Improvements for `type_repetition_in_bounds` lint
Some improvements for `type_repetition_in_bounds`:
- add a configurable threshold to trigger the lint (#4380). The lint won't trigger anymore if there are more bounds (strictly) than `conf.max_trait_bounds` on this type.
- take generic args into account over bounded type (#4323)
- don't lint for predicates generated in macros (#4326)
Fixes#4380,
Fixes#4323,
Fixes#4326,
Closes#3764
changelog: Fix multiple FPs in `type_repetition_in_bounds` and add a configuration option
Note: the #3764 has already been fixed but not closed
Fix multiple_crate_versions error
Fix the versions of packages in the multiple_crate_versions ui test by
checking in the Cargo.lock for the test package. `ansi_term 0.11`
depends on `winapi ^0.3.4`. This means means that the expected stderr for
this test would have to be updated whenever `winapi 0.3` is updated
otherwise.
changelog: none
Fix the versions of packages in the multiple_crate_versions ui test by
checking in the Cargo.lock for the test package. `ansi_term 0.11`
depends on `winapi ^0.3.4`. This means means that the expected stderr for
this test would have to be updated whenever `winapi 0.3` is updated
otherwise.
Lint enabling the whole restriction group
I've added it to the `correctness` category, but I may be missing some valid use cases. In that case it could be changed to `pedantic`.
changelog: Add [`blanket_clippy_restriction_lints`] to check against enabling the whole restriction group.
This commit modifies the Place as follow:
* remove 'ty' from ProjectionKind
* add type information into to Projection
* replace 'ty' in Place with 'base_ty'
* introduce 'ty()' in `Place` to return the final type of the `Place`
* introduce `ty_before_projection()` in `Place` to return the type of
a `Place` before i'th projection is applied
Closes https://github.com/rust-lang/project-rfc-2229/issues/5
Rollup of 13 pull requests
Successful merges:
- #72620 (Omit DW_AT_linkage_name when it is the same as DW_AT_name)
- #72967 (Don't move cursor in search box when using arrows to navigate results)
- #73102 (proc_macro: Stop flattening groups with dummy spans)
- #73297 (Support configurable deny-warnings for all in-tree crates.)
- #73507 (Cleanup MinGW LLVM linkage workaround)
- #73588 (Fix handling of reserved registers for ARM inline asm)
- #73597 (Record span of `const` kw in GenericParamKind)
- #73629 (Make AssocOp Copy)
- #73681 (Update Chalk to 0.14)
- #73707 (Fix links in `SliceIndex` documentation)
- #73719 (emitter: column width defaults to 140)
- #73729 (disable collectionbenches for android)
- #73748 (Add code block to code in documentation of `List::rebase_onto`)
Failed merges:
r? @ghost
Record span of `const` kw in GenericParamKind
Context: this is needed for a fix of https://github.com/rust-lang/rustfmt/issues/4263,
which currently records the span of a const generic param incorrectly
because the location of the `const` kw is not known.
I am not sure how to add tests for this; any guidance in how to do so
would be appreciated 🙂
Change a noun to a verb to make the sentence complete
changelog: Fixed some grammar in the documentation for `await_holding_lock`.
Just a tiny little thing I found while using clippy <3
cmp_owned: handle when PartialEq is not implemented symmetrically
changelog: Handle asymmetrical implementations of PartialEq in [`cmp_owned`].
Fixes#4874
clone_on_copy - add machine applicability
Fix#4826.
Change the applicability of the lint clone_on_copy. Split a test file and run rustfix on the clone_on_copy part.
changelog: clone_on_copy - add machine applicability
Context: this is needed to fix https://github.com/rust-lang/rustfmt/issues/4263,
which currently records the span of a const generic param incorrectly
because the location of the `const` kw is not known.
I am not sure how to add tests for this; any guidance in how to do so
would be appreciated 🙂
#5626: lint iterator.map(|x| x)
changelog: adds a new lint for iterator.map(|x| x) (see https://github.com/rust-lang/rust-clippy/issues/5626)
The code also lints for result.map(|x| x) and option.map(|x| x). Also, I'm not sure if I'm checking for type adjustments correctly and I can't think of an example where .map(|x| x) would apply type adjustments.