This commit makes several changes to the stability index infrastructure:
* Stability levels are now inherited lexically, i.e., each item's
stability level becomes the default for any nested items.
* The computed stability level for an item is stored as part of the
metadata. When using an item from an external crate, this data is
looked up and cached.
* The stability lint works from the computed stability level, rather
than manual stability attribute annotations. However, the lint still
checks only a limited set of item uses (e.g., it does not check every
component of a path on import). This will be addressed in a later PR,
as part of issue #8962.
* The stability lint only applies to items originating from external
crates, since the stability index is intended as a promise to
downstream crates.
* The "experimental" lint is now _allow_ by default. This is because
almost all existing crates have been marked "experimental", pending
library stabilization. With inheritance in place, this would generate
a massive explosion of warnings for every Rust program.
The lint should be changed back to deny-by-default after library
stabilization is complete.
* The "deprecated" lint still warns by default.
The net result: we can begin tracking stability index for the standard
libraries as we stabilize, without impacting most clients.
Closes#13540.
This PR is changing the error messages for non-exhaustive pattern matching to include a more accurate witness, i.e. a pattern that is not covered by any of the ones provided by the user. Example:
```rust
fn main() {
match (true, (Some("foo"), [true, true]), Some(42u)) {
(false, _, _) => (),
(true, (None, [true, _]), None) => (),
(true, (None, [false, _]), Some(1u)) => ()
}
}
```
```sh
/tmp/witness.rs:2:2: 6:3 error: non-exhaustive patterns: (true, (core::option::Some(_), _), _) not covered
/tmp/witness.rs:2 match (true, (Some("foo"), [true, true]), Some(42u)) {
/tmp/witness.rs:3 (false, _, _) => (),
/tmp/witness.rs:4 (true, (None, [true, _]), None) => (),
/tmp/witness.rs:5 (true, (None, [false, _]), Some(1u)) => ()
/tmp/witness.rs:6 }
```
As part of that, I refactored some of the relevant code and carried over the changes to fixed vectors from the previous PR.
I'm putting it out there for now but the tests will be red.
Closes#8142.
This is not the semantics we want long-term. You can continue to use
`#[unsafe_destructor]`, but you'll need to add
`#![feature(unsafe_destructor)]` to the crate attributes.
[breaking-change]
r? @alexcrichton
Closes#8142.
This is not the semantics we want long-term. You can continue to use
`#[unsafe_destructor]`, but you'll need to add
`#![feature(unsafe_destructor)]` to the crate attributes.
[breaking-change]
The parser already has special logic for parsing `>` tokens from `>>`, and this
commit extends the logic to the acquiring a `>` from the `>=` and `>>=` tokens
as well.
Closes#15043
This test was added long time ago and marked as ignored.
The same test was added later in #8485 as run-fail/issue-3907.rs,
but the old one was not deleted.
This commit makes several changes to the stability index infrastructure:
* Stability levels are now inherited lexically, i.e., each item's
stability level becomes the default for any nested items.
* The computed stability level for an item is stored as part of the
metadata. When using an item from an external crate, this data is
looked up and cached.
* The stability lint works from the computed stability level, rather
than manual stability attribute annotations. However, the lint still
checks only a limited set of item uses (e.g., it does not check every
component of a path on import). This will be addressed in a later PR,
as part of issue #8962.
* The stability lint only applies to items originating from external
crates, since the stability index is intended as a promise to
downstream crates.
* The "experimental" lint is now _allow_ by default. This is because
almost all existing crates have been marked "experimental", pending
library stabilization. With inheritance in place, this would generate
a massive explosion of warnings for every Rust program.
The lint should be changed back to deny-by-default after library
stabilization is complete.
* The "deprecated" lint still warns by default.
The net result: we can begin tracking stability index for the standard
libraries as we stabilize, without impacting most clients.
Closes#13540.
The lexer already ignores CRLF in between tokens, but it doesn't
properly handle carriage returns inside strings and doc comments. Teach
it to treat CRLF as LF inside these tokens, and to disallow carriage
returns that are not followed by linefeeds. This includes handling an
escaped CRLF inside a regular string token the same way it handles an
escaped LF.
This is technically a breaking change, as bare carriage returns are no
longer allowed, and CRLF sequences are now treated as LF inside strings
and doc comments, but it's very unlikely to actually affect any
real-world code.
This change is necessary to have Rust code compile on Windows the same
way it does on Unix. The mozilla/rust repository explicitly sets eol=lf
for Rust source files, but other Rust repositories don't. Notably,
rust-http cannot be compiled on Windows without converting the CRLF line
endings back to LF.
