std_instead_of_core: avoid lint inside of proc-macro
- fixes https://github.com/rust-lang/rust-clippy/issues/10198
note: The lint for the reported `thiserror::Error` has been suppressed by [Don't lint unstable moves in std_instead_of_core](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust-clippy/pull/9545/files#diff-2cb8a24429cf9d9898de901450d640115503a10454d692dddc6a073a299fbb7eR29) because `thiserror::Error` internally implements `std::error::Error for (derived struct)`.
changelog: [`std_intead_of_core`]: avoid linting inside proc-macro
I confirmed this change fixes the problem:
<details>
<summary>test result without the change</summary>
```console
error: used import from `std` instead of `core`
--> tests/ui/std_instead_of_core.rs:65:14
|
LL | #[derive(ImplStructWithStdDisplay)]
| ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
|
= note: this error originates in the derive macro `ImplStructWithStdDisplay` (in Nightly builds, run with -Z macro-backtrace for more info)
```
</details>
Move `needless_pass_by_ref_mut`: `suspicious` -> `nursery`
[Related to [this Zulip thread](https://rust-lang.zulipchat.com/#narrow/stream/257328-clippy/topic/needless_pass_by_ref_mut.20isn't.20ready.20for.20stable)]
`needless_pass_by_ref_mut` has been released with some important bugs (notably having a lot of reported false positives and an ICE). So it may not be really ready for being in stable until these problems are solved. This PR changes the lint's category from `suspicious` to `nursery`, just that.
changelog: none
Partially outline code inside the panic! macro
This outlines code inside the panic! macro in some cases. This is split out from https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/115562 to exclude changes to rustc.
There are cases where users create a unit variant for the purposes
of tracking the number of variants for an nonexhaustive enum.
We should check if an enum is explicitly marked as nonexhaustive
before reporting `manual_non_exhaustive` in these cases. Fixes#11583
new lint: `into_iter_without_iter`
Closes#9736 (part 2)
This implements the other lint that my earlier PR missed: given an `IntoIterator for &Type` impl, check that there exists an inherent `fn iter(&self)` method.
changelog: new lint: `into_iter_without_iter`
r? `@Jarcho` since you reviewed #11527 I figured it makes sense for you to review this as well?
[`manual_let_else`]: only omit block if span is from same ctxt
Fixes#11579.
The lint already had logic for omitting a block in `else` if a block is already present, however this didn't handle the case where the block is from a different expansion/syntax context. E.g.
```rs
macro_rules! panic_in_block {
() => { { panic!() } }
}
let _ = match Some(1) {
Some(v) => v,
_ => panic_in_block!()
};
```
It would see this in its expanded form as `_ => { panic!() }` and think it doesn't have to include a block in its suggestion because it is already there, however that's not true if it's from a different expansion like in this case.
changelog: [`manual_let_else`]: only omit block in suggestion if the block is from the same expansion
prevent ice when threshold is 0 and enum has no variants
changelog: [`enum_variant_names`]: prevent ice when threshold is 0 and enum has no variants
r? `@y21`
Fixes the same ice issue raised during review of https://github.com/rust-lang/rust-clippy/pull/11496
Add missing tests for configuration options
I noticed that a lot of lints didn't have test(s) for their configuration. This leads to issues like #11481 where the lint just does nothing with it.
This PR adds tests for *almost*[^1] all of the lints with a configuration that didn't have a test in ui-toml.
The tests that I wrote here are usually two cases: one for where it's right above or under the limit set by the config where it shouldn't lint and another one for right above where it should.
changelog: none
[^1]: allow-one-hash-in-raw-strings is ignored by needless_raw_string_hashes
fixed fp caused by moving &mut reference inside of a closure
changelog: [`needless_pass_by_ref mut`]: fixes false positive caused by not covering mutable references passed to a closure inside of a fuction
fixes#11545
Remove most usage of `hir_ty_to_ty`
Removes the usages where there's a suitable query or the type was already available elsewhere. The remaining cases would all require more involved changes
changelog: none
r? `@Jarcho`
fix FP with needless_raw_string_hashes
changelog: Fix [`needless_raw_string_hashes`]: Continue the lint checking of raw string when `needless_raw_strings` is allowed.
fix#11420
[`redundant_guards`]: lint if the pattern is on the left side
A tiny improvement to the `redundant_guards` lint. There's no associated issue for this, just noticed it while going through the code.
