Commit Graph

273 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
bors
09ac6e4b6d Auto merge of #117459 - matthiaskrgr:rollup-t3osb3c, r=matthiaskrgr
Rollup of 5 pull requests

Successful merges:

 - #113241 (rustdoc: Document lack of object safety on affected traits)
 - #117388 (Turn const_caller_location from a query to a hook)
 - #117417 (Add a stable MIR visitor)
 - #117439 (prepopulate opaque ty storage before using it)
 - #117451 (Add support for pre-unix-epoch file dates on Apple platforms (#108277))

r? `@ghost`
`@rustbot` modify labels: rollup
2023-10-31 23:08:56 +00:00
Matthias Krüger
51b275bff8
Rollup merge of #113241 - poliorcetics:85138-doc-object-safety, r=GuillaumeGomez
rustdoc: Document lack of object safety on affected traits

Closes #85138

I saw the issue didn't have any recent activity, if there is another MR for it I missed it.

I want the issue to move forward so here is my proposition.

It takes some space just before the "Implementors" section and only if the trait is **not** object
safe since it is the only case where special care must be taken in some cases and this has the
benefit of avoiding generation of HTML in (I hope) the common case.
2023-10-31 19:03:20 +01:00
Oli Scherer
4512f211ae Accept less invalid Rust in rustdoc 2023-10-31 13:58:03 +00:00
León Orell Valerian Liehr
58a80c85b9
rustdoc: elide cross-crate default generic arguments 2023-10-30 16:44:52 +01:00
Alexis (Poliorcetics) Bourget
a119158eb3 tests: object-safety section in traits 2023-10-29 22:57:45 +01:00
bors
6f349cdbfa Auto merge of #116471 - notriddle:notriddle/js-trait-alias, r=GuillaumeGomez
rustdoc: use JS to inline target type impl docs into alias

Preview docs:

- https://notriddle.com/rustdoc-html-demo-5/js-trait-alias/std/io/type.Result.html

- https://notriddle.com/rustdoc-html-demo-5/js-trait-alias-compiler/rustc_middle/ty/type.PolyTraitRef.html

This pull request also includes a bug fix for trait alias inlining across crates. This means more documentation is generated, and is why ripgrep runs slower (it's a thin wrapper on top of the `grep` crate, so 5% of its docs are now the Result type).

- Before, built with rustdoc 1.75.0-nightly (aa1a71e9e 2023-10-26), Result type alias method docs are missing: http://notriddle.com/rustdoc-html-demo-5/ripgrep-js-nightly/rg/type.Result.html
- After, built with this branch, all the methods on Result are shown: http://notriddle.com/rustdoc-html-demo-5/ripgrep-js-trait-alias/rg/type.Result.html

*Review note: This is mostly just reverting https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/115201. The last commit has the new work in it.*

Fixes #115718

This is an attempt to balance three problems, each of which would
be violated by a simpler implementation:

- A type alias should show all the `impl` blocks for the target
  type, and vice versa, if they're applicable. If nothing was
  done, and rustdoc continues to match them up in HIR, this
  would not work.

- Copying the target type's docs into its aliases' HTML pages
  directly causes far too much redundant HTML text to be generated
  when a crate has large numbers of methods and large numbers
  of type aliases.

- Using JavaScript exclusively for type alias impl docs would
  be a functional regression, and could make some docs very hard
  to find for non-JS readers.

- Making sure that only applicable docs are show in the
  resulting page requires a type checkers. Do not reimplement
  the type checker in JavaScript.

So, to make it work, rustdoc stashes these type-alias-inlined docs
in a JSONP "database-lite". The file is generated in `write_shared.rs`,
included in a `<script>` tag added in `print_item.rs`, and `main.js`
takes care of patching the additional docs into the DOM.

The format of `trait.impl` and `type.impl` JS files are superficially
similar. Each line, except the JSONP wrapper itself, belongs to a crate,
and they are otherwise separate (rustdoc should be idempotent). The
"meat" of the file is HTML strings, so the frontend code is very simple.
Links are relative to the doc root, though, so the frontend needs to fix
that up, and inlined docs can reuse these files.

