Initialization expressions are now generated when index is bound to a variable.
FIX: Check to see if variables are used after swap
FIX: rename StmtKind::Local to StmtKind::Let
Elide unit variables linted by `let_unit` and use `()` directly instead
Situation: `let_unit` lints when an expression binds a unit (`()`) to a variable. In some cases this binding may be passed down to another function. Currently, the lint removes the binding without considering usage.
fixes: #12594
changelog: Suggestion Fix [`let_unit`]. Clippy will remove unit bindings and replace all their instances in the body with `()`.
Situation: `let_unit` lints when an expression binds a unit (`()`)
to a variable. In some cases this binding may be passed down to
another function. Currently, the lint removes the binding without
considering usage.
Change: All usages of the elided variable are now replaced with `()`.
fixes: #12594
`Box::default()` had its `#[rustc_box]` attribute removed in 1.69 so is
no longer a perf related lint
The lint is moved to style but no longer produces suggestions containing
turbofishes, as they're often longer/more annoying to type
Allow `filter_map_identity` when the closure is typed
This extends the `filter_map_identity` lint to support typed closures.
For untyped closures, we know that the program compiles, and therefore we can safely suggest using flatten.
For typed closures, they may participate in type resolution. In this case we use `Applicability::MaybeIncorrect`.
Details:
https://rust-lang.zulipchat.com/#narrow/stream/257328-clippy/topic/Should.20.60filter_map_identity.60.20lint.20when.20closures.20are.20typed.3F
changelog: `filter_map_identity` will now suggest using flatten for typed closures.
r? `@y21` && `@Centri3`
[`type_id_on_box`]: lint on any `Box<dyn _>`
Closes#11349.
It now not only lints when calling `.type_id()` on the type `Box<dyn Any>`, but also on any `Box<dyn Trait>` where `Trait` is a subtrait of `Any`
changelog: FN: [`type_id_on_box`]: lint if `Any` is a sub trait
new lint `legacy_numeric_constants`
Rework of #10997
- uses diagnostic items
- does not lint imports of the float modules (`use std::f32`)
- does not lint usage of float constants that look like `f32::MIN`
I chose to make the float changes because the following pattern is actually pretty useful
```rust
use std::f32;
let omega = freq * 2 * f32::consts::PI;
```
and the float modules are not TBD-deprecated like the integer modules.
Closes#10995
---
changelog: New lint [`legacy_numeric_constants`]
[#12312](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust-clippy/pull/12312)
make sure checked type implements `Try` trait when linting [`question_mark`]
(indirectly) fixes: #12412 and fixes: #11983
---
changelog: make sure checked type implements `Try` trait when linting [`question_mark`]
restrict manual_clamp to const case, bring it out of nursery
Implements the plan that I described in https://github.com/rust-lang/rust-clippy/pull/9484#issuecomment-1374522054
This does two things primarily
1. Restrict `manual_clamp` such that it will only trigger if we are able to guarantee that `clamp` won't panic at runtime.
2. Bring `manual_clamp` out of nursery status and move it into the complexity group.
changelog: [`manual_clamp`]: Restrict this lint such that it only triggers if max and min are const, and max is greater than or equal to min. Then bring it out of the nursery group.
Instead of just saying “this function's stack frame is big”, report:
* the (presumed) size of the frame
* the size and type of the largest local contributing to that size
* the configurable limit that was exceeded (once)
`useless_asref`: do not lint `.as_ref().map(Arc::clone)`
This applies to `Arc`, `Rc`, and their weak variants. Using `.clone()` would be less idiomatic.
This follows the discussion in <https://github.com/rust-lang/rust-clippy/issues/12528#issuecomment-2014444305>.
changelog: [`useless_asref`]: do not lint `.as_ref().map(Arc::clone)` and similar
don't lint [`mixed_attributes_style`] when mixing docs and other attrs
fixes: #12435fixes: #12436fixes: #12530
---
changelog: don't lint [`mixed_attributes_style`] when mixing different kind of attrs; and move it to late pass;
don't lint [`mixed_attributes_style`] when mixing docs and other attrs
add test files for issue #12436
move [`mixed_attributes_style`] to `LateLintPass` to enable global `allow`
stop [`mixed_attributes_style`] from linting on different attributes
add `@compile-flags` to [`mixed_attributes_style`]'s test;
turns out not linting in test mod is not a FN.
Apply suggestions from code review
Co-authored-by: Timo <30553356+y21@users.noreply.github.com>
move [`mixed_attributes_style`] to late pass and stop it from linting on different kind of attributes
Note that the caller chooses a type for type param
```
error[E0308]: mismatched types
--> $DIR/return-impl-trait.rs:23:5
|
LL | fn other_bounds<T>() -> T
| - -
| | |
| | expected `T` because of return type
| | help: consider using an impl return type: `impl Trait`
| expected this type parameter
...
