Curse outdated test output
changelog: internal
Change `cargo dev bless` to only include test output that was generated since the last build of clippy. This is especially useful when running tests with `TESTNAME=...`. The feature may be disabled by `cargo dev bless --ignore-timestamp`.
The core issue was the usage of `reference_file_path.file_name()`, which
provided a non-existent path if the file to be updated was in a
subdirectory.
Instead we have to provide the whole path after 'tests/ui/' as the
'filename'. This part of the path is called `test_name` in the code now.
Adding of new reference files wasn't handled correctly. It was trying to
read a file that didn't exist yet.
Instead of unwrapping, we now treat a missing reference file as empty
(`Vec::new`). This makes the following conditional work. We then also
have to re-read the reference file after it was being copied. This
second read is technically the same as in the old shell script, but
wasn't really obvious. The shell script did a `-s` test which reads the
file.
Deprecate util/dev in favor of cargo alias
This means one less shell script and a bit more cross-platform support
for contributors.
If you've been using `./util/dev` before, this now becomes `cargo dev`.
The key part of this change is found in `.cargo/config` where an alias for calling the `clippy_dev` binary is defined.
changelog: none
This allows us to use the method in both `fmt.rs` and `lib.rs` in
multiple places. The downside is that we panic inside the method now,
instead of using the error handling in `fmt.rs`. We may want to
centralize the error handling for clippy_dev at some point, though.
If you've been using `./util/dev` before, this now becomes `cargo dev`.
The key part of this change is found in `.cargo/config`.
This means one less shell script and a bit more cross-platform support
for contributors.
`must_use_unit` lints unit-returning functions with a `#[must_use]`
attribute, suggesting to remove it.
`double_must_use` lints functions with a plain `#[must_use]`
attribute, but which return a type which is already `#[must_use]`,
so the attribute has no benefit.
`must_use_candidate` is a pedantic lint that lints functions and
methods that return some non-unit type that is not already
`#[must_use]` and suggests to add the annotation.
account for doc visibility
This fixes#4608.
Also I noticed that the lint failed to look at trait and impl items. There's a small bit of fallout in the code, too, but not enough to warrant its own commit.
changelog: check docs of trait items and impl items, also make `missing_safety_doc` account for visibility
Fix false-positive of redundant_clone and move to clippy::perf
This PR introduces dataflow analysis to `redundant_clone` lint to filter out borrowed variables, which had been incorrectly detected.
Depends on https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/64207.
changelog: Moved `redundant_clone` lint to `perf` group
# What this lint catches
## `clone`/`to_owned`
```rust
let s = String::new();
let t = s.clone();
```
```rust
// MIR
_1 = String::new();
_2 = &_1;
_3 = clone(_2); // (*)
```
We can turn this `clone` call into a move if
1. `_2` is the sole borrow of `_1` at the statement `(*)`
2. `_1` is not used hereafter
## `Deref` + type-specific `to_owned` method
```rust
let s = std::path::PathBuf::new();
let t = s.to_path_buf();
```
```rust
// MIR
_1 = PathBuf::new();
_2 = &1;
_3 = call deref(_2);
_4 = _3; // Copies borrow
StorageDead(_2);
_5 = Path::to_path_buf(_4); // (*)
```
We can turn this `to_path_buf` call into a move if
1. `_3` `_4` are the sole borrow of `_1` at `(*)`
2. `_1` is not used hereafter
# What this PR introduces
1. `MaybeStorageLive` that determines whether a local lives at a particular location
2. `PossibleBorrowerVisitor` that constructs [`TransitiveRelation`](https://doc.rust-lang.org/nightly/nightly-rustc/rustc_data_structures/transitive_relation/struct.TransitiveRelation.html) of possible borrows, e.g. visiting `_2 = &1; _3 = &_2:` will result in `_3 -> _2 -> _1` relation. Then `_3` and `_2` will be counted as possible borrowers of `_1` in the sole-borrow analysis above.