However, there are a few differences, caused by the sophisticated
features that type aliases have. Consider this crate graph:

```text
 ---------------------------------
 | crate A: struct Foo<T>        |
 |          type Bar = Foo<i32>  |
 |          impl X for Foo<i8>   |
 |          impl Y for Foo<i32>  |
 ---------------------------------
     |
 ----------------------------------
 | crate B: type Baz = A::Foo<i8> |
 |          type Xyy = A::Foo<i8> |
 |          impl Z for Xyy        |
 ----------------------------------
```

The type.impl/A/struct.Foo.js JS file has a structure kinda like this:

```js
JSONP({
"A": [["impl Y for Foo<i32>", "Y", "A::Bar"]],
"B": [["impl X for Foo<i8>", "X", "B::Baz", "B::Xyy"], ["impl Z for Xyy", "Z", "B::Baz"]],
});
```

When the type.impl file is loaded, only the current crate's docs are
actually used. The main reason to bundle them together is that there's
enough duplication in them for DEFLATE to remove the redundancy.

The contents of a crate are a list of impl blocks, themselves
represented as lists. The first item in the sublist is the HTML block,
the second item is the name of the trait (which goes in the sidebar),
and all others are the names of type aliases that successfully match.

This way:

- There's no need to generate these files for types that have no aliases
  in the current crate. If a dependent crate makes a type alias, it'll
  take care of generating its own docs.
- There's no need to reimplement parts of the type checker in
  JavaScript. The Rust backend does the checking, and includes its
  results in the file.
- Docs defined directly on the type alias are dropped directly in the
  HTML by `render_assoc_items`, and are accessible without JavaScript.
  The JSONP file will not list impl items that are known to be part
  of the main HTML file already.

[JSONP]: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/JSONP
2023-10-27 23:08:24 +00:00
David Tolnay
6933a671d3
Handle structured stable attribute 'since' version in rustdoc 2023-10-24 17:34:59 -07:00
David Tolnay
6a02e20fb5
Update since stability attributes in tests 2023-10-23 13:04:47 -07:00
David Tolnay
01b909174b
Fix stable feature names in tests 2023-10-23 13:03:11 -07:00
Michael Howell
46fdeb24fd rustdoc: make JS trait impls act more like HTML 2023-10-22 16:51:32 -07:00
Michael Howell
fa10e4d667 rustdoc: use JS to inline target type impl docs into alias
This is an attempt to balance three problems, each of which would
be violated by a simpler implementation:

- A type alias should show all the `impl` blocks for the target
  type, and vice versa, if they're applicable. If nothing was
  done, and rustdoc continues to match them up in HIR, this
  would not work.

- Copying the target type's docs into its aliases' HTML pages
  directly causes far too much redundant HTML text to be generated
  when a crate has large numbers of methods and large numbers
  of type aliases.

- Using JavaScript exclusively for type alias impl docs would
  be a functional regression, and could make some docs very hard
  to find for non-JS readers.

- Making sure that only applicable docs are show in the
  resulting page requires a type checkers. Do not reimplement
  the type checker in JavaScript.

So, to make it work, rustdoc stashes these type-alias-inlined docs
in a JSONP "database-lite". The file is generated in `write_shared.rs`,
included in a `<script>` tag added in `print_item.rs`, and `main.js`
takes care of patching the additional docs into the DOM.

The format of `trait.impl` and `type.impl` JS files are superficially
similar. Each line, except the JSONP wrapper itself, belongs to a crate,
and they are otherwise separate (rustdoc should be idempotent). The
"meat" of the file is HTML strings, so the frontend code is very simple.
Links are relative to the doc root, though, so the frontend needs to fix
that up, and inlined docs can reuse these files.

However, there are a few differences, caused by the sophisticated
features that type aliases have. Consider this crate graph:

```text
 ---------------------------------
 | crate A: struct Foo<T>        |
 |          type Bar = Foo<i32>  |
 |          impl X for Foo<i8>   |
 |          impl Y for Foo<i32>  |
 ---------------------------------
     |
 ----------------------------------
 | crate B: type Baz = A::Foo<i8> |
 |          type Xyy = A::Foo<i8> |
 |          impl Z for Xyy        |
 ----------------------------------
```

The type.impl/A/struct.Foo.js JS file has a structure kinda like this:

```js
JSONP({
"A": [["impl Y for Foo<i32>", "Y", "A::Bar"]],
"B": [["impl X for Foo<i8>", "X", "B::Baz", "B::Xyy"], ["impl Z for Xyy", "Z", "B::Baz"]],
});
```

When the type.impl file is loaded, only the current crate's docs are
actually used. The main reason to bundle them together is that there's
enough duplication in them for DEFLATE to remove the redundancy.

The contents of a crate are a list of impl blocks, themselves
represented as lists. The first item in the sublist is the HTML block,
the second item is the name of the trait (which goes in the sidebar),
and all others are the names of type aliases that successfully match.

