Stabilize some Result methods as const
Stabilize the following methods of Result as const:
- `is_ok`
- `is_err`
- `as_ref`
A test is also included, analogous to the test for `const_option`.
These methods are currently const under the unstable feature `const_result` (tracking issue: #67520).
I believe these methods to be eligible for stabilization because of the stabilization of #49146 (Allow if and match in constants) and the trivial implementations, see also: [PR#75463](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/75463) and [PR#76135](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/76135).
Note: these methods are the only methods currently under the `const_result` feature, thus this PR results in the removal of the feature.
Related: #76225
Update the test `redundant_pattern_matching`: check if `is_ok` and `is_err` are suggested within const contexts.
Also removes the `redundant_pattern_matching_const_result` test, as it is no longer needed.
* stop linting associated types and generic type parameters
* start linting ones in trait impls
whose corresponding definitions in the traits are generic
* remove the `is_copy` check
as presumably the only purpose of it is to allow
generics with `Copy` bounds as `Freeze` is internal
and generics are no longer linted
* remove the term 'copy' from the tests
as being `Copy` no longer have meaning
option_if_let_else - distinguish pure from impure else expressions
Addresses partially #5821.
changelog: improve the lint `option_if_let_else`. Suggest `map_or` or `map_or_else` based on the else expression purity.
Extend invalid_atomic_ordering for compare_exchange{,_weak} and fetch_update
changelog: The invalid_atomic_ordering lint can now detect misuse of `compare_exchange`, `compare_exchange_weak`, and `fetch_update`.
---
I was surprised not to find an issue or existing support here, since these are the functions which are always hardest to get the ordering right on for me (as the allowed orderings for `fail` depend on the `success` parameter).
I believe this lint now covers all atomic methods which care about their ordering now, but I could be wrong.
Hopefully I didn't forget to do anything for the PR!
{print,write}-with-newline: do not suggest empty format string
changelog: do not suggest empty format strings in `print-with-newline` and `write-with-newline`
clarify margin of error in wording of float comparison operator lint messages
fixes#6040
changelog: change wording of float comparison operator to make margin of error less ambiguous
Add map_err_ignore lint
In a large code base a lot of times errors are ignored by using something like:
```rust
foo.map_err(|_| Some::Enum)?;
```
This drops the original error in favor of a enum that will not have the original error's context. This lint helps catch throwing away the original error in favor of an enum without its context.
---
*Please keep the line below*
changelog: Added map_err_ignore lint
Add a new lint, `manual-strip`, that suggests using the `str::strip_prefix`
and `str::strip_suffix` methods introduced in Rust 1.45 when the same
functionality is performed 'manually'.
Closes#5734
Add lint panic in result
### Change
Adding a new "restriction" lint that will emit a warning when using "panic", "unimplemented" or "unreachable" in a function of type option/result.
### Motivation
Some codebases must avoid crashes at all costs, and hence functions of type option/result must return an error instead of crashing.
### Test plan
Running:
TESTNAME=panic_in_result cargo uitest ---
changelog: none
improve the suggestion of the lint `unit-arg`
Fixes#5823Fixes#6015
Changes
```
help: move the expression in front of the call...
|
3 | g();
|
help: ...and use a unit literal instead
|
3 | o.map_or((), |i| f(i))
|
```
into
```
help: move the expression in front of the call and replace it with the unit literal `()`
|
3 | g();
| o.map_or((), |i| f(i))
|
```
changelog: improve the suggestion of the lint `unit-arg`
We no longer lint assignments to const item fields in the
`temporary_assignment` lint, since this is now covered by the
`CONST_ITEM_MUTATION` lint.
Additionally, we `#![allow(const_item_mutation)]` in the
`borrow_interior_mutable_const.rs` test. Clippy UI tests are run with
`-D warnings`, which seems to cause builtin lints to prevent Clippy
lints from running.
