Ignore imported items in `min_ident_chars`
Suppress the `min_ident_chars` warning for items whose name we cannot control. Do not warn for `use a::b`, but warn for `use a::b as c`, since `c` is a local identifier.
Fixes#12232
---
*Please write a short comment explaining your change (or "none" for internal only changes)*
changelog: [`min_ident_chars`]: Do not warn on non-local identifiers
[`incompatible_msrv`]: allow expressions that come from desugaring
Fixes#12273
changelog: [`incompatible_msrv`]: don't lint on the `IntoFuture::into_future` call desugared by `.await`
Suppress the `min_ident_chars` warning for items whose name we cannot
control. Do not warn for `use a::b`, but warn for `use a::b as c`, since
`c` is a local identifier.
Fixes#12232
[`implied_bounds_in_impls`]: avoid linting on overlapping associated tys
Fixes#11880
Before this change, we were simply ignoring associated types (except for suggestion purposes), because of an incorrect assumption (see the comment that I also removed).
For something like
```rs
trait X { type T; }
trait Y: X { type T; }
// Can't constrain `X::T` through `Y`
fn f() -> impl X<T = i32> + Y<T = u32> { ... }
```
We now avoid linting if the implied bound (`X<T = i32>`) "names" associated types that also exists in the implying trait (`trait Y`). Here that would be the case.
But if we only wrote `impl X + Y<T = u32>` then that's ok because `X::T` was never constrained in the first place.
I haven't really thought about how this interacts with GATs, but I think it's fine. Fine as in, it might create false negatives, but hopefully no false positives.
(The diff is slightly annoying because of formatting things. Really the only thing that changed in the if chain is extracting the `implied_by_def_id` which is needed for getting associated types from the trait, and of course actually checking for overlap)
cc `@Jarcho` ? idk if you want to review this or not. I assume you looked into this code a bit to find this bug.
changelog: [`implied_bounds_in_impls`]: avoid linting when associated type from supertrait can't be constrained through the implying trait bound
[`mem_replace_with_default`] No longer triggers on unused expression
changelog:[`mem_replace_with_default`]: No longer triggers on unused expression
Change [`mem_replace_with_default`] to not trigger on unused expression because the lint from `#[must_use]` handle this case better.
fixes: #5586
Minor refactor format-args
* Move all linting logic into a single format implementations struct
This should help with the future format-args improvements.
**NOTE TO REVIEWERS**: use "hide whitespace" in the github diff -- most of the code has shifted, but relatively low number of lines actually modified.
Followig up from #12274
r? `@xFrednet`
---
changelog: none
fix: ICE when array index exceeds usize
fixes#12253
This PR fixes ICE in `indexing_slicing` as it panics when the index of the array exceeds `usize`.
changelog: none
Don't allow derive macros to silence `disallowed_macros`
fixes#12254
The implementation is a bit of a hack, but "works". A derive expanding to another derive won't work properly, but we shouldn't be linting those anyways.
changelog: `disallowed_macros`: Don't allow derive macros to silence their own expansion
Minor refactor format-impls
Move all linting logic into a single format implementations struct
This should help with the future format-args improvements.
TODO: do the same with format_args.rs, perhaps in the same PR
**NOTE TO REVIEWERS**: use "hide whitespace" in the github diff -- most of the code has shifted, but relatively low number of lines actually modified.
changelog: none
Refactor `implied_bounds_in_impls` lint
Some refactors in `implied_bounds_in_impls` that I wanted to make while working on something else in that file, but I found them "large" enough that I didn't want them in the same PR and instead wanted them reviewed separately (since itd just be distracting).
This just splits up the two phases of "collect all the supertraits from each of the `impl Trait` bounds" and "find those `impl Trait` bounds that are mentioned in one of the previously-collected supertraits" into separate functions. Before, this was all in a single function.
Reviewing it commit by commit might make it easier. I can squash it down later.
changelog: none
stop linting [`blocks_in_conditions`] on `match` with weird attr macro case
should fixes: #12016
---
changelog: [`blocks_in_conditions`] - fix FP on `match` with weird attr macro
This might not be the best solution, as the root cause (i think?) is the `span` of block was incorrectly given by the compiler?
I'm open to better solutions
* Move all linting logic into a single format implementations struct
This should help with the future format-args improvements.
TODO: do the same with format_args.rs, perhaps in the same PR
A lot of cases of the "noise" cases of `similar_names` come from two
idents with a different first letter, which is easy enough to
differentiate visually but causes this lint to be raised.
Do not raise the lint in these cases, as long as the first character
does not have a lookalike.
Link: https://github.com/rust-lang/rust-clippy/issues/10926
Fix issue #12034: add autofixes for unnecessary_fallible_conversions
fixes#12034
Currently, the `unnecessary_fallible_conversions` lint was capable of autofixing expressions like `0i32.try_into().unwrap()`. However, it couldn't autofix expressions in the form of `i64::try_from(0i32).unwrap()` or `<i64 as TryFrom<i32>>::try_from(0).unwrap()`.
This pull request extends the functionality to correctly autofix these latter forms as well.
changelog: [`unnecessary_fallible_conversions`]: Add autofixes for more forms
[`unconditional_recursion`]: compare by `Ty`s instead of `DefId`s
Fixes#12154Fixes#12181 (this was later edited in, so the rest of the description refers to the first linked issue)
Before this change, the lint would work with `DefId`s and use those to compare types. This PR changes it to compare types directly. It fixes the linked issue, but also other false positives I found in a lintcheck run. For example, one of the issues is that some types don't have `DefId`s (primitives, references, etc., leading to possible FNs), and the helper function used to extract a `DefId` didn't handle type parameters.
Another issue was that the lint would use `.peel_refs()` in a few places where that could lead to false positives (one such FP was in the `http` crate). See the doc comment on one of the added functions and also the test case for what I mean.
The code in the linked issue was linted because the receiver type is `T` (a `ty::Param`), which was not handled in `get_ty_def_id` and returned `None`, so this wouldn't actually *get* to comparing `self_arg != ty_id` here, and skip the early-return:
70573af31e/clippy_lints/src/unconditional_recursion.rs (L171-L178)
This alone could be fixed by doing something like `&& get_ty_def_id(ty).map_or(true, |ty_id)| self_arg != ty_id)`, but we don't really need to work with `DefId`s in the first place, I don't think.
changelog: [`unconditional_recursion`]: avoid linting when the other comparison type is a type parameter
Fix false positive in `redundant_type_annotations` lint
This PR changes the `redundant_type_annotations` lint to allow slice type annotations (i.e., `&[u8]`) for byte string literals. It will still consider _array_ type annotations (i.e., `&[u8; 4]`) as redundant. The reasoning behind this is that the type of byte string literals is by default a reference to an array, but, by using a type annotation, you can force it to be a slice. For example:
```rust
let a: &[u8; 4] = b"test";
let b: &[u8] = b"test";
```
Now, the type annotation for `a` will still be linted (as it is still redundant), but the type annotation for `b` will not.
Fixes#12212.
changelog: [`redundant_type_annotations`]: Fix false positive with byte string literals
[`redundant_locals`]: take by-value closure captures into account
Fixes#12225
The same problem in the linked issue can happen to regular closures too, and conveniently async blocks are closures in the HIR so fixing closures will fix async blocks as well.
changelog: [`redundant_locals`]: avoid linting when redefined variable is captured by-value