Right now it warns on `Some(x) if x == 2` and suggests `Some(2)`, but it didn't do that for `Some(x) if 2 == x` (i.e. when the local is on the right side and the pattern on the left side).
changelog: [`redundant_guards`]: also lint if the pattern is on the left side
Change defaults of `accept-comment-above-statement` and `accept-comment-above-attributes`
This patch sets the two configuration options for `undocumented_unsafe_blocks` to `true` by default: these are `accept-comment-above-statement` and `accept-comment-above-attributes`. Having these values `false` by default prevents what many users would consider clean code, e.g. placing the `// SAFETY:` comment above a single-line functino call, rather than directly next to the argument.
This was originally discussed in https://github.com/rust-lang/rust-clippy/issues/11162
changelog: [`undocumented_unsafe_blocks`]: set
`accept-comment-above-statement` and `accept-comment-above-attributes` to `true` by default.
Fix mutaby used async function argument in closure for `needless_pass_by_ref_mut`
Fixes https://github.com/rust-lang/rust-clippy/issues/11380.
The problem was that it needed to go through closures as well in async functions to correctly find the mutable usage of async function arguments.
changelog: Correctly handle mutable usage of async function arguments in closures.
r? `@Centri3`
This patch sets the two configuration options for
`undocumented_unsafe_blocks` to `true` by default: these are
`accept-comment-above-statement` and `accept-comment-above-attributes`.
Having these values `false` by default prevents what many users would
consider clean code, e.g. placing the `// SAFETY:` comment above a
single-line functino call, rather than directly next to the argument.
changelog: [`undocumented_unsafe_blocks`]: set
`accept-comment-above-statement` and `accept-comment-above-attributes`
to `true` by default.
Add redundant_as_str lint
This lint checks for `as_str` on a `String` immediately followed by `as_bytes` or `is_empty` as those methods are available on `String` too. This could possibly also be extended to `&[u8]` in the future.
changelog: New lint [`redundant_as_str`] #11526
move required_consts check to general post-mono-check function
This factors some code that is common between the interpreter and the codegen backends into shared helper functions. Also as a side-effect the interpreter now uses the same `eval` functions as everyone else to get the evaluated MIR constants.
Also this is in preparation for another post-mono check that will be needed for (the current hackfix for) https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/115709: ensuring that all locals are dynamically sized.
I didn't expect this to change diagnostics, but it's just cycle errors that change.
r? `@oli-obk`
This lint checks for `as_str` on a `String` immediately followed by `as_bytes` or `is_empty` as those methods are available on `String` too. This could possibly also be extended to `&[u8]` in the future.
Split `needless_borrow` into two lints
Splits off the case where the borrow is used as a generic argument to a function. I think the two cases are different enough to warrant a separate lint.
The tests for the new lint have been reordered to group related parts together. Two warning have been dropped, one looked like it was testing the generic argument form, but it ends up triggering the auto-deref variant. The second was just a redundant test that didn't do anything interesting.
An issue with cycle detection is also included. The old version was checking if a cycle was reachable from a block when it should have been checking if the block is part or a cycle.
As a side note, I'm liking the style of just jamming all the tests into separate scopes in main.
changelog: Split off `needless_borrows_for_generic_args` from `needless_borrow`
[`filter_map_bool_then`]: include multiple derefs from adjustments
In #11506 this lint was improved to suggest one deref if the bool is behind references (fixed the FP #11503), however it might need multiple dereferences if the bool is behind multiple layers of references or custom derefs. E.g. `&&&bool` needs `***b`.
changelog: [`filter_map_bool_then`]: suggest as many dereferences as there are needed to get to the bool
add extra `byref` checking for the guard's local
changelog: [`redundant_guards`]: Now checks if the variable is bound using `ref` before linting.
The lint should not be emitted, when the local variable is bind by-ref in the pattern.
fixes#11465
[`useless_conversion`]: don't lint if type parameter has unsatisfiable bounds for `.into_iter()` receiver
Fixes#11300.
Before this PR, clippy assumed that if it sees a `f(x.into_iter())` call and the type at that argument position is generic over any `IntoIterator`, then the `.into_iter()` call must be useless because `x` already implements `IntoIterator`, *however* this assumption is not right if the generic parameter has more than just the `IntoIterator` bound (because other traits can be implemented for the IntoIterator target type but not the IntoIterator implementor, as can be seen in the linked issue: `<[i32; 3] as IntoIterator>::IntoIter` satisfies `ExactSizeIterator`, but `[i32; 3]` does not).
So, this PR makes it check that the type parameter only has a single `IntoIterator` bound. It *might* be possible to check if the type of `x` in `f(x.into_iter())` satisfies all the bounds on the generic type parameter as defined on the function (which would allow removing the `.into_iter()` call even with multiple bounds), however I'm not sure how to do that, and the current fix should always work.
