Commit graph

247 commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Ross MacArthur
d2613fb7a5
Improve help for recursion limit errors 2021-09-28 22:17:13 +02:00
Eric Huss
75f058dbfd Check for macros in built-in attributes that don't support them. 2021-09-25 09:03:15 -07:00
bjorn3
9886c233d8 Remove Symbol::len
It is used exactly once and can be replaced with the equally fast
.as_str().len()
2021-09-22 13:37:09 +02:00
Mark Rousskov
c746be2219 Migrate to 2021 2021-09-20 22:21:42 -04:00
Yuki Okushi
1c3fce01df
Rollup merge of #88996 - Aaron1011:trailing-macro-semi, r=petrochenkov
Fix linting when trailing macro expands to a trailing semi

When a macro is used in the trailing expression position of a block
(e.g. `fn foo() { my_macro!() }`), we currently parse it as an
expression, rather than a statement. As a result, we ended up
using the `NodeId` of the containing statement as our `lint_node_id`,
even though we don't normally do this for macro calls.

If such a macro expands to an expression with a `#[cfg]` attribute,
then the trailing statement can get removed entirely. This lead to
an ICE, since we were usng the `NodeId` of the expression to emit
a lint.

Ths commit makes us skip updating `lint_node_id` when handling
a macro in trailing expression position. This will cause us to
lint at the closest parent of the macro call.
2021-09-19 17:31:31 +09:00
Aaron Hill
bd4c9676c7
Fix linting when trailing macro expands to a trailing semi
When a macro is used in the trailing expression position of a block
(e.g. `fn foo() { my_macro!() }`), we currently parse it as an
expression, rather than a statement. As a result, we ended up
using the `NodeId` of the containing statement as our `lint_node_id`,
even though we don't normally do this for macro calls.

If such a macro expands to an expression with a `#[cfg]` attribute,
then the trailing statement can get removed entirely. This lead to
an ICE, since we were usng the `NodeId` of the expression to emit
a lint.

Ths commit makes us skip updating `lint_node_id` when handling
a macro in trailing expression position. This will cause us to
lint at the closest parent of the macro call.
2021-09-15 19:36:28 -05:00
Michael Howell
ef44452a83 chore(rustc_expand): fix typo in comment 2021-09-15 09:13:18 -07:00
bors
547d9374d2 Auto merge of #84373 - cjgillot:resolve-span, r=michaelwoerister,petrochenkov
Encode spans relative to the enclosing item

The aim of this PR is to avoid recomputing queries when code is moved without modification.

MCP at https://github.com/rust-lang/compiler-team/issues/443

This is achieved by :
1. storing the HIR owner LocalDefId information inside the span;
2. encoding and decoding spans relative to the enclosing item in the incremental on-disk cache;
3. marking a dependency to the `source_span(LocalDefId)` query when we translate a span from the short (`Span`) representation to its explicit (`SpanData`) representation.

Since all client code uses `Span`, step 3 ensures that all manipulations
of span byte positions actually create the dependency edge between
the caller and the `source_span(LocalDefId)`.
This query return the actual absolute span of the parent item.
As a consequence, any source code motion that changes the absolute byte position of a node will either:
- modify the distance to the parent's beginning, so change the relative span's hash;
- dirty `source_span`, and trigger the incremental recomputation of all code that
  depends on the span's absolute byte position.

With this scheme, I believe the dependency tracking to be accurate.

For the moment, the spans are marked during lowering.
I'd rather do this during def-collection,
but the AST MutVisitor is not practical enough just yet.
The only difference is that we attach macro-expanded spans
to their expansion point instead of the macro itself.
2021-09-11 23:35:28 +00:00
Camille GILLOT
2e37ed87fc Record call_site parent for macros. 2021-09-10 20:19:25 +02:00
Camille GILLOT
00485e0c0e Keep a parent LocalDefId in SpanData. 2021-09-10 20:17:33 +02:00
Manish Goregaokar
358a018292
Rollup merge of #87441 - ibraheemdev:i-86865, r=cjgillot
Emit suggestion when passing byte literal to format macro

Closes #86865
2021-09-10 08:23:15 -07:00
Manish Goregaokar
000dbd27f1
Rollup merge of #86165 - m-ou-se:proc-macro-span-shrink, r=dtolnay
Add proc_macro::Span::{before, after}.

