Split out statement attributes changes from #78306
This is the same as PR https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/78306, but `unused_doc_comments` is modified to explicitly ignore statement items (which preserves the current behavior).
This shouldn't have any user-visible effects, so it can be landed without lang team discussion.
---------
When the 'early' and 'late' visitors visit an attribute target, they
activate any lint attributes (e.g. `#[allow]`) that apply to it.
This can affect warnings emitted on sibiling attributes. For example,
the following code does not produce an `unused_attributes` for
`#[inline]`, since the sibiling `#[allow(unused_attributes)]` suppressed
the warning.
```rust
trait Foo {
#[allow(unused_attributes)] #[inline] fn first();
#[inline] #[allow(unused_attributes)] fn second();
}
```
However, we do not do this for statements - instead, the lint attributes
only become active when we visit the struct nested inside `StmtKind`
(e.g. `Item`).
Currently, this is difficult to observe due to another issue - the
`HasAttrs` impl for `StmtKind` ignores attributes for `StmtKind::Item`.
As a result, the `unused_doc_comments` lint will never see attributes on
item statements.
This commit makes two interrelated fixes to the handling of inert
(non-proc-macro) attributes on statements:
* The `HasAttr` impl for `StmtKind` now returns attributes for
`StmtKind::Item`, treating it just like every other `StmtKind`
variant. The only place relying on the old behavior was macro
which has been updated to explicitly ignore attributes on item
statements. This allows the `unused_doc_comments` lint to fire for
item statements.
* The `early` and `late` lint visitors now activate lint attributes when
invoking the callback for `Stmt`. This ensures that a lint
attribute (e.g. `#[allow(unused_doc_comments)]`) can be applied to
sibiling attributes on an item statement.
For now, the `unused_doc_comments` lint is explicitly disabled on item
statements, which preserves the current behavior. The exact locatiosn
where this lint should fire are being discussed in PR #78306
When the 'early' and 'late' visitors visit an attribute target, they
activate any lint attributes (e.g. `#[allow]`) that apply to it.
This can affect warnings emitted on sibiling attributes. For example,
the following code does not produce an `unused_attributes` for
`#[inline]`, since the sibiling `#[allow(unused_attributes)]` suppressed
the warning.
```rust
trait Foo {
#[allow(unused_attributes)] #[inline] fn first();
#[inline] #[allow(unused_attributes)] fn second();
}
```
However, we do not do this for statements - instead, the lint attributes
only become active when we visit the struct nested inside `StmtKind`
(e.g. `Item`).
Currently, this is difficult to observe due to another issue - the
`HasAttrs` impl for `StmtKind` ignores attributes for `StmtKind::Item`.
As a result, the `unused_doc_comments` lint will never see attributes on
item statements.
This commit makes two interrelated fixes to the handling of inert
(non-proc-macro) attributes on statements:
* The `HasAttr` impl for `StmtKind` now returns attributes for
`StmtKind::Item`, treating it just like every other `StmtKind`
variant. The only place relying on the old behavior was macro
which has been updated to explicitly ignore attributes on item
statements. This allows the `unused_doc_comments` lint to fire for
item statements.
* The `early` and `late` lint visitors now activate lint attributes when
invoking the callback for `Stmt`. This ensures that a lint
attribute (e.g. `#[allow(unused_doc_comments)]`) can be applied to
sibiling attributes on an item statement.
For now, the `unused_doc_comments` lint is explicitly disabled on item
statements, which preserves the current behavior. The exact locatiosn
where this lint should fire are being discussed in PR #78306
BTreeMap: refactor Entry out of map.rs into its own file
btree/map.rs is approaching the 3000 line mark, splitting out the entry
code buys about 500 lines of headroom.
I've created this PR because the changes I've made in #77438 will push `map.rs` over the 3000 line limit and cause tidy to complain.
I picked `Entry` to factor out because it feels less tightly coupled to the rest of `BTreeMap` than the various iterator implementations.