**Edit:** This PR has been changed to check if any of the bounds don't hold for the type of the `.into_iter()` receiver, so we can still lint in some cases.
changelog: [`useless_conversion`]: don't lint `.into_iter()` if type parameter has multiple bounds
fix filter_map_bool_then with a bool reference
changelog: [`filter_map_bool_then`]: Fix the incorrect autofix when the `bool` in question is a reference.
fix#11503
[`extra_unused_type_parameters`]: Fix edge case FP for parameters in where bounds
Generic parameters can end up being used on the left side of where-bounds if they are not directly bound but instead appear nested in some concrete generic type. Therefore, we should walk the left side of where bounds, but only if the bounded type is *not* a generic param, in which case we still need to ignore the bound.
Fixes#11302
changelog: [`extra_unused_type_parameters`]: Fix edge case false positive for parameters in where bounds
[`len_without_is_empty`]: follow type alias to find inherent `is_empty` method
Fixes#11165
When we see an `impl B` and `B` is a type alias to some type `A`, then we need to follow the type alias to look for an `is_empty` method on the aliased type `A`. Before this PR, it'd get the inherent impls of `B`, which there aren't any and so it would warn that there isn't an `is_empty` method even if there was one.
Passing the type alias `DefId` to `TyCtxt::type_of` gives us the aliased `DefId` (or simply return the type itself if it wasn't a type alias) so we can just use that
changelog: [`len_without_is_empty`]: follow type alias to find inherent `is_empty` method
[`implied_bounds_in_impls`]: include (previously omitted) associated types in suggestion
Fixes#11435
It now includes associated types from the implied bound that were omitted in the second bound. Example:
```rs
fn f() -> impl Iterator<Item = u8> + ExactSizeIterator> {..}
```
Suggestion before this change:
```diff
- pub fn my_iter() -> impl Iterator<Item = u32> + ExactSizeIterator {
+ pub fn my_iter() -> impl ExactSizeIterator {
```
It didn't include `<Item = u32>` on `ExactSizeIterator`. Now, with this change, it does.
```diff
- pub fn my_iter() -> impl Iterator<Item = u32> + ExactSizeIterator {
+ pub fn my_iter() -> impl ExactSizeIterator<Item = u32> {
```
We also now extend the span to include not just possible `+` ahead of it, but also behind it (an example for this is in the linked issue as well).
**Note:** The overall diff is a bit noisy, because building up the suggestion involves quite a bit more logic now and I decided to extract that into its own function. For that reason, I split this PR up into two commits. The first commit contains the actual "logic" changes. Second commit just moves code around.
changelog: [`implied_bounds_in_impls`]: include (previously omitted) associated types in suggestion
changelog: [`implied_bounds_in_impls`]: include the `+` behind bound if it's the last bound
Rename incorrect_impls to non_canonical_impls, move them to warn by default
The wording/category of these feel too strong to me, I would expect most of the time it's linting the implementations aren't going to be *incorrect*, just unnecessary
changelog: rename `incorrect_clone_impl_on_copy_type` to [`non_canonical_clone_impl`]
changelog: rename `incorrect_partial_ord_impl_on_ord_type` to [`non_canonical_partial_ord_impl`]
changelog: Move [`non_canonical_clone_impl`], [`non_canonical_partial_ord_impl`] to suspicious
Preserve literals and range kinds in `manual_range_patterns`
Fixes#11461
Also enables linting when there are 3 or fewer alternatives if one of them is already a range pattern
changelog: none
[`slow_vector_initialization`]: use the source span of vec![] macro and fix another FP
Fixes#11408
<details>
<summary>Also fixes a FP when the vec initializer comes from a macro other than `vec![]`</summary>
```rs
macro_rules! x {
() => { vec![] }
}
fn f() {
let mut v = x!();
v.resize(10, 0);
}
```
This shouldn't warn. The `x!` macro might be doing other things, so just replacing `x!()` with `vec![0; 10]` is not always an option.
</details>
I added some test cases for macro expansions, however I don't think there's a way to write a test for that specific warning that appeared in the linked issue. As far as I understand, that happens when the rust-src rustup component isn't installed (so the stdlib source is unavailable) and the span points to the `vec![]` *expansion*, instead of the `vec![]` that the user wrote.
changelog: [`slow_vector_initialization`]: use the source span of `vec![]` macro
changelog: [`slow_vector_initialization`]: only warn on `vec![]` expansions and allow other macros
Fix `i686-unknown-linux-gnu` CI job
When testing https://github.com/oli-obk/ui_test/pull/161 I gave `--ignored` a try, I was surprised to see many of the 32bit tests passing even though I'm on a 64bit target
Turns out the `.stderr`s were incorrect, and our `i686-unknown-linux-gnu` job has been running `x86_64-unknown-linux-gnu` so it didn't get picked up
changelog: none