Render Markdown in search results
Fixes#32040.
Previously Markdown documentation was not rendered to HTML for search results,
which led to the output not being very readable, particularly for inline code.
This PR fixes that by rendering Markdown to HTML with the help of pulldown-cmark
(the library rustdoc uses to parse Markdown for the main text of documentation).
However, the text for the title attribute (the text shown when you hover over an
element) still uses the plain-text rendering since it is displayed in browsers
as plain-text.
Only these styles will be rendered; everything else is stripped away:
* *italics*
* **bold**
* `inline code`
On Windows, the environment variable NUMBER_OF_PROCESSORS has special
meaning. Unfortunately, you can get different answers, depending on
whether you are enumerating all environment variables or querying a
specific variable. This was causing the src/test/ui/env-vars.rs test
to fail on machines with more than 64 processors when run on Windows.
Previously Markdown documentation was not rendered to HTML for search results,
which led to the output not being very readable, particularly for inline code.
This PR fixes that by rendering Markdown to HTML with the help of pulldown-cmark
(the library rustdoc uses to parse Markdown for the main text of documentation).
However, the text for the title attribute (the text shown when you hover over an
element) still uses the plain-text rendering since it is displayed in browsers
as plain-text.
Only these styles will be rendered; everything else is stripped away:
* *italics*
* **bold**
* `inline code`
Added one more test (two files) showing coverage of generics and unused
functions across crates.
Created and referenced new Issues, as requested.
Added comments.
Added a note about the possible effects of compiler options on LLVM
coverage maps.
Fixes multiple issue with counters, with simplification
Includes a change to the implicit else span in ast_lowering, so coverage
of the implicit else no longer spans the `then` block.
Adds coverage for unused closures and async function bodies.
Fixes: #78542
Adding unreachable regions for known MIR missing from coverage map
Cleaned up PR commits, and removed link-dead-code requirement and tests
Coverage no longer depends on Issue #76038 (`-C link-dead-code` is
no longer needed or enforced, so MSVC can use the same tests as
Linux and MacOS now)
Restrict adding unreachable regions to covered files
Improved the code that adds coverage for uncalled functions (with MIR
but not-codegenned) to avoid generating coverage in files not already
included in the files with covered functions.
Resolved last known issue requiring --emit llvm-ir workaround
Fixed bugs in how unreachable code spans were added.
Tested and validate results for panic unwind, panic abort, assert!()
macro, TerminatorKind::Assert (for example, numeric overflow), and
async/await.
Implemented a previous documented idea to change Assert handling to be
the same as FalseUnwind and Goto, so it doesn't get its own
BasicCoverageBlock anymore. This changed a couple of coverage regions,
but I validated those changes are not any worse than the prior results,
and probably help assure some consistency (even if some people might
disagree with how the code region is consistently computed).
Fixed issue with async/await. AggregateKind::Generator needs to be
handled like AggregateKind::Closure; coverage span for the outer async
function should not "cover" the async body, which is actually executed
in a separate "closure" MIR.
Fix `unknown-crate` when using -Z self-profile with rustdoc
... by removing a duplicate `crate_name` field in `interface::Config`,
making it clear that rustdoc should be passing it to `config::Options` instead.
Unblocks https://github.com/rust-lang/rustc-perf/issues/797.
Revert "Auto merge of #79209
r? `@nikomatsakis`
This has caused some issues (#79560) so better to revert and try to come up with a proper fix without rush.
Rustdoc: JSON backend experimental impl, with new tests.
Based on #75114 by `@P1n3appl3`
The first commit is all of #75114, but squased to 1 commit, as that was much easier to rebase onto master.
The git history is a mess, but I think I'll edit it after review, so it's obvious whats new.
## Still to do
- [ ] Update docs.
- [ ] Add bless option to tests.
- [ ] Add test option for multiple files in same crate.
- [ ] Decide if the tests should check for json to be equal or subset.
- [ ] Go through the rest of the review for the original pr. (This is open because the test system is done(ish), but stuff like [not using a hashmap](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/75114#discussion_r519474420) and [using `CRATE_DEF_INDEX` ](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/75114#discussion_r519470764) hasn't)
I'm also sure how many of these we need to do before landing on nightly, as it would be nice to get this in tree, so it isn't effected by churn like #79125, #79041, #79061
r? `@jyn514`
unix: Extend UnixStream and UnixDatagram to send and receive file descriptors
Add the functions `recv_vectored_fds` and `send_vectored_fds` to `UnixDatagram` and `UnixStream`. With this functions `UnixDatagram` and `UnixStream` can send and receive file descriptors, by using `recvmsg` and `sendmsg` system call.
Pretty printing would add a `r#` prefix to raw identifiers, which was
not correct. In general I think this change makes sense -
pretty-printing is for showing to the *user*, `item_name` is suitable to
pass to resolve.
Do not show negative polarity trait implementations in diagnostic messages for similar implementations
This fixes#79458.
Previously, this code:
```rust
#[derive(Clone)]
struct Foo<'a, T> {
x: &'a mut T,
}
```
would have suggested that `<&mut T as Clone>` was an implementation that was found. This is due to the fact that the standard library now has `impl<'_, T> !Clone for &'_ mut T`, and explicit negative polarity implementations were not filtered out in diagnostic output when suggesting similar implementations.
This PR fixes this issue by filtering out negative polarity trait implementations in `find_similar_impl_candidates` within `rustc_trait_selection::traits::error_reporting::InferCtxtPrivExt<'tcx>`. It also adds a UI regression test for this issue and fixes UI tests that had incorrectly been modified to expect the invalid output.
r? `@scottmcm`