Related: #60302
The wrapper type led to tons of target.target
across the compiler. Its ptr_width field isn't
required any more, as target_pointer_width
is already present in parsed form.
Fix LitKind's byte buffer to use refcounted slice
While working on adding a new lint for clippy (see https://github.com/rust-lang/rust-clippy/pull/6044) for avoiding shared ownership of "mutable buffer" types (such as using `Rc<Vec<T>>` instead of `Rc<[T]>`), I noticed a type exported from rustc_ast and used by clippy gets caught by the lint. This PR fixes the exported type.
This PR includes the actual change to clippy too, but I will open a PR directly against clippy for that part (although it will currently fail to build there).
Allow a unique name to be assigned to dataflow graphviz output
Previously, if the same analysis were invoked multiple times in a single compilation session, the graphviz output for later runs would overwrite that of previous runs. Allow callers to add a unique identifier to each run so this can be avoided.
Stabilize some Result methods as const
Stabilize the following methods of Result as const:
- `is_ok`
- `is_err`
- `as_ref`
A test is also included, analogous to the test for `const_option`.
These methods are currently const under the unstable feature `const_result` (tracking issue: #67520).
I believe these methods to be eligible for stabilization because of the stabilization of #49146 (Allow if and match in constants) and the trivial implementations, see also: [PR#75463](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/75463) and [PR#76135](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/76135).
Note: these methods are the only methods currently under the `const_result` feature, thus this PR results in the removal of the feature.
Related: #76225
Attach tokens to all AST types used in `Nonterminal`
We perform token capturing when we have outer attributes (for nonterminals that support attributes - e.g. `Stmt`), or when we parse a `Nonterminal` for a `macro_rules!` argument. The full list of `Nonterminals` affected by this PR is:
* `NtBlock`
* `NtStmt`
* `NtTy`
* `NtMeta`
* `NtPath`
* `NtVis`
* `NtLiteral`
Of these nonterminals, only `NtStmt` and `NtLiteral` (which is actually just an `Expr`), support outer attributes - the rest only ever have token capturing perform when they match a `macro_rules!` argument.
This makes progress towards solving https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/43081 - we now collect tokens for everything that might need them. However, we still need to handle `#[cfg]`, inner attributes, and misc pretty-printing issues (e.g. #75734)
I've separated the changes into (mostly) independent commits, which could be split into individual PRs for each `Nonterminal` variant. The purpose of having them all in one PR is to do a single Crater run for all of them.
Most of the changes in this PR are trivial (adding `tokens: None` everywhere we construct the various AST structs). The significant changes are:
* `ast::Visibility` is changed from `type Visibility = Spanned<VisibilityKind>` to a `struct Visibility { kind, span, tokens }`.
* `maybe_collect_tokens` is made generic, and used for both `ast::Expr` and `ast::Stmt`.
* Some of the statement-parsing functions are refactored so that we can capture the trailing semicolon.
* `Nonterminal` and `Expr` both grew by 8 bytes, as some of the structs which are stored inline (rather than behind a `P`) now have an `Option<TokenStream>` field. Hopefully the performance impact of doing this is negligible.
Add CONST_ITEM_MUTATION lint
Fixes#74053Fixes#55721
This PR adds a new lint `CONST_ITEM_MUTATION`.
Given an item `const FOO: SomeType = ..`, this lint fires on:
* Attempting to write directly to a field (`FOO.field = some_val`) or
array entry (`FOO.array_field[0] = val`)
* Taking a mutable reference to the `const` item (`&mut FOO`), including
through an autoderef `FOO.some_mut_self_method()`
The lint message explains that since each use of a constant creates a
new temporary, the original `const` item will not be modified.
We no longer lint assignments to const item fields in the
`temporary_assignment` lint, since this is now covered by the
`CONST_ITEM_MUTATION` lint.
