Closed
Description
Code
#[cfg(linux)]
fn x() {}
fn main() {}
Current output
warning: unexpected `cfg` condition name: `linux`
--> t.rs:1:7
|
1 | #[cfg(linux)]
| ^^^^^
|
= help: expected names are: `debug_assertions`, `doc`, `doctest`, `miri`, `overflow_checks`, `panic`, `proc_macro`, `relocation_model`, `sanitize`, `sanitizer_cfi_generalize_pointers`, `sanitizer_cfi_normalize_integers`, `target_abi`, `target_arch`, `target_endian`, `target_env`, `target_family`, `target_feature`, `target_has_atomic`, `target_has_atomic_equal_alignment`, `target_has_atomic_load_store`, `target_os`, `target_pointer_width`, `target_thread_local`, `target_vendor`, `test`, `unix`, `windows`
= help: to expect this configuration use `--check-cfg=cfg(linux)`
= note: see <https://doc.rust-lang.org/nightly/unstable-book/compiler-flags/check-cfg.html> for more information about checking conditional configuration
= note: `#[warn(unexpected_cfgs)]` on by default
Desired output
= help: try `cfg(target_os = "linux")`
Rationale and extra context
The user wanted something with "linux", and there is a name-value cfg that has the value "linux", so they probably wanted that.
Other cases
many other possible name-value cfgs...
Rust Version
rustc 1.77.0-nightly (5bd5d214e 2024-01-25)
Anything else?
No response