Commit Graph

1581 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Dylan DPC
35188440b5
Rollup merge of #96089 - ojeda:no-vec-no_global_oom_handling, r=Mark-Simulacrum
`alloc`: make `vec!` unavailable under `no_global_oom_handling`

`alloc`: make `vec!` unavailable under `no_global_oom_handling`

The `vec!` macro has 3 rules, but two are not usable under
`no_global_oom_handling` builds of the standard library
(even with a zero size):

```rust
let _ = vec![42];    // Error: requires `exchange_malloc` lang_item.
let _ = vec![42; 0]; // Error: cannot find function `from_elem`.
```

Thus those two rules should not be available to begin with.

The remaining one, with an empty matcher, is just a shorthand for
`new()` and may not make as much sense to have alone, since the
idea behind `vec!` is to enable `Vec`s to be defined with the same
syntax as array expressions. Furthermore, the documentation can be
confusing since it shows the other rules.

Thus perhaps it is better and simpler to disable `vec!` entirely
under `no_global_oom_handling` environments, and let users call
`new()` instead:

```rust
let _: Vec<i32> = vec![];
let _: Vec<i32> = Vec::new();
```

Notwithstanding this, a `try_vec!` macro would be useful, such as
the one introduced in https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/95051.

If the shorthand for `new()` is deemed worth keeping on its own,
then it may be interesting to have a separate `vec!` macro with
a single rule and different, simpler documentation.

Signed-off-by: Miguel Ojeda <ojeda@kernel.org>
2022-04-19 14:43:19 +02:00
bors
43a71dc732 Auto merge of #96002 - nnethercote:speed-up-Vec-clear-2, r=m-ou-se
Speed up Vec::clear().

Currently it just calls `truncate(0)`. `truncate()` is (a) not marked as
`#[inline]`, and (b) more general than needed for `clear()`.

This commit changes `clear()` to do the work itself. This modest change
was first proposed in rust-lang#74172, where the reviewer rejected it because
there was insufficient evidence that `Vec::clear()`'s performance
mattered enough to justify the change. Recent changes within rustc have
made `Vec::clear()` hot within `macro_parser.rs`, so the change is now
clearly worthwhile.

Although it doesn't show wins on CI perf runs, this seems to be because they
use PGO. But not all platforms currently use PGO. Also, local builds don't use
PGO, and `truncate` sometimes shows up in an over-represented fashion in local
profiles. So local profiling will be made easier by this change.

Note that this will also benefit `String::clear()`, because it just
calls `Vec::clear()`.

Finally, the commit removes the `vec-clear.rs` codegen test. It was
added in #52908. From before then until now, `Vec::clear()` just called
`Vec::truncate()` with a zero length. The body of Vec::truncate() has
changed a lot since then. Now that `Vec::clear()` is doing actual work
itself, and not just calling `Vec::truncate()`, it's not surprising that
its generated code includes a load and an icmp. I think it's reasonable
to remove this test.

r? `@m-ou-se`
2022-04-17 03:08:45 +00:00
Dylan DPC
04ccba8728
Rollup merge of #96070 - Gumichocopengin8:test/btree-map, r=thomcc
[test] Add test cases for untested functions for BTreeMap

- add `pop_first()`, `pop_last()`, `get_key_value()` and `try_insert()` test cases
2022-04-16 07:12:48 +02:00
Miguel Ojeda
8cec88ba76 alloc: make vec! unavailable under no_global_oom_handling
The `vec!` macro has 3 rules, but two are not usable under
`no_global_oom_handling` builds of the standard library
(even with a zero size):

```rust
let _ = vec![42];    // Error: requires `exchange_malloc` lang_item.
let _ = vec![42; 0]; // Error: cannot find function `from_elem`.
```

Thus those two rules should not be available to begin with.

The remaining one, with an empty matcher, is just a shorthand for
`new()` and may not make as much sense to have alone, since the
idea behind `vec!` is to enable `Vec`s to be defined with the same
syntax as array expressions. Furthermore, the documentation can be
confusing since it shows the other rules.

Thus perhaps it is better and simpler to disable `vec!` entirely
under `no_global_oom_handling` environments, and let users call
`new()` instead:

```rust
let _: Vec<i32> = vec![];
let _: Vec<i32> = Vec::new();
```

Notwithstanding this, a `try_vec!` macro would be useful, such as
the one introduced in https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/95051.

