Age | Commit message (Collapse) | Author |
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Map fields are put in their own function instead of being clauses of expr/3.
Also, invalid map construction expressions now emit one error per ':=' field,
at the location of said field instead of one for the whole expression,
furthermore, such warnings do not stop linting of their key and value
expressions anymore. Ill-formed maps constructions are now also properly
detected in guard expressions.
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The types array(), dict(), digraph(), gb_set(), gb_tree(), queue(),
set(), and tid() have been deprecated. They will be removed in OTP 18.0.
Instead the types array:array(), dict:dict(), digraph:graph(),
gb_set:set(), gb_tree:tree(), queue:queue(), sets:set(), and ets:tid()
can be used. (Note: it has always been necessary to use ets:tid().)
It is allowed in OTP 17.0 to locally re-define the types array(), dict(),
and so on.
New types array:array/1, dict:dict/2, gb_sets:set/1, gb_trees:tree/2,
queue:queue/1, and sets:set/1 have been added.
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* josevalim/suppress-all-auto-imports:
Allow all auto imports to be suppressed at once
OTP-11682
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Reported-by: Michele Miron
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This patch introduces the no_auto_import attribute:
-compile(no_auto_import).
Useful for code generation tools that always use the
qualified function names and want to avoid the auto
imported functions clashing with local ones.
Implementation wise, we chose to have a special flag
'all' to avoid doing many set lookups when checking for
suppression.
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Conflicts:
bootstrap/lib/stdlib/ebin/erl_lint.beam
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When reporting a field redefinition in a record, erl_lint can forget
about some old unused variables.
f() -> X = 1, #r{a=foo,a=bar,a=qux}.
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Variables used in the body of a try expression were marked as unsafe
*and* used, which makes no sense as an unsafe variable can't be used.
Function vtsubtract/2 is used to forget usage of such unsafe variables.
Reported-by: Paul Davis
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When analyzing complex expressions (i.e. comprehensions, cases, tries,
ifs and receives), erl_lint does not forget about old unused variables
when returning the updated variable table. This causes a bug where old
unused variables are not recorded as such:
t(X, Y) ->
#r{a=[ K || K <- Y ],b=[ K || K <- Y ]}.
As erl_lint uses vtmerge_pat/2 to merge the results of the analysis of
the two list comprehensions, X is marked as used and the warning is not
emitted.
The function vtmerge_pat/2 is used instead of the similar vtmerge/2
which does not mark multiple occurrences of a variable as usage to
handle cases like the following one:
t(X, Y) ->
#r{a=A=X,b=A=Y}.
Other simpler expressions like conses, tuples and external fun
references do not correctly follow this behaviour, e.g. A is not marked
as used in the following code:
t(X, Y) ->
{A=X,A=Y}.
This commit fixes both issues and makes erl_lint not return old unused
variables in updated tables and makes all compound expressions use
vtmerge_pat/2.
Reported-by: Anders Ramsell
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* maint:
Fix a bug in the linter regarding the 'fun M:F/A' construct
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If the fun M:F/A construct was used erroneously the linter could
crash.
Thanks to Mikhail Sobolev for reporting the bug.
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It makes no sense to be able to do `<<...,Rest/binary>> <= ...` in a
comprehension. The related Dialyzer test is removed.
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Tuple funs were deprecated in R15B (in commit a4029940e309518f5500).
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The run-time warning for use of tuple funs will not catch the use
of literal tuple funs, such as:
if
{erlang,'+'}(3,X) =:= 0 -> true;
true -> false
end.
Therefore, add a compile-time warning to give users some warning
before they stop working in R16.
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Attempting to call is_record/3 (without an erlang: prefix) from a
guard if there was a local function named is_record/3 would cause
a compiler crash. For consistency with other guard tests, disallow
the call.
is_record/2 in a guard will still be allowed (and work correctly)
even if there is a local is_record/2. It could be argued that
is_record/2 should be handled in the same way as is_record/3,
but changing that now could break working code.
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If a guard test (such as is_list/1) has a local definition in a
module (or is imported), erl_lint will reject a call to it from
a guard if the call is not at the top-level:
foo(L) when is_list(L) =:= true -> %% Will be rejected.
ok.
is_list(_) -> ok.
But if the call is at the top-level, it will be accepted (and
cause a crash in a later compiler pass):
foo(L) when is_list(L) -> %% Will be accepted by erl_lint
ok.
is_list(_) -> ok.
This inconsistency was an oversight introduced when it became
possible to override BIFs with local definitions.
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Running Dialyzer on the test suites revealed a few type errors.
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warn_unused_import works correctly (does not give warnings when overridden).
Local call in guard gives its own error pointing out the local/imported
function.
Use of the phrase "overridden auto-imported bif" instead of "redefined
auto-imported bif" in textual error messages.
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Wrote and changed some tests in stdlib:erl_lint_SUITE
nowarn_bif_clash is obsoleted but will remove warnings and errors about bif
clashes. The recommended way is to use no_auto_import directives instead.
Hopefully erlang.erl is the only user in the world of nowarn_bif_clash.
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* ks/erl_lint:
erl_lint_SUITE: adjust failing test case
Allow recursive types and check for undefined types
OTP-8421: ks/erl_lint
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Errors are now reported slightly differently, so we'll
need to adjust the test case.
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