add regression test for `proc_macro` error subdiagnostics
The previous ICE was already fixed by rust-lang/rust#148188, but no test was added at that time.
Closesrust-lang/rust#145305.
```
error[E0308]: mismatched types
--> $DIR/macro-span-caller-replacement.rs:5:17
|
LL | s = format!("{arg}");
| ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ expected `&str`, found `String`
...
LL | macro_with_format!();
| -------------------- in this macro invocation
|
= note: this error originates in the macro `format` which comes from the expansion of the macro `macro_with_format` (in Nightly builds, run with -Z macro-backtrace for more info)
```
unstable proc_macro tracked::* rename/restructure
Picking up what should be the uncontroversial part of rust-lang/rust#87173 (closed due to inactivity over two years ago).
Part of rust-lang/rust#99515.
- move `proc_macro::tracked_env::var` to `proc_macro::tracked::env_var`
- move `proc_macro::tracked_path::path` to `proc_macro::tracked::path`
- change the argument of `proc_macro::tracked::path` from `AsRef<str>` to `AsRef<Path>`.
Warn on unused_attributes in uitests
r? ```@jdonszelmann```
Because:
- unused_attributes warnings are usually actual mistakes, rather than just unused code, and we want to notify test writers they may be accidentally making a mistake
- Because the lint was allowed by default previously, we missed real bugs, because the test coverage is worse
1. https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/147417
2. https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/147411
Remove `no-remap-src-base` from tests
Previously in the `//`-compiletest-directive times, `no-remap-src-base` was implemented as a special `no-*` directive parsing. In the migration from `//` -> `//`@`,` the `// no-remap-src-base` directive was lost, most likely because it had no effect -- the default is not remapping `src-base`.
So remove occurrences of `no-remap-src-base`, as these are not valid directives.
r? `@Zalathar` (since we discussed this on discord, or compiler)
Previously in the `//`-compiletest-directive times, this was implemented
as a special `no-*` directive parsing. In the migration from `//` ->
`//@`, the `// no-remap-src-base` directive was lost, most likely
because it had no effect -- the default is not remapping `src-base`.
So remove occurrences of `no-remap-src-base`, as these are not valid
directives.
Don’t suggest foreign `doc(hidden)` types in "the following other types implement trait" diagnostics
Fixes https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/132024.
``@rustbot`` label A-diagnostics T-compiler
We'll still error due to the `opt_bad_ty` of `method_autoderef_steps`.
This slightly worsens the span of `infer_var.method()` which is now the
same as for `Box::new(infer_var).method()`.
Unlike `structurally_resolve_type`, `probe_op` does not check whether
the infcx is already tainted, so this results in 2 previously not emitted
errors.
When encountering an unmet trait bound, point at local type that doesn't implement the trait:
```
error[E0277]: the trait bound `Bar<T>: Foo` is not satisfied
--> $DIR/issue-64855.rs:9:19
|
LL | pub struct Bar<T>(<Self as Foo>::Type) where Self: ;
| ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ unsatisfied trait bound
|
help: the trait `Foo` is not implemented for `Bar<T>`
--> $DIR/issue-64855.rs:9:1
|
LL | pub struct Bar<T>(<Self as Foo>::Type) where Self: ;
| ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
```
Resolve the prelude import in `build_reduced_graph`
This pr tries to resolve the prelude import at the `build_reduced_graph` stage.
Part of batched import resolution in rust-lang/rust#145108 (cherry picked commit) and maybe needed for rust-lang/rust#139493.
r? petrochenkov
Remove one FIXME, addressing it does not reduce the hacky-ness much, and the logic is going to be removed anyway together with the `legacy_derive_helpers` deprecation lint.
Handle macros with multiple kinds, and improve errors
(I recommend reviewing this commit-by-commit.)
Switch to a bitflags `MacroKinds` to support macros with more than one kind
Review everything that uses `MacroKind`, and switch anything that could refer to more than one kind to use `MacroKinds`.
Add a new `SyntaxExtensionKind::MacroRules` for `macro_rules!` macros, using the concrete `MacroRulesMacroExpander` type, and have it track which kinds it can handle. Eliminate the separate optional `attr_ext`, now that a `SyntaxExtension` can handle multiple macro kinds.
This also avoids the need to downcast when calling methods on `MacroRulesMacroExpander`, such as `get_unused_rule`.
Integrate macro kind checking into name resolution's `sub_namespace_match`, so that we only find a macro if it's the right type, and eliminate the special-case hack for attributes.
This allows detecting and report macro kind mismatches early, and more precisely, improving various error messages. In particular, this eliminates the case in `failed_to_match_macro` to check for a function-like invocation of a macro with no function-like rules.
Instead, macro kind mismatches now result in an unresolved macro, and we detect this case in `unresolved_macro_suggestions`, which now carefully distinguishes between a kind mismatch and other errors.
This also handles cases of forward-referenced attributes and cyclic attributes.
----
In this PR, I've minimally fixed up `rustdoc` so that it compiles and passes tests. This is just the minimal necessary fixes to handle the switch to `MacroKinds`, and it only works for macros that don't actually have multiple kinds. This will panic (with a `todo!`) if it encounters a macro with multiple kinds.
rustdoc needs further fixes to handle macros with multiple kinds, and to handle attributes and derive macros that aren't proc macros. I'd appreciate some help from a rustdoc expert on that.
----
r? ````````@petrochenkov````````
Modify `AttributeTemplate` to support list of alternatives for list and name value attribute styles.
Suggestions now provide more correct suggested code:
```
error[E0805]: malformed `used` attribute input
--> $DIR/used_with_multi_args.rs:3:1
|
LL | #[used(compiler, linker)]
| ^^^^^^------------------^
| |
| expected a single argument here
|
help: try changing it to one of the following valid forms of the attribute
|
LL - #[used(compiler, linker)]
LL + #[used(compiler)]
|
LL - #[used(compiler, linker)]
LL + #[used(linker)]
|
LL - #[used(compiler, linker)]
LL + #[used]
|
```
instead of the prior "masking" of the lack of this feature by suggesting pipe-separated lists:
```
error[E0805]: malformed `used` attribute input
--> $DIR/used_with_multi_args.rs:3:1
|
LL | #[used(compiler, linker)]
| ^^^^^^------------------^
| |
| expected a single argument here
|
help: try changing it to one of the following valid forms of the attribute
|
LL - #[used(compiler, linker)]
LL + #[used(compiler|linker)]
|
LL - #[used(compiler, linker)]
LL + #[used]
|
```
Do not point at macro invocation which expands to an inference error. Avoid the following:
```
error[E0308]: mismatched types
--> $DIR/does-not-have-iter-interpolated.rs:12:5
|
LL | quote!($($nonrep)*);
| ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
| |
| expected `HasIterator`, found `ThereIsNoIteratorInRepetition`
| expected due to this
| here the type of `has_iter` is inferred to be `ThereIsNoIteratorInRepetition`
```
`panic!` does not print any identifying information for threads that are
unnamed. However, in many cases, the thread ID can be determined.
This changes the panic message from something like this:
thread '<unnamed>' panicked at src/main.rs:3:5:
explicit panic
To something like this:
thread '<unnamed>' (0xff9bf) panicked at src/main.rs:3:5:
explicit panic
Stack overflow messages are updated as well.
This change applies to both named and unnamed threads. The ID printed is
the OS integer thread ID rather than the Rust thread ID, which should
also be what debuggers print.
Use `splice` to avoid shifting the other items twice.
Put `extern crate std;` first so it's already resolved when we resolve `::std::prelude::rust_20XX`.