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Extend unused_must_use
to cover block exprs
#112529
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r? @oli-obk (rustbot has picked a reviewer for you, use r? to override) |
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I think that's a true positive (can just surround with |
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@bors r+ |
📌 Commit fc6b5315b2f2e4eedb923dbb25bf6a518e53e02e has been approved by It is now in the queue for this repository. |
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@bors r- |
you need to bless the clippy tests: |
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Some changes occurred in src/tools/clippy cc @rust-lang/clippy |
Can you fix first message? In your example |
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The Miri subtree was changed cc @rust-lang/miri |
@@ -1,8 +1,8 @@ | |||
error: Undefined Behavior: dereferencing pointer failed: $HEX[noalloc] is a dangling pointer (it has no provenance) | |||
--> $DIR/storage_dead_dangling.rs:LL:CC | |||
| | |||
LL | unsafe { &mut *(LEAK as *mut i32) }; | |||
| ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ dereferencing pointer failed: $HEX[noalloc] is a dangling pointer (it has no provenance) | |||
LL | let _ = unsafe { &mut *(LEAK as *mut i32) }; |
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FWIW, adding let _
here is not always obviously the right choice: there are cases where *y;
is UB but let _ = *y;
is fine. In terms of UB, using *y;
as a statement is equivalent to let _unused = *y;
, not to let _ = *y;
. (In terms of drop order however it seems to behave like let _
...)
However, only "fail" tests were changed in Miri, so if UB was accidentally removed we would have noticed.
…llaumeGomez Rollup of 8 pull requests Successful merges: - rust-lang#112403 (Prevent `.eh_frame` from being emitted for `-C panic=abort`) - rust-lang#112517 (`suspicious_double_ref_op`: don't lint on `.borrow()`) - rust-lang#112529 (Extend `unused_must_use` to cover block exprs) - rust-lang#112614 (tweak suggestion for argument-position `impl ?Sized`) - rust-lang#112654 (normalize closure output in equate_inputs_and_outputs) - rust-lang#112660 (Migrate GUI colors test to original CSS color format) - rust-lang#112664 (Add support for test tmpdir to fuchsia test runner) - rust-lang#112669 (Fix comment for ptr alignment checks in codegen) r? `@ghost` `@rustbot` modify labels: rollup
`Box::from_raw()` is `#[must_use]`, which means the result cannot go unused. In Rust 1.71.0, this was not detected because the block expression swallows the diagnostic [1]: unsafe { Box::from_raw(self.ptr.as_ptr()) }; It would have been detected, however, if the line had been instead: unsafe { Box::from_raw(self.ptr.as_ptr()); } i.e. the semicolon being inside the `unsafe` block, rather than outside. In Rust 1.72.0, the compiler started warning about this [2], so without this patch we will get: error: unused return value of `alloc::boxed::Box::<T>::from_raw` that must be used --> rust/kernel/sync/arc.rs:302:22 | 302 | unsafe { Box::from_raw(self.ptr.as_ptr()) }; | ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ | = note: call `drop(Box::from_raw(ptr))` if you intend to drop the `Box` = note: `-D unused-must-use` implied by `-D warnings` help: use `let _ = ...` to ignore the resulting value | 302 | unsafe { let _ = Box::from_raw(self.ptr.as_ptr()); }; | +++++++ + Thus add an add an explicit `drop()` as the `#[must_use]`'s annotation suggests (instead of the more general help line). Link: rust-lang/rust#104253 [1] Link: rust-lang/rust#112529 [2] Signed-off-by: Miguel Ojeda <[email protected]>