This way:

- There's no need to generate these files for types that have no aliases
  in the current crate. If a dependent crate makes a type alias, it'll
  take care of generating its own docs.
- There's no need to reimplement parts of the type checker in
  JavaScript. The Rust backend does the checking, and includes its
  results in the file.
- Docs defined directly on the type alias are dropped directly in the
  HTML by `render_assoc_items`, and are accessible without JavaScript.
  The JSONP file will not list impl items that are known to be part
  of the main HTML file already.

[JSONP]: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/JSONP
2023-10-22 15:56:14 -07:00
Michael Howell
e701e64d59 Revert "rustdoc: list matching impls on type aliases"
This reverts commit 19edb3ce80.
2023-10-22 15:55:43 -07:00
Michael Howell
36b8d58b41 Revert "rustdoc: add impl items from aliased type into sidebar"
This reverts commit d882b2118e.
2023-10-22 15:54:36 -07:00
Michael Howell
ade7ecf909 rustdoc: rename /implementors to /impl.trait
This is shorter, avoids potential conflicts with a crate
named `implementors`[^1], and will be less confusing when JS
include files are added for type aliases.

[^1]: AFAIK, this couldn't actually cause any problems right now,
but it's simpler just to make it impossible than relying on never
having a file named `trait.Foo.js` in the crate data area.
2023-10-22 15:47:34 -07:00
Michael Howell
94b39e8c86 rustdoc: move ICE test to rustdoc-ui 2023-10-16 18:02:11 -07:00
Michael Howell
43b493ebc0 Add URL to test cases 2023-10-16 18:01:02 -07:00
Michael Howell
69dc19043b Rename issue-\d+.rs tests to have meaningful names 2023-10-16 18:01:02 -07:00
Michael Howell
df5ea58287 Add crate_name to test so that it can be renamed 2023-10-16 15:41:04 -07:00
Matthias Krüger
4dd4d9b489
Rollup merge of #115439 - fmease:rustdoc-priv-repr-transparent-heuristic, r=GuillaumeGomez
rustdoc: hide `#[repr(transparent)]` if it isn't part of the public ABI

Fixes #90435.

This hides `#[repr(transparent)]` when the non-1-ZST field the struct is "transparent" over is private.

CC `@RalfJung`

Tentatively nominating it for the release notes, feel free to remove the nomination.
`@rustbot` label needs-fcp relnotes A-rustdoc-ui
2023-10-14 19:22:16 +02:00
Michael Goulet
59315b8a63 Stabilize AFIT and RPITIT 2023-10-13 21:01:36 +00:00
Oli Scherer
6724f9926c hide host param from generic parameter list of ~const bounds 2023-10-12 17:14:19 +00:00
Oli Scherer
cfb6afa296 Add regression test for generic args showing host param 2023-10-12 16:49:23 +00:00
Oli Scherer
8f2af7e010 Test cross crate 2023-10-12 16:44:37 +00:00
Oli Scherer
c4e61faf2e Hide host effect params from docs 2023-10-12 16:14:54 +00:00
Oli Scherer
20363f40a9 Add regression tests 2023-10-12 15:55:23 +00:00
Guillaume Gomez
bd59fc603f Add tests for enum discriminant value display with repr 2023-10-11 23:44:12 +02:00
bors
6d05c430d2 Auto merge of #115948 - notriddle:notriddle/logo-lockup, r=fmease
rustdoc: show crate name beside smaller logo

*Blocked on https://github.com/rust-lang/cargo/pull/12800*

## Summary

In this PR, the crate name and version are always shown in the sidebar, even in subpages, and the lateral navigation is always shown in the sidebar, even in modules.

Clicking the crate name does the same thing clicking the logo always did: take you to the crate root (the crate's home page, at least within Rustdoc).

The Rust logo is also no longer shown by default for non-Rust docs.

### Screenshots

<details><summary>Before</summary>

| | Macro | Module |
|--|-------|--------|
| In crate | ![image](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/assets/1593513/d5db0a46-2bb6-44a2-a3aa-2d915ecb8595) |![image](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/assets/1593513/61f8c1ee-c298-4e2c-b791-18ecb79ab83b)
| In module[^1] | ![image](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/assets/1593513/73abca59-0b69-4650-a1e2-7278ca34795c) | ![image](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/assets/1593513/0baf02c2-2ec7-4674-80e5-a6a74a973376)

[^1]: This PR also includes a bug fix for derive macros not showing up in the lateral navigation part of the sidebar