If the shorthand for `new()` is deemed worth keeping on its own,
then it may be interesting to have a separate `vec!` macro with
a single rule and different, simpler documentation.

Signed-off-by: Miguel Ojeda <ojeda@kernel.org>
2022-04-16 06:31:41 +02:00
bors
bb1a03c4fc Auto merge of #95224 - mjbshaw:patch-1, r=yaahc
Optimize RcInnerPtr::inc_strong()/inc_weak() instruction count

Inspired by this internals thread: https://internals.rust-lang.org/t/rc-optimization-on-64-bit-targets/16362

[The generated assembly is a bit smaller](https://rust.godbolt.org/z/TeTnf6144) and is a more efficient usage of the CPU's instruction cache. `unlikely` doesn't impact any of the small artificial tests I've done, but I've included it in case it might help more complex scenarios when this is inlined.
2022-04-15 23:15:51 +00:00
Dylan DPC
224afadb3b
Rollup merge of #96034 - Gumichocopengin8:test/btree-set, r=Dylan-DPC
[test] Add test cases of untested functions for BTreeSet

- add [`is_superset()`](https://doc.rust-lang.org/std/collections/struct.BTreeSet.html#method.is_superset) and [`remove()`](https://doc.rust-lang.org/std/collections/struct.BTreeSet.html#method.remove) test cases for BTreeSet since these functions has no test cases.
2022-04-15 20:50:49 +02:00
Keita Nonaka
3f46ba6028 chore: formatting 2022-04-15 01:30:05 -07:00
Keita Nonaka
3f2f4a35ed test: add try_insert() test cases for BTreeSet 2022-04-15 01:12:00 -07:00
Keita Nonaka
e1626020d3 test: add get_key_value() test cases for BTreeSet 2022-04-15 00:04:03 -07:00
Keita Nonaka
4117e8c2d3 test: add pop_first() pop_last() test cases for BTreeSet 2022-04-14 23:40:05 -07:00
Vadim Petrochenkov
afa2e6f2ff Fix targets not supporting target_has_atomic = "ptr" 2022-04-14 21:53:11 +03:00
Vadim Petrochenkov
7f3cc2fbbf library: Use type aliases to make CStr(ing) in libcore/liballoc unstable 2022-04-14 21:53:11 +03:00
Vadim Petrochenkov
5bee741a08 library: Move CStr to libcore, and CString to liballoc 2022-04-14 21:53:11 +03:00
Keita Nonaka
50c339e8f5 test: add remove() test cases for BTreeSet 2022-04-13 22:19:08 -07:00
Keita Nonaka
21d3f8444a test: add is_superset test cases for BTreeSet 2022-04-13 22:09:03 -07:00
Nicholas Nethercote
9c59d04d55 Speed up Vec::clear().
Currently it just calls `truncate(0)`. `truncate()` is (a) not marked as
`#[inline]`, and (b) more general than needed for `clear()`.

This commit changes `clear()` to do the work itself. This modest change
was first proposed in rust-lang#74172, where the reviewer rejected it because
there was insufficient evidence that `Vec::clear()`'s performance
mattered enough to justify the change. Recent changes within rustc have
made `Vec::clear()` hot within `macro_parser.rs`, so the change is now
clearly worthwhile.

Although it doesn't show wins on CI perf runs, this seems to be because they
use PGO. But not all platforms currently use PGO. Also, local builds don't use
PGO, and `truncate` sometimes shows up in an over-represented fashion in local
profiles. So local profiling will be made easier by this change.

Note that this will also benefit `String::clear()`, because it just
calls `Vec::clear()`.

Finally, the commit removes the `vec-clear.rs` codegen test. It was
added in #52908. From before then until now, `Vec::clear()` just called
`Vec::truncate()` with a zero length. The body of Vec::truncate() has
changed a lot since then. Now that `Vec::clear()` is doing actual work
itself, and not just calling `Vec::truncate()`, it's not surprising that
its generated code includes a load and an icmp. I think it's reasonable
to remove this test.
2022-04-13 15:39:35 +10:00
Josh Stone
a2902ebe57 impl const Default for Box<[T]> and Box<str> 2022-04-11 12:14:18 -07:00
Matthias Krüger
5b8e2ea520
Rollup merge of #95917 - RalfJung:thin-box-test, r=dtolnay
thin_box test: import from std, not alloc

