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Rollup of 10 pull requests #81493
Rollup of 10 pull requests #81493
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Prevents LateContext::maybe_typeck_results() from returning data in a nested item without a body. Consequently, LateContext::qpath_res is less likely to ICE when called in a nested item. Would have prevented rust-lang/rust-clippy#4545, presumably.
Actually fulfills the documented guarantees.
Add expected error Add comment Tweak comment wording Fix after rebase to updated master Fix after rebase to updated master Distinguish mutation in normal and move closures Tweak error message Fix error message for nested closures Refactor code showing mutated upvar in closure Remove debug assert B
The angle brackets were not rendered, so code like this: some_func: for<'a> fn(val: &'a i32) -> i32 would be rendered as: some_func: fn'a(val: &'a i32) -> i32 However, rendering with angle brackets is still invalid syntax: some_func: fn<'a>(val: &'a i32) -> i32 so now it renders correctly as: some_func: for<'a> fn(val: &'a i32) -> i32 ----- However, note that this code: some_trait: dyn for<'a> Trait<'a> will still render as: some_trait: dyn Trait<'a> which is not invalid syntax, but is still unclear. Unfortunately I think it's hard to fix that case because there isn't enough information in the `rustdoc::clean::Type` that this code operates on. Perhaps that case can be fixed in a later PR.
cc rust-lang#79813 This PR adds an allow-by-default future-compatibility lint `SEMICOLON_IN_EXPRESSIONS_FROM_MACROS`. It fires when a trailing semicolon in a macro body is ignored due to the macro being used in expression position: ```rust macro_rules! foo { () => { true; // WARN } } fn main() { let val = match true { true => false, _ => foo!() }; } ``` The lint takes its level from the macro call site, and can be allowed for a particular macro by adding `#[allow(semicolon_in_expressions_from_macros)]`. The lint is set to warn for all internal rustc crates (when being built by a stage1 compiler). After the next beta bump, we can enable the lint for the bootstrap compiler as well.
This commit adds a new stable codegen option to rustc, `-Csplit-debuginfo`. The old `-Zrun-dsymutil` flag is deleted and now subsumed by this stable flag. Additionally `-Zsplit-dwarf` is also subsumed by this flag but still requires `-Zunstable-options` to actually activate. The `-Csplit-debuginfo` flag takes one of three values: * `off` - This indicates that split-debuginfo from the final artifact is not desired. This is not supported on Windows and is the default on Unix platforms except macOS. On macOS this means that `dsymutil` is not executed. * `packed` - This means that debuginfo is desired in one location separate from the main executable. This is the default on Windows (`*.pdb`) and macOS (`*.dSYM`). On other Unix platforms this subsumes `-Zsplit-dwarf=single` and produces a `*.dwp` file. * `unpacked` - This means that debuginfo will be roughly equivalent to object files, meaning that it's throughout the build directory rather than in one location (often the fastest for local development). This is not the default on any platform and is not supported on Windows. Each target can indicate its own default preference for how debuginfo is handled. Almost all platforms default to `off` except for Windows and macOS which default to `packed` for historical reasons. Some equivalencies for previous unstable flags with the new flags are: * `-Zrun-dsymutil=yes` -> `-Csplit-debuginfo=packed` * `-Zrun-dsymutil=no` -> `-Csplit-debuginfo=unpacked` * `-Zsplit-dwarf=single` -> `-Csplit-debuginfo=packed` * `-Zsplit-dwarf=split` -> `-Csplit-debuginfo=unpacked` Note that `-Csplit-debuginfo` still requires `-Zunstable-options` for non-macOS platforms since split-dwarf support was *just* implemented in rustc. There's some more rationale listed on rust-lang#79361, but the main gist of the motivation for this commit is that `dsymutil` can take quite a long time to execute in debug builds and provides little benefit. This means that incremental compile times appear that much worse on macOS because the compiler is constantly running `dsymutil` over every single binary it produces during `cargo build` (even build scripts!). Ideally rustc would switch to not running `dsymutil` by default, but that's a problem left to get tackled another day. Closes rust-lang#79361
rustc: Stabilize `-Zrun-dsymutil` as `-Csplit-debuginfo` This commit adds a new stable codegen option to rustc, `-Csplit-debuginfo`. The old `-Zrun-dsymutil` flag is deleted and now subsumed by this stable flag. Additionally `-Zsplit-dwarf` is also subsumed by this flag but still requires `-Zunstable-options` to actually activate. The `-Csplit-debuginfo` flag takes one of three values: * `off` - This indicates that split-debuginfo from the final artifact is not desired. This is not supported on Windows and is the default on Unix platforms except macOS. On macOS this means that `dsymutil` is not executed. * `packed` - This means that debuginfo is desired in one location separate from the main executable. This is the default on Windows (`*.pdb`) and macOS (`*.dSYM`). On other Unix platforms this subsumes `-Zsplit-dwarf=single` and produces a `*.dwp` file. * `unpacked` - This means that debuginfo will be roughly equivalent to object files, meaning that it's throughout the build directory rather than in one location (often the fastest for local development). This is not the default on any platform and is not supported on Windows. Each target can indicate its own default preference for how debuginfo is handled. Almost all platforms default to `off` except for Windows and macOS which default to `packed` for historical reasons. Some equivalencies for previous unstable flags with the new flags are: * `-Zrun-dsymutil=yes` -> `-Csplit-debuginfo=packed` * `-Zrun-dsymutil=no` -> `-Csplit-debuginfo=unpacked` * `-Zsplit-dwarf=single` -> `-Csplit-debuginfo=packed` * `-Zsplit-dwarf=split` -> `-Csplit-debuginfo=unpacked` Note that `-Csplit-debuginfo` still requires `-Zunstable-options` for non-macOS platforms since split-dwarf support was *just* implemented in rustc. There's some more rationale listed on rust-lang#79361, but the main gist of the motivation for this commit is that `dsymutil` can take quite a long time to execute in debug builds and provides little benefit. This means that incremental compile times appear that much worse on macOS because the compiler is constantly running `dsymutil` over every single binary it produces during `cargo build` (even build scripts!). Ideally rustc would switch to not running `dsymutil` by default, but that's a problem left to get tackled another day. Closes rust-lang#79361
…micolon, r=petrochenkov Add `SEMICOLON_IN_EXPRESSIONS_FROM_MACROS` lint cc rust-lang#79813 This PR adds an allow-by-default future-compatibility lint `SEMICOLON_IN_EXPRESSIONS_FROM_MACROS`. It fires when a trailing semicolon in a macro body is ignored due to the macro being used in expression position: ```rust macro_rules! foo { () => { true; // WARN } } fn main() { let val = match true { true => false, _ => foo!() }; } ``` The lint takes its level from the macro call site, and can be allowed for a particular macro by adding `#[allow(macro_trailing_semicolon)]`. The lint is set to warn for all internal rustc crates (when being built by a stage1 compiler). After the next beta bump, we can enable the lint for the bootstrap compiler as well.