Additionally, we `#![allow(const_item_mutation)]` in the
`borrow_interior_mutable_const.rs` test. Clippy UI tests are run with
`-D warnings`, which seems to cause builtin lints to prevent Clippy
lints from running.
Support dataflow problems on arbitrary lattices
This PR implements last of the proposed extensions I mentioned in the design meeting for the original dataflow refactor. It extends the current dataflow framework to work with arbitrary lattices, not just `BitSet`s. This is a prerequisite for dataflow-enabled MIR const-propagation. Personally, I am skeptical of the usefulness of doing const-propagation pre-monomorphization, since many useful constants only become known after monomorphization (e.g. `size_of::<T>()`) and users have a natural tendency to hand-optimize the rest. It's probably worth exprimenting with, however, and others have shown interest cc `@rust-lang/wg-mir-opt.`
The `Idx` associated type is moved from `AnalysisDomain` to `GenKillAnalysis` and replaced with an associated `Domain` type that must implement `JoinSemiLattice`. Like before, each `Analysis` defines the "bottom value" for its domain, but can no longer override the dataflow join operator. Analyses that want to use set intersection must now use the `lattice::Dual` newtype. `GenKillAnalysis` impls have an additional requirement that `Self::Domain: BorrowMut<BitSet<Self::Idx>>`, which effectively means that they must use `BitSet<Self::Idx>` or `lattice::Dual<BitSet<Self::Idx>>` as their domain.
Most of these changes were mechanical. However, because a `Domain` is no longer always a powerset of some index type, we can no longer use an `IndexVec<BasicBlock, GenKillSet<A::Idx>>>` to store cached block transfer functions. Instead, we use a boxed `dyn Fn` trait object. I discuss a few alternatives to the current approach in a commit message.
The majority of new lines of code are to preserve existing Graphviz diagrams for those unlucky enough to have to debug dataflow analyses. I find these diagrams incredibly useful when things are going wrong and considered regressing them unacceptable, especially the pretty-printing of `MovePathIndex`s, which are used in many dataflow analyses. This required a parallel `fmt` trait used only for printing dataflow domains, as well as a refactoring of the `graphviz` module now that we cannot expect the domain to be a `BitSet`. Some features did have to be removed, such as the gen/kill display mode (which I didn't use but existed to mirror the output of the old dataflow framework) and line wrapping. Since I had to rewrite much of it anyway, I took the opportunity to switch to a `Visitor` for printing dataflow state diffs instead of using cursors, which are error prone for code that must be generic over both forward and backward analyses. As a side-effect of this change, we no longer have quadratic behavior when writing graphviz diagrams for backward dataflow analyses.
r? `@pnkfelix`
This extends PR #73293 to handle patterns (Pat). Unlike expressions,
patterns do not support custom attributes, so we only need to capture
tokens during macro_rules! argument parsing.
Miri: Renamed "undef" to "uninit"
Renamed remaining references to "undef" to "uninit" when referring to Miri.
Impacted directories are:
- `src/librustc_codegen_llvm/consts.rs`
- `src/librustc_middle/mir/interpret/`
- `src/librustc_middle/ty/print/pretty.rs`
- `src/librustc_mir/`
- `src/tools/clippy/clippy_lints/src/consts.rs`
Upon building Miri based on the new changes it was verified that no changes needed to be made with the Miri project.
Related issue #71193
Renamed remaining references to "undef" to "uninit" when referring to Miri.
Impacted directories are:
- src/librustc_codegen_llvm/consts.rs
- src/librustc_middle/mir/interpret/
- src/librustc_middle/ty/print/pretty.rs
- src/librustc_mir/
- src/tools/clippy/clippy_lints/src/consts.rs
Upon building Miri based on the new changes it was verified that no changes needed to be made with the Miri project.
Related issue #71193
By moving `{known,used}_attrs` from `SessionGlobals` to `Session`. This
means they are accessed via the `Session`, rather than via TLS. A few
`Attr` methods and `librustc_ast` functions are now methods of
`Session`.
