Commit graph

10641 commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Guillaume Gomez
4ab6924bca Extend useless_asref lint on map(clone) 2024-01-09 14:09:00 +01:00
bors
3b8323d790 Auto merge of #12049 - cocodery:fix/issue#11243, r=Alexendoo
fix/issue#11243: allow 3-digit-grouped binary in non_octal_unix_permissions

fixes [Issue#11243](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust-clippy/issues/11243)

Issue#11243 suggest lint `non_octal_unix_permissions` should not report binary format literal unix permissions as an error, and we think binary format is a good way to understand these permissions.

To solve this problem, we need to add check for binary literal, which is written in function `check_binary_unix_permissions` , only `binary, 3 groups and each group length equals to 3` is a legal format.

changelog: [`non_octal_unix_permissions`]: Add check for binary format literal unix permissions like 0b111_111_111
2024-01-08 19:09:42 +00:00
bors
7fbaba856b Auto merge of #12080 - PartiallyTyped:12058, r=xFrednet
Fixed ICE introduced in #12004

Issue: in https://github.com/rust-lang/rust-clippy/pull/12004, we emit a lint for `filter(Option::is_some)`. If the
parent expression is a `.map` we don't emit that lint as there exists a
more specialized lint for that.

The ICE introduced in https://github.com/rust-lang/rust-clippy/pull/12004 is a consequence of the assumption that a
parent expression after a filter would be a method call with the filter
call being the receiver. However, it is entirely possible to have a
closure of the form

```
|| { vec![Some(1), None].into_iter().filter(Option::is_some) }
```
The previous implementation looked at the parent expression; namely the
closure, and tried to check the parameters by indexing [0] on an empty
list.

This commit is an overhaul of the lint with significantly more FP tests
and checks.

Impl details:

1. We verify that the filter method we are in is a proper trait method
   to avoid FPs.
2. We check that the parent expression is not a map by checking whether
   it exists; if is a trait method; and then a method call.
3. We check that we don't have comments in the span.
4. We verify that we are in an Iterator of Option and Result.
5. We check the contents of the filter.
   1. For closures we peel it. If it is not a single expression, we don't
     lint. We then try again by checking the peeled expression.
   2. For paths, we do a typecheck to avoid FPs for types that impl
     functions with the same names.
   3. For calls, we verify the type, via the path, and that the param of
     the closure is the single argument to the call.
   4. For method calls we verify that the receiver is the parameter of
     the closure. Since we handle single, non-block exprs, the
     parameter can't be shadowed, so no FP.

This commit also adds additional FP tests.

Fixes: #12058

Adding `@xFrednet` as you've the most context for this as you reviewed it last time.

`@rustbot` r? `@xFrednet`

---

changelog: none
(Will be backported and therefore don't effect stable)
2024-01-07 17:21:28 +00:00
Quinn Sinclair
bbadce9ec0 Fixed ICE introduced in #12004
Issue: in #12004, we emit a lint for `filter(Option::is_some)`. If the
parent expression is a `.map` we don't emit that lint as there exists a
more specialized lint for that.

The ICE introduced in #12004 is a consequence of the assumption that a
parent expression after a filter would be a method call with the filter
call being the receiver. However, it is entirely possible to have a
closure of the form

```
|| { vec![Some(1), None].into_iter().filter(Option::is_some) }
```
The previous implementation looked at the parent expression; namely the
closure, and tried to check the parameters by indexing [0] on an empty
list.

This commit is an overhaul of the lint with significantly more FP tests
and checks.

Impl details:

1. We verify that the filter method we are in is a proper trait method
   to avoid FPs.
2. We check that the parent expression is not a map by checking whether
   it exists; if is a trait method; and then a method call.
3. We check that we don't have comments in the span.
4. We verify that we are in an Iterator of Option and Result.
5. We check the contents of the filter.
  1. For closures we peel it. If it is not a single expression, we don't
     lint.
  2. For paths, we do a typecheck to avoid FPs for types that impl
     functions with the same names.
  3. For calls, we verify the type, via the path, and that the param of
     the closure is the single argument to the call.
  4. For method calls we verify that the receiver is the parameter of
     the closure. Since we handle single, non-block exprs, the
     parameter can't be shadowed, so no FP.

