| # Implementing new language features |
| |
| <!-- toc --> |
| |
| When you want to implement a new significant feature in the compiler, |
| you need to go through this process to make sure everything goes |
| smoothly. |
| |
| **NOTE: this section is for *language* features, not *library* features, |
| which use [a different process].** |
| |
| See also [the Rust Language Design Team's procedures][lang-propose] for |
| proposing changes to the language. |
| |
| [a different process]: ./stability.md |
| [lang-propose]: https://lang-team.rust-lang.org/how_to/propose.html |
| |
| ## The @rfcbot FCP process |
| |
| When the change is small and uncontroversial, then it can be done |
| with just writing a PR and getting an r+ from someone who knows that |
| part of the code. However, if the change is potentially controversial, |
| it would be a bad idea to push it without consensus from the rest |
| of the team (both in the "distributed system" sense to make sure |
| you don't break anything you don't know about, and in the social |
| sense to avoid PR fights). |
| |
| If such a change seems to be too small to require a full formal RFC process |
| (e.g., a small standard library addition, a big refactoring of the code, a |
| "technically-breaking" change, or a "big bugfix" that basically amounts to a |
| small feature) but is still too controversial or big to get by with a single r+, |
| you can propose a final comment period (FCP). Or, if you're not on the relevant |
| team (and thus don't have @rfcbot permissions), ask someone who is to start one; |
| unless they have a concern themselves, they should. |
| |
| Again, the FCP process is only needed if you need consensus – if you |
| don't think anyone would have a problem with your change, it's OK to |
| get by with only an r+. For example, it is OK to add or modify |
| unstable command-line flags or attributes without an FCP for |
| compiler development or standard library use, as long as you don't |
| expect them to be in wide use in the nightly ecosystem. |
| Some teams have lighter weight processes that they use in scenarios |
| like this; for example, the compiler team recommends |
| filing a Major Change Proposal ([MCP][mcp]) as a lightweight way to |
| garner support and feedback without requiring full consensus. |
| |
| [mcp]: https://forge.rust-lang.org/compiler/proposals-and-stabilization.html#how-do-i-submit-an-mcp |
| |
| You don't need to have the implementation fully ready for r+ to propose an FCP, |
| but it is generally a good idea to have at least a proof |
| of concept so that people can see what you are talking about. |
| |
| When an FCP is proposed, it requires all members of the team to sign off the |
| FCP. After they all do so, there's a 10-day-long "final comment period" (hence |
| the name) where everybody can comment, and if no concerns are raised, the |
| PR/issue gets FCP approval. |
| |
| ## The logistics of writing features |
| |
| There are a few "logistic" hoops you might need to go through in |
| order to implement a feature in a working way. |
| |
| ### Warning Cycles |
| |
| In some cases, a feature or bugfix might break some existing programs |
| in some edge cases. In that case, you might want to do a crater run |
| to assess the impact and possibly add a future-compatibility lint, |
| similar to those used for |
| [edition-gated lints](diagnostics.md#edition-gated-lints). |
| |
| ### Stability |
| |
| We [value the stability of Rust]. Code that works and runs on stable |
| should (mostly) not break. Because of that, we don't want to release |
| a feature to the world with only team consensus and code review - |
| we want to gain real-world experience on using that feature on nightly, |
| and we might want to change the feature based on that experience. |
| |
| To allow for that, we must make sure users don't accidentally depend |
| on that new feature - otherwise, especially if experimentation takes |
| time or is delayed and the feature takes the trains to stable, |
| it would end up de facto stable and we'll not be able to make changes |
| in it without breaking people's code. |
| |
| The way we do that is that we make sure all new features are feature |
| gated - they can't be used without enabling a feature gate |
| (`#[feature(foo)]`), which can't be done in a stable/beta compiler. |
| See the [stability in code] section for the technical details. |
| |
| Eventually, after we gain enough experience using the feature, |
| make the necessary changes, and are satisfied, we expose it to |
| the world using the stabilization process described [here]. |
| Until then, the feature is not set in stone: every part of the |
| feature can be changed, or the feature might be completely |
| rewritten or removed. Features are not supposed to gain tenure |
| by being unstable and unchanged for a year. |
| |
| ### Tracking Issues |
| |
| To keep track of the status of an unstable feature, the |