</details>

#### Whole sidebar screenshots

| | Macro | Module |
|--|-------|--------|
| In crate | ![image](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/assets/1593513/75d1bd07-41f7-4f11-ba24-fd5476e0586a) | ![image](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/assets/1593513/52960259-2b65-4131-b380-01826f0a0eb7)
| In module | ![image](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/assets/1593513/06e57928-8cb0-41bd-b152-be16cc53e5ec) | ![image](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/assets/1593513/37291c69-2a07-4467-a382-d9b029084a47)

#### Different logo configurations

|         | Short crate name | Long crate name |
|---------|------------------|-----------------|
| Root    | ![short-root]    | ![long-root]
| Subpage | ![short-subpage] | ![long-subpage]

[short-root]: https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/assets/1593513/9e2b4fa8-f581-4106-b562-1e0372c13f79
[short-subpage]: https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/assets/1593513/8331cdb8-fa13-4671-a1e2-dcc1cdca7451
[long-root]: https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/assets/1593513/7d377fec-0f1d-4343-9f82-0e35a8f58056
[long-subpage]: https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/assets/1593513/3b3094a4-63c9-477c-8c15-b6075837df30

##### Without a logo

![image](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/assets/1593513/66672b79-6c59-4be8-a527-25ef6f0b04ab)

### Preview pages

https://notriddle.com/rustdoc-html-demo-5/sidebar-layout-rocket/rocket/index.html

https://notriddle.com/rustdoc-html-demo-5/sidebar-layout-rocket/rocket_sync_db_pools/index.html

https://notriddle.com/rustdoc-html-demo-5/sidebar-layout-rust-compiler/index.html

https://notriddle.com/rustdoc-html-demo-5/sidebar-layout-rust/std/index.html

https://notriddle.com/rustdoc-html-demo-5/sidebar-layout-rocket/tokio/index.html

## Motivation

This improves visual information density (the construct with the logo and crate name is *shorter* than the logo on its own, because it's not square) and navigation clarity (we can now see what clicking the Rust logo does, specifically).

Compare this with the layout at [Phoenix's Hexdocs] (which is what this proposal is closely based on), the old proposal on [Internals Discourse] (which always says "Rust standard library" in the sidebar, but doesn't do the side-by-side layout).

[Phoenix's Hexdocs]: https://hexdocs.pm/phoenix/1.7.7/overview.html
[Internals Discourse]: https://internals.rust-lang.org/t/poc-of-a-new-design-for-the-generated-rustdoc/11018

## Guide-level explanation

This PR cleans up some of the sidebar navigation.

It makes the logo in the desktop sidebar a bit smaller, and puts the crate name and version next to it (either beside it, or below it, depending on if there's space), making it clearer what clicking on it does: click the crate name to open the crate's home page. It also removes the Rust logo from non-official-Rust crates, again to make the navigation and supply chain clearer (since the crate name has been added, the logo is no longer necessary for navigation).

It adds a bit more clarifying information for lateral navigation. On items that don't add their own sidebar items, it just shows its siblings directly below the crate name and logo, but for other items, it shows "In crate alloc" instead of just "In alloc". It also shows the lateral navigation tools on module pages, making modules consistent with every other item.

## Drawbacks

While this actually takes up less screen real estate than the old layout on desktop, it takes up more HTML. It's also a bit more visually complex.

## Rationale and alternatives

I could do what the Internals POC did and keep the vertically stacked layout all the time, instead of doing a horizontal stack where possible. It would take up more screen real estate, though.

## Prior art

This design is lifted almost verbatim from Hexdocs. It seems to work for them. [`opentelemetry_process_propagator`], for example, has a long application name.

[`opentelemetry_process_propagator`]: https://hexdocs.pm/opentelemetry_process_propagator/OpentelemetryProcessPropagator.html

## Unresolved questions

Maybe we should encourage crate authors to include their own logo more often? It certainly helps give people a better sense of "place." This seems to be blocked on coming up with an API to do it without requiring them to host the file somewhere.

## Future possibilities

Beyond this, plenty of other changes could be made to improve the layout, like

* Fix things so that clicking an item in the sidebar doesn't cause it to scroll back to the top.
  * The [Internals demo](https://utherii.github.io/new.html) does this right: clicking an item in the sidebar changes the content area, but the sidebar itself does not change. This is nice, because clicking is cheap and I can skim the opening few paragraphs while browsing.
  * The layout of the docs sidebar causes trouble to implement this, because it's different on different pages, but at least fix this on the file browser.
* Come up with a less cluttered way to do disclosure. There's a lot of `[-]` on the page.
  * We don't lack ideas to fix this one. We have *too many*.
* Do a better job of separating local navigation (vec::Vec links to vec::IntoIter) and the table of contents (vec::Vec links to vec::Vec::new).
  * A possibility: add a Back arrow next to the "In [module]" header?
    ![image](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/assets/1593513/e969faf7-7722-457a-b8c6-8d962e9e1e23)
* Give readers more control of how much rustdoc shows them, and giving doc authors more control of how much it generates. Basically, https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/115660 is great, let's do it too.