All of this required passing a `Session` to lots of functions that didn't
already have one. Some of these functions also had arguments removed, because
those arguments could be accessed directly via the `Session` argument.
`contains_feature_attr()` was dead, and is removed.
Some functions were moved from `librustc_ast` elsewhere because they now need
to access `Session`, which isn't available in that crate.
- `entry_point_type()` --> `librustc_builtin_macros`
- `global_allocator_spans()` --> `librustc_metadata`
- `is_proc_macro_attr()` --> `Session`
For consistency with `Attribute::has_name` which doesn't mark the attribute as used either.
Replace all uses of `check_name` with `has_name` outside of rustc
This commit modifies the `substitute_normalize_and_test_predicates`
query, renaming it to `impossible_predicates` and only checking
predicates which do not require substs. By making this change,
polymorphization doesn't have to explicitly support vtables.
Signed-off-by: David Wood <david@davidtw.co>
Rollup of 14 pull requests
Successful merges:
- #70563 ([rustdoc] Page hash handling)
- #73856 (Edit librustc_lexer top-level docs)
- #73870 (typeck: adding type information to projection)
- #73953 (Audit hidden/short code suggestions)
- #73962 (libstd/net/tcp.rs: #![deny(unsafe_op_in_unsafe_fn)])
- #73969 (mir: mark mir construction temporaries as internal)
- #73974 (Move A|Rc::as_ptr from feature(weak_into_raw) to feature(rc_as_ptr))
- #74067 (rustdoc: Restore underline text decoration on hover for FQN in header)
- #74074 (Fix the return type of Windows' `OpenOptionsExt::security_qos_flags`.)
- #74078 (Always resolve type@primitive as a primitive, not a module)
- #74089 (Add rust-analyzer to the build manifest)
- #74090 (Remove unused RUSTC_DEBUG_ASSERTIONS)
- #74102 (Fix const prop ICE)
- #74112 (Expand abbreviation in core::ffi description)
Failed merges:
r? @ghost
typeck: adding type information to projection
This commit modifies the Place as follow:
* remove 'ty' from ProjectionKind
* add type information into to Projection
* replace 'ty' in Place with 'base_ty'
* introduce 'ty()' in `Place` to return the final type of the `Place`
* introduce `ty_before_projection()` in `Place` to return the type of
a `Place` before i'th projection is applied
Closes https://github.com/rust-lang/project-rfc-2229/issues/5
This commit modifies the Place as follow:
* remove 'ty' from ProjectionKind
* add type information into to Projection
* replace 'ty' in Place with 'base_ty'
* introduce 'ty()' in `Place` to return the final type of the `Place`
* introduce `ty_before_projection()` in `Place` to return the type of
a `Place` before i'th projection is applied
Closes https://github.com/rust-lang/project-rfc-2229/issues/5
Rollup of 13 pull requests
Successful merges:
- #72620 (Omit DW_AT_linkage_name when it is the same as DW_AT_name)
- #72967 (Don't move cursor in search box when using arrows to navigate results)
- #73102 (proc_macro: Stop flattening groups with dummy spans)
- #73297 (Support configurable deny-warnings for all in-tree crates.)
- #73507 (Cleanup MinGW LLVM linkage workaround)
- #73588 (Fix handling of reserved registers for ARM inline asm)
- #73597 (Record span of `const` kw in GenericParamKind)
- #73629 (Make AssocOp Copy)
- #73681 (Update Chalk to 0.14)
- #73707 (Fix links in `SliceIndex` documentation)
- #73719 (emitter: column width defaults to 140)
- #73729 (disable collectionbenches for android)
- #73748 (Add code block to code in documentation of `List::rebase_onto`)
Failed merges:
r? @ghost
Record span of `const` kw in GenericParamKind
Context: this is needed for a fix of https://github.com/rust-lang/rustfmt/issues/4263,
which currently records the span of a const generic param incorrectly
because the location of the `const` kw is not known.