`Box::from_raw()` is `#[must_use]`, which means the result cannot go unused. In Rust 1.71.0, this was not detected because the block expression swallows the diagnostic [1]: unsafe { Box::from_raw(self.ptr.as_ptr()) }; It would have been detected, however, if the line had been instead: unsafe { Box::from_raw(self.ptr.as_ptr()); } i.e. the semicolon being inside the `unsafe` block, rather than outside. In Rust 1.72.0, the compiler started warning about this [2], so without this patch we will get: error: unused return value of `alloc::boxed::Box::<T>::from_raw` that must be used --> rust/kernel/sync/arc.rs:302:22 | 302 | unsafe { Box::from_raw(self.ptr.as_ptr()) }; | ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ | = note: call `drop(Box::from_raw(ptr))` if you intend to drop the `Box` = note: `-D unused-must-use` implied by `-D warnings` help: use `let _ = ...` to ignore the resulting value | 302 | unsafe { let _ = Box::from_raw(self.ptr.as_ptr()); }; | +++++++ + Thus add an add an explicit `drop()` as the `#[must_use]`'s annotation suggests (instead of the more general help line). Link: rust-lang/rust#104253 [1] Link: rust-lang/rust#112529 [2] Signed-off-by: Miguel Ojeda <[email protected]>
`Box::from_raw()` is `#[must_use]`, which means the result cannot go unused. In Rust 1.71.0, this was not detected because the block expression swallows the diagnostic [1]: unsafe { Box::from_raw(self.ptr.as_ptr()) }; It would have been detected, however, if the line had been instead: unsafe { Box::from_raw(self.ptr.as_ptr()); } i.e. the semicolon being inside the `unsafe` block, rather than outside. In Rust 1.72.0, the compiler started warning about this [2], so without this patch we will get: error: unused return value of `alloc::boxed::Box::<T>::from_raw` that must be used --> rust/kernel/sync/arc.rs:302:22 | 302 | unsafe { Box::from_raw(self.ptr.as_ptr()) }; | ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ | = note: call `drop(Box::from_raw(ptr))` if you intend to drop the `Box` = note: `-D unused-must-use` implied by `-D warnings` help: use `let _ = ...` to ignore the resulting value | 302 | unsafe { let _ = Box::from_raw(self.ptr.as_ptr()); }; | +++++++ + Thus add an add an explicit `drop()` as the `#[must_use]`'s annotation suggests (instead of the more general help line). Link: rust-lang/rust#104253 [1] Link: rust-lang/rust#112529 [2] Signed-off-by: Miguel Ojeda <[email protected]> Link: https://lore.kernel.org/r/[email protected]
`Box::from_raw()` is `#[must_use]`, which means the result cannot go unused. In Rust 1.71.0, this was not detected because the block expression swallows the diagnostic [1]: unsafe { Box::from_raw(self.ptr.as_ptr()) }; It would have been detected, however, if the line had been instead: unsafe { Box::from_raw(self.ptr.as_ptr()); } i.e. the semicolon being inside the `unsafe` block, rather than outside. In Rust 1.72.0, the compiler started warning about this [2], so without this patch we will get: error: unused return value of `alloc::boxed::Box::<T>::from_raw` that must be used --> rust/kernel/sync/arc.rs:302:22 | 302 | unsafe { Box::from_raw(self.ptr.as_ptr()) }; | ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ | = note: call `drop(Box::from_raw(ptr))` if you intend to drop the `Box` = note: `-D unused-must-use` implied by `-D warnings` help: use `let _ = ...` to ignore the resulting value | 302 | unsafe { let _ = Box::from_raw(self.ptr.as_ptr()); }; | +++++++ + Thus add an add an explicit `drop()` as the `#[must_use]`'s annotation suggests (instead of the more general help line). Link: rust-lang/rust#104253 [1] Link: rust-lang/rust#112529 [2] Signed-off-by: Miguel Ojeda <[email protected]> Link: https://lore.kernel.org/r/[email protected]