But those are mostly orthogonal, not future possibilities unlocked by this change.
2023-10-11 06:28:36 +00:00
Guillaume Gomez
4be9cfabf2
Rollup merge of #109422 - notriddle:notriddle/impl-disambiguate-search, r=GuillaumeGomez
rustdoc-search: add impl disambiguator to duplicate assoc items

Preview (to see the difference, click the link and pay attention to the specific function that comes up):

| Before | After |
|--|--|
| [`simd<i64>, simd<i64> -> simd<i64>`](https://doc.rust-lang.org/nightly/std/?search=simd%3Ci64%3E%2C%20simd%3Ci64%3E%20-%3E%20simd%3Ci64%3E) | [`simd<i64>, simd<i64> -> simd<i64>`](https://notriddle.com/rustdoc-demo-html-3/impl-disambiguate-search/std/index.html?search=simd%3Ci64%3E%2C%20simd%3Ci64%3E%20-%3E%20simd%3Ci64%3E) |
| [`cow, vec -> bool`](https://doc.rust-lang.org/nightly/std/?search=cow%2C%20vec%20-%3E%20bool) | [`cow, vec -> bool`](https://notriddle.com/rustdoc-demo-html-3/impl-disambiguate-search/std/index.html?search=cow%2C%20vec%20-%3E%20bool)

Helps with #90929

This changes the search results, specifically, when there's more than one impl with an associated item with the same name. For example, the search queries `simd<i8> -> simd<i8>` and `simd<i64> -> simd<i64>` don't link to the same function, but most of the functions have the same names.

This change should probably be FCP-ed, especially since it adds a new anchor link format for `main.js` to handle, so that URLs like `struct.Vec.html#impl-AsMut<[T]>-for-Vec<T,+A>/method.as_mut` redirect to `struct.Vec.html#method.as_mut-2`. It's a strange design, but there are a few reasons for it:

* I'd like to avoid making the HTML bigger. Obviously, fixing this bug is going to add at least a little more data to the search index, but adding more HTML penalises viewers for the benefit of searchers.

* Breaking `struct.Vec.html#method.len` would also be a disappointment.

On the other hand:

* The path-style anchors might be less prone to link rot than the numbered anchors. It's definitely less likely to have URLs that appear to "work", but silently point at the wrong thing.

* This commit arranges the path-style anchor to redirect to the numbered anchor. Nothing stops rustdoc from doing the opposite, making path-style anchors the default and redirecting the "legacy" numbered ones.

### The bug

On the "Before" links, this example search calls for `i64`:

![image](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/assets/1593513/9431d89d-41dc-4f68-bbb1-3e2704a973d2)

But if I click any of the results, I get `f64` instead.

![image](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/assets/1593513/6d89c692-1847-421a-84d9-22e359d9cf82)

The PR fixes this problem by adding enough information to the search result `href` to disambiguate methods with different types but the same name.

More detailed description of the problem at:
https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/109422#issuecomment-1491089293

> When a struct/enum/union has multiple impls with different type parameters, it can have multiple methods that have the same name, but which are on different impls. Besides Simd, [Any](https://doc.rust-lang.org/nightly/std/any/trait.Any.html?search=any%3A%3Adowncast) also demonstrates this pattern. It has three methods named `downcast`, on three different impls.
>
> When that happens, it presents a challenge in linking to the method. Normally we link like `#method.foo`. When there are multiple `foo`, we number them like `#method.foo`, `#method.foo-1`, `#method.foo-2`, etc.
>
> It also presents a challenge for our search code. Currently we store all the variants in the index, but don’t have any way to generate unambiguous URLs in the results page, or to distinguish them in the SERP.
>
> To fix this, we need three things:
>
> 1. A fragment format that fully specifies the impl type parameters when needed to disambiguate (`#impl-SimdOrd-for-Simd<i64,+LANES>/method.simd_max`)
> 2. A search index that stores methods with enough information to disambiguate the impl they were on.
> 3. A search results interface that can display multiple methods on the same type with the same name, when appropriate OR a disambiguation landing section on item pages?
>
> For reviewers: it can be hard to see the new fragment format in action since it immediately gets rewritten to the numbered form.
2023-10-10 18:44:43 +02:00
bors
be581d9f82 Auto merge of #116142 - GuillaumeGomez:enum-variant-display, r=fmease
[rustdoc] Show enum discrimant if it is a C-like variant

Fixes https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/101337.