Fix FP in `same_item_push`
Don't emit a lint when the pushed item doesn't have Clone trait
Fix#5979
changelog: Fix FP in `same_item_push` not to emit a lint when the pushed item doesn't have Clone trait
useless_attribute: Permit wildcard_imports and enum_glob_use
Fixes#5918
changelog: `useless_attribute`: Permit `wildcard_imports` and `enum_glob_use` on `use` items
default_trait_access: Fix wrong suggestion
https://github.com/rust-lang/rust-clippy/issues/5975#issuecomment-683751131
> I think the underlying problem is clippy suggests code with complete parameters, not clippy triggers this lint even for complex types. AFAIK, If code compiles with `Default::default`, it doesn't need to specify any parameters, as type inference is working. (So, in this case, `default_trait_access` should suggest `RefCell::default`.)
Fixes#5975Fixes#5990
changelog: `default_trait_access`: fixed wrong suggestion
Add a lint for an async block/closure that yields a type that is itself awaitable.
This catches bugs of the form
tokio::spawn(async move {
let f = some_async_thing();
f // Oh no I forgot to await f so that work will never complete.
});
See the two XXXkhuey comments and the unfixed `_l` structure for things that need more thought.
*Please keep the line below*
changelog: none
This catches bugs of the form
tokio::spawn(async move {
let f = some_async_thing();
f // Oh no I forgot to await f so that work will never complete.
});
Fix FP in `to_string_in_display`
Don't emit a lint when `.to_string()` on anything that is not `self`
Fix#5967
changelog: Fix FP in `to_string_in_display` when calling `.to_string()` on anything that is not `self`
Corrects the float_equality_without_abs lint
Fixes an issue in the `float_equality_without_abs` lint. The lint suggestion was configured in a way that it lints the whole error and not just the subtraction part. In the current configuration the lint would suggest to change the expression in a wrong way, e.g.
```rust
let _ = (a - b) < f32::EPSILON; // before
let _ = (a - b).abs(); // after
```
This was dicovered by @flip1995. (See discussion of PR #5952).
Also the suggestion is now formatted via `utils::sugg`.
changelog: none
Fix `let_and_return` bad suggestion
Add a cast to the suggestion when the return expression has adjustments.
These adjustments are lost when the suggestion is applied.
This is similar to the problem in issue #4437.
Closes#5729
changelog: Fix `let_and_return` bad suggestion
Fix fp in `borrow_interior_mutable_const`
fixes#5796
changelog: fix false positive in `borrow_interior_mutable_const` when referencing a field behind a pointer.
Fix incorrect suggestion when `clone_on_ref_ptr` is triggered in macros
In the lint `clone_on_ref_ptr`, if the `span` is in a macro, don't expand it for suggestion.
Fixes: #2076
changelog: none
r? @ebroto
Add a cast to the suggestion when the return expression has adjustments.
These adjustments are lost when the suggestion is applied.
This is similar to the problem in issue #4437.
Closes#5729
Don't lint if it has always inline attribute
Don't trigger the lint `trivially_copy_pass_by_ref` if it has `#[inline(always)]` attribute.
Note: I am not particularly familiar with `inline` impacts, so I implemented this the way that if only `#[inline]` attribute is here (without `always`), the lint will still trigger. Also, it will still trigger if it has `#[inline(never)]`.
Just tell me if it sounds too much conservative.
Fixes: #5876
changelog: none
Prelude imports are exempt from wildcard import warnings. Until now only
imports of the form
```
use ...::prelude::*;
```
were considered. This change makes it so that the segment `prelude` can
show up anywhere, for instance:
```
use ...::prelude::v1::*;
```
Fixes#5917
Fix false positive in `PRECEDENCE` lint
Extend the lint to handle chains of methods combined with unary negation.