`Box::from_raw()` is `#[must_use]`, which means the result cannot go unused. In Rust 1.71.0, this was not detected because the block expression swallows the diagnostic [1]: unsafe { Box::from_raw(self.ptr.as_ptr()) }; It would have been detected, however, if the line had been instead: unsafe { Box::from_raw(self.ptr.as_ptr()); } i.e. the semicolon being inside the `unsafe` block, rather than outside. In Rust 1.72.0, the compiler started warning about this [2], so without this patch we will get: error: unused return value of `alloc::boxed::Box::<T>::from_raw` that must be used --> rust/kernel/sync/arc.rs:302:22 | 302 | unsafe { Box::from_raw(self.ptr.as_ptr()) }; | ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ | = note: call `drop(Box::from_raw(ptr))` if you intend to drop the `Box` = note: `-D unused-must-use` implied by `-D warnings` help: use `let _ = ...` to ignore the resulting value | 302 | unsafe { let _ = Box::from_raw(self.ptr.as_ptr()); }; | +++++++ + Thus add an add an explicit `drop()` as the `#[must_use]`'s annotation suggests (instead of the more general help line). Link: rust-lang/rust#104253 [1] Link: rust-lang/rust#112529 [2] Signed-off-by: Miguel Ojeda <[email protected]> Link: https://lore.kernel.org/r/[email protected]
`Box::from_raw()` is `#[must_use]`, which means the result cannot go unused. In Rust 1.71.0, this was not detected because the block expression swallows the diagnostic [1]: unsafe { Box::from_raw(self.ptr.as_ptr()) }; It would have been detected, however, if the line had been instead: unsafe { Box::from_raw(self.ptr.as_ptr()); } i.e. the semicolon being inside the `unsafe` block, rather than outside. In Rust 1.72.0, the compiler started warning about this [2], so without this patch we will get: error: unused return value of `alloc::boxed::Box::<T>::from_raw` that must be used --> rust/kernel/sync/arc.rs:302:22 | 302 | unsafe { Box::from_raw(self.ptr.as_ptr()) }; | ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ | = note: call `drop(Box::from_raw(ptr))` if you intend to drop the `Box` = note: `-D unused-must-use` implied by `-D warnings` help: use `let _ = ...` to ignore the resulting value | 302 | unsafe { let _ = Box::from_raw(self.ptr.as_ptr()); }; | +++++++ + Thus add an add an explicit `drop()` as the `#[must_use]`'s annotation suggests (instead of the more general help line). Link: rust-lang/rust#104253 [1] Link: rust-lang/rust#112529 [2] Signed-off-by: Miguel Ojeda <[email protected]> Link: https://lore.kernel.org/r/[email protected]
`Box::from_raw()` is `#[must_use]`, which means the result cannot go unused. In Rust 1.71.0, this was not detected because the block expression swallows the diagnostic [1]: unsafe { Box::from_raw(self.ptr.as_ptr()) }; It would have been detected, however, if the line had been instead: unsafe { Box::from_raw(self.ptr.as_ptr()); } i.e. the semicolon being inside the `unsafe` block, rather than outside. In Rust 1.72.0, the compiler started warning about this [2], so without this patch we will get: error: unused return value of `alloc::boxed::Box::<T>::from_raw` that must be used --> rust/kernel/sync/arc.rs:302:22 | 302 | unsafe { Box::from_raw(self.ptr.as_ptr()) }; | ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ | = note: call `drop(Box::from_raw(ptr))` if you intend to drop the `Box` = note: `-D unused-must-use` implied by `-D warnings` help: use `let _ = ...` to ignore the resulting value | 302 | unsafe { let _ = Box::from_raw(self.ptr.as_ptr()); }; | +++++++ + Thus add an add an explicit `drop()` as the `#[must_use]`'s annotation suggests (instead of the more general help line). Link: rust-lang/rust#104253 [1] Link: rust-lang/rust#112529 [2] Signed-off-by: Miguel Ojeda <[email protected]> Link: https://lore.kernel.org/r/[email protected]
`Box::from_raw()` is `#[must_use]`, which means the result cannot go unused. In Rust 1.71.0, this was not detected because the block expression swallows the diagnostic [1]: unsafe { Box::from_raw(self.ptr.as_ptr()) }; It would have been detected, however, if the line had been instead: unsafe { Box::from_raw(self.ptr.as_ptr()); } i.e. the semicolon being inside the `unsafe` block, rather than outside. In Rust 1.72.0, the compiler started warning about this [2], so without this patch we will get: error: unused return value of `alloc::boxed::Box::<T>::from_raw` that must be used --> rust/kernel/sync/arc.rs:302:22 | 302 | unsafe { Box::from_raw(self.ptr.as_ptr()) }; | ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ | = note: call `drop(Box::from_raw(ptr))` if you intend to drop the `Box` = note: `-D unused-must-use` implied by `-D warnings` help: use `let _ = ...