This adds `proc_macro::Span::before()` and `proc_macro::Span::after()` to get a zero width span at the start or end of the span.

These are equivalent to rustc's `Span::shrink_to_lo()` and `Span::shrink_to_hi()` but with a less cryptic name. They are useful when generating diagnostlics like "missing \<thing\> after \<thing\>".

E.g.

```rust
syn::Error::new(ident.span().after(), "missing `:` after field name").into_compile_error()
```
2021-09-10 08:23:14 -07:00
Mark Rousskov
b4e7649d6d Bump stage0 compiler to 1.56 2021-09-08 20:51:05 -04:00
bors
b4e8596e3e Auto merge of #88598 - estebank:type-ascription-can-die-in-a-fire, r=wesleywiser
Detect bare blocks with type ascription that were meant to be a `struct` literal

Address part of #34255.

Potential improvement: silence the other knock down errors in `issue-34255-1.rs`.
2021-09-04 01:40:36 +00:00
bors
577a76f003 Auto merge of #88597 - cjgillot:lower-global, r=petrochenkov
Move global analyses from lowering to resolution

Split off https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/87234

r? `@petrochenkov`
2021-09-03 14:47:13 +00:00
Esteban Kuber
12ce6e9c60 Detect bare blocks with type ascription that were meant to be a struct literal
Address part of #34255.

Potential improvement: silence the other knock down errors in
`issue-34255-1.rs`.
2021-09-03 14:43:04 +00:00
bors
fbdff7fae9 Auto merge of #88428 - petrochenkov:stmtid, r=Aaron1011
expand: Treat more macro calls as statement macro calls

This PR implements the suggestion from https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/87981#issuecomment-906641052 and treats fn-like macro calls inside `StmtKind::Item` and `StmtKind::Semi` as statement macro calls, which is consistent with treatment of attribute invocations in the same positions and with token-based macro expansion model in general.

This also allows to remove a special case in `NodeId` assignment (previously tried in #87779), and to use statement `NodeId`s for linting (`assign_id!`).

r? `@Aaron1011`
2021-09-03 06:10:27 +00:00
bors
97f2698484 Auto merge of #88363 - michaelwoerister:remapped-diagnostics, r=estebank
Path remapping: Make behavior of diagnostics output dependent on presence of --remap-path-prefix.

This PR fixes a regression (#87745) with `--remap-path-prefix` where the flag stopped causing diagnostic messages to be remapped as well. The regression was introduced in https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/83813 where we erroneously assumed that remapping of diagnostic messages was not desired anymore (because #70642 partially undid that functionality with nobody objecting).

The issue is fixed by making `--remap-path-prefix` remap diagnostic messages again, including for paths that have been remapped in upstream crates (e.g. the standard library). This means that "sysroot-localization" (implemented in #70642) is also disabled if `rustc` is invoked with `--remap-path-prefix`. The assumption is that once someone starts explicitly remapping paths they also don't want paths to their local Rust installation in their build output.

In the future we might want to give more fine-grained control over this behavior via compiler flags (see https://github.com/rust-lang/rfcs/pull/3127 for a related RFC). For now this PR is intended as a regression fix.

This PR is an alternative to https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/88191, which makes diagnostic messages be remapped unconditionally. That approach, however, would effectively revert #70642.