LL | ()
| ^^ expected type parameter `T`, found `()`
|
= note: expected type parameter `T`
found unit type `()`
= note: the caller chooses the type of T which can be different from ()
```
Tried to see if "expected this type parameter" can be replaced, but that goes all the way to `rustc_infer` so seems not worth the effort and can affect other diagnostics.
Revives #112088 and #104755.
Do not warn on .map(_::clone) for Arc, Rc, and their weak variants
Those constructions are idiomatic, and using `Arc::clone(x)` and `Rc::clone(x)` is often the recommended way of cloning a `Arc` or a `Rc`.
Fix#12528
changelog: [`map_clone`]: do not warn on `.map(_::clone)` for `Arc`, `Rc`, and their `Weak` variants
Fix infinite loop in `cast_sign_loss` when peeling unwrap method calls
Fixes#12506
The lint wants to peel method calls but didn't actually reassign the expression, leading to an infinite loop.
----
changelog: Fix infinite loop in [`cast_sign_loss`] when having two chained `.unwrap()` calls
Several (doc) comments were super outdated or didn't provide enough context.
Some doc comments shoved everything in a single paragraph without respecting
the fact that the first paragraph should be a single sentence because rustdoc
treats these as item descriptions / synopses on module pages.
Disable `cast_lossless` when casting to u128 from any (u)int type
Fixes https://github.com/rust-lang/rust-clippy/issues/12492
Disables `cast_lossless` when casting to u128 from any int or uint type. The lint states that when casting to any int type, there can potentially be lossy behaviour if the source type ever exceeds the size of the destination type in the future, which is impossible with a destination of u128.
It's possible this is a bit of a niche edge case which is better addressed by just disabling the lint in code, but I personally couldn't think of any good reason to still lint in this specific case - maybe except if the source is a bool, for readability reasons :).
changelog: FP: `cast_lossless`: disable lint when casting to u128 from any (u)int type
[`map_entry`]: call the visitor on the local's `else` block
Fixes#12489
The lint already has all the logic it needs for figuring out if it can or can't suggest a closure if it sees control flow expressions like `break` or `continue`, but it was ignoring the local's else block, which meant that it didn't see the `return None;` in a `let..else`.
changelog: [`map_entry`]: suggest `if let` instead of a closure when `return` expressions exist in the else block of a `let..else`
new restriction lint: `integer_division_remainder_used`
Fixes https://github.com/rust-lang/rust-clippy/issues/12391
Introduces a restriction lint which disallows the use of `/` and `%` operators on any `Int` or `Uint` types (i.e., any that use the default `Div` or `Rem` trait implementations). Custom implementations of these traits are ignored.
----
changelog: Add new restriction lint [`integer_division_remainder_used`]
[`option_option`]: Fix duplicate diagnostics
Relates to #12379
This `option_option` lint change skips checks against `ty`s inside `field_def`s defined by external macro to prevent duplicate diagnostics to the same span `ty` by multiple `Struct` definitions.
---
changelog: [`option_option`]: Fix duplicate diagnostics
move `readonly_write_lock` to perf
[There haven't been any issues](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust-clippy/issues?q=is%3Aissue+readonly_write_lock) since its creation and it's a pretty useful lint I think, so I'd say it's worth giving it a try?
Did a lintcheck run on 300 crates with no results, but I guess `RwLock` is usually not something that's used much in libraries.
changelog: move [`readonly_write_lock`] to perf (now warn-by-default)
fix [`dbg_macro`] FN when dbg is inside some complex macros
fixes: #12131
It appears that [`root_macro_call_first_node`] only detects `println!` in the following example:
```rust
println!("{:?}", dbg!(s));
```
---
changelog: fix [`dbg_macro`] FN when `dbg` is inside some complex macros
(re-opening b'cuz bors doesn't like my previous one)
fix span calculation for non-ascii in `needless_return`
Fixes#12491
Probably fixes#12328 as well, but that one has no reproducer, so 🤷
The bug was that the lint used `rfind()` for finding the byte index of the start of the previous non-whitespace character:
```
// abc\n return;
^
```
... then subtracting one to get the byte index of the actual whitespace (the `\n` here).
(Subtracting instead of adding because it treats this as the length from the `return` token to the `\n`)
That's correct for ascii, like here, and will get us to the `\n`, however for non ascii, the `c` could be multiple bytes wide, which would put us in the middle of a codepoint if we simply subtract 1 and is what caused the ICE.
There's probably a lot of ways we could fix this.
This PR changes it to iterate backwards using bytes instead of characters, so that when `rposition()` finally finds a non-whitespace byte, we *know* that we've skipped exactly 1 byte. This was *probably*(?) what the code was intending to do
changelog: Fix ICE in [`needless_return`] when previous line end in a non-ascii character
[`unused_enumerate_index`]: trigger on method calls
The lint used to check for patterns looking like:
```rs
for (_, x) in some_iter.enumerate() {
// Index is ignored
}
```
This commit further checks for chained method calls constructs where we
can detect that the index is unused. Currently, this checks only for the
following patterns:
```rs
some_iter.enumerate().map_function(|(_, x)| ..)
let x = some_iter.enumerate();
x.map_function(|(_, x)| ..)