` to ignore the resulting value | 302 | unsafe { let _ = Box::from_raw(self.ptr.as_ptr()); }; | +++++++ + Thus add an add an explicit `drop()` as the `#[must_use]`'s annotation suggests (instead of the more general help line). Link: rust-lang/rust#104253 [1] Link: rust-lang/rust#112529 [2] Reviewed-by: Martin Rodriguez Reboredo <[email protected]> Reviewed-by: Gary Guo <[email protected]> Reviewed-by: Alice Ryhl <[email protected]> Reviewed-by: Andreas Hindborg <[email protected]> Reviewed-by: Björn Roy Baron <[email protected]> Link: https://lore.kernel.org/r/[email protected] Signed-off-by: Miguel Ojeda <[email protected]>
`Box::from_raw()` is `#[must_use]`, which means the result cannot go unused. In Rust 1.71.0, this was not detected because the block expression swallows the diagnostic [1]: unsafe { Box::from_raw(self.ptr.as_ptr()) }; It would have been detected, however, if the line had been instead: unsafe { Box::from_raw(self.ptr.as_ptr()); } i.e. the semicolon being inside the `unsafe` block, rather than outside. In Rust 1.72.0, the compiler started warning about this [2], so without this patch we will get: error: unused return value of `alloc::boxed::Box::<T>::from_raw` that must be used --> rust/kernel/sync/arc.rs:302:22 | 302 | unsafe { Box::from_raw(self.ptr.as_ptr()) }; | ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ | = note: call `drop(Box::from_raw(ptr))` if you intend to drop the `Box` = note: `-D unused-must-use` implied by `-D warnings` help: use `let _ = ...` to ignore the resulting value | 302 | unsafe { let _ = Box::from_raw(self.ptr.as_ptr()); }; | +++++++ + Thus add an add an explicit `drop()` as the `#[must_use]`'s annotation suggests (instead of the more general help line). Link: rust-lang/rust#104253 [1] Link: rust-lang/rust#112529 [2] Reviewed-by: Martin Rodriguez Reboredo <[email protected]> Reviewed-by: Gary Guo <[email protected]> Reviewed-by: Alice Ryhl <[email protected]> Reviewed-by: Andreas Hindborg <[email protected]> Reviewed-by: Björn Roy Baron <[email protected]> Link: https://lore.kernel.org/r/[email protected] Change-Id: Iecf642296b8fdf52f03531ff45b8c97f7f5ea372 Signed-off-by: Miguel Ojeda <[email protected]> Signed-off-by: Matthew Maurer <[email protected]> (cherry picked from commit 828176d037e29f813792a8b3ac1591834240e96f)
commit 828176d upstream. `Box::from_raw()` is `#[must_use]`, which means the result cannot go unused. In Rust 1.71.0, this was not detected because the block expression swallows the diagnostic [1]: unsafe { Box::from_raw(self.ptr.as_ptr()) }; It would have been detected, however, if the line had been instead: unsafe { Box::from_raw(self.ptr.as_ptr()); } i.e. the semicolon being inside the `unsafe` block, rather than outside. In Rust 1.72.0, the compiler started warning about this [2], so without this patch we will get: error: unused return value of `alloc::boxed::Box::<T>::from_raw` that must be used --> rust/kernel/sync/arc.rs:302:22 | 302 | unsafe { Box::from_raw(self.ptr.as_ptr()) }; | ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ | = note: call `drop(Box::from_raw(ptr))` if you intend to drop the `Box` = note: `-D unused-must-use` implied by `-D warnings` help: use `let _ = ...` to ignore the resulting value | 302 | unsafe { let _ = Box::from_raw(self.ptr.as_ptr()); }; | +++++++ + Thus add an add an explicit `drop()` as the `#[must_use]`'s annotation suggests (instead of the more general help line). Link: rust-lang/rust#104253 [1] Link: rust-lang/rust#112529 [2] Reviewed-by: Martin Rodriguez Reboredo <[email protected]> Reviewed-by: Gary Guo <[email protected]> Reviewed-by: Alice Ryhl <[email protected]> Reviewed-by: Andreas Hindborg <[email protected]> Reviewed-by: Björn Roy Baron <[email protected]> Link: https://lore.kernel.org/r/[email protected] Signed-off-by: Miguel Ojeda <[email protected]> Signed-off-by: Greg Kroah-Hartman <[email protected]>
