-
Couldn't load subscription status.
- Fork 13.9k
Rollup of 7 pull requests #120679
New issue
Have a question about this project? Sign up for a free GitHub account to open an issue and contact its maintainers and the community.
By clicking “Sign up for GitHub”, you agree to our terms of service and privacy statement. We’ll occasionally send you account related emails.
Already on GitHub? Sign in to your account
Rollup of 7 pull requests #120679
Conversation
Co-authored-by: Urgau <[email protected]>
yes, once_cell better, but ... this reduces from ==31349== Total: 1,365,199,543 bytes in 4,774,213 blocks ==31349== At t-gmax: 10,975,708 bytes in 66,093 blocks ==31349== At t-end: 2,880,947 bytes in 12,332 blocks ==31349== Reads: 5,210,008,956 bytes ==31349== Writes: 1,280,920,127 bytes to ==47796== Total: 821,467,407 bytes in 3,955,595 blocks ==47796== At t-gmax: 10,976,209 bytes in 66,100 blocks ==47796== At t-end: 2,944,016 bytes in 12,490 blocks ==47796== Reads: 4,788,959,023 bytes ==47796== Writes: 975,493,639 bytes miropt-test-tools: remove regex usage this removes regex usage and slightly refactors ext stripping in one case
$ cargo update -p ignore --precise=0.4.22
Updating crates.io index
Updating aho-corasick v1.0.2 -> v1.1.2
Updating bstr v1.5.0 -> v1.9.0
Updating globset v0.4.10 -> v0.4.14
Updating ignore v0.4.20 -> v0.4.22
Updating log v0.4.19 -> v0.4.20
Updating memchr v2.5.0 -> v2.7.1
Adding regex-automata v0.4.3
Updating walkdir v2.3.3 -> v2.4.0
some notable change is BurntSushi/ripgrep#2692
reduces memory usage from
==47796== Total: 821,467,407 bytes in 3,955,595 blocks
==47796== At t-gmax: 10,976,209 bytes in 66,100 blocks
==47796== At t-end: 2,944,016 bytes in 12,490 blocks
==47796== Reads: 4,788,959,023 bytes
==47796== Writes: 975,493,639 bytes
to
==66633== Total: 791,565,538 bytes in 3,503,144 blocks
==66633== At t-gmax: 10,914,511 bytes in 65,997 blocks
==66633== At t-end: 395,531 bytes in 941 blocks
==66633== Reads: 4,249,388,949 bytes
==66633== Writes: 814,119,580 bytes
bump regex to dedupe one regex-syntax
$ cargo update -p regex
Updating crates.io index
Updating regex v1.8.4 -> v1.10.2
Removing regex-syntax v0.7.2
When encountering
```rust
fn f<T>(a: T, b: T) -> std::cmp::Ordering {
a.cmp(&b) //~ ERROR E0599
}
```
output
```
error[E0599]: no method named `cmp` found for type parameter `T` in the current scope
--> $DIR/method-on-unbounded-type-param.rs:2:7
|
LL | fn f<T>(a: T, b: T) -> std::cmp::Ordering {
| - method `cmp` not found for this type parameter
LL | a.cmp(&b)
| ^^^ method cannot be called on `T` due to unsatisfied trait bounds
|
= help: items from traits can only be used if the type parameter is bounded by the trait
help: the following traits define an item `cmp`, perhaps you need to restrict type parameter `T` with one of them:
|
LL | fn f<T: Ord>(a: T, b: T) -> std::cmp::Ordering {
| +++++
LL | fn f<T: Iterator>(a: T, b: T) -> std::cmp::Ordering {
| ++++++++++
```
Fix rust-lang#120186.
When a method not found on a type parameter could have been provided by any
of multiple traits, suggest each trait individually, instead of a single
suggestion to restrict the type parameter with *all* of them.