This commit also adds additional FP tests.
2024-01-07 17:11:34 +02:00
cocodery
a843996e81 Simplify check function, weirdly binary format literals happen not often 2024-01-07 22:35:21 +08:00
bors
f37e7f3585 Auto merge of #12109 - GuillaumeGomez:map-clone-call, r=llogiq
Handle "calls" inside the closure as well in `map_clone` lint

Follow-up of https://github.com/rust-lang/rust-clippy/pull/12104.

I just realized that I didn't handle the case where the `clone` method was made as a call and not a method call.

r? `@llogiq`

changelog: Handle "calls" inside the closure as well in `map_clone` lint
2024-01-07 14:23:02 +00:00
Guillaume Gomez
78aa2e29e2 Handle "calls" inside the closure as well in map_clone lint 2024-01-07 13:24:52 +01:00
Samuel Tardieu
5b7a0de3e7 Do not suggest bool::then() and bool::then_some in const contexts 2024-01-07 10:43:18 +01:00
bors
0e5dc8e630 Auto merge of #11883 - J-ZhengLi:issue11642, r=dswij
improve [`cast_sign_loss`], to skip warning on always positive expressions

fixes: #11642

changelog: improve [`cast_sign_loss`] to skip warning on always positive expressions

Turns out this is change became quite big, and I still can't cover all the cases, like method calls such as `POSITIVE_NUM.mul(POSITIVE_NUM)`, or `NEGATIVE_NUM.div(NEGATIVE_NUM)`... but well, if I do, I'm scared that this will goes forever, so I stopped, unless it needs to be done, lol.
2024-01-06 19:22:59 +00:00
bors
788094c235 Auto merge of #11972 - samueltardieu:issue-11958, r=llogiq
Do not suggest `[T; n]` instead of `vec![T; n]` if `T` is not `Copy`

changelog: [`useless_vec`]: do not suggest replacing `&vec![T; N]` by `&[T; N]` if `T` is not `Copy`

Fix #11958
2024-01-06 18:56:30 +00:00
bors
17b2418208 Auto merge of #12104 - GuillaumeGomez:map-clone, r=llogiq
Extend `map_clone` lint to also work on non-explicit closures

I found it weird that this case was not handled by the current line so I added it. The only thing is that I don't see an obvious way to infer the current type to determine if it's copyable or not, so for now I always suggest `cloned` and I added a FIXME.

r? `@llogiq`

changelog: Extend `map_clone` lint to also work on non-explicit closures
2024-01-06 16:54:20 +00:00
Guillaume Gomez
28c133b4bc Extend map_clone lint to also work on non-explicit closures 2024-01-06 17:22:21 +01:00
cocodery
60c647b262 Fix bug: allow no- '_'-split binary format string, add test 2024-01-06 21:41:25 +08:00
bors
7bb0e9c2f2 Auto merge of #12099 - GuillaumeGomez:struct-field-names-bool, r=llogiq
Don't emit `struct_field_names` lint if all fields are booleans and don't start with the type's name

Fixes #11936.

I only checked that all fields are booleans and not the prefix (nor the suffix) because when I started to list accepted prefixes (like "is", "has", "should", "could", etc), the list was starting to get a bit too long and I thought it was not really worth for such a small change.

r? `@llogiq`

changelog: Don't emit `struct_field_names` lint if all fields are booleans and don't start with the type's name
2024-01-05 16:58:50 +00:00
bors
394f63fe94 Auto merge of #10844 - Centri3:let_unit_value, r=Alexendoo
Don't lint `let_unit_value` when `()` is explicit

since these are explicitly written (and not the result of a function call or anything else), they should be allowed, as they are both useful in some cases described in #9048