commit 828176d upstream. `Box::from_raw()` is `#[must_use]`, which means the result cannot go unused. In Rust 1.71.0, this was not detected because the block expression swallows the diagnostic [1]: unsafe { Box::from_raw(self.ptr.as_ptr()) }; It would have been detected, however, if the line had been instead: unsafe { Box::from_raw(self.ptr.as_ptr()); } i.e. the semicolon being inside the `unsafe` block, rather than outside. In Rust 1.72.0, the compiler started warning about this [2], so without this patch we will get: error: unused return value of `alloc::boxed::Box::<T>::from_raw` that must be used --> rust/kernel/sync/arc.rs:302:22 | 302 | unsafe { Box::from_raw(self.ptr.as_ptr()) }; | ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ | = note: call `drop(Box::from_raw(ptr))` if you intend to drop the `Box` = note: `-D unused-must-use` implied by `-D warnings` help: use `let _ = ...` to ignore the resulting value | 302 | unsafe { let _ = Box::from_raw(self.ptr.as_ptr()); }; | +++++++ + Thus add an add an explicit `drop()` as the `#[must_use]`'s annotation suggests (instead of the more general help line). Link: rust-lang/rust#104253 [1] Link: rust-lang/rust#112529 [2] Reviewed-by: Martin Rodriguez Reboredo <[email protected]> Reviewed-by: Gary Guo <[email protected]> Reviewed-by: Alice Ryhl <[email protected]> Reviewed-by: Andreas Hindborg <[email protected]> Reviewed-by: Björn Roy Baron <[email protected]> Link: https://lore.kernel.org/r/[email protected] Signed-off-by: Miguel Ojeda <[email protected]> Signed-off-by: Greg Kroah-Hartman <[email protected]>
commit 828176d upstream. `Box::from_raw()` is `#[must_use]`, which means the result cannot go unused. In Rust 1.71.0, this was not detected because the block expression swallows the diagnostic [1]: unsafe { Box::from_raw(self.ptr.as_ptr()) }; It would have been detected, however, if the line had been instead: unsafe { Box::from_raw(self.ptr.as_ptr()); } i.e. the semicolon being inside the `unsafe` block, rather than outside. In Rust 1.72.0, the compiler started warning about this [2], so without this patch we will get: error: unused return value of `alloc::boxed::Box::<T>::from_raw` that must be used --> rust/kernel/sync/arc.rs:302:22 | 302 | unsafe { Box::from_raw(self.ptr.as_ptr()) }; | ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ | = note: call `drop(Box::from_raw(ptr))` if you intend to drop the `Box` = note: `-D unused-must-use` implied by `-D warnings` help: use `let _ = ...` to ignore the resulting value | 302 | unsafe { let _ = Box::from_raw(self.ptr.as_ptr()); }; | +++++++ + Thus add an add an explicit `drop()` as the `#[must_use]`'s annotation suggests (instead of the more general help line). Link: rust-lang/rust#104253 [1] Link: rust-lang/rust#112529 [2] Reviewed-by: Martin Rodriguez Reboredo <[email protected]> Reviewed-by: Gary Guo <[email protected]> Reviewed-by: Alice Ryhl <[email protected]> Reviewed-by: Andreas Hindborg <[email protected]> Reviewed-by: Björn Roy Baron <[email protected]> Link: https://lore.kernel.org/r/[email protected] Signed-off-by: Miguel Ojeda <[email protected]> Signed-off-by: Greg Kroah-Hartman <[email protected]>
commit 828176d upstream. `Box::from_raw()` is `#[must_use]`, which means the result cannot go unused. In Rust 1.71.0, this was not detected because the block expression swallows the diagnostic [1]: unsafe { Box::from_raw(self.ptr.as_ptr()) }; It would have been detected, however, if the line had been instead: unsafe { Box::from_raw(self.ptr.as_ptr()); } i.e. the semicolon being inside the `unsafe` block, rather than outside. In Rust 1.72.0, the compiler started warning about this [2], so without this patch we will get: error: unused return value of `alloc::boxed::Box::<T>::from_raw` that must be used --> rust/kernel/sync/arc.rs:302:22 | 302 | unsafe { Box::from_raw(self.ptr.as_ptr()) }; | ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ | = note: call `drop(Box::from_raw(ptr))` if you intend to drop the `Box` = note: `-D unused-must-use` implied by `-D warnings` help: use `let _ = ...