Closes#5924
changelog: Fix false negative in `PRECEDENCE` lint
Warn about assignments where left-hand side place expression is the same
as right-hand side value expression. For example, warn about assignment in:
```rust
pub struct Event {
id: usize,
x: i32,
y: i32,
}
pub fn copy_position(a: &mut Event, b: &Event) {
a.x = b.x;
a.y = a.y;
}
```
should_impl_trait - ignore methods with lifetime params
Fixes: #5617
changelog: don't lint should_implement_trait when an `Iterator::next` case has explicit parameters
Fix: keep parenthesis for suggestion in `useless_conversion` lint
Note: this lint was previously named `identity_conversion`.
fixes: #4750
changelog: fix parenthesis for `useless_conversion` lint suggestion
Add the other overloadable operations to suspicious_arithmetic_impl
In #2268 I idly mused that the other user-overloadable operations could be added to this lint. Knowing that the lint was arguably incomplete was gnawing at the back of my mind, so I figured that I might as well make this PR, particularly given the change needed was so small.
changelog: Start warning on suspicious implementations of the `BitAnd`, `BitOr`, `BitXor`, `Rem`, `Shl`, and `Shr` traits.
make a bunch of lints texts adhere to rustc dev guide
According to the rustc-dev guide: "The text should be matter of fact and avoid capitalization and periods, unless multiple sentences are needed"
changelog: make some lint output adhere to the rustc-dev guide
enable #[allow(clippy::unsafe_derive_deserialize)]
Before this change this lint could not be allowed as the code we are checking is automatically generated.
changelog: Enable using the `allow` attribute on top of an ADT linted by [`unsafe_derive_deserialize`].
Fixes: #5789
Fix ICE in `loops` module
changelog: Fix ICE related to `needless_collect` when a call to `iter()` was not present.
I went for restoring the old suggestion of `next().is_some()` over `get(0).is_some()` given that `iter()` is not necessarily present (could be e.g. `into_iter()` or `iter_mut()`) and that the old suggestion could change semantics, e.g. a call to `filter()` could be present between `iter()` and the collect part.
Fixes#5872
Check whether locals are too large instead of whether accesses into them are too large
Essentially this stops const prop from attempting to optimize
```rust
let mut x = [0_u8; 5000];
x[42] = 3;
```
I don't expect this to be a perf improvement without #73656 (which is also where the lack of this PR will be a perf regression).
r? @wesleywiser
try_err: Consider Try impl for Poll when generating suggestions
There are two different implementation of `Try` trait for `Poll` type:
`Poll<Result<T, E>>` and `Poll<Option<Result<T, E>>>`. Take them into
account when generating suggestions.
For example, for `Err(e)?` suggest either `return Poll::Ready(Err(e))` or
`return Poll::Ready(Some(Err(e)))` as appropriate.
Fixes#5855
changelog: try_err: Consider Try impl for Poll when generating suggestions
Add derive_ord_xor_partial_ord lint
Fix#1621
Some remarks:
This PR follows the example of the analogous derive_hash_xor_partial_eq lint where possible.
I initially tried using the `match_path` function to identify `Ord` implementation like the derive_hash_xor_partial_eq lint currently does, for `Hash` implementations but that didn't work.
Specifically, the structs at the top level were getting paths that matched `&["$crate", "cmp", "Ord"]` instead of `&["std", "cmp", "Ord"]`. While trying to figure out what to do instead I saw the comment at the top of [clippy_lints/src/utils/paths.rs](f5d429cd76/clippy_lints/src/utils/paths.rs (L5)) that mentioned [this issue](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust-clippy/issues/5393) and suggested to use diagnostic items instead of hardcoded paths whenever possible. I looked for a way to identify `Ord` implementations with diagnostic items, but (possibly because this was the first time I had heard of diagnostic items,) I was unable to find one.
Eventually I tried using `get_trait_def_id` and comparing `DefId` values directly and that seems to work as expected. Maybe there's a better approach however?
changelog: new lint: derive_ord_xor_partial_ord
Handle mapping to Option in `map_flatten` lint
Fixes#4496
The existing [`map_flatten`](https://rust-lang.github.io/rust-clippy/master/index.html#map_flatten) lint suggests changing `expr.map(...).flatten()` to `expr.flat_map(...)` when `expr` is `Iterator`. This PR changes suggestion to `filter_map` instead of `flat_map` when mapping to `Option`, because it is more natural
Also here are some questions:
* If expression has type which implements `Iterator` trait (`match_trait_method(cx, expr, &paths::ITERATOR) == true`), how can I get type of iterator elements? Currently I use return type of closure inside `map`, but probably it is not good way
* I would like to change suggestion range to cover only `.map(...).flatten()`, that is from:
```
let _: Vec<_> = vec![5_i8; 6].into_iter().map(|x| 0..x).flatten().collect();
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ help: try using `flat_map` instead: `vec![5_i8; 6].into_iter().flat_map
```
to
```
let _: Vec<_> = vec![5_i8; 6].into_iter().map(|x| 0..x).flatten().collect();
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ help: try using `flat_map` instead: `.flat_map(|x| 0..x)`
```
Is it ok?