Fixes https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/87745.

cc `@cbeuw`
r? `@ghost`
2021-09-03 00:23:10 +00:00
Vadim Petrochenkov
9940758416 expand: Treat more macro calls as statement macro calls 2021-09-02 14:14:38 +03:00
Camille GILLOT
f8efe5d822 Compute proc_macros in resolutions. 2021-09-01 20:13:16 +02:00
ibraheemdev
f56034ec3e emit suggestion byte literal is passed to format! 2021-08-31 17:29:42 -04:00
Cameron Steffen
89d2600d01 Add let-else to AST 2021-08-30 20:17:45 -05:00
bors
ae0b03bc6b Auto merge of #88262 - klensy:pprust-cow, r=nagisa
Cow'ify some pprust methods

Reduce number of potential needless de/allocations by using `Cow<'static, str>` instead of explicit `String` type.
2021-08-29 17:46:29 +00:00
Michael Woerister
af1b65cb18 Path remapping: Make behavior of diagnostics output dependent on presence of --remap-path-prefix. 2021-08-27 11:50:44 +02:00
Léo Lanteri Thauvin
2b0c8fff8a Various pattern cleanups 2021-08-25 20:24:39 +02:00
Léo Lanteri Thauvin
fde1b76b4b Use if-let guards in the codebase 2021-08-25 20:24:35 +02:00
klensy
c565339c37 Convert some functions to return Cow<'static,str> instead of String to reduce potential reallocations 2021-08-25 00:24:44 +03:00
Aaron Hill
17aef21b30
Remove NonMacroAttr.mark_used 2021-08-21 13:27:29 -05:00
Aaron Hill
af46699f81
Remove Session.used_attrs and move logic to CheckAttrVisitor
Instead of updating global state to mark attributes as used,
we now explicitly emit a warning when an attribute is used in
an unsupported position. As a side effect, we are to emit more
detailed warning messages (instead of just a generic "unused" message).

`Session.check_name` is removed, since its only purpose was to mark
the attribute as used. All of the callers are modified to use
`Attribute.has_name`

Additionally, `AttributeType::AssumedUsed` is removed - an 'assumed
used' attribute is implemented by simply not performing any checks
in `CheckAttrVisitor` for a particular attribute.

We no longer emit unused attribute warnings for the `#[rustc_dummy]`
attribute - it's an internal attribute used for tests, so it doesn't
mark sense to treat it as 'unused'.

With this commit, a large source of global untracked state is removed.
2021-08-21 13:27:27 -05:00
Caio
6aa9937a76 Introduce hir::ExprKind::Let - Take 2 2021-08-15 16:18:26 -03:00
Aaron Hill
cfc3fee952
Revert "Rollup merge of #87779 - Aaron1011:stmt-ast-id, r=petrochenkov"
Fixes #87877

This change interacts badly with `noop_flat_map_stmt`,
which synthesizes multiple statements with the same `NodeId`.

I'm working on a better fix that will still allow us to
remove this special case. For now, let's revert the change
to fix the ICE.

This reverts commit a4262cc984, reversing
changes made to 8ee962f88e.
2021-08-12 08:24:22 -05:00
Aaron Hill
a35d7f2bb3
Remove special case for statement NodeId assignment
We now let `noop_flat_map_stmt` assign `NodeId`s (via `visit_id`),
just as we do for other AST nodes.
2021-08-06 09:30:47 -05:00
David Tolnay
3744dc8687
Remove space after negative sign in Literal to_string 2021-08-03 10:40:52 -07:00
bors
e91405b9d5 Auto merge of #87262 - dtolnay:negative, r=Aaron1011
Support negative numbers in Literal::from_str

proc_macro::Literal has allowed negative numbers in a single literal token ever since Rust 1.29, using https://doc.rust-lang.org/stable/proc_macro/struct.Literal.html#method.isize_unsuffixed and similar constructors.

```rust
let lit = proc_macro::Literal::isize_unsuffixed(-10);
```

However, the suite of constructors on Literal is not sufficient for all use cases, for example arbitrary precision floats, or custom suffixes in FFI macros.

```rust
let lit = proc_macro::Literal::f64_unsuffixed(0.101001000100001000001000000100000001); // :(
let lit = proc_macro::Literal::i???_suffixed(10ulong); // :(
```

For those, macros construct the literal using from_str instead, which preserves arbitrary precision, custom suffixes, base, and digit grouping.

```rust
let lit = "0.101001000100001000001000000100000001".parse::<Literal>().unwrap();
let lit = "10ulong".parse::<Literal>().unwrap();
let lit = "0b1000_0100_0010_0001".parse::<Literal>().unwrap();
```

However, until this PR it was not possible to construct a literal token that is **both** negative **and** preserving of arbitrary precision etc.