Before:
```
error[E0599]: the method `cmp` exists for reference `&T`, but its trait bounds were not satisfied
--> $DIR/method-on-unbounded-type-param.rs:5:10
|
LL | (&a).cmp(&b)
| ^^^ method cannot be called on `&T` due to unsatisfied trait bounds
|
= note: the following trait bounds were not satisfied:
`T: Ord`
which is required by `&T: Ord`
`&T: Iterator`
which is required by `&mut &T: Iterator`
`T: Iterator`
which is required by `&mut T: Iterator`
help: consider restricting the type parameters to satisfy the trait bounds
|
LL | fn g<T>(a: T, b: T) -> std::cmp::Ordering where T: Iterator, T: Ord {
| +++++++++++++++++++++++++
```
After:
```
error[E0599]: the method `cmp` exists for reference `&T`, but its trait bounds were not satisfied
--> $DIR/method-on-unbounded-type-param.rs:5:10
|
LL | (&a).cmp(&b)
| ^^^ method cannot be called on `&T` due to unsatisfied trait bounds
|
= note: the following trait bounds were not satisfied:
`T: Ord`
which is required by `&T: Ord`
`&T: Iterator`
which is required by `&mut &T: Iterator`
`T: Iterator`
which is required by `&mut T: Iterator`
= help: items from traits can only be used if the type parameter is bounded by the trait
help: the following traits define an item `cmp`, perhaps you need to restrict type parameter `T` with one of them:
|
LL | fn g<T: Ord>(a: T, b: T) -> std::cmp::Ordering {
| +++++
LL | fn g<T: Iterator>(a: T, b: T) -> std::cmp::Ordering {
| ++++++++++
```
Fix rust-lang#108428.
It doesn't affect behaviour, but makes sense with (a) `FailureNote` having `()` as its emission guarantee, and (b) in `Level` the `is_error` levels now are all listed before the non-`is_error` levels.
I.e. `Bug` and `Fatal` level diagnostics are never downgraded.
- Combine two different blocks involving `diagnostic.level.get_expectation_id()` into one. - Combine several `if`s involving `diagnostic.level` into a single `match`. This requires reordering some of the operations, but this has no functional effect.
The two kinds of delayed bug have quite different semantics so a stronger conceptual separation is nice. (`is_error` is a good example, because the two kinds have different behaviour.) The commit also moves the `DelayedBug` variant after `Error` in `Level`, to reflect the fact that it's weaker than `Error` -- it might trigger an error but also might not. (The pre-existing `downgrade_to_delayed_bug` function also reflects the notion that delayed bugs are lower/after normal errors.) Plus it condenses some of the comments on `Level` into a table, for easier reading, and introduces `can_be_top_or_sub` to indicate which levels can be used in top-level diagnostics vs. subdiagnostics. Finally, it renames `DiagCtxtInner::span_delayed_bugs` as `DiagCtxtInner::delayed_bugs`. The `span_` prefix is unnecessary because some delayed bugs don't have a span.
All the other `emit`/`emit_diagnostic` methods were recently made consuming (e.g. rust-lang#119606), but this one wasn't. But it makes sense to. Much of this is straightforward, and lots of `clone` calls are avoided. There are a couple of tricky bits. - `Emitter::primary_span_formatted` no longer takes a `Diagnostic` and returns a pair. Instead it takes the two fields from `Diagnostic` that it used (`span` and `suggestions`) as `&mut`, and modifies them. This is necessary to avoid the cloning of `diag.children` in two emitters. - `from_errors_diagnostic` is rearranged so various uses of `diag` occur before the consuming `emit_diagnostic` call.
tidy: reduce allocs this reduces allocs in tidy from (dhat output) ``` ==31349== Total: 1,365,199,543 bytes in 4,774,213 blocks ==31349== At t-gmax: 10,975,708 bytes in 66,093 blocks ==31349== At t-end: 2,880,947 bytes in 12,332 blocks ==31349== Reads: 5,210,008,956 bytes ==31349== Writes: 1,280,920,127 bytes ``` to ``` ==66633== Total: 791,565,538 bytes in 3,503,144 blocks ==66633== At t-gmax: 10,914,511 bytes in 65,997 blocks ==66633== At t-end: 395,531 bytes in 941 blocks ==66633== Reads: 4,249,388,949 bytes ==66633== Writes: 814,119,580 bytes ``` by wrapping regex and updating `ignore` (effect probably not only from `ignore`, didn't measured)
…param, r=nnethercote
Account for unbounded type param receiver in suggestions
When encountering
```rust
fn f<T>(a: T, b: T) -> std::cmp::Ordering {
a.cmp(&b) //~ ERROR E0599
}
```
output
```
error[E0599]: no method named `cmp` found for type parameter `T` in the current scope
--> $DIR/method-on-unbounded-type-param.rs:2:7
|
LL | fn f<T>(a: T, b: T) -> std::cmp::Ordering {
| - method `cmp` not found for this type parameter
LL | a.cmp(&b)
| ^^^ method cannot be called on `T` due to unsatisfied trait bounds
|
= help: items from traits can only be used if the type parameter is bounded by the trait
help: the following traits define an item `cmp`, perhaps you need to restrict type parameter `T` with one of them:
|
LL | fn f<T: Ord>(a: T, b: T) -> std::cmp::Ordering {
| +++++
LL | fn f<T: Iterator>(a: T, b: T) -> std::cmp::Ordering {
| ++++++++++
```
Fix rust-lang#120186.
