Commit Graph

97885 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Seiichi Uchida 0be01fa655 Update rustfmt to 1.4.5 2019-08-20 16:23:46 +09:00
bors d8d99baf56 Auto merge of #62727 - SimonSapin:plugins-tls-dylib, r=petrochenkov
Deprecate using rustc_plugin without the rustc_driver dylib.

CC https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/59800, https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/commit/7198687bb2df13a3298ef1e8f594753073d6b9e8

Fix https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/62717
2019-08-20 00:31:13 +00:00
Simon Sapin d0bbc6062d Deprecate using rustc_plugin without the rustc_driver dylib.
CC https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/59800
https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/commit/7198687bb2df13a3298ef1e8f594753073d6b9e8

Fix https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/62717
2019-08-20 00:21:32 +02:00
bors c1b08dd260 Auto merge of #63715 - Centril:rollup-dga8qtp, r=Centril
Rollup of 5 pull requests

Successful merges:

 - #63252 (Remove recommendation about idiomatic syntax for Arc::clone)
 - #63376 (use different lifetime name for object-lifetime-default elision)
 - #63620 (Use constraint span when lowering associated types)
 - #63699 (Fix suggestion from incorrect `move async` to `async move`.)
 - #63704 ( Fixed: error: unnecessary trailing semicolon)

Failed merges:

r? @ghost
2019-08-19 20:49:39 +00:00
Mazdak Farrokhzad ac34594209 Rollup merge of #63704 - Wind-River:master, r=Centril
Fixed: error: unnecessary trailing semicolon
2019-08-19 22:48:59 +02:00
Mazdak Farrokhzad 2c0f05a04f Rollup merge of #63699 - gilescope:async-move-diagnostic, r=estebank
Fix suggestion from incorrect `move async` to `async move`.

PR for #61920. Happy with the test. There must be a better implementation though - possibly a MIR visitor to estabilsh a span that doesn't include the `async` keyword?
2019-08-19 22:48:57 +02:00
Mazdak Farrokhzad a2080a60ac Rollup merge of #63620 - estebank:assoc-type-span, r=Centril
Use constraint span when lowering associated types

Fix #63594.

r? @Centril
2019-08-19 22:48:55 +02:00
Mazdak Farrokhzad bece1177c0 Rollup merge of #63376 - nikomatsakis:async-await-issue-62517, r=cramertj
use different lifetime name for object-lifetime-default elision

Introduce a distinct value for `LifetimeName` to use when this is a object-lifetime-default elision. This allows us to avoid creating incorrect lifetime parameters for the opaque types that result. We really need to overhaul this setup at some point! It's getting increasingly byzantine. But this seems like a relatively... surgical fix.

r? @cramertj

Fixes #62517
2019-08-19 22:48:54 +02:00
Mazdak Farrokhzad 4486c02695 Rollup merge of #63252 - nrc:arc-doc, r=alexcrichton
Remove recommendation about idiomatic syntax for Arc::clone

I believe we should not make this recommendation. I don't want to argue that `Arc::clone` is less idiomatic than `arc.clone`, but that the choice is not clear cut and that we should not be making this kind of call in the docs.

The `.clone()` form has advantages too: it is more succinct, it is more likely to be understood by beginners, and it is more uniform with other `clone` calls, indeed with most other method calls.

Whichever approach is better, I think that this discussion belongs in a style guide or textbook, rather than the library docs. We don't talk much about idiomatic code in the docs, this place is pretty exceptional.

The recommendation is also not followed in this repo. It is hard to figure out how many calls there are of the `.clone()` form, but there are 1550 uses of `Arc` and only 65 uses of `Arc::clone`. The recommendation has existed for over two years.

The recommendation was added in https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/42137, as a result of https://github.com/rust-lang/rfcs/pull/1954. However, note that that RFC was closed because it was not necessary to change the docs (the original RFC proposed a new function instead). So I don't think an RFC is necessary here (and I'm not trying to re-litigate the discussion on that RFC (which favoured `Arc::clone` as idiomatic) in any case).

cc @nical (who added the docs in the first place; sorry :-) )

r? @alexcrichton (or someone else on @rust-lang/libs )
2019-08-19 22:48:52 +02:00
Esteban Küber 1808e4da68 review comments 2019-08-19 12:24:06 -07:00
Esteban Küber 94ee54c425 Use constraint span when lowering associated types 2019-08-19 11:50:34 -07:00
Niko Matsakis 7ee1af51cc adjust test to be check-pass 2019-08-19 13:53:06 -04:00
Niko Matsakis 832199ee76 use static as object-lifetime default for type XX in Foo<Item=XX>
Currently the default is "inherited" from context, so e.g.  `&impl
Foo<Item = dyn Bar>` would default to `&'x impl Foo<Item = dyn Bar +
'x>`, but this triggers an ICE and is not very consistent.