I am not sure how to add tests for this; any guidance in how to do so
would be appreciated 🙂
Context: this is needed to fix https://github.com/rust-lang/rustfmt/issues/4263,
which currently records the span of a const generic param incorrectly
because the location of the `const` kw is not known.
I am not sure how to add tests for this; any guidance in how to do so
would be appreciated 🙂
For the following code
```rust
let c = || bar(foo.x, foo.x)
```
We generate two different `hir::Place`s for both `foo.x`.
Handling this adds overhead for analysis we need to do for RFC 2229.
We also want to store type information at each Projection to support
analysis as part of the RFC. This resembles what we have for
`mir::Place`
This commit modifies the Place as follows:
- Rename to `PlaceWithHirId`, where there `hir_id` is that of the
expressioin.
- Move any other information that describes the access out to another
struct now called `Place`.
- Removed `Span`, it can be accessed using the [hir
API](https://doc.rust-lang.org/nightly/nightly-rustc/rustc_middle/hir/map/struct.Map.html#method.span)
- Modify `Projection` to be a strucutre of its own, that currently only
contains the `ProjectionKind`.
Adding type information to projections wil be completed as part of https://github.com/rust-lang/project-rfc-2229/issues/5
Closes https://github.com/rust-lang/project-rfc-2229/issues/3
Co-authored-by: Aman Arora <me@aman-arora.com>
Co-authored-by: Roxane Fruytier <roxane.fruytier@hotmail.com>
Stabilize Option::zip
This PR stabilizes the following API:
```rust
impl<T> Option<T> {
pub fn zip<U>(self, other: Option<U>) -> Option<(T, U)>;
}
```
This API has real world usage as seen in <https://grep.app/search?q=-%3E%20Option%3C%5C%28T%2C%5Cs%3FU%5C%29%3E®exp=true&filter[lang][0]=Rust>.
The `zip_with` method is left unstably as this API is kinda niche
and it hasn't received much usage in Rust repositories on GitHub.
cc #70086
Clean up type alias impl trait implementation
- Removes special case for top-level impl trait
- Removes associated opaque types
- Forbid lifetime elision in let position impl trait. This is consistent with the behavior for inferred types.
- Handle lifetimes in type alias impl trait more uniformly with other parameters
cc #69323
cc #63063Closes#57188Closes#62988Closes#69136Closes#73061
Make `PolyTraitRef::self_ty` return `Binder<Ty>`
This came up during review of #71618. The current implementation is the same as a call to `skip_binder` but harder to audit. Make it preserve binding levels and add a call to `skip_binder` at all use sites so they can be audited as part of #72507.
Literal error reporting cleanup
While doing some performance work, I noticed some code duplication in `librustc_parser/lexer/mod.rs`, so I cleaned it up.
This PR is probably best reviewed commit by commit.
I'm not sure what the API stability practices for `librustc_lexer` are. Four public methods in `unescape.rs` can be removed, but two are used by clippy, so I left them in for now.
I could open a PR for Rust-Analyzer when this one lands.
But how do I open a PR for clippy? (Git submodules are frustrating to work with)
New lint `match_vec_item`
Added new lint to warn a match on index item which can panic. It's always better to use `get(..)` instead.
Closes#5500
changelog: New lint `match_on_vec_items`
- Show just one error message with multiple suggestions in case of
using multiple times an OS in target family position
- Only suggest #[cfg(unix)] when the OS is in the Unix family
- Test all the operating systems
Don't trigger while_let_on_iterator when the iterator is recreated every iteration
r? @phansch
Fixes#1654
changelog: Fix false positive in [`while_let_on_iterator`]
Downgrade match_bool to pedantic
I don't quite buy the justification in https://rust-lang.github.io/rust-clippy/. The justification is:
> It makes the code less readable.
