Add test for `try_err` lint within try blocks.
Fixes#5757
Turns out the current `try_err` implementation already skips expressions inside of a try block.
When inside of a try block, `Err(_)?` is desugared to a `break` instead of normal `return` . This makes `find_return_type()` function at [this line](eb4d88e690/clippy_lints/src/matches/try_err.rs (L29)) always returns `None` and skips the check.
I just added a test case for try block.
changelog: none
Fix [`redundant_slicing`] when the slice is behind a mutable reference
Fixes#12751
changelog: Fix [`redundant_slicing`] when the slice is behind a mutable reference and a immutable reference is expected.
When a suggestion part is for already present code, do not highlight it. If after that there are no highlights left, do not show the suggestion at all.
Fix clippy lint suggestion incorrectly treated as `span_help`.
Fix `redundant_closure` false positive with closures has return type contains `'static`
Fix#13073 .
Please enable "ignore white-space change" settings in github UI for easy reviewing.
HACK: The third commit contains a hack to check if a type `T: 'static` when `fn() -> U where U: 'static`.
I don't have a clean way to check for it.
changelog: [`redundant_closure`] Fix false positive with closures has return type contains `'static`
Fix false positive for `missing_backticks` in footnote references
Fixes#13183.
changelog: Fix false positive for `missing_backticks` in footnote references
Emit `if_let_mutex` in presence of other mutexes
Currently (master, not nightly nor stable) `if_let_mutex` does not emit a warning here:
```rs
let m1 = Mutex::new(10);
let m2 = Mutex::new(());
if let 100..=200 = *m1.lock().unwrap() {
m2.lock();
} else {
m1.lock();
}
```
It currently looks for the first call to `.lock()` on *any* mutex receiver inside of the if/else body, and only later (outside of the visitor) checks that the receiver matches the mutex in the scrutinee. That means that in cases like the above, it finds the `m2.lock()` expression, stops the visitor, fails the check that it's the same mutex (`m2` != `m1`) and then does not look for any other `.lock()` calls.
So, just make the receiver check also part of the visitor so that we only stop the visitor when we also find the right receiver.
The first commit has the actual changes described here. The sceond one just unnests all the `if let`s
----
changelog: none
`missing_trait_methods`: lint methods in definition order
Lintcheck for #13157 showed a bunch of changes for `missing_trait_methods`
This is because `values_sorted` was sorting the entries by the key's [`DefPathHash`](https://doc.rust-lang.org/nightly/nightly-rustc/rustc_span/def_id/struct.DefPathHash.html), this is stable for a given compiler but can change across versions
changelog: none
Fix while_let_on_iterator dropping loop label when applying fix.
Loop label was not persisted when displaying help and was therefore producing broken rust code when applying fixes.
Solution was to store the `ast::Label` when creating a `higher::WhileLet` from an expression and add the label name to the lint suggestion and diagnostics.
---
Fixes: https://github.com/rust-lang/rust-clippy/issues/13123
changelog: [`while_let_on_iterator`]: Fix issue dropping loop label when displaying help and applying fixes.
Add `BTreeSet` detection to the `set_contains_or_insert` lint
* Detect `BTreeSet::contains` + `BTreeSet::insert` usage in the same way as with the `HashSet`.
CC: `@lochetti` `@bitfield`
----
changelog: [`set_contains_or_insert`]: Handle `BTreeSet` in addition to `HashSet`
Make `std_instead_of_core` somewhat MSRV aware
For #13158, this catches some things e.g. `core::net` and the recently stable `core::error` but not things moved individually like `UnwindSafe`, as far as I can see the version for those isn't easily available
Beta nominating since ideally we'd get this change in the same version as `core::error` becomes stable
cc `@kpreid`
changelog: none
Stabilize const `{integer}::from_str_radix` i.e. `const_int_from_str`
This PR stabilizes the feature `const_int_from_str`.