* Is `map_flatten` lint intentionally in `pedantic` category, or could it be moved to `complexity`?
changelog: Handle mapping to Option in [`map_flatten`](https://rust-lang.github.io/rust-clippy/master/index.html#map_flatten) lint
needless_collect: catch x: Vec<_> = iter.collect(); x.into_iter() ...
changelog: Expand the needless_collect lint as suggested in #5627 (WIP).
This PR is WIP because I can't figure out how to make the multi-part suggestion include its changes in the source code (the fixed is identical to the source, despite the lint making suggestions). Aside from that one issue, I think this should be good.
There are two different implementation of Try trait for Poll type;
Poll<Result<T, E>> and Poll<Option<Result<T, E>>>. Take them into
account when generating suggestions.
For example, for Err(e)? suggest either return Poll::Ready(Err(e)) or
return Poll::Ready(Some(Err(e))) as appropriate.
The reason we do not trigger these lints anymore is that clippy sets the mir-opt-level to 0, and the recent changes subtly changed how the const propagator works.
Fix FP for `suspicious_arithmetic_impl` from `suspicious_trait_impl` …
As discussed in #3215, the `suspicious_trait_impl` lint causes too many false positives, as it is complex to find out if binary operations are suspicious or not.
This PR restricts the number of binary operations to at most one, otherwise we don't lint.
This can be seen as very conservative, but at least FP can be reduced to bare minimum.
Fixes: #3215
changelog: limit the `suspicious_arithmetic_impl` lint to one binop, to avoid many FPs
Ignore not really redundant clones of ManuallyDrop
"Redundant" clones of `ManuallyDrop` are sometimes used for the side effect of
invoking the clone, without running the drop implementation of the inner type.
In other words, they aren't really redundant. For example, futures-rs crate:
```rust
#[allow(clippy::redundant_clone)] // The clone here isn't actually redundant.
unsafe fn increase_refcount<T: ArcWake>(data: *const ()) {
// Retain Arc, but don't touch refcount by wrapping in ManuallyDrop
let arc = mem::ManuallyDrop::new(Arc::<T>::from_raw(data as *const T));
// Now increase refcount, but don't drop new refcount either
let _arc_clone: mem::ManuallyDrop<_> = arc.clone();
}
```
changelog: Ignore redundant clone lint for ManuallyDrop.
"Redundant" clones of `ManuallyDrop` are sometimes used for the side effect of
invoking the clone, without running the drop implementation of the inner type.
In other words, they aren't really redundant. For example, futures-rs crate:
```rust
#[allow(clippy::redundant_clone)] // The clone here isn't actually redundant.
unsafe fn increase_refcount<T: ArcWake>(data: *const ()) {
// Retain Arc, but don't touch refcount by wrapping in ManuallyDrop
let arc = mem::ManuallyDrop::new(Arc::<T>::from_raw(data as *const T));
// Now increase refcount, but don't drop new refcount either
let _arc_clone: mem::ManuallyDrop<_> = arc.clone();
}
```
Ignore redundant clone lint for ManuallyDrop.
Panic multiple args
changelog: Fixes bug with `panic` lint reported in #5767. I also did the same changes to the lints for `todo`, `unimplemented` and `unreachable`, so those lints should now also detect calls to those macros with a message.
improve advice in iter_nth_zero
fixes#5783
*Please keep the line below*
changelog: For iter_nth_zero, the "use .next()" replacement advice is on the last line of the code snippet, where it is vulnerable to truncation. Display that advice at the beginning instead.
