cc #79813
This PR adds an allow-by-default future-compatibility lint
`SEMICOLON_IN_EXPRESSIONS_FROM_MACROS`. It fires when a trailing semicolon in a
macro body is ignored due to the macro being used in expression
position:
```rust
macro_rules! foo {
() => {
true; // WARN
}
}
fn main() {
let val = match true {
true => false,
_ => foo!()
};
}
```
The lint takes its level from the macro call site, and
can be allowed for a particular macro by adding
`#[allow(semicolon_in_expressions_from_macros)]`.
The lint is set to warn for all internal rustc crates (when being built
by a stage1 compiler). After the next beta bump, we can enable
the lint for the bootstrap compiler as well.
Make `-Z time-passes` less noisy
- Add the module name to `pre_AST_expansion_passes` and don't make it a
verbose event (since it normally doesn't take very long, and it's
emitted many times)
- Don't make the following rustdoc events verbose; they're emitted many times.
+ build_extern_trait_impl
+ build_local_trait_impl
+ build_primitive_trait_impl
+ get_auto_trait_impls
+ get_blanket_trait_impls
- Remove the `get_auto_trait_and_blanket_synthetic_impls` rustdoc event; it's wholly
covered by get_{auto,blanket}_trait_impls and not very useful.
I found this while working on https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/81275 but it's independent of those changes.
- Add the module name to `pre_AST_expansion_passes` and don't make it a
verbose event (since it normally doesn't take very long, and it's
emitted many times)
- Don't make the following rustdoc events verbose; they're emitted many times.
+ build_extern_trait_impl
+ build_local_trait_impl
+ build_primitive_trait_impl
+ get_auto_trait_impls
+ get_blanket_trait_impls
- Remove `get_auto_trait_and_blanket_synthetic_impls`; it's wholly
covered by get_{auto,blanket}_trait_impls and not very useful.
Fixes#81007
Previously, we would fail to collect tokens in the proper place when
only builtin attributes were present. As a result, we would end up with
attribute tokens in the collected `TokenStream`, leading to duplication
when we attempted to prepend the attributes from the AST node.
We now explicitly track when token collection must be performed due to
nomterminal parsing.
Allow #[rustc_builtin_macro = "name"]
This adds the option of specifying the name of a builtin macro in the `#[rustc_builtin_macro]` attribute: `#[rustc_builtin_macro = "name"]`.
This makes it possible to have both `std::panic!` and `core::panic!` as a builtin macro, by using different builtin macro names for each. This is needed to implement the edition-specific behaviour of the panic macros of RFC 3007.
Also removes `SyntaxExtension::is_derive_copy`, as the macro name (e.g. `sym::Copy`) is now tracked and provides that information directly.
r? ``@petrochenkov``
This makes it possible to have both std::panic and core::panic as a
builtin macro, by using different builtin macro names for each.
Also removes SyntaxExtension::is_derive_copy, as the macro name (e.g.
sym::Copy) is now tracked and provides that information directly.
Fix some clippy lints
Happy to revert these if you think they're less readable, but personally I like them better now (especially the `else { if { ... } }` to `else if { ... }` change).
We now collect tokens for the underlying node wrapped by `StmtKind`
instead of storing tokens directly in `Stmt`.
`LazyTokenStream` now supports capturing a trailing semicolon after it
is initially constructed. This allows us to avoid refactoring statement
parsing to wrap the parsing of the semicolon in `parse_tokens`.
Attributes on item statements
(e.g. `fn foo() { #[bar] struct MyStruct; }`) are now treated as
item attributes, not statement attributes, which is consistent with how
we handle attributes on other kinds of statements. The feature-gating
code is adjusted so that proc-macro attributes are still allowed on item
statements on stable.
Two built-in macros (`#[global_allocator]` and `#[test]`) needed to be
adjusted to support being passed `Annotatable::Stmt`.
Add lint for panic!("{}")
This adds a lint that warns about `panic!("{}")`.
`panic!(msg)` invocations with a single argument use their argument as panic payload literally, without using it as a format string. The same holds for `assert!(expr, msg)`.
This lints checks if `msg` is a string literal (after expansion), and warns in case it contained braces. It suggests to insert `"{}", ` to use the message literally, or to add arguments to use it as a format string.
![image](https://user-images.githubusercontent.com/783247/96643867-79eb1080-1328-11eb-8d4e-a5586837c70a.png)
This lint is also a good starting point for adding warnings about `panic!(not_a_string)` later, once [`panic_any()`](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/74622) becomes a stable alternative.