This patch doesn't implement what I expect would be the correct
semantics, because those are likely too complex. Instead, it handles
what I'd expect to be the common case -- where the trait has no
lifetime parameters.
2019-08-19 13:50:44 -04:00
Niko Matsakis af86fb1959 distinguish object-lifetime-default elision from other elision
Object-lifetime-default elision is distinct from other forms of
elision; it always refers to some enclosing lifetime *present in the
surrounding type* (e.g., `&dyn Bar` expands to `&'a (dyn Bar + 'a)`.
If there is no enclosing lifetime, then it expands to `'static`.

Therefore, in an `impl Trait<Item = dyn Bar>` setting, we don't expand
to create a lifetime parameter for the `dyn Bar + 'X` bound.  It will
just be resolved to `'static`.

Annoyingly, the responsibility for this resolution is spread across
multiple bits of code right now (`middle::resolve_lifetimes`,
`lowering`). The lowering code knows that the default is for an object
lifetime, but it doesn't know what the correct result would be.
Probably this should be fixed, but what we do now is a surgical fix:
we have it generate a different result for elided lifetimes in a
object context, and then we can ignore those results when figuring out
the lifetimes that are captured in the opaque type.
2019-08-19 13:50:42 -04:00
Niko Matsakis b51df1def0 add debug logs 2019-08-19 13:48:45 -04:00
bors 29a54035c7 Auto merge of #63579 - alexcrichton:new-lockfile, r=Mark-Simulacrum
Use to Cargo's experimental lockfile format

This commit changes the lock file format of this repository to an
experimental format that isn't rolled out by default in Cargo but is
intended to eventually become the default. The new format moves
information around and compresses the lock file a bit. The intention of
the new format is to reduce the amount of git merge conflicts that
happen in a repository, with rust-lang/rust being a prime candidate for
testing this.

The new format wille ventually become the default but for now it is
off-by-default in Cargo, but Cargo will preserve the format if it sees
it. Since we always build with a beta version of Cargo for the
rust-lang/rust repository it should be safe to go ahead and change the
lock file format here and everyone building this repository will
automatically pick it up.

It's intended that we'll evaluate this lock file format in the
rust-lang/rust repository to see if it reduces the number of perceived
merge conflicts for changes that touch the lock file. This will in turn
help inform the development of the feature in Cargo and whether we
choose to stabilize this and turn it on by default.

Note that this commit does not actually change the contents of the lock
file in terms of a resolution graph, it simply reencodes the lock file
with a new format.
2019-08-19 17:04:10 +00:00
Alex Crichton 093ede240a Use to Cargo's experimental lockfile format
This commit changes the lock file format of this repository to an
experimental format that isn't rolled out by default in Cargo but is
intended to eventually become the default. The new format moves
information around and compresses the lock file a bit. The intention of
the new format is to reduce the amount of git merge conflicts that
happen in a repository, with rust-lang/rust being a prime candidate for
testing this.

The new format wille ventually become the default but for now it is
off-by-default in Cargo, but Cargo will preserve the format if it sees
it. Since we always build with a beta version of Cargo for the
rust-lang/rust repository it should be safe to go ahead and change the
lock file format here and everyone building this repository will
automatically pick it up.

It's intended that we'll evaluate this lock file format in the
rust-lang/rust repository to see if it reduces the number of perceived
merge conflicts for changes that touch the lock file. This will in turn
help inform the development of the feature in Cargo and whether we
choose to stabilize this and turn it on by default.

