Fix out of date unstable book entries for `alloc_*` features.
The `alloc_jemalloc` crate does not provide a type to use with `#[global_allocator]`, and (according to Alex) `extern crate alloc_jemalloc;` alone became a no-op when `#[global_allocator]` was introduced.
List of all lang items in unstable book.
I don't know how to link to the source code correctly, so I just put the information aside the lang item name.
Mention Clone and refs in --explain E0382
I followed the discussion in #42446 and came up with these additions.
- Mention references before going into traits. They're probably more likely solutions.
- Mention `Clone` before `Copy`. Cloning has wider applicability and `#derive[Copy, Clone]` makes more sense after learning about `Clone`.
The language is not great, any suggestions there would be appreciated ✨
Deprecate several flags in rustdoc
Part of #44136
cc @rust-lang/dev-tools @rust-lang/docs
This is a very basic PR to start deprecating some flags; `rustdoc` doesn't really have fancy output options like `rustc` does, so I went with `eprintln!`. Happy to change it if people feel that's not appropriate.
Also, I have no idea if we can or should write tests here, so I didn't try. If someone feels strongly about it, then let's do it, but given that the only outcome here is a side effect...
remove or encapsulate the remaining non-query data in tcx
I wound up removing the existing cache around inhabitedness since it didn't seem to be adding much value. I reworked const rvalue promotion, but not that much (i.e., I did not split the computation into bits, as @eddyb had tossed out as a suggestion). But it's now demand driven, at least.
cc @michaelwoerister -- see the `forbid_reads` change in last commit
r? @eddyb -- since the trickiest of this PR is the work on const rvalue promotion
cc #44137
Update array documentation for Clone trait changes
Just a note, for this to work, `T` doesn't have to `Copy`, `Clone` is sufficient. For instance, the following works.
```rust
fn x(a: &[String; 100]) -> [String; 100] {
a.clone()
}
```
don't issue "expected statement after outer attr." after inner attr.
While an inner attribute here is in fact erroneous, that error ("inner
attribute is not permitted in this context") successfully gets set earlier;
this further admonition is nonsensical.
Resolves#45296.
Add the test for #40003.
I checked that the test failed to compile on an older nightly (I tried 2017-09-29) and that it compiles against master.
Closes#40003.
core: derive Clone for result::IntoIter
It appears to be a simple oversight that `result::IntoIter<T>` doesn't
implement `Clone` (where `T: Clone`). We do already have `Clone` for
`result::Iter`, as well as the similar `option::IntoIter` and `Iter`.
Add more __future__ imports to increase compatibility with Python 3 in bootstrap
The functionality of the `__future__` imports are described [here](https://docs.python.org/3/library/__future__.html).
These will help ensure the bootstrap code stays compatible with Python 3. If changes are made in the future that use absolute imports, division, or the `print` function, this will be ensure that running it under Python 2 will pass or fail the same way as Python 3.
`Option` is made a [new-style class](https://docs.python.org/2/reference/datamodel.html#new-style-and-classic-classes), so that it behaves the same way in Python 2 and 3.
The `__future__ unicode_literals` import is not used, because that can change the semantics of the code in Python 2 in unwanted ways. For more information see [this article](http://python-future.org/unicode_literals.html).
The cache was broken anyhow and this computation doesn't look that
expensive. These public accessors could potentially become queries,
but we'd have to add some more complex logic around lift. I'd prefer
to have some test cases to profile with before doing that.
Fixes#44402.
#44493 add structure for inferred_outlives_of
#44493
- add placeholder for the final implementation of inferred_outlives_of
- add some placeholder tests
While the `config.toml.example` comments say "we automatically check the
version by default," we actually didn't. That check was badly out of
date, only allowing 3.5, 3.6, or 3.7. This it now updated to the new
3.9 minimum requirement, and truly enabled by default.
The necessary changes were only in upstream LLVM in 4.0, but they were
for a while backported to Rust LLVM. Now that Rust LLVM is also 4.0, we
can make the test conditional here more accurate.
rustbuild: Allow setting rls/rustfmt to "broken"
This commit enables configuring the RLS/rustfmt tools to the "broken" state and
actually get it past CI. The main changes here were to update all dist-related
code to handle the situation where the RLS isn't available. This in turn
involved a homegrown preprocessor-like-function to edit the configuration files
we pass to the various combined installer tools.