders, which can keep it themselves if they want it.
It was used to choose whether to apply derive markers like `#[rustc_copy_clone_marker]` or not,
but it was called before all the data required for resolution is available, so it could work incorrectly in some corner cases (like user-defined derives name `Copy` or `Eq`).
Delay the decision about markers until the proper resolution results are available instead.
The expansions were created to allow unstable things inside `#[test_case/test/bench]`, but that's not a proper way to do that.
Put the required `allow_internal_unstable`s into the macros' properties instead.
It's internal to resolve and always results in `Res::Err` outside of resolve.
Instead put `DefKind::Fn`s themselves into the macro namespace, it's ok.
Proc macro stubs are items placed into macro namespase for functions that define proc macros.
https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/52383
The rustdoc test is changed because the old test didn't actually reproduce the ICE it was supposed to reproduce.
Ensure that checkout is with \n line endings
During installation of mingw, at least, the git directories change, so
we need to reset the core.autocrlf config to false.
Once we finish checking out submodules, check that the line endings are
\n and not \r\n.
Artifacts were built via the last try on #62545; I've manually confirmed that `install.sh` appears to no longer have `\r\n` line endings.
Fixes#62276.
Some more cleanups to syntax::print
All of these changes should be functionally equivalent to previous code.
Each commit mostly stands alone and this PR is easiest to review by-commit.
#62357: doc(ptr): add example for {read,write}_unaligned
related to #62357
> With #62323 the only example (that had UB and was thus invalid) in std::ptr::read_unaligned and std::ptr::write_unaligned is removed.
> We should add a valid example of using the aforementioned functions.
Signed-off-by: Freyskeyd <simon.paitrault@gmail.com>
rustc_mir: treat DropAndReplace as Drop + Assign in qualify_consts.
This slipped through the cracks and never got implemented (thankfully that just meant it was overly conservative and didn't allow assignments that don't *actually* drop the previous value).
Fixes#62273.
r? @oli-obk
All ioctl(2)s will fail on O_PATH file descriptors on Linux (because
they use &empty_fops as a security measure against O_PATH descriptors
affecting the backing file).
As a result, File::try_clone() and various other methods would always
fail with -EBADF on O_PATH file descriptors. The solution is to simply
use F_SETFD (as is used on other unices) which works on O_PATH
descriptors because it operates through the fnctl(2) layer and not
through ioctl(2)s.
Since this code is usually only used in strange error paths (a broken or
ancient kernel), the extra overhead of one syscall shouldn't cause any
dramas. Most other systems programming languages also use the fnctl(2)
so this brings us in line with them.
Fixes: rust-lang/rust#62314
Signed-off-by: Aleksa Sarai <cyphar@cyphar.com>
During installation of mingw, at least, the git directories change, so
we need to reset the core.autocrlf config to false.
Once we finish checking out submodules, check that the line endings are
\n and not \r\n.
use visitor for #[structural_match] check
This changes the code so that we recur down the structure of a type of a const (rather than just inspecting at a shallow one or two levels) when we are looking to see if it has an ADT that did not derive `PartialEq` and `Eq`.
Fix#61188Fix#62307
Cc #62336
This enforces that eof() must be called to get the String out, and
generally is better from an API perspective. No users of pretty printing
pre-allocate the buffer.