Fixes #9048

changelog: [`let_unit_value`]: Don't lint when `()` is explicit
2024-01-05 16:13:38 +00:00
Centri3
fd9d330839 Don't lint let_unit_value when () is explicit 2024-01-05 16:04:02 +00:00
Guillaume Gomez
9e4e8ef102 Don't emit struct_field_names lint if all fields are booleans and don't start with the type's name 2024-01-05 16:44:01 +01:00
bors
eec0f3d6aa Auto merge of #12036 - kpreid:patch-1, r=Alexendoo
Polish `missing_enforced_import_renames` documentation

* Fixes a typo in the name of the lint (`enforce-import-renames` instead of `enforced-import-renames`).
* Copyedit “Why” paragraph.
* Make the example configuration use a multi-line list, since it is not particularly expected that a real project will have *exactly one* rename to enforce (and the old formatting had unbalanced whitespace).

changelog: none
2024-01-05 15:31:27 +00:00
bors
d3dfecbd41 Auto merge of #12066 - y21:issue12048, r=Alexendoo
Don't look for safety comments in doc tests

Fixes #12048.

What happened in the linked issue is that the lint checks for lines that start with `//` and have `SAFETY:` somewhere in it above the function item.
This works for regular comments, but when the `//` is the start of a doc comment (e.g. `/// // SAFETY: ...`) and it's part of a doc test (i.e. within \`\`\`), we probably shouldn't lint that, since the user most likely meant to refer to a different node than the one currently being checked. For example in the linked issue, the safety comment refers to `unsafe { *five_pointer }`, but the lint believes it's part of the function item.

We also can't really easily test whether the `// SAFETY:` comment within a doc comment is necessary or not, since I think that would require creating a new compiler session to re-parse the contents of the doc comment. We already do this for one of the doc markdown lints, to look for a main function in doc tests, but I don't know how to feel about doing that in more places, so probably best to just ignore them?

changelog: [`unnecessary_safety_comment`]: don't look for safety comments in doc tests
2024-01-05 15:23:11 +00:00
bors
2d6c2386f5 Auto merge of #12091 - samueltardieu:issue-12068, r=Alexendoo
Add .as_ref() to suggestion to remove .to_string()

The case of `.to_owned().split(…)` is treated specially in the `unnecessary_to_owned` lint. Test cases check that it works both for slices and for strings, but they missed a corner case: `x.to_string().split(…)` when `x` implements `AsRef<str>` but not `Deref<Target = str>`. In this case, it is wrong to suggest to remove `.to_string()` without adding `.as_ref()` instead.

Fix #12068

changelog: [`unnecessary_to_owned`]: suggest replacing `.to_string()` by `.as_ref()`
2024-01-05 14:54:40 +00:00
bors
ee8bfb7f7a Auto merge of #12051 - y21:option_as_ref_cloned, r=dswij
new lint: `option_as_ref_cloned`

Closes #12009

Adds a new lint that looks for `.as_ref().cloned()` on `Option`s. That's the same as just `.clone()`-ing the option directly.

changelog: new lint: [`option_as_ref_cloned`]
2024-01-05 06:39:46 +00:00
bors
8507e4c80e Auto merge of #12090 - GuillaumeGomez:default-unconditional-recursion, r=llogiq
Extend `unconditional_recursion` lint to check for `Default` trait implementation

In case the `Default` trait is implemented manually and is calling a static method (let's call it `a`) and then `a` is using `Self::default()`, it makes an infinite call recursion difficult to see without debugging. This extension checks that there is no such recursion possible.

r? `@llogiq`

changelog: Extend `unconditional_recursion` lint to check for `Default` trait implementation
2024-01-04 19:45:20 +00:00
Guillaume Gomez
2666f39d3e Detect unconditional recursion between Default trait impl and static methods 2024-01-04 17:40:28 +01:00
Samuel Tardieu
e758413973 Add .as_ref() to suggestion to remove .to_string() 2024-01-04 17:29:20 +01:00
bors
ebf5c1a928 Auto merge of #12031 - y21:eager_transmute_more_binops, r=llogiq
Lint nested binary operations and handle field projections in `eager_transmute`