Importing from `alloc` makes [Miri fail](https://github.com/rust-lang/miri-test-libstd/runs/5964922742?check_suite_focus=true), probably due to the hack that we used to resolve https://github.com/rust-lang/miri-test-libstd/issues/4. There might be better ways around this, but for now this is the easiest thing to do -- no other alloc integration test is importing from `alloc::`.
2022-04-11 12:06:58 +02:00
Matthias Krüger
e25bc303f1
Rollup merge of #95743 - yaahc:binary-search-clarification, r=Mark-Simulacrum
Update binary_search example to instead redirect to partition_point

Inspired by discussion in the tracking issue for `Result::into_ok_or_err`: https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/82223#issuecomment-1067098167

People are surprised by us not providing a `Result<T, T> -> T` conversion, and the main culprit for this confusion seems to be the `binary_search` API. We should instead redirect people to the equivalent API that implicitly does that `Result<T, T> -> T` conversion internally which should obviate the need for the `into_ok_or_err` function and give us time to work towards a more general solution that applies to all enums rather than just `Result` such as making or_patterns usable for situations like this via postfix `match`.

I choose to duplicate the example rather than simply moving it from `binary_search` to partition point because most of the confusion seems to arise when people are looking at `binary_search`. It makes sense to me to have the example presented immediately rather than requiring people to click through to even realize there is an example. If I had to put it in only one place I'd leave it in `binary_search` and remove it from `partition_point` but it seems pretty obviously relevant to `partition_point` so I figured the best option would be to duplicate it.
2022-04-11 12:06:52 +02:00
Ralf Jung
dbc0afa215 thin_box test: import from std, not alloc 2022-04-10 22:59:51 -04:00
Dylan DPC
2464ea2510
Rollup merge of #95817 - oconnor663:doc_comment2, r=yaahc
hide another #[allow] directive from a docs example

This is a repeat for Rc of e0e64a8930,
which cleaned up the same thing for Arc.
2022-04-09 18:26:29 +02:00
Mark Lodato
9cf35a6c06 Rework String UTF-8 Documentation
**This Commit**
Adds some clarity around indexing into Strings and the constraints
driving various decisions there.

**Why?**
The [`String` documentation][0] mentions how `String`s can't be indexed
but `Range` has an implementation for `SliceIndex<str>`. This can be
confusing. There are also several statements to explain the lack of
`String` indexing:

- the inability to index into a `String` is an implication of UTF-8
  encoding
- indexing into a `String` could not be constant-time with UTF-8
  encoding
- indexing into a `String` does not have an obvious return type

This last statement made sense but the first two seemed contradictory to
the documentation around [`SliceIndex<str>`][1] which mention:

- one can index into a `String` with a `Range` (also called substring
  slicing but it uses the same syntax and the method name is `index`)
- `Range` indexing into a `String` is constant-time

To resolve this seeming contradiction the documentation is reworked to
more clearly explain what factors drive the decision to disallow
indexing into a `String` with a single number.

[0]: https://doc.rust-lang.org/stable/std/string/struct.String.html#utf-8
[1]: https://doc.rust-lang.org/stable/std/slice/trait.SliceIndex.html#impl-SliceIndex%3Cstr%3E
2022-04-09 09:27:32 -04:00
Jack O'Connor
c1023e9e5f hide another #[allow] directive from a docs example
This is a repeat for Rc of e0e64a8930,
which cleaned up the same thing for Arc.
2022-04-08 10:29:50 -07:00
Jane Lusby
a87a0d089e Add ThinBox type for 1 stack pointer sized heap allocated trait objects
Relevant commit messages from squashed history in order:

Add initial version of ThinBox

update test to actually capture failure

swap to middle ptr impl based on matthieu-m's design

Fix stack overflow in debug impl

The previous version would take a `&ThinBox<T>` and deref it once, which
resulted in a no-op and the same type, which it would then print causing
an endless recursion. I've switched to calling `deref` by name to let
method resolution handle deref the correct number of times.

I've also updated the Drop impl for good measure since it seemed like it
could be falling prey to the same bug, and I'll be adding some tests to
verify that the drop is happening correctly.

add test to verify drop is behaving

add doc examples and remove unnecessary Pointee bounds

ThinBox: use NonNull

ThinBox: tests for size

Apply suggestions from code review

Co-authored-by: Alphyr <47725341+a1phyr@users.noreply.github.com>

use handle_alloc_error and fix drop signature

update niche and size tests

add cfg for allocating APIs

check null before calculating offset

add test for zst and trial usage

prevent optimizer induced ub in drop and cleanup metadata gathering

account for arbitrary size and alignment metadata

Thank you nika and thomcc!