Implement destructuring assignment for structs and slices
This is the second step towards implementing destructuring assignment (RFC: rust-lang/rfcs#2909, tracking issue: #71126). This PR is the second part of #71156, which was split up to allow for easier review.
Note that the first PR (#78748) is not merged yet, so it is included as the first commit in this one. I thought this would allow the review to start earlier because I have some time this weekend to respond to reviews. If ``@petrochenkov`` prefers to wait until the first PR is merged, I totally understand, of course.
This PR implements destructuring assignment for (tuple) structs and slices. In order to do this, the following *parser change* was necessary: struct expressions are not required to have a base expression, i.e. `Struct { a: 1, .. }` becomes legal (in order to act like a struct pattern).
Unfortunately, this PR slightly regresses the diagnostics implemented in #77283. However, it is only a missing help message in `src/test/ui/issues/issue-77218.rs`. Other instances of this diagnostic are not affected. Since I don't exactly understand how this help message works and how to fix it yet, I was hoping it's OK to regress this temporarily and fix it in a follow-up PR.
Thanks to ``@varkor`` who helped with the implementation, particularly around the struct rest changes.
r? ``@petrochenkov``
Do not collect tokens for doc comments
Doc comment is a single token and AST has all the information to re-create it precisely.
Doc comments are also responsible for majority of calls to `collect_tokens` (with `num_calls == 1` and `num_calls == 0`, cc https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/78736).
(I also moved token collection into `fn parse_attribute` to deduplicate code a bit.)
r? `@Aaron1011`
rustc_ast: Do not panic by default when visiting macro calls
Panicking by default made sense when we didn't have HIR or MIR and everything worked on AST, but now all AST visitors run early and majority of them have to deal with macro calls, often by ignoring them.
The second commit renames `visit_mac` to `visit_mac_call`, the corresponding structures were renamed earlier in https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/69589.
Improve errors about #[deprecated] attribute
This change:
1. Turns `#[deprecated]` on a trait impl block into an error, which fixes#78625;
2. Changes these and other errors about `#[deprecated]` to use the span of the attribute instead of the item; and
3. Turns this error into a lint, to make sure it can be capped with `--cap-lints` and doesn't break any existing dependencies.
Can be reviewed per commit.
---
Example:
```rust
struct X;
#[deprecated = "a"]
impl Default for X {
#[deprecated = "b"]
fn default() -> Self {
X
}
}
```
Before:
```
error: This deprecation annotation is useless
--> src/main.rs:6:5
|
6 | / fn default() -> Self {
7 | | X
8 | | }
| |_____^
```
After:
```
error: this `#[deprecated]' annotation has no effect
--> src/main.rs:3:1
|
3 | #[deprecated = "a"]
| ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ help: try removing the deprecation attribute
|
= note: `#[deny(useless_deprecated)]` on by default
error: this `#[deprecated]' annotation has no effect
--> src/main.rs:5:5
|
5 | #[deprecated = "b"]
| ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ help: try removing the deprecation attribute
```
Treat trailing semicolon as a statement in macro call
See #61733 (comment)
We now preserve the trailing semicolon in a macro invocation, even if
the macro expands to nothing. As a result, the following code no longer
compiles:
```rust
macro_rules! empty {
() => { }
}
fn foo() -> bool { //~ ERROR mismatched
{ true } //~ ERROR mismatched
empty!();
}
```
Previously, `{ true }` would be considered the trailing expression, even
though there's a semicolon in `empty!();`
This makes macro expansion more token-based.
See https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/61733#issuecomment-716188981
We now preserve the trailing semicolon in a macro invocation, even if
the macro expands to nothing. As a result, the following code no longer
compiles:
```rust
macro_rules! empty {
() => { }
}
fn foo() -> bool { //~ ERROR mismatched
{ true } //~ ERROR mismatched
empty!();
}
```
Previously, `{ true }` would be considered the trailing expression, even
though there's a semicolon in `empty!();`
This makes macro expansion more token-based.
expand: Tweak a comment in implementation of `macro_rules`
The answer to the removed FIXME is that we don't apply mark to the span `sp` just because that span is no longer used. We could apply it, but that would just be unnecessary extra work.
The comments in code tell why the span is unused, it's a span of `$var` literally, which is lost for `tt` variables because their tokens are outputted directly, but kept for other variables which are outputted as [groups](https://doc.rust-lang.org/nightly/proc_macro/struct.Group.html) and `sp` is kept as the group's span.
Closes https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/2887