```
where `map_function` is one of `all`, `any`, `filter_map`, `find_map`,
`flat_map`, `for_each` or `map`.
Fixes#12411.
*Please write a short comment explaining your change (or "none" for internal only changes)*
changelog: [`unused_enumerate_index`]: add detection for method chains such as `iter.enumerate().map(|(_, x)| x)`
Prior to this change, it might be that the lint would remove an explicit
type that was necessary for the type system to keep track of types.
This should be the last change that prevented this lint to be machine
applicable.
Don't emit `doc_markdown` lint for missing backticks if it's inside a quote
Fixes#10262.
changelog: Don't emit `doc_markdown` lint for missing backticks if it's inside a quote
[`use_self`]: Make it aware of lifetimes
Have the lint trigger even if `Self` has generic lifetime parameters.
```rs
impl<'a> Foo<'a> {
type Item = Foo<'a>; // Can be replaced with Self
fn new() -> Self {
Foo { // No lifetime, but they are inferred to be that of Self
// Can be replaced as well
...
}
}
// Don't replace `Foo<'b>`, the lifetime is different!
fn eq<'b>(self, other: Foo<'b>) -> bool {
..
}
```
Fixes#12381
*Please write a short comment explaining your change (or "none" for internal only changes)*
changelog: [`use_self`]: Have the lint trigger even if `Self` has generic lifetime parameters
The lint used to check for patterns looking like:
```rs
for (_, x) in some_iter.enumerate() {
// Index is ignored
}
```
This commit further checks for chained method calls constructs where we
can detect that the index is unused. Currently, this checks only for the
following patterns:
```rs
some_iter.enumerate().map_function(|(_, x)| ..)
let x = some_iter.enumerate();
x.map_function(|(_, x)| ..)
```
where `map_function` is one of `all`, `any`, `filter_map`, `find_map`,
`flat_map`, `for_each` or `map`.
Fixes#12411.
lint when calling the blanket `Into` impl from a `From` impl
Closes#11150
```
warning: function cannot return without recursing
--> x.rs:9:9
|
9 | / fn from(value: f32) -> Self {
10 | | value.into()
11 | | }
| |_________^
|
note: recursive call site
--> x.rs:10:13
|
10 | value.into()
| ^^^^^^^^^^^^
```
I'm also thinking that we can probably generalize this lint to #11032 at some point (instead of hardcoding a bunch of impls), like how rustc's `unconditional_recursion` works, at least up to one indirect call, but this still seems useful for now :)
I've also noticed that we use `fn_def_id` in a bunch of lints and then try to get the node args of the call in a separate step, so I made a helper function that does both in one. I intend to refactor a bunch of uses of `fn_def_id` to use this later
I can add more test cases, but this is already using much of the same logic that exists for the other impls that this lint looks for (e.g. making sure that there are no conditional returns).
changelog: [`unconditional_recursion`]: emit a warning inside of `From::from` when unconditionally calling the blanket `.into()` impl
Move `iter_nth` to `style`, add machine applicable suggestion
There's no `O(n)` involved with `.iter().nth()` on the linted types since the iterator implementations provide `nth` and/or `advance_by` that operate in `O(1)`
For slice iterators the codegen is equivalent, `VecDeque`'s iterator seems to codegen differently but that doesn't seem significant enough to keep it as a perf lint
changelog: [`iter_nth`] Move to `style`
r? `@flip1995`
[`manual_retain`]: Fix duplicate diagnostics
Relates to: #12379
The first lint guard executed in `LateLintPass::check_expr` was testing if the parent was of type `ExprKind::Assign`. This meant the lint emitted on both sides of the assignment operator when `check_expr` is called on either `Expr`. The guard in the fix only lints once when the `Expr` is of kind `Assign`.
changelog: Fix duplicate lint diagnostic emission from [`manual_retain`]
Add new `duplicated_attributes` lint
It's a lint idea that `@llogiq` gave me while reviewing another PR.
There are some limitations, in particular for the "output". Initially I wanted to make it possible for directly lint against the whole attribute if its parts were all duplicated, but then I realized that the output would be chaotic if the duplicates were coming from different attributes, so I preferred to go to the simplest way and simply emit a warning for each entry. Not the best, but makes the implementation much easier.
Another limitation is that `cfg_attr` would be a bit more tricky to implement because we need to check if two `cfg` sets are exactly the same. I added a FIXME and will likely come back to it later.
And finally, I updated the `cargo dev update_lints` command because the generated `tests/ui/rename.rs` file was emitting the `duplicated_attributes` lint, so I allowed this lint inside it to prevent it from working.
changelog: Add new `duplicated_attributes` lint
add documentation to the `span_lint_hir` functions
As far as I could tell, these weren't documented anywhere, and since this is sometimes needed over `span_lint` for `#[allow]` attrs to work, I thought I would add a little bit of documentation.
When I started with clippy development, I also had no idea what these functions were for.
changelog: none