Update library/alloc/src/boxed/thin.rs

Co-authored-by: Josh Triplett <josh@joshtriplett.org>

Update library/alloc/src/boxed/thin.rs

Co-authored-by: Josh Triplett <josh@joshtriplett.org>
2022-04-08 09:00:16 -07:00
Dylan DPC
7b285d09e9
Rollup merge of #95791 - oconnor663:doc_comment, r=thomcc
hide an #[allow] directive from the Arc::new_cyclic doc example

A minor docs cleanup.
2022-04-08 11:48:26 +02:00
Dylan DPC
d5232c6b93
Rollup merge of #95579 - Cyborus04:slice_flatten, r=scottmcm
Add `<[[T; N]]>::flatten{_mut}`

Adds `flatten` to convert `&[[T; N]]` to `&[T]` (and `flatten_mut` for `&mut [[T; N]]` to `&mut [T]`)
2022-04-08 11:48:21 +02:00
Cyborus04
06788fd7a4 add <[[T; N]]>::flatten, <[[T; N]]>::flatten_mut, and Vec::<[T; N]>::into_flattened 2022-04-08 00:54:39 -04:00
Jack O'Connor
e0e64a8930 hide an #[allow] directive from the Arc::new_cyclic doc example 2022-04-07 18:00:46 -07:00
bors
f565016edd Auto merge of #95678 - pietroalbini:pa-1.62.0-bootstrap, r=Mark-Simulacrum
Bump bootstrap compiler to 1.61.0 beta

This PR bumps the bootstrap compiler to the 1.61.0 beta. The first commit changes the stage0 compiler, the second commit applies the "mechanical" changes and the third and fourth commits apply changes explained in the relevant comments.

r? `@Mark-Simulacrum`
2022-04-07 07:34:04 +00:00
Jane Lusby
0eb0d891ad add necessary closure for partition_point 2022-04-06 18:18:09 -07:00
Jane Lusby
c957b809e9 Update binary_search example to instead redirect to partition_point 2022-04-06 14:23:57 -07:00
Pietro Albini
181d28bb61
trivial cfg(bootstrap) changes 2022-04-05 23:18:40 +02:00
SparkyPotato
83f659b4bb formatting 2022-04-06 01:36:46 +05:30
SparkyPotato
9e9881bcd8 cleanup 2022-04-06 01:36:24 +05:30
SparkyPotato
31e7990145 fix Vec leak with 0 capacity 2022-04-06 01:32:26 +05:30
bors
168a020900 Auto merge of #92686 - saethlin:unsafe-debug-asserts, r=Amanieu
Add debug assertions to some unsafe functions

As suggested by https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/51713

~~Some similar code calls `abort()` instead of `panic!()` but aborting doesn't work in a `const fn`, and the intrinsic for doing dispatch based on whether execution is in a const is unstable.~~

This picked up some invalid uses of `get_unchecked` in the compiler, and fixes them.

I can confirm that they do in fact pick up invalid uses of `get_unchecked` in the wild, though the user experience is less-than-awesome:
```
     Running unittests (target/x86_64-unknown-linux-gnu/debug/deps/rle_decode_fast-04b7918da2001b50)

running 6 tests
error: test failed, to rerun pass '--lib'

Caused by:
  process didn't exit successfully: `/home/ben/rle-decode-helper/target/x86_64-unknown-linux-gnu/debug/deps/rle_decode_fast-04b7918da2001b50` (signal: 4, SIGILL: illegal instruction)
```

~~As best I can tell these changes produce a 6% regression in the runtime of `./x.py test` when `[rust] debug = true` is set.~~
Latest commit (6894d559bd) brings the additional overhead from this PR down to 0.5%, while also adding a few more assertions. I think this actually covers all the places in `core` that it is reasonable to check for safety requirements at runtime.

Thoughts?
2022-04-03 16:04:47 +00:00
Ralf Jung
85bfe2d99d make utf8_char_counts test faster in Miri 2022-03-31 13:11:44 -04:00
Dylan DPC
c90a94707f
Rollup merge of #95491 - faern:stabilize-vec_retain_mut, r=yaahc
Stabilize feature vec_retain_mut on Vec and VecDeque

Closes #90829
2022-03-31 04:57:27 +02:00
Dylan DPC
d6c959c680
Rollup merge of #95298 - jhorstmann:fix-double-drop-of-allocator-in-vec-into-iter, r=oli-obk
Fix double drop of allocator in IntoIter impl of Vec

Fixes #95269

The `drop` impl of `IntoIter` reconstructs a `RawVec` from `buf`, `cap` and `alloc`, when that `RawVec` is dropped it also drops the allocator. To avoid dropping the allocator twice we wrap it in `ManuallyDrop` in the `InttoIter` struct.