[breaking-change]
The lexer already ignores CRLF in between tokens, but it doesn't
properly handle carriage returns inside strings and doc comments. Teach
it to treat CRLF as LF inside these tokens, and to disallow carriage
returns that are not followed by linefeeds. This includes handling an
escaped CRLF inside a regular string token the same way it handles an
escaped LF.
This is technically a breaking change, as bare carriage returns are no
longer allowed, and CRLF sequences are now treated as LF inside strings
and doc comments, but it's very unlikely to actually affect any
real-world code.
This change is necessary to have Rust code compile on Windows the same
way it does on Unix. The mozilla/rust repository explicitly sets eol=lf
for Rust source files, but other Rust repositories don't. Notably,
rust-http cannot be compiled on Windows without converting the CRLF line
endings back to LF.
[breaking-change]
Replace its usage with byte string literals, except in `bytes!()` tests.
Also add a new snapshot, to be able to use the new b"foo" syntax.
The src/etc/2014-06-rewrite-bytes-macros.py script automatically
rewrites `bytes!()` invocations into byte string literals.
Pass it filenames as arguments to generate a diff that you can inspect,
or `--apply` followed by filenames to apply the changes in place.
Diffs can be piped into `tip` or `pygmentize -l diff` for coloring.
Fixes a codegen bug which generates illegal non-terminated LLVM block
when there are wildcard pattern with guard and enum patterns in a match
expression. Also refactors the code a little.
Closes#14865
This patch consolidates and cleans up the task spawning APIs:
* Removes the problematic `future_result` method from `std::task::TaskBuilder`,
and adds a `try_future` that both spawns the task and returns a future
representing its eventual result (or failure).
* Removes the public `opts` field from `TaskBuilder`, instead adding appropriate
builder methods to configure the task.
* Adds extension traits to libgreen and libnative that add methods to
`TaskBuilder` for spawning the task as a green or native thread.
Previously, there was no way to benefit from the `TaskBuilder` functionality and
also set the scheduler to spawn within.
With this change, all task spawning scenarios are supported through the
`TaskBuilder` interface.
Closes#3725.
[breaking-change]
The nightly builds on linux have been failing over the past few days due to a
malformed LD_LIBRARY_PATH. It appears that the underlying cause is that one of
the tests, dep-info-custom, recursively invokes make but the RUSTC variable
passed down has the string "$LD_LIBRARY_PATH". This is intended to read the
host's original LD_LIBRARY_PATH, but it appears that the makefile is eagerly
expanding the "$L" to nothing, causing the original host's LD_LIBRARY_PATH to be
ignored.
This fix removes passing the string "$LD_LIBRARY_PATH" and rather expands it
eagerly to ensure that escaping doesn't happen at a later stage. I'm still not
entirely sure why the makefile is interpreting the dollar as a variable, but
this seems to fix the issue.
The nightly builds on linux have been failing over the past few days due to a
malformed LD_LIBRARY_PATH. It appears that the underlying cause is that one of
the tests, dep-info-custom, recursively invokes make but the RUSTC variable
passed down has the string "$LD_LIBRARY_PATH". This is intended to read the
host's original LD_LIBRARY_PATH, but it appears that the makefile is eagerly
expanding the "$L" to nothing, causing the original host's LD_LIBRARY_PATH to be
ignored.
This fix removes passing the string "$LD_LIBRARY_PATH" and rather expands it
eagerly to ensure that escaping doesn't happen at a later stage. I'm still not
entirely sure why the makefile is interpreting the dollar as a variable, but
this seems to fix the issue.
This test was added long time ago and marked as ignored.
The same test was added later in #8485 as run-fail/issue-3907.rs,
but the old one was not deleted.
thereof.)
PR 14739 injected the new message that this removes from one test
case: borrowck-vec-pattern-loan-from-mut.rs
When reviewing the test case, I was not able to convince myself that
the error message was a legitimate thing to start emitting. Niko did
not see an obvious reason for it either, so I am going to remove it
and wait for someone (maybe Cameron Zwarich) to explain to me why we
should be emitting it.
See #14646 (tracking issue) and rust-lang/rfcs#69.
This does not close the tracking issue, as the `bytes!()` macro still needs to be removed. It will be later, after a snapshot is made with the changes in this PR, so that the new syntax can be used when bootstrapping the compiler.
`#[inline(never)]` is used.
Closes#8958.
This can break some code that relied on the addresses of statics
being distinct; add `#[inline(never)]` to the affected statics.
[breaking-change]
r? @brson
`#[inline(never)]` is used.
Closes#8958.
This can break some code that relied on the addresses of statics
being distinct; add `#[inline(never)]` to the affected statics.
[breaking-change]