Note that this commit does not actually change the contents of the lock
file in terms of a resolution graph, it simply reencodes the lock file
with a new format.
2019-08-19 09:56:22 -07:00
Giles Cope ef3e66d69f Fix suggestion from move async to async move. 2019-08-19 17:14:38 +01:00
Baoshan 7ab6fa0914 Merge pull request #3 from Wind-River/vxworks-salim
Fixed: error: unnecessary trailing semicolon
2019-08-19 08:45:43 -07:00
bors f86521e0a3 Auto merge of #63700 - alexcrichton:update-backtrace, r=sfackler
std: Update `backtrace` crate dependency

This commit updates the `backtrace` crate from 0.3.34 to 0.3.35. The
[included set of changes][changes] for this update mostly includes some
gimli-related improvements (not relevant for the standard library) but
critically includes a fix for rust-lang/backtrace-rs#230. The standard
library will not aqcuire a session-local lock whenever a backtrace is
generated on Windows to allow external synchronization with the
`backtrace` crate itself, allowing `backtrace` to be safely used while
other threads may be panicking.

[changes]: https://github.com/rust-lang/backtrace-rs/compare/0.3.34...0.3.35
2019-08-19 13:17:34 +00:00
Alex Crichton 1301b100ca std: Update backtrace crate dependency
This commit updates the `backtrace` crate from 0.3.34 to 0.3.35. The
[included set of changes][changes] for this update mostly includes some
gimli-related improvements (not relevant for the standard library) but
critically includes a fix for rust-lang/backtrace-rs#230. The standard
library will not aqcuire a session-local lock whenever a backtrace is
generated on Windows to allow external synchronization with the
`backtrace` crate itself, allowing `backtrace` to be safely used while
other threads may be panicking.

[changes]: https://github.com/rust-lang/backtrace-rs/compare/0.3.34...0.3.35
2019-08-19 06:13:18 -07:00
bors cdff918955 Auto merge of #63670 - Dante-Broggi:patch-2, r=Centril
Size has a ::zero
2019-08-19 05:12:58 +00:00
bors a807902dd6 Auto merge of #63463 - matthewjasper:ty_param_cleanup, r=petrochenkov
Don't special case the `Self` parameter by name

This results in a couple of small diagnostic regressions. They could be avoided by keeping the special case just for diagnostics, but that seems worse.

closes #50125
cc #60869
2019-08-19 01:31:35 +00:00
bors 0ccbae2f18 Auto merge of #63045 - Rosto75:master, r=jonas-schievink
Change the placement of two functions.

Right now, the order is as follows:
`pop_front()`
`push_front()`
`push_back()`
`pop_back()`

`swap_remove_back()`
`swap_remove_front()`

I believe it would be more natural, and easier to follow, if we place `pop_back()` right after the `pop_front()`, and `swap_remove_back()` after the `swap_remove_front()` like this:
`pop_front()`
`pop_back()`
`push_front()`
`push_back()`

`swap_remove_front()`
`swap_remove_back()`

The rest of the documentation (at least in this module) adheres to the same logic, where the 'front' function always precedes its 'back' equivalent.
2019-08-18 22:01:21 +00:00
Matthew Jasper 24587d20df Pre intern the Self parameter type
Use this to simplify the object safety code a bit.
2019-08-18 19:25:12 +01:00
bors 4cf7673076 Auto merge of #63659 - gilescope:async-in-closure, r=Centril
Improved error message for break in async block

Fixes #63391
2019-08-18 18:23:28 +00:00
bors ea52be482a Auto merge of #63635 - oli-obk:default-slice-dangles, r=eddyb
Do not generate allocations for zero sized allocations

Alternative to https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/62487

r? @eddyb

There are other places where we could do this, too, but that would cause `static FOO: () = ();` to not have a unique address
2019-08-18 13:22:38 +00:00
Giles Cope 1e02bc62bc Better error message for break in async blocks. 2019-08-18 10:39:15 +01:00
bors 71e2882973 Auto merge of #63269 - Aaron1011:feature/proc-macro-data, r=eddyb,petrochenkov
Serialize additional data for procedural macros

Split off from #62855

This PR serializes the declaration `Span` and attributes for all
procedural macros. This allows Rustdoc to properly render doc comments
and source links when performing inlinig procedural macros across crates
2019-08-18 08:15:38 +00:00
bors ef1ecbefb8 Auto merge of #62948 - matklad:failable-file-loading, r=petrochenkov
Normalize newlines when loading files

Fixes #62865
2019-08-18 04:37:01 +00:00
Salim Nasser f0b394bfb6 Fixed: error: unnecessary trailing semicolon 2019-08-17 18:56:38 -07:00
bors fc8765d6d8 Auto merge of #61708 - dlrobertson:or-patterns-0, r=centril
Initial implementation of or-patterns

An incomplete implementation of or-patterns (e.g. `Some(0 | 1)` as a pattern). This patch set aims to implement initial parsing of `or-patterns`.

