Shrink error variants for layout and fn_abi
The errors are bigger than the result, so let's put them behind a reference. Since query results have to be `Copy`, we use a reference into the arena instead of a `Box<T>`.
The args for unittest and cargo test are mutually incompatible. Suggest that people use `python -m unittest ...` manually instead.
This also changes `bootstrap_test.py` to be easier to run standalone; see the commit for details.
New lint [`tuple_array_conversions`]
Closes#10748
PS, the implementation is a bit ugly 😅 ~~I will likely refactor soon enough :)~~ Done :D
changelog: New lint [`tuple_array_conversions`]
Rollup of 6 pull requests
Successful merges:
- #113168 (fix(resolve): skip assertion judgment when NonModule is dummy)
- #113174 (Better messages for next on a iterator inside for loops)
- #113182 (Error when RPITITs' hidden types capture more lifetimes than their trait definitions)
- #113196 (Fix associated items effective visibility calculation for type privacy lints)
- #113226 (Fix try builds on the msvc builder)
- #113227 (Update cargo)
r? `@ghost`
`@rustbot` modify labels: rollup
Update cargo
6 commits in 03bc66b55c290324bd46eb22e369c8fae1908f91..5b377cece0e0dd0af686cf53ce4637d5d85c2a10
2023-06-23 23:27:46 +0000 to 2023-06-30 00:01:00 +0000
- Add READMEs for the credential helpers. (rust-lang/cargo#12322)
- Add some more documentation for Source download functions. (rust-lang/cargo#12319)
- Don't try to compile cargo-credential-gnome-secret on non-Linux platforms. (rust-lang/cargo#12321)
- refactor: use macro to remove duplication of workspace inheritable fields getters (rust-lang/cargo#12317)
- doc: should be `.cargo-ok` (rust-lang/cargo#12318)
- refactor(registry): extract and rearrange items to their own modules (rust-lang/cargo#12290)
r? `@ghost`
Fix try builds on the msvc builder
Try builds have been optimized to build less components, however bootstrap was still expecting them to be present on msvc. This PR (extracted from https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/112267) fixes that.
r? `@Kobzol`
Error when RPITITs' hidden types capture more lifetimes than their trait definitions
This implements a stricter set of captures rules for RPITITs. They now may only capture:
1. Lifetimes from the impl header (both the self type and any trait substs -- we may want to restrict just to the self type's lifetimes, but the PR makes that easy to do, too)
2. Lifetimes mentioned by the `impl Trait` in the trait method's definition.
Namely, they may not mention lifetimes from the method (early or late) that are not mentioned in the `impl Trait`.
cc #105258 which I think was trying to do this too, though I'm not super familiar with what exactly differs from that or why that one was broken.
cc #112194 (doesn't fix this issue per se, because it's still an open question, but I think this is objectively better than the status quo, and gets us closer to resolving that issue.)
Technically is a fix for the ICE in #108580, but it turns that issue into an error now. We can decide separately whether or not nested RPITITs should capture lifetimes from their parents.
r? ``@oli-obk``
fix(resolve): skip assertion judgment when NonModule is dummy
Fixes#85992
## Why #85992 panic
During `resolve_imports`, the `path_res` of the import `issue_85992_extern_2::Outcome` is pointing to `external::issue_85992_extern_2` instead of `crate::issue_85992_extern_2`. As a result `import.imported_module.set` had been executed.
Attached 1: the state of `early_resolve_ident_in_lexical_scope` during the `resolve_imports` for `use issue_85992_extern_2::Outcome` is as follows:
|iter in `visit_scopes` | `scope` | `result.binding` |
| - | - | - |
| init | - | - |
| 0 | `CrateRoot` | Err(Determined) |
| 1 | `ExternPrelude` | pointing to the `issue_85992_extern_2`(external) |
However, during finalization for `issue_85992_extern_2::Outcome`, the `innermost_result` was pointed to `crate::issue_85992_extern_2` and no ambiguity was generated, leading to a panic.