In the Rust codebases I've worked in, I have found people were comfortable using `match bool` (selectively) to make code more readable. For example, initializing struct fields is a place where the indentation of `match` can work better than the indentation of `if`:
```rust
let _ = Struct {
v: {
...
},
w: match doing_w {
true => ...,
false => ...,
},
x: Nested {
c: ...,
b: ...,
a: ...,
},
y: if doing_y {
...
} else { // :(
...
},
z: ...,
};
```
Or sometimes people prefer something a bit less pithy than `if` when the meaning of the bool doesn't read off clearly from the condition:
```rust
if set.insert(...) {
... // ???
} else {
...
}
match set.insert(...) {
// set.insert returns false if already present
false => ...,
true => ...,
}
```
Or `match` can be a better fit when the bool is playing the role more of a value than a branch condition:
```rust
impl ErrorCodes {
pub fn from(b: bool) -> Self {
match b {
true => ErrorCodes::Yes,
false => ErrorCodes::No,
}
}
}
```
And then there's plain old it's-1-line-shorter, which means we get 25% more content on a screen when stacking a sequence of conditions:
```rust
let old_noun = match old_binding.is_import() {
true => "import",
false => "definition",
};
let new_participle = match new_binding.is_import() {
true => "imported",
false => "defined",
};
```
Bottom line is I think this lint fits the bill better as a pedantic lint; I don't think linting on this by default is justified.
changelog: Remove match_bool from default set of enabled lints
Fixes#4226
This introduces the lint await_holding_lock. For async functions, we iterate
over all types in generator_interior_types and look for types named MutexGuard,
RwLockReadGuard, or RwLockWriteGuard. If we find one then we emit a lint.
If let else mutex
changelog: Adds lint to catch incorrect use of `Mutex::lock` in `if let` expressions with lock calls in any of the blocks.
closes: #5219
Fix issue #2907.
Update the "borrow box" lint to avoid recommending the following
conversion:
```
// Old
pub fn f(&mut Box<T>) {...}
// New
pub fn f(&mut T) {...}
```
Given a mutable reference to a box, functions may want to change
"which" object the Box is pointing at.
This change avoids recommending removing the "Box" parameter
for mutable references.
changelog: Don't trigger [`borrow_box`] lint on `&mut Box` references
Cleanup: `node_id` -> `hir_id`
This removes some more `node_id` terminology from Clippy and replaces one occurrence of `as_local_node_id` with `as_local_hir_id`, which should be doing the same for that particular case.
changelog: none
Update the "borrow box" lint to avoid recommending the following
conversion:
```
// Old
pub fn f(&mut Box<T>) {...}
// New
pub fn f(&mut T) {...}
```
Given a mutable reference to a box, functions may want to change
"which" object the Box is pointing at.
This change avoids recommending removing the "Box" parameter
for mutable references.
add lint futures_not_send
changelog: add lint futures_not_send
fixes#5379
~Remark: one thing that can (should?) still be improved is to directly include the error message from the `Send` check so that the programmer stays in the flow. Currently, getting the actual error message requires a restructuring of the code to make the `Send` constraint explicit.~
It now shows all unmet constraints for allowing the Future to be Send.
Fixes issue #4892.
First contribution here 😊 ! Do not hesitate to correct me.
This PR is related to issue #4892 .
# Summary
```rust
-literal.method_call(args)
```
The main idea is to not trigger `clippy::precedence` when the method call is an odd function.
# Example
```rust
// should trigger lint
let _ = -1.0_f64.abs() //precedence of method call abs() and neg ('-') is ambiguous
// should not trigger lint
let _ = -1.0_f64.sin() // sin is an odd function => -sin(x) = sin(-x)
```
# Theory
Rust allows following literals:
- char
- string
- integers
- floats
- byte
- bool
Only integers/floats implements the relevant `std::ops::Neg`.