Related to: #54883

CC @alexreg @varkor
r? @Centril
2019-08-18 01:02:20 +00:00
bors bd1da18b04 Auto merge of #63671 - Centril:rollup-zufavt5, r=Centril
Rollup of 5 pull requests

Successful merges:

 - #62451 (Add APIs for uninitialized Box, Rc, and Arc. (Plus get_mut_unchecked))
 - #63487 (Remove meaningless comments in src/test)
 - #63657 (Crank up invalid value lint)
 - #63667 (resolve: Properly integrate derives and `macro_rules` scopes)
 - #63669 (fix typos in mir/interpret)

Failed merges:

r? @ghost
2019-08-17 21:30:10 +00:00
Mazdak Farrokhzad 4ec9703467 Rollup merge of #63669 - Dante-Broggi:patch-1, r=jonas-schievink
fix typos in mir/interpret
2019-08-17 22:57:35 +02:00
Mazdak Farrokhzad b60f245b95 Rollup merge of #63667 - petrochenkov:deriveholders, r=matthewjasper
resolve: Properly integrate derives and `macro_rules` scopes

So,
```rust
#[derive(A, B)]
struct S;

m!();
```
turns into something like
```rust
struct S;

A_placeholder!( struct S; );

B_placeholder!( struct S; );

m!();
```
during expansion.

And for `m!()` its "`macro_rules` scope" (aka "legacy scope") should point to the `B_placeholder` call rather than to the derive container `#[derive(A, B)]`.

`fn build_reduced_graph` now makes sure the legacy scope points to the right thing.
(It's still a mystery for me why this worked before https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/63535.)

Unfortunately, placeholders from derives are currently treated separately from placeholders from other macros and need to be passed as `extra_placeholders` rather than a part of the AST fragment.
That's fixable, but I wanted to keep this PR more minimal to close the regression faster.

Fixes https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/63651
r? @matthewjasper
2019-08-17 22:57:34 +02:00
Mazdak Farrokhzad a00b4f1401 Rollup merge of #63657 - RalfJung:invalid_value, r=Centril
Crank up invalid value lint

* Warn against uninit `bool` and `char`.
* Warn against 0-init `NonNull` and friends
* Detect transmute-from-0 as zero-initialization ([seen in the wild](https://github.com/glium/glium/issues/1775#issuecomment-522144636))
2019-08-17 22:57:32 +02:00
Mazdak Farrokhzad a396434136 Rollup merge of #63487 - sd234678:remove-meaningless-comments-in-src/test-2, r=Centril
Remove meaningless comments in src/test

Moved from #63411
2019-08-17 22:57:30 +02:00
Mazdak Farrokhzad a3b6e8ef99 Rollup merge of #62451 - SimonSapin:new_uninit, r=RalfJung
Add APIs for uninitialized Box, Rc, and Arc. (Plus get_mut_unchecked)

Assigning `MaybeUninit::<Foo>::uninit()` to a local variable is usually free, even when `size_of::<Foo>()` is large. However, passing it for example to `Arc::new` [causes at least one copy](https://youtu.be/F1AquroPfcI?t=4116) (from the stack to the newly allocated heap memory) even though there is no meaningful data. It is theoretically possible that a Sufficiently Advanced Compiler could optimize this copy away, but this is [reportedly unlikely to happen soon in LLVM](https://youtu.be/F1AquroPfcI?t=5431).

This PR proposes two sets of features:

* Constructors for containers (`Box`, `Rc`, `Arc`) of `MaybeUninit<T>` or `[MaybeUninit<T>]` that do not initialized the data, and unsafe conversions to the known-initialized types (without `MaybeUninit`). The constructors are guaranteed not to make unnecessary copies.

* On `Rc` and `Arc`, an unsafe `get_mut_unchecked` method that provides `&mut T` access without checking the reference count. `Arc::get_mut` involves multiple atomic operations whose cost can be non-trivial. `Rc::get_mut` is less costly, but we add `Rc::get_mut_unchecked` anyway for symmetry with `Arc`.