This lint catches cases where the last statement of a closure expecting
an instance of Ord has a trailing semi-colon. It compiles since the
closure ends up return () which also implements Ord but causes
unexpected results in cases such as sort_by_key.
Fixes#5080
reprise: rebase, update and address all concerns
Rename collapsable_if fix suggestion to "collapse nested if block"
The name "try" is confusing when shown as quick fix by rust-analyzer
changelog: Rename `collapsable_if` fix suggestion to "collapse nested if block"
The "use .next()" replacement advice is on the last line of the code snippet,
where it is vulnerable to truncation. Display that advice at the beginning
instead.
closes#5783
Move range_minus_one to pedantic
This moves the range_minus_one lint to the pedantic category, so there
will not be any warnings emitted by default. This should work around
problems where the suggestion is impossible to resolve due to the range
consumer only accepting a specific range implementation, rather than the
`RangeBounds` trait (see #3307).
While it is possible to work around this by extracting the boundary into
a variable, I don't think clippy should encourage people to disable or
work around lints, but instead the lints should be fixable. So hopefully
this will help until a proper implementation checks what the range is
used for.
*Please keep the line below*
changelog: move [`range_minus_one`] to pedantic
Some accuracy lints for floating point operations
This will add some lints for accuracy on floating point operations suggested by @clarfon in #2040 (fixes#2040).
These are the remaining lints:
- [x] x.powi(2) => x * x
- [x] x.logN() / y.logN() => x.logbase(y)
- [x] x.logbase(E) => x.log()
- [x] x.logbase(10) => x.log10()
- [x] x.logbase(2) => x.log2().
- [x] x * PI / 180 => x.to_radians()
- [x] x * 180 / PI => x.to_degrees()
- [x] (x + 1).log() => x.log_1p()
- [x] sqrt(x * x + y * y) => x.hypot(y)
changelog: Included some accuracy lints for floating point operations
Stabilize `transmute` in constants and statics but not const fn
cc #53605 (leaving issue open so we can add `transmute` to `const fn` later)
Previous attempt: #64011
r? @RalfJung
cc @rust-lang/wg-const-eval
new lint: match_like_matches_macro
Suggests using the `matches!` macro from `std` where appropriate.
`redundant_pattern_matching` has been moved into the `matches` pass to allow suppressing the suggestion where `is_some` and friends are a better replacement.
changelog: new lint: `match_like_matches_macro`
single_match_else - single expr/stmt else block corner case
One approach to fix#3489.
See discussion in the issue.
changelog: single_match_else - single expr/stmt else block corner case fix
Added restriction lint: pattern-type-mismatch
changelog: Added a new restriction lint `pattern-type-mismatch`. This lint is especially helpful for beginners learning about the magic behind pattern matching. (This explanation might be worth to include in the next changelog.)
Fix the versions of packages in the multiple_crate_versions ui test by
checking in the Cargo.lock for the test package. `ansi_term 0.11`
depends on `winapi ^0.3.4`. This means means that the expected stderr for
this test would have to be updated whenever `winapi 0.3` is updated
otherwise.
cmp_owned: handle when PartialEq is not implemented symmetrically
changelog: Handle asymmetrical implementations of PartialEq in [`cmp_owned`].
Fixes#4874
clone_on_copy - add machine applicability
Fix#4826.
Change the applicability of the lint clone_on_copy. Split a test file and run rustfix on the clone_on_copy part.
changelog: clone_on_copy - add machine applicability
#5626: lint iterator.map(|x| x)
changelog: adds a new lint for iterator.map(|x| x) (see https://github.com/rust-lang/rust-clippy/issues/5626)
The code also lints for result.map(|x| x) and option.map(|x| x). Also, I'm not sure if I'm checking for type adjustments correctly and I can't think of an example where .map(|x| x) would apply type adjustments.
New lint: suggest `ptr::read` instead of `mem::replace(..., uninitialized())`
resolves: #5575
changelog: improvements to `MEM_REPLACE_WITH_UNINIT`:
- add a new test case in `tests/ui/repl_uninit.rs` to cover the case of replacing with `mem::MaybeUninit::uninit().assume_init()`.