Following odd functions are implemented on i[8-128] and/or f[32-64]:
- `asin`
- `asinh`
- `atan`
- `atanh`
- `cbrt`
- `fract`
- `round`
- `signum`
- `sin`
- `sinh`
- `tan`
- `tanh `
- `to_degrees`
- `to_radians`
# Implementation
As suggested by `flip1995` in [comment](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust-clippy/issues/4892#issuecomment-568249683), this PR add a whitelist of odd functions and compare method call to the the whitelist before triggering lint.
changelog: Don't trigger [`clippy::precedence`] on odd functions.
question_mark: don't add `as_ref()` for a call expression
If a call returns a `!Copy` value, it does so regardless of whether `as_ref()` is added. For example, `foo.into_option().as_ref()?` can be simplified to `foo.into_option()?`.
---
changelog: Improved `question_mark` lint suggestion so that it doesn't add redundant `as_ref()`
Do not lint in macros for match lints
Don't lint in macros for match lints, more precisely in `check_pat` and `check_local` where it was not the case.
changelog: none
fixes: #5362
large_enum_variant: Report sizes of variants
This reports the sizes of the largest and second-largest variants.
Closes#5459
changelog: `large_enum_variant`: Report the sizes of the largest and second-largest variants.
Disallow bit-shifting in integer_arithmetic
Make the `integer_arithmetic` lint detect all the operations that are defined as being capable of overflow in the [Rust Reference](https://doc.rust-lang.org/reference/expressions/operator-expr.html#overflow), by also linting for bit-shifting operations (`<<`, `>>`).
changelog: Disallow bit-shifting in `integer_arithmetic`
Add lint on large non scalar const
This PR adds the new lint `non_scalar_const` that aims to warn against `const` declaration of large arrays. For performance, because of inlining, large arrays should be preferably declared as `static`.
Note: i made this one to warn on all const arrays, whether they are in a body function or not. I don't know if this is really necessary, i could just reduce this lint to variables out of function scope.
Fixes: #400
changelog: add new lint for large non-scalar types declared as const
Add lint for explicit deref and deref_mut method calls
This PR adds the lint `explicit_deref_method` that suggests replacing `deref()` and `deref_mut()` with `&*a` and `&mut *a`.
It doesn't lint inside macros.
This PR is the continuation of #3258.
changelog: Add lint `explicit_deref_method`.
Fixes: #1566
Add lint for float in array comparison
Fixes#4277
changelog:
- Added new handler for expression of index kind (e.g. `arr[i]`). It returns a constant when both array and index are constant, or when the array is constant and all values are equal.
- Trigger float_cmp and float_cmp_const lint when comparing arrays. Allow for comparison when one of the arrays contains only zeros or infinities.
- Added appropriate tests for such cases.
Refactor: Use rustc's `match_def_path`
This replaces our match_def_path implementation with the rustc one.
Note that we can't just use it in all call sites because of the
`&[&str]` / `&[Symbol]` difference in Clippy/rustc.
changelog: none
This replaces our match_def_path implementation with the rustc one.
Note that we can't just use it in all call sites because of the
`&[&str]` / `&[Symbol]` difference in Clippy/rustc.
Make use of more diagnostic items
This makes use of some (not all) already existing diagnostic items. Specifically:
* 79982a2: `core::mem::uninitialized`, `core::mem::zeroed`, `alloc::sync::Arc`, `alloc::sync::Rc`
* 83874d0: `Option` and `Result`
cc #5393
changelog: none
Fixes#5405: redundant clone false positive with arrays
Check whether slice elements implement Copy before suggesting to drop
the clone method
changelog: add a check for slice indexing on redundant_clone lint
Update documentation for new_ret_no_self
changelog: Update documentation for lint new_ret_no_self to reflect that the return type must only contain `Self`, not be `Self`
The lint was changed to be more lenient than the documentation implies in PR #3338 (Related issue #3313)
Change the existing hex bit mask (`0x1111`) to a binary one (`0b1111`).
The former does not seem to have anything to do with trailing zeros and is
probably a typo.