Commit graph

1009 commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Stuart Cook
1ea1db5b08
Rollup merge of #134877 - DavisRayM:129966-format-string-help-message, r=estebank
add suggestion for wrongly ordered format parameters

Add suggestion for wrongly ordered format parameters like `?#`.

Supersedes #131004
Fix #129966
2025-01-01 16:35:30 +11:00
Michael Goulet
ea291e5b5f Account for format_args in HiddenUnicodeCodepoints lint 2024-12-31 05:03:22 +00:00
Michael Goulet
c6afe82b8a Make parsed string literal fields named 2024-12-31 04:55:10 +00:00
Davis Muro
62c3c9a5ae
add suggestion for wrongly ordered format parameters 2024-12-30 06:14:26 -08:00
Esteban Küber
94812f1c8f Use E0665 for missing #[default] error
Use orphaned error code for the same error it belonged to before.

```
error[E0665]: `#[derive(Default)]` on enum with no `#[default]`
  --> $DIR/macros-nonfatal-errors.rs:42:10
   |
LL |   #[derive(Default)]
   |            ^^^^^^^
LL | / enum NoDeclaredDefault {
LL | |     Foo,
LL | |     Bar,
LL | | }
   | |_- this enum needs a unit variant marked with `#[default]`
   |
   = note: this error originates in the derive macro `Default` (in Nightly builds, run with -Z macro-backtrace for more info)
help: make this unit variant default by placing `#[default]` on it
   |
LL |     #[default] Foo,
   |     ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
help: make this unit variant default by placing `#[default]` on it
   |
LL |     #[default] Bar,
   |     ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
```
2024-12-21 19:14:58 +00:00
Nicholas Nethercote
b9bf0b4b10 Speed up Parser::expected_token_types.
The parser pushes a `TokenType` to `Parser::expected_token_types` on
every call to the various `check`/`eat` methods, and clears it on every
call to `bump`. Some of those `TokenType` values are full tokens that
require cloning and dropping. This is a *lot* of work for something
that is only used in error messages and it accounts for a significant
fraction of parsing execution time.

This commit overhauls `TokenType` so that `Parser::expected_token_types`
can be implemented as a bitset. This requires changing `TokenType` to a
C-style parameterless enum, and adding `TokenTypeSet` which uses a
`u128` for the bits. (The new `TokenType` has 105 variants.)

The new types `ExpTokenPair` and `ExpKeywordPair` are now arguments to
the `check`/`eat` methods. This is for maximum speed. The elements in
the pairs are always statically known; e.g. a
`token::BinOp(token::Star)` is always paired with a `TokenType::Star`.
So we now compute `TokenType`s in advance and pass them in to
`check`/`eat` rather than the current approach of constructing them on
insertion into `expected_token_types`.

Values of these pair types can be produced by the new `exp!` macro,
which is used at every `check`/`eat` call site. The macro is for
convenience, allowing any pair to be generated from a single identifier.

The ident/keyword filtering in `expected_one_of_not_found` is no longer
necessary. It was there to account for some sloppiness in
`TokenKind`/`TokenType` comparisons.

The existing `TokenType` is moved to a new file `token_type.rs`, and all
its new infrastructure is added to that file. There is more boilerplate
code than I would like, but I can't see how to make it shorter.
2024-12-19 16:05:41 +11:00
Nicholas Nethercote
48f7714819 Rename Parser::expected_tokens as Parser::expected_token_types.
Because the `Token` type is similar to but different to the `TokenType`
type, and the difference is important, so we want to avoid confusion.
2024-12-19 16:05:41 +11:00
许杰友 Jieyou Xu (Joe)
477f222b02
Rollup merge of #134161 - nnethercote:overhaul-token-cursors, r=spastorino
Overhaul token cursors

Some nice cleanups here.

r? `````@davidtwco`````
2024-12-18 22:56:53 +08:00
Nicholas Nethercote
2620eb42d7 Re-export more rustc_span::symbol things from rustc_span.
`rustc_span::symbol` defines some things that are re-exported from
`rustc_span`, such as `Symbol` and `sym`. But it doesn't re-export some
closely related things such as `Ident` and `kw`. So you can do `use
rustc_span::{Symbol, sym}` but you have to do `use
rustc_span::symbol::{Ident, kw}`, which is inconsistent for no good
reason.