- modify the existing `MEM_REPLACE_WITH_UNINIT` when replacing with `mem::uninitialized` to suggest using `ptr::read` instead.
- lint with `MEM_REPLACE_WITH_UNINIT` when replacing with `mem::MaybeUninit::uninit().assume_init()`
None of the tools seem to need syn 0.15.35, so we can just build syn
1.0.
This was causing an issue with clippy's `compile-test` program: since
multiple versions of `syn` would exist in the build directory, we would
non-deterministically pick one based on filesystem iteration order. If
the pre-1.0 version of `syn` was picked, a strange build error would
occur (see
https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/73594#issuecomment-647671463)
To prevent this kind of issue from happening again, we now panic if we
find multiple versions of a crate in the build directly, instead of
silently picking the first version we find.
let_and_return: avoid "does not live long enough" errors
EDIT: Add #3324 to the list of fixes
<details>
<summary>Description of old impl</summary>
<br>
Avoid suggesting turning the RHS expression of the last statement into the block tail expression if a temporary borrows from a local that would be destroyed before.
This is my first incursion into MIR so there's probably room for improvement!
</details>
Avoid linting if the return type of some method or function called in the last statement has a lifetime parameter.
changelog: Fix false positive in [`let_and_return`]
Fixes#3792Fixes#3324
Add regression test for `string_lit_as_bytes` issue
Closes#5619
Before the fix in https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/72637, `string_lit_as_bytes` was incorrectly triggering on the `env!` macro. With the fix merged, this test makes sure that the lint is not triggering anymore.
changelog: none
New lint: iter_next_slice
Hello, this is a work-in-progress PR for issue: https://github.com/rust-lang/rust-clippy/issues/5572
I have implemented lint to replace `iter().next()` for `slice[index..]` and `array` with `get(index)` and `get(0)` respectively. However since I made a lot of changes, I would like to request some feedback before continuing so that I could fix mistakes.
Thank you!
---
changelog: implement `iter_next_slice` lint and test, and modify `needless_continues`, `for_loop_over_options_result` UI tests since they have `iter().next()`
Add regression test for endless loop / update `pulldown_cmark`
Closes#4917
This was fixed in pulldown_cmark 0.7.1, specifically raphlinus/pulldown-cmark#438
changelog: none
cargo-ui tests: check that <dir>/src exists before processing test
I forgot that I had fixed this in a PR I closed some days ago (#5643).
Before this change, cargo UI tests could fail when switching between branches if the previous branch had a test that the current branch does not have. The directory is not removed when switching because an ignored `Cargo.lock` file exists, and the code was trying to reach `$DIR/src` unconditionally.
This change will just skip a directory that has no `src` subdirectory.
changelog: none
len_zero: skip ranges if feature `range_is_empty` is not enabled
If the feature is not enabled, calling `is_empty()` on a range is ambiguous. Moreover, the two possible resolutions are unstable methods, one inherent to the range and the other being part of the `ExactSizeIterator` trait.
Since `len_zero` only checks for existing `is_empty()` inherent methods, we only take into account the `range_is_empty` feature.
Related: https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/48111#issuecomment-445132965
changelog: len_zero: avoid linting ranges without #![feature(range_is_empty)]
Fixes: #3807
Extend useless conversion
This PR extends `useless_conversion` lint with `TryFrom` and `TryInto`
fixes: #5344
changelog: Extend `useless_conversion` with `TryFrom` and `TryInto`
Make empty_line_after_outer_attr an early lint
Fixes#5567
Unfortunately I couldn't find a way to reproduce the issue without syn/quote. Considering that most real-world macros use syn and/or quote, I think it's okay to pull them in anyway.
changelog: Fix false positive in [`empty_line_after_outer_attr`]
reversed_empty_ranges: add suggestion for &slice[N..N]
As discussed in the issue thread, the user accepted this solution. Let me know if this is what we want, or if changing the way we lint the N..N case is prefered.
changelog: reversed_empty_ranges: add suggestion for &slice[N..N]
Closes#5628
ptr_arg: honor `allow` attribute on arguments
The `intravisit::Visitor` impl for `LateContextAndPass` only takes into account the attributes of a function parameter inside the `check_param` method. `ptr_arg` starts its heuristics at `check_item` / `check_impl_item` / `check_trait_item`, so the `allow` is not taken into account automatically.
changelog: ptr_arg: honor `allow` attribute on arguments
Fixes#5644
option_option test case #4298
Adds regression test case for #4298.