- ACP Issue: rust-lang/libs-team#74
- Implementation PR: rust-lang/rust#99322
- Part of Tracking Issue: rust-lang/rust#59133
API Change Diff:
```diff
impl {integer} {
- pub fn from_str_radix(src: &str, radix: u32) -> Result<Self, ParseIntError>;
+ pub const fn from_str_radix(src: &str, radix: u32) -> Result<Self, ParseIntError>;
}
impl ParseIntError {
- pub fn kind(&self) -> &IntErrorKind;
+ pub const fn kind(&self) -> &IntErrorKind;
}
```
This makes it easier to parse integers at compile-time, e.g.
the example from the Tracking Issue:
```rust
env!("SOMETHING").parse::<usize>().unwrap()
```
could now be achived with
```rust
match usize::from_str_radix(env!("SOMETHING"), 10) {
Ok(val) => val,
Err(err) => panic!("Invalid value for SOMETHING environment variable."),
}
```
rather than having to depend on a library that implements or manually implement the parsing at compile-time.
---
Checklist based on [Libs Stabilization Guide - When there's const involved](https://std-dev-guide.rust-lang.org/development/stabilization.html#when-theres-const-involved)
I am treating this as a [partial stabilization](https://std-dev-guide.rust-lang.org/development/stabilization.html#partial-stabilizations) as it shares a tracking issue (and is rather small), so directly opening the partial stabilization PR for the subset (feature `const_int_from_str`) being stabilized.
- [x] ping Constant Evaluation WG
- [x] no unsafe involved
- [x] no `#[allow_internal_unstable]`
- [ ] usage of `intrinsic::const_eval_select` rust-lang/rust#124625 in `from_str_radix_assert` to change the error message between compile-time and run-time
- [ ] [rust-labg/libs-api FCP](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/124941#issuecomment-2207021921)
needless_borrows_for_generic_args: Fix for &mut
This commit fixes a bug introduced in #12706, where the behavior of the lint has been changed, to avoid suggestions that introduce a move. The motivation in the commit message is quite poor (if the detection for significant drops is not sufficient because it's not transitive, the proper fix would be to make it transitive). However, #12454, the linked issue, provides a good reason for the change — if the value being borrowed is bound to a variable, then moving it will only introduce friction into future refactorings.
Thus #12706 changes the logic so that the lint triggers if the value being borrowed is Copy, or is the result of a function call, simplifying the logic to the point where analysing "is this the only use of this value" isn't necessary.
However, said PR also introduces an undocumented carveout, where referents that themselves are mutable references are treated as Copy, to catch some cases that we do want to lint against. However, that is not sound — it's possible to consume a mutable reference by moving it.
To avoid emitting false suggestions, this PR reintroduces the referent_used_exactly_once logic and runs that check for referents that are themselves mutable references.
Thinking about the code shape of &mut x, where x: &mut T, raises the point that while removing the &mut outright won't work, the extra indirection is still undesirable, and perhaps instead we should suggest reborrowing: &mut *x. That, however, is left as possible future work.
Fixes#12856
changelog: none
Implement lint against ambiguous negative literals
This PR implements a lint against ambiguous negative literals with a literal and method calls right after it.
## `ambiguous_negative_literals`
(deny-by-default)
The `ambiguous_negative_literals` lint checks for cases that are confusing between a negative literal and a negation that's not part of the literal.
### Example
```rust,compile_fail
-1i32.abs(); // equals -1, while `(-1i32).abs()` equals 1
```
### Explanation
Method calls take precedence over unary precedence. Setting the precedence explicitly makes the code clearer and avoid potential bugs.
<details>
<summary>Old proposed lint</summary>
## `ambiguous_unary_precedence`
(deny-by-default)
The `ambiguous_unary_precedence` lint checks for use the negative unary operator with a literal and method calls.
### Example
```rust
-1i32.abs(); // equals -1, while `(-1i32).abs()` equals 1
```
### Explanation
Unary operations take precedence on binary operations and method calls take precedence over unary precedence. Setting the precedence explicitly makes the code clearer and avoid potential bugs.
</details>
-----
Note: This is a strip down version of https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/117161, without the binary op precedence.
Fixes https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/117155
`@rustbot` labels +I-lang-nominated
cc `@scottmcm`
r? compiler
Misc refactorings part 5
`toplevel_ref_arg` gets a small fix so it can be allowed on function arguments. Otherwise just some rearrangements.
changelog: none
add lint for recreation of an entire struct
This lint makes Clippy warn about situations where an owned struct is
essentially recreated by moving all its fields into a new instance of
the struct. The lint is not machine-applicable because the source
struct may have been partially moved.
