FormatArgsExpn: Find comma spans and ignore weird proc macro spans
Fixes the following cases:
A missing `, 1` from the `expect_fun_call` suggestion:
```rust
Some(()).expect(&format!("{x} {}", 1));
```
```
warning: use of `expect` followed by a function call
--> t.rs:7:14
|
7 | Some(()).expect(&format!("{x} {}", 1));
| ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ help: try this: `unwrap_or_else(|| panic!("{x} {}"))`
```
The suggestion removing from the comma in the comment rather than the one after the format string:
```rust
println!(
"{}",
// a comment, with a comma in it
x
);
```
```
warning: variables can be used directly in the `format!` string
--> t.rs:9:5
|
9 | / println!(
10 | | "{}",
11 | | // a comment, with a comma in it
12 | | x
13 | | );
| |_____^
|
help: change this to
|
10 ~ "{x}",
11 ~ // a comment
|
```
It also no longer accepts expansions where a format string or argument has a "weird" proc macro span, that is one where the literal/expression it outputs has the span of one of its inputs. Kind of like a `format_args` specific `clippy_utils::is_from_proc_macro`, e.g. `format!(indoc! {" ... "})`
changelog: [`expect_fun_call`]: Fix suggestion for `format!` using captured variables
changelog: [`print_literal`], [`write_literal`], [`uninlined_format_args`]: Fix suggestion when following a comment including a comma
Fix and improve `match_type_on_diagnostic_item`
This extracts the fix for the lint out of #7647. There's still a couple of other functions to check, but at least this will get lint working again.
The two added util functions (`is_diagnostic_item` and `is_lang_item`) are needed to handle `DefId` for unit and tuple struct/variant constructors. The `rustc_diagnostic_item` and `lang` attributes are attached to the struct/variant `DefId`, but most of the time they are used through their constructors which have a different `DefId`. The two utility functions will check if the `DefId` is for a constructor and switch to the associated struct/variant `DefId`.
There does seem to be a bug on rustc's side where constructor `DefId`s from external crates seem to be returning `DefKind::Variant` instead of `DefKind::Ctor()`. There's a workaround put in right.
changelog: None
Remove unused `.fixed` files, only run asm_syntax doctests on x86
Two small changes, removes some unused `.fixed` and makes `clippy_lints` doctests pass on non x86 arches
changelog: none
* Check for `const`s and `static`s from external crates
* Check for `LangItem`s
* Handle inherent functions which have the same name as a field
* Also check the following functions:
* `match_trait_method`
* `match_def_path`
* `is_expr_path_def_path`
* `is_qpath_def_path`
* Handle checking for a constructor to a diagnostic item or `LangItem`
let unnecessary_cast work for trivial non_literal expressions
Signed-off-by: TennyZhuang <zty0826@gmail.com>
---
changelog: [`unnecessary_cast`]: fix for trivial non_literal expressions
Fixes#9562
[`unnecessary_cast`] add parenthesis when negative number uses a method
fix#9563
The issue was probably introduced by 90fe3bea52
changelog: [`unnecessary_cast`] add parenthesis when negative number uses a method
r? llogiq
use `is_integer_literal` more
I noticed that we have the `is_integer_literal` function in our `clippy_utils`, yet almost everywhere people still match int literal expressions manually. So I searched for instances to replace and shorten the code a bit.
---
changelog: none
Implement `manual_clamp` lint
Fixes#9477Fixes#6751
Identifies common patterns where usage of the `clamp` function would be more succinct and clear, and suggests using the `clamp` function instead.
changelog: [`manual_clamp`]: Implement manual_clamp lint
This lint detects calls to a `&self`-taking `as_ptr` method, where
the result is then immediately cast to a `*mut T`. Code like this
is probably invalid, as that pointer will not have write permissions,
and `*mut T` is usually used to write through.
Move lint level source explanation to the bottom
So, uhhhhh
r? `@estebank`
## User-facing change
"note: `#[warn(...)]` on by default" and such are moved to the bottom of the diagnostic:
```diff
- = note: `#[warn(unsupported_calling_conventions)]` on by default
= warning: this was previously accepted by the compiler but is being phased out; it will become a hard error in a future release!
= note: for more information, see issue #87678 <https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/87678>
+ = note: `#[warn(unsupported_calling_conventions)]` on by default
```
Why warning is enabled is the least important thing, so it shouldn't be the first note the user reads, IMO.
## Developer-facing change
`struct_span_lint` and similar methods have a different signature.
Before: `..., impl for<'a> FnOnce(LintDiagnosticBuilder<'a, ()>)`
After: `..., impl Into<DiagnosticMessage>, impl for<'a, 'b> FnOnce(&'b mut DiagnosticBuilder<'a, ()>) -> &'b mut DiagnosticBuilder<'a, ()>`
The reason for this is that `struct_span_lint` needs to edit the diagnostic _after_ `decorate` closure is called. This also makes lint code a little bit nicer in my opinion.
Another option is to use `impl for<'a> FnOnce(LintDiagnosticBuilder<'a, ()>) -> DiagnosticBuilder<'a, ()>` altough I don't _really_ see reasons to do `let lint = lint.build(message)` everywhere.
## Subtle problem
By moving the message outside of the closure (that may not be called if the lint is disabled) `format!(...)` is executed earlier, possibly formatting `Ty` which may call a query that trims paths that crashes the compiler if there were no warnings...
I don't think it's that big of a deal, considering that we move from `format!(...)` to `fluent` (which is lazy by-default) anyway, however this required adding a workaround which is unfortunate.
## P.S.
I'm sorry, I do not how to make this PR smaller/easier to review. Changes to the lint API affect SO MUCH 😢
`Res::SelfTy` currently has two `Option`s. When the second one is `Some`
the first one is never consulted. So we can split it into two variants,
`Res::SelfTyParam` and `Res::SelfTyAlias`, reducing the size of `Res`
from 24 bytes to 12. This then shrinks `hir::Path` and
`hir::PathSegment`, which are the HIR types that take up the most space.
fix [`needless_borrow`], [`explicit_auto_deref`] FPs on unions
fix https://github.com/rust-lang/rust-clippy/issues/9383
changelog: fix [`needless_borrow`] false positive on unions
changelog: fix [`explicit_auto_deref`] false positive on unions
Left a couple debug derived impls on purpose I needed to debug as I don't think it's noise
Don't lint unstable moves in `std_instead_of_core`
Fixes#9515
changelog: [`std_instead_of_core`]: No longer suggests unstable modules such as `core::error`
add `box-default` lint
This adds a `box-default` lint to suggest using `Box::default()` instead of `Box::new(Default::default())`, which offers less moving parts and potentially better performance according to [the perf book](https://nnethercote.github.io/perf-book/standard-library-types.html#box).
---
changelog: add [`box_default`] lint
[`needless_return`] Recursively remove unneeded semicolons
fix#8336,
fix#8156,
fix https://github.com/rust-lang/rust-clippy/issues/7358,
fix#9192,
fix https://github.com/rust-lang/rust-clippy/issues/9503
changelog: [`needless_return`] Recursively remove unneeded semicolons
For now the suggestion about removing the semicolons are hidden because they would be very noisy and should be obvious if the user wants to apply the lint manually instead of using `--fix`. This could be an issue for beginner, but haven't found better way to display it.
[arithmetic-side-effects] Consider references
Takes into consideration integer references like `&i32::MAX` because currently things like `let _ = &1 + 0` trigger the lint.
changelog: FP: [`arithmetic_side_effects`]: Now ignores references
[9507](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust-clippy/pull/9507)
Don't lint `*_interior_mutable_const` on unions due to potential ICE.
fixes#9445
cc rust-lang/rust#101113
This started ICE'ing sometime last month due to stricter UB checks. I'm not sure how we could check the value of a union as MIRI doesn't seem to store which field is currently active.
changelog: Don't ICE on const unions containing a `!Freeze` type.
Silence [`question_mark`] in const context
fix https://github.com/rust-lang/rust-clippy/issues/9175
When `const_try` is stabilised can be turned into a MSRV
changelog: Silence [`question_mark`] in const context
Implement https://github.com/rust-lang/rust-clippy/issues/8368 - a new
lint to inline format arguments such as `print!("{}", var)` into
`print!("{var}")`.
code | suggestion | comment
---|---|---
`print!("{}", var)` | `print!("{var}")` | simple variables
`print!("{0}", var)` | `print!("{var}")` | positional variables
`print!("{v}", v=var)` | `print!("{var}")` | named variables
`print!("{0} {0}", var)` | `print!("{var} {var}")` | aliased variables
`print!("{0:1$}", var, width)` | `print!("{var:width$}")` | width
support
`print!("{0:.1$}", var, prec)` | `print!("{var:.prec$}")` | precision
support
`print!("{:.*}", prec, var)` | `print!("{var:.prec$}")` | asterisk
support
code | suggestion | comment
---|---|---
`print!("{0}={1}", var, 1+2)` | `print!("{var}={0}", 1+2)` | Format
string uses an indexed argument that cannot be inlined. Supporting this
case requires re-indexing of the format string.
changelog: [`uninlined_format_args`]: A new lint to inline format
arguments, i.e. `print!("{}", var)` into `print!("{var}")`
fix a ui test
use `into`
fix clippy ui test
fix a run-make-fulldeps test
implement `IntoQueryParam<DefId>` for `OwnerId`
use `OwnerId` for more queries
change the type of `ParentOwnerIterator::Item` to `(OwnerId, OwnerNode)`
[`never_loop`]: Fix FP with let..else statements.
Fixes#9356
This has been bugging me for a while, so I thought I'd take a stab at it! I'm completely uncertain about the quality of my code, but I think it's an alright start, so opening this PR to get some feedback from more experienced clippy people :)
changelog: [`never_loop`]: Fix FP with let..else statements
Introduce mir::Unevaluated
Previously the distinction between unevaluated constants in the type-system and in mir was not explicit and a little confusing. Probably better to introduce its own type for that.
r? `@lcnr`
Changelog for Rust 1.64 🍎
The normal release preparation dance. I've written the changelog like the version has already been released. The PR can be approved and then merged by anyone after the release of Rust 1.64 🙃
---
changelog: none
Fixes#9504
Compiler generated call `into_iter` nodes return empty substs
which we need when checking it's predicates. Handle this by
simply exitting when we encounter one. This change introduces
false negatives in place of the ICEs.
[arithmetic-side-effects] Finish non-overflowing ops
Extends https://github.com/rust-lang/rust-clippy/pull/9474 to also take into consideration "raw" binary operations. For example, `let a = b / 2` and `let a = 1 * b` won't trigger the lint.
changelog: [arithmetic-side-effects] Finish non-overflowing ops
Clippy pre beta branch fix
Before beta is branched on Friday, I want to move the `unused_peekable` lint that was added in this release cycle (1.65) to `nursery`. This lint was already reported twice (https://github.com/rust-lang/rust-clippy/issues/9456, https://github.com/rust-lang/rust-clippy/issues/9462) in a short time, so it is probably a good idea to fix it before it hits beta and then stable.
r? `@Manishearth`
Make module-style lints resilient to --remap-path-prefix
changelog: [`self_named_module_files`], [`mod_module_files`]: Make module-style lints resilient to `--remap-path-prefix`
Without this if a user has configured `--remap-path-prefix` to be used for a prefix containing the current source directory the lints would silently fail to generate a warning.
Initial implementation of dyn*
This PR adds extremely basic and incomplete support for [dyn*](https://smallcultfollowing.com/babysteps//blog/2022/03/29/dyn-can-we-make-dyn-sized/). The goal is to get something in tree behind a flag to make collaboration easier, and also to make sure the implementation so far is not unreasonable. This PR does quite a few things:
* Introduce `dyn_star` feature flag
* Adds parsing for `dyn* Trait` types
* Defines `dyn* Trait` as a sized type
* Adds support for explicit casts, like `42usize as dyn* Debug`
* Including const evaluation of such casts
* Adds codegen for drop glue so things are cleaned up properly when a `dyn* Trait` object goes out of scope
* Adds codegen for method calls, at least for methods that take `&self`
Quite a bit is still missing, but this gives us a starting point. Note that this is never intended to become stable surface syntax for Rust, but rather `dyn*` is planned to be used as an implementation detail for async functions in dyn traits.
Joint work with `@nikomatsakis` and `@compiler-errors.`
r? `@bjorn3`
Migrate write.rs to a late pass
changelog: Migrates write.rs from a pre expansion pass to a late pass
changelog: [`positional_named_format_parameters`] is renamed in favour of the rustc lint `named_arguments_used_positionally`
- Macros are now identified by diagnostic items, so will no longer lint user defined macros named, e.g. a custom `print!`
- `print_literal`/`write_literal` no longer lint no longer lint literals that come from macro expansions, e.g. `env!("FOO")`
- `print_with_newline`/`write_with_newline` no longer lint strings with any internal `\r` or `\n`s
~~A false negative, `print_literal`/`write_literal` don't lint format strings that produce `FormatSpec`s, e.g. ones containing pretty print/width/align specifiers~~
Suggestion changes:
- ~~`print_literal`/`write_literal` no longer have suggestions, as the spans for the `{}`s were not easily obtainable~~
- `print_with_newline`/`write_with_newline` has a better suggestion for a sole literal newline, but no longer has suggestions for len > 1 strings that end in a literal newline
- ~~`use_debug` spans are less precise, now point to the whole format string~~
The diff for write.rs is pretty unwieldy, other than for the `declare_clippy_lint!`s I think you'd be better off viewing it as a brand new file rather than looking at the diff, as it's mostly written from scratch
cc #6610, fixes#5721, fixes#7195, fixes#8615
Fix `unused_peekable` closure and `f(&mut peekable)` false positives
changelog: Fix [`unused_peekable`] false positive when peeked in a closure or called as `f(&mut peekable)`
The `return`/`break` changes aren't part of the fix, they allow an earlier return in some cases. `break` is replaced with `return` for style purposes as they do the same thing in this case
Fixes#9456Fixes#9462
Use `DisplayBuffer` for socket addresses.
Continuation of https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/100625 for socket addresses.
Renames `net::addr` to `net::addr::socket`, `net::ip` to `net::addr::ip` and `net::ip::display_buffer::IpDisplayBuffer` to `net::addr::display_buffer::DisplayBuffer`.
Fix `range_{plus,minus}_one` bad suggestions
Fixes#9431.
The current `range_plus_one` and `range_minus_one` suggestions are completely incorrect when macros are involved.
This commit resolves this by disabling the lints for any range expression that is expanded from a macro. The reasons for this are that it is very difficult to create a correct suggestion in this case and that false negatives are less important for pedantic lints.
changelog: Fix `range_{plus,minus}_one` bad suggestions
Fixes#9431.
The current `range_plus_one` and `range_minus_one` suggestions
are completely incorrect when macros are involved.
This commit resolves this by disabling the lints for any range
expression that is expanded from a macro. The reasons for this
are that it is very difficult to create a correct suggestion in
this case and that false negatives are less important for
pedantic lints.
Rollup of 7 pull requests
Successful merges:
- #98933 (Opaque types' generic params do not imply anything about their hidden type's lifetimes)
- #101041 (translations(rustc_session): migrates rustc_session to use SessionDiagnostic - Pt. 2)
- #101424 (Adjust and slightly generalize operator error suggestion)
- #101496 (Allow lower_lifetime_binder receive a closure)
- #101501 (Allow lint passes to be bound by `TyCtxt`)
- #101515 (Recover from typo where == is used in place of =)
- #101545 (Remove unnecessary `PartialOrd` and `Ord`)
Failed merges:
r? `@ghost`
`@rustbot` modify labels: rollup
Allow lint passes to be bound by `TyCtxt`
This will allow storing things like `Ty<'tcx>` inside late lint passes. It's already possible to store various id types so they're already implicitly bound to a specific `TyCtxt`.
r? rust-lang/compiler
rustc: Parameterize `ty::Visibility` over used ID
It allows using `LocalDefId` instead of `DefId` when possible, and also encode cheaper `Visibility<DefIndex>` into metadata.
[Arithmetic] Consider literals
Fixes https://github.com/rust-lang/rust-clippy/issues/9307 and makes the `arithmetic` lint behave like `integer_arithmetic`.
It is worth noting that literal integers of a binary operation (`1 + 1`, `i32::MAX + 1`), **regardless if they are in a constant environment**, won't trigger the lint. Assign operations also have similar reasoning.
changelog: Consider literals in the arithmetic lint
Suggest `unwrap_or_default` when closure returns `"".to_string`
Closes https://github.com/rust-lang/rust-clippy/issues/9420
changelog: [`unwrap_or_else_default`]: suggest `unwrap_or_default()` instead of `unwrap_or_else` with a closure that returns an empty `to_string`.
`BindingAnnotation` refactor
* `ast::BindingMode` is deleted and replaced with `hir::BindingAnnotation` (which is moved to `ast`)
* `BindingAnnotation` is changed from an enum to a tuple struct e.g. `BindingAnnotation(ByRef::No, Mutability::Mut)`
* Associated constants added for convenience `BindingAnnotation::{NONE, REF, MUT, REF_MUT}`
One goal is to make it more clear that `BindingAnnotation` merely represents syntax `ref mut` and not the actual binding mode. This was especially confusing since we had `ast::BindingMode`->`hir::BindingAnnotation`->`thir::BindingMode`.
I wish there were more symmetry between `ByRef` and `Mutability` (variant) naming (maybe `Mutable::Yes`?), and I also don't love how long the name `BindingAnnotation` is, but this seems like the best compromise. Ideas welcome.
Unlike past similar work done in #6228, expand the existing `or_fun_call`
lint to detect `or_insert` calls with a `T::new()` or `T::default()`
argument, much like currently done for `unwrap_or` calls. In that case,
suggest the use of `or_default`, which is more idiomatic.
Note that even with this change, `or_insert_with(T::default)` calls
aren't detected as candidates for `or_default()`, in the same manner
that currently `unwrap_or_else(T::default)` calls aren't detected as
candidates for `unwrap_or_default()`.
Also, as a nearby cleanup, change `KNOW_TYPES` from `static` to `const`,
since as far as I understand it's preferred (should Clippy have a lint
for that?).
Fixes#3812.
fix wording for `derivable_impls`
While looking at the explanation as to why this lint was not automatically applicable, found the explanation a bit clunky grammatically.
Feel free to close if you consider the wording was correct in the first place.
changelog: none
Fixes#9351.
Note that this commit reworks that fix for #9317. The change
is to check that the type implements `AsRef<str>` before regarding
`to_string` as an equivalent of `to_owned`. This was suggested
by Jarcho in the #9317 issue comments.
The benefit of this is that it moves some complexity out of
`check_other_call_arg` and simplifies the module as a whole.
Fix `mut_mutex_lock` when Mutex is behind immutable deref
I *think* the problem here is the `if let ty::Ref(_, _, Mutability::Mut) = cx.typeck_results().expr_ty(recv).kind()` line tries to check if the `Mutex` can be mutably borrowed (there already is a test for `Arc<Mutex<_>>`), but gets bamboozled by the `&mut Arc` indirection. And I *think* checking the deref-adjustment to filter immutable-adjust (the deref through the `Arc`, starting from `&mut Arc`) is the correct fix.
Fixes#9415
changelog: Fix `mut_mutex_lock` when Mutex is behind immutable deref
Don't use `hir_ty_to_ty` in `result_large_err`
fixes#9414
This occurs starting with 2022-09-01. I checked that this does fix the ICE on rust-lang/rust@9353538. Not sure which pr caused the late-bound region to leak through `hir_ty_to_ty`.
changelog: None
Fix `suboptimal_float` not linting on `{const}.powf({const})`
There used to be an early return if the receiver was an effective const but the method was not linted, not taking into account later cases where the receiver and the arguments are both effective consts for different methods. Removed the early return.