We currently display values for associated constant items in traits:

![image](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/assets/3050060/03e566ec-c670-47b4-8ca2-b982baa7a0f4)

And we also display constant values like [here](file:///home/imperio/rust/rust/build/x86_64-unknown-linux-gnu/doc/std/f32/consts/constant.E.html).

I think that for coherency, we should display values of C-like enum variants.

With this change, it looks like this:

![image](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/assets/3050060/b53fbbe0-bdb1-4289-8537-f2dd4988e9ac)

As for the display of the constant value itself, I used what we already have to keep coherency.

We display the C-like variants value in the following scenario:
 1. It is a C-like variant with a value set => all the time
 2. It is a C-like variant without a value set: All other variants are C-like variants and at least one them has its value set.

Here is the result in code:

```rust
// Ax and Bx value will be displayed.
enum A {
    Ax = 12,
    Bx,
}

// Ax and Bx value will not be displayed
enum B {
    Ax,
    Bx,
}

// Bx value will not be displayed
enum C {
    Ax(u32),
    Bx,
}

// Bx value will not be displayed, Cx value will be displayed.
#[repr(u32)]
enum D {
    Ax(u32),
    Bx,
    Cx = 12,
}
```

r? `@notriddle`
2023-10-09 13:18:47 +00:00
Guillaume Gomez
1210aac1c0 Add more complex test cases for enum discriminant display 2023-10-09 14:33:04 +02:00
Michael Howell
c6e6ecb1af rustdoc: remove rust logo from non-Rust crates 2023-10-08 20:17:53 -07:00
Michael Howell
6d6fa792ff rustdoc: clean up the layout for annotated version numbers
This should result in a layout for the actual standard library,
when built on CI, that looks like this:

    _____
   /     \ std
   |  R  | 1.74.0-nightly
   \_____/

   (203c57dbe 2023-09-17)

Having the whole version as one string caused it to flex wrap,
because the sidebar isn't wide enough to fit the whole thing.
2023-10-08 20:17:53 -07:00
Michael Howell
28ee5da4b7 rustdoc: show crate name beside small logo
This commit changes the layout to something a bit less "look at my logo!!!111"
gigantic, and makes it clearer where clicking the logo will actually take you.
It also means the crate name is persistently at the top of the sidebar, even
when in a sub-item page, and clicking that name takes you back to the root.

|         | Short crate name | Long crate name |
|---------|------------------|-----------------|
| Root    | ![short-root]    | ![long-root]
| Subpage | ![short-subpage] | ![long-subpage]

[short-root]: https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/assets/1593513/fe2ce102-d4b8-44e6-9f7b-68636a907f56
[short-subpage]: https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/assets/1593513/29501663-56c0-4151-b7de-d2637e167125
[long-root]: https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/assets/1593513/f6a385c0-b4c5-4a9c-954b-21b38de4192f
[long-subpage]: https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/assets/1593513/97ec47b4-61bf-4ebe-b461-0d2187b8c6ca

https://notriddle.com/rustdoc-html-demo-4/logo-lockup/image/index.html

https://notriddle.com/rustdoc-html-demo-4/logo-lockup/crossbeam_channel/index.html

https://notriddle.com/rustdoc-html-demo-4/logo-lockup/adler/struct.Adler32.html

https://notriddle.com/rustdoc-html-demo-4/logo-lockup/crossbeam_channel/struct.Sender.html

This improves visual information density (the construct with the logo and
crate name is *shorter* than the logo on its own, because it's not
square) and navigation clarity (we can now see what clicking the Rust logo
does, specifically).

Compare this with the layout at [Phoenix's Hexdocs] (which is what this
proposal is closely based on), the old proposal on [Internals Discourse]
(which always says "Rust standard library" in the sidebar, but doesn't do the
side-by-side layout).

[Phoenix's Hexdocs]: https://hexdocs.pm/phoenix/1.7.7/overview.html
[Internals Discourse]: https://internals.rust-lang.org/t/poc-of-a-new-design-for-the-generated-rustdoc/11018

In newer versions of rustdoc, the crate name and version are always shown in
the sidebar, even in subpages. Clicking the crate name does the same thing
clicking the logo always did: return you to the crate root.

