use crate::utils::{ contains_name, get_pat_name, match_type, paths, single_segment_path, snippet_with_applicability, span_lint_and_sugg, walk_ptrs_ty, }; use if_chain::if_chain; use rustc_ast::ast::{UintTy}; use rustc_errors::Applicability; use rustc_hir::{BinOpKind, BorrowKind, Expr, ExprKind, UnOp}; use rustc_lint::{LateContext, LateLintPass}; use rustc_middle::ty; use rustc_session::{declare_lint_pass, declare_tool_lint}; use rustc_span::Symbol; declare_clippy_lint! { /// **What it does:** Checks for naive byte counts /// /// **Why is this bad?** The [`bytecount`](https://crates.io/crates/bytecount) /// crate has methods to count your bytes faster, especially for large slices. /// /// **Known problems:** If you have predominantly small slices, the /// `bytecount::count(..)` method may actually be slower. However, if you can /// ensure that less than 2³²-1 matches arise, the `naive_count_32(..)` can be /// faster in those cases. /// /// **Example:** /// /// ```rust /// # let vec = vec![1_u8]; /// &vec.iter().filter(|x| **x == 0u8).count(); // use bytecount::count instead /// ``` pub NAIVE_BYTECOUNT, perf, "use of naive `.filter(|&x| x == y).count()` to count byte values" } declare_lint_pass!(ByteCount => [NAIVE_BYTECOUNT]); impl<'a, 'tcx> LateLintPass<'a, 'tcx> for ByteCount { fn check_expr(&mut self, cx: &LateContext<'_, '_>, expr: &Expr<'_>) { if_chain! { if let ExprKind::MethodCall(ref count, _, ref count_args) = expr.kind; if count.ident.name == sym!(count); if count_args.len() == 1; if let ExprKind::MethodCall(ref filter, _, ref filter_args) = count_args[0].kind; if filter.ident.name == sym!(filter); if filter_args.len() == 2; if let ExprKind::Closure(_, _, body_id, _, _) = filter_args[1].kind; then { let body = cx.tcx.hir().body(body_id); if_chain! { if body.params.len() == 1; if let Some(argname) = get_pat_name(&body.params[0].pat); if let ExprKind::Binary(ref op, ref l, ref r) = body.value.kind; if op.node == BinOpKind::Eq; if match_type(cx, walk_ptrs_ty(cx.tables.expr_ty(&filter_args[0])), &paths::SLICE_ITER); then { let needle = match get_path_name(l) { Some(name) if check_arg(name, argname, r) => r, _ => match get_path_name(r) { Some(name) if check_arg(name, argname, l) => l, _ => { return; } } }; if ty::Uint(UintTy::U8) != walk_ptrs_ty(cx.tables.expr_ty(needle)).kind { return; } let haystack = if let ExprKind::MethodCall(ref path, _, ref args) = filter_args[0].kind { let p = path.ident.name; if (p == sym!(iter) || p == sym!(iter_mut)) && args.len() == 1 { &args[0] } else { &filter_args[0] } } else { &filter_args[0] }; let mut applicability = Applicability::MaybeIncorrect; span_lint_and_sugg( cx, NAIVE_BYTECOUNT, expr.span, "You appear to be counting bytes the naive way", "Consider using the bytecount crate", format!("bytecount::count({}, {})", snippet_with_applicability(cx, haystack.span, "..", &mut applicability), snippet_with_applicability(cx, needle.span, "..", &mut applicability)), applicability, ); } }; } }; } } fn check_arg(name: Symbol, arg: Symbol, needle: &Expr<'_>) -> bool { name == arg && !contains_name(name, needle) } fn get_path_name(expr: &Expr<'_>) -> Option { match expr.kind { ExprKind::Box(ref e) | ExprKind::AddrOf(BorrowKind::Ref, _, ref e) | ExprKind::Unary(UnOp::UnDeref, ref e) => { get_path_name(e) }, ExprKind::Block(ref b, _) => { if b.stmts.is_empty() { b.expr.as_ref().and_then(|p| get_path_name(p)) } else { None } }, ExprKind::Path(ref qpath) => single_segment_path(qpath).map(|ps| ps.ident.name), _ => None, } }