Diagnostic attributes
The following attributes are used for controlling or generating diagnostic messages during compilation.
Lint check attributes
A lint check names a potentially undesirable coding pattern, such as
unreachable code or omitted documentation. The lint attributes allow
,
warn
, deny
, and forbid
use the MetaListPaths syntax to specify a
list of lint names to change the lint level for the entity to which the
attribute applies.
For any lint check C
:
allow(C)
overrides the check forC
so that violations will go unreported,warn(C)
warns about violations ofC
but continues compilation.deny(C)
signals an error after encountering a violation ofC
,forbid(C)
is the same asdeny(C)
, but also forbids changing the lint level afterwards,
Note: The lint checks supported by
rustc
can be found viarustc -W help
, along with their default settings and are documented in the rustc book.
Lint attributes can override the level specified from a previous attribute, as long as the level does not attempt to change a forbidden lint. Previous attributes are those from a higher level in the syntax tree, or from a previous attribute on the same entity as listed in left-to-right source order.
This example shows how one can use allow
and warn
to toggle a particular
check on and off:
This example shows how one can use forbid
to disallow uses of allow
for
that lint check:
Note:
rustc
allows setting lint levels on the command-line, and also supports setting caps on the lints that are reported.
Lint groups
Lints may be organized into named groups so that the level of related lints can be adjusted together. Using a named group is equivalent to listing out the lints within that group.
There is a special group named "warnings" which includes all lints at the "warn" level. The "warnings" group ignores attribute order and applies to all lints that would otherwise warn within the entity.
Tool lint attributes
Tool lints allows using scoped lints, to allow
, warn
, deny
or forbid
lints of certain tools.
Tool lints only get checked when the associated tool is active. If a lint
attribute, such as allow
, references a nonexistent tool lint, the compiler
will not warn about the nonexistent lint until you use the tool.
Otherwise, they work just like regular lint attributes:
// set the entire `pedantic` clippy lint group to warn
#![warn(clippy::pedantic)]
// silence warnings from the `filter_map` clippy lint
#![allow(clippy::filter_map)]
fn main() {
// ...
}
// silence the `cmp_nan` clippy lint just for this function
#[allow(clippy::cmp_nan)]
fn foo() {
// ...
}
Note:
rustc
currently recognizes the tool lints for "clippy" and "rustdoc".
The deprecated
attribute
The deprecated
attribute marks an item as deprecated. rustc
will issue
warnings on usage of #[deprecated]
items. rustdoc
will show item
deprecation, including the since
version and note
, if available.
The deprecated
attribute has several forms:
deprecated
— Issues a generic message.deprecated = "message"
— Includes the given string in the deprecation message.- MetaListNameValueStr syntax with two optional fields:
since
— Specifies a version number when the item was deprecated.rustc
does not currently interpret the string, but external tools like Clippy may check the validity of the value.note
— Specifies a string that should be included in the deprecation message. This is typically used to provide an explanation about the deprecation and preferred alternatives.
The deprecated
attribute may be applied to any item, trait item, enum
variant, struct field, external block item, or macro definition. It
cannot be applied to trait implementation items. When applied to an item
containing other items, such as a module or implementation, all child
items inherit the deprecation attribute.
Here is an example:
The RFC contains motivations and more details.
The must_use
attribute
The must_use
attribute is used to issue a diagnostic warning when a value
is not "used". It can be applied to user-defined composite types
(struct
s, enum
s, and union
s), functions,
and traits.
The must_use
attribute may include a message by using the
MetaNameValueStr syntax such as #[must_use = "example message"]
. The
message will be given alongside the warning.
When used on user-defined composite types, if the expression of an
expression statement has that type, then the unused_must_use
lint is
violated.
When used on a function, if the expression of an expression statement is a
call expression to that function, then the unused_must_use
lint is
violated.
When used on a trait declaration, a call expression of an expression
statement to a function that returns an impl trait or a dyn trait of that trait violates
the unused_must_use
lint.
When used on a function in a trait declaration, then the behavior also applies when the call expression is a function from an implementation of the trait.
When used on a function in a trait implementation, the attribute does nothing.
Note: Trivial no-op expressions containing the value will not violate the lint. Examples include wrapping the value in a type that does not implement
Drop
and then not using that type and being the final expression of a block expression that is not used.
Note: It is idiomatic to use a let statement with a pattern of
_
when a must-used value is purposely discarded.