| experience we get while using it on nightly, and of the |
| concerns that block its stabilization, every feature-gate |
| needs a tracking issue. General discussions about the feature should be done on the tracking issue. |
| |
| For features that have an RFC, you should use the RFC's |
| tracking issue for the feature. |
| |
| For other features, you'll have to make a tracking issue |
| for that feature. The issue title should be "Tracking issue |
| for YOUR FEATURE". Use the ["Tracking Issue" issue template][template]. |
| |
| [template]: https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/new?template=tracking_issue.md |
| |
| ## Stability in code |
| |
| The below steps needs to be followed in order to implement |
| a new unstable feature: |
| |
| 1. Open a [tracking issue] - |
| if you have an RFC, you can use the tracking issue for the RFC. |
| |
| The tracking issue should be labeled with at least `C-tracking-issue`. |
| For a language feature, a label `F-feature_name` should be added as well. |
| |
| 1. Pick a name for the feature gate (for RFCs, use the name |
| in the RFC). |
| |
| 1. Add the feature name to `rustc_span/src/symbol.rs` in the `Symbols {...}` block. |
| |
| Note that this block must be in alphabetical order. |
| |
| 1. Add a feature gate declaration to `rustc_feature/src/unstable.rs` in the unstable |
| `declare_features` block. |
| |
| ```rust ignore |
| /// description of feature |
| (unstable, $feature_name, "CURRENT_RUSTC_VERSION", Some($tracking_issue_number)) |
| ``` |
| |
| If you haven't yet |
| opened a tracking issue (e.g. because you want initial feedback on whether the feature is likely |
| to be accepted), you can temporarily use `None` - but make sure to update it before the PR is |
| merged! |
| |
| For example: |
| |
| ```rust ignore |
| /// Allows defining identifiers beyond ASCII. |
| (unstable, non_ascii_idents, "CURRENT_RUSTC_VERSION", Some(55467), None), |
| ``` |
| |
| Features can be marked as incomplete, and trigger the warn-by-default [`incomplete_features` |
| lint] |
| by setting their type to `incomplete`: |
| |
| [`incomplete_features` lint]: https://doc.rust-lang.org/rustc/lints/listing/warn-by-default.html#incomplete-features |
| |
| ```rust ignore |
| /// Allows deref patterns. |
| (incomplete, deref_patterns, "CURRENT_RUSTC_VERSION", Some(87121), None), |
| ``` |
| |
| To avoid [semantic merge conflicts], please use `CURRENT_RUSTC_VERSION` instead of `1.70` or |
| another explicit version number. |
| |
| [semantic merge conflicts]: https://bors.tech/essay/2017/02/02/pitch/ |
| |
| 1. Prevent usage of the new feature unless the feature gate is set. |
| You can check it in most places in the compiler using the |
| expression `tcx.features().$feature_name()` |
| |
| If the feature gate is not set, you should either maintain |
| the pre-feature behavior or raise an error, depending on |
| what makes sense. Errors should generally use [`rustc_session::parse::feature_err`]. |
| For an example of adding an error, see [#81015]. |
| |
| For features introducing new syntax, pre-expansion gating should be used instead. |
| During parsing, when the new syntax is parsed, the symbol must be inserted to the |
| current crate's [`GatedSpans`] via `self.sess.gated_span.gate(sym::my_feature, span)`. |
| |
| After being inserted to the gated spans, the span must be checked in the |
| [`rustc_ast_passes::feature_gate::check_crate`] function, which actually denies |
| features. Exactly how it is gated depends on the exact type of feature, but most |
| likely will use the `gate_all!()` macro. |
| |
| 1. Add a test to ensure the feature cannot be used without |
| a feature gate, by creating `tests/ui/feature-gates/feature-gate-$feature_name.rs`. |
| You can generate the corresponding `.stderr` file by running `./x test |
| tests/ui/feature-gates/ --bless`. |
| |
| 1. Add a section to the unstable book, in |
| `src/doc/unstable-book/src/language-features/$feature_name.md`. |
| |
| 1. Write a lot of tests for the new feature, preferably in `tests/ui/$feature_name/`. |
| PRs without tests will not be accepted! |
| |
| 1. Get your PR reviewed and land it. You have now successfully |
| implemented a feature in Rust! |
| |
| [`GatedSpans`]: https://doc.rust-lang.org/nightly/nightly-rustc/rustc_session/parse/struct.GatedSpans.html |
| [#81015]: https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/81015 |
| [`rustc_session::parse::feature_err`]: https://doc.rust-lang.org/nightly/nightly-rustc/rustc_session/parse/fn.feature_err.html |
| [`rustc_ast_passes::feature_gate::check_crate`]: https://doc.rust-lang.org/nightly/nightly-rustc/rustc_ast_passes/feature_gate/fn.check_crate.html |
| [value the stability of Rust]: https://github.com/rust-lang/rfcs/blob/master/text/1122-language-semver.md |
| [stability in code]: #stability-in-code |
| [here]: ./stabilization_guide.md |
| [tracking issue]: #tracking-issues |
| [add-feature-gate]: ./feature-gates.md#adding-a-feature-gate |