Brings in a few regression fixes on the Cargo side, updates the rls to work
with the newer Cargo, and also updates other crates.io dependencies to pull in
various bug fixes and such.
Report error for assignment in `if` condition
For code like `if x = 3 {}`, output:
```
error[E0308]: mismatched types
--> $DIR/issue-17283.rs:25:8
|
25 | if x = x {
| ^^^^^
| |
| help: did you mean to compare equality? `x == x`
| expected bool, found ()
|
= note: expected type `bool`
found type `()`
```
Fix#40926.
Issue 42545 type inference regression
Fix an ICE that results from type inference obligations being dropped on the floor. Specifically, when computing the implied bounds, we would sometimes do normalizations that get stored in the cache, but we would *not* try to solve the resulting obligations. This can sometimes leave type variables uninferred. Occurs only rarely because implied bounds are processed in regionck which happens very late, so usually the cache is populated already from somewhere else.
I think that the *proper* fix here is probably lazy normalization. This fix is intentionally very narrow both because this code is on the chopping block and because this needs a beta backport.
r? @eddyb
cc @arielb1
Introduce tidy lint to check for inconsistent tracking issues
This PR
* Refactors the collect_lib_features function to work in a
non-checking mode (no bad pointer needed, and list of
lang features).
* Introduces checking whether unstable/stable tags for a
given feature have inconsistent tracking issues, as in,
multiple tracking issues per feature.
* Fixes such inconsistencies throughout the codebase.
save-analysis: remove a lot of stuff
This commits us to the JSON format and the more general def/ref style of output, rather than also supporting different data formats for different data structures. This does not affect the RLS at all, but will break any clients of the CSV form - AFAIK there are none (beyond a few of my own toy projects) - DXR stopped working long ago.
r? @eddyb
Fix condvar.wait(distant future) return immediately on OSX
Fixes issue #37440: `pthread_cond_timedwait` on macOS Sierra seems
to overflow `ts_sec` parameter and returns immediately. To work
around this problem patch rounds timeout down to year 3000.
Patch also fixes overflow when converting `u64` to `time_t`.
The new target is wasm32-experimental-emscripten. Adds a new
configuration option to opt in to building experimental LLVM backends
such as the WebAssembly backend. The target name was chosen to be
similar to the existing wasm32-unknown-emscripten target so that the
build and tests would work with minimal other code changes. When/if the
new target replaces the old target, simply renaming it should just work.
This commit
* Refactors the collect_lib_features function to work in a
non-checking mode (no bad pointer needed, and list of
lang features).
* Introduces checking whether unstable/stable tags for a
given feature have inconsistent tracking issues.
* Fixes such inconsistencies throughout the codebase.
Autogenerate stubs and SUMMARY.md in the unstable book
Removes a speed bump in compiler development by autogenerating stubs for features in the unstable book. See #42454 for discussion.
The PR contains three commits, separated in order to make review easy:
* The first commit converts the tidy tool from a binary crate to a crate that contains both a library and a binary. In the second commit, we'll use the tidy library
* The second and main commit introduces autogeneration of SUMMARY.md and feature stub files
* The third commit turns off the tidy lint that checks for features without a stub, and removes the stub files. A separate commit due to the large number of files touched
Members of the doc team who wish to document some features can either do this (where `$rustsrc` is the root of the rust repo git checkout):
1. cd to `$rustsrc/src/tools/unstable-book-gen` and then do `cargo run $rustsrc/src $rustsrc/src/doc/unstable-book` to put the stubs into the unstable book
2. cd to `$rustsrc` and run `git ls-files --others --exclude-standard` to list the newly added stubs
3. choose a file to edit, then `git add` it and `git commit`
4. afterwards, remove all changes by the tool by doing `git --reset hard` and `git clean -f`
Or they can do this:
1. remove the comment marker in `src/tools/tidy/src/unstable_book.rs` line 122
2. run `./x.py test src/tools/tidy` to list the unstable features which only have stubs
3. revert the change in 1
3. document one of the chosen unstable features
The changes done by this PR also allow for further development:
* tidy obtains information about tracking issues. We can now forbid differing tracking issues between differing `#![unstable]` annotations. I haven't done this but plan to in a future PR
* we now have a general framework for generating stuff for the unstable book at build time. Further changes can autogenerate a list of the API a given library feature exposes.