This commit re-exports `Ident`, `kw`, and `MacroRulesNormalizedIdent`,
and changes many `rustc_span::symbol::` qualifiers in `compiler/` to
`rustc_span::`. This is a 200+ net line of code reduction, mostly
because many files with two `use rustc_span` items can be reduced to
one.
2024-12-18 13:38:53 +11:00
Nicholas Nethercote
809975c94a Rename RefTokenTreeCursor.
Because `TokenStreamIter` is a much better name for a `TokenStream`
iterator. Also rename the `TokenStream::trees` method as
`TokenStream::iter`, and some local variables.
2024-12-18 10:39:07 +11:00
Jonathan Dönszelmann
efb98b6552
rename rustc_attr to rustc_attr_parsing and create rustc_attr_data_structures 2024-12-16 19:08:19 +01:00
Matthias Krüger
5c9b227a3d
Rollup merge of #134140 - compiler-errors:unsafe-binders-ast, r=oli-obk
Add AST support for unsafe binders

I'm splitting up #130514 into pieces. It's impossible for me to keep up with a huge PR like that. I'll land type system support for this next, probably w/o MIR lowering, which will come later.

r? `@oli-obk`
cc `@BoxyUwU` and `@lcnr` who also may want to look at this, though this PR doesn't do too much yet
2024-12-13 17:25:31 +01:00
Michael Goulet
3f97c6be8d Add unwrap_unsafe_binder and wrap_unsafe_binder macro operators 2024-12-12 16:29:40 +00:00
Esteban Küber
69fb612608 Keep track of parse errors in mods and don't emit resolve errors for paths involving them
When we expand a `mod foo;` and parse `foo.rs`, we now track whether that file had an unrecovered parse error that reached the end of the file. If so, we keep that information around. When resolving a path like `foo::bar`, we do not emit any errors for "`bar` not found in `foo`", as we know that the parse error might have caused `bar` to not be parsed and accounted for.

When this happens in an existing project, every path referencing `foo` would be an irrelevant compile error. Instead, we now skip emitting anything until `foo.rs` is fixed. Tellingly enough, we didn't have any test for errors caused by `mod` expansion.

Fix #97734.
2024-12-10 18:17:24 +00:00
Esteban Küber
2d6e763cc6 Disallow #[default] Variant {} regardless of feature flag 2024-12-09 21:55:13 +00:00
Esteban Küber
9ac95c10c0 Introduce default_field_values feature
Initial implementation of `#[feature(default_field_values]`, proposed in https://github.com/rust-lang/rfcs/pull/3681.

Support default fields in enum struct variant

Allow default values in an enum struct variant definition:

```rust
pub enum Bar {
    Foo {
        bar: S = S,
        baz: i32 = 42 + 3,
    }
}
```

Allow using `..` without a base on an enum struct variant

```rust
Bar::Foo { .. }
```

`#[derive(Default)]` doesn't account for these as it is still gating `#[default]` only being allowed on unit variants.

Support `#[derive(Default)]` on enum struct variants with all defaulted fields

```rust
pub enum Bar {
    #[default]
    Foo {
        bar: S = S,
        baz: i32 = 42 + 3,
    }
}
```

Check for missing fields in typeck instead of mir_build.

Expand test with `const` param case (needs `generic_const_exprs` enabled).

Properly instantiate MIR const

The following works:

```rust
struct S<A> {
    a: Vec<A> = Vec::new(),
}
S::<i32> { .. }
```

Add lint for default fields that will always fail const-eval

We *allow* this to happen for API writers that might want to rely on users'
getting a compile error when using the default field, different to the error
that they would get when the field isn't default. We could change this to
*always* error instead of being a lint, if we wanted.

This will *not* catch errors for partially evaluated consts, like when the
expression relies on a const parameter.

Suggestions when encountering `Foo { .. }` without `#[feature(default_field_values)]`:

 - Suggest adding a base expression if there are missing fields.
 - Suggest enabling the feature if all the missing fields have optional values.
 - Suggest removing `..` if there are no missing fields.
2024-12-09 21:55:01 +00:00
Ding Xiang Fei
836ab5cd89
make CoercePointee errors translatable 2024-12-04 20:34:48 +08:00
Boxy
22998f0785 update cfgs 2024-11-27 15:14:54 +00:00
bors
f2abf827c1 Auto merge of #132894 - frank-king:feature/where-refactor, r=cjgillot
Refactor `where` predicates, and reserve for attributes support

Refactor `WherePredicate` to `WherePredicateKind`, and reserve for attributes support in `where` predicates.