The bug seems still present although rust Playground said otherwise.
changelog: none
new_without_default: do not suggest deriving
---
changelog: do not suggest deriving `Default` in `new_without_default`
This commit changes the behavior of the `new_without_default` lint to not suggest deriving `Default`. This suggestion is misleading if the `new` implementation does something different than what a derived `Default` implementation would do, because then the two methods would not be equivalent.
Instead, the `can_derive_default` check is removed, and we always suggest implementing `Default` in terms of `new()`.
New lint: `match_wildcard_for_single_variants`
changelog: Added a new lint match_wildcard_for_single_variants to warn on enum matches where a wildcard is used to match a single variant
Closes#5556
Rename lint `identity_conversion` to `useless_conversion`
Lint name `identity_conversion` was misleading, so this PR renames it to `useless_conversion`.
As decision has not really came up in the issue comments, this PR will probably need discussion.
fixes#3106
changelog: Rename lint `identity_conversion` to `useless_conversion`
Merge some lints together
This PR merges following lints:
- `block_in_if_condition_expr` and `block_in_if_condition_stmt` → `blocks_in_if_conditions`
- `option_map_unwrap_or`, `option_map_unwrap_or_else` and `result_map_unwrap_or_else` → `map_unwrap`
- `option_unwrap_used` and `result_unwrap_used` → `unwrap_used`
- `option_expect_used` and `result_expect_used` → `expect_used`
- `wrong_pub_self_convention` into `wrong_self_convention`
- `for_loop_over_option` and `for_loop_over_result` → `for_loops_over_fallibles`
Lints that have already been merged since the issue was created:
- [x] `new_without_default` and `new_without_default_derive` → `new_without_default`
Need more discussion:
- `string_add` and `string_add_assign`: do we agree to merge them or not? Is there something more to do? → **not merge finally**
- `identity_op` and `modulo_one` → `useless_arithmetic`: seems outdated, since `modulo_arithmetic` has been created.
fixes#1078
changelog: Merging some lints together:
- `block_in_if_condition_expr` and `block_in_if_condition_stmt` → `blocks_in_if_conditions`
- `option_map_unwrap_or`, `option_map_unwrap_or_else` and `result_map_unwrap_or_else` → `map_unwrap_or`
- `option_unwrap_used` and `result_unwrap_used` → `unwrap_used`
- `option_expect_used` and `result_expect_used` → `expect_used`
- `for_loop_over_option` and `for_loop_over_result` → `for_loops_over_fallibles`
identity_op: allow `1 << 0`
I went for accepting `1 << 0` verbatim instead of something more general as it seems to be what everyone in the issue thread needed.
changelog: identity_op: allow `1 << 0` as it's a common pattern in bit manipulation code.
Fixes#3430
Reversed empty ranges
This lint checks range expressions with inverted limits which result in empty ranges. This includes also the ranges used to index slices.
The lint reverse_range_loop was covering iteration of reversed ranges in a for loop, which is a subset of what this new lint covers, so it has been removed. I'm not sure if that's the best choice. It would be doable to check in the new lint that we are not in the arguments of a for loop; I went for removing it because the logic was too similar to keep them separated.
changelog: Added reversed_empty_ranges lint that checks for ranges where the limits have been inverted, resulting in empty ranges. Removed reverse_range_loop which was covering a subset of the new lint.
Closes#4192Closes#96
Fix match on vec items: match on vec[..]
- Added new tests
- Fixed false positive when matching on full range, which will never panic
Closes#5551
changelog: fix match_on_vec_items when matching full range
Fix `unnecessary_unwrap` lint when checks are done in parameters
Fixes a false positive in `unnecessary_unwrap` lint when checks are done in macro parameters.
