Lints
rustdoc
provides lints to help you writing and testing your documentation. You
can use them like any other lints by doing this:
#![allow(unused)] #![allow(rustdoc::broken_intra_doc_links)] // allows the lint, no diagnostics will be reported #![warn(rustdoc::broken_intra_doc_links)] // warn if there are broken intra-doc links #![deny(rustdoc::broken_intra_doc_links)] // error if there are broken intra-doc links fn main() { }
Note that, except for missing_docs
, these lints are only available when running rustdoc
, not rustc
.
Here is the list of the lints provided by rustdoc
:
broken_intra_doc_links
This lint warns by default. This lint detects when an intra-doc link fails to be resolved. For example:
#![allow(unused)] fn main() { /// I want to link to [`Nonexistent`] but it doesn't exist! pub fn foo() {} }
You'll get a warning saying:
warning: unresolved link to `Nonexistent`
--> test.rs:1:24
|
1 | /// I want to link to [`Nonexistent`] but it doesn't exist!
| ^^^^^^^^^^^^^ no item named `Nonexistent` in `test`
It will also warn when there is an ambiguity and suggest how to disambiguate:
#![allow(unused)] fn main() { /// [`Foo`] pub fn function() {} pub enum Foo {} pub fn Foo(){} }
warning: `Foo` is both an enum and a function
--> test.rs:1:6
|
1 | /// [`Foo`]
| ^^^^^ ambiguous link
|
= note: `#[warn(rustdoc::broken_intra_doc_links)]` on by default
help: to link to the enum, prefix with the item type
|
1 | /// [`enum@Foo`]
| ^^^^^^^^^^
help: to link to the function, add parentheses
|
1 | /// [`Foo()`]
| ^^^^^^^
private_intra_doc_links
This lint warns by default. This lint detects when intra-doc links from public to private items. For example:
#![allow(unused)] #![warn(rustdoc::private_intra_doc_links)] // note: unnecessary - warns by default. fn main() { /// [private] pub fn public() {} fn private() {} }
This gives a warning that the link will be broken when it appears in your documentation:
warning: public documentation for `public` links to private item `private`
--> priv.rs:1:6
|
1 | /// [private]
| ^^^^^^^ this item is private
|
= note: `#[warn(rustdoc::private_intra_doc_links)]` on by default
= note: this link will resolve properly if you pass `--document-private-items`
Note that this has different behavior depending on whether you pass --document-private-items
or not!
If you document private items, then it will still generate a link, despite the warning:
warning: public documentation for `public` links to private item `private`
--> priv.rs:1:6
|
1 | /// [private]
| ^^^^^^^ this item is private
|
= note: `#[warn(rustdoc::private_intra_doc_links)]` on by default
= note: this link resolves only because you passed `--document-private-items`, but will break without
missing_docs
This lint is allowed by default. It detects items missing documentation. For example:
#![warn(missing_docs)] pub fn undocumented() {} fn main() {}
The undocumented
function will then have the following warning:
warning: missing documentation for a function
--> your-crate/lib.rs:3:1
|
3 | pub fn undocumented() {}
| ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
Note that unlike other rustdoc lints, this lint is also available from rustc
directly.
missing_crate_level_docs
This lint is allowed by default. It detects if there is no documentation at the crate root. For example:
#![allow(unused)] #![warn(rustdoc::missing_crate_level_docs)] fn main() { }
This will generate the following warning:
warning: no documentation found for this crate's top-level module
|
= help: The following guide may be of use:
https://doc.rust-lang.org/nightly/rustdoc/how-to-write-documentation.html
This is currently "allow" by default, but it is intended to make this a
warning in the future. This is intended as a means to introduce new users on
how to document their crate by pointing them to some instructions on how to
get started, without providing overwhelming warnings like missing_docs
might.
missing_doc_code_examples
This lint is allowed by default and is nightly-only. It detects when a documentation block is missing a code example. For example:
#![warn(rustdoc::missing_doc_code_examples)] /// There is no code example! pub fn no_code_example() {} fn main() {}
The no_code_example
function will then have the following warning:
warning: Missing code example in this documentation
--> your-crate/lib.rs:3:1
|
LL | /// There is no code example!
| ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
To fix the lint, you need to add a code example into the documentation block:
#![allow(unused)] fn main() { /// There is no code example! /// /// ``` /// println!("calling no_code_example..."); /// no_code_example(); /// println!("we called no_code_example!"); /// ``` pub fn no_code_example() {} }
private_doc_tests
This lint is allowed by default. It detects documentation tests when they are on a private item. For example:
#![warn(rustdoc::private_doc_tests)] mod foo { /// private doc test /// /// ``` /// assert!(false); /// ``` fn bar() {} } fn main() {}
Which will give:
warning: Documentation test in private item
--> your-crate/lib.rs:4:1
|
4 | / /// private doc test
5 | | ///
6 | | /// ```
7 | | /// assert!(false);
8 | | /// ```
| |___________^
invalid_codeblock_attributes
This lint warns by default. It detects code block attributes in documentation examples that have potentially mis-typed values. For example:
#![allow(unused)] #![warn(rustdoc::invalid_codeblock_attributes)] // note: unnecessary - warns by default. fn main() { /// Example. /// /// ```should-panic /// assert_eq!(1, 2); /// ``` pub fn foo() {} }
Which will give:
warning: unknown attribute `should-panic`. Did you mean `should_panic`?
--> src/lib.rs:1:1
|
1 | / /// Example.
2 | | ///
3 | | /// ```should-panic
4 | | /// assert_eq!(1, 2);
5 | | /// ```
| |_______^
|
= note: `#[warn(rustdoc::invalid_codeblock_attributes)]` on by default
= help: the code block will either not be tested if not marked as a rust one or won't fail if it doesn't panic when running
In the example above, the correct form is should_panic
. This helps detect
typo mistakes for some common attributes.
invalid_html_tags
This lint warns by default. It detects unclosed or invalid HTML tags. For example:
#![allow(unused)] #![warn(rustdoc::invalid_html_tags)] fn main() { /// <h1> /// </script> pub fn foo() {} }
Which will give:
warning: unopened HTML tag `script`
--> foo.rs:1:1
|
1 | / /// <h1>
2 | | /// </script>
| |_____________^
|
note: the lint level is defined here
--> foo.rs:1:9
|
1 | #![warn(rustdoc::invalid_html_tags)]
| ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
warning: unclosed HTML tag `h1`
--> foo.rs:1:1
|
1 | / /// <h1>
2 | | /// </script>
| |_____________^
warning: 2 warnings emitted
invalid_rust_codeblocks
This lint warns by default. It detects Rust code blocks in documentation examples that are invalid (e.g. empty, not parsable as Rust). For example:
#![allow(unused)] fn main() { /// Empty code blocks (with and without the `rust` marker): /// /// ```rust /// ``` /// /// Invalid syntax in code blocks: /// /// ```rust /// '< /// ``` pub fn foo() {} }
Which will give:
warning: Rust code block is empty
--> lint.rs:3:5
|
3 | /// ```rust
| _____^
4 | | /// ```
| |_______^
|
= note: `#[warn(rustdoc::invalid_rust_codeblocks)]` on by default
warning: could not parse code block as Rust code
--> lint.rs:8:5
|
8 | /// ```rust
| _____^
9 | | /// '<
10 | | /// ```
| |_______^
|
= note: error from rustc: unterminated character literal
bare_urls
This lint is warn-by-default. It detects URLs which are not links. For example:
#![allow(unused)] #![warn(rustdoc::bare_urls)] // note: unnecessary - warns by default. fn main() { /// http://example.org /// [http://example.net] pub fn foo() {} }
Which will give:
warning: this URL is not a hyperlink
--> links.rs:1:5
|
1 | /// http://example.org
| ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ help: use an automatic link instead: `<http://example.org>`
|
= note: `#[warn(rustdoc::bare_urls)]` on by default
warning: this URL is not a hyperlink
--> links.rs:3:6
|
3 | /// [http://example.net]
| ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ help: use an automatic link instead: `<http://example.net>`
warning: 2 warnings emitted
unescaped_backticks
This lint is allowed by default. It detects backticks (`) that are not escaped. This usually means broken inline code. For example:
#![allow(unused)] #![warn(rustdoc::unescaped_backticks)] fn main() { /// `add(a, b) is the same as `add(b, a)`. pub fn add(a: i32, b: i32) -> i32 { a + b } }
Which will give:
warning: unescaped backtick
--> src/lib.rs:3:41
|
3 | /// `add(a, b) is the same as `add(b, a)`.
| ^
|
note: the lint level is defined here
--> src/lib.rs:1:9
|
1 | #![warn(rustdoc::unescaped_backticks)]
| ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
help: a previous inline code might be longer than expected
|
3 | /// `add(a, b)` is the same as `add(b, a)`.
| +
help: if you meant to use a literal backtick, escape it
|
3 | /// `add(a, b) is the same as `add(b, a)\`.
| +
warning: 1 warning emitted