This is a part of #115590 and is split from #132388.

r? petrochenkov
2024-11-26 04:12:33 +00:00
Frank King
161221da9e Refactor where predicates, and reserve for attributes support 2024-11-25 16:38:35 +08:00
Gary Guo
73f8309300 Support use of asm goto with outputs and options(noreturn)
When labels are present, the `noreturn` option really means that asm block
won't fallthrough -- if labels are present, then outputs can still be
meaningfully used.
2024-11-24 14:18:10 +00:00
maxcabrajac
01b26e6198 Use visit_item instead of flat_map_item in test_harness.rs 2024-11-20 16:47:00 -03:00
maxcabrajac
1dc12367b9 Items 2024-11-20 16:42:18 -03:00
Matthias Krüger
6b47c6d786
Rollup merge of #132787 - maxcabrajac:fnctxt, r=petrochenkov
Unify FnKind between AST visitors and make WalkItemKind more straight forward

Unifying `FnKind` requires a bunch of changes to `WalkItemKind::walk` signature so I'll change them in one go

related to #128974

r? `@petrochenkov`
2024-11-16 21:05:46 +01:00
maxcabrajac
6180173612 Add WalkItemKind::Ctxt so AssocCtxt is not sent to non-Assoc ItemKinds 2024-11-15 17:00:01 -03:00
maxcabrajac
1236656319 Make Visitor::FnKind and MutVisitor::FnKind compatible 2024-11-15 16:59:47 -03:00
Nicholas Nethercote
7a96ed3dd0 Remove unreachable code in has_cfg_or_cfg_attr. 2024-11-14 14:58:16 +11:00
Nicholas Nethercote
d55a5e5dda Merge matches in configure_annotatable.
There are two matches: one in a closure, and one vanilla one. They can
be combined and simplified by putting them in a `try` block.
2024-11-14 14:52:42 +11:00
Nicholas Nethercote
b2b643c9d9 Inline and remove flat_map_annotatable.
Important: we know from the `parse_annotatable_with` call above the call
site that only some of the `Annotatable` variants are possible. The
remaining cases can be replaced with `unreachable!`.
2024-11-14 14:52:18 +11:00
Nicholas Nethercote
7aee2b332f Make configure_annotatable/flat_map_annotatable infallible.
They each have a single callsite, and the result is always unwrapped, so
the `Option<Annotatable>` return type is misleading.

Also, the comment at the `configure_annotatable` call site is wrong,
talking about a result vector, so this commit also removes that.
2024-11-14 14:51:45 +11:00
PonasKovas
7c0a7f78a0 remove attributes from generics in built-in derive macros
add a test

add github issue link to description of the test

replace new ThinVec with clear()

Co-authored-by: León Orell Valerian Liehr <me@fmease.dev>
2024-11-11 21:20:02 +02:00
bors
81d6652e74 Auto merge of #131284 - dingxiangfei2009:rename-smart-ptr-to-coerce-referent, r=compiler-errors
Rename macro `SmartPointer` to `CoercePointee`

As per resolution #129104 we will rename the macro to better reflect the technical specification of the feature and clarify the communication.

- `SmartPointer` is renamed to `CoerceReferent`
- `#[pointee]` attribute is renamed to `#[referent]`
- `#![feature(derive_smart_pointer)]` gate is renamed to `#![feature(derive_coerce_referent)]`.
- Any mention of `SmartPointer` in the file names are renamed accordingly.

r? `@compiler-errors`

cc `@nikomatsakis` `@Darksonn`
2024-10-27 17:04:12 +00:00
bors
54761cb3e8 Auto merge of #131349 - RalfJung:const-stability-checks, r=compiler-errors
Const stability checks v2

The const stability system has served us well ever since `const fn` were first stabilized. It's main feature is that it enforces *recursive* validity -- a stable const fn cannot internally make use of unstable const features without an explicit marker in the form of `#[rustc_allow_const_fn_unstable]`. This is done to make sure that we don't accidentally expose unstable const features on stable in a way that would be hard to take back. As part of this, it is enforced that a `#[rustc_const_stable]` can only call `#[rustc_const_stable]` functions. However, some problems have been coming up with increased usage:
- It is baffling that we have to mark private or even unstable functions as `#[rustc_const_stable]` when they are used as helpers in regular stable `const fn`, and often people will rather add `#[rustc_allow_const_fn_unstable]` instead which was not our intention.
- The system has several gaping holes: a private `const fn` without stability attributes whose inherited stability (walking up parent modules) is `#[stable]` is allowed to call *arbitrary* unstable const operations, but can itself be called from stable `const fn`. Similarly, `#[allow_internal_unstable]` on a macro completely bypasses the recursive nature of the check.

