Commit graph

5 commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Esteban Küber
cf09cba20c When finding item gated behind a cfg flat, point at it
Previously we would only mention that the item was gated out, and opportunisitically mention the feature flag name when possible. We now point to the place where the item was gated, which can be behind layers of macro indirection, or in different modules.

```
error[E0433]: failed to resolve: could not find `doesnt_exist` in `inner`
  --> $DIR/diagnostics-cross-crate.rs:18:23
   |
LL |     cfged_out::inner::doesnt_exist::hello();
   |                       ^^^^^^^^^^^^ could not find `doesnt_exist` in `inner`
   |
note: found an item that was configured out
  --> $DIR/auxiliary/cfged_out.rs:6:13
   |
LL |     pub mod doesnt_exist {
   |             ^^^^^^^^^^^^
note: the item is gated here
  --> $DIR/auxiliary/cfged_out.rs:5:5
   |
LL |     #[cfg(FALSE)]
   |     ^^^^^^^^^^^^^
```
2024-07-12 18:52:52 +00:00
Urgau
d4e26fbb53 compiletest: add enable-by-default check-cfg 2024-05-04 11:30:38 +02:00
bohan
7f45f53204 store segment and module in UnresolvedImportError 2024-03-20 18:04:47 +08:00
bohan
c288cb1f74 store the segment name when resolution fails 2024-01-13 21:06:38 +08:00
Nilstrieb
a647ba250a Remember names of cfg-ed out items to mention them in diagnostics
`#[cfg]`s are frequently used to gate crate content behind cargo
features. This can lead to very confusing errors when features are
missing. For example, `serde` doesn't have the `derive` feature by
default. Therefore, `serde::Serialize` fails to resolve with a generic
error, even though the macro is present in the docs.

This commit adds a list of all stripped item names to metadata. This is
filled during macro expansion and then, through a fed query, persisted
in metadata. The downstream resolver can then access the metadata to
look at possible candidates for mentioning in the errors.

This slightly increases metadata (800k->809k for the feature-heavy
windows crate), but not enough to really matter.
2023-06-01 19:17:19 +02:00