` to ignore the resulting value | 302 | unsafe { let _ = Box::from_raw(self.ptr.as_ptr()); }; | +++++++ + Thus add an add an explicit `drop()` as the `#[must_use]`'s annotation suggests (instead of the more general help line). Link: rust-lang/rust#104253 [1] Link: rust-lang/rust#112529 [2] Reviewed-by: Martin Rodriguez Reboredo <[email protected]> Reviewed-by: Gary Guo <[email protected]> Reviewed-by: Alice Ryhl <[email protected]> Reviewed-by: Andreas Hindborg <[email protected]> Reviewed-by: Björn Roy Baron <[email protected]> Link: https://lore.kernel.org/r/[email protected] Signed-off-by: Miguel Ojeda <[email protected]> Signed-off-by: Greg Kroah-Hartman <[email protected]>
commit 828176d upstream. `Box::from_raw()` is `#[must_use]`, which means the result cannot go unused. In Rust 1.71.0, this was not detected because the block expression swallows the diagnostic [1]: unsafe { Box::from_raw(self.ptr.as_ptr()) }; It would have been detected, however, if the line had been instead: unsafe { Box::from_raw(self.ptr.as_ptr()); } i.e. the semicolon being inside the `unsafe` block, rather than outside. In Rust 1.72.0, the compiler started warning about this [2], so without this patch we will get: error: unused return value of `alloc::boxed::Box::<T>::from_raw` that must be used --> rust/kernel/sync/arc.rs:302:22 | 302 | unsafe { Box::from_raw(self.ptr.as_ptr()) }; | ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ | = note: call `drop(Box::from_raw(ptr))` if you intend to drop the `Box` = note: `-D unused-must-use` implied by `-D warnings` help: use `let _ = ...` to ignore the resulting value | 302 | unsafe { let _ = Box::from_raw(self.ptr.as_ptr()); }; | +++++++ + Thus add an add an explicit `drop()` as the `#[must_use]`'s annotation suggests (instead of the more general help line). Link: rust-lang/rust#104253 [1] Link: rust-lang/rust#112529 [2] Reviewed-by: Martin Rodriguez Reboredo <[email protected]> Reviewed-by: Gary Guo <[email protected]> Reviewed-by: Alice Ryhl <[email protected]> Reviewed-by: Andreas Hindborg <[email protected]> Reviewed-by: Björn Roy Baron <[email protected]> Link: https://lore.kernel.org/r/[email protected] Signed-off-by: Miguel Ojeda <[email protected]> Signed-off-by: Greg Kroah-Hartman <[email protected]>
commit 828176d upstream. `Box::from_raw()` is `#[must_use]`, which means the result cannot go unused. In Rust 1.71.0, this was not detected because the block expression swallows the diagnostic [1]: unsafe { Box::from_raw(self.ptr.as_ptr()) }; It would have been detected, however, if the line had been instead: unsafe { Box::from_raw(self.ptr.as_ptr()); } i.e. the semicolon being inside the `unsafe` block, rather than outside. In Rust 1.72.0, the compiler started warning about this [2], so without this patch we will get: error: unused return value of `alloc::boxed::Box::<T>::from_raw` that must be used --> rust/kernel/sync/arc.rs:302:22 | 302 | unsafe { Box::from_raw(self.ptr.as_ptr()) }; | ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ | = note: call `drop(Box::from_raw(ptr))` if you intend to drop the `Box` = note: `-D unused-must-use` implied by `-D warnings` help: use `let _ = ...` to ignore the resulting value | 302 | unsafe { let _ = Box::from_raw(self.ptr.as_ptr()); }; | +++++++ + Thus add an add an explicit `drop()` as the `#[must_use]`'s annotation suggests (instead of the more general help line). Link: rust-lang/rust#104253 [1] Link: rust-lang/rust#112529 [2] Reviewed-by: Martin Rodriguez Reboredo <[email protected]> Reviewed-by: Gary Guo <[email protected]> Reviewed-by: Alice Ryhl <[email protected]> Reviewed-by: Andreas Hindborg <[email protected]> Reviewed-by: Björn Roy Baron <[email protected]> Link: https://lore.kernel.org/r/[email protected] Signed-off-by: Miguel Ojeda <[email protected]> Signed-off-by: Greg Kroah-Hartman <[email protected]>
commit 828176d upstream. `Box::from_raw()` is `#[must_use]`, which means the result cannot go unused. In Rust 1.71.0, this was not detected because the block expression swallows the diagnostic [1]: unsafe { Box::from_raw(self.ptr.as_ptr()) }; It would have been detected, however, if the line had been instead: unsafe { Box::from_raw(self.ptr.as_ptr()); } i.e. the semicolon being inside the `unsafe` block, rather than outside. In Rust 1.72.0, the compiler started warning about this [2], so without this patch we will get: error: unused return value of `alloc::boxed::Box::<T>::from_raw` that must be used --> rust/kernel/sync/arc.rs:302:22 | 302 | unsafe { Box::from_raw(self.ptr.as_ptr()) }; | ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ | = note: call `drop(Box::from_raw(ptr))` if you intend to drop the `Box` = note: `-D unused-must-use` implied by `-D warnings` help: use `let _ = ...` to ignore the resulting value | 302 | unsafe { let _ = Box::from_raw(self.ptr.as_ptr()); }; | +++++++ + Thus add an add an explicit `drop()` as the `#[must_use]`'s annotation suggests (instead of the more general help line). Link: rust-lang/rust#104253 [1] Link: rust-lang/rust#112529 [2] Reviewed-by: Martin Rodriguez Reboredo <[email protected]> Reviewed-by: Gary Guo <[email protected]> Reviewed-by: Alice Ryhl <[email protected]> Reviewed-by: Andreas Hindborg <[email protected]> Reviewed-by: Björn Roy Baron <[email protected]> Link: https://lore.kernel.org/r/[email protected] Signed-off-by: Miguel Ojeda <[email protected]> Signed-off-by: Greg Kroah-Hartman <[email protected]>
commit 828176d upstream. `Box::from_raw()` is `#[must_use]`, which means the result cannot go unused. In Rust 1.71.0, this was not detected because the block expression swallows the diagnostic [1]: unsafe { Box::from_raw(self.ptr.as_ptr()) }; It would have been detected, however, if the line had been instead: unsafe { Box::from_raw(self.ptr.as_ptr()); } i.e. the semicolon being inside the `unsafe` block, rather than outside. In Rust 1.72.0, the compiler started warning about this [2], so without this patch we will get: error: unused return value of `alloc::boxed::Box::<T>::from_raw` that must be used --> rust/kernel/sync/arc.rs:302:22 | 302 | unsafe { Box::from_raw(self.ptr.as_ptr()) }; | ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ | = note: call `drop(Box::from_raw(ptr))` if you intend to drop the `Box` = note: `-D unused-must-use` implied by `-D warnings` help: use `let _ = ...` to ignore the resulting value | 302 | unsafe { let _ = Box::from_raw(self.ptr.as_ptr()); }; | +++++++ + Thus add an add an explicit `drop()` as the `#[must_use]`'s annotation suggests (instead of the more general help line). Link: rust-lang/rust#104253 [1] Link: rust-lang/rust#112529 [2] Reviewed-by: Martin Rodriguez Reboredo <[email protected]> Reviewed-by: Gary Guo <[email protected]> Reviewed-by: Alice Ryhl <[email protected]> Reviewed-by: Andreas Hindborg <[email protected]> Reviewed-by: Björn Roy Baron <[email protected]> Link: https://lore.kernel.org/r/[email protected] Signed-off-by: Miguel Ojeda <[email protected]> Signed-off-by: Greg Kroah-Hartman <[email protected]>
commit 828176d upstream. `Box::from_raw()` is `#[must_use]`, which means the result cannot go unused. In Rust 1.71.0, this was not detected because the block expression swallows the diagnostic [1]: unsafe { Box::from_raw(self.ptr.as_ptr()) }; It would have been detected, however, if the line had been instead: unsafe { Box::from_raw(self.ptr.as_ptr()); } i.e. the semicolon being inside the `unsafe` block, rather than outside. In Rust 1.72.0, the compiler started warning about this [2], so without this patch we will get: error: unused return value of `alloc::boxed::Box::<T>::from_raw` that must be used --> rust/kernel/sync/arc.rs:302:22 | 302 | unsafe { Box::from_raw(self.ptr.as_ptr()) }; | ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ | = note: call `drop(Box::from_raw(ptr))` if you intend to drop the `Box` = note: `-D unused-must-use` implied by `-D warnings` help: use `let _ = ...` to ignore the resulting value | 302 | unsafe { let _ = Box::from_raw(self.ptr.as_ptr()); }; | +++++++ + Thus add an add an explicit `drop()` as the `#[must_use]`'s annotation suggests (instead of the more general help line). Link: rust-lang/rust#104253 [1] Link: rust-lang/rust#112529 [2] Reviewed-by: Martin Rodriguez Reboredo <[email protected]> Reviewed-by: Gary Guo <[email protected]> Reviewed-by: Alice Ryhl <[email protected]> Reviewed-by: Andreas Hindborg <[email protected]> Reviewed-by: Björn Roy Baron <[email protected]> Link: https://lore.kernel.org/r/[email protected] Signed-off-by: Miguel Ojeda <[email protected]> Signed-off-by: Greg Kroah-Hartman <[email protected]>
