Before, `mdbook` would continue processing even when
errors, such as invalid links, are encountered. Moreover,
it would exit with a `0` return code. Such behavior is
unexpected and leads to confusion when run in CI.
Now, when links that don't point to existing files are
encounter and error is returned which yields to `mdbook`
exiting with an error code. The change in behavior has
revealed that some tests were run with invalid links.
* Removed the itertools dependency
* Removed an unused feature flag
* Stubbed out a toml_query replacement
* Update dependencies.
* Bump env_logger.
* Use warp instead of iron for http server.
Iron does not appear to be maintained anymore. warp/hyper seems to be
reasonably maintained. Unfortunately this takes a few seconds more
to compile, but shouldn't be too bad.
One benefit is that there is no longer a need for a separate websocket
port, which makes it easier to run multiple servers at once.
* Update pulldown-cmark to 0.7
* Switch from error-chain to anyhow.
* Bump MSRV to 1.39.
* Update elasticlunr-rs.
Co-authored-by: Michael Bryan <michaelfbryan@gmail.com>
* Allow underscores in the link type name
* Add some tests for include anchors
* Include parts of Rust files and hide the rest
Fixes#618.
* Increase min supported Rust version to 1.35
* Add a test for a behavior of rustdoc_include I want to depend on
At first I thought this was a bug, but then I looked at some use cases
we have in TRPL and decided this was a feature that I'd like to use.
* Created regression tests for the table of contents
* Refactoring to make the test more readable
* Fixed some bitrot and removed the (now redundant) tests/helper module
* Removed the include_str!() stuff and use just the dummy book for testing
* Regression tests now pass again!
* Pinned a `*` dependency to use a particular version
* Made sure test mocks return errors instead of panicking
* Addressed the rest of @budziq's review
* Replaced a file open/read with file_to_string