Fundamentally, the problem is that we have *three* disjoint categories of functions, and not enough attributes to distinguish them:
1. const-stable functions
2. private/unstable functions that are meant to be callable from const-stable functions
3. functions that can make use of unstable const features

Functions in the first two categories cannot use unstable const features and they can only call functions from the first two categories.

This PR implements the following system:
- `#[rustc_const_stable]` puts functions in the first category. It may only be applied to `#[stable]` functions.
- `#[rustc_const_unstable]` by default puts functions in the third category. The new attribute `#[rustc_const_stable_indirect]` can be added to such a function to move it into the second category.
- `const fn` without a const stability marker are in the second category if they are still unstable. They automatically inherit the feature gate for regular calls, it can now also be used for const-calls.

Also, all the holes mentioned above have been closed. There's still one potential hole that is hard to avoid, which is when MIR building automatically inserts calls to a particular function in stable functions -- which happens in the panic machinery. Those need to be manually marked `#[rustc_const_stable_indirect]` to be sure they follow recursive const stability. But that's a fairly rare and special case so IMO it's fine.

The net effect of this is that a `#[unstable]` or unmarked function can be constified simply by marking it as `const fn`, and it will then be const-callable from stable `const fn` and subject to recursive const stability requirements. If it is publicly reachable (which implies it cannot be unmarked), it will be const-unstable under the same feature gate. Only if the function ever becomes `#[stable]` does it need a `#[rustc_const_unstable]` or `#[rustc_const_stable]` marker to decide if this should also imply const-stability.

Adding `#[rustc_const_unstable]` is only needed for (a) functions that need to use unstable const lang features (including intrinsics), or (b) `#[stable]` functions that are not yet intended to be const-stable. Adding `#[rustc_const_stable]` is only needed for functions that are actually meant to be directly callable from stable const code. `#[rustc_const_stable_indirect]` is used to mark intrinsics as const-callable and for `#[rustc_const_unstable]` functions that are actually called from other, exposed-on-stable `const fn`. No other attributes are required.

Also see the updated dev-guide at https://github.com/rust-lang/rustc-dev-guide/pull/2098.

I think in the future we may want to tweak this further, so that in the hopefully common case where a public function's const-stability just exactly mirrors its regular stability, we never have to add any attribute. But right now, once the function is stable this requires `#[rustc_const_stable]`.

### Open question

There is one point I could see we might want to do differently, and that is putting `#[rustc_const_unstable]`  functions (but not intrinsics) in category 2 by default, and requiring an extra attribute for `#[rustc_const_not_exposed_on_stable]` or so. This would require a bunch of extra annotations, but would have the advantage that turning a `#[rustc_const_unstable]` into `#[rustc_const_stable]`  will never change the way the function is const-checked. Currently, we often discover in the const stabilization PR that a function needs some other unstable const things, and then we rush to quickly deal with that. In this alternative universe, we'd work towards getting rid of the `rustc_const_not_exposed_on_stable` before stabilization, and once that is done stabilization becomes a trivial matter. `#[rustc_const_stable_indirect]` would then only be used for intrinsics.

I think I like this idea, but might want to do it in a follow-up PR, as it will need a whole bunch of annotations in the standard library. Also, we probably want to convert all const intrinsics to the "new" form (`#[rustc_intrinsic]` instead of an `extern` block) before doing this to avoid having to deal with two different ways of declaring intrinsics.