Fixes#9402Fixes#9201
changelog: Fix `suboptimal_flops`, `imprecise_flops` not linting on `{const}.powf({const})` et al
Fix the emission order of `trait_duplication_in_bounds`
Makes the lint emit in source order rather than whatever order the hash map happens to be in. This is currently blocking the sync into rustc.
changelog: None
Fix missing parens in `suboptimal_flops` suggestion
Fixes#9391. The problem is simple enough, I didn't check if the same problem occurs elsewhere, though.
changelog: fix missing parenthesis in `suboptimal_flops` suggestion
Ignore `match_like_matches_macro` when there is comment
Closes#9164
changelog: [`match_like_matches_macro`] is ignored when there is some comment inside the match block.
Also add `span_contains_comment` util to check if given span contains comments.
Implemented `suspicious_to_owned` lint to check if `to_owned` is called on a `Cow`
changelog: Add lint ``[`suspicious_to_owned`]``
-----------------
Hi,
posting this unsolicited PR as I've been burned by this issue :)
Being unsolicited, feel free to reject it or reassign a different lint level etc.
This lint checks whether `to_owned` is called on `Cow<'_, _>`. This is done because `to_owned` is very similarly named to `into_owned`, but the effect of calling those two methods is completely different (one makes the `Cow::Borrowed` into a `Cow::Owned`, the other just clones the `Cow`). If the cow is then passed to code for which the type is not checked (e.g. generics, closures, etc.) it might slip through and if the cow data is coming from an unsafe context there is the potential for accidentally cause undefined behavior.
Even if not falling into this painful case, there's really no reason to call `to_owned` on a `Cow` other than confusing people reading the code: either `into_owned` or `clone` should be called.
Note that this overlaps perfectly with `implicit_clone` as a warning, but `implicit_clone` is classified pedantic (while the consequences for `Cow` might be of a wider blast radius than just pedantry); given the overlap, I set-up the lint so that if `suspicious_to_owned` triggers `implicit_clone` will not trigger. I'm not 100% sure this is done in the correct way (I tried to copy what other lints were doing) so please provide feedback on it if it isn't.
### Checklist
- \[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`
- \[x] Added lint documentation
- \[x] Run `cargo dev fmt`
This is done because `to_owned` is very similarly named to `into_owned`, but the
effect of calling those two methods is completely different. This creates
confusion (stemming from the ambiguity of the 'owned' term in the context of
`Cow`s) and might not be what the writer intended.
new lint
This fixes#6576
If you added a new lint, here's a checklist for things that will be
checked during review or continuous integration.
- \[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`
- \[x] Added lint documentation
- \[x] Run `cargo dev fmt`
---
changelog: add [`multi_assignments`] lint
Replace `contains_ty(..)` with `Ty::contains(..)`
This removes some code we don't need and the method syntax is
also more readable IMO.
changelog: none
feat(fix): Do not lint if the target code is inside a loop
close#8753
we consider the following code.
```rust
fn main() {
let vec = vec![1];
let w: Vec<usize> = vec.iter().map(|i| i * i).collect(); // <- once.
for i in 0..2 {
let _ = w.contains(&i);
}
}
```
and the clippy will issue the following warning.
```rust
warning: avoid using `collect()` when not needed
--> src/main.rs:3:51
|
3 | let w: Vec<usize> = vec.iter().map(|i| i * i).collect();
| ^^^^^^^
...
6 | let _ = w.contains(&i);
| -------------- the iterator could be used here instead
|
= note: `#[warn(clippy::needless_collect)]` on by default
= help: for further information visit https://rust-lang.github.io/rust-clippy/master/index.html#needless_collect
help: check if the original Iterator contains an element instead of collecting then checking
|
3 ~
4 |
5 | for i in 0..2 {
6 ~ let _ = vec.iter().map(|i| i * i).any(|x| x == i);
```
Rewrite the code as indicated.
```rust
fn main() {
let vec = vec![1];
for i in 0..2 {
let _ = vec.iter().map(|i| i * i).any(|x| x == i); // <- execute `map` every loop.
}
}
```
this code is valid in the compiler, but, it is different from the code before the rewrite.
So, we should not lint, If `collect` is outside of a loop.
Thank you in advance.
---
changelog: Do not lint if the target code is inside a loop in `needless_collect`
Lint `collapsible_str_replace`
fixes#6651
```
changelog: [`collapsible_str_replace`]: create new lint `collapsible_str_replace`
```
If you added a new lint, here's a checklist for things that will be
checked during review or continuous integration.
- \[x] Followed [lint naming conventions][lint_naming]
- \[x] Added passing UI tests (including committed `.stderr` file)
- \[x] `cargo test` passes locally
- \[ ] Executed `cargo dev update_lints`
- \[x] Added lint documentation
- \[x] Run `cargo dev fmt`
Rework `only_used_in_recursion`
fixes#8782fixes#8629fixes#8560fixes#8556
This is a complete rewrite of the lint. This loses some capabilities of the old implementation. Namely the ability to track through tuple and slice patterns, as well as the ability to trace through assignments.
The two reported bugs are fixed with this. One was caused by using the name of the method rather than resolving to the `DefId` of the called method. The second was cause by using the existence of a cycle in the dependency graph to determine whether the parameter was used in recursion even though there were other ways to create a cycle in the graph.
Implementation wise this switches from using a visitor to walking up the tree from every use of each parameter until it has been determined the parameter is used for something other than recursion. This is likely to perform better as it avoids walking the entire function a second time, and it is unlikely to walk up the HIR tree very much. Some cases would perform worse though.
cc `@buttercrab`
changelog: Scale back `only_used_in_recursion` to fix false positives
changelog: Move `only_used_in_recursion` back to `complexity`
Enhance `needless_borrow` to consider trait implementations
The proposed enhancement causes `needless_borrow` to suggest removing `&` from `&e` when `&e` is an argument position requiring trait implementations, and `e` implements the required traits. Example:
```
error: the borrowed expression implements the required traits
--> $DIR/needless_borrow.rs:131:51
|
LL | let _ = std::process::Command::new("ls").args(&["-a", "-l"]).status().unwrap();
| ^^^^^^^^^^^^^ help: change this to: `["-a", "-l"]`
```
r? `@Jarcho`
changelog: Enhance `needless_borrow` to consider trait implementations
unwrap_used and expect_used: trigger on uses of their _err variants
changelog: [`unwrap_used`]: lint uses of `unwrap_err`
changelog: [`expect_used`]: lint uses of `expect_err`
fixes#9331
`transmute_undefined_repr` fix
changelog: Don't lint `transmute_undefined_repr` when the the first field of a `repr(C)` type is compatible with the other type
suggest map_or in case_sensitive_file_extension_comparisons
changelog: [`case_sensitive_file_extension_comparisons `]: updated suggestion in the example to use `map_or`
Currently, case_sensitive_file_extension_comparisons suggests using `map(..).unwrap_or(..)` which trips up the `map_unwrap_or` lint. This updates the suggestion to use `map_or`.
Fix [`non_ascii_literal`] in tests
changelog: Don't lint [`non_ascii_literal`] when using non-ascii comments in tests
changelog: Don't lint [`non_ascii_literal`] when `allow`ed on tests
closes: #7739closes: #8263
Currently, case_sensitive_file_extension_comparisons suggests using
`map(..).unwrap_or(..)` which trips up `map_unwrap_or`. This updates
the suggestion to use map_or.
Add new lint [`positional_named_format_parameters`]
*Please write a short comment explaining your change (or "none" for internal only changes)*
changelog: Add new lint [`positional_named_format_parameters`] to warn when named parameters in format strings are used as positional arguments.
- Rename `ast::Lit::token` as `ast::Lit::token_lit`, because its type is
`token::Lit`, which is not a token. (This has been confusing me for a
long time.)
reasonable because we have an `ast::token::Lit` inside an `ast::Lit`.
- Rename `LitKind::{from,to}_lit_token` as
`LitKind::{from,to}_token_lit`, to match the above change and
`token::Lit`.
Fix if_let_mutex not checking Mutexes behind refs
Fixes#9193
We can always peel references because we are looking for a method-call, for which autoderef applies.
---
changelog: [`if_let_mutex`]: detect calls to `Mutex::lock()` if mutex is behind a ref
changelog: [`if_let_mutex`]: Add labels to the two instances of the same Mutex that will deadlock
Visit attributes in more places.
This adds 3 loosely related changes (I can split PRs if desired):
- Attribute checking on pattern struct fields.
- Attribute checking on struct expression fields.
- Lint level visiting on pattern struct fields, struct expression fields, and generic parameters.
There are still some lints which ignore lint levels in various positions. This is a consequence of how the lints themselves are implemented. For example, lint levels on associated consts don't work with `unused_braces`.
Add lint recommending using `std::iter::once` and `std::iter::empty`
```
changelog: [`iter_once`]: add new lint
changelog: [`iter_empty`]: add new lint
```
fixes#9186
- \[ ] 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`
- \[x] Added lint documentation
- \[x] Run `cargo dev fmt`
[lint_naming]: https://rust-lang.github.io/rfcs/0344-conventions-galore.html#lints
The lint doesn't really follow the naming conventions. I don't have any better idea so I'm open to suggestions.
Extend `if_then_some_else_none` to also suggest `bool::then_some`
Closes#9094.
changelog: Extend `if_then_some_else_none` to also suggest `bool::then_some`
Add partialeq_to_none lint
Initial implementation of #9275, adding lint `partialeq_to_none`. This is my first time working on `clippy`, so please review carefully.
I'm unsure especially about the `Sugg`, as it covers the entire `BinOp`, instead of just covering one of the sides and the operator (see the multi-line example). I was unsure if pinpointing the suggestion wouldn't be brittle...
changelog: [`PARTIALEQ_TO_NONE`]: Initial commit
`explicit_auto_deref` changes
fixes#9123fixes#9109fixes#9143fixes#9101
This avoid suggesting code which hits a rustc bug. Basically `&{x}` won't use auto-deref if the target type is `Sized`.
changelog: Don't suggest using auto deref for block expressions when the target type is `Sized`
changelog: Include the borrow in the suggestion for `explicit_auto_deref`
changelog: Don't lint `explicit_auto_deref` on `dyn Trait` return
changelog: Don't lint `explicit_auto_deref` when other adjustments are required
changelog: Lint `explicit_auto_deref` in implicit return positions for closures
More proc-macro detection
fixes#6514fixes#8683fixes#6858fixes#6594
This is a more general way of checking if an expression comes from a macro and could be trivially applied to other lints. Ideally this would be fixed in rustc's proc-macro api, but I don't see that happening any time soon.
changelog: FPs: [`unit_arg`] [`default_trait_access`] [`missing_docs_in_private_items`]: No longer trigger in code generated from proc-macros.
move [`assertions_on_result_states`] to restriction
"Backports" the first commit of https://github.com/rust-lang/rust-clippy/pull/9273, so that the lint doesn't go into beta as a warn-by-default lint.
The other changes in the linked PR can ride the train as usual.
r? ``@xFrednet`` (only Clippy changes, so we don't need to bother compiler people)
---
For Clippy:
changelog: none
Always include a position span in `rustc_parse_format::Argument`
Moves the spans from the `Position` enum to always be included in the `Argument` struct. Doesn't make any changes to use it in rustc, but it will be useful for some upcoming Clippy lints
Fix suggestions for `async` closures in redundant_closure_call
Fixes#9052
changelog: Fix suggestions given by [`redundant_closure_call`] for async closures
- only compare where predicates to trait bounds when generating where
clause specific message to fix#9151
- use comparable_trait_ref to account for trait bound generics to fix#8757
Move [`assertions_on_result_states`] to restriction
Close#9263
This lint causes regression on readability of code and log output. And printing runtime values is not particularly useful for majority of tests which should be reproducible.
changelog: Move [`assertions_on_result_states`] to restriction and don't lint it for unit type
Signed-off-by: tabokie <xy.tao@outlook.com>
unwrap_used: Don't recommend using `expect` when the `expect_used` lint is not allowed
Fixes#9222
```
changelog: [`unwrap_used`]: Don't recommend using `expect` when the `expect_used` lint is not allowed
```
From 72 bytes to 12 bytes (on x86-64).
There are two parts to this:
- Changing various source code offsets from 64-bit to 32-bit. This is
not a problem because the rest of rustc also uses 32-bit source code
offsets. This means `Token` is no longer `Copy` but this causes no
problems.
- Removing the `RawStrError` from `LiteralKind`. Raw string literal
invalidity is now indicated by a `None` value within
`RawStr`/`RawByteStr`, and the new `validate_raw_str` function can be
used to re-lex an invalid raw string literal to get the `RawStrError`.
There is one very small change in behaviour. Previously, if a raw string
literal matched both the `InvalidStarter` and `TooManyHashes` cases,
the latter would override the former. This has now changed, because
`raw_double_quoted_string` now uses `?` and so returns immediately upon
detecting the `InvalidStarter` case. I think this is a slight
improvement to report the earlier-detected error, and it explains the
change in the `test_too_many_hashes` test.
The commit also removes a couple of comments that refer to #77629 and
say that the size of these types don't affect performance. These
comments are wrong, though the performance effect is small.
Rollup of 5 pull requests
Successful merges:
- #99311 (change maybe_body_owned_by to take local def id)
- #99862 (Improve type mismatch w/ function signatures)
- #99895 (don't call type ascription "cast")
- #99900 (remove some manual hash stable impls)
- #99903 (Add diagnostic when using public instead of pub)
Failed merges:
r? `@ghost`
`@rustbot` modify labels: rollup
Remove `TreeAndSpacing`.
A `TokenStream` contains a `Lrc<Vec<(TokenTree, Spacing)>>`. But this is
not quite right. `Spacing` makes sense for `TokenTree::Token`, but does
not make sense for `TokenTree::Delimited`, because a
`TokenTree::Delimited` cannot be joined with another `TokenTree`.
This commit fixes this problem, by adding `Spacing` to `TokenTree::Token`,
changing `TokenStream` to contain a `Lrc<Vec<TokenTree>>`, and removing the
`TreeAndSpacing` typedef.
The commit removes these two impls:
- `impl From<TokenTree> for TokenStream`
- `impl From<TokenTree> for TreeAndSpacing`
These were useful, but also resulted in code with many `.into()` calls
that was hard to read, particularly for anyone not highly familiar with
the relevant types. This commit makes some other changes to compensate:
- `TokenTree::token()` becomes `TokenTree::token_{alone,joint}()`.
- `TokenStream::token_{alone,joint}()` are added.
- `TokenStream::delimited` is added.
This results in things like this:
```rust
TokenTree::token(token::Semi, stmt.span).into()
```
changing to this:
```rust
TokenStream::token_alone(token::Semi, stmt.span)
```
This makes the type of the result, and its spacing, clearer.
These changes also simplifies `Cursor` and `CursorRef`, because they no longer
need to distinguish between `next` and `next_with_spacing`.
r? `@petrochenkov`
The expect_used lint is allow-by-default, so it would be better to show the case where this is enabled.
Co-authored-by: Takayuki Nakata <f.seasons017@gmail.com>
A `TokenStream` contains a `Lrc<Vec<(TokenTree, Spacing)>>`. But this is
not quite right. `Spacing` makes sense for `TokenTree::Token`, but does
not make sense for `TokenTree::Delimited`, because a
`TokenTree::Delimited` cannot be joined with another `TokenTree`.
This commit fixes this problem, by adding `Spacing` to `TokenTree::Token`,
changing `TokenStream` to contain a `Lrc<Vec<TokenTree>>`, and removing the
`TreeAndSpacing` typedef.
The commit removes these two impls:
- `impl From<TokenTree> for TokenStream`
- `impl From<TokenTree> for TreeAndSpacing`
These were useful, but also resulted in code with many `.into()` calls
that was hard to read, particularly for anyone not highly familiar with
the relevant types. This commit makes some other changes to compensate:
- `TokenTree::token()` becomes `TokenTree::token_{alone,joint}()`.
- `TokenStream::token_{alone,joint}()` are added.
- `TokenStream::delimited` is added.
This results in things like this:
```rust
TokenTree::token(token::Semi, stmt.span).into()
```
changing to this:
```rust
TokenStream::token_alone(token::Semi, stmt.span)
```
This makes the type of the result, and its spacing, clearer.
These changes also simplifies `Cursor` and `CursorRef`, because they no longer
need to distinguish between `next` and `next_with_spacing`.
Generate correct suggestion with named arguments used positionally
Address issue #99265 by checking each positionally used argument
to see if the argument is named and adding a lint to use the name
instead. This way, when named arguments are used positionally in a
different order than their argument order, the suggested lint is
correct.
For example:
```
println!("{b} {}", a=1, b=2);
```
This will now generate the suggestion:
```
println!("{b} {a}", a=1, b=2);
```
Additionally, this check now also correctly replaces or inserts
only where the positional argument is (or would be if implicit).
Also, width and precision are replaced with their argument names
when they exists.
Since the issues were so closely related, this fix for issue #99265
also fixes issue #99266.
Fixes#99265Fixes#99266
Read and use deprecated configuration (as well as emitting a warning)
Original change written by `@flip1995` I've simply rebased to master and fixed up the formatting/tests. This change teaches the configuration parser which config key replaced a deprecated key and attempts to populate the latter from the former. If both keys are provided this fails with a duplicate key error (rather than attempting to guess which the user intended).
Currently this on affects `cyclomatic-complexity-threshold` -> `cognitive-complexity-threshold` but will also be used in #8974 to handle `blacklisted-names` -> `disallowed-names`.
```
changelog: deprecated configuration keys are still applied as if they were provided as their non-deprecated name.
```
- [x] `cargo test` passes locally
- [x] Run `cargo dev fmt`
Address issue #99265 by checking each positionally used argument
to see if the argument is named and adding a lint to use the name
instead. This way, when named arguments are used positionally in a
different order than their argument order, the suggested lint is
correct.
For example:
```
println!("{b} {}", a=1, b=2);
```
This will now generate the suggestion:
```
println!("{b} {a}", a=1, b=2);
```
Additionally, this check now also correctly replaces or inserts
only where the positional argument is (or would be if implicit).
Also, width and precision are replaced with their argument names
when they exists.
Since the issues were so closely related, this fix for issue #99265
also fixes issue #99266.
Fixes#99265Fixes#99266
Add new lint `obfuscated_if_else`
part of #9100, additional commits could make it work with `then` and `unwrap_or_else` as well
changelog: Add new lint `obfuscated_if_else`
unused_self: respect avoid-breaking-exported-api
```
changelog: [`unused_self`]: Now respects the `avoid-breaking-exported-api` config option
```
Fixes#9195.
I mostly copied the implementation from `unnecessary_wraps`, since I don't have much understanding of rustc internals.
[`box_collection`]: raise warn for all std collections
So far, only [`Vec`, `String`, `HashMap`] were considered.
Extend collection checklist for this lint with:
- `HashSet`
- `VecDeque`
- `LinkedList`
- `BTreeMap`
- `BTreeSet`
- `BinaryHeap`
changelog: [`box_collection`]: raise warn for all std collections
Move format_push_string to restriction
Fixes#9077 (kinda) by moving the lint to the restriction group. As I noted in that issue, I think the suggested change is too much and as the OP of the issue points out, the ramifications of the change are not necessarily easily understood. As such I don't think the lint should be enabled by default.
changelog: [`format_push_string`]: moved to restriction (see #9077).
Implement `for<>` lifetime binder for closures
This PR implements RFC 3216 ([TI](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/97362)) and allows code like the following:
```rust
let _f = for<'a, 'b> |a: &'a A, b: &'b B| -> &'b C { b.c(a) };
// ^^^^^^^^^^^--- new!
```
cc ``@Aaron1011`` ``@cjgillot``
Always create elided lifetime parameters for functions
Anonymous and elided lifetimes in functions are sometimes (async fns) --and sometimes not (regular fns)-- desugared to implicit generic parameters.
This difference of treatment makes it some downstream analyses more complicated to handle. This step is a pre-requisite to perform lifetime elision resolution on AST.
