.. with mutliple calls of:
fastmod --accept-all '\.cargo\("([^"]+)"\)\.arg\("([^"]+)"\)' '.cargo("${1} ${2}")' tests/testsuite/
until no changes are left.
* Collapse the nested cargotest::support module into the cargotest
module (merge the mod.rs's)
* Rename the cargotest module to support
* Nest the top-level hamcrest module into support
Generally that means either switching "foo" and "bar" around (reversing
the arrow), or it means push "foo" to "bar" (and sometimes "bar" to
"baz", etc..) to free up "foo".
For trivia that leaves 80/1222 outliers, therefore 93.4% of test
project use the default. :)
By rewriting the tests, with rerast (https://github.com/google/rerast),
to use the newly introduced "at" method.
First I added the following temporary function to cargotest::support:
pub fn project_foo() -> ProjectBuilder {
project("foo")
}
Then I defined the following rewrite.rs:
use cargotest::support::{ project, project_foo };
fn rule1(a: &'static str) {
replace!(project("foo") => project_foo());
replace!(project(a) => project_foo().at(a));
}
Then I ran rerast:
cargo +nightly rerast --rules_file=rewrite.rs --force --targets tests --file tests/testsuite/main.rs
Finally I searched and replaced the references to project_foo with
argument-less project (a little awkardly on macOS with a git clean).
find tests -type f -exec sed -i -e 's/project_foo/project/g' {} +
git clean -d tests
The new `mode` for the library dependency is dependent on the library target
rather than the target which is the reason for the dependency on the library!
Closesrust-lang/rust#50640
This changes it so that only top-level targets requested on the command-line will be included in the output directory. Dependencies are no longer included.
Fixes#5444.
This hasn't been updated in awhile and in general we've been barely using it.
This drops the outdated dependency and vendors a small amount of the
functionality that it provided. I think eventually we'll want to transition away
from this method of assertions but I wanted to get this piece in to avoid too
much churn in one commit.