Cc `@rust-lang/wg-const-eval` `@rust-lang/libs-api`
Part of https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/129815 (but not finished since this is not yet sufficient to safely let us expose `const fn` from hashbrown)
Fixes https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/131073 by making it so that const-stable functions are always stable

try-job: test-various
2024-10-25 23:29:40 +00:00
Ralf Jung
3854e16fa2 proc_macro_harness: adjust the span we use for const fn calls 2024-10-25 20:31:40 +02:00
maxcabrajac
64a3451835 Pass Ident by reference in ast Visitor 2024-10-24 11:10:49 -03:00
Ding Xiang Fei
fd36b3a4a8
s/SmartPointer/CoerceReferent/g
move derive_smart_pointer into removed set
2024-10-24 02:14:09 +08:00
Ralf Jung
ad3991d303 nightly feature tracking: get rid of the per-feature bool fields 2024-10-23 09:14:41 +01:00
bors
f79fae3069 Auto merge of #131723 - matthiaskrgr:rollup-krcslig, r=matthiaskrgr
Rollup of 9 pull requests

Successful merges:

 - #122670 (Fix bug where `option_env!` would return `None` when env var is present but not valid Unicode)
 - #131095 (Use environment variables instead of command line arguments for merged doctests)
 - #131339 (Expand set_ptr_value / with_metadata_of docs)
 - #131652 (Move polarity into `PolyTraitRef` rather than storing it on the side)
 - #131675 (Update lint message for ABI not supported)
 - #131681 (Fix up-to-date checking for run-make tests)
 - #131702 (Suppress import errors for traits that couldve applied for method lookup error)
 - #131703 (Resolved python deprecation warning in publish_toolstate.py)
 - #131710 (Remove `'apostrophes'` from `rustc_parse_format`)

r? `@ghost`
`@rustbot` modify labels: rollup
2024-10-15 11:50:31 +00:00
Matthias Krüger
4d53a28cac
Rollup merge of #131652 - compiler-errors:modifiers, r=Nadrieril,jieyouxu
Move polarity into `PolyTraitRef` rather than storing it on the side

Arguably we could move these modifiers into `TraitRef` instead of `PolyTraitRef`, but I see `TraitRef` as simply the *path* part of the trait ref. It doesn't really matter -- refactoring this further is much easier now.
2024-10-15 05:11:37 +02:00
Matthias Krüger
6d9999662c
Rollup merge of #122670 - beetrees:non-unicode-option-env-error, r=compiler-errors
Fix bug where `option_env!` would return `None` when env var is present but not valid Unicode

Fixes #122669 by making `option_env!` emit an error when the value of the environment variable is not valid Unicode.
2024-10-15 05:11:36 +02:00
bors
785c83015c Auto merge of #129458 - EnzymeAD:enzyme-frontend, r=jieyouxu
Autodiff Upstreaming - enzyme frontend

This is an upstream PR for the `autodiff` rustc_builtin_macro that is part of the autodiff feature.

For the full implementation, see: https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/129175

**Content:**
It contains a new `#[autodiff(<args>)]` rustc_builtin_macro, as well as a `#[rustc_autodiff]` builtin attribute.
The autodiff macro is applied on function `f` and will expand to a second function `df` (name given by user).
It will add a dummy body to `df` to make sure it type-checks. The body will later be replaced by enzyme on llvm-ir level,
we therefore don't really care about the content. Most of the changes (700 from 1.2k) are in `compiler/rustc_builtin_macros/src/autodiff.rs`, which expand the macro. Nothing except expansion is implemented for now.
I have a fallback implementation for relevant functions in case that rustc should be build without autodiff support. The default for now will be off, although we want to flip it later (once everything landed) to on for nightly. For the sake of CI, I have flipped the defaults, I'll revert this before merging.

**Dummy function Body:**
The first line is an `inline_asm` nop to make inlining less likely (I have additional checks to prevent this in the middle end of rustc. If `f` gets inlined too early, we can't pass it to enzyme and thus can't differentiate it.
If `df` gets inlined too early, the call site will just compute this dummy code instead of the derivatives, a correctness issue. The following black_box lines make sure that none of the input arguments is getting optimized away before we replace the body.

**Motivation:**
The user facing autodiff macro can verify the user input. Then I write it as args to the rustc_attribute, so from here on I can know that these values should be sensible. A rustc_attribute also turned out to be quite nice to attach this information to the corresponding function and carry it till the backend.
This is also just an experiment, I expect to adjust the user facing autodiff macro based on user feedback, to improve usability.