This lint originated in something I spotted during peer review. While
working on their branch a colleague ended up with a commit where a
function returned a struct that 1:1 replicated one of its owned inputs
from its members. Initially I suspected they hadn’t run their code
through Clippy but AFAICS there is no lint for this situation yet.
changelog: new lint: [`redundant_owned_struct_recreation`]
### New lint checklist
- \[+] Followed [lint naming conventions][lint_naming]
- \[+] Added passing UI tests (including committed `.stderr` file)
- \[+] `cargo test` passes locally
- \[+] Executed `cargo dev update_lints`
- \[+] Added lint documentation
- \[+] Run `cargo dev fmt`
[`pathbuf_init_then_push`]: Checks for calls to `push` immediately a…
changelog: [`pathbuf_init_then_push`]: new lint: Checks for calls to `push` immediately after creating a new `PathBuf`
Just a mirror of VEC_INIT_THEN_PUSH
This is a very large commit since a lot needs to be changed in order to
make the tests pass. The salient changes are:
- `ConstArgKind` gets a new `Path` variant, and all const params are now
represented using it. Non-param paths still use `ConstArgKind::Anon`
to prevent this change from getting too large, but they will soon use
the `Path` variant too.
- `ConstArg` gets a distinct `hir_id` field and its own variant in
`hir::Node`. This affected many parts of the compiler that expected
the parent of an `AnonConst` to be the containing context (e.g., an
array repeat expression). They have been changed to check the
"grandparent" where necessary.
- Some `ast::AnonConst`s now have their `DefId`s created in
rustc_ast_lowering rather than `DefCollector`. This is because in some
cases they will end up becoming a `ConstArgKind::Path` instead, which
has no `DefId`. We have to solve this in a hacky way where we guess
whether the `AnonConst` could end up as a path const since we can't
know for sure until after name resolution (`N` could refer to a free
const or a nullary struct). If it has no chance as being a const
param, then we create a `DefId` in `DefCollector` -- otherwise we
decide during ast_lowering. This will have to be updated once all path
consts use `ConstArgKind::Path`.
- We explicitly use `ConstArgHasType` for array lengths, rather than
implicitly relying on anon const type feeding -- this is due to the
addition of `ConstArgKind::Path`.
- Some tests have their outputs changed, but the changes are for the
most part minor (including removing duplicate or almost-duplicate
errors). One test now ICEs, but it is for an incomplete, unstable
feature and is now tracked at #127009.
Add more doc-valid-idents
* "AccessKit" is a commonly used accessibility toolkit used in Rust GUIs.
* "CoreFoundation", "CoreGraphics", "CoreText" are frameworks on Apple OSes.
* "Direct2D", "Direct3D", "DirectWrite" are frameworks on Windows
* "PostScript" is a programming language and is mentioned when talking about text and vector graphics.
* "OpenAL" is an audio framework / API.
* "OpenType" is a font format (TrueType is already mentioned).
* "WebRTC", "WebSocket", "WebTransport" are web networking technologies.
* "NetBSD" and "OpenBSD" are like the already included FreeBSD.
changelog: [`doc_markdown`]: Add AccessKit, CoreFoundation, CoreGraphics, CoreText, Direct2D, Direct3D, DirectWrite, PostScript, OpenAL, OpenType, WebRTC, WebSocket, WebTransport, NetBSD, and OpenBSD to `doc-valid-idents`.
* "AccessKit" is a commonly used accessibility toolkit used in Rust GUIs.
* "CoreFoundation", "CoreGraphics", "CoreText" are frameworks on Apple OSes.
* "Direct2D", "Direct3D", "DirectWrite" are frameworks on Windows
* "PostScript" is a programming language and is mentioned when talking about
text and vector graphics.
* "OpenAL" is an audio framework / API.
* "OpenType" is a font format (TrueType is already mentioned).
* "WebRTC", "WebSocket", "WebTransport" are web networking technologies.
* "NetBSD" and "OpenBSD" are like the already included FreeBSD.
Fix and rename `overflow_check_conditional`
fixes#2457
Other changes:
* Limit the lint to unsigned types.
* Actually check if the operands are the same rather than using only the first part of the path.
* Allow the repeated expression to be anything as long as there are no side effects.
changelog: Rename `overflow_check_conditional` to `panicking_overflow_check` and move to `correctness`
Fix guidance of [`float_cmp`] and [`float_cmp_const`] to not incorrectly recommend `f__::EPSILON` as the error margin.
