Rollup merge of #141597 - Oneirical:unquestionable-instruction, r=jieyouxu

Document subdirectories of UI tests with README files

Part of rust-lang/rust#133895 and the [2025 Google Summer of Code](https://blog.rust-lang.org/2025/05/08/gsoc-2025-selected-projects/) associated project.

When adding a new UI test, one is faced with hundreds of subdirectories in `tests/ui` reflecting various categories. Knowing where to put the new test is not trivial, as many of the categories have slightly misleading names. For example, `moves` does not only refer to the `move` keyword but to functions taking ownership in general, whereas `allocator` does not refer to allocation in general but rather to the very specific `allocator_api` and `global_allocator` features.

Many contributors will therefore place their test at the top level of ̀`tests/ui` where it will be mixed with hundreds of unrelated tests.

This PR is a tentative move towards more clearly defined tag/categories, with a SUMMARY.md file documenting the true purpose of each subdirectory, placed inside `tests/ui`.

r? ``@jieyouxu``
tree: e7b824b75bbd9f30d5ee8e62afae20bae8756036
  1. .github/
  2. compiler/
  3. library/
  4. LICENSES/
  5. src/
  6. tests/
  7. .clang-format
  8. .editorconfig
  9. .git-blame-ignore-revs
  10. .gitattributes
  11. .gitignore
  12. .gitmodules
  13. .ignore
  14. .mailmap
  15. bootstrap.example.toml
  16. Cargo.lock
  17. Cargo.toml
  18. CODE_OF_CONDUCT.md
  19. configure
  20. CONTRIBUTING.md
  21. COPYRIGHT
  22. INSTALL.md
  23. LICENSE-APACHE
  24. license-metadata.json
  25. LICENSE-MIT
  26. README.md
  27. RELEASES.md
  28. REUSE.toml
  29. rust-bors.toml
  30. rustfmt.toml
  31. triagebot.toml
  32. x
  33. x.ps1
  34. x.py
README.md

Website | Getting started | Learn | Documentation | Contributing

This is the main source code repository for Rust. It contains the compiler, standard library, and documentation.

Why Rust?

  • Performance: Fast and memory-efficient, suitable for critical services, embedded devices, and easily integrated with other languages.

  • Reliability: Our rich type system and ownership model ensure memory and thread safety, reducing bugs at compile-time.

  • Productivity: Comprehensive documentation, a compiler committed to providing great diagnostics, and advanced tooling including package manager and build tool (Cargo), auto-formatter (rustfmt), linter (Clippy) and editor support (rust-analyzer).

Quick Start

Read “Installation” from The Book.

Installing from Source

If you really want to install from source (though this is not recommended), see INSTALL.md.

Getting Help

See https://www.rust-lang.org/community for a list of chat platforms and forums.

Contributing

See CONTRIBUTING.md.

License

Rust is primarily distributed under the terms of both the MIT license and the Apache License (Version 2.0), with portions covered by various BSD-like licenses.

See LICENSE-APACHE, LICENSE-MIT, and COPYRIGHT for details.

Trademark

The Rust Foundation owns and protects the Rust and Cargo trademarks and logos (the “Rust Trademarks”).

If you want to use these names or brands, please read the Rust language trademark policy.

Third-party logos may be subject to third-party copyrights and trademarks. See Licenses for details.