There is currently an inconsistency in the treatment of argument-position impl-trait for functions and async fns:
```rust
trait Foo<'a> {}
fn foo(t: impl Foo<'_>) {} //~ ERROR missing lifetime specifier
async fn async_foo(t: impl Foo<'_>) {} //~ OK
fn bar(t: impl Iterator<Item = &'_ u8>) {} //~ ERROR missing lifetime specifier
async fn async_bar(t: impl Iterator<Item = &'_ u8>) {} //~ OK
```
The current implementation reports "missing lifetime specifier" on `foo`, but **accepts it** in `async_foo`.
This PR **proposes to accept** the anonymous lifetime in both cases as an extra generic lifetime parameter.
This change would be insta-stable, so let's ping t-lang.
Anonymous lifetimes in GAT bindings keep being forbidden:
```rust
fn foo(t: impl Foo<Assoc<'_> = Bar<'_>>) {}
^^ ^^
forbidden ok
```
I started a discussion here: https://rust-lang.zulipchat.com/#narrow/stream/213817-t-lang/topic/Anonymous.20lifetimes.20in.20universal.20impl-trait/near/284968606
r? ``@petrochenkov``
fix [`manual_flatten`] help texts order
fixes #8948
Whenever suggestion for this lint does not fit in one line,
legacy solution has some unexpected/unhandled behavior:
lint will then generate two help messages which seem to be shown in the wrong order.
The second help message in that case will contain the suggestion.
The first help message always refers to a suggestion message,
and **it should adapt** depending on the location of the suggestion:
- inline suggestion within the error/warning message
- suggestion separated into a second help text
This is my first contribution here, so I hope I didn't miss anything for creating this PR.
changelog: fix [`manual_flatten`] help texts order
Whenever suggestion for this lint does not fit in one line,
lint will generate two help messages. The second help message
will always contain the suggestion.
The first help message refers to suggestion message,
and it should adapt depending on the location of the suggestion:
- inline suggestion within the error/warning message
- suggestion separated into second help text
Add `repeated_where_clause_or_trait_bound` lint
I thought I would try and scratch my own itch for #8674.
1. Is comparing the `Res` the correct way for ensuring we have the same trait?
2. Is there a way to get the spans for the bounds and clauses for suggestions?
I tried to use `GenericParam::bounds_span_for_suggestions` but it only gave me an empty span at the end of the spans.
I tried `WhereClause::span_for_predicates_or_empty_place` and it included the comma.
3. Is there a simpler way to get the trait names? I have used the spans of the traits because I didn't see a way to get it off the `Res` or `Def`.
changelog: Add ``[`repeated_where_clause_or_trait_bound`]`` lint.
change applicability type to MaybeIncorrect in `explicit_counter_loop`
close#9013
This PR changes applicability type to `MaybeIncorrect`, because the suggestion is not `MachineApplicable`.
changelog: change applicability type to MaybeIncorrect in `explicit_counter_loop`
Fixes for `branches_sharing_code`
fixes#7198fixes#7452fixes#7555fixes#7589
changelog: Don't suggest moving modifications to locals used in any of the condition expressions in `branches_sharing_code`
changelog: Don't suggest moving anything after a local with a significant drop in `branches_sharing_code`
Fix span for or_fun_call
Closes#9033
changelog: [`or_fun_call`]: span points to the `unwrap_or` only instead of through the entire method chain expression
* Don't suggest moving modifications to locals used in any of the condition expressions
* Don't suggest moving anything after a local with a significant drop
Simplify if let statements
fixes: #8288
---
changelog: Allowing [`qustion_mark`] lint to check `if let` expressions that immediatly return unwrapped value
Lint simple expressions in `manual_filter_map`, `manual_find_map`
changelog: Lint simple expressions in [`manual_filter_map`], [`manual_find_map`]
The current comparison rules out `.find(|a| a.is_some()).map(|b| b.unwrap())` because `a` being a reference can effect more complicated expressions, this adds a simple check for that case and adds the necessary derefs
There's some overlap with `option_filter_map` so `lint_filter_some_map_unwrap` now returns a `bool` to indicate it linted
Make MIR basic blocks field public
This makes it possible to mutably borrow different fields of the MIR
body without resorting to methods like `basic_blocks_local_decls_mut_and_var_debug_info`.
To preserve validity of control flow graph caches in the presence of
modifications, a new struct `BasicBlocks` wraps together basic blocks
and control flow graph caches.
The `BasicBlocks` dereferences to `IndexVec<BasicBlock, BasicBlockData>`.
On the other hand a mutable access requires explicit `as_mut()` call.
Finishing touches for `#[expect]` (RFC 2383)
This PR adds documentation and some functionality to rustc's lint passes, to manually fulfill expectations. This is needed for some lints in Clippy. Hopefully, it should be one of the last things before we can move forward with stabilizing this feature.
As part of this PR, I've also updated `clippy::duplicate_mod` to showcase how this new functionality can be used and to ensure that it works correctly.
---
changelog: [`duplicate_mod`]: Fixed lint attribute interaction
r? `@wesleywiser`
cc: https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/97660, https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/85549
And I guess that's it. Here have a magical unicorn 🦄
the two loops did practically the same, only the type were different (&&
vs &), so I used `copied` to convert `&&` and chained them together.
Instead of parsing the trait info manually, I use the already provided
method `get_trait_info_from_bound`.
Also, instead of using manual string writing, I used `join` by
`itertools`.
Fix `undocumented_unsafe_blocks` in closures
fixes#9114
changelog: Fix `undocumented_unsafe_blocks` not checking for comments before the start of a closure
Add `invalid_utf8_in_unchecked`
changelog: Add [`invalid_utf8_in_unchecked`]
closes: #629
Don't know how useful of a lint this is, just saw this was a really old issue 😄.
Correct lint version for `format_push_string`
Closes#9081
changelog: none
IDK what else to say. Look I can draw an ascii penguin =D:
```
(^v^)
<( )>
w w
```
Add details about how significant drop in match scrutinees can cause deadlocks
Adds more details about how a significant drop in a match scrutinee can cause a deadlock and include link to documentation.
changelog: Add more details to significant drop lint to explicitly show how temporaries in match scrutinees can cause deadlocks.
Fix `#[expect]` for most clippy lints
This PR fixes most `#[expect]` - lint interactions listed in rust-lang/rust#97660. [My comment in the issue](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/97660#issuecomment-1147269504) shows the current progress (Once this is merged). I plan to work on `duplicate_mod` and `multiple_inherent_impl` and leave the rest for later. I feel like stabilizing the feature is more important than fixing the last few nits, which currently also don't work with `#[allow]`.
---
changelog: none
r? `@Jarcho`
cc: rust-lang/rust#97660
Add lint `explicit_auto_deref` take 2
fixes: #234fixes: #8367fixes: #8380
Still things to do:
* ~~This currently only lints `&*<expr>` when it doesn't trigger `needless_borrow`.~~
* ~~This requires a borrow after a deref to trigger. So `*<expr>` changing `&&T` to `&T` won't be caught.~~
* The `deref` and `deref_mut` trait methods aren't linted.
* Neither ~~field accesses~~, nor method receivers are linted.
* ~~This probably shouldn't lint reborrowing.~~
* Full slicing to deref should probably be handled here as well. e.g. `&vec[..]` when just `&vec` would do
changelog: new lint `explicit_auto_deref`
try reading rust-version from Cargo.toml
Cargo.toml can contain a field `rust-version`, that acts like a MSRV of
clippy.toml file: https://doc.rust-lang.org/cargo/reference/manifest.html#the-rust-version-field
This will try to read that field and use it, if the clippy.toml config
has no `msrv` entry
changelog: respect `rust-version` from `Cargo.toml`
closes#8746closes#7765
`trivially_copy_pass_by_ref` fixes
fixes#5953fixes#2961
The fix for #5953 is overly aggressive, but the suggestion is so bad that it's worth the false negatives. Basically three things together:
* It's not obviously wrong
* It compiles
* It may actually work when tested
changelog: Don't lint `trivially_copy_pass_by_ref` when unsafe pointers are used.
changelog: Better track lifetimes when linting `trivially_copy_pass_by_ref`.
add [`manual_find`] lint for function return case
part of the implementation discussed in #7143
changelog: add [`manual_find`] lint for function return case
feat(new lint): new lint `manual_retain`
close#8097
This PR is a new lint implementation.
This lint checks if the `retain` method is available.
Thank you in advance.
changelog: add new ``[`manual_retain`]`` lint
Suggest `pointer::cast` when possible in `transmute_ptr_to_ref`
fixes#8924
changelog: Suggest casting the pointer for any type containing lifetimes in `transmute_ptr_to_ref`.
changelog: Suggest `pointer::cast` when possible in `transmute_ptr_to_ref`.
enum_variant_names should ignore when all prefixes are _
close#9018
When Enum prefix is only an underscore, we should not issue warnings.
changelog: fix false positive in enum_variant_names
Lint `[single_match]` on `Option` matches
fixes#8928
changelog: did some cleanup of the logic for ``[`single_match`]`` and ``[`single_match_else`]`` which fixes the bug where `Option` matches were not linted unless a wildcard was used for one of the arms.
ignore item in `thread_local!` macro
close#8493
This PR ignores `thread_local` macro in `declare_interior_mutable_const`.
changelog: ignore `thread_local!` macro in `declare_interior_mutable_const`
Fix `extra_unused_lifetimes` false positive
This PR fixes#9014.
I confirmed the FP on the `crates.io` source as `@JohnTitor` mentioned, and confirmed that the FP is no longer present following this change.
I did not include a test in this PR because I think constructing one would be complicated, and the fix is pretty simple. But please let me know if this is unacceptable.
changelog: fix `extra_unused_lifetimes` FP
add vec.capacity() to [`slow_vec_initialization`] detection
fix#8800
for example
```rust
let mut vec1 = Vec::with_capacity(len);
vec1.resize(vec1.capacity(), 0);
let mut vec2 = Vec::with_capacity(len);
vec2.extend(repeat(0).take(vec2.capacity()));
```
will trigger the lint
---
changelog: add `vec.capacity()` to [`slow_vec_initialization`] detection
confirm using chain in collapsible_span_lint_calls
close#8798
This PR fixes false positive when using chain in `collapsible_span_lint_calls`.
changelog: None
put parentheses around neg_multiply suggestion if needed
*Please write a short comment explaining your change (or "none" for internal only changes)*
changelog: [`neg_multiply`]: put parentheses around suggestion if needed
`For` example should be used instead `while` in WHILE_LET_ON_ITERATOR
For example should be used instead while in WHILE_LET_ON_ITERATOR
Revert some changes
Fix cargo dev fmt
Adds more details about how a significant drop in a match scrutinee can
cause a deadlock and include link to documentation. Emits messages
indicating temporaries with significant drops in arms of matches and
message about possible deadlocks/unexpected behavior.
changelog: Add more details to significant drop lint to explicitly show
how temporaries in match scrutinees can cause deadlocks/unexpected
behavior.
feat(lint): add default_iter_empty
close#8915
This PR adds `default_iter_empty` lint.
This lint checks `std::iter::Empty::default()` and replace with `std::iter::empty()`.
Thank you in advance.
---
changelog: add `default_instead_of_iter_empty` lint.
Update description in clippy_lints/src/default_iter_empty.rs
Co-authored-by: Fridtjof Stoldt <xFrednet@gmail.com>
Update clippy_lints/src/default_iter_empty.rs
Co-authored-by: Alex Macleod <alex@macleod.io>
Update clippy_lints/src/default_iter_empty.rs
Co-authored-by: Alex Macleod <alex@macleod.io>
renamed default_iter_empty to default_instead_of_iter_empty
Avoid duplicate messages
add tests for regression
rewrite 'Why is this bad?'
cargo dev fmt
delete default_iter_empty lint in renamed_lint.rs
rewrite a message in the suggestion
cargo dev update_lints --check
Make `ExprKind::Closure` a struct variant.
Simple refactor since we both need it to introduce additional fields in `ExprKind::Closure`.
r? ``@Aaron1011``
Rework `branches_sharing_code`
fixes#7378
This changes the lint from checking pairs of blocks, to checking all the blocks at the same time. As such there's almost none of the original code left.
changelog: Don't lint `branches_sharing_code` when using different binding names
And likewise for the `Const::val` method.
Because its type is called `ConstKind`. Also `val` is a confusing name
because `ConstKind` is an enum with seven variants, one of which is
called `Value`. Also, this gives consistency with `TyS` and `PredicateS`
which have `kind` fields.
The commit also renames a few `Const` variables from `val` to `c`, to
avoid confusion with the `ConstKind::Value` variant.
Fix some `#[expect]` lint interaction
Fixing the first few lints that aren't caught by `#[expect]`. The root cause of these examples was, that the lint was emitted at the wrong location.
---
changelog: none
r? `@Jarcho`
cc: rust-lang/rust#97660
Improve lint doc consistency
changelog: none
This is a continuation of #8908.
Notable changes:
- Removed empty `Known Problems` sections
- Removed "Good"/"Bad" language (replaced with "Use instead")
- Removed (and added some 😄) duplication
- Ignored the [`create_dir`] example so it doesn't create `clippy_lints/foo` 😄
fix(lint): check const context
close: https://github.com/rust-lang/rust-clippy/issues/8898
This PR fixes a bug in checked_conversions.
Thank you in advance.
changelog: check const context in checked_conversions.
This commit makes type folding more like the way chalk does it.
Currently, `TypeFoldable` has `fold_with` and `super_fold_with` methods.
- `fold_with` is the standard entry point, and defaults to calling
`super_fold_with`.
- `super_fold_with` does the actual work of traversing a type.
- For a few types of interest (`Ty`, `Region`, etc.) `fold_with` instead
calls into a `TypeFolder`, which can then call back into
`super_fold_with`.
With the new approach, `TypeFoldable` has `fold_with` and
`TypeSuperFoldable` has `super_fold_with`.
- `fold_with` is still the standard entry point, *and* it does the
actual work of traversing a type, for all types except types of
interest.
- `super_fold_with` is only implemented for the types of interest.
Benefits of the new model.
- I find it easier to understand. The distinction between types of
interest and other types is clearer, and `super_fold_with` doesn't
exist for most types.
- With the current model is easy to get confused and implement a
`super_fold_with` method that should be left defaulted. (Some of the
precursor commits fixed such cases.)
- With the current model it's easy to call `super_fold_with` within
`TypeFolder` impls where `fold_with` should be called. The new
approach makes this mistake impossible, and this commit fixes a number
of such cases.
- It's potentially faster, because it avoids the `fold_with` ->
`super_fold_with` call in all cases except types of interest. A lot of
the time the compile would inline those away, but not necessarily
always.
* Don't lint on `.cloned().flatten()` when `T::Item` doesn't implement `IntoIterator`
* Reduce verbosity of lint message
* Narrow down the scope of the replacement range
List configuration values can now be extended instead of replaced
I've seen some `clippy.toml` files, that have a few additions to the default list of a configuration and then a copy of our default. The list will therefore not be updated, when we add new names. This change should make it simple for new users to append values instead of replacing them.
I'm uncertain if the documentation of the `".."` is apparent. Any suggestions are welcome. I've also check that the lint list displays the examples correctly.
<details>
<summary>Lint list screenshots</summary>
![image](https://user-images.githubusercontent.com/17087237/171999434-393f2f83-09aa-4bab-8b05-bd4973150f27.png)
![image](https://user-images.githubusercontent.com/17087237/171999401-e6942b53-25e6-4b09-89e5-d867c7463156.png)
</details>
---
changelog: enhancement: [`doc_markdown`]: Users can now indicate, that the `doc-valid-idents` should extend the default and not replace it
changelog: enhancement: [`blacklisted-name`]: Users can now indicate, that the `blacklisted-names` should extend the default and not replace it
Closes: #8877
That's it. Have a fantastic weekend to everyone reading this. Here is a cookie 🍪
Add new lint [`needless_parens_on_range_literals`]
changelog: Adds a new lint [`needless_parens_on_range_literals`] to warn on needless braces on literals in a range statement
For example, the lint would catch
```log
error: needless parenthesis on range literals can be removed
--> $DIR/needless_parens_on_range_literals.rs:8:13
|
LL | let _ = ('a')..=('z');
| ^^^^^ help: try: `'a'`
|
= note: `-D clippy::needless-parens-on-range-literals` implied by `-D warnings`
```
improve [`for_loops_over_fallibles`] to detect the usage of iter, iter_mut and into_iterator
fix#6762
detects code like
```rust
for _ in option.iter() {
//..
}
```
changelog: Improve [`for_loops_over_fallibles`] to detect `for _ in option.iter() {}` or using `iter_mut()` or `into_iterator()`.
Remove the unneeded wrapping and unwrapping in suggestion creation.
Collecting to Option<Vec<_>> only returns None if one of the elements is
None and that is never the case here.
fix(manual_find_map and manual_filter_map): check clone method
close#8920
Added conditional branching when the clone method is used.
Thank you in advance.
---
changelog: check `clone()` and other variant preserving methods in [`manual_find_map`] and [`manual_filter_map`]
When setting suggestion for significant_drop_in_scrutinee, add suggestion for MoveAndClone for non-ref
When trying to set the current suggestion, if the type of the expression
is not a reference and it is not trivially pure clone copy, we should still
trigger and emit a lint message. Since this fix may require cloning an
expensive-to-clone type, do not attempt to offer a suggested fix.
This change means that matches generated from TryDesugar and AwaitDesugar
would normally trigger a lint, but they are out of scope for this lint,
so we will explicitly ignore matches with sources of TryDesugar or
AwaitDesugar.
changelog: Update for ``[`significant_drop_in_scrutinee`]`` to correctly
emit lint messages for cases where the type is not a reference *and*
not trivially pure clone copy.
changelog: [`significant_drop_in_scrutinee`]: No longer lint on Try `?`
and `await` desugared expressions.
remove `large_enum_variant` suggestion for `Copy` types
Replaces the (erroneous) suggestion on `large_enum_variant` for `Copy` types by a note. This fixes#8894.
---
changelog: none
[1/N] Implement Arithmetic lint
Assuming that https://github.com/rust-lang/rust-clippy/issues/8903 is OK, this PR starts the creation of the `Arithmetic` lint with configurable types.
My current struggle to get a rustc review inspired me to create smaller PRs in order to easy review and make merges as fast as possible. So the first step here only moves the `arithmetic.rs` file to `numeric_arithmetic.rs` to make room for the new lint.
--
changelog: none
Make docs more consistent
changelog: none
This just fixes some docs to make them more consistent. I mostly just changed `// Good`, `// Bad`, etc to `Use instead:`.
Set correct `ParamEnv` for `derive_partial_eq_without_eq`
fixes#8867
changelog: Handle differing predicates applied by `#[derive(PartialEq)]` and `#[derive(Eq)]` in `derive_partial_eq_without_eq`
new lint: `borrow_deref_ref`
changelog: ``[`borrow_deref_ref`]``
Related pr: #6837#7577
`@Jarcho` Could you please give a review?
`cargo lintcheck` gives no false negative (but tested crates are out-of-date).
TODO:
1. Not sure the name. `deref_on_immutable_ref` or some others?
`SourceFile::lines` is a big part of metadata. It's stored in a compressed form
(a difference list) to save disk space. Decoding it is a big fraction of
compile time for very small crates/programs.
This commit introduces a new type `SourceFileLines` which has a `Lines`
form and a `Diffs` form. The latter is used when the metadata is first
read, and it is only decoded into the `Lines` form when line data is
actually needed. This avoids the decoding cost for many files,
especially in `std`. It's a performance win of up to 15% for tiny
crates/programs where metadata decoding is a high part of compilation
costs.
A `Lock` is needed because the methods that access lines data (which can
trigger decoding) take `&self` rather than `&mut self`. To allow for this,
`SourceFile::lines` now takes a `FnMut` that operates on the lines slice rather
than returning the lines slice.