Using `f32::EPSILON` or `f64::EPSILON` as the floating-point equality comparison error margin is incorrect, yet `float_cmp` has until now recommended this be done. This change fixes the given guidance (both in docs and compiler hints) to not reference these unsuitable constants.
Instead, the guidance now clarifies that the scenarios in which an absolute error margin is usable, provides a sample implementation for using a user-defined absolute error margin (as an absolute error margin can only be used-defined and may be different for different comparisons) and references the floating point guide for a reference implementation of relative error based equality comparison for cases where absolute error margins cannot be identified.
changelog: [`float_cmp`] Fix guidance to not incorrectly recommend `f__::EPSILON` as the error margin.
changelog: [`float_cmp_const`] Fix guidance to not incorrectly recommend `f__::EPSILON` as the error margin.
Fixes#6816
This lint makes Clippy warn about situations where an owned
struct is essentially recreated by moving all its fields into a
new instance of the struct. Until now this lint only triggered
for structs recreated from a base struct.
NB: The new functionality too will cause false positives for the
situation where a non-copy struct consisting of all copy members
is touched again in subsequent code.
Using `f32::EPSILON` or `f64::EPSILON` as the floating-point equality comparison error margin is incorrect, yet `float_cmp` has until now recommended this be done. This change fixes the given guidance (both in docs and compiler hints) to not reference these unsuitable constants.
Instead, the guidance now clarifies that the scenarios in which an absolute error margin is usable, provides a reference implementation of using a user-defined absolute error margin (as an absolute error margin can only be used-defined and may be different for different comparisons) and references the floating point guide for a reference implementation of relative error based equaltiy comparison for when absolute error margin cannot be used.
changelog: Fix guidance of [`float_cmp`] and [`float_cmp_const`] to not incorrectly recommend `f64::EPSILON` as the error margin.
Fixes#6816
`significant_drop_in_scrutinee`: Trigger lint also for scrutinees in `while let` and `if let`
This lint should also work for `if let` and `while let`, so this PR makes it actually work.
For `while let`, I can't think of any reason why this lint shouldn't be enabled. The only problem is that the lint suggests moving the significant drop above the `while let`, which is clearly invalid in the case of `while let`. I don't know if this is fixable, but this PR simply disables the wrong suggestions.
For `if let`, it seems that another lint called `if_let_mutex` has some overlapping functionality. But `significant_drop_in_scrutinee` is a bit stricter, as it will trigger even if the `else` branch does not try to lock the same mutex.
changelog: [`significant_drop_in_scrutinee`]: Trigger lint also for scrutinees in `while let` and `if let`.
r? `@blyxyas` (the third PR as promised in https://github.com/rust-lang/rust-clippy/pull/12740#issuecomment-2094876350, thanks for your review!)
[`missing_const_for_fn`]: fix FP when arg ty is impl trait alias ty
closes: #13009
---
changelog: [`missing_const_for_fn`]: fix FP when arg ty is impl trait alias ty
Rename thread_local_initializer_can_be_made_const to missing_const_for_thread_local
Close#12934
As discussed at #12934 name `thread_local_initializer_can_be_made_const` sounds against convention for other lints which describe the issue/wrong code but not suggestion and it is quite long. The new name take example from existing lint `missing_const_for_fn`
changelog: `thread_local_initializer_can_be_made_const` : Rename to [`missing_const_for_thread_local`]
feat: add cfg_not_test lint
<!--
- \[x] Followed [lint naming conventions][lint_naming]
- \[x] Added passing UI tests (including committed `.stderr` file)
- \[x] `cargo test` passes locally
- \[x] Executed `cargo dev update_lints`
- \[ ] Added lint documentation
- \[x] Run `cargo dev fmt`
[lint_naming]: https://rust-lang.github.io/rfcs/0344-conventions-galore.html#lints
-->
Fixes#11234
changelog: new lint: [`cfg_not_test`]
I don't know whether to lint only the `attr` or also the item associated to it. I guess this would mean putting the check in another place than `check_attribute` but I can't find a way to get the associated item to the attribute.
Also, I'm not sure how to document this lint, I feel like my explications are bad.