FIxes#5174
changelog: Fixes a false positive in `unnecessary_unwrap` lint when checks are done in macro parameters.
Fix FP on while-let-on-iterator
- fix `is_refutable` for slice patterns
- fix `is_refutable` for bindings
- add some TODO-s for cases, which can not be fixed easily
fixes#3780
changelog: fix FP on while-let-on-iterator for arrays and bindings
Implement the manual_non_exhaustive lint
Some implementation notes:
* Not providing automatic fixups because additional changes may be needed in other parts of the code, e.g. when constructing a struct.
* Even though the attribute is valid on enum variants, it's not possible to use the manual implementation of the pattern because the visibility is always public, so the lint ignores enum variants.
* Unit structs are also ignored, it's not possible to implement the pattern manually without fields.
* The attribute is not accepted in unions, so those are ignored too.
* Even though the original issue did not mention it, tuple structs are also linted because it's possible to apply the pattern manually.
changelog: Added the manual non-exhaustive implementation lint
Closes#2017
Fix the bugs of `manual_memcpy`, simplify the suggestion and refactor it
While I’m working on the long procrastinated work to expand `manual_memcpy`(#1670), I found a few minor bugs and probably unidiomatic or old coding style. There is a brief explanation of changes to the behaviour this PR will make below. And, I have a questoin: do I need to add tests for the first and second fixed bugs? I thought it might be too rare cases to include the tests for those. I added for the last one though.
* Bug fix
* It negates resulted offsets (`src/dst_offset`) when `offset` is subtraction by 0. This PR will remove any subtraction by 0 as a part of minification.
```rust
for i in 0..5 {
dst[i - 0] = src[i];
}
```
```diff
warning: it looks like you're manually copying between slices
--> src/main.rs:2:14
|
LL | for i in 0..5 {
- | ^^^^ help: try replacing the loop by: `dst[..-5].clone_from_slice(&src[..5])`
+ | ^^^^ help: try replacing the loop by: `dst[..5].clone_from_slice(&src[..5])`
|
```
* It prints `RangeTo` or `RangeFull` when both of `end` and `offset` are 0, which have different meaning. This PR will print 0. I could reject the cases `end` is 0, but I thought I won’t catch other cases `reverse_range_loop` will trigger, and it’s over to catch every such cases.
```rust
for i in 0..0 {
dst[i] = src[i];
}
```
```diff
warning: it looks like you're manually copying between slices
--> src/main.rs:2:14
|
LL | for i in 0..0 {
- | ^^^^ help: try replacing the loop by: `dst.clone_from_slice(&src[..])`
+ | ^^^^ help: try replacing the loop by: `dst[..0].clone_from_slice(&src[..0])`
|
```
* it prints four dots when `end` is `None`. This PR will ignore any `for` loops without `end` because a `for` loop that takes `RangeFrom` as its argument and contains indexing without the statements or the expressions that end loops such as `break` will definitely panic, and `manual_memcpy` should ignore the loops with such control flow.
```rust
fn manual_copy(src: &[u32], dst: &mut [u32]) {
for i in 0.. {
dst[i] = src[i];
}
}
```
```diff
-warning: it looks like you're manually copying between slices
- --> src/main.rs:2:14
- |
-LL | for i in 0.. {
- | ^^^ help: try replacing the loop by: `dst[....].clone_from_slice(&src[....])`
- |
```
* Simplification of the suggestion
* It prints 0 when `start` or `end` and `offset` are same (from #3323). This PR will use `RangeTo`
changelog: fixed the bugs of `manual_memcpy` and also simplify the suggestion.
New lint `match_vec_item`
Added new lint to warn a match on index item which can panic. It's always better to use `get(..)` instead.
Closes#5500
changelog: New lint `match_on_vec_items`
- Show just one error message with multiple suggestions in case of
using multiple times an OS in target family position
- Only suggest #[cfg(unix)] when the OS is in the Unix family
- Test all the operating systems