…llaumeGomez,jyn514 rustdoc: Render HRTB correctly for bare functions The angle brackets were not rendered, so code like this: some_func: for<'a> fn(val: &'a i32) -> i32 would be rendered as: some_func: fn'a(val: &'a i32) -> i32 However, rendering with angle brackets is still invalid syntax: some_func: fn<'a>(val: &'a i32) -> i32 so now it renders correctly as: some_func: for<'a> fn(val: &'a i32) -> i32 ----- However, note that this code: some_trait: dyn for<'a> Trait<'a> will still render as: some_trait: dyn Trait<'a> which is not invalid syntax, but is still unclear. Unfortunately I think it's hard to fix that case because there isn't enough information in the `rustdoc::clean::Type` that this code operates on. Perhaps that case can be fixed in a later PR. r? ``@jyn514``
Use -target when linking binaries for Mac Catalyst When running `rustc` with `-target x86_64-apple-ios-macabi`, the linker eventually gets run with `-arch x86_64`, because the linker back end splits the LLVM target triple and uses the first token as the target architecture. However, this does not work for the Mac Catalyst ABI, which is a separate target from Darwin. Specifying the full target triple with `-target` allows Mac Catalyst binaries to link and run. closes rust-lang#80202
…1011 Point to span of upvar making closure FnMut For rust-lang#80313.
Improve safety of `LateContext::qpath_res` This is my first rustc code change, inspired by hacking on clippy! The first change is to clear cached `TypeckResults` from `LateContext` when visiting a nested item. I took a hint from [here](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/blob/5e91c4ecc09312d8b63d250a432b0f3ef83f1df7/compiler/rustc_privacy/src/lib.rs#L1300). Clippy has a `qpath_res` util function to avoid a possible ICE in `LateContext::qpath_res`. But the docs of `LateContext::qpath_res` promise no ICE. So this updates the `LateContext` method to keep its promises, and removes the util function. Related: rust-lang/rust-clippy#4545 CC ````````````@eddyb```````````` since you've done related work CC ````````````@flip1995```````````` FYI
…illaumeGomez Split rustdoc JSON types into separately versioned crate For now just an in-tree change. In the future, this may be exposed as a standalone crate with standard semver.
Fuse inner iterator in FlattenCompat and improve related tests Fixes rust-lang#81248
clean up some const error reporting around promoteds These are some error reporting simplifications enabled by rust-lang#80579. Further simplifications are possible but could be blocked on making `const_err` a hard error. r? ``````@oli-obk``````
…r=Nemo157 Fix rustdoc text selection for page titles Fixes text selection of page titles by placing the `h1.fqn span.in-band` element before `h1.fqn span.out-of-band`. Before vs after: https://user-images.githubusercontent.com/11315492/105768203-55708700-5f5c-11eb-924b-4e7527ffe147.mp4 Retry of PR rust-lang#81397 due to merge conflicts confusing me. Recreated the same changes as in that PR, but now when I run `./x.py doc library/std`, no changes I make to `src/librustdoc/html/render/mod.rs` to the file are reflected in the built doc files, even if I delete the `build` folder. I'm guessing there's some cache I'm missing? r? `@Nemo157`
@bors r+ p=10 rollup=never |
📌 Commit 2b4fa3d has been approved by |
☀️ Test successful - checks-actions |
This seems to have caused a minor regression in compile times, including some additional codegen on incremental builds. I'm not sure what PR is responsible; nothing jumps out as obviously affecting codegen in this PR. There's also minor improvements across the board (0.3% approximately), which is also interesting; they don't seem clearly caused by any part of this PR. Since the change is so minor I'm not going to investigate further, though. |
Successful merges:
-Zrun-dsymutil
as-Csplit-debuginfo
#79570 (rustc: Stabilize-Zrun-dsymutil
as-Csplit-debuginfo
)SEMICOLON_IN_EXPRESSIONS_FROM_MACROS
lint #79819 (AddSEMICOLON_IN_EXPRESSIONS_FROM_MACROS
lint)LateContext::qpath_res
#81176 (Improve safety ofLateContext::qpath_res
)Failed merges:
r? @ghost
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