Remove `is_in_test_module_or_function`
Uses are replaced with `is_in_test` for consistency with other lints and to simplify the implementation of the lints. This means the module name is no longer checked, but that was a horrible hack from a time when late passes couldn't see `#[cfg(..)]` attributes.
changelog: none
[`unnecessary_to_owned`]: catch `to_owned` on byte slice to create temporary `&str`
Closes#11648
Detects the pattern `&String::from_utf8(bytes.to_vec()).unwrap()` and suggests `core::str::from_utf8(bytes).unwrap()`, which avoids the unnecessary intermediate allocation.
I decided to put this in the existing `unnecessary_to_owned` lint (rather than creating a new lint) for a few reasons:
- we get to use some of its logic (for example, recognizing any of the functions in the `to_owned` family, e.g. `to_vec`)
- the actual inefficient operation that can be avoided here is the call to `.to_vec()`, so this is in a way similar to the other cases caught by `unnecessary_to_owned`, just through a bunch of type conversions
- we can make this more "generic" later and catch other cases, so imo it's best not to tie this lint specifically to the `String` type
changelog: [`unnecessary_to_owned`]: catch `&String::from_utf8(bytes.to_vec()).unwrap()` and suggest `core::str::from_utf8(bytes).unwrap()`
[`missing_const_for_fn`]: fix suggestions for fn with abi that requires `const_extern_fn` feature
closes: #13008
---
changelog: [`missing_const_for_fn`]: fix suggestions for fn with abi that requires `const_extern_fn` feature.
This patch adds a new lint that checks for potentially harder to read
byte char slices: `&[b'a', b'b']` and suggests to replace them with the
easier to read `b"ab"` form.
Signed-Off-By: Marcel Müller <m.mueller@ifm.com>
Co-authored-by: Matthias Beyer <matthias.beyer@ifm.com>
Use iterator to skip validation
Signed-off-by: Marcel Müller <m.mueller@ifm.com>
Suggested-by: Alex Macleod <alex@macleod.io>
Convert quote escapes to proper form
Signed-off-by: Marcel Müller <m.mueller@ifm.com>
Add more convertable test cases
Signed-off-by: Marcel Müller <m.mueller@ifm.com>
Add new lint `hashset_insert_after_contains`
This PR closes https://github.com/rust-lang/rust-clippy/issues/11103.
This is my first PR creating a new lint (and the second attempt of creating this PR, the first one I was not able to continue because of personal reasons). Thanks for the patience :)
The idea of the lint is to find insert in hashmanps inside if staments that are checking if the hashmap contains the same value that is being inserted. This is not necessary since you could simply call the insert and check for the bool returned if you still need the if statement.
changelog: new lint: [hashset_insert_after_contains]
Fix some false-positive cases of `explicit_auto_deref`
changelog: [`explicit_auto_deref`] Fix some false-positive cases
Fix part of #9841
Fix #12969
r? xFrednet
Honor `avoid-breaking-exported-api` in `needless_pass_by_ref_mut`
Until now, the lint only emitted a warning, when breaking public API. Now it doesn't lint at all when the config value is not set to `false`, bringing it in line with the other lints using this config value.
Also ensures that this config value is documented in the lint.
changelog: none
(I don't think a changelog is necessary, since this lint is in `nursery`)
---
Fixes https://github.com/rust-lang/rust-clippy/issues/11374
cc `@GuillaumeGomez`
Marking as draft: Does this lint even break public API? If I change a function signature from `fn foo(x: &mut T)` to `fn foo(x: &T)`, I can still call it with `foo(&mut x)`. The only "breaking" thing is that the `clippy::unnecessary_mut_passed` lint will complain that `&mut` at the callsite is not necessary, possibly trickling down to the crate user having to remote a `mut` from a variable. [Playground](https://play.rust-lang.org/?version=stable&mode=debug&edition=2021&gist=058165a7663902e84af1d23e35c10d66).
Are there examples where this actually breaks public API, that I'm missing?
Until now, the lint only emitted a warning, when breaking public API. Now it
doesn't lint at all when the config value is not set to `false`, bringing it in
line with the other lints using this config value.
Also ensures that this config value is documented in the lint.
Don't lint `assertions_on_constants` on any const assertions
close#12816close#12847
cc #12817
----
changelog: Fix false positives in consts for `assertions_on_constants` and `unnecessary_operation`.
This change addresses cases where doc comments are separated
by blank lines, comments, or non-doc-comment attributes,
like this:
```rust
/// - first line
// not part of doc comment
/// second line
```
Before this commit, Clippy gave a pedantically-correct
warning about how you needed to indent the second line.
