Triage some date references (#1293)

This commit is contained in:
Yuki Okushi 2022-02-11 05:34:23 +09:00 committed by GitHub
parent 62e5c2a719
commit 3e67d8ee9a
5 changed files with 12 additions and 12 deletions

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@ -12,8 +12,8 @@ reasons:
- The dependency may have transitive dependencies that have one of the above
problems.
As of <!-- date: 2021-07 --> July 2021, there is no official policy for vetting
new dependencies to the compiler. Generally, new dependencies are not added
As of <!-- date: 2022-02 --> February 2022, there is no official policy for vetting
new dependencies to the compiler. Generally, new dependencies are not added
to the compiler unless there is a good reason to do so.
## Permitted dependencies

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@ -44,7 +44,7 @@ A new diagnostic item can be added with these two steps:
For the naming conventions of diagnostic items, please refer to
[*Naming Conventions*](#naming-conventions).
2. As of August 2021 <!-- date: 2021-08 --> diagnostic items in code are accessed via symbols in
2. As of <!-- date: 2022-02 --> February 2022, diagnostic items in code are accessed via symbols in
[`rustc_span::symbol::sym`]. To add your newly created diagnostic item simply open the
module file and add the name (In this case `Cat`) at the correct point in the list.

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@ -17,7 +17,7 @@ First, we have the lint declarations themselves: this is where the name and defa
other metadata come from. These are normally defined by way of the [`declare_lint!`] macro, which
boils down to a static with type `&rustc_session::lint::Lint`.
As of <!-- date: 2021-07 --> July 2021, we lint against direct declarations
As of <!-- date: 2022-02 --> February 2022, we lint against direct declarations
without the use of the macro today (although this may change in the future, as
the macro is somewhat unwieldy to add new fields to, like all macros).
@ -56,11 +56,11 @@ internally.
#### Internal lints
These are lints used just by the compiler or plugins like `clippy`. They can be found in
These are lints used just by the compiler or plugins like `clippy`. They can be found in
`rustc_lint::internal`.
An example of such a lint is the check that lint passes are implemented using the
`declare_lint_pass!` macro and not by hand. This is accomplished with the
An example of such a lint is the check that lint passes are implemented using the
`declare_lint_pass!` macro and not by hand. This is accomplished with the
`LINT_PASS_IMPL_WITHOUT_MACRO` lint.
Registration of these lints happens in the [`rustc_lint::register_internals`] function which is
@ -81,7 +81,7 @@ with internal lints, this happens inside of [`rustc_lint::new_lint_store`].
This is one of the primary use cases remaining for plugins/drivers. Plugins are given access
to the mutable `LintStore` during registration (which happens inside of
[`rustc_interface::register_plugins`]) and they can call any functions they need on
the `LintStore`, just like rustc code.
the `LintStore`, just like rustc code.
Plugins are intended to declare lints with the `plugin` field set to true (e.g., by
way of the [`declare_tool_lint!`] macro), but this is purely for diagnostics and help text;

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@ -157,8 +157,8 @@ no changes added to commit (use "git add" and/or "git commit -a")
These changes are not changes to files: they are changes to submodules (more on
this [later](#git-submodules)). To get rid of those, run `git submodule update`
(or run any `x.py` command, which will automatically update the submodules).
Note that there is (as of <!-- date: 2021-07 --> July 2021) a [bug][#77620] if you use
worktrees, submodules, and `x.py` in a commit hook. If you run into an error
Note that there is (as of <!-- date: 2022-02 --> February 2022) a [bug][#77620] if you use
worktrees, submodules, and `x.py` in a commit hook. If you run into an error
like:
```

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@ -451,8 +451,8 @@ fn main() {
## Revisions
Certain classes of tests support "revisions" (as of <!-- date: 2021-02 --> February 2021,
this includes compile-fail, run-fail, and incremental, though
Certain classes of tests support "revisions" (as of <!-- date: 2022-02 --> February 2022,
this includes UI, assembly, codegen, incremental, and rustdoc UI tests, though
incremental tests are somewhat different).
Revisions allow a single test file to be used for multiple tests.
This is done by adding a special header at the top of the file: