Commit graph

19260 commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Ralf Jung
5cd391c4ad make the set of methods between our two Const types more consistent 2023-09-13 07:29:34 +02:00
mojave2
7f870201d3
add byref checking for the guard's local 2023-09-13 11:13:51 +08:00
Philipp Krones
471469d30f Merge commit '98363cbf6a7c3f8b571a7d92a3c645bb4376e4a6' into clippyup 2023-09-12 18:44:06 +02:00
bors
b788addfcc Auto merge of #11473 - Alexendoo:format-args-span-parents, r=dswij
Ignore span's parents in `collect_ast_format_args`/`find_format_args`

Fixes #11470, covers some cases missed by #10980

Can't have a test yet because of #11126 but it works locally

changelog: none

r? `@dswij`
2023-09-12 16:43:14 +00:00
bors
cb057019d4 Auto merge of #11413 - jonboh:master, r=Alexendoo
new unnecessary_map_on_constructor lint

changelog: [`unnecessary_map_on_constructor`]: adds lint for cases in which map is not necessary. `Some(4).map(myfunction)` => `Some(myfunction(4))`

Closes https://github.com/rust-lang/rust-clippy/issues/6472

Note that the case mentioned in the issue `Some(..).and_then(|..| Some(..))` is fixed by a chain of lint changes. This PR completes the last part of that chain.

By `bind_instead_of_map`[lint](https://rust-lang.github.io/rust-clippy/master/index.html#/bind_instead_of_map):
`Some(4).and_then(|x| Some(foo(4)))` => `Some(4).map(|x| foo)`

By `redundant_closure` [lint](https://rust-lang.github.io/rust-clippy/master/index.html#/redundant_closure):
`Some(4).map(|x| foo)` => `Some(4).map(fun)`

Finally by this PR `unnecessary_map_on_constructor`:
`Some(4).map(fun)` => `Some(fun(4))`

I'm not sure this is the desired behavior for clippy and if it should be addressed in another issue/PR. I'd be up to give it a try if that's the case.
2023-09-12 16:09:06 +00:00
jonboh
f136e1634a new unnecessary_map_on_constructor lint 2023-09-12 17:32:11 +02:00
J-ZhengLi
22ba7925d6 Update clippy_lints/src/option_if_let_else.rs
Co-authored-by: Samuel Tardieu <sam@rfc1149.net>
2023-09-12 17:18:39 +08:00
bors
b643f20f46 Auto merge of #115689 - Alexendoo:clippy-doc-comments, r=notriddle,Manishearth,flip1995
Reuse rustdoc's doc comment handling in Clippy

Moves `source_span_for_markdown_range` and `span_of_attrs` (renamed to `span_of_fragments`) to `rustc_resolve::rustdoc` so it can be used in Clippy

Fixes https://github.com/rust-lang/rust-clippy/issues/10277
Fixes https://github.com/rust-lang/rust-clippy/issues/5593
Fixes https://github.com/rust-lang/rust-clippy/issues/10263
Fixes https://github.com/rust-lang/rust-clippy/issues/2581
2023-09-12 01:45:24 +00:00
Michael Krasnitski
f598bb75d4 Walk the left side of where bounds if the bounded type is not a generic parameter 2023-09-11 21:43:27 -04:00
bors
98363cbf6a Auto merge of #11477 - samueltardieu:11474, r=xFrednet
Auto deref does not apply on union field

changelog: [`explicit_auto_deref`]: do not suggest propose to auto-dereference an union field

Fix #11474
2023-09-11 19:42:10 +00:00
Matthew Jasper
ab08a3d7b2 Update tools and fulldeps tests 2023-09-11 15:51:19 +00:00
Alex Macleod
54f3ddb84a Call LateLintPass::check_attribute from with_lint_attrs 2023-09-10 18:56:39 +00:00
Samuel Tardieu
c548d11041 Auto deref does not apply on union field 2023-09-10 18:15:18 +02:00
bors
8c48b936cc Auto merge of #11459 - y21:issue11435, r=blyxyas
[`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
2023-09-09 22:51:42 +00:00
bors
ec6f1bd4bf Auto merge of #11358 - Alexendoo:incorrect-to-manual-impls, r=Jarcho
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
2023-09-09 11:44:51 +00:00
Alex Macleod
e88a556124 Reuse rustdoc's doc comment handling in Clippy 2023-09-08 23:42:57 +00:00
bors
27165acadf Auto merge of #11456 - tom-anders:std_instead_of_core_suggestion, r=Manishearth
Add suggestions for std_instead_of_core

```
changelog: [`std_instead_of_core`]: add suggestions
```

Fixes #11446
2023-09-08 15:59:00 +00:00
Alex Macleod
b99921a5e8 Rename incorrect_impls to non_canonical_impls, move them to warn by default 2023-09-08 13:15:51 +00:00
Alex Macleod
cc8c0e0099 Ignore span's parents in collect_ast_format_args/find_format_args 2023-09-08 12:40:21 +00:00
John Kåre Alsaker
b5941a2fd5 Partially outline code inside the panic! macro 2023-09-08 14:05:57 +02:00
bors
253f1c410b Auto merge of #11469 - flip1995:rustup, r=flip1995
Rustup

r? `@ghost`

changelog: none
2023-09-07 20:39:49 +00:00
Philipp Krones
184c9712b2
Fix 32bit tests 2023-09-07 22:39:11 +02:00
Philipp Krones
25e8639676
Fix clippy driver stderr test 2023-09-07 22:12:40 +02:00
Philipp Krones
d780573bec
Bump nightly version -> 2023-09-07 2023-09-07 21:43:45 +02:00
Philipp Krones
d2b08432db
Merge remote-tracking branch 'upstream/master' into rustup 2023-09-07 21:43:06 +02:00
bors
6150bf5b92 Auto merge of #11462 - Alexendoo:manual-range-patterns-preserve-literals, r=blyxyas
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
2023-09-07 13:50:16 +00:00
John Kåre Alsaker
0f74faf158 Use Freeze for SourceFile.lines 2023-09-07 13:05:05 +02:00
bors
415ba21c3b Auto merge of #11451 - y21:issue11408, r=xFrednet
[`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
2023-09-07 11:03:01 +00:00
bors
69fcbfdac0 Auto merge of #11466 - Alexendoo:ci-32bit, r=flip1995
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
2023-09-06 15:15:32 +00:00
Alex Macleod
60ffff08e6 Fix i686-unknown-linux-gnu CI job 2023-09-06 14:59:54 +00:00
bors
0d36d57c41 Auto merge of #11439 - Alexendoo:disallowed-macros-bins-attrs, r=xFrednet
Check binary operators and attributes in disallowed_macros

changelog: none
2023-09-06 11:36:28 +00:00
bors
953901e35c Auto merge of #115507 - cjgillot:relative-source-file, r=oli-obk
Use relative positions inside a SourceFile.

This allows to remove the normalization of start positions for hashing, and simplify allocation of global address space.

cc `@Zoxc`
2023-09-05 21:03:56 +00:00
y21
30846b16a0 add comments in code to clarify and fix typo 2023-09-05 21:55:08 +02:00
y21
18f36897ef use the correct node args for substitution 2023-09-05 19:08:34 +02:00
Alex Macleod
bbf67c3424 Preserve literals and range kinds in manual_range_patterns 2023-09-05 13:20:37 +00:00
bors
eb0df1d4f4 Auto merge of #11454 - samueltardieu:issue-11403, r=Centri3
Ignore wildcards in function arguments and local bindings

Fix #11403

changelog: none
2023-09-05 12:01:31 +00:00
Samuel Tardieu
2f5c445c0b Ignore wildcards in function arguments and local bindings 2023-09-04 17:18:33 +02:00
Samuel Tardieu
822c7df545 Add ui_test error annotations in existing tests 2023-09-04 17:05:03 +02:00
y21
cf10690ad4 check that the receiver type satisfies bounds 2023-09-04 16:34:57 +02:00
y21
e34e49f7ff useless_conversion: don't lint if ty param has multiple bounds 2023-09-04 16:20:38 +02:00
Urgau
a86e758228 Adjust clippy tests with new rustc help suggestion for lints 2023-09-04 14:22:02 +02:00
bors
bcf856bfb3 Auto merge of #11375 - J-ZhengLi:issue11246, r=Centri3
fix fp when [`undocumented_unsafe_blocks`] not able to detect comment on globally defined const/static variables

fixes: #11246

changelog: fix detection on global variables for [`undocumented_unsafe_blocks`]
2023-09-04 09:47:45 +00:00
J-ZhengLi
438f934f1c suggest passing function instead of calling it in [option_if_let_else] 2023-09-04 16:15:45 +08:00
bors
da882f0a5a Auto merge of #11455 - digama0:never_loop3, r=Centri3,dswij
skip `todo!()` in  `never_loop`

As promised in #11450, here is an implementation which skips occurrences of the `todo!()` macro.

changelog: [`never_loop`]: skip loops containing `todo!()`
2023-09-04 05:51:47 +00:00
Mario Carneiro
4e0a3465d1 fix vec.rs test, comment 2023-09-04 06:35:51 +02:00
bors
f13e1f429a Auto merge of #11259 - Jarcho:ice_10253, r=dswij
Don't pass extra generic arguments in `needless_borrow`

fixes #10253

Also switches to using `implements_trait` which does ICE when clippy's debug assertions are enabled.

changelog: None
2023-09-04 03:17:50 +00:00
y21
32e25118a6 extract lint emitting into separate fn 2023-09-03 22:53:37 +02:00
bors
60a18b7831 Auto merge of #11449 - blyxyas:book-write_tests, r=flip1995
Should be final writing_tests commit

Fixes that book `FIXME`.

r? `@flip1995`
changelog: none
2023-09-03 20:25:41 +00:00
y21
7262145964 [implied_bounds_in_impl]: fix suggestion for assoc types 2023-09-03 22:21:03 +02:00
bors
3de0f19c41 Auto merge of #11437 - y21:issue-11422, r=xFrednet
[`implied_bounds_in_impls`]: don't ICE on default generic parameter and move to nursery

Fixes #11422

This fixes two ICEs ([1](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust-clippy/issues/11422#issue-1872351763), [2](https://play.rust-lang.org/?version=stable&mode=debug&edition=2021&gist=2901e6febb479d3bd2a74f8a5b8a9305)), and moves it to nursery for now, because this lint needs some improvements in its suggestion (see #11435, for one such example).

changelog: Moved [`implied_bounds_in_impls`] to nursery (Now allow-by-default)
[#11437](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust-clippy/pull/11437)
changelog: [`implied_bounds_in_impls`]: don't ICE on default generic parameter in supertrait clause

r? `@xFrednet` (since you reviewed my PR that added this lint, I figured it might make sense to have you review this as well since you have seen this code before. If you don't want to review this, sorry! Feel free to reroll then)

--------

As for the ICE, it's pretty complicated and very confusing imo, so I'm going to try to explain the idea here (partly for myself, too, because I've confused myself several times writing- and fixing this):
<details>
<summary>Expand</summary>

The general idea behind the lint is that, if we have this function:
```rs
fn f() -> impl PartialEq<i32> + PartialOrd<i32> { 0 }
```
We want to lint the `PartialEq` bound because it's unnecessary. That exact bound is already specified in `PartialOrd<i32>`'s supertrait clause:
```rs
trait PartialOrd<Rhs>: PartialEq<Rhs> {}
//    PartialOrd<i32>: PartialEq<i32>
```

 The way it does this is in two steps:
- Go through all of the bounds in the `impl Trait` return type and collect each of the trait's supertrait bounds into a vec. We also store the generic arguments for later.
  - `PartialEq` has no supertraits, nothing to add.
  - `PartialOrd` is defined as `trait PartialOrd: PartialEq`, so add `PartialEq` to the list, as well as the generic argument(s) `<i32>`

Once we are done, we have these entries in the vec: `[(PartialEq, [i32])]`

- Go through all the bounds again, and looking for those bounds that have their trait `DefId` in the implied bounds vec.
  - `PartialEq` is in that vec. However, that is not enough, because the trait is generic. If the user wrote `impl PartialEq<String> + PartialOrd<i32>`, then `PartialOrd` clearly doesn't imply `PartialEq`. Which means, we also need to check that the generic parameters match. This is why we also collected the generic arguments in `PartialOrd<i32>`. This process of checking generic arguments is pretty complicated and is also where the two ICEs happened.

The way it checks that the generic arguments match is by comparing the generic parameters in the super trait clause:
```rs
trait PartialOrd<Rhs>: PartialEq<Rhs> {}
//                     ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
```
...this needs to match...
```rs
fn f() -> impl PartialEq<i32> + ...
//             ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
```
In the compiler, the `Rhs` generic parameter is its own type and we cannot just compare it to `i32`. We need to "substitute" it.
Internally, `Rhs` is represented as `Rhs#1` (the number next to # represents the type parameter index. They start at 0, but 0 is "reserved" for the implicit `Self` generic parameter).

How do we go from `Rhs#1` to `i32`? Well, we know that all the generic parameters had to be substituted in the `impl ... + PartialOrd<i32>` type. So we subtract 1 from the type parameter index, giving us 0 (`Self` is not specified in that list of arguments). We use that as the index into the generic argument list `<i32>`. That's `i32`. Now we know that the supertrait clause looks like `: PartialEq<i32>`.

Then, we can compare that to what the user actually wrote on the bound that we think is being implied: `impl PartialEq<i32> + ...`.

Now to the actual bug: this whole logic doesn't take into account *default* generic parameters. Actually, `PartialOrd` is defined like this:
```rs
trait PartialOrd<Rhs = Self>: PartialEq<Rhs> {}
```
If we now have a function like this:
```rs
fn f() -> impl PartialOrd + PartialEq {}
```
that logic breaks apart... We look at the supertrait predicate `: PartialEq<Rhs>` (`Rhs` is `Rhs#1`), then take the first argument in the generic argument list `PartialEq<..>` to resolve the `Rhs`, but at this point we crash because there *is no* generic argument.
The index 0 is out of bounds. If this happens (and we even get to linting here, which could only happen if it passes typeck), it must mean that that generic parameter has a default type that is not required to be specified.

This PR changes the logic such that if we have a type parameter index that is out of bounds, it looks at the definition of the trait and check that there exists a default type that we can use instead.
So, we see `<Rhs = Self>`, and use `Self` for substitution, and end up with this predicate: `: PartialEq<Self>`. No crash this time.

</details>
2023-09-03 16:09:40 +00:00