…ame, r=Urgau,Nilstrieb Suggest name value cfg when only value is used for check-cfg Fixes rust-lang#120427 r? ``````````@Nilstrieb``````````
Account for non-overlapping unmet trait bounds in suggestion
When a method not found on a type parameter could have been provided by any
of multiple traits, suggest each trait individually, instead of a single
suggestion to restrict the type parameter with *all* of them.
Before:
```
error[E0599]: the method `cmp` exists for reference `&T`, but its trait bounds were not satisfied
--> $DIR/method-on-unbounded-type-param.rs:5:10
|
LL | (&a).cmp(&b)
| ^^^ method cannot be called on `&T` due to unsatisfied trait bounds
|
= note: the following trait bounds were not satisfied:
`T: Ord`
which is required by `&T: Ord`
`&T: Iterator`
which is required by `&mut &T: Iterator`
`T: Iterator`
which is required by `&mut T: Iterator`
help: consider restricting the type parameters to satisfy the trait bounds
|
LL | fn g<T>(a: T, b: T) -> std::cmp::Ordering where T: Iterator, T: Ord {
| +++++++++++++++++++++++++
```
After:
```
error[E0599]: the method `cmp` exists for reference `&T`, but its trait bounds were not satisfied
--> $DIR/method-on-unbounded-type-param.rs:5:10
|
LL | (&a).cmp(&b)
| ^^^ method cannot be called on `&T` due to unsatisfied trait bounds
|
= note: the following trait bounds were not satisfied:
`T: Ord`
which is required by `&T: Ord`
`&T: Iterator`
which is required by `&mut &T: Iterator`
`T: Iterator`
which is required by `&mut T: Iterator`
= help: items from traits can only be used if the type parameter is bounded by the trait
help: the following traits define an item `cmp`, perhaps you need to restrict type parameter `T` with one of them:
|
LL | fn g<T: Ord>(a: T, b: T) -> std::cmp::Ordering {
| +++++
LL | fn g<T: Iterator>(a: T, b: T) -> std::cmp::Ordering {
| ++++++++++
```
Fix rust-lang#108428.
Follow up to rust-lang#120396, only last commit is relevant.
…i-obk Some cleanups around diagnostic levels. Plus some refactoring in and around diagnostic levels and emission. Details in the individual commit logs. r? `@oli-obk`
…handling, r=estebank Simplify codegen diagnostic handling Some nice improvements. Details in the individual commit logs. r? `@estebank`
cleanup effect var handling r? types
|
@bors r+ rollup=never p=8 |
|
@bors r- |
|
but I do :) |
…iaskrgr Rollup of 7 pull requests Successful merges: - rust-lang#120023 (tidy: reduce allocs) - rust-lang#120396 (Account for unbounded type param receiver in suggestions) - rust-lang#120435 (Suggest name value cfg when only value is used for check-cfg) - rust-lang#120507 (Account for non-overlapping unmet trait bounds in suggestion) - rust-lang#120520 (Some cleanups around diagnostic levels.) - rust-lang#120575 (Simplify codegen diagnostic handling) - rust-lang#120670 (cleanup effect var handling) Failed merges: - rust-lang#120423 (update indirect structural match lints to match RFC and to show up for dependencies) r? `@ghost` `@rustbot` modify labels: rollup
|
The job Click to see the possible cause of the failure (guessed by this bot) |
|
💔 Test failed - checks-actions |
Successful merges:
Emitter::emit_diagnosticconsuming. #120575 (Simplify codegen diagnostic handling)Failed merges:
r? @ghost
@rustbot modify labels: rollup
Create a similar rollup