Fix `manual_range_contains` false negative with chains of `&&` and `||`
Fixes#8745
Since the precedence for `&&` is the same as itself the HIR for a chain of `&&` ends up with a right skewed tree like:
```
&&
/ \
&& c2
/ \
... c1
```
So only the leftmost `&&` was actually "fully" checked, the top level was just `c2` and `&&` so the `manual_range_contains` lint won't apply. This change makes it also check `c2` with `c1`.
There's a bit of a hacky solution in the [second commit](257f09776a) to check if the number of open/closing parens in the snippet match. This is to prevent a case like `((x % 2 == 0) || (x < 0)) || (x >= 10)` from offering a suggestion like `((x % 2 == 0) || !(0..10).contains(&x)` which now won't compile.
Any suggestions for that paren hack welcome, kinda new to working on this so not too sure about possible solutions :) it's weird because I don't know how else to check for parens in HIR considering they're removed when lowering AST.
changelog: Fix [`manual_range_contains`] false negative with chains of `&&` and `||`
Don't lint `useless_transmute` on types with erased regions
fixes#6356fixes#3340fixes#2906
This should get a proper fix at some point, but this at least gets the lint running on some types.
cc #5343
changelog: Don't lint `useless_transmute` on types with erased regions
`cast_abs_to_unsigned`: do not remove cast if it's required
Fixes#8873
If `iX` is not cast to `uX` then keep the cast rather than removing it
changelog: [`cast_abs_to_unsigned`]: do not remove cast if it's required
needless_late_init: fix ICE when all branches return the never type
Fixes#8911
When the assignment is done in a match guard or the if condition and all of the branches return the never type `assignment_suggestions` would return an empty `Vec` which caused the ICE. It now returns `None` in that scenario
Also moves some tests to the top of the file
changelog: ICE Fixes: [`needless_late_init`] #8911
Fix `[use_self]` false negative with on struct and tuple struct patterns
fixes#8845
changelog: Triggered the warning for ``[`use_self`]`` on `TupleStruct` and `Struct` patterns, whereas currently it's only triggered for `Path` patterns
Fix `empty_line_after_outer_attribute` false positive
This PR fixes a false positive in `empty_line_after_outer_attribute`.
Here is a minimal example that trigger the FP:
```rust
#[derive(clap::Parser)]
#[clap(after_help = "This ia a help message.
You're welcome.
")]
pub struct Args;
```
changelog: PF: [`empty_line_after_outer_attribute`]: No longer lints empty lines in inner string values.
Introduce `allow-dbg-in-tests` config value
related to: Issue #8758, PR https://github.com/rust-lang/rust-clippy/pull/8838
changelog: Introduced `allow-dbg-in-tests` config value. [dbg_macro] does not allow `dbg!` in test code by default.
When trying to set the current suggestion, if the type of the expression
is not a reference and it is not trivially pure clone copy, we should still
trigger and emit a lint message. Since this fix may require cloning an
expensive-to-clone type, do not attempt to offer a suggested fix.
This change means that matches generated from TryDesugar and AwaitDesugar
would normally trigger a lint, but they are out of scope for this lint,
so we will explicitly ignore matches with sources of TryDesugar or
AwaitDesugar.
changelog: Update for [`significant_drop_in_scrutinee`] to correctly
emit lint messages for cases where the type is not a reference and
not trivially pure clone copy.
`get_last_with_len`: lint `VecDeque` and any deref to slice
changelog: [`get_last_with_len`]: lint `VecDeque` and any deref to slice
Previously only `Vec`s were linted, this will now catch any usages on slices, arrays, etc. It also suggests `.back()` for `VecDeque`s
Also moves the lint into `methods/`
`identity_op`: add parenthesis to suggestions where required
changelog: [`identity_op`]: add parenthesis to suggestions where required
Follow up to #8730, wraps the cases we can't lint as-is in parenthesis rather than ignoring them
Catches a couple new FPs with mixed operator precedences and `as` casts
```rust
// such as
0 + { a } * 2;
0 + a as usize;
```
The suggestions are now applied using `span_lint_and_sugg` rather than appearing in just the message and have a `run-rustfix` test
Refactor call terminator to always include destination place
In #71117 people seemed to agree that call terminators should always have a destination place, even if the call was guaranteed to diverge. This implements that. Unsurprisingly, the diff touches a lot of code, but thankfully I had to do almost nothing interesting. The only interesting thing came up in const prop, where the stack frame having no return place was also used to indicate that the layout could not be computed (or similar). I replaced this with a ZST allocation, which should continue to do the right things.
cc `@RalfJung` `@eddyb` who were involved in the original conversation
r? rust-lang/mir-opt
Lifetime variance fixes for clippy
#97287 migrates rustc to a `Ty` type that is invariant over its lifetime `'tcx`, so I need to fix a bunch of places that assume that `Ty<'a>` and `Ty<'b>` can be shortened to some common lifetime.
This is doable, since everything is already `'tcx`, so all this PR does is be a bit more explicit that elided lifetimes are actually `'tcx`.
Split out from #97287 so the clippy team can review independently.
Drop Tracking: Implement `fake_read` callback
This PR updates drop tracking's use of `ExprUseVisitor` so that we treat `fake_read` events as borrows. Without doing this, we were not handling match expressions correctly, which showed up as a breakage in the `addassign-yield.rs` test. We did not previously notice this because we still had rather large temporary scopes that we held borrows for, which changed in #94309.
This PR also includes a variant of the `addassign-yield.rs` test case to make sure we continue to have correct behavior here with drop tracking.
r? `@nikomatsakis`
Rustup
`@rust-lang/clippy,` `@Jarcho,` `@dswij,` `@Alexendoo.` Could someone review this? It should be pretty straight forward since it's just a sync. I think it's also fine if either one of `@Jarcho,` `@dswij,` `@Alexendoo` approves this, as these are usually not reviewed. I just want to make sure that I didn't break something obvious 🙃
It should be enough to look at the merge commit 🙃
changelog: none
changelog: move [`significant_drop_in_scrutinee`] to `suspicious`
[dbg_macro] tolerates use of `dbg!` in items which have `#[cfg(test)]` attribute
fix: #8758
changelog: [dbg_macro] tolerates use of `dbg!` in items with `#[cfg(test)]` attribute
Improve "unknown field" error messages
Fixes#8806
Sample output:
```
error: error reading Clippy's configuration file `/home/smoelius/github/smoelius/rust-clippy/clippy.toml`: unknown field `foobar`, expected one of
allow-expect-in-tests enable-raw-pointer-heuristic-for-send standard-macro-braces
allow-unwrap-in-tests enforced-import-renames third-party
allowed-scripts enum-variant-name-threshold too-large-for-stack
array-size-threshold enum-variant-size-threshold too-many-arguments-threshold
avoid-breaking-exported-api literal-representation-threshold too-many-lines-threshold
await-holding-invalid-types max-fn-params-bools trivial-copy-size-limit
blacklisted-names max-include-file-size type-complexity-threshold
cargo-ignore-publish max-struct-bools unreadable-literal-lint-fractions
cognitive-complexity-threshold max-suggested-slice-pattern-length upper-case-acronyms-aggressive
cyclomatic-complexity-threshold max-trait-bounds vec-box-size-threshold
disallowed-methods msrv verbose-bit-mask-threshold
disallowed-types pass-by-value-size-limit warn-on-all-wildcard-imports
doc-valid-idents single-char-binding-names-threshold
at line 1 column 1
```
You can test this by (say) adding `foobar = 42` to Clippy's root `clippy.toml` file, and running `cargo run --bin cargo-clippy`.
Note that, to get the terminal width, this PR adds `termize` as a dependency to `cargo-clippy`. However, `termize` is also [how `rustc_errors` gets the terminal width](481db40311/compiler/rustc_errors/src/emitter.rs (L1607)). So, hopefully, this is not a dealbreaker.
r? `@xFrednet`
changelog: Enhancements: the "unknown field" error messages for config files now wraps the field names.
add suggestions to rc_clone_in_vec_init
A followup to https://github.com/rust-lang/rust-clippy/pull/8769
I also switch the order of the 2 suggestions, since the loop initialization one is probably the common case.
`@xFrednet` I'm not letting you guys rest for a minute 😅
changelog: add suggestions to [`rc_clone_in_vec_init`]
`undocumented_unsafe_blocks` does not trigger on unsafe trait impls
Closes#8505
changelog: This lint checks unsafe impls NOT from macro expansions and checks ones in macro declarations.
~~`unsafe impl`s from macro invocations don't trigger the lint for now.~~
~~This lint checks unsafe impls from/not from macro expansions~~
Don't lint `vec_init_then_push` when further extended
fixes#7071
This will still lint when a larger number of pushes are done (four currently). The exact number could be debated, but this is more readable then a sequence of pushes so it shouldn't be too large.
changelog: Don't lint `vec_init_then_push` when further extended.
changelog: Remove `mut` binding from `vec_init_then_push` when possible.
Add EarlyBinder
Chalk has no concept of `Param` (e0ade19d13/chalk-ir/src/lib.rs (L579)) or `ReEarlyBound` (e0ade19d13/chalk-ir/src/lib.rs (L1308)). Everything is just "bound" - the equivalent of rustc's late-bound. It's not completely clear yet whether to move everything to the same time of binder in rustc or add `Param` and `ReEarlyBound` in Chalk.
Either way, tracking when we have or haven't already substituted out these in rustc can be helpful.
As a first step, I'm just adding a `EarlyBinder` newtype that is required to call `subst`. I also add a couple "transparent" `bound_*` wrappers around a couple query that are often immediately substituted.
r? `@nikomatsakis`
Fix redundant_allocation warning for Rc<Box<str>>
changelog: [`redundant_allocation`] Fixes#8604
Fixes false positives where a fat pointer with `str` type was made thin by another allocation, but that thinning allocation was marked as redundant
This PR has implemented improved representation.
- Use "lib" instead of "lifb"
- Use "triggered" instead of "triggere"
- Use "blacklisted_name" instead of "blackisted_name"
- Use "stabilization" instead of "stabilisation"
- Use "behavior" instead of "behaviour"
- Use "target" instead of "tartet"
- Use "checked_add" instead of "chcked_add"
- Use "anti-pattern" instead of "antipattern"
- Use "suggestion" instead of "suggesttion"
- Use "example" instead of "exampel"
- Use "Cheat Sheet" instead of "Cheatsheet"
New lint: [`derive_partial_eq_without_eq`]
Introduces a new lint, [`derive_partial_eq_without_eq`].
See: #1781 (doesn't close it though).
changelog: add lint [`derive_partial_eq_without_eq`]
Replace `#[allow]` with `#[expect]` in Clippy
Hey `@rust-lang/clippy,` `@Alexendoo,` `@dswij,` I'm currently working on the expect attribute as defined in [Rust RFC 2383](https://rust-lang.github.io/rfcs/2383-lint-reasons.html). With that, an `#[allow]` attribute can be replaced with a `#[expect]` attribute that suppresses the lint, but also emits a warning, if the lint isn't emitted in the expected scope.
With this PR I would like to test the attribute on a project scale and Clippy obviously came to mind. This PR replaces (almost) all `#[allow]` attributes in `clippy_utils` and `clippy_lints` with the `#[expect]` attribute. I was also able to remove some allows since, the related FPs have been fixed 🎉.
My question is now, are there any concerns regarding this? It's still okay to add normal `#[allow]` attributes, I see the need to nit-pick about that in new PRs, unless it's actually a FP. Also, I would not recommend using `#[expect]` in tests, as changes to a lint could the trigger the expect attribute in other files.
Additionally, I've noticed that Clippy has a bunch of `#[allow(clippy::too_many_lines)]` attributes. Should we maybe allow the lint all together or increase the threshold setting? To me, it seems like we mostly just ignore it in our code. 😅🙃
---
changelog: none
r? `@flip1995` (I've requested you for now, since you're also helping with reviewing the expect implementation. You are welcome to delegate this PR, even if it should be a simple review 🙃 )
Track if a where bound comes from a impl Trait desugar
With https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/93803 `impl Trait` function arguments get desugared to hidden where bounds. However, Clippy needs to know if a bound was originally a `impl Trait` or an actual bound. This adds a field to the `WhereBoundPredicate` struct to keep track of this information during AST->HIR lowering.
r? `@cjgillot`
cc `@estebank` (as the reviewer of #93803)
Create clippy lint against unexpectedly late drop for temporaries in match scrutinee expressions
A new clippy lint for issue 93883 (https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/93883). Relies on a new trait in `marker` (called `SignificantDrop` to enable linting), which is why this PR is for the rust-lang repo and not the clippy repo.
changelog: new lint [`significant_drop_in_scrutinee`]
With #93803 `impl Trait` function arguments get desugared to hidden
where bounds. However, Clippy needs to know if a bound was originally a
impl Trait or an actual bound. This adds a field to the
`WhereBoundPredicate` struct to keep track of this information during
HIR lowering.
Address `unnecessary_to_owned` false positive
My proposed fix for #8759 is to revise the conditions that delineate `redundant_clone` and `unnecessary_to_owned`:
```rust
// Only flag cases satisfying at least one of the following three conditions:
// * the referent and receiver types are distinct
// * the referent/receiver type is a copyable array
// * the method is `Cow::into_owned`
// This restriction is to ensure there is no overlap between `redundant_clone` and this
// lint. It also avoids the following false positive:
// https://github.com/rust-lang/rust-clippy/issues/8759
// Arrays are a bit of a corner case. Non-copyable arrays are handled by
// `redundant_clone`, but copyable arrays are not.
```
This change causes a few cases that were previously flagged by `unnecessary_to_owned` to no longer be flagged. But one could argue those cases would be better handled by `redundant_clone`.
Closes#8759
changelog: none
Support negative ints in manual_range_contains
fixes: #8721
changelog: Fixes issue where ranges containing ints with different signs would be
incorrect due to comparing as unsigned.
Fix `cast_lossless` to avoid warning on `usize` to `f64` conversion.
Previously, the `cast_lossless` lint would issue a warning on code that
converted a `usize` value to `f64`, on 32-bit targets.
`usize` to `f64` is a lossless cast on 32-bit targets, however there is
no corresponding `f64::from` that takes a `usize`, so `cast_lossless`'s
suggested replacement does not compile.
This PR disables the lint in the case of casting from `usize` or `isize`.
Fixes#3689.
changelog: [`cast_lossless`] no longer gives wrong suggestion on usize,isize->f64
Lint `empty_lint_after_outer_attr` on argumentless macros
Reverts the change from 034c81b761 as it's no longer needed. The test is left just in case. Original issue is #2475.
changelog: Lint `empty_lint_after_outer_attr` on argumentless macros again
Those lints are trait_duplication_in_bounds and
type_repetition_in_bounds. I don't think those can be fixed on the
Clippy side alone, but need changes in the compiler. So let's move them
to nursery to get the sync through and then fix them on the rustc side.
Also adds a regression test that has to be fixed before they can be
moved back to pedantic.
Easier readability for `needless_late_init` message
Closes#8530
Updated the lint to use a `MultiSpan`, showing where the `let` statement was first used and where the initialisation statement was done, as in the format described, for easier readability.
Was wondering why, when pushing the span label for the initialisation statement, that sometimes the prior statement above the initialisation statement gets pulled into the output as well - any insight is appreciated!
---
changelog: [`needless_late_init`]: Now shows the `let` statement where it was first initialized
[FP] identity_op in front of if
fix#8724
changelog: FP: [`identity_op`]: is now allowed in front of if statements, blocks and other expressions where the suggestion would be invalid.
Resolved simular problems with blocks, mathces, and loops.
identity_op always does NOT suggest reducing `0 + if b { 1 } else { 2 } + 3` into `if b { 1 } else { 2 } + 3` even in the case that the expression is in `f(expr)` or `let x = expr;` for now.
Previously, the `cast_lossless` lint would issue a warning on code that
converted a `usize` value to `f64`, on 32-bit targets.
`usize` to `f64` is a lossless cast on 32-bit targets, however there is
no corresponding `f64::from` that takes a `usize`, so `cast_lossless`'s
suggested replacement does not compile.
This PR disables the lint in the case of casting from `usize` or `isize`.
Fixes#3689.
changelog: [`cast_lossless`] no longer gives wrong suggestion on usize->f64
Only crate root def-ids don't have a parent, and in majority of cases the argument of `DefIdTree::parent` cannot be a crate root.
So we now panic by default in `parent` and introduce a new non-panicing function `opt_parent` for cases where the argument can be a crate root.
Same applies to `local_parent`/`opt_local_parent`.
Change `span_suggestion` (and variants) to take `impl ToString` rather
than `String` for the suggested code, as this simplifies the
requirements on the diagnostic derive.
Signed-off-by: David Wood <david.wood@huawei.com>
ignore `redundant_pub_crate` in `useless_attribute`
changelog: [`useless_attribute`] no longer lints [`redundant_pub_crate`]
As mentioned in https://github.com/rust-lang/rust-clippy/issues/8732#issuecomment-1106489634
> And it turns out I can't even explicitly allow it at the usage site, because then `clippy::useless_attribute` fires (which would also be a FP?), which is deny-by-default.
>
> Though it does work if I then allow `clippy::useless_attribute`. 😂
>
> ```rust
> #[allow(clippy::useless_attribute)]
> #[allow(clippy::redundant_pub_crate)]
> pub(crate) use bit;
> ```
>
> The originally-reported warning now no longer occurs.
`needless_late_init`: ignore `if let`, `let mut` and significant drops
No longer lints `if let`, personal taste on this one is pretty split, so it probably shouldn't be warning by default. Fixes#8613
```rust
let x = if let Some(n) = y {
n
} else {
1
}
```
No longer lints `let mut`, things like the following are not uncommon and look fine as they are
b169c16d86/src/sixty_four.rs (L88-L93)
Avoids changing the drop order in an observable way, where the type of `x` has a drop with side effects and something between `x` and the first use also does, e.g.
48cc6cb791/tests/test_api.rs (L159-L167)
The implementation of `type_needs_ordered_drop_inner` was changed a bit, it now uses `Ty::has_significant_drop` and reordered the ifs to check diagnostic name before checking the implicit drop impl
changelog: [`needless_late_init`]: No longer lints `if let` statements, `let mut` bindings and no longer significantly changes drop order
mistyped_literal_suffix: improve integer suggestions, avoid wrong float suggestions
This PR fixes 2 things:
- The known problem that integer types are always suggested as signed, by suggesting an unsigned suffix for literals that wouldnt fit in the signed type, and ignores any literals too big for the corresponding unsigned type too.
- The lint would only look at the integer part of any floating point literals without an exponent, this causing #6129. This just ignores those literals.
Examples:
```rust
let _ = 2_32; // still 2_i32
let _ = 234_8; // would now suggest 234_u8
// these are now ignored
let _ = 500_8;
let _ = 123_32.123;
```
changelog: suggest correct integer types in [`mistyped_literal_suffix`], ignore float literals without an exponent
fixes#6129
Previously this lint would only look at the integer part of floating
point literals without an exponent, giving wrong suggestions like:
```
|
8 | let _ = 123_32.123;
| ^^^^^^^^^^ help: did you mean to write: `123.123_f32`
|
```
Instead, it now ignores these literals.