The old way to simply click through the documentation after it has been uploaded to rust-lang.org works as well.
r? @nagisa
Fixes#42454
Suppress trait errors that are implied by other errors
this is currently a hack and should be cleaned up somewhat. Posting this to get some feedback.
r? @nikomatsakis
cc @estebank
Add a travis builder for wasm32-unknown-emscripten
This commits add an entry to travis matrix that will execute wasm32-unknown-emscripten tests suites.
- Emscripten for asmjs was updated to sdk-1.37.13-64bit
- The tests are run with node 8.0.0 (it can execute wasm)
- A wrapper script is used to run each test from the directory where it is (workaround for https://github.com/kripken/emscripten/issues/4542)
- Some tests are ignore, see #42629 and #42630
Remove sometimes in std::io::Read doc
We use it immediately in the next sentence, and the word is filler.
A different conversation to make is whether we want to call them Readers in the documentation at all. And whether it's actually called "Readers" elsewhere.
Remove struct_field_attributes feature gate
Part of #41681. ~This PR only removes the feature gate; this *does not* update any documentations.~ This PR removes the feature gate and the corresponding chapter of the Unstable Book.
I'm not very sure about the changes I made though... Just followed the stabilization guideline.
r? @nikomatsakis
Position span label correctly when it isn't last
Fix#42595.
Before:
```
15 | map.entry("e").or_insert(0) += 1;
| ---------------------------^^^^^ot use `+=` on type `&mut {integer}`
```
After:
```
15 | map.entry("e").or_insert(0) += 1;
| ---------------------------^^^^^
| |
| cannot use `+=` on type `&mut {integer}`
```
Learn to parse `a as usize < b`
Parsing `a as usize > b` always works, but `a as usize < b` was a
parsing error because the parser would think the `<` started a generic
type argument for `usize`. The parser now attempts to parse as before,
and if a DiagnosticError is returned, try to parse again as a type with
no generic arguments. If this fails, return the original
`DiagnosticError`.
Fix#22644.
Includes methods exposing underlying allocator and the dellocation
routine.
Includes test illustrating a tiny `Alloc` that just bounds the total
bytes allocated.
Alpha-renamed `Allocator` to `Alloc` (and `HeapAllocator` to `HeapAlloc`).
Alpha-renamed `HeapAllocator` to `HeapAlloc`.
`<HeapAlloc as Alloc>::alloc_zeroed` is hooked up to `heap::allocate_zeroed`.
`HeapAlloc::realloc` falls back on alloc+copy+realloc on align mismatch.
Added `unwrap` calls in all the places where I can infer that the
conditions are met to avoid panic (or when the calling method itself
says it will panic in such a case).
Includes `alloc_zeroed` method that `RawVec` has come to depend on.
Exposed private `Layout::from_size_align` ctor to be `pub`, and added
explicit conditions for when it will panic (namely, when `align` is
not power-of-two, or if rounding up `size` to a multiple of `align`
overflows). Normalized all `Layout` construction to go through
`Layout::from_size_align`.
Addressed review feedback regarding `struct Layout` and zero-sized
layouts.
Restrict specification for `dealloc`, adding additional constraint
that the given alignment has to match that used to allocate the block.
(This is a maximally conservative constraint on the alignment. An open
question to resolve (before stabilization) is whether we can return to
a looser constraint such as the one previously specified.)
Split `fn realloc_in_place` into separate `fn grow_in_place` and `fn
shrink_in_place` methods, which have default impls that check against
usable_size for reuse. Make `realloc` default impl try `grow_in_place`
or `shrink_in_place` as appropriate before fallback on
alloc+copy+dealloc.
Drive-by: When reviewing calls to `padding_needed_for`, discovered
what I think was an over-conservative choice for its argument
alignment. Namely, in `fn extend`, we automatically realign the whole
resulting layout to satisfy both old (self) and new alignments. When
the old alignment exceeds the new, this means we would insert
unnecessary padding. So I changed the code to pass in `next.align`
instead of `new_align` to `padding_needed_for`.
Replaced ref to `realloc_in_place` with `grow_in_place`/`shrink_in_place`.
Revised docs replacing my idiosyncratic style of `fn foo` with just
`foo` when referring to the function or method `foo`.
(Alpha-renamed `Allocator` to `Alloc`.)
Post-rebased, added `Debug` derive for `allocator::Excess` to satisfy
`missing_debug_implementations`.
Fixes issue #37440: `pthread_cond_timedwait` on macOS Sierra seems
to overflow `ts_sec` parameter and returns immediately. To work
around this problem patch rounds timeout down to approximately 1000
years.
Patch also fixes overflow when converting `u64` to `time_t`.