While this actually takes up less screen real estate than the old layout on
desktop, it takes up more HTML. It's also a bit more visually complex.

I could do what the Internals POC did and keep the vertically stacked layout
all the time, instead of doing a horizontal stack where possible. It would
take up more screen real estate, though.

This design is lifted almost verbatim from Hexdocs. It seems to work for them.
[`opentelemetry_process_propagator`], for example, has a long application name.

[`opentelemetry_process_propagator`]: https://hexdocs.pm/opentelemetry_process_propagator/OpentelemetryProcessPropagator.html

Has anyone written the rationale on why the Rust logo shows up on projects that
aren't the standard library? If we turned it off on non-standard crates by
default, it would line wrap crate names a lot less often.

Or maybe we should encourage crate authors to include their own logo more
often? It certainly helps give people a better sense of "place."

I'm not sure of anything that directly follows up this one. Plenty of other
changes could be made to improve the layout, like

* coming up with a less cluttered way to do disclosure (there's a lot of `[-]`
  on the page)
* doing a better job of separating lateral navigation (vec::Vec links to
  vec::IntoIter) and the table of contents (vec::Vec links to vec::Vec::new)
* giving readers more control of how much rustdoc hows them, and giving doc
  authors more control of how much it generates
* better search that reduces the need to browse

But those are mostly orthogonal, not future possibilities unlocked by this change.
2023-10-08 20:17:40 -07:00
Guillaume Gomez
b0badc17cd Add cross-crate C-like variant test 2023-10-07 14:37:47 +02:00
Guillaume Gomez
1994d0b4a4 Update enum-variant-value test 2023-10-07 14:17:17 +02:00
Michael Howell
a46ccd8d3f Add URL to test case issues 2023-10-04 13:04:45 -07:00
Michael Howell
9266270ef5 Rename issue-\d+.rs tests to have meaningful names 2023-10-04 12:58:06 -07:00
Michael Howell
a198aff4a4 Add crate_name to test so that it can be renamed 2023-10-04 12:13:01 -07:00
Matthias Krüger
3e293634e2
Rollup merge of #116388 - fmease:rustdoc-fix-n-clean-up-x-crate-higher-ranked-params, r=notriddle
rustdoc: fix & clean up handling of cross-crate higher-ranked parameters

Preparatory work for the refactoring planned in #113015 (for correctness & maintainability).

---

1. Render the higher-ranked parameters of cross-crate function pointer types **(*)**.
2. Replace occurrences of `collect_referenced_late_bound_regions()` (CRLBR) with `bound_vars()`.
  The former is quite problematic and the use of the latter allows us to yank a lot of hacky code **(†)**
  as you can tell from the diff! :)
3. Add support for cross-crate higher-ranked types (`#![feature(non_lifetime_binders)]`).
  We were previously ICE'ing on them (see `inline_cross/non_lifetime_binders.rs`).

---

**(*)**: Extracted from test `inline_cross/fn-type.rs`:

```diff
- fn(_: &'z fn(_: &'b str), _: &'a ()) -> &'a ()
+ for<'z, 'a, '_unused> fn(_: &'z for<'b> fn(_: &'b str), _: &'a ()) -> &'a ()
```

**(†)**: It returns an `FxHashSet` which isn't *predictable* or *stable* wrt. source code (`.rmeta`) changes. To elaborate, the ordering of late-bound regions doesn't necessarily reflect the ordering found in the source code. It does seem to be stable across compilations but modifying the source code of the to-be-documented crates (like adding or renaming items) may result in a different order:

<details><summary>Example</summary>

Let's assume that we're documenting the cross-crate re-export of `produce` from the code below. On `master`, rustdoc would render the list of binders as `for<'x, 'y, 'z>`. However, once you add back the functions `a`–`l`, it would be rendered as `for<'z, 'y, 'x>` (reverse order)! Results may vary. `bound_vars()` fixes this as it returns them in source order.

```rs
// pub fn a() {}
// pub fn b() {}
// pub fn c() {}
// pub fn d() {}
// pub fn e() {}
// pub fn f() {}
// pub fn g() {}
// pub fn h() {}
// pub fn i() {}
// pub fn j() {}
// pub fn k() {}
// pub fn l() {}

pub fn produce() -> impl for<'x, 'y, 'z> Trait<'z, 'y, 'x> {}

pub trait Trait<'a, 'b, 'c> {}

impl Trait<'_, '_, '_> for () {}
```

</details>

Further, as the name suggests, CRLBR only collects *referenced* regions and thus we drop unused binders. `bound_vars()` contains unused binders on the other hand. Let's stay closer to the source where possible and keep unused binders.