This is unlikely to be what the user intends, and has
been described as a "false positive" (since Clippy is
warning you about a highly unintuitive behavior that
Rustdoc actually has, we definitely want it to output
*something*, but the suggestion to indent was poor).
https://github.com/rust-lang/rust-clippy/issues/12917
Fix `...` in multline code-skips in suggestions
When we have long code skips, we write `...` in the line number gutter.
For suggestions, we were "centering" the `...` with the line, but that was inconsistent with what we do in every other case *and* off-center.
Fix incorrect suggestion for `manual_unwrap_or_default`
Fixes#12928.
If this not a "simple" pattern, better not emit the lint.
changelog: Fix incorrect suggestion for `manual_unwrap_or_default`
When we have long code skips, we write `...` in the line number gutter.
For suggestions, we were "centering" the `...` with the line, but that was consistent with what we do in every other case.
Lint `manual_unwrap_or` for it let cases
This PR modifies `manual_unwrap_or` to lint for `if let` cases as well. This effort is part of the fixes desired by https://github.com/rust-lang/rust-clippy/issues/12618
changelog:[`manual_unwrap_or`]: Lint for `if let` cases.
Rework `octal_escapes`
Main changes are not doing UTF-8 decoding, noting each occurrence as an individual lint emission, and narrowing the span to point to the escape itself.
changelog: none
Fix ICE in `upper_case_acronyms`
fixes#12284
The logic has been rewritten to avoid allocations. The old version allocated multiple vecs and strings for each identifier. The new logic allocates a single string only when the lint triggers.
This also no longer lints on strings which don't start with an uppercase letter (e.g. `something_FOO`).
changelog: none
Avoid emitting `assigning_clones` when cloned data borrows from the place to clone into
Fixes#12444Fixes#12460Fixes#12749Fixes#12757Fixes#12929
I think the documentation for the function should describe what- and how this is fixing the issues well.
It avoids emitting a warning when the data being cloned borrows from the place to clone into, which is information that we can get from `PossibleBorrowerMap`. Unfortunately, it is a tiny bit tedious to match on the MIR like that and I'm not sure if this is possibly relying a bit too much on the exact MIR lowering for assignments.
Things left to do:
- [x] Handle place projections (or verify that they work as expected)
- [x] Handle non-`Drop` types
changelog: [`assigning_clones`]: avoid warning when the suggestion would lead to a borrow-check error
When both `std::` and `core::` items are available, only suggest the
`std::` ones. We ensure that in `no_std` crates we suggest `core::`
items.
Ensure that the list of items suggested to be imported are always in the
order of local crate items, `std`/`core` items and finally foreign crate
items.
Tweak wording of import suggestion: if there are multiple items but they
are all of the same kind, we use the kind name and not the generic "items".
Fix#83564.
Let `qualify_min_const_fn` deal with drop terminators
Fixes#12677
The `method_accepts_droppable` check that was there seemed overly conservative.
> Returns true if any of the method parameters is a type that implements `Drop`.
> The method can't be made const then, because `drop` can't be const-evaluated.
Accepting parameters that implement `Drop` should still be fine as long as the parameter isn't actually dropped, as is the case in the linked issue where the droppable is moved into the return place. This more accurate analysis ("is there a `drop` terminator") is already done by `qualify_min_const_fn` [here](f5e250180c/clippy_utils/src/qualify_min_const_fn.rs (L298)), so I don't think this additional check is really necessary?
Fixing the other, second case in the linked issue was only slightly more involved, since `Vec::new()` is a function call that has the ability to panic, so there must be a `drop()` terminator for cleanup, however we should be able to freely ignore that. [Const checking ignores cleanup blocks](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/blob/master/compiler/rustc_const_eval/src/transform/check_consts/check.rs#L382-L388), so we should, too?
r? `@Jarcho`
----
changelog: [`missing_const_for_fn`]: continue linting on fns with parameters implementing `Drop` if they're not actually dropped
Don't lint indexing_slicing lints on proc macros
This pr fixes https://github.com/rust-lang/rust-clippy/issues/12824
Even though the issue mentions the indexing case only, it was easy to apply the fix to the slicing case as well.
changelog: [`out_of_bounds_indexing`, `indexing_slicing`]: Don't lint on procedural macros.