This PR fixes `Literal::from_str` to recognize negative integer and float literals.
2021-08-03 04:50:28 +00:00
bors
b53a93db2d Auto merge of #87535 - lf-:authors, r=Mark-Simulacrum
rfc3052 followup: Remove authors field from Cargo manifests

Since RFC 3052 soft deprecated the authors field, hiding it from
crates.io, docs.rs, and making Cargo not add it by default, and it is
not generally up to date/useful information for contributors, we may as well
remove it from crates in this repo.
2021-08-02 05:49:17 +00:00
bors
aadd6189ad Auto merge of #87449 - matthiaskrgr:clippyy_v2, r=nagisa
more clippy::complexity fixes

(also a couple of clippy::perf fixes)
2021-08-01 09:15:15 +00:00
Jade
3cf820e17d rfc3052: Remove authors field from Cargo manifests
Since RFC 3052 soft deprecated the authors field anyway, hiding it from
crates.io, docs.rs, and making Cargo not add it by default, and it is
not generally up to date/useful information, we should remove it from
crates in this repo.
2021-07-29 14:56:05 -07:00
Aaron Hill
cf167c9c9c
Only emit lint for local macros 2021-07-27 14:18:46 -05:00
Matthias Krüger
d709e6efef clippy::single_char_pattern 2021-07-25 12:25:26 +02:00
bors
71a6c7c803 Auto merge of #87381 - Aaron1011:note-semi-trailing-macro, r=petrochenkov
Display an extra note for trailing semicolon lint with trailing macro

Currently, we parse macros at the end of a block
(e.g. `fn foo() { my_macro!() }`) as expressions, rather than
statements. This means that a macro invoked in this position
cannot expand to items or semicolon-terminated expressions.

In the future, we might want to start parsing these kinds of macros
as statements. This would make expansion more 'token-based'
(i.e. macro expansion behaves (almost) as if you just textually
replaced the macro invocation with its output). However,
this is a breaking change (see PR #78991), so it will require
further discussion.

Since the current behavior will not be changing any time soon,
we need to address the interaction with the
`SEMICOLON_IN_EXPRESSIONS_FROM_MACROS` lint. Since we are parsing
the result of macro expansion as an expression, we will emit a lint
if there's a trailing semicolon in the macro output. However, this
results in a somewhat confusing message for users, since it visually
looks like there should be no problem with having a semicolon
at the end of a block
(e.g. `fn foo() { my_macro!() }` => `fn foo() { produced_expr; }`)

To help reduce confusion, this commit adds a note explaining
that the macro is being interpreted as an expression. Additionally,
we suggest adding a semicolon after the macro *invocation* - this
will cause us to parse the macro call as a statement. We do *not*
use a structured suggestion for this, since the user may actually
want to remove the semicolon from the macro definition (allowing
the block to evaluate to the expression produced by the macro).
2021-07-25 04:34:58 +00:00
Manish Goregaokar
c673d3fed0
Rollup merge of #87389 - Aaron1011:expand-known-attrs, r=wesleywiser
Rename `known_attrs` to `expanded_inert_attrs` and move to rustc_expand

There's no need for this to be (untracked) global state.
2021-07-24 09:51:59 -07:00
Aaron Hill
0df5ac8269
Display an extra note for trailing semicolon lint with trailing macro
Currently, we parse macros at the end of a block
(e.g. `fn foo() { my_macro!() }`) as expressions, rather than
statements. This means that a macro invoked in this position
cannot expand to items or semicolon-terminated expressions.

In the future, we might want to start parsing these kinds of macros
as statements. This would make expansion more 'token-based'
(i.e. macro expansion behaves (almost) as if you just textually
replaced the macro invocation with its output). However,
this is a breaking change (see PR #78991), so it will require
further discussion.