Fixes#6129
Instead of just always suggesting signed suffixes regardless of size
of the value, it now suggests an unsigned suffix when the value wouldn't
fit into the corresponding signed type, and ignores the literal entirely
if it is too big for the unsigned type as well.
wrong_self_convention allows `is_*` to take `&mut self`
fix#8480 and #8513
Allowing `is_*` to take `&self` or none is too restrictive.
changelog: FPs: [`wrong_self_convention`] now allows `&mut self` and no self as arguments for `is_*` methods
`manual_split_once`: lint manual iteration of `SplitN`
changelog: `manual_split_once`: lint manual iteration of `SplitN`
Now lints:
```rust
let mut iter = "a.b.c".splitn(2, '.');
let first = iter.next().unwrap();
let second = iter.next().unwrap();
let mut iter = "a.b.c".splitn(2, '.');
let first = iter.next()?;
let second = iter.next()?;
let mut iter = "a.b.c".rsplitn(2, '.');
let first = iter.next().unwrap();
let second = iter.next().unwrap();
let mut iter = "a.b.c".rsplitn(2, '.');
let first = iter.next()?;
let second = iter.next()?;
```
It suggests (minus leftover whitespace):
```rust
let (first, second) = "a.b.c".split_once('.').unwrap();
let (first, second) = "a.b.c".split_once('.')?;
let (second, first) = "a.b.c".rsplit_once('.').unwrap();
let (second, first) = "a.b.c".rsplit_once('.')?;
```
Currently only lints if the statements are next to each other, as detecting the various kinds of shadowing was tricky, so the following won't lint
```rust
let mut iter = "a.b.c".splitn(2, '.');
let something_else = 1;
let first = iter.next()?;
let second = iter.next()?;
```
Less authoritative stable_sort_primitive message
fixes#8241
Hey all - first contribution here so I'm deciding to start with something small.
Updated the linked message to be less authoritative as well as moved the lint grouping from `perf` to `pedantic` as suggested by `@camsteffen` under the issue.
changelog: [`stable_sort_primitive`]: emit less authoritative message and move to `pedantic`
Fix needless_match false positive for if-let when the else block doesn't match to given expr
<!--
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fix#8695
*Please write a short comment explaining your change (or "none" for internal only changes)*
changelog: Fixed ``[`needless_match`]`` false positive when else block expression differs.
Take over: New lint bytes count to len
take over #8375close#8083
This PR adds new lint about considering replacing `.bytes().count()` with `.len()`.
Thank you in advance.
---
r! `@Manishearth`
changelog: adds new lint [`bytes_count_to_len`] to consider replacing `.bytes().count()` with `.len()`
Stop using CRATE_DEF_INDEX outside of metadata encoding.
`CRATE_DEF_ID` and `CrateNum::as_def_id` are almost always what we want. We should not manipulate raw `DefIndex` outside of metadata encoding.
adding test patterns
cargo dev bless
fix comment
add ;
delete :
fix suggestion code
and update stderr in tests.
use match_def_path when checking method name
Add `await_holding_invalid_type` lint
changelog: [`await_holding_invalid_type`]
This lint allows users to create a denylist of types which are not allowed to be
held across await points. This is essentially a re-implementation of the
language-level [`must_not_suspend`
lint](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/83310). That lint has a lot of
work still to be done before it will reach Rust stable, and in the meantime
there are a lot of types which can trip up developers if they are used
improperly.
I originally implemented this specifically for `tracing::span::Entered`, until I discovered #8434 and read the commentary on that PR. Given this implementation is fully user configurable, doesn't tie clippy to any one particular crate, and introduces no additional dependencies, it seems more appropriate.
Refactor HIR item-like traversal (part 1)
Issue #95004
- Create hir_crate_items query which traverses tcx.hir_crate(()).owners to return a hir::ModuleItems
- use tcx.hir_crate_items in tcx.hir().items() to return an iterator of hir::ItemId
- use tcx.hir_crate_items to introduce a tcx.hir().par_items(impl Fn(hir::ItemId)) to traverse all items in parallel;
Signed-off-by: Miguel Guarniz <mi9uel9@gmail.com>
cc `@cjgillot`
Fix formatting of `cast_abs_to_unsigned` docs
The "use instead" section of the example was not being formatted as Rust code, and the "configuration" documentation was being formatted as Rust code.
changelog: `[cast_abs_to_unsigned]` Fix example/configuration formatting
Implement sym operands for global_asm!
Tracking issue: #93333
This PR is pretty much a complete rewrite of `sym` operand support for inline assembly so that the same implementation can be shared by `asm!` and `global_asm!`. The main changes are:
- At the AST level, `sym` is represented as a special `InlineAsmSym` AST node containing a path instead of an `Expr`.
- At the HIR level, `sym` is split into `SymStatic` and `SymFn` depending on whether the path resolves to a static during AST lowering (defaults to `SynFn` if `get_early_res` fails).
- `SymFn` is just an `AnonConst`. It runs through typeck and we just collect the resulting type at the end. An error is emitted if the type is not a `FnDef`.
- `SymStatic` directly holds a path and the `DefId` of the `static` that it is pointing to.
- The representation at the MIR level is mostly unchanged. There is a minor change to THIR where `SymFn` is a constant instead of an expression.
- At the codegen level we need to apply the target's symbol mangling to the result of `tcx.symbol_name()` depending on the target. This is done by calling the LLVM name mangler, which handles all of the details.
- On Mach-O, all symbols have a leading underscore.
- On x86 Windows, different mangling is used for cdecl, stdcall, fastcall and vectorcall.
- No mangling is needed on other platforms.
r? `@nagisa`
cc `@eddyb`
changelog: [`await_holding_invalid_type`]
This lint allows users to create a denylist of types which are not allowed to be
held across await points. This is essentially a re-implementation of the
language-level [`must_not_suspend`
lint](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/83310). That lint has a lot of
work still to be done before it will reach Rust stable, and in the meantime
there are a lot of types which can trip up developers if they are used
improperly.
New lint `format_add_strings`
Closes#6261
changelog: Added [`format_add_string`]: recommend using `write!` instead of appending the result of `format!`
Add `usize` cast to `clippy::manual_bits` suggestion
A fix for the suggestion from https://github.com/rust-lang/rust-clippy/pull/8213
changelog: [`manual_bits`]: The suggestion now includes a cast for proper type conversion
This adds test to make sure correct behavior of lint
- The first test's option variable is not a temporary variable
- The second test does not make usage of `take()`
- The third test makes usage of `take()` and uses a temporary variable
Instead of type checking the entire expression (causing a false
positive), only type check for a subset of the expression (the receiver of
the matched function: `take()`)
This lint checks if Option::take() is used on a temporary value (a value
that is not of type &mut Option and that is not a Place expression) to
suggest omitting take()
Check for loops/closures in `local_used_after_expr`
Follow up to #8646, catches when a local is used multiple times because it's in a loop or a closure
changelog: none
errors: lazily load fallback fluent bundle
Addresses (hopefully) https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/95667#issuecomment-1094794087.
Loading the fallback bundle in compilation sessions that won't go on to emit any errors unnecessarily degrades compile time performance, so lazily create the Fluent bundle when it is first required.
r? `@ghost` (just for perf initially)
Use mir constant in thir instead of ty::Const
This is blocked on https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/94059 (does include its changes, the first two commits in this PR correspond to those changes) and https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/93800 being reinstated (which had to be reverted). Mainly opening since `@lcnr` offered to give some feedback and maybe also for a perf-run (if necessary).
This currently contains a lot of duplication since some of the logic of `ty::Const` had to be copied to `mir::ConstantKind`, but with the introduction of valtrees a lot of that functionality will disappear from `ty::Const`.
Only the last commit contains changes that need to be reviewed here. Did leave some `FIXME` comments regarding future implementation decisions and some things that might be incorrectly implemented.
r? `@oli-obk`
Loading the fallback bundle in compilation sessions that won't go on to
emit any errors unnecessarily degrades compile time performance, so
lazily create the Fluent bundle when it is first required.
Signed-off-by: David Wood <david.wood@huawei.com>
fix unnecessary_to_owned about msrv
This PR fixes ``[`unnecessary_owned`]``.
## What
```rust
# sample code
fn _msrv_1_35() {
#![clippy::msrv = "1.35"]
let _ = &["x"][..].to_vec().into_iter();
}
fn _msrv_1_36() {
#![clippy::msrv = "1.36"]
let _ = &["x"][..].to_vec().into_iter();
}
```
If we will check this code using clippy, ``[`unnecessary_owned`]`` will modify the code as follows.
```rust
error: unnecessary use of `to_vec`
--> $DIR/unnecessary_to_owned.rs:219:14
|
LL | let _ = &["x"][..].to_vec().into_iter();
| ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ help: use: `["x"][..].iter().copied()`
error: unnecessary use of `to_vec`
--> $DIR/unnecessary_to_owned.rs:224:14
|
LL | let _ = &["x"][..].to_vec().into_iter();
| ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ help: use: `["x"][..].iter().copied()`
```
This is incorrect. Because `Iterator::copied` was estabilished in 1.36.
## Why
This bug was caused by not separating "copied" and "clone" by reference to msrv.
89ee6aa6e3/clippy_lints/src/methods/unnecessary_to_owned.rs (L195)
So, I added a conditional branch and described the corresponding test.
Thank you in advance.
changelog: fix wrong suggestions about msrv in [`unnecessary_to_owned`]
r! `@giraffate`
Don't lint `manual_non_exhaustive` when the enum variant is used
fixes#5714
changelog: Don't lint `manual_non_exhaustive` when the enum variant is used
Do not trigger ``[`rest_pat_in_fully_bound_structs`]`` on `#[non_exhaustive]` structs
fixes#8029
Just adds an additional check to ensure that the`ty::VariantDef` is not marked as `#[non_exhaustive]`.
changelog: Do not apply ``[`rest_pat_in_fully_bound_structs`]`` on structs marked as non exhaustive.
Prevent infinite (exponential) recursion in only_used_in_recursion
This simplifies the visitor code a bit and prevents checking expressions
multiple times. I still think this lint should be removed for now,
because its code isn't really tested.
Fixes#8689
**NOTE:** Before merging this, we should talk about removing and revisiting this lint. See my comment in #8689
changelog: prevent infinite recursion in [`only_used_in_recursion`]
This simplifies the visitor code a bit and prevents checking expressions
multiple times. I still think this lint should be removed for now,
because its code isn't really tested.
adding condition for map_clone message
This PR fixes the message about `map_clone`.
if msrv >= 1.36, the message is correct.
```bash
$ cat main.rs
fn main() {
let x: Vec<&i32> = vec![&1, &2];
let y: Vec<_> = x.iter().map(|i| *i).collect();
println!("{:?}", y);
}
$ cargo clippy
warning: you are using an explicit closure for copying elements
--> main.rs:3:20
|
3 | let y: Vec<_> = x.iter().map(|i| *i).collect();
| ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ help: consider calling the dedicated `copied` method: `x.iter().copied()`
|
= note: `#[warn(clippy::map_clone)]` on by default
= help: for further information visit https://rust-lang.github.io/rust-clippy/master/index.html#map_clone
warning: `test` (build script) generated 1 warning
warning: `test` (bin "test") generated 1 warning (1 duplicate)
Finished dev [unoptimized + debuginfo] target(s) in 0.00s
```
but, if msrv < 1.36, the suggestion is `cloned`, but the message is `copying`.
```bash
$ cat clippy.toml
msrv = "1.35"
$ cargo clippy
warning: you are using an explicit closure for copying elements
--> main.rs:3:20
|
3 | let y: Vec<_> = x.iter().map(|i| *i).collect();
| ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ help: consider calling the dedicated `cloned` method: `x.iter().cloned()`
```
I think the separation of messages will make it more user-friendly.
thank you in advance.
changelog: Fixed a message in map_clone.
New lint `is_digit_ascii_radix`
Closes#6399
changelog: Added [`is_digit_ascii_radix`]: recommend `is_ascii_digit()` or `is_ascii_hexdigit()` in place of `is_digit(10)` and `is_digit(16)`
Fix subtraction overflow in `cast_possible_truncation`
changelog: Fix false negative due to subtraction overflow in `cast_possible_truncation`
I *think* a false negative is the worst that can happen from this
Don't lint various match lints when expanded by a proc-macro
fixes#4952
As always for proc-macro output this is a hack-job of a fix. It would be really nice if more proc-macro authors would set spans correctly.
changelog: Don't lint various lints on proc-macro output.
Remove overlap between `manual_split_once` and `needless_splitn`
changelog: Remove overlap between [`manual_split_once`] and [`needless_splitn`]. Fixes some incorrect `rsplitn` suggestions for [`manual_split_once`]
Things that can trigger `needless_splitn` no longer trigger `manual_split_once`, e.g.
```rust
s.[r]splitn(2, '=').next();
s.[r]splitn(2, '=').nth(0);
s.[r]splitn(3, '=').next_tuple();
```
Fixes some suggestions:
```rust
let s = "should not match";
s.rsplitn(2, '.').nth(1);
// old -> Some("should not match")
Some(s.rsplit_once('.').map_or(s, |x| x.0));
// new -> None
s.rsplit_once('.').map(|x| x.0);
s.rsplitn(2, '.').nth(1)?;
// old -> "should not match"
s.rsplit_once('.').map_or(s, |x| x.0);
// new -> early returns
s.rsplit_once('.')?.0;
```
Cached stable hash cleanups
r? `@nnethercote`
Add a sanity assertion in debug mode to check that the cached hashes are actually the ones we get if we compute the hash each time.
Add a new data structure that bundles all the hash-caching work to make it easier to re-use it for different interned data structures
- Create hir_crate_items query which traverses tcx.hir_crate(()).owners to return a hir::ModuleItems
- use tcx.hir_crate_items in tcx.hir().items() to return an iterator of hir::ItemId
- add par_items(impl Fn(hir::ItemId)) to traverse all items in parallel
Signed-off-by: Miguel Guarniz <mi9uel9@gmail.com>
ignore `&x | &y` in unnested_or_patterns
replacing it with `&(x | y)` is actually more characters
Fixes#6973
changelog: [`unnested_or_patterns`] ignore `&x | &y`, nesting would result in more characters
Add a lint to detect cast to unsigned for abs() and suggest unsigned_…
…abs()
changelog: Add a [`cast_abs_to_unsigned`] that checks for uses of `abs()` that are cast to the corresponding unsigned integer type and suggest to replace them with `unsigned_abs()`.
Fix `as_deref_mut` false positives in `needless_option_as_deref`
Also moves it into `methods/`
Fixes#7846Fixes#8047
changelog: [`needless_option_as_deref`]: No longer lints for `as_deref_mut` on Options that cannot be moved
supersedes #8064
fix FP in lint `[needless_match]`
fixes: #8542fixes: #8551fixes: #8595fixes: #8599
---
changelog: check for more complex custom type, and ignore type coercion in [`needless_match`]
Suggest from_utf8_unchecked in const contexts
Unfortunately I couldn't figure out how to check whether a given expression is in an `unsafe` context or not, so I just unconditionally emit the wrapping `unsafe {}` block in the suggestion. If there is an easy way to get it to work better then I would love to hear it.
changelog: Suggest `from_utf8_unchecked` instead of `from_utf8` in const contexts for ``[`transmute_bytes_to_str`]``
refs: #8379
Fix unnecessary_cast suggestion for type aliasses
Fix#6923. The [`unnecessary_cast`] lint now will skip casting to non-primitive type.
changelog: fix lint [`unnecessary_cast `]
`indexing_slicing` should not fire if a valid array index comes from a constant function that is evaluated at compile-time
fix#8348
changelog: [`indexing_slicing`] fewer false positives in `const` contexts and with `const` indices
Add an option for enabling and disabling Fluent's directionality
isolation markers in output. Disabled by default as these can render in
some terminals and applications.
Signed-off-by: David Wood <david.wood@huawei.com>
Extend loading of Fluent bundles so that bundles can be loaded from the
sysroot based on the language requested by the user, or using a nightly
flag.
Sysroot bundles are loaded from `$sysroot/share/locale/$locale/*.ftl`.
Signed-off-by: David Wood <david.wood@huawei.com>
This commit updates the signatures of all diagnostic functions to accept
types that can be converted into a `DiagnosticMessage`. This enables
existing diagnostic calls to continue to work as before and Fluent
identifiers to be provided. The `SessionDiagnostic` derive just
generates normal diagnostic calls, so these APIs had to be modified to
accept Fluent identifiers.
In addition, loading of the "fallback" Fluent bundle, which contains the
built-in English messages, has been implemented.
Each diagnostic now has "arguments" which correspond to variables in the
Fluent messages (necessary to render a Fluent message) but no API for
adding arguments has been added yet. Therefore, diagnostics (that do not
require interpolation) can be converted to use Fluent identifiers and
will be output as before.
`MultiSpan` contains labels, which are more complicated with the
introduction of diagnostic translation and will use types from
`rustc_errors` - however, `rustc_errors` depends on `rustc_span` so
`rustc_span` cannot use types like `DiagnosticMessage` without
dependency cycles. Introduce a new `rustc_error_messages` crate that can
contain `DiagnosticMessage` and `MultiSpan`.
Signed-off-by: David Wood <david.wood@huawei.com>
Rework `undocumented_unsafe_blocks`
fixes: #8264fixes: #8449
One thing came up while working on this. Currently comments on the same line are supported like so:
```rust
/* SAFETY: reason */ unsafe {}
```
Is this worth supporting at all? Anything other than a couple of words doesn't really fit well.
edit: [zulip topic](https://rust-lang.zulipchat.com/#narrow/stream/257328-clippy/topic/.60undocumented_unsafe_blocks.60.20same.20line.20comment)
changelog: Don't lint `undocumented_unsafe_blocks` when the unsafe block comes from a proc-macro.
changelog: Don't lint `undocumented_unsafe_blocks` when the preceding line has a safety comment and the unsafe block is a sub-expression.
add `empty_structs_with_brackets`
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Closes#8591
I'm already sorry for the massive diff 😅
changelog: New lint [`empty_structs_with_brackets`]
Handle relative paths in module_files lints
The problem being that when clippy is run in the project's directory `lp` would be a relative path, this wasn't caught by the tests as there `lp` is an absolute path. Being a relative path it did not start with `trim_src_path` and so was ignored
Also allowed the removal of some `.to_os_string`/`.to_owned`s
changelog: Fixes [`self_named_module_files`] and [`mod_module_files`] not linting
Fixes#8123, cc `@DevinR528`
single_element_loop: handle arrays for Edition2021
changelog: [`single_element_loop`] handle arrays in Edition 2021, handle `.iter_mut()` and `.into_iter()`, and wrap in parens if necessary
Rollup of 6 pull requests
Successful merges:
- #93901 (Stabilize native library modifier syntax and the `whole-archive` modifier specifically)
- #94806 (Fix `cargo run tidy`)
- #94869 (Add the generic_associated_types_extended feature)
- #95011 (async: Give predictable name to binding generated from .await expressions.)
- #95251 (Reduce max hash in raw strings from u16 to u8)
- #95298 (Fix double drop of allocator in IntoIter impl of Vec)
Failed merges:
r? `@ghost`
`@rustbot` modify labels: rollup
Remember mutability in `DefKind::Static`.
This allows to compute the `BodyOwnerKind` from `DefKind` only, and
removes a direct dependency of some MIR queries onto HIR.
As a side effect, it also simplifies metadata, since we don't need 4
flavours of `EntryKind::*Static` any more.
Add `crate_in_macro_def` lint
This PR adds a lint to check for `crate` as opposed to `$crate` used in a macro definition.
I think this can close#4798. That issue focused on the case where the macro author "imports something into said macro."
But I think use of `crate` is likely to be a bug whether it appears in a `use` statement or not. There could be some use case I am failing to see, though. (cc: `@nilscript` `@flip1995)`
changelog: `crate_in_macro_def`
This allows to compute the `BodyOwnerKind` from `DefKind` only, and
removes a direct dependency of some MIR queries onto HIR.
As a side effect, it also simplifies metadata, since we don't need 4
flavours of `EntryKind::*Static` any more.
More `transmute_undefined_repr` fixes
fixes: #8498fixes: #8501fixes: #8503
changelog: Allow `transumte_undefined_repr` between fat pointers and `(usize, usize)`
changelog: Allow `transumte_undefined_repr` when one side is a union
changelog: Fix `transumte_undefined_repr` on tuples with one non-zero-sized type.
new lint: `only_used_in_recursion`
changed:
- added `only_used_in_recursion`.
- fixed code that variables are only used in recursion.
- this would not lint when `unused_variable`
This fixes: #8390
-----
changelog: add lint [`only_used_in_recursion`]
This commit makes `AdtDef` use `Interned`. Much the commit is tedious
changes to introduce getter functions. The interesting changes are in
`compiler/rustc_middle/src/ty/adt.rs`.
