## Summary
This PR modifies our `Cargo.toml` files to use workspace dependencies
for _all_ dependencies, rather than the status quo of sporadically
trying to use workspace dependencies for those dependencies that are
used across multiple crates. I find the current situation more confusing
and harder to manage, since we have a mix of workspace and crate-local
dependencies, whereas this setup consistently uses the same approach for
all dependencies.
Update to [Rust
1.74](https://blog.rust-lang.org/2023/11/16/Rust-1.74.0.html) and use
the new clippy lints table.
The update itself introduced a new clippy lint about superfluous hashes
in raw strings, which got removed.
I moved our lint config from `rustflags` to the newly stabilized
[workspace.lints](https://doc.rust-lang.org/stable/cargo/reference/workspaces.html#the-lints-table).
One consequence is that we have to `unsafe_code = "warn"` instead of
"forbid" because the latter now actually bans unsafe code:
```
error[E0453]: allow(unsafe_code) incompatible with previous forbid
--> crates/ruff_source_file/src/newlines.rs:62:17
|
62 | #[allow(unsafe_code)]
| ^^^^^^^^^^^ overruled by previous forbid
|
= note: `forbid` lint level was set on command line
```
---------
Co-authored-by: Charlie Marsh <charlie.r.marsh@gmail.com>
This PR introduces a new `CacheKey` trait for types that can be used as a cache key.
I'm not entirely sure if this is worth the "overhead", but I was surprised to find `HashableHashSet` and got scared when I looked at the time complexity of the `hash` function. These implementations must be extremely slow in hashed collections.
I then searched for usages and quickly realized that only the cache uses these `Hash` implementations, where performance is less sensitive.
This PR introduces a new `CacheKey` trait to communicate the difference between a hash and computing a key for the cache. The new trait can be implemented for types that don't implement `Hash` for performance reasons, and we can define additional constraints on the implementation: For example, we'll want to enforce portability when we add remote caching support. Using a different trait further allows us not to implement it for types without stable identities (e.g. pointers) or use other implementations than the standard hash function.