Since the current behavior will not be changing any time soon,
we need to address the interaction with the
`SEMICOLON_IN_EXPRESSIONS_FROM_MACROS` lint. Since we are parsing
the result of macro expansion as an expression, we will emit a lint
if there's a trailing semicolon in the macro output. However, this
results in a somewhat confusing message for users, since it visually
looks like there should be no problem with having a semicolon
at the end of a block
(e.g. `fn foo() { my_macro!() }` => `fn foo() { produced_expr; }`)

To help reduce confusion, this commit adds a note explaining
that the macro is being interpreted as an expression. Additionally,
we suggest adding a semicolon after the macro *invocation* - this
will cause us to parse the macro call as a statement. We do *not*
use a structured suggestion for this, since the user may actually
want to remove the semicolon from the macro definition (allowing
the block to evaluate to the expression produced by the macro).
2021-07-24 11:46:44 -05:00
Aaron Hill
a2ae191295
Rename known_attrs to expanded_inert_attrs and move to rustc_expand
There's no need for this to be (untracked) global state.
2021-07-23 17:03:07 -05:00
Aaron Hill
070df9e676
Warn on inert attributes used on bang macro invocation
These attributes are currently discarded.
This may change in the future (see #63221), but for now,
placing inert attributes on a macro invocation does nothing,
so we should warn users about it.

Technically, it's possible for there to be attribute macro
on the same macro invocation (or at a higher scope), which
inspects the inert attribute. For example:

```rust
#[look_for_inline_attr]
#[inline]
my_macro!()

#[look_for_nested_inline]
mod foo { #[inline] my_macro!() }
```

However, this would be a very strange thing to do.
Anyone running into this can manually suppress the warning.
2021-07-19 17:49:28 -05:00
David Tolnay
55ff45a5c2
Support negative numbers in Literal::from_str 2021-07-18 14:08:34 -07:00
Aaron Hill
7ca089c6d2
Only use assign_id! for ast nodes that support attributes 2021-07-17 23:03:58 -05:00
Aaron Hill
d6e3c11101
Add additional missing lint handling logic 2021-07-17 23:03:58 -05:00
Aaron Hill
ddd544856e
Compute a better lint_node_id during expansion
When we need to emit a lint at a macro invocation, we currently use the
`NodeId` of its parent definition (e.g. the enclosing function). This
means that any `#[allow]` / `#[deny]` attributes placed 'closer' to the
macro (e.g. on an enclosing block or statement) will have no effect.

This commit computes a better `lint_node_id` in `InvocationCollector`.
When we visit/flat_map an AST node, we assign it a `NodeId` (earlier
than we normally would), and store than `NodeId` in current
`ExpansionData`. When we collect a macro invocation, the current
`lint_node_id` gets cloned along with our `ExpansionData`, allowing it
to be used if we need to emit a lint later on.

This improves the handling of `#[allow]` / `#[deny]` for
`SEMICOLON_IN_EXPRESSIONS_FROM_MACROS` and some `asm!`-related lints.
The 'legacy derive helpers' lint retains its current behavior
(I've inlined the now-removed `lint_node_id` function), since
there isn't an `ExpansionData` readily available.
2021-07-17 23:03:56 -05:00
Camille GILLOT
078dd37f88 Use LocalExpnId where possible. 2021-07-17 19:41:02 +02:00
Guillaume Gomez
4d141f5e4c
Rollup merge of #87027 - petrochenkov:builderhelp, r=oli-obk
expand: Support helper attributes for built-in derive macros

This is needed for https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/86735 (derive macro `Default` should have a helper attribute `default`).

With this PR we can specify helper attributes for built-in derives using syntax `#[rustc_builtin_macro(MacroName, attributes(attr1, attr2, ...))]` which mirrors equivalent syntax for proc macros `#[proc_macro_derive(MacroName, attributes(attr1, attr2, ...))]`.
Otherwise expansion infra was already ready for this.
The attribute parsing code is shared between proc macro derives and built-in macros (`fn parse_macro_name_and_helper_attrs`).
2021-07-14 19:53:35 +02:00