This PR makes the lint a bit stronger. Previously it would only lint `(x < 4).then_some(transmute(x))` (that is, a single binary op in the condition). With this change, it understands:
- multiple, nested binary ops: `(x < 4 && x > 1).then_some(...)`
- local references with projections: `(x.field < 4 && x.field > 1).then_some(transmute(x.field))`

changelog: [`eager_transmute`]: lint nested binary operations and look through field/array accesses

r? llogiq (since you reviewed my initial PR #11981, I figured you have the most context here, sorry if you are too busy with other PRs, feel free to reassign to someone else then)
2024-01-03 21:43:01 +00:00
bors
17dcd0d2e4 Auto merge of #12030 - torfsen:11973-fix-quoting-of-double-quote-in-char-literal, r=llogiq
11973: Don't escape `"` in `'"'`

Fixes #11973.

```
changelog: [`single_char_pattern`]: don't escape `"` in `'"'`
```
2024-01-03 21:30:01 +00:00
bors
bc962c246a Auto merge of #12071 - ShE3py:deadlinks, r=blyxyas
Remove deadlinks from `unchecked_duration_subtraction`

See <https://rust-lang.github.io/rust-clippy/master/index.html#unchecked_duration_subtraction>

changelog: [`unchecked_duration_subtraction`]: remove deadlinks
2024-01-03 20:04:56 +00:00
y21
5960107415 new lint: option_as_ref_cloned 2024-01-03 19:40:47 +01:00
bors
0153ca95ae Auto merge of #12062 - GuillaumeGomez:fix-false-positive-unconditional_recursion, r=xFrednet
Fix false positive `unconditional_recursion`

Fixes #12052.

Only checking if both variables are `local` was not enough, we also need to confirm they have the same type as `Self`.

changelog: Fix false positive for `unconditional_recursion` lint
2024-01-03 09:14:58 +00:00
bors
2eb13d3a7c Auto merge of #12056 - PartiallyTyped:12050, r=xFrednet
Fixes: #12050 - `identity_op` correctly suggests a deference for coerced references

When `identity_op` identifies a `no_op`, provides a suggestion, it also checks the type of the type of the variable. If the variable is a reference that's been coerced into a value, e.g.

```
let x = &0i32;
let _ = x + 0;
```

the suggestion will now use a derefence. This is done by identifying whether the variable is a reference to an integral value, and then whether it gets dereferenced.

changelog: false positive: [`identity_op`]: corrected suggestion for reference coerced to value.

fixes: #12050
2024-01-03 09:02:02 +00:00
Yuxiang Qiu
88541d6637
fix some typos 2024-01-02 19:21:51 -05:00
Lieselotte
ff2919ac5d
Remove deadlinks from unchecked_duration_subtraction 2024-01-01 18:50:58 +01:00
Quinn Sinclair
70024e16c0 New Lint: [thread_local_initializer_can_be_made_const]
Adds a new lint to suggest using `const` on `thread_local!`
initializers that can be evaluated at compile time.

Impl details:

The lint relies on the expansion of `thread_local!`. For non
const-labelled initializers, `thread_local!` produces a function
called `__init` that lazily initializes the value. We check the function
and decide whether the body can be const. The body of the function is
exactly the initializer. If so, we lint the body.

changelog: new lint [`thread_local_initializer_can_be_made_const`]
2024-01-01 18:06:10 +02:00
y21
ef35e82ea3 don't look for safety comments in codeblocks 2024-01-01 02:57:23 +01:00
bors
e1dbafd875 Auto merge of #12065 - samueltardieu:issue-12063, r=llogiq
Add `.front()` to `get_first` lint description

Fix #12063

changelog: none
2023-12-31 16:35:58 +00:00
Samuel Tardieu
457ab585fc Add .front() to get_first lint description 2023-12-31 15:38:38 +01:00
Florian Brucker
fe35e08e9f 8733: Suggest str.lines when splitting at hard-coded newlines
Adds a new `splitting_strings_at_newlines` lint that suggests to use
`str.lines` instead of splitting a trimmed string at hard-coded
newlines.
2023-12-31 13:30:36 +01:00
Guillaume Gomez
d3bde854c4 Fix false positive in PartialEq implementation 2023-12-31 11:20:49 +01:00
bors
44c99a8089 Auto merge of #11980 - GuillaumeGomez:UNCONDITIONAL_RECURSION-tostring, r=llogiq
Extend UNCONDITIONAL_RECURSION to check for ToString implementations

