The diagnostic implemented is a simple one (E0109). It serves as a test for the new foundation.
This commit only implements diagnostics for type in bodies and body-carrying signatures; the next commit will include diagnostics in the rest of the things.
Also fix one weird bug that was detected when implementing this that caused `Fn::(A, B) -> C` (which is a valid, if bizarre, alternative syntax to `Fn(A, B) -> C` to lower incorrectly.
And also fix a maybe-bug where parentheses were sneaked into a code string needlessly; this was not detected until now because the parentheses were removed (by the make-AST family API), but with a change in this commit they are now inserted. So fix that too.
Most paths are types and therefore already are in the source map, but the trait in impl trait and in bounds are not.
We do this by storing them basically as `TypeRef`s. For convenience, I created a wrapper around `TypeRefId` called `PathId` that always stores a path, and implemented indexing from the types map to it.
Fortunately, this change impacts memory usage negligibly (adds 2mb to `analysis-stats .`, but that could be just fluff). Probably because there aren't that many trait bounds and impl traits, and this also shrinks `TypeBound` by 8 bytes.
I also added an accessor to `TypesSourceMap` to get the source code, which will be needed for diagnostics.
We add union fields access (in both expressions and patterns) and inline assembly.
That completes the unsafe check (there are some other unsafe things but they are unstable), and so also opens the door to reporting unused unsafe without annoying people about their not-unused unsafe blocks.
When a glob import overriding the visibility of a previous glob import was not properly resolved when the items are only available in the next fixpoint iteration.
The bug was hidden until #18390.
Only in calls, because to support them in bounds we need support from Chalk. However we don't yet report error from bounds anyway, so this is less severe.
The returned future is shown in its name within inlay hints instead of as a nicer `impl Future`, but that can wait for another PR.
Rollup of 7 pull requests
Successful merges:
- #133358 (Don't type error if we fail to coerce `Pin<T>` because it doesnt contain a ref)
- #133422 (Fix clobber_abi in RV32E and RV64E inline assembly)
- #133452 (Support predicate registers (clobber-only) in Hexagon inline assembly)
- #133463 (Fix handling of x18 in AArch64 inline assembly on ohos/trusty or with -Zfixed-x18)
- #133487 (fix confusing diagnostic for reserved `##`)
- #133557 (Small doc fixes in `rustc_codegen_ssa`)
- #133560 (Trim extra space in 'repeated `mut`' diagnostic)
r? `@ghost`
`@rustbot` modify labels: rollup
Use edition of `macro_rules` when compiling the macro
This changes the edition assigned to a macro_rules macro when it is compiled to use the edition of where the macro came from instead of the local crate's edition.
This fixes a problem when a macro_rules macro is created by a proc-macro. Previously that macro would be tagged with the local edition, which would cause problems with using the correct edition behavior inside the macro. For example, the check for unsafe attributes would cause errors in 2024 when using proc-macros from older editions.
This is partially related to https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/132906. Unfortunately this is only a half fix for that issue. It fixes the error that happens in 2024, but does not fix the lint firing in 2021. I'm still trying to think of some way to fix that, but I'm running low on ideas.