Const parameters can not be inferred with `_` help note
This should close: #79557
# Example output
```
error[E0747]: type provided when a constant was expected
--> inferred_const_note.rs:6:19
|
6 | let a = foo::<_, 2>([0, 1, 2]);
| ^
|
= help: Const parameters can not be inferred with `_`
error: aborting due to previous error
For more information about this error, try `rustc --explain E0747`.
```
r? `@lcnr`
Update RLS and Rustfmt
Fixes#79406Fixes#79407
This does pull 1.4.28 version of Rustfmt. Do you want me to pull the 1.4.29 while we're at it?
r? `@calebcartwright`
Fix incorrect io::Take's limit resulting from io::copy specialization
The specialization introduced in #75272 fails to update `io::Take` wrappers after performing the copy syscalls which bypass those wrappers. The buffer flushing before the copy does update them correctly, but the bytes copied after the initial flush weren't subtracted.
The fix is to subtract the bytes copied from each `Take` in the chain of wrappers, even when an error occurs during the syscall loop. To do so the `CopyResult` enum now has to carry the bytes copied so far in the error case.
A slightly clearer diagnostic when misusing const
Fixes#79598
This produces the following diagnostic:
"expected one of `>`, a const expression, lifetime, or type, found keyword `const`"
Instead of the previous, more confusing:
"expected one of `>`, const, lifetime, or type, found keyword `const`"
This might not be completely clear as some users might not understand what a const expression is, but I do believe this is an improvement.
Fix src/test/ui/env-vars.rs on 128-core machines on Windows
On Windows, the environment variable NUMBER_OF_PROCESSORS has special
meaning. Unfortunately, you can get different answers, depending on
whether you are enumerating all environment variables or querying a
specific variable. This was causing the src/test/ui/env-vars.rs test
to fail on machines with more than 64 processors when run on Windows.
check the recursion limit when finding a struct's tail
fixes#79437
This does a `delay_span_bug` (via `ty_error_with_message`) rather than emit a new error message, under the assumption that there will be an error elsewhere (even if the type isn't infinitely recursive, just deeper than the recursion limit, this appears to be the case).
Provide IntoInnerError::into_parts
Hi. This is an updated version of the IntoInnerError bits of my previous portmanteau MR #78689. Thanks to `@jyn514` and `@m-ou-se` for helpful comments there.
I have made this insta-stable since it seems like it will probably be uncontroversial, but that is definitely something that someone from the libs API team should be aware of and explicitly consider.
I included a tangentially-related commit providing documentation of the buffer full behaviiour of `&mut [u8] as Write`; the behaviour I am documenting is relied on by the doctest for `into_parts`.
Rename `AllocRef` to `Allocator` and `(de)alloc` to `(de)allocate`
Calling `Box::alloc_ref` and `Vec::alloc_ref` sounds like allocating a reference. To solve this ambiguity, this renames `AllocRef` to `Allocator` and `alloc` to `allocate`. For a more detailed explaination see https://github.com/rust-lang/wg-allocators/issues/76.
closes https://github.com/rust-lang/wg-allocators/issues/76
r? `@KodrAus`
`@rustbot` modify labels: +A-allocators +T-libs
`@rustbot` ping wg-allocators
In particular, IntoIneerError only currently provides .error() which
returns a reference, not an owned value. This is not helpful and
means that a caller of BufWriter::into_inner cannot acquire an owned
io::Error which seems quite wrong.
Signed-off-by: Ian Jackson <ijackson@chiark.greenend.org.uk>
Fix perf regression caused by #79284https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/79284 only moved code around but this changed inlining and caused a large perf regression. This fixes it for me, though I'm less confident than usual because the regression was not observable with my usual (i.e. incremental) compilation settings.
r? `@Mark-Simulacrum`
Coverage tests for remaining TerminatorKinds and async, improve Assert
Tested and validate results for panic unwind, panic abort, assert!()
macro, TerminatorKind::Assert (for example, numeric overflow), and
async/await.
Implemented a previous documented idea to change Assert handling to be
the same as FalseUnwind and Goto, so it doesn't get its own
BasicCoverageBlock anymore. This changed a couple of coverage regions,
but I validated those changes are not any worse than the prior results,
and probably help assure some consistency (even if some people might
disagree with how the code region is consistently computed).
Fixed issue with async/await. AggregateKind::Generator needs to be
handled like AggregateKind::Closure; coverage span for the outer async
function should not "cover" the async body, which is actually executed
in a separate "closure" MIR.
Fix some clippy lints
Happy to revert these if you think they're less readable, but personally I like them better now (especially the `else { if { ... } }` to `else if { ... }` change).
Use `item_name` instead of pretty printing for resolving `Self` on intra-doc links
Pretty printing would add a `r#` prefix to raw identifiers, which was
not correct. In general I think this change makes sense -
pretty-printing is for showing to the *user*, `item_name` is suitable to
pass to resolve.
Fixes https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/79633.
r? `@Manishearth`
disable a ptr equality test on Miri
This test relies on deduplication of constants. I do not think that this is a *guarantee* that Rust currently makes, and indeed Miri does not deduplicate constants the same way that rustc does, leading to different behavior in this test.
For now, I propose we simply disable this test in Miri.
Update cargo
12 commits in bfca1cd22bf514d5f2b6c1089b0ded0ba7dfaa6e..63d0fe43449adcb316d34d98a982b597faca4178
2020-11-24 16:33:21 +0000 to 2020-12-02 01:44:30 +0000
- Add "--workspace" to update command (rust-lang/cargo#8725)
- Add an FAQ for "Why is my crate rebuilt?" (rust-lang/cargo#8927)
- Set docs.rs as the default extern-map for crates.io (rust-lang/cargo#8877)
- remove extra whitespace when running cargo -Z help (rust-lang/cargo#8924)
- Remove version from dev-dependencies to make it easier to publish. (rust-lang/cargo#8920)
- update dependency queue to consider cost for each node (rust-lang/cargo#8908)
- Fix some rustdoc warnings. (rust-lang/cargo#8911)
- Bump miow dependency to not invalidly assume memory layout (rust-lang/cargo#8909)
- Remove unnecessary trailing semicolons (rust-lang/cargo#8906)
- Fix custom_target_dependency test. (rust-lang/cargo#8907)
- fix: we don't ignore `version` for `git`/`path` deps now (rust-lang/cargo#8900)
- doc (book): add "Getting Started" subsection: "Essential Terminology" (rust-lang/cargo#8855)
Pass around Symbols instead of Idents in doctree
The span was unused.
Vaguely related to https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/78082 - currently working on converting `visit_ast` to use `hir::intravisit` and this makes that a little easier.
r? ``@GuillaumeGomez``
Use more std:: instead of core:: in docs for consistency
``@rustbot`` label T-doc
Some cleanup work to use `std::` instead of `core::` in docs as much as possible. This helps with terminology and consistency, especially for newcomers from other languages that have often heard of `std` to describe the standard library but not of `core`.
Edit: I also added more intra doc links when I saw the opportunity.