Follow-up of https://github.com/rust-lang/rust-clippy/pull/11938.

r? `@llogiq`

changelog: Extend `UNCONDITIONAL_RECURSION` to check for `ToString` implementations
2023-12-31 09:12:42 +00:00
bors
7f185bdef6 Auto merge of #12047 - ARandomDev99:12007-empty-enum-variants-with-brackets, r=Jarcho
New Lint: empty_enum_variants_with_brackets

This PR:
- adds a new early pass lint that checks for enum variants with no fields that were defined using brackets. **Category: Restriction**
- adds relevant UI tests for the new lint.

Closes #12007

```
changelog: New lint: [`empty_enum_variants_with_brackets`]
```
2023-12-30 19:01:53 +00:00
Aneesh Kadiyala
5f1718810f Change empty_enum_variants_with_brackets applicability to MaybeIncorrect 2023-12-30 22:22:44 +05:30
bors
0cc53f48f5 Auto merge of #11957 - J-ZhengLi:issue11535, r=Jarcho
don't lint [`default_numeric_fallback`] on return and local assigned macro calls with type stated

fixes: #11535

changelog: don't lint [`default_numeric_fallback`] on return and local assigned macro calls with type stated
2023-12-30 16:47:14 +00:00
bors
c6aeb28a7b Auto merge of #11865 - yuxqiu:map_unwrap_or_default, r=Jarcho
feat: add `manual_is_variant_and` lint

changelog: add a new lint [`manual_is_variant_and`].
- Replace `option.map(f).unwrap_or_default()` and `result.map(f).unwrap_or_default()` with `option.is_some_and(f)` and `result.is_ok_and(f)` where `f` is a function or closure that returns `bool`.
- MSRV is set to 1.70.0 for this lint; when `is_some_and` and `is_ok_and` was stabilised

---

For example, for the following code:

```rust
let opt = Some(0);
opt.map(|x| x > 1).unwrap_or_default();
```

It suggests to instead write:

```rust
let opt = Some(0);
opt.is_some_and(|x| x > 1)
```
2023-12-30 16:37:36 +00:00
bors
b19b5f293e Auto merge of #12008 - J-ZhengLi:issue9872, r=Jarcho
make [`mutex_atomic`] more type aware

fixes: #9872

---

changelog: [`mutex_atomic`] now suggests more specific atomic types and skips mutex i128 and u128
2023-12-30 16:29:13 +00:00
Guillaume Gomez
ab2d1c28d5 Extend UNCONDITIONAL_RECURSION to check for ToString implementations 2023-12-30 17:11:56 +01:00
cocodery
79e70ccf6f add setuid, setgid and sticky bits on high 3-bits of 12 2023-12-30 23:03:47 +08:00
Quinn Sinclair
c2b3f5c767 identity_op correctly suggests a deference for coerced references
When `identity_op` identifies a `no_op`, provides a suggestion, it also
checks the type of the type of the variable. If the variable is
a reference that's been coerced into a value, e.g.

```
let x = &0i32;
let _ = x + 0;
```

the suggestion will now use a derefence. This is done by identifying
whether the variable is a reference to an integral value, and then
whether it gets dereferenced.

changelog: false positive: [`identity_op`]: corrected suggestion for
reference coerced to value.

fixes: #12050
2023-12-30 13:31:32 +02:00
y21
0848e120b2 add expansion checks to iter_without_into_iter and into_iter_without_iter 2023-12-30 04:56:46 +01:00
cocodery
ca40b0c284 fix/issue#11243: allow 3-digit-grouped binary in non_octal_unix_permissions 2023-12-30 01:58:30 +08:00
Aneesh Kadiyala
1ee9993a96 add new lint, empty_enum_variants_with_brackets
- Add a new early pass lint.
- Add relevant UI tests.
2023-12-29 19:23:31 +05:30