  These can be useful independently, but they will presumably be typical when the new constructors of `Rc` and `Arc` are used.

  An alternative with a safe API would be to introduce `UniqueRc` and `UniqueArc` types that have the same memory layout as `Rc` and `Arc` (and so zero-cost conversion to them) but are guaranteed to have only one reference. But introducing entire new types feels “heavier” than new constructors on existing types, and initialization of `MaybeUninit<T>` typically requires unsafe code anyway.

Summary of new APIs (all unstable in this PR):

```rust
impl<T> Box<T> { pub fn new_uninit() -> Box<MaybeUninit<T>> {…} }
impl<T> Box<MaybeUninit<T>> { pub unsafe fn assume_init(self) -> Box<T> {…} }
impl<T> Box<[T]> { pub fn new_uninit_slice(len: usize) -> Box<[MaybeUninit<T>]> {…} }
impl<T> Box<[MaybeUninit<T>]> { pub unsafe fn assume_init(self) -> Box<[T]> {…} }

impl<T> Rc<T> { pub fn new_uninit() -> Rc<MaybeUninit<T>> {…} }
impl<T> Rc<MaybeUninit<T>> { pub unsafe fn assume_init(self) -> Rc<T> {…} }
impl<T> Rc<[T]> { pub fn new_uninit_slice(len: usize) -> Rc<[MaybeUninit<T>]> {…} }
impl<T> Rc<[MaybeUninit<T>]> { pub unsafe fn assume_init(self) -> Rc<[T]> {…} }

impl<T> Arc<T> { pub fn new_uninit() -> Arc<MaybeUninit<T>> {…} }
impl<T> Arc<MaybeUninit<T>> { pub unsafe fn assume_init(self) -> Arc<T> {…} }
impl<T> Arc<[T]> { pub fn new_uninit_slice(len: usize) -> Arc<[MaybeUninit<T>]> {…} }
impl<T> Arc<[MaybeUninit<T>]> { pub unsafe fn assume_init(self) -> Arc<[T]> {…} }

impl<T: ?Sized> Rc<T> { pub unsafe fn get_mut_unchecked(this: &mut Self) -> &mut T {…} }
impl<T: ?Sized> Arc<T> { pub unsafe fn get_mut_unchecked(this: &mut Self) -> &mut T {…} }
```
2019-08-17 22:57:29 +02:00
Ralf Jung 3288be515f test in a way that works even with musl 2019-08-17 22:11:43 +02:00
Dante-Broggi d64f06ce31 size has a zero 2019-08-17 16:09:49 -04:00
Simon Sapin 9bd70834b0 Doc nit
Co-Authored-By: Ralf Jung <post@ralfj.de>
2019-08-17 21:40:35 +02:00
Dante-Broggi a7c34f1ce9 fix typos 2019-08-17 15:36:28 -04:00
Vadim Petrochenkov 1064d41c96 resolve/expand: Rename some things for clarity 2019-08-17 21:04:48 +03:00
bors 2111aed0a3 Auto merge of #63658 - RalfJung:miri-op, r=oli-obk
Refactor Miri ops (unary, binary) to have more types

This is the part of https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/63448 that is just a refactoring. It helps that PR by making it easier to perform machine arithmetic.

r? @oli-obk @eddyb
2019-08-17 17:53:31 +00:00
Vadim Petrochenkov d479ff2ffe resolve: Properly integrate derives and macro_rules scopes 2019-08-17 20:15:06 +03:00
Aaron Hill 64f867ae3e Serialize additional data for procedural macros
Split off from #62855

This PR deerializes the declaration `Span` and attributes for all
procedural macros from their underlying function definitions.
This allows Rustdoc to properly render doc comments
and source links when inlining procedural macros across crates
2019-08-17 13:14:05 -04:00
Dan Robertson 1870537f27 initial implementation of or-pattern parsing
Initial implementation of parsing or-patterns e.g., `Some(Foo | Bar)`.
This is a partial implementation of RFC 2535.
2019-08-17 15:55:40 +00:00
varkor 1713ac4bf5 Initial implementation of or patterns 2019-08-17 15:05:36 +00:00
Simon Sapin b79ce1b1b1 Rename private helper method allocate_for_unsized to allocate_for_layout 2019-08-17 17:01:04 +02:00
Ralf Jung 72d9fe8b0e less & 2019-08-17 16:48:08 +02:00