Rollup of 4 pull requests
Successful merges:
- #93350 (libunwind: readd link attrs to _Unwind_Backtrace)
- #93827 (Stabilize const_fn_fn_ptr_basics, const_fn_trait_bound, and const_impl_trait)
- #94696 (Remove whitespaces and use CSS to align line numbers to the right instead)
- #94700 (rustdoc: Update minifier version)
Failed merges:
r? `@ghost`
`@rustbot` modify labels: rollup
`Layout` is another type that is sometimes interned, sometimes not, and
we always use references to refer to it so we can't take any advantage
of the uniqueness properties for hashing or equality checks.
This commit renames `Layout` as `LayoutS`, and then introduces a new
`Layout` that is a newtype around an `Interned<LayoutS>`. It also
interns more layouts than before. Previously layouts within layouts
(via the `variants` field) were never interned, but now they are. Hence
the lifetime on the new `Layout` type.
Unlike other interned types, these ones are in `rustc_target` instead of
`rustc_middle`. This reflects the existing structure of the code, which
does layout-specific stuff in `rustc_target` while `TyAndLayout` is
generic over the `Ty`, allowing the type-specific stuff to occur in
`rustc_middle`.
The commit also adds a `HashStable` impl for `Interned`, which was
needed. It hashes the contents, unlike the `Hash` impl which hashes the
pointer.
Llint for casting between raw slice pointers with different element sizes
This lint disallows using `as` to convert from a raw pointer to a slice (e.g. `*const [i32]`, `*mut [Foo]`) to any other raw pointer to a slice if the element types have different sizes. When a raw slice pointer is cast, the data pointer and count metadata are preserved. This means that when the size of the inner slice's element type changes, the total number of bytes pointed to by the count changes. For example a `*const [i32]` with length 4 (four `i32` elements) is cast `as *const [u8]` the resulting pointer points to four `u8` elements at the same address, losing most of the data. When the size *increases* the resulting pointer will point to *more* data, and accessing that data will be UB.
On its own, *producing* the pointer isn't actually a problem, but because any use of the pointer as a slice will either produce surprising behavior or cause UB I believe this is a correctness lint. If the pointer is not intended to be used as a slice, the user should instead use any of a number of methods to produce just a data pointer including an `as` cast to a thin pointer (e.g. `p as *const i32`) or if the pointer is being created from a slice, the `as_ptr` method on slices. Detecting the intended use of the pointer is outside the scope of this lint, but I believe this lint will also lead users to realize that a slice pointer is only for slices.
There is an exception to this lint when either of the slice element types are zero sized (e.g `*mut [()]`). The total number of bytes pointed to by the slice with a zero sized element is zero. In that case preserving the length metadata is likely intended as a workaround to get the length metadata of a slice pointer though a zero sized slice.
The lint does not forbid casting pointers to slices with the *same* element size as the cast was likely intended to reinterpret the data in the slice as some equivalently sized data and the resulting pointer will behave as intended.
---
changelog: Added ``[`cast_slice_different_sizes`]``, a lint that disallows using `as`-casts to convert between raw pointers to slices when the elements have different sizes.
Add lint to detect `allow` attributes without reason
I was considering putting this lint into the pedantic group. However, that would result in countless warnings for existing projects. Having it in restriction also seems good to me 🙃 (And now I need sleep 💤 )
---
changelog: New lint [`allow_lint_without_reason`] (Requires the `lint_reasons` feature)
Closes: rust-lang/rust-clippy#8502
Use `.into_iter()` rather than `.drain(..)`
Replacing `.drain(..)` with `.into_iter()` makes my project's binary size smaller.
Fixes#1908
Applicability of this suggestion is `MaybeIncorrect` rather than `MachineApplicable` due to the complexity of "checking otherwise usage" X-|
changelog: Add new lint [`iter_with_drain`]
There's still open discussion if this lint is ready to be enabled by
default. We want to give us more time to figure this out and prevent
this lint from getting to stable as an enabled-by-default lint.
Add `unnecessary_find_map` lint
This PR adds an `unnecessary_find_map` lint. It is essentially just a minor enhancement of `unnecessary_filter_map`.
Closes#8467
changelog: New lint `unnecessary_find_map`
new lint: `missing-spin-loop`
This fixes#7809. I went with the shorter name because the function is called `std::hint::spin_loop`. It doesn't yet detect `while let` loops. I left that for a follow-up PR.
---
changelog: new lint: [`missing_spin_loop`]
Transmute_undefined_repr to nursery again
This PR reinstates #8418, which was reverted in #8425 (incorrectly I think).
I don't want to start a revert war over this but I feel very strongly that this lint is not in a state that would be a net benefit to users of clippy. In its current form, making this an enabled-by-default `correctness` lint with authoritative-sounding proclamations of undefined behavior does more harm than the benefit of the true positive cases.
I can file a bunch more examples of false positives but I don't want to give the author of this lint the impression that it is ready to graduate from `nursery` as soon as I've exhausted the amount of time I am willing to spend revising this lint.
Instead I would recommend that the author of the lint try running it on some reputable codebases containing transmutes. Everywhere that the lint triggers please consider critically whether it should be triggering. For cases that you think are true positives, please raise a few of them with the crate authors (in a PR or issue) to better understand their perspective if they think the transmute is correct.
---
*Please write a short comment explaining your change (or "none" for internal only changes)*
changelog: Re-remove [`transmute_undefined_repr`] from default set of enabled lints
This internal lint checks if the `extract_msrv_attrs!` macro is used if
a lint has a MSRV. If not, it suggests to add this attribute to the lint
pass implementation.
fix false positives of large_enum_variant
fixes: #8321
The size of enums containing generic type was calculated to be 0.
I changed [large_enum_variant] so that such enums are not linted.
changelog: none
rustc_errors: let `DiagnosticBuilder::emit` return a "guarantee of emission".
That is, `DiagnosticBuilder` is now generic over the return type of `.emit()`, so we'll now have:
* `DiagnosticBuilder<ErrorReported>` for error (incl. fatal/bug) diagnostics
* can only be created via a `const L: Level`-generic constructor, that limits allowed variants via a `where` clause, so not even `rustc_errors` can accidentally bypass this limitation
* asserts `diagnostic.is_error()` on emission, just in case the construction restriction was bypassed (e.g. by replacing the whole `Diagnostic` inside `DiagnosticBuilder`)
* `.emit()` returns `ErrorReported`, as a "proof" token that `.emit()` was called
(though note that this isn't a real guarantee until after completing the work on
#69426)
* `DiagnosticBuilder<()>` for everything else (warnings, notes, etc.)
* can also be obtained from other `DiagnosticBuilder`s by calling `.forget_guarantee()`
This PR is a companion to other ongoing work, namely:
* #69426
and it's ongoing implementation:
#93222
the API changes in this PR are needed to get statically-checked "only errors produce `ErrorReported` from `.emit()`", but doesn't itself provide any really strong guarantees without those other `ErrorReported` changes
* #93244
would make the choices of API changes (esp. naming) in this PR fit better overall
In order to be able to let `.emit()` return anything trustable, several changes had to be made:
* `Diagnostic`'s `level` field is now private to `rustc_errors`, to disallow arbitrary "downgrade"s from "some kind of error" to "warning" (or anything else that doesn't cause compilation to fail)
* it's still possible to replace the whole `Diagnostic` inside the `DiagnosticBuilder`, sadly, that's harder to fix, but it's unlikely enough that we can paper over it with asserts on `.emit()`
* `.cancel()` now consumes `DiagnosticBuilder`, preventing `.emit()` calls on a cancelled diagnostic
* it's also now done internally, through `DiagnosticBuilder`-private state, instead of having a `Level::Cancelled` variant that can be read (or worse, written) by the user
* this removes a hazard of calling `.cancel()` on an error then continuing to attach details to it, and even expect to be able to `.emit()` it
* warnings were switched to *only* `can_emit_warnings` on emission (instead of pre-cancelling early)
* `struct_dummy` was removed (as it relied on a pre-`Cancelled` `Diagnostic`)
* since `.emit()` doesn't consume the `DiagnosticBuilder` <sub>(I tried and gave up, it's much more work than this PR)</sub>,
we have to make `.emit()` idempotent wrt the guarantees it returns
* thankfully, `err.emit(); err.emit();` can return `ErrorReported` both times, as the second `.emit()` call has no side-effects *only* because the first one did do the appropriate emission
* `&mut Diagnostic` is now used in a lot of function signatures, which used to take `&mut DiagnosticBuilder` (in the interest of not having to make those functions generic)
* the APIs were already mostly identical, allowing for low-effort porting to this new setup
* only some of the suggestion methods needed some rework, to have the extra `DiagnosticBuilder` functionality on the `Diagnostic` methods themselves (that change is also present in #93259)
* `.emit()`/`.cancel()` aren't available, but IMO calling them from an "error decorator/annotator" function isn't a good practice, and can lead to strange behavior (from the caller's perspective)
* `.downgrade_to_delayed_bug()` was added, letting you convert any `.is_error()` diagnostic into a `delay_span_bug` one (which works because in both cases the guarantees available are the same)
This PR should ideally be reviewed commit-by-commit, since there is a lot of fallout in each.
r? `@estebank` cc `@Manishearth` `@nikomatsakis` `@mark-i-m`
better ObligationCause for normalization errors in `can_type_implement_copy`
Some logic is needed so we can point to the field when given totally nonsense types like `struct Foo(<u32 as Iterator>::Item);`
Fixes#93687
Don't lint `match` expressions with `cfg`ed arms
Somehow there are no open issues related to this for any of the affected lints. At least none that I could fine from a quick search.
changelog: Don't lint `match` expressions with `cfg`ed arms in many cases
Fix `await_holding_lock` not linting `parking_lot` Mutex/RwLock
This adds tests for `RwLock` and `parking_lot::{Mutex, RwLock}`, which were added before in 2dc8c083f5, but never tested in UI tests. I noticed this while reading [fasterthanli.me](https://fasterthanli.me/articles/a-rust-match-made-in-hell) latest blog post, complaining that Clippy doesn't catch this for `parking_lot`. (Too many people read his blog, he's too powerful)
Some more things:
- Adds a test for #6446
- Improves the lint message
changelog: [`await_holding_lock`]: Now also lints for `parking_lot::{Mutex, RwLock}`
Even though the FP for that the lints were moved to pedantic isn't fixed
yet, running the lintcheck tool over the most popular 279 crates didn't
trigger this lint once. I would say that this lint is valuable enough,
despite the known FP, to be warn-by-default. Especially since a pretty
nice workaround exists.
Improve `redundant_slicing` lint
fixes#7972fixes#7257
This can supersede #7976
changelog: Fix suggestion for `redundant_slicing` when re-borrowing for a method call
changelog: New lint `deref_as_slicing`
Don't lint `needless_borrow` in method receiver positions
fixes#8408fixes#8407fixes#8391fixes#8367fixes#8380
This is a temporary fix for `needless_borrow`. The proper fix is included in #8355.
This should probably be merged into rustc before beta branches on Friday. This issue has been reported six or seven times in the past couple of weeks.
changelog: Fix various issues with `needless_borrow` n´. Note to changelog writer: those issues might have been introduced in this release cycle, so this might not matter in the changelog.
Don't lint Default::default if it is the udpate syntax base
changelog: Don't lint `Default::default` it is part of the update syntax
Current clippy warns about this:
```
warning: calling `Foo::default()` is more clear than this expression
--> src/main.rs:12:11
|
12 | ..Default::default()
| ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ help: try: `Foo::default()`
|
```
With these changes, it will not lint that particular expression anymore.
Correctly mark the span of captured arguments in `format_args!()`
It should not include the braces, or misspelling suggestions will be wrong.
Fixes#94010.
Move transmute_undefined_repr back to nursery
There's still open discussion if this lint is ready to be enabled by
default. We want to give us more time to figure this out and prevent
this lint from getting to stable as an enabled-by-default lint.
cc https://github.com/rust-lang/rust-clippy/pull/8432
r? `@Manishearth` `@dtolnay`
I think this is the way to go here. We can re-enable this lint with the next sync, if we should decide to do so. But I would hold of for this release.
We have until Friday (beta branching) to decide if we want to merge this.
There's still open discussion if this lint is ready to be enabled by
default. We want to give us more time to figure this out and prevent
this lint from getting to stable as an enabled-by-default lint.
Specifically, rename the `Const` struct as `ConstS` and re-introduce `Const` as
this:
```
pub struct Const<'tcx>(&'tcx Interned<ConstS>);
```
This now matches `Ty` and `Predicate` more closely, including using
pointer-based `eq` and `hash`.
Notable changes:
- `mk_const` now takes a `ConstS`.
- `Const` was copy, despite being 48 bytes. Now `ConstS` is not, so need a
we need separate arena for it, because we can't use the `Dropless` one any
more.
- Many `&'tcx Const<'tcx>`/`&Const<'tcx>` to `Const<'tcx>` changes
- Many `ct.ty` to `ct.ty()` and `ct.val` to `ct.val()` changes.
- Lots of tedious sigil fiddling.
Specifically, change `Region` from this:
```
pub type Region<'tcx> = &'tcx RegionKind;
```
to this:
```
pub struct Region<'tcx>(&'tcx Interned<RegionKind>);
```
This now matches `Ty` and `Predicate` more closely.
Things to note
- Regions have always been interned, but we haven't been using pointer-based
`Eq` and `Hash`. This is now happening.
- I chose to impl `Deref` for `Region` because it makes pattern matching a lot
nicer, and `Region` can be viewed as just a smart wrapper for `RegionKind`.
- Various methods are moved from `RegionKind` to `Region`.
- There is a lot of tedious sigil changes.
- A couple of types like `HighlightBuilder`, `RegionHighlightMode` now have a
`'tcx` lifetime because they hold a `Ty<'tcx>`, so they can call `mk_region`.
- A couple of test outputs change slightly, I'm not sure why, but the new
outputs are a little better.
Specifically, change `Ty` from this:
```
pub type Ty<'tcx> = &'tcx TyS<'tcx>;
```
to this
```
pub struct Ty<'tcx>(Interned<'tcx, TyS<'tcx>>);
```
There are two benefits to this.
- It's now a first class type, so we can define methods on it. This
means we can move a lot of methods away from `TyS`, leaving `TyS` as a
barely-used type, which is appropriate given that it's not meant to
be used directly.
- The uniqueness requirement is now explicit, via the `Interned` type.
E.g. the pointer-based `Eq` and `Hash` comes from `Interned`, rather
than via `TyS`, which wasn't obvious at all.
Much of this commit is boring churn. The interesting changes are in
these files:
- compiler/rustc_middle/src/arena.rs
- compiler/rustc_middle/src/mir/visit.rs
- compiler/rustc_middle/src/ty/context.rs
- compiler/rustc_middle/src/ty/mod.rs
Specifically:
- Most mentions of `TyS` are removed. It's very much a dumb struct now;
`Ty` has all the smarts.
- `TyS` now has `crate` visibility instead of `pub`.
- `TyS::make_for_test` is removed in favour of the static `BOOL_TY`,
which just works better with the new structure.
- The `Eq`/`Ord`/`Hash` impls are removed from `TyS`. `Interned`s impls
of `Eq`/`Hash` now suffice. `Ord` is now partly on `Interned`
(pointer-based, for the `Equal` case) and partly on `TyS`
(contents-based, for the other cases).
- There are many tedious sigil adjustments, i.e. adding or removing `*`
or `&`. They seem to be unavoidable.
The to_string_in_display lint is renamed to recursive_format_impl
A check is added for the use of self formatted with Display or Debug
inside any format string in the same impl
The to_string_in_display check is kept as is - like in the
format_in_format_args lint
For now only Display and Debug are checked
This could also be extended to other Format traits (Binary, etc.)
Fix `transmute_undefined_repr` with single field `#[repr(C)]` structs
Fixes: #8417
The description has also been made more precise.
changelog: Fix `transmute_undefined_repr` with single field `#[repr(C)]` structs
changelog: Move `transmute_undefined_repr` back to `correctness`
Remove defaultness from ImplItem.
This information is not really used anywhere, except HIR pretty-printing. This makes ImplItem and TraitItem more similar.
Factor out several utils, add `path_def_id`
changelog: none
This is generally an effort to reduce the total number of utils. `path_def_id` is added which I believe is more "cross-cutting" and also complements `path_to_local`. Best reviewed one commit at a time.
Added:
* `path_def_id`
* `path_res`
Removed:
* `is_qpath_def_path`
* `match_any_diagnostic_items`
* `expr_path_res`
* `single_segment_path`
* `differing_macro_contexts`
* `is_ty_param_lang_item`
* `is_ty_param_diagnostic_item`
* `get_qpath_generics`
Renamed:
* `path_to_res` to `def_path_res`
* `get_qpath_generic_tys` to `qpath_generic_tys`
CC `@Jarcho` since this relates to some of your work and you may have input.
warn if we find multiple clippy configs
Fixes#8323
---
*Please write a short comment explaining your change (or "none" for internal only changes)*
changelog: warn if we find multiple clippy configs
Add lint `transmute_undefined_repr`
Partially implements #3999 and #546
This doesn't consider `enum`s at all right now as those are going to be a pain to deal with. This also allows `#[repr(Rust)]` structs with only one non-zero sized fields. I think those are technically undefined when transmuted.
changelog: Add lint `transmute_undefined_repr`
Add `explicit_write` suggestions for `write!`s with format args
changelog: Add [`explicit_write`] suggestions for `write!`s with format args
Fixes#4542
```rust
writeln!(std::io::stderr(), "macro arg {}", one!()).unwrap();
```
Now suggests:
```
error: use of `writeln!(stderr(), ...).unwrap()`
--> $DIR/explicit_write.rs:36:9
|
LL | writeln!(std::io::stderr(), "macro arg {}", one!()).unwrap();
| ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ help: try this: `eprintln!("macro arg {}", one!())`
```
---------
r? `@camsteffen` (again, sorry 😛) for the `FormatArgsExpn` change
Before this change `inputs_span` returned a span pointing to just `1` in
```rust
macro_rules! one {
() => { 1 };
}
`writeln!(std::io::stderr(), "macro arg {}", one!()).unwrap();`
```
And the `source_callsite` of that span didn't include the format string, it was just `one!()`
make unwrap_used also trigger on .get().unwrap()
fixes#8124
changelog: make the [unwrap_used] lint trigger for code of the form such as `.get(i).unwrap()` and `.get_mut(i).unwrap()`
[explicit_counter_loop] suggests `.into_iter()`, despite that triggering [into_iter_on_ref] in some cases
I have modified `fn make_iterator_snippet` in clippy_lints/src/loops/utils.rs ,so this change has some little influence on another lint [manual_flatten] .
fixes#8155
---
changelog: Fix that [`explicit_counter_loop`] suggests `into_iter()` despite that triggering [`into_iter_on_ref`] in some cases
Create `core::fmt::ArgumentV1` with generics instead of fn pointer
Split from (and prerequisite of) #90488, as this seems to have perf implication.
`@rustbot` label: +T-libs
single_match: Don't lint non-exhaustive matches; support tuples
`single_match` lint:
* Don't lint exhaustive enum patterns without a wild.
Rationale: The definition of the enum could be changed, so the user can get non-exhaustive match after applying the suggested lint (see https://github.com/rust-lang/rust-clippy/issues/8282#issuecomment-1013566068 for context).
* Lint `match` constructions with tuples (as suggested at https://github.com/rust-lang/rust-clippy/issues/8282#issuecomment-1015621148)
Closes#8282
---
changelog: [`single_match`]: Don't lint exhaustive enum patterns without a wild.
changelog: [`single_match`]: Lint `match` constructions with tuples
Fix underflow in `manual_split_once` lint
Hi, a friend found clippy started crashing on a suspiciously large allocation of `u64::MAX` memory on their code.