commit 828176d upstream. `Box::from_raw()` is `#[must_use]`, which means the result cannot go unused. In Rust 1.71.0, this was not detected because the block expression swallows the diagnostic [1]: unsafe { Box::from_raw(self.ptr.as_ptr()) }; It would have been detected, however, if the line had been instead: unsafe { Box::from_raw(self.ptr.as_ptr()); } i.e. the semicolon being inside the `unsafe` block, rather than outside. In Rust 1.72.0, the compiler started warning about this [2], so without this patch we will get: error: unused return value of `alloc::boxed::Box::<T>::from_raw` that must be used --> rust/kernel/sync/arc.rs:302:22 | 302 | unsafe { Box::from_raw(self.ptr.as_ptr()) }; | ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ | = note: call `drop(Box::from_raw(ptr))` if you intend to drop the `Box` = note: `-D unused-must-use` implied by `-D warnings` help: use `let _ = ...` to ignore the resulting value | 302 | unsafe { let _ = Box::from_raw(self.ptr.as_ptr()); }; | +++++++ + Thus add an add an explicit `drop()` as the `#[must_use]`'s annotation suggests (instead of the more general help line). Link: rust-lang/rust#104253 [1] Link: rust-lang/rust#112529 [2] Reviewed-by: Martin Rodriguez Reboredo <[email protected]> Reviewed-by: Gary Guo <[email protected]> Reviewed-by: Alice Ryhl <[email protected]> Reviewed-by: Andreas Hindborg <[email protected]> Reviewed-by: Björn Roy Baron <[email protected]> Link: https://lore.kernel.org/r/[email protected] Signed-off-by: Miguel Ojeda <[email protected]> Signed-off-by: Greg Kroah-Hartman <[email protected]>
BugLink: https://bugs.launchpad.net/bugs/2059991 commit 828176d upstream. `Box::from_raw()` is `#[must_use]`, which means the result cannot go unused. In Rust 1.71.0, this was not detected because the block expression swallows the diagnostic [1]: unsafe { Box::from_raw(self.ptr.as_ptr()) }; It would have been detected, however, if the line had been instead: unsafe { Box::from_raw(self.ptr.as_ptr()); } i.e. the semicolon being inside the `unsafe` block, rather than outside. In Rust 1.72.0, the compiler started warning about this [2], so without this patch we will get: error: unused return value of `alloc::boxed::Box::<T>::from_raw` that must be used --> rust/kernel/sync/arc.rs:302:22 | 302 | unsafe { Box::from_raw(self.ptr.as_ptr()) }; | ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ | = note: call `drop(Box::from_raw(ptr))` if you intend to drop the `Box` = note: `-D unused-must-use` implied by `-D warnings` help: use `let _ = ...` to ignore the resulting value | 302 | unsafe { let _ = Box::from_raw(self.ptr.as_ptr()); }; | +++++++ + Thus add an add an explicit `drop()` as the `#[must_use]`'s annotation suggests (instead of the more general help line). Link: rust-lang/rust#104253 [1] Link: rust-lang/rust#112529 [2] Reviewed-by: Martin Rodriguez Reboredo <[email protected]> Reviewed-by: Gary Guo <[email protected]> Reviewed-by: Alice Ryhl <[email protected]> Reviewed-by: Andreas Hindborg <[email protected]> Reviewed-by: Björn Roy Baron <[email protected]> Link: https://lore.kernel.org/r/[email protected] Signed-off-by: Miguel Ojeda <[email protected]> Signed-off-by: Greg Kroah-Hartman <[email protected]> Signed-off-by: Portia Stephens <[email protected]> Signed-off-by: Roxana Nicolescu <[email protected]>
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Before This PR
After This PR
Fixes #104253.