Fix search result bottom border color
It reverts a color change while keeping the improvement made in #103938.
I think it'll need to be backported once merged too.
r? `@notriddle`
Move browser opening logic in `Builder`
This allows `open()` to be called from other places in bootstrap (I need this for Ferrocene, as we keep our custom steps in `src/bootstrap/ferrocene`), and it simplifies the callers by moving the `was_invoked_explicitly` check into the function.
rustdoc: add hash to filename of toolchain files
All static files used by rustdoc are now stored in static.files/ and their filenames include a hash of their contents. Their filenames no longer include the contents of the --resource-suffix flag. This clarifies caching semantics. Anything in static.files can use Cache-Control: immutable because any updates will show up as a new URL.
Invocation-specific files like crates-NN.js, search-index-NN.js, and sidebar-items-NN.js still get the resource suffix.
This has a useful side effect: once toolchain files aren't affected by resource suffix, it will become possible for docs.rs to include crate version in the resource suffix. That should fix a caching issue with `/latest/` URLs: https://github.com/rust-lang/docs.rs/issues/1593. My goal is that it should be safe to serve all rustdoc JS, CSS, and fonts with infinite caching headers, even when new versions of a crate are uploaded in the same place as old versions.
The --disable-minification flag is removed because it would vary the output of static files based on invocation flags. Instead, for rustdoc development purposes it's preferable to symlink static files to a non-minified copy for quick iteration.
Example listing:
```
$ cd build/x86_64-unknown-linux-gnu/doc/ && find . | egrep 'js$|css$' | egrep -v 'sidebar-items|implementors' | sort
./crates1.65.0.js
./rust.css
./search-index1.65.0.js
./source-files1.65.0.js
./static.files/ayu-2bfd0af01c176fd5.css
./static.files/dark-95d11b5416841799.css
./static.files/light-c83a97e93a11f15a.css
./static.files/main-efc63f77fb116394.js
./static.files/normalize-76eba96aa4d2e634.css
./static.files/noscript-5bf457055038775c.css
./static.files/rustdoc-7a422337900fa894.css
./static.files/scrape-examples-3dd10048bcead3a4.js
./static.files/search-47f3c289722672cf.js
./static.files/settings-17b08337296ac774.js
./static.files/settings-3f95eacb845293c0.css
./static.files/source-script-215e9db86679192e.js
./static.files/storage-26d846fcae82ff09.js
```
Fixes#98413
internal: Migrate `ide_assists::utils` and `ide_assists::handlers` to use format arg captures (part 1)
This not only serves as making future migration to mutable syntax trees easier, it also finds out what needs to be migrated in the first place.
~~Aside from the first commit, subsequent commits are structured to only deal with one file/handler at a time.~~
This is the first of 3 PRs, migrating:
Utils:
- `gen_trait_fn_body`
- `render_snippet`
- `ReferenceConversion`
- `convert_type`
- `getter`
Handlers:
- `add_explicit_type`
- `add_return_type`
- `add_turbo_fish`
- `apply_demorgan`
- `auto_import`
- `convert_comment_block`
- `convert_integer_literal`
- `convert_into_to_from`
- `convert_iter_for_each_to_for`
- `convert_let_else_to_match`
- `convert_tuple_struct_to_named_struct`
- `convert_two_arm_bool_match_to_matches_macro`
- `destructure_tuple_binding`
- `extract_function`
- `extract_module`
- `extract_struct_from_enum_variant`
- `extract_type_alias`
- `extract_variable`
- `fix_visibility`
[debuginfo] Make cpp-like debuginfo type names for slices and str consistent.
Before this PR, the compiler would emit the debuginfo name `slice$<T>` for all kinds of slices, regardless of whether they are behind a reference or not and regardless of the kind of reference. As a consequence, the types `Foo<&[T]>`, `Foo<[T]>`, and `Foo<&mut [T]>` would end up with the same type name `Foo<slice$<T> >` in debuginfo, making it impossible to disambiguate between them by name. Similarly, `&str` would get the name `str` in debuginfo, so the debuginfo name for `Foo<str>` and `Foo<&str>` would be the same. In contrast, `*const [bool]` and `*mut [bool]` would be `ptr_const$<slice$<bool> >` and `ptr_mut$<slice$<bool> >`, i.e. the encoding does not lose information about the type.
This PR removes all special handling for slices and `str`. The types `&[bool]`, `&mut [bool]`, and `&str` thus get the names `ref$<slice2$<bool> >`, `ref_mut$<slice2$<bool> >`, and `ref$<str$>` respectively -- as one would expect.
The new special name for slices is `slice2$` to differentiate it from the previous name `slice$`, which has different semantics. The same is true for `str` and `str$`. This kind of versioning already has a precedent with the case of `enum$` and `enum2$` and hopefully will make it easier to transition existing consumers of these names.
cc `@rust-lang/wg-debugging` `@vadimcn`
r? `@wesleywiser`
UPDATE: Here is a table to clarify the changes
| Rust type | DWARF name | C++-like name (before) | C++-like name (after) |
|-----------|------------|------------------------|------------------------|
| `[T]` | `[T]` | `slice$<T>` | `slice2$<T>` |
| `&[T]` | `&[T]` | `slice$<T>` | `ref$<slice2$<T> >` |
| `&mut [T]` | `&mut [T]` | `slice$<T>` | `ref_mut$<slice2$<T> >`|
| `str` | `str` | `str` | `str$` |
| `&str` | `&str` | `str` | `ref$<str$>` |
| `&mut str` | `&mut str` | `str` | `ref_mut$<str$>`|
| `*const [T]` | `*const [T]` | `ptr_const$<slice$<T> >` | `ptr_const$<slice2$<T> >` |
| `*mut [T]` | `*mut [T]` | `ptr_mut$<slice$<T> >` | `ptr_mut$<slice2$<T> >` |
As you can see, before the PR many types would end up with the same name, making it impossible to distinguish between them in NatVis or other places where types are matched or looked up by name. The DWARF version of names is not changed.
Remove `has_errors` from `FnCtxt`
It doesn't seem like this `has_errors` flag actually suppresses any errors (at least in the UI test suite) --- except for one test (`E0767.rs`), and I think that error really should be considered legitimate, since it has nothing to do with the error code and continues to exist after you fix the first error...
This flag was added by ```@eddyb``` in 6b3cc0b8c8094407a3b5ea75f946c682d6d0142a, and it's likely that it was made redundant due to subsequent restructuring of the compiler.
It only affects block type-checking anyways, so its effect does seem limited these days anyway.