The mostly minimized repro is:
```rust
fn _f01(title: &str) -> Option<()> {
let _ = title[1..].splitn(2, '[').next()?;
Some(())
}
```
The underflow happens in this case on line 57 of the patch but I've changed the other substraction to saturating as well since it could potentially cause the same issue.
I'm not sure where to put a regression test, or if it's even worth for such a thing.
Aside, has it been considered before to build clippy with overflow checks enabled?
changelog: fix ICE of underflow in `manual_split_once` lint
Store a `Symbol` instead of an `Ident` in `AssocItem`
This is the same idea as #92533, but for `AssocItem` instead
of `VariantDef`/`FieldDef`.
With this change, we no longer have any uses of
`#[stable_hasher(project(...))]`
Fix `needless_borrow` causing mutable borrows to be moved
fixes#8191
changelog: Fix `needless_borrow` causing mutable borrows to be moved
changelog: Rename `ref_in_deref` to `needless_borrow`
changelog: Suggest removing the borrow on method call receivers in `needless_borrow`
Check usages in `ptr_arg`
fixes#214fixes#1981fixes#3381fixes#6406fixes#6964
This does not take into account the return type of the function currently, so `(&Vec<_>) -> &Vec<_>` functions may still be false positives.
The name given for the type also has to match the real type name, so `type Foo = Vec<u32>` won't trigger the lint, but `type Vec = Vec<u32>` will. I'm not sure if this is the best way to handle this, or if a note about the actual type should be added instead.
changelog: Check if the argument is used in a way which requires the original type in `ptr_arg`
changelog: Lint mutable references in `ptr_arg`
This commit changes the behavior of `single_match` lint.
After that, we won't lint non-exhaustive matches like this:
```rust
match Some(v) {
Some(a) => println!("${:?}", a),
None => {},
}
```
The rationale is that, because the type of `a` could be changed, so the
user can get non-exhaustive match after applying the suggested lint (see
https://github.com/rust-lang/rust-clippy/issues/8282#issuecomment-1013566068
for context).
We also will lint `match` constructions with tuples. When we see the
tuples on the both arms, we will check them both at the same time, and
if they form exhaustive match, we could display the warning.
Closes#8282
This is the same idea as #92533, but for `AssocItem` instead
of `VariantDef`/`FieldDef`.
With this change, we no longer have any uses of
`#[stable_hasher(project(...))]`
Add `msrv` config for `map_clone`
Just a small PR to have some fun with Clippy and to clear my head a bit 😅
---
changelog: [`map_clone`]: The suggestion takes `msrv` into account
changelog: Track `msrv` attribute for `manual_bits` and `borrow_as_prt`
fixes: #8276
Out of cycle Clippy update
I want to do an out-of-cycle sync for rust-lang/rust-clippy#8295, and possibly backport this to stable together with https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/92938. If this doesn't get backported to stable, then I at least want to backport it to beta.
r? `@Manishearth`
fix op_ref false positive
fixes#7572
changelog: `op_ref` don't lint for unnecessary reference in BinOp impl if removing the reference will lead to unconditional recursion
Replace use of `ty()` on term and use it in more places. This will allow more flexibility in the
future, but slightly worried it allows items which are consts which only accept types.
ProjectionPredicate should be able to handle both associated types and consts so this adds the
first step of that. It mainly just pipes types all the way down, not entirely sure how to handle
consts, but hopefully that'll come with time.
Replace `NestedVisitorMap` with generic `NestedFilter`
This is an attempt to make the `intravisit::Visitor` API simpler and "more const" with regard to nested visiting.
With this change, `intravisit::Visitor` does not visit nested things by default, unless you specify `type NestedFilter = nested_filter::OnlyBodies` (or `All`). `nested_visit_map` returns `Self::Map` instead of `NestedVisitorMap<Self::Map>`. It panics by default (unreachable if `type NestedFilter` is omitted).
One somewhat trixty thing here is that `nested_filter::{OnlyBodies, All}` live in `rustc_middle` so that they may have `type Map = map::Map` and so that `impl Visitor`s never need to specify `type Map` - it has a default of `Self::NestedFilter::Map`.
issue #8239: Printed hint for lint or_fun_call is cropped and does no…
fixesrust-lang/rust-clippy#8239
changelog: [`or_fun_call`]: if suggestion contains more lines than MAX_SUGGESTION_HIGHLIGHT_LINES it is stripped to one line
Remove deprecated LLVM-style inline assembly
The `llvm_asm!` was deprecated back in #87590 1.56.0, with intention to remove
it once `asm!` was stabilized, which already happened in #91728 1.59.0. Now it
is time to remove `llvm_asm!` to avoid continued maintenance cost.
Closes#70173.
Closes#92794.
Closes#87612.
Closes#82065.
cc `@rust-lang/wg-inline-asm`
r? `@Amanieu`
Handle implicit named arguments in `useless_format`
fixes#8290
Ideally this would fix the macro parsing code to handle this, but this is a smaller change and easier to back port.
changelog: Handle implicit named arguments in `useless_format`
* Track the argument when used to initialize simple `let` bindings
* Check if the argument is passed to a function requiring the original type
* Use `multipart_suggestion` rather than multiple suggestions
* Check if the name given in the source code matches the name of the actual type
`manual_memcpy` fix
fixes#8160
Ideally this would work with `VecDeque`, but the current interface is unsuitable for it. At a minimum something like `range_as_slices` would be needed.
changelog: Don't lint `manual_memcpy` on `VecDeque`
changelog: Suggest `copy_from_slice` for `manual_memcpy` when applicable
Improve documentation for `borrowed-box` lint
fixes#8161
Updates documentation to elaborate more on how removing Box from a function parameter can generalize the function.
changelog: none
The field is also renamed from `ident` to `name. In most cases,
we don't actually need the `Span`. A new `ident` method is added
to `VariantDef` and `FieldDef`, which constructs the full `Ident`
using `tcx.def_ident_span()`. This method is used in the cases
where we actually need an `Ident`.
This makes incremental compilation properly track changes
to the `Span`, without all of the invalidations caused by storing
a `Span` directly via an `Ident`.
Downgrade mutex_atomic to nursery
See #1516 and #4295.
There are suggestions about removing this lint from the default warned lints in both issues.
Also, [`mutex_integer`](https://rust-lang.github.io/rust-clippy/master/index.html#mutex_integer) lint that has the same problems as this lint is in `nursery` group.
changelog: Moved [`mutex_atomic`] to `nursery`
new lint: `single_char_lifetime_names`
This pull request adds a lint against single character lifetime names, as they might not divulge enough information about the purpose of the lifetime. This can make code harder to understand. I placed this in `restriction` rather than `pedantic` (as suggested in #8233) since most of the Rust ecosystem already uses single character lifetime names (to my knowledge, at least) and since single character lifetime names aren't incorrect. I'd be happy to change this upon request, however. Fixes#8233.
- [x] Followed lint naming conventions
- [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`
changelog: new lint: [`single_char_lifetime_names`]
This pull request adds a lint against single character lifetime names, as they might not divulge enough information about the purpose of the lifetime. This can make code harder to understand. I placed this in `restriction` rather than `pedantic` (as suggested in #8233) since most of the Rust ecosystem already uses single character lifetime names (to my knowledge, at least) and since single character lifetime names aren't incorrect. I'd be happy to change this upon request, however. Fixes#8233.
- [x] Followed lint naming conventions
- [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`
changelog: new lint: [`single_char_lifetime_names`]
Change `unnecessary_to_owned` `into_iter` suggestions to `MaybeIncorrect`
I am having a hard time finding a good solution for #8148, so I am wondering if is enough to just change the suggestion's applicability to `MaybeIncorrect`?
I apologize, as I realize this is a bit of a cop out.
changelog: none
Better detect when a field can be moved from in `while_let_on_iterator`
fixes#8113
changelog: Better detect when a field can be moved from in `while_let_on_iterator`
Fix `type_repetition_in_bounds`
fixes#7360fixes#8162fixes#8056
changelog: Check for full equality in `type_repetition_in_bounds` rather than just equal hashes
Remove in_macro from clippy_utils
changelog: none
Previously done in #7897 but reverted in #8170. I'd like to keep `in_macro` out of utils because if a span is from expansion in any way (desugaring or macro), we should not proceed without understanding the nature of the expansion IMO.
r? `@llogiq`
changelog: none
Sorry, this is a big one. A lot of interrelated changes and I wanted to put the new utils to use to make sure they are somewhat battle-tested. We may want to divide some of the lint-specific refactoring commits into batches for smaller reviewing tasks. I could also split into more PRs.
Introduces a bunch of new utils at `clippy_utils::macros::...`. Please read through the docs and give any feedback! I'm happy to introduce `MacroCall` and various functions to retrieve an instance. It feels like the missing puzzle piece. I'm also introducing `ExpnId` from rustc as "useful for Clippy too". `@rust-lang/clippy`
Fixes#7843 by not parsing every node of macro implementations, at least the major offenders.
I probably want to get rid of `is_expn_of` at some point.
wrong_self_convention: Match `SelfKind::No` more restrictively
The `wrong_self_convention` lint uses a `SelfKind` type to decide
whether a method has the right kind of "self" for its name, or whether
the kind of "self" it has makes its name confusable for a method in
a common trait. One possibility is `SelfKind::No`, which is supposed
to mean "No `self`".
Previously, SelfKind::No matched everything _except_ Self, including
references to Self. This patch changes it to match Self, &Self, &mut
Self, Box<Self>, and so on.
For example, this kind of method was allowed before:
```
impl S {
// Should trigger the lint, because
// "methods called `is_*` usually take `self` by reference or no `self`"
fn is_foo(&mut self) -> bool { todo!() }
}
```
But since SelfKind::No matched "&mut self", no lint was triggered
(see #8142).
With this patch, the code above now gives a lint as expected.
fixes#8142
changelog: [`wrong_self_convention`] rejects `self` references in more cases
Inspired by a discussion in rust-lang/rust-clippy#8197
---
r? `@llogiq`
changelog: none
The lint is this on nightly, therefore no changelog entry for you xD
The `wrong_self_convention` lint uses a `SelfKind` type to decide
whether a method has the right kind of "self" for its name, or whether
the kind of "self" it has makes its name confusable for a method in
a common trait. One possibility is `SelfKind::No`, which is supposed
to mean "No `self`".
Previously, SelfKind::No matched everything _except_ Self, including
references to Self. This patch changes it to match Self, &Self, &mut
Self, Box<Self>, and so on.
For example, this kind of method was allowed before:
```
impl S {
// Should trigger the lint, because
// "methods called `is_*` usually take `self` by reference or no `self`"
fn is_foo(&mut self) -> bool { todo!() }
}
```
But since SelfKind::No matched "&mut self", no lint was triggered
(see #8142).
With this patch, the code above now gives a lint as expected.
Fixes#8142
changelog: [`wrong_self_convention`] rejects `self` references in more cases
This improves the quality of the genrated output and makes it
more in line with other lint messages.
changelog: [`unused_io_amount`]: Improve help text
Clippy helpfully warns about code like this, telling you that you
probably meant "write_all":
fn say_hi<W:Write>(w: &mut W) {
w.write(b"hello").unwrap();
}
This patch attempts to extend the lint so it also covers this
case:
async fn say_hi<W:AsyncWrite>(w: &mut W) {
w.write(b"hello").await.unwrap();
}
(I've run into this second case several times in my own programming,
and so have my coworkers, so unless we're especially accident-prone
in this area, it's probably worth addressing?)
This patch covers the Async{Read,Write}Ext traits in futures-rs,
and in tokio, since both are quite widely used.
changelog: [`unused_io_amount`] now supports AsyncReadExt and AsyncWriteExt.
Limit the ``[`identity_op`]`` lint to integral operands.
changelog: limit ``[`identity_op`]`` to integral operands
In the ``[`identity_op`]`` lint, if the operands are non-integers, then the lint is likely
wrong.
Fixed issues with to_radians and to_degrees lints
fixes#7651
I fixed the original problem as described in the issue, but the bug remains for complex expressions (the commented out TC I added is an example). I would also love some feedback on how to cleanup my code and reduce duplication. I hope it's not a problem that the issue has been claimed by someone else - that was over two months ago.
changelog: ``[`suboptimal_flops`]`` no longer proposes broken code with `to_radians` and `to_degrees`
Fix `enum_variants` FP on prefixes that are not camel-case
closes#8090
Fix FP on `enum_variants` when prefixes are only a substring of a camel-case word. Also adds some util helpers on `str_utils` to help parsing camel-case strings.
This changes how the lint behaves:
1. previously if the Prefix is only a length of 1, it's going to get ignored, i.e. these were previously ignored and now is warned
```rust
enum Foo {
cFoo,
cBar,
cBaz,
}
enum Something {
CCall,
CCreate,
CCryogenize,
}
```
2. non-ascii characters that doesn't have casing will not be split,
```rust
enum NonCaps {
PrefixXXX,
PrefixTea,
PrefixCake,
}
```
will be considered as `PrefixXXX`, `Prefix`, `Prefix`, so this won't lint as opposed to fired previously.
changelog: [`enum_variant_names`] Fix FP when first prefix are only a substring of a camel-case word.
---
(Edited by `@xFrednet` removed some non ascii characters)
closes#8177
previously, `needless_return` suggests an empty block `{}` to replace void `return` on match arms, this PR improve the suggestion by suggesting a unit instead.
changelog: `needless_return` suggests `()` instead of `{}` on match arms
`enum_variant_names` will consider characters with no case to be a part
of prefixes/suffixes substring that are compared. This means `Foo1` and
`Foo2` has different prefixes (`Foo1` and `Foo2` prefix respeectively).
This applies to all non-ascii characters with no casing.
fix an ICE on unwrapping a None
This very likely fixes#8166 though I wasn't able to meaningfully reduce a test case. This line is the only call to `unwrap` within that function, which was the one in the stack trace that triggered the ICE, so I think we'll be OK.
`@hackmad` can you pull and build this branch and check if it indeed fixes your problem?
---
changelog: Fixed ICE in [`unnecessary_cast`]
Fix `SAFETY` comment tag casing in undocumented_unsafe_blocks
This changes the lint introduced in #7748 to suggest adding a `SAFETY` comment instead of a `Safety` comment.
Searching for `// Safety:` in rust-lang/rust yields 67 results while `// SAFETY:` yields 1072.
I think it's safe to say that this comment tag is written in upper case, just like `TODO`, `FIXME` and so on are. As such I would expect this lint to follow the official convention as well.
Note that I intentionally introduced some casing diversity in `tests/ui/undocumented_unsafe_blocks.rs` to test more cases than just `Safety:`.
changelog: Capitalize `SAFETY` comment in [`undocumented_unsafe_blocks`]
Don't emit RETURN_SELF_NOT_MUST_USE lint if `Self` already is marked as `#[must_use]`
New bug discovered with this lint. Hopefully, this is the last one.
---
changelog: none
Remove `SymbolStr`
This was originally proposed in https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/74554#discussion_r466203544. As well as removing the icky `SymbolStr` type, it allows the removal of a lot of `&` and `*` occurrences.
Best reviewed one commit at a time.
r? `@oli-obk`
Ensure that RETURN_SELF_NOT_MUST_USE is not emitted if the method already has `#[must_use]`
Fixes https://github.com/rust-lang/rust-clippy/issues/8140.
---
Edit:
changelog: none
(The lint is not in beta yet, this should therefore not be included inside the changelog :) )
Implement let-else type annotations natively
Tracking issue: #87335Fixes#89688, fixes#89807, edit: fixes #89960 as well
As explained in https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/89688#issuecomment-940405082, the previous desugaring moved the let-else scrutinee into a dummy variable, which meant if you wanted to refer to it again in the else block, it had moved.
This introduces a new hir type, ~~`hir::LetExpr`~~ `hir::Let`, which takes over all the fields of `hir::ExprKind::Let(...)` and adds an optional type annotation. The `hir::Let` is then treated like a `hir::Local` when type checking a function body, specifically:
* `GatherLocalsVisitor` overrides a new `Visitor::visit_let_expr` and does pretty much exactly what it does for `visit_local`, assigning a local type to the `hir::Let` ~~(they could be deduplicated but they are right next to each other, so at least we know they're the same)~~
* It reuses the code in `check_decl_local` to typecheck the `hir::Let`, simply returning 'bool' for the expression type after doing that.
* ~~`FnCtxt::check_expr_let` passes this local type in to `demand_scrutinee_type`, and then imitates check_decl_local's pattern checking~~
* ~~`demand_scrutinee_type` (the blindest change for me, please give this extra scrutiny) uses this local type instead of of creating a new one~~
* ~~Just realised the `check_expr_with_needs` was passing NoExpectation further down, need to pass the type there too. And apparently this Expectation API already exists.~~
Some other misc notes:
* ~~Is the clippy code supposed to be autoformatted? I tried not to give huge diffs but maybe some rustfmt changes simply haven't hit it yet.~~
* in `rustc_ast_lowering/src/block.rs`, I noticed some existing `self.alias_attrs()` calls in `LoweringContext::lower_stmts` seem to be copying attributes from the lowered locals/etc to the statements. Is that right? I'm new at this, I don't know.
By changing `as_str()` to take `&self` instead of `self`, we can just
return `&str`. We're still lying about lifetimes, but it's a smaller lie
than before, where `SymbolStr` contained a (fake) `&'static str`!
Stabilize `iter::zip`
Hello all!
As the tracking issue (#83574) for `iter::zip` completed the final commenting period without any concerns being raised, I hereby submit this stabilization PR on the issue.
As the pull request that introduced the feature (#82917) states, the `iter::zip` function is a shorter way to zip two iterators. As it's generally a quality-of-life/ergonomic improvement, it has been integrated into the codebase without any trouble, and has been
used in many places across the rust compiler and standard library since March without any issues.
For more details, I would refer to `@cuviper's` original PR, or the [function's documentation](https://doc.rust-lang.org/std/iter/fn.zip.html).
fix clippy format using `cargo fmt -p clippy_{lints,utils}`
manually revert rustfmt line truncations
rename to hir::Let in clippy
Undo the shadowing of various `expr` variables after renaming `scrutinee`
reduce destructuring of hir::Let to avoid `expr` collisions
cargo fmt -p clippy_{lints,utils}
bless new clippy::author output
Add new lint to warn when #[must_use] attribute should be used on a method
This lint is somewhat similar to https://rust-lang.github.io/rust-clippy/master/index.html#must_use_candidate but also different: it emits a warning by default and only targets methods (so not functions nor associated functions).
Someone suggested it to me after this tweet: https://twitter.com/m_ou_se/status/1466439813230477312
I think it would reduce the number of cases of API misuses quite a lot.
What do you think?
---
changelog: Added new [`return_self_not_must_use`] lint
Ignore associated types in traits when considering type complexity
changelog: Ignore associated types in traits when checking ``[`type_complexity`]`` lint.
fixes#1013
Fix bad suggestion on `option_if_let_else` when there is complex subpat
closes#7991
Prefer not warning any complex subpat in `option_if_let_else` rather than suggesting obscure suggestions.
changelog: [`option_if_let_else`] does not warn when complex subpat is present
Parenthesize blocks in `needless_bool` suggestion
Because the `if .. {}` statement already puts the condition in expression scope, contained blocks would be parsed as complete
statements, so any `&` binary expression whose left operand ended in a block would lead to a non-compiling suggestion.
We identify such expressions and add parentheses. Note that we don't make a difference between normal and unsafe blocks because the parsing problems are the same for both.
This fixes#8052.
---
changelog: none
Because the `if .. {}` statement already puts the condition in
expression scope, contained blocks would be parsed as complete
statements, so any `&` binary expression whose left operand ended in a
block would lead to a non-compiling suggestion.
This adds a visitor to identify such expressions and add parentheses.
This fixes#8052.
Consider NonNull as a pointer type
PR 1/2 for issue #8045. Add `NonNull` as a pointer class to suppress false positives like `UnsafeCell<NonNull<()>>`. However, this change is not sufficient to handle the cases shared in gtk-rs and Rug in the issue.
changelog: none
r? `@xFrednet`
Fix `any()` not taking reference in `search_is_some` lint
`find` gives reference to the item, but `any` does not, so suggestion is broken in some specific cases.