Handle single chars with `to_string()` for `single_char_add_str`
Add support for single chars / literals with `to_string()` call for `push_str()` and `insert_str()`.
changelog: [`single_char_add_str`]: handle single chars with `to_string()` call
Closes#12775
- remove now dead code in ASSERTIONS_ON_CONSTANTS
cc #11966
- Partially revert "ignore `assertions-on-constants` in const contexts"
This reverts commit c7074de420a2192fb40d3f2194a20dd0d1b65cc6.
Don't lint blocks in closures for blocks_in_conditions
Seemed like an outlier for the lint which generally caught only the syntactically confusing cases, it lints blocks in closures but excludes closures passed to iterator methods, this changes it to ignore closures in general
changelog: none
Remove `lazy_static` mention
I planned to replace any mention with `LazyLock` but I think `thread_local` is more appropriate here - `const`s that aren't `Sync` wouldn't be able to go in a `lazy_static`/`static LazyLock` either
Also removed a test file that was mostly commented out so wasn't testing anything
changelog: none
Make `for_each_expr` visit closures by default, rename the old version `for_each_expr_without_closures`
A lot of the time `for_each_expr` is picked when closures should be visited so I think it makes sense for this to be the default with the alternative available for when you don't need to visit them.
The first commit renames `for_each_expr` to `for_each_expr_without_closures` and `for_each_expr_with_closures` to `for_each_expr`
The second commit switches a few uses that I caught over to include closures to fix a few bugs
changelog: none
Handle const effects inherited from parent correctly in `type_certainty`
This fixes a (debug) ICE in `type_certainty` that happened in the [k256 crate]. (I'm sure you can also specifically construct an edge test case that will run into type_certainty false positives visible outside of debug builds from this bug)
<details>
<summary>Minimal ICE repro</summary>
```rs
use std::ops::Add;
Add::add(1_i32, 1).add(i32::MIN);
```
</details>
The subtraction here overflowed:
436675b477/clippy_utils/src/ty/type_certainty/mod.rs (L209)
... when we have something like `Add::add` where `add` fn has 0 generic params but the `host_effect_index` is `Some(2)` (inherited from the parent generics, the const trait `Add`), and we end up executing `0 - 1`.
(Even if the own generics weren't empty and we didn't overflow, this would still be wrong because it would assume that a trait method with 1 generic parameter didn't have any generics).
So, *only* exclude the "host" generic parameter if it's actually bound by the own generics
changelog: none
[k256 crate]: https://github.com/RustCrypto/elliptic-curves/tree/master/k256
Revert: create const block bodies in typeck via query feeding
as per the discussion in https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/125806#discussion_r1622563948
It was a mistake to try to shoehorn const blocks and some specific anon consts into the same box and feed them during typeck. It turned out not simplifying anything (my hope was that we could feed `type_of` to start avoiding the huge HIR matcher, but that didn't work out), but instead making a few things more fragile.
reverts the const-block-specific parts of https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/124650
`@bors` rollup=never had a small perf impact previously
fixes https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/125846
r? `@compiler-errors`
This commit fixes a bug introduced in #12706, where the behavior of the
lint has been changed, to avoid suggestions that introduce a move. The
motivation in the commit message is quite poor (if the detection for
significant drops is not sufficient because it's not transitive, the
proper fix would be to make it transitive). However, #12454, the linked
issue, provides a good reason for the change — if the value being
borrowed is bound to a variable, then moving it will only introduce
friction into future refactorings.
Thus #12706 changes the logic so that the lint triggers if the value
being borrowed is Copy, or is the result of a function call, simplifying
the logic to the point where analysing "is this the only use of this
value" isn't necessary.
However, said PR also introduces an undocumented carveout, where
referents that themselves are mutable references are treated as Copy,
to catch some cases that we do want to lint against. However, that is
not sound — it's possible to consume a mutable reference by moving it.
To avoid emitting false suggestions, this PR reintroduces the
referent_used_exactly_once logic and runs that check for referents that
are themselves mutable references.
Thinking about the code shape of &mut x, where x: &mut T, raises the
point that while removing the &mut outright won't work, the extra
indirection is still undesirable, and perhaps instead we should suggest
reborrowing: &mut *x. That, however, is left as possible future work.
Fixes#12856