As a simple example of what this will do, we can see this expansion:
From:
```
#[autodiff(df, Reverse, Duplicated, Const, Active)]
pub fn f1(x: &[f64], y: f64) -> f64 {
    unimplemented!()
}
```
to
```
#[rustc_autodiff]
#[inline(never)]
pub fn f1(x: &[f64], y: f64) -> f64 {
    ::core::panicking::panic("not implemented")
}
#[rustc_autodiff(Reverse, Duplicated, Const, Active,)]
#[inline(never)]
pub fn df(x: &[f64], dx: &mut [f64], y: f64, dret: f64) -> f64 {
    unsafe { asm!("NOP"); };
    ::core::hint::black_box(f1(x, y));
    ::core::hint::black_box((dx, dret));
    ::core::hint::black_box(f1(x, y))
}
```
I will add a few more tests once I figured out why rustc rebuilds every time I touch a test.

Tracking:

- https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/124509

try-job: dist-x86_64-msvc
2024-10-15 01:30:01 +00:00
Matthias Krüger
75231f8764
Rollup merge of #131430 - surechen:fix_130495, r=jieyouxu
Special treatment empty tuple when suggest adding a string literal in format macro.

For example:
```rust
let s = "123";
println!({}, "sss", s);
```
Suggest:
`println!("{:?} {} {}", {}, "sss", s);`

fixes #130170
2024-10-14 17:06:37 +02:00
Michael Goulet
95dba280b9 Move trait bound modifiers into ast::PolyTraitRef 2024-10-14 09:20:38 -04:00
surechen
ceced5322c Special treatment empty tuple when suggest adding a string literal in format macro.
For example:
```rust
let s = "123";
println!({}, "sss", s);
```
Suggest:
`println!("{:?} {} {}", {}, "sss", s);`

fixes #130170
2024-10-14 10:07:57 +08:00
beetrees
feecfaa18d
Fix bug where option_env! would return None when env var is present but not valid Unicode 2024-10-13 02:10:19 +01:00
Matthias Krüger
e5906e1591 yeet some clones 2024-10-12 10:59:12 +02:00
Manuel Drehwald
624c071b99 Single commit implementing the enzyme/autodiff frontend
Co-authored-by: Lorenz Schmidt <bytesnake@mailbox.org>
2024-10-11 19:13:31 +02:00
bors
f4966590d8 Auto merge of #131045 - compiler-errors:remove-unnamed_fields, r=wesleywiser
Retire the `unnamed_fields` feature for now

`#![feature(unnamed_fields)]` was implemented in part in #115131 and #115367, however work on that feature has (afaict) stalled and in the mean time there have been some concerns raised (e.g.[^1][^2]) about whether `unnamed_fields` is worthwhile to have in the language, especially in its current desugaring. Because it represents a compiler implementation burden including a new kind of anonymous ADT and additional complication to field selection, and is quite prone to bugs today, I'm choosing to remove the feature.

However, since I'm not one to really write a bunch of words, I'm specifically *not* going to de-RFC this feature. This PR essentially *rolls back* the state of this feature to "RFC accepted but not yet implemented"; however if anyone wants to formally unapprove the RFC from the t-lang side, then please be my guest. I'm just not totally willing to summarize the various language-facing reasons for why this feature is or is not worthwhile, since I'm coming from the compiler side mostly.

Fixes #117942
Fixes #121161
Fixes #121263
Fixes #121299
Fixes #121722
Fixes #121799
Fixes #126969
Fixes #131041

Tracking:
* https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/49804

[^1]: https://rust-lang.zulipchat.com/#narrow/stream/213817-t-lang/topic/Unnamed.20struct.2Funion.20fields
[^2]: https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/49804#issuecomment-1972619108
2024-10-11 13:11:13 +00:00
Jubilee
bd2e7ee976
Rollup merge of #128721 - Brezak:pointee-in-strange-places, r=pnkfelix
Don't allow the `#[pointee]` attribute where it doesn't belong

Error if the `#[pointee]` attribute is applied to anything but generic type parameters.

Closes #128485
Related to #123430
2024-10-07 11:10:52 -07:00
bors
0b16baa570 Auto merge of #131235 - codemountains:rename-nestedmetaitem-to-metaitemlnner, r=nnethercote
Rename `NestedMetaItem` to `MetaItemInner`

Fixes #131087

r? `@nnethercote`
2024-10-07 08:59:55 +00:00