Fixes#4226
This introduces the lint await_holding_lock. For async functions, we iterate
over all types in generator_interior_types and look for types named MutexGuard,
RwLockReadGuard, or RwLockWriteGuard. If we find one then we emit a lint.
If let else mutex
changelog: Adds lint to catch incorrect use of `Mutex::lock` in `if let` expressions with lock calls in any of the blocks.
closes: #5219
add --fix support to `cargo-clippy`
Prior to this we had started work on integrating clippy as a subcommand directly into cargo in the form of `cargo clippy-preview` and `cargo fix --clippy`. In the course of that work it was decided that the best approach would be to strictly add the features clippy needed to cargo in order to insert `clippy-driver` only for workspace crates. This was accomplished by adding a `RUSTC_WORKSPACE_WRAPPER` env variable to cargo that will override the normal `RUSTC_WRAPPER` when both are present and the current crate is a workspace crate.
This change adds support to clippy to use this by setting the `RUSTC_WORKSPACE_WRAPPER` env variable instead `RUSTC_WRAPPER` and by detecting `--fix` as an arg and swapping out the `check` cargo command for `fix` when it is present.
WIP, here are the current issues that I still need to resolve
- [x] Detect if we're running on nightly rust
- [x] Set `RUSTC_WORKSPACE_WRAPPER` on nightly, and `RUSTC_WRAPPER` on stable
- [x] Error out on stable when `--fix` is specified, because stable currently hasn't landed the PR for `RUSTC_WORKSPACE_WRAPPER` so if we set this it just runs check and silently fails
- [ ] Update the help text
- [ ] The current plan is to shell out to `cargo check --help` and then postprocess the output to mention clippy instead of check where appropriate and to add the extra info about `--fix` and the `-- -A lint` options.
- [x] tests?
changelog: add `--fix` arg to `cargo-clippy`
Disallow bit-shifting in integer_arithmetic
Make the `integer_arithmetic` lint detect all the operations that are defined as being capable of overflow in the [Rust Reference](https://doc.rust-lang.org/reference/expressions/operator-expr.html#overflow), by also linting for bit-shifting operations (`<<`, `>>`).
changelog: Disallow bit-shifting in `integer_arithmetic`
Add lint on large non scalar const
This PR adds the new lint `non_scalar_const` that aims to warn against `const` declaration of large arrays. For performance, because of inlining, large arrays should be preferably declared as `static`.
Note: i made this one to warn on all const arrays, whether they are in a body function or not. I don't know if this is really necessary, i could just reduce this lint to variables out of function scope.
Fixes: #400
changelog: add new lint for large non-scalar types declared as const
Downgrade implicit_hasher to pedantic
From the [documentation](https://rust-lang.github.io/rust-clippy/master/index.html#implicit_hasher), this lint is intended to suggest:
```diff
- pub fn foo(map: &mut HashMap<i32, i32>) { }
+ pub fn foo<S: BuildHasher>(map: &mut HashMap<i32, i32, S>) { }
```
I think this is pedantic. I get that this lint can benefit core libraries like serde, but that's exactly the use case for pedantic lints; a library like serde will [enable clippy_pedantic](fd6741f4b0/src/lib.rs (L304)) and take the time to go through everything possible. Similar for libraries doing a libz blitz style checkup before committing to a 1.0 release; it would make sense to run through all the available pedantic lints then.
But otherwise, for most codebases and certainly for industrial codebases, the above suggested change just makes the codebase more obtuse for questionable benefit.
changelog: Remove implicit_hasher from default set of enabled lints
Downgrade unreadable_literal to pedantic
As motivated by #5418. This is the top most commonly suppressed Clippy style lint, which indicates that the community has decided they don't share Clippy's opinion on the best style of this.
I've left the lint in as pedantic, though it could be that "restriction" would be better -- I can see this lint being useful as an opt-in restriction in some codebases.
changelog: Remove unreadable_literal from default set of enabled lints
Add new lint for `Result<T, E>.map_or(None, Some(T))`
Fixes#5414
PR Checklist
---
- [x] Followed lint naming conventions (the name is a bit awkward, but it seems to conform)
- [x] Added passing UI tests (including committed .stderr file)
- [x] cargo test passes locally
- [x] Executed cargo dev update_lints
- [x] Added lint documentation
- [x] Run cargo dev fmt
`Result<T, E>` has an [`ok()`](https://doc.rust-lang.org/std/result/enum.Result.html#method.ok) method that adapts a `Result<T,E>` into an `Option<T>`.