Lastly, using `bound_vars()` allows us to get rid of

* the deduplication and alphabetical sorting hack in `simplify.rs`
* the weird field `bound_params` on `EqPredicate`

both of which were introduced by me in #102707 back when I didn't know better.

To illustrate, let's look at the cross-crate bound `T: for<'a, 'b> Trait<A<'a> = (), B<'b> = ()>`.

* With CRLBR + `EqPredicate.bound_params`, *before* bounds simplification we would have the bounds `T: Trait`, `for<'a> <T as Trait>::A<'a> == ()` and `for<'b> <T as Trait>::B<'b> == ()` which required us to merge `for<>`, `for<'a>` and `for<'b>` into `for<'a, 'b>` in a deterministic manner and without introducing duplicate binders.
* With `bound_vars()`, we now have the bounds `for<'a, b> T: Trait`, `<T as Trait>::A<'a> == ()` and `<T as Trait>::B<'b> == ()` before bound simplification similar to rustc itself. This obviously no longer requires any funny merging of `for<>`s. On top of that `for<'a, 'b>` is guaranteed to be in source order.
2023-10-04 05:02:06 +02:00
León Orell Valerian Liehr
ace85f0ae3
rustdoc: add support for cross-crate higher-ranked types 2023-10-03 17:41:25 +02:00
León Orell Valerian Liehr
67de1509f3
rustdoc: fix & clean up handling of cross-crate higher-ranked lifetimes 2023-10-03 17:16:51 +02:00
Michael Howell
0487237f12 rustdoc: add URLs for test issues 2023-09-27 17:22:18 -07:00
Michael Howell
7cd8b2c925 Rename issue-\d+.rs tests to have meaningful names 2023-09-27 17:15:37 -07:00
Michael Howell
79195d5cbb Add crate_name to test so that it can be renamed 2023-09-27 16:51:21 -07:00
bors
0288f2e195 Auto merge of #116084 - fmease:rustdoc-fix-x-crate-async-fn, r=GuillaumeGomez
rustdoc: correctly render the return type of cross-crate async fns

Fixes #115760.
2023-09-25 22:04:53 +00:00
León Orell Valerian Liehr
025a2cda0e
rustdoc: correctly render ret ty of cross-crate async fns 2023-09-25 15:57:04 +02:00
Guillaume Gomez
4a64c796ee Add test for enum variant value display 2023-09-25 15:01:14 +02:00
bors
8759de0a49 Auto merge of #114776 - fee1-dead-contrib:enable-effects-in-libcore, r=oli-obk
Enable effects for libcore

~~r? `@oli-obk~~`

forgot you are on vacation, oops
2023-09-22 07:00:52 +00:00
Michael Howell
3583e86674 rustdoc: update test cases for changes to the printing style
This whole thing changes it so that the JS and the UI both use
rustc's own path printing to handle the impl IDs. This results in
the format changing a little bit; full paths are used in spots
where they aren't strictly necessary, and the path sometimes uses
generics where the old system used the trait's own name, but it
shouldn't matter since the orphan rules will prevent it anyway.
2023-09-21 15:16:44 -07:00
Michael Howell
3fbfe2bca5 rustdoc-search: add impl disambiguator to duplicate assoc items
Helps with #90929

This changes the search results, specifically, when there's more than
one impl with an associated item with the same name. For example,
the search queries `simd<i8> -> simd<i8>` and `simd<i64> -> simd<i64>`
don't link to the same function, but most of the functions have the
same names.

This change should probably be FCP-ed, especially since it adds a new
anchor link format for `main.js` to handle, so that URLs like
`struct.Vec.html#impl-AsMut<[T]>-for-Vec<T,+A>/method.as_mut` redirect
to `struct.Vec.html#method.as_mut-2`. It's a strange design, but there
are a few reasons for it:

* I'd like to avoid making the HTML bigger. Obviously, fixing this bug
  is going to add at least a little more data to the search index, but
  adding more HTML penalises viewers for the benefit of searchers.

* Breaking `struct.Vec.html#method.len` would also be a disappointment.

On the other hand:

* The path-style anchors might be less prone to link rot than the numbered
  anchors. It's definitely less likely to have URLs that appear to "work",
  but silently point at the wrong thing.

* This commit arranges the path-style anchor to redirect to the numbered
  anchor. Nothing stops rustdoc from doing the opposite, making path-style
  anchors the default and redirecting the "legacy" numbered ones.
2023-09-21 15:16:44 -07:00