Attached 2: the state of `early_resolve_ident_in_lexical_scope` during the `finalize_import` for `use issue_85992_extern_2::Outcome` is as follows:
|iter in `visit_scopes` | `scope` | `result.binding` | `innermost_result` |
| - | - | - | - |
| init | - | - | `None` |
| 0 | `CrateRoot` | pointing to `use crate::issue_85992_extern_2` **(introdcued by dummy)** | same as `result` but with a `Some` wapper|
| 1 | `ExternPrelude` | pointing to the `issue_85992_extern_2`(external) | smae as above |
## Try to solve
Skip assertion judgment when `NonModule` is dummy
r? `@petrochenkov`
loongarch: Fix ELF header flags
This patch changes the ELF header flags so that the ABI matches the floating-point features. It also updates the link to the new official documentation.
Test benchmarks with `-Z panic-abort-tests`
During test execution, when a `#[bench]` benchmark is encountered it's executed once to check whether it works. Unfortunately that was not compatible with `-Z panic-abort-tests`: the feature works by spawning a subprocess for each test, which prevents the use of dynamic tests as we cannot pass closures to child processes, and before this PR the conversion from benchmark to test was done by turning benchmarks into dynamic tests whose closures execute the benchmark once.
The approach this PR took was to add two new kinds of `TestFn`s: `StaticBenchAsTestFn` and `DynBenchAsTestFn` (⚠️ **this is a breaking change** ⚠️). With that change, a `StaticBenchFn` can be converted into a `StaticBenchAsTestFn` without creating dynamic tests, and making it possible to test `#[bench]` functions with `-Z panic-abort-tests`. The subprocess test runner also had to be updated to perform the conversion from benchmark to test when appropriate.
Along with the bug fix, in the first commit I refactored how tests are executed: rather than executing the test function in multiple places across `libtest`, there is now a private `TestFn::into_runnable()` method, which returns either a `RunnableTest` or `RunnableBench`, on which you can call the `run()` method. This simplified the rest of the changes in the PR.
This PR is best reviewed commit-by-commit.
Fixes https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/73509
By reversing the logic I felt that the code became a clearer. Also,
added a comment to make it clear that we need to take the trailing
semicolon for the `let-else` statement into account.
This allows users to configure the maximum length of a single line
`let-else` statements. `let-else` statements that otherwise meet the
requirements to be formatted on a single line will have their divergent
`else` block formatted over multiple lines if they exceed this length.
**Note**: `single_line_let_else_max_widt` will be introduced as a stable
configuration option.
Mark wrapped intrinsics as inline(always)
This should mitigate having the inliner decide not to inline when the architecture is lacking an implementation of
TargetTransformInfo::areInlineCompatible aware of the target features (e.g. PowerPC as today).
See https://github.com/rust-lang/stdarch/pull/1443#issuecomment-1613788080
Rollup of 8 pull requests
Successful merges:
- #113072 (str docs: remove "Basic usage" text where not useful)
- #113153 (make HashMap::or_insert_with example more simple)
- #113185 (Set `channel = nightly` in dist profile)
- #113186 (document that the panic in collect_intra_doc_links is load-bearing)
- #113187 (No need to distinguish `LocalTy` from `Ty`)
- #113189 (compiletest: Only trim the end of process output)
- #113191 (Update browser-ui-test version and improve GUI test)
- #113206 (User may want to skip tidy check sometimes)
r? `@ghost`
`@rustbot` modify labels: rollup
compiletest: Only trim the end of process output
As of #94196, compiletest automatically trims process stderr/stdout output before printing it, to make failure info more compact.
This causes the first line of `run-coverage` output to be displayed incorrectly, because it uses leading whitespace to align line numbers.
Trimming only the end of the output string should still have the intended effect (e.g. removing trailing newlines), without causing problems for output that deliberately uses leading whitespace on the first line.
## Before
```
--- stdout -------------------------------
1| 1|fn main() { //
2| 1| let num = 9;
3| 1| while num >= 10 {
4| 0| }
5| 1|}
------------------------------------------
stderr: none
```
## After
```
--- stdout -------------------------------
1| 1|fn main() { //
2| 1| let num = 9;
3| 1| while num >= 10 {
4| 0| }
5| 1|}
------------------------------------------
stderr: none
```