In the future this should make it easier to use weak symbols for the
allocator shim on platforms that properly support weak symbols. And it
would allow reusing the allocator shim code for handling default
implementations of the upcoming externally implementable items feature
on platforms that don't properly support weak symbols.
Currently it is possible to avoid linking the allocator shim when
__rust_no_alloc_shim_is_unstable_v2 is defined when linking rlibs
directly as some build systems need. However this requires liballoc to
be compiled with --cfg no_global_oom_handling, which places huge
restrictions on what functions you can call and makes it impossible to
use libstd. Or alternatively you have to define
__rust_alloc_error_handler and (when using libstd)
__rust_alloc_error_handler_should_panic
using #[rustc_std_internal_symbol]. With this commit you can either use
libstd and define __rust_alloc_error_handler_should_panic or not use
libstd and use #[alloc_error_handler] instead. Both options are still
unstable though.
Eventually the alloc_error_handler may either be removed entirely
(though the PR for that has been stale for years now) or we may start
using weak symbols for it instead. For the latter case this commit is a
prerequisite anyway.
Derive `PartialEq` for `InvisibleOrigin`
For https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/145354, we need `PartialEq` for `TokenStream` to "just work". However, due to the special comparison implementation that was used for `InvisibleOrigin`, this wasn't the case.
So I derived `PartialEq` for `InvisibleOrigin`, and used the previous special comparison logic only on the single place where it was actually required.
r? `````````@petrochenkov`````````
add span to struct pattern rest (..)
Struct pattern rest (`..`) did not retain span information compared to normal fields. This patch adds span information for it.
The motivation of this patch comes from when I implemented this PR for Clippy: https://github.com/rust-lang/rust-clippy/pull/15000#discussion_r2134145163
It is possible to get the span of the Et cetera in a bit roundabout way, but I thought this would be nicer.
I.e. the type definition, then a single inherent `impl` block, then the
trait `impl` blocks.
The lack of sensible ordering here has bugged me for some time.
Prevent impossible combinations in `ast::ModKind`.
`ModKind::Loaded` has an `inline` field and a `had_parse_error` field. If the `inline` field is `Inline::Yes` then `had_parse_error` must be `Ok(())`.
This commit moves the `had_parse_error` field into the `Inline::No` variant. This makes it impossible to create the nonsensical combination of `inline == Inline::Yes` and `had_parse_error = Err(_)`.
r? ```@Urgau```
`ModKind::Loaded` has an `inline` field and a `had_parse_error` field.
If the `inline` field is `Inline::Yes` then `had_parse_error` must be
`Ok(())`.
This commit moves the `had_parse_error` field into the `Inline::No`
variant. This makes it impossible to create the nonsensical combination
of `inline == Inline::Yes` and `had_parse_error = Err(_)`.
There are identical definitions in `rustc_type_ir` and `rustc_ast`. This
commit removes them and places a single definition in `rustc_ast_ir`.
This requires adding `rust_span` as a dependency of `rustc_ast_ir`, but
means a bunch of silly conversion functions can be removed.
The one annoying wrinkle is that the old version had differences in
their `Debug` impls, e.g. one printed `u32` while the other printed
`U32`. Some compiler error messages rely on the former (yuk), and some
clippy output depends on the latter. So the commit also changes clippy
to not rely on `Debug` and just implement what it needs itself.
update to literal-escaper-0.0.5
Quoting from the changelog, this version brings:
- Use `NonZero<char/u8>` in `unescape_c_str` and `check_raw_c_str` to statically exclude nuls
- Add `#[inline]` to small functions for improved performance
There are many places that join path segments with `::` to produce a
string. A lot of these use `join("::")`. Many in rustdoc use
`join_with_double_colon`, and a few use `.joined("..")`. One in Clippy
uses `itertools::join`. A couple of them look for `kw::PathRoot` in the
first segment, which can be important.
This commit introduces `rustc_ast::join_path_{syms,ident}` to do the
joining for everyone. `rustc_ast` is as good a location for these as
any, being the earliest-running of the several crates with a `Path`
type. Two functions are needed because `Ident` printing is more complex
than simple `Symbol` printing.
The commit also removes `join_with_double_colon`, and
`estimate_item_path_byte_length` with it.
There are still a handful of places that join strings with "::" that are
unchanged. They are not that important: some of them are in tests, and
some of them first split a path around "::" and then rejoin with "::".
This fixes one test case where `{{root}}` shows up in an error message.
Fix some comments and related types and locals where it is obvious, e.g.
- bare_fn -> fn_ptr
- LifetimeBinderKind::BareFnType -> LifetimeBinderKind::FnPtrType
Co-authored-by: León Orell Valerian Liehr <me@fmease.dev>
setup typos check in CI
This allows to check typos in CI, currently for compiler only (to reduce commit size with fixes). With current setup, exclude list is quite short, so it worth trying?
Also includes commits with actual typo fixes.
MCP: https://github.com/rust-lang/compiler-team/issues/817
typos check currently turned for:
* ./compiler
* ./library
* ./src/bootstrap
* ./src/librustdoc
After merging, PRs which enables checks for other crates (tools) can be implemented too.
Found typos will **not break** other jobs immediately: (tests, building compiler for perf run). Job will be marked as red on completion in ~ 20 secs, so you will not forget to fix it whenever you want, before merging pr.
Check typos: `python x.py test tidy --extra-checks=spellcheck`
Apply typo fixes: `python x.py test tidy --extra-checks=spellcheck:fix` (in case if there only 1 suggestion of each typo)
Current fail in this pr is expected and shows how typo errors emitted. Commit with error will be removed after r+.