It's possible to get around this adapter by writing `Result<T,E>.map_or(None, Some)`.
This lint is implemented as a new variant of the existing [`option_map_none` lint](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust-clippy/pull/2128)
Downgrade inefficient_to_string to pedantic
From the [documentation](https://rust-lang.github.io/rust-clippy/master/index.html#inefficient_to_string):
> ```diff
> - ["foo", "bar"].iter().map(|s| s.to_string());
>
> + ["foo", "bar"].iter().map(|&s| s.to_string());
> ```
I feel like saving 10 nanoseconds from the formatting machinery isn't worth asking the programmer to insert extra `&` / `*` noise in the *vast* majority of cases. This is a pedantic lint.
changelog: Remove inefficient_to_string from default set of enabled lints
Downgrade trivially_copy_pass_by_ref to pedantic
The rationale for this lint is documented as:
> In many calling conventions instances of structs will be passed through registers if they fit into two or less general purpose registers.
I think the purported performance benefits of clippy's recommendation are overstated. This isn't worth asking people to sprinkle code with more `*``*``&``*``&` to chase the alleged performance.
This should be a pedantic lint that is disabled by default and opted in if some specific performance sensitive codebase determines that it is worthwhile.
As a reminder, a typical place that a reference to a primitive would come up is if the function is used as a filter. Triggering a performance-oriented lint on this type of code is the definition of pedantic.
```rust
fn filter(_n: &i32) -> bool {
true
}
fn main() {
let v = vec![1, 2, 3];
v.iter().copied().filter(filter).for_each(drop);
}
```
```console
warning: this argument (4 byte) is passed by reference, but would be more efficient if passed by value (limit: 8 byte)
--> src/main.rs:1:15
|
1 | fn filter(_n: &i32) -> bool {
| ^^^^ help: consider passing by value instead: `i32`
```
changelog: Remove trivially_copy_pass_by_ref from default set of enabled lints
Downgrade let_unit_value to pedantic
Given that the false positive in #1502 is marked E-hard and I don't have much hope of it getting fixed, I think it would be wise to disable this lint by default. I have had to suppress this lint in every substantial codebase (\>100k line) I have worked in. Any time this lint is being triggered, it's always the false positive case.
The motivation for this lint is documented as:
> A unit value cannot usefully be used anywhere. So binding one is kind of pointless.
with this example:
> ```rust
> let x = {
> 1;
> };
> ```
Sure, but the author would find this out via an unused_variable warning or from `x` not being the type that they need further down. If there ends up being a type error on `x`, clippy's advice isn't going to help get the code compiling because it can only run if the code already compiles.
changelog: Remove let_unit_value from default set of enabled lints
Result<T, E> has an `ok()` method that adapts a Result<T,E> into an Option<T>.
It's possible to get around this adapter by writing Result<T,E>.map_or(None, Some).
This lint is implemented as a new variant of the existing
[`option_map_none` lint](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust-clippy/pull/2128)
Add lint to detect floating point operations that can be computed more
accurately at the cost of performance. `cbrt`, `ln_1p` and `exp_m1`
library functions call their equivalent cmath implementations which is
slower but more accurate so moving checks for these under this new lint.
Merge the accuracy and efficiency lints into a single lint that
checks for improvements to accuracy, efficiency and readability
of floating-point expressions.
Move check for lossy whole-number floats out of `excessive_precision`
changelog: Add new lint `lossy_float_literal` to detect lossy whole number float literals and move it out of `excessive_precision` again.
Fixes#5201
Deprecate util/dev in favor of cargo alias
This means one less shell script and a bit more cross-platform support
for contributors.
If you've been using `./util/dev` before, this now becomes `cargo dev`.
The key part of this change is found in `.cargo/config` where an alias for calling the `clippy_dev` binary is defined.
changelog: none
If you've been using `./util/dev` before, this now becomes `cargo dev`.
The key part of this change is found in `.cargo/config`.
This means one less shell script and a bit more cross-platform support
for contributors.