Fixes: #7392
changelog: [`search_is_some`] Fix suggestion for `any()` not taking item by reference
Cleanup: Eliminate ConstnessAnd
This is almost a behaviour-free change and purely a refactoring. "almost" because we appear to be using the wrong ParamEnv somewhere already, and this is now exposed by failing a test using the unstable `~const` feature.
We most definitely need to review all `without_const` and at some point should probably get rid of many of them by using `TraitPredicate` instead of `TraitRef`.
This is a continuation of https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/90274.
r? `@oli-obk`
cc `@spastorino` `@ecstatic-morse`
Improve `strlen_on_c_string`
fixes: #7436
changelog: lint `strlen_on_c_string` when used without a fully-qualified path
changelog: suggest removing the surrounding unsafe block for `strlen_on_c_string` when possible
Add `needless_late_init` lint
examples:
```rust
let a;
a = 1;
// to
let a = 1;
```
```rust
let b;
match 3 {
0 => b = "zero",
1 => b = "one",
_ => b = "many",
}
// to
let b = match 3 {
0 => "zero",
1 => "one",
_ => "many",
};
```
```rust
let c;
if true {
c = 1;
} else {
c = -1;
}
// to
let c = if true {
1
} else {
-1
};
```
changelog: Add [`needless_late_init`]
Add new lint `octal_escapes`
This checks for sequences in strings that would be octal character
escapes in C, but are not supported in Rust. It suggests either
to use the `\x00` escape, or an equivalent hex escape if the octal
was intended.
Fixes#7981
---
*Please write a short comment explaining your change (or "none" for internal only changes)*
changelog: Add new lint [`octal_escapes`], which checks for literals like `"\033[0m"`.
Allow `suboptimal_flops` in const functions
This PR allows `clippy::suboptimal_flops` in constant functions. The check also effects the `clippy::imprecise_flops` lint logic. However, this doesn't have any effects as all functions checked for are not const and can therefore not be found in such functions.
---
changelog: [`suboptimal_flops`]: No longer triggers in constant functions
Closes: rust-lang/rust-clippy#8004
This checks for sequences in strings that would be octal character
escapes in C, but are not supported in Rust. It suggests either
to use the `\x00` escape, or an equivalent hex escape if the octal
was intended.
Pluralize `disallowed_type` lint
This was brought up in [Zulip] and is also mentioned in the lint naming
conventions. Since this is still a nursery lint, I think there shouldn't
be any problem in renaming it.
[Zulip]: rust-lang.zulipchat.com/#narrow/stream/257328-clippy/topic/disallow_type.20vs.20disallowed-types
changelog: Rename nursery lint [`disallowed_type`] to [`disallowed_types`].
Improve `needless_borrow` lint
fixes: #5327fixes: #1726fixes: #1212
This is merging `needless_borrow` into the `dereference` pass in preparation for `explicit_auto_deref`. `explicit_auto_deref` needs to implement most of what `needless_borrow` implements in order to work.
There is a minor regression here where `let x: &str = &x.deref()` will trigger `needless_borrow` without triggering `explicit_deref_methods`. Removing the redundant borrow will cause `explicit_deref_methods` to trigger. This will be fixed when `explicit_auto_deref` is implemented.
changelog: Lint `needless_borrow` when a borrow is auto-derefed more than once
changelog: Lint `needless_borrow` in the trailing expression of a block for a match arm
This function parameter attribute was introduced in https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/44866 as an intermediate step in implementing `impl Trait`, it's not necessary or used anywhere by itself.
Don't show no_effect warning on unit structs implementing fn_once
Fixes#7792
changelog: Don't show [`no_effect`] or [`unecessary_operation`] warning for unit struct implementing FnOnce
Fix for #7889 and add new lint needless_splitn
fixes: #7889
1. Fix the problem of manual_split_once changing the original behavior.
2. Add a new lint needless_splitn.
changelog: Fix the problem of manual_split_once changing the original behavior and add a new lint needless_splitn.
1. Fix the problem of manual_split_once changing the original behavior.
2. Add a new lint needless_splitn.
changelog: Fix the problem of manual_split_once changing the original behavior and add a new lint needless_splitn.
Fix `needless_collect`'s tendency to suggest code requiring multiple mutable borrows of the same value.
Fixes error specified in #7975.
changelog: [`needless_collect`] no longer suggests removal of `collect` when removal would create code requiring mutably borrowing a value multiple times.
1. Make the lifetime contained in LateContext `'tcx`.
2. Fix `'txc` to `'tcx` because it was a typo.
3. Refactor `IterFunctionVisitor`'s `visit_block` method to be more readable.
4. Replace uses of `rustc_middle::ty::TyKind` with `rustc::middle::ty`, and remove the `#[allow(...)]`.
(Thank you llogiq for all these suggestions!)
* Lint when a borrow is auto dereferenced more than once
* Lint when the expression is used as the expression of a block for a match arm
Moves `needless_borrow` and `ref_binding_to_reference` to `dereference`
lint pass in preperation for `explicit_auto_deref` lint.
Support suggestion for #7854
I think the detection of parking_lot's mutex and rwlock is valuable, so submit this pr, please help judge and review, thank you.
Make let_underscore_lock support parking_lot.(Fixes#7854)
changelog: Make let_underscore_lock support parking_lot
I think the detection of parking_lot's mutex and rwlock is valuable, so submit this pr, please help judge and review, thank you.
Make let_underscore_lock support parking_lot.
changelog: Make let_underscore_lock support parking_lot
Lint for bool to integer casts in `cast_lossless`
The lint description says
> Checks for casts between *numerical* types that may be replaced by safe conversion functions.
Which is strictly speaking being violated here, but it seems within the spirit of the lint. I think it is still a useful lint to have, and having a different lint for just this feels excessive. Thoughts?
Fixes#7947
changelog: Lint for bool to integer casts in [`cast_lossless`]
Author improvements
changelog: none
Various aspects of the author implementation are re-imagined to be much less repetitive. Also fixes some bugs. I hope this makes author more fun to work on for future contributors.
The last commit is pretty heavy but I tried to at least separate some changes so that the test file diffs per commit are simple.
* Finding pattern slices for `avoidable_slice_indexing`
* `avoidable_slice_indexing` analysing slice usage
* Add configuration to `avoidable_slice_indexing`
* Emitting `avoidable_slice_indexing` with suggestions
* Dogfooding and fixing bugs
* Add ui-toml test for `avoidable_slice_indexing`
* Correctly suggest `ref` keywords for `avoidable_slice_indexing`
* Test and document `mut` for `avoid_slice_indexing`
* Handle macros with `avoidable_slice_indexing` lint
* Ignore slices with sub patterns in `avoidable_slice_indexing`
* Update lint description for `avoidable_slice_indexing`
* Move `avoidable_slice_indexing` to nursery
* Added more tests for `avoidable_slice_indexing`
* Update documentation and message for `avoidable_slice_indexing`
* Teach `avoidable_slice_indexing` about `HirId`s and `Visitors`
* Rename lint to `index_refutable_slice` and connected config
Add Clippy version to Clippy's lint list
Hey, hey, the semester is finally over, and I wanted to get back into hacking on Clippy. It has also been some time since our metadata collection monster has been feed. So, this PR adds a new attribute `clippy::version` to document which version a lint was stabilized. I considered using `git blame` but that would be very hacky and probably not accurate.
I'm also thinking that this attribute can be used to have a `clippy::nightly` lint group which is allow-by-default that delays setting the actual lint group until the defined version is reached. Just something to consider regarding #6623🙃
This PR only adds the version to 4 lints to keep it reviewable. I'll do a followup PR to add the version to other lints if the implementation is accepted 🙃
![image](https://user-images.githubusercontent.com/17087237/137118859-0aafdfdf-7595-4289-8ba4-33d58eb6991d.png)
Also, mobile approved xD
![image](https://user-images.githubusercontent.com/17087237/137118944-833cf7fb-a4a1-45d6-9af8-32c951822360.png)
---
r? `@flip1995`
cc: #7172closes: #6492
changelog: [Clippy's lint list](https://rust-lang.github.io/rust-clippy/master/index.html) now displays the version a lint was added. 🎉
---
Example lint declaration after this update:
```rs
declare_clippy_lint! {
/// [...]
///
/// ### Example
/// ```rust
/// // Bad
/// let x = 3.14;
/// // Good
/// let x = std::f32::consts::PI;
/// ```
#[clippy::version = "pre 1.29.0"]
pub APPROX_CONSTANT,
correctness,
"the approximate of a known float constant (in `std::fXX::consts`)"
}
```
This commit adds a `no_std` and `no_core` check on `swap` lint and additionally suggest `core::mem::swap` whenever possible.
Remove warning if both `std` and `core` is not present.
So, some context for this, well, more a story. I'm not used to scripting, I've never really scripted anything, even if it's a valuable skill. I just never really needed it. Now, `@flip1995` correctly suggested using a script for this in `rust-clippy#7813`...
And I decided to write a script using nushell because why not? This was a mistake... I spend way more time on this than I would like to admit. It has definitely been more than 4 hours. It shouldn't take that long, but me being new to scripting and nushell just wasn't a good mixture... Anyway, here is the script that creates another script which adds the versions. Fun...
Just execute this on the `gh-pages` branch and the resulting `replacer.sh` in `clippy_lints` and it should all work.
```nu
mv v0.0.212 rust-1.00.0;
mv beta rust-1.57.0;
mv master rust-1.58.0;
let paths = (open ./rust-1.58.0/lints.json | select id id_span | flatten | select id path);
let versions = (
ls | where name =~ "rust-" | select name | format {name}/lints.json |
each { open $it | select id | insert version $it | str substring "5,11" version} |
group-by id | rotate counter-clockwise id version |
update version {get version | first 1} | flatten | select id version);
$paths | each { |row|
let version = ($versions | where id == ($row.id) | format {version})
let idu = ($row.id | str upcase)
$"sed -i '0,/($idu),/{s/pub ($idu),/#[clippy::version = "($version)"]\n pub ($idu),/}' ($row.path)"
} | str collect ";" | str find-replace --all '1.00.0' 'pre 1.29.0' | save "replacer.sh";
```
And this still has some problems, but at this point I just want to be done -.-
`match_overlapping_arm` refactoring
The main purpose of this pull request is to remove the unneeded and scary `unimplented!()` in the `match_arm_overlapping` code.
The rest is gratuitous refactoring.
changelog: none
Fix `explicit_counter_loop` suggestion for non-usize types
changelog: Add a new suggestion for non-usize types in [`explicit_counter_loop`]
closes: #7920
Type inference for inline consts
Fixes#78132Fixes#78174Fixes#81857Fixes#89964
Perform type checking/inference of inline consts in the same context as the outer def, similar to what is currently done to closure.
Doing so would require `closure_base_def_id` of the inline const to return the outer def, and since `closure_base_def_id` can be called on non-local crate (and thus have no HIR available), a new `DefKind` is created for inline consts.
The type of the generated anon const can capture lifetime of outer def, so we couldn't just use the typeck result as the type of the inline const's def. Closure has a similar issue, and it uses extra type params `CK, CS, U` to capture closure kind, input/output signature and upvars. I use a similar approach for inline consts, letting it have an extra type param `R`, and then `typeof(InlineConst<[paremt generics], R>)` would just be `R`. In borrowck region requirements are also propagated to the outer MIR body just like it's currently done for closure.
With this PR, inline consts in expression position are quitely usable now; however the usage in pattern position is still incomplete -- since those does not remain in the MIR borrowck couldn't verify the lifetime there. I have left an ignored test as a FIXME.
Some disucssions can be found on [this Zulip thread](https://rust-lang.zulipchat.com/#narrow/stream/260443-project-const-generics/topic/inline.20consts.20typeck).
cc `````@spastorino````` `````@lcnr`````
r? `````@nikomatsakis`````
`````@rustbot````` label A-inference F-inline_const T-compiler
Fix suggestion for deref expressions in redundant_pattern_matching
changelog: Fix suggestion for deref expressions in [`redundant_pattern_matching`]
closes: #7921
Only the end bounds of ranges can actually be included or excluded. This
commit changes the SpannedRange type to reflect that. Update `Kind::value`
to and `Kind::cmp` for this change. `Kind::cmp` gets flipped to check value
first and then the bound details and is much shorter.
This unbounded case never actually happens because `all_ranges(..)` uses
the scrutinee type bounds for open ranges. Switch to our own `Bound`
enum so that we don't have this case.
Introduce `expr_visitor` and `expr_visitor_no_bodies`
changelog: none
A couple utils that satisfy a *lot* of visitor use cases. Factoring in every possible usage would be really big so I just focused on cleaning clippy_utils.
TraitKind -> Trait
TyAliasKind -> TyAlias
ImplKind -> Impl
FnKind -> Fn
All `*Kind`s in AST are supposed to be enums.
Tuple structs are converted to braced structs for the types above, and fields are reordered in syntactic order.
Also, mutable AST visitor now correctly visit spans in defaultness, unsafety, impl polarity and constness.
Replace `in_macro` usage with `from_expansion`
changelog: none
Generally replace `in_macro(span)` with `span.from_expansion()`. If we're just trying to avoid expanded code, this seems more appropriate because any kind of expanded code is prone to false positives. One place I did not touch is `macro_use.rs`. I think this lint could use a rewrite so I moved `in_macro` there, the only place it is still used.
Move non_ascii_literal to restriction
It feels like the more apt category, since cases where you'd want it enabled would be pretty specific
changelog: Move [`non_ascii_literal`] to `restriction`
Prevent clippy::needless_lifetimes false positive in async function definition
Scan `OpaqueDef` bounds for lifetimes as well. Those `OpaqueDef` instances are generated while desugaring an `async` function definition.
This fixes#7893
changelog: Prevent [`clippy::needless_lifetimes`] false positive in `async` function definition
Fix manual_assert and match_wild_err_arm for `#![no_std]` and Rust 2021
Rust 2015 `std::panic!` has a wrapping block while `core::panic!` and Rust 2021 `std::panic!` does not. See rust-lang/rust#88919 for details.
Note that the test won't pass until clippy changes in rust-lang/rust#88860 is synced.
---
changelog: Fix [`manual_assert`] and [`match_wild_err_arm`] for `#![no_std]` and Rust 2021.
Fixes#7723
Unseparated literal suffix
Closes#7658
Since `literal_suffix` style is opinionated, we should disable by default and only enforce if it's stated as so.
changelog: [`unseparated_literal_suffix`] is renamed to `literal_suffix`, adds a new configuration `literal-suffix-style` to enforce a certain style writing literal_suffix. Possible values for `literal-suffix-style`: `"separated"`, `"unseparated"`
avoid linting `possible_truncation` on bit-reducing operations
---
*Please write a short comment explaining your change (or "none" for internal only changes)*
changelog: avoid linting `possible_truncation` on bit-reducing operations
`unseparated_literal_suffix`
This commit adds a configuration `literal-suffix-style` to enforce a
specific style for unseparated_literal_suffix. The configuration accepts
two values:
- "separated"
enforce all literals to be written separately (e.g. `123_i32`)
- "unseparated"
enforce all literals to be written as unseparated (e.g. `123i32`)
Not specifying a value means that there is no preference on style and
any style should not be warned.
Disable "if_not_else" lints from firing on else-ifs
Fixes#7892
1. Convert `['if_not_else']` to `LateLintPass` and use `clippy_utils::is_else_clause` for checking.
2. Update tests.
changelog: [`if_not_else`] now ignores else if statements.
1. Convert IfNotElse to LateLintPass and use clippy_utils::is_else_clause for checking.
2. Handle the case where the span comes from desugaring.
3. Update tests.
Ignore references to type aliases in ptr_arg
Works using the fact that the hir path will point to a TyAlias, rather than being resolved to the underlying type
Fixes#7699
changelog: [`ptr_arg`] No longer lints references to type aliases
Add unit-hash lint
changelog: [`unit_hash`] Add lint for hashing unit values
This will lint for situations where the end user is attempting to hash a unit value (`()`), as the implementation in `std` simply [does nothing][impl]. Closes#7159 .
Example:
```rust
().hash(&mut state);
// Should (probably) be replaced with:
0_u8.hash(&mut state);
```
[impl]: a5f164faad/library/core/src/hash/mod.rs (L656)
Register the generated lints from `cargo dev new_lint`
How to register a lint was something that took me a couple reads to figure out, this will hopefully make that easier. It appends the created lint to the end of the list when running `cargo dev new_lint`
changelog: none
Fix `question_mark` FP on custom error type
Closes#7859#7840 aims to ignore `question_mark` when the return type is custom, which is [covered here](df65291edd/tests/ui/question_mark.rs (L144-L149)). But this fails when there is a call in conditional predicate
changelog: [`question_mark`] Fix false positive when there is call in conditional predicate
Clean up tests/ui/rename.rs
Part one of #7057, cleaning up `tests/ui/rename.rs`. `tests/ui/deprecated.rs` will be updated in a subsequent PR.
changelog: none
new lint: string-slice
This is a restriction lint to highlight code that should have tests containing non-ascii characters. See #6623.
changelog: new lint: [`string-slice`]
Fix `match_str_case_mismatch` on uncased chars
False positives would result because `char::is_lowercase` and friends will return `false` for non-alphabetic chars and alphabetic chars lacking case (such as CJK scripts). Care also has to be taken for handling titlecase characters (`Dz`) and lowercased chars with no uppercase equivalent (`ʁ`).
For example, when verifying lowercase:
* Check `!any(char::is_ascii_uppercase)` instead of `all(char::is_ascii_lowercase)` for ASCII.
* Check that `all(|c| c.to_lowercase() == c)` instead of `all(char::is_lowercase)` for non-ASCII
Fixes#7863.
changelog: Fix false positives in [`match_str_case_mismatch`] on uncased characters
Update `str` utils to prevent ICEs and FNs
This PR reworks some string handling for lints regarding enum naming. I hope the refactoring will prevent future ICEs and help with new bug free implementations.
It might be better to review this PR by going through the commits, as `clippy_utils::camel_case` was renamed to `clippy_utils::str_utils` and then changed further. GH sadly doesn't really make the changes that obvious 🙃
Not too much more to say. Have a nice day 🌞
---
Fixes: rust-lang/rust-clippy#7869
changelog: ICE Fix: [`enum_variant_names`] #7869
Don't mark for loop iter expression as desugared
We typically don't mark spans of lowered things as desugared. This helps Clippy rightly discern when code is (not) from expansion. This was discovered by ``@flip1995`` at https://github.com/rust-lang/rust-clippy/pull/7789#issuecomment-939289501.
missing_safety_doc: Handle 'implementation safety' headers as well
We hit some FPs on this in `yoke`, it's somewhat normal to mark trait impl safety with "implementation safety". We could also broaden the check for headers which contain the word "safety" somehow, or split out impl safety stuff to only apply to traits.
changelog: handle 'implementation safety' headers in `missing_safety_doc`
Fix FP: no lint when cast is coming from `signum` method call for `cast_possible_truncation` lint
Fixes a FP when cast is coming from `signum` method call
fixes: #5395
changelog: [`cast_possible_truncation`] Fix FP when cast is coming from `signum` method call
Warn on structs with a trailing zero-sized array but no `repr` attribute
Closes#2868
changelog: Implement ``[`trailing_empty_array`]``, which warns if a struct is defined where the last field is a zero-sized array but there are no `repr` attributes. Zero-sized arrays aren't very useful in Rust itself, so such a struct is likely being created to pass to C code or in some other situation where control over memory layout matters. Either way, a `repr` attribute is needed.
FIx FP in `missing_safety_doc` lint
Fix FP where lint souldn't fire if any parent has `#[doc(hidden)]` attribute
fixes: #7347
changelog: [`missing_safety_doc`] Fix FP if any parent has `#[doc(hidden)]` attribute