Detect usage of invalid atomic ordering in memory fences
Detect usage of `core::sync::atomic::{fence, compiler_fence}` with `Ordering::Relaxed` and suggest valid alternatives.
changelog: Extend `invalid_atomic_ordering` to lint memory fences
Fixes#5026
New lint: pats_with_wild_match_arm
Wildcard use with other pattern in same match arm.
The wildcard covers other(s) pattern(s) as it will match anyway.
changelog: add new lint when multiple patterns (including wildcard) are used in a match arm.
Fixes#4640.
Detect usage of invalid atomic ordering modes such as
`Ordering::{Release, AcqRel}` in atomic loads and
`Ordering::{Acquire, AcqRel}` in atomic stores.
new lint: mutable_key_type
This fixes#732 - well, partly, it doesn't adress `Hash` impls, but the use of mutable types as map keys or set members
changelog: add `mutable_key_type` lint
r? @flip1995
The Rust Book recommends that functions that return a `Result` type have
a doc comment with an `# Errors` section describing the kind of errors
that can be returned
(https://doc.rust-lang.org/book/ch14-02-publishing-to-crates-io.html#commonly-used-sections).
This change adds a lint to enforce this. The lint is allow by default;
it can be enabled with `#![warn(clippy::missing_errors_doc)]`.
Closes#4854.
This utilizes https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/60584 by setting
our own `panic_hook` and pointing to our own issue tracker instead of
the rustc issue tracker.
This also adds a new internal lint to test the ICE message.
**Potential downsides**
* This essentially copies rustc's `report_ice` function as
`report_clippy_ice`. I think that's how it's meant to be implemented, but
maybe @jonas-schievink could have a look as well =)
The downside of more-or-less copying this function is that we have to
maintain it as well now.
The original function can be found [here][original].
* `driver` now depends directly on `rustc` and `rustc_errors`
Closes#2734
[original]: 59367b074f/src/librustc_driver/lib.rs (L1185)
Move use_self to nursery
Closes#4859
We have a lot of false positives in this lint, so I think it makes sense
to move this to the nursery until they are resolved.
changelog: Move `use_self` lint to nursery, due to many false positives
Closes#4859
We have a lot of false positives in this lint, so I think it makes sense
to move this to the nursery until they are resolved.
changelog: Move `use_self` lint to nursery, due to many false positives
Run ./util/dev
Revert changelog entry
Rename lint to same_functions_in_if_condition and add a doc example
Add testcases with different arg in fn invocation
added documentation
minor style fix
change as to ::from
add ignore to doc
include threshold in lint message/make suggestion more apparent/use Scalar api instead of matching
style fix
shange snippet_opt to snippet
Specifically, this revises the clippy integration to utilize a new
callback to register its lints, as the prior editing of lint store in
Session is no longer possible.
This lint will complain when you put a mutable function/method call
inside a `debug_assert` macro, because it will not be executed in
release mode, therefore it will change the execution flow, which is not
wanted.
`must_use_unit` lints unit-returning functions with a `#[must_use]`
attribute, suggesting to remove it.
`double_must_use` lints functions with a plain `#[must_use]`
attribute, but which return a type which is already `#[must_use]`,
so the attribute has no benefit.
`must_use_candidate` is a pedantic lint that lints functions and
methods that return some non-unit type that is not already
`#[must_use]` and suggests to add the annotation.
Lints when, on the RHS of a BinOp, there is a UnOp without a space
before the operator but with a space after (e.g. foo >- 1).
Signed-off-by: Nikos Filippakis <nikolaos.filippakis@cern.ch>
Changes cast-lossless to a pedantic lint
As discussed in #4528, this moves the cast-lossless lint from `all` to `pedantic`.
I couldn't tell from description alone if it should also be removed from the complexity category, so I left it as part of complexity for now. I didn't see any impact to the tests from this change, but I could be wrong (as this is my first PR).
fixes#4528
changelog: Moves cast-lossless from default to checking only as a `pedantic` lint.
Improvements to `type_repetition_in_bounds`
Improvements to the `type_repetition_in_bounds` trait based on feedback from #4380#4326#4323
Currently just make it pedantic. Hopefully, more to come
changelog: move `type_repetition_in_bounds` to `pedantic`