Note this is my first contribution to the standard library, so I might be missing some details or a better way to solve this.
2022-03-31 00:26:32 +02:00
Linus Färnstrand
796f385190 Stabilize feature vec_retain_mut on Vec and VecDeque 2022-03-30 20:28:50 +02:00
bors
3e7514670d Auto merge of #94963 - lcnr:inherent-impls-std, r=oli-obk,m-ou-se
allow arbitrary inherent impls for builtin types in core

Part of https://github.com/rust-lang/compiler-team/issues/487. Slightly adjusted after some talks with `@m-ou-se` about the requirements of `t-libs-api`.

This adds a crate attribute `#![rustc_coherence_is_core]` which allows arbitrary impls for builtin types in core.

For other library crates impls for builtin types should be avoided if possible. We do have to allow the existing stable impls however. To prevent us from accidentally adding more of these in the future, there is a second attribute `#[rustc_allow_incoherent_impl]` which has to be added to **all impl items**. This only supports impls for builtin types but can easily be extended to additional types in a future PR.

This implementation does not check for overlaps in these impls. Perfectly checking that requires us to check the coherence of these incoherent impls in every crate, as two distinct dependencies may add overlapping methods. It should be easy enough to detect if it goes wrong and the attribute is only intended for use inside of std.

The first two commits are mostly unrelated cleanups.
2022-03-30 12:28:50 +00:00
lcnr
afbecc0f68 remove now unnecessary lang items 2022-03-30 11:23:58 +02:00
lcnr
bef6f3e895 rework implementation for inherent impls for builtin types 2022-03-30 11:23:58 +02:00
Aria Beingessner
37d4753776 fixup feature position in liballoc 2022-03-29 20:18:29 -04:00
Aria Beingessner
7514d760b8 cleanup some of the less terrifying library code 2022-03-29 20:18:27 -04:00
Aria Beingessner
c7de289e1c Make the stdlib largely conform to strict provenance.
Some things like the unwinders and system APIs are not fully conformant,
this only covers a lot of low-hanging fruit.
2022-03-29 20:18:21 -04:00
Ben Kimock
6e6d0cbf83 Add debug assertions to some unsafe functions
These debug assertions are all implemented only at runtime using
`const_eval_select`, and in the error path they execute
`intrinsics::abort` instead of being a normal debug assertion to
minimize the impact of these assertions on code size, when enabled.

Of all these changes, the bounds checks for unchecked indexing are
expected to be most impactful (case in point, they found a problem in
rustc).
2022-03-29 11:05:24 -04:00
bors
c1230e137b Auto merge of #95249 - HeroicKatora:set-ptr-value, r=dtolnay
Refactor set_ptr_value as with_metadata_of

Replaces `set_ptr_value` (#75091) with methods of reversed argument order:

```rust
impl<T: ?Sized> *mut T {
    pub fn with_metadata_of<U: ?Sized>(self, val: *mut U) -> *mut U;
}

impl<T: ?Sized> *const T {
    pub fn with_metadata_of<U: ?Sized>(self, val: *const U) -> *const U;
}
```

By reversing the arguments we achieve several clarifications:

- The function closely resembles `cast` with an argument to
  initialize the metadata. This is easier to teach and answers a long
  outstanding question that had restricted cast to `Sized` pointee
  targets. See multiples reviews of
  <https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/47631>
- The 'object identity', in the form of provenance, is now preserved
  from the receiver argument to the result. This helps explain the method as
  a builder-style, instead of some kind of setter that would modify
  something in-place. Ensuring that the result has the identity of the
  `self` argument is also beneficial for an intuition of effects.
- An outstanding concern, 'Correct argument type', is avoided by not
  committing to any specific argument type. This is consistent with cast
  which does not require its receiver to be a 'raw address'.

Hopefully the usage examples in `sync/rc.rs` serve as sufficient examples of the style to convince the reader of the readability improvements of this style, when compared to the previous order of arguments.

I want to take the opportunity to motivate inclusion of this method _separate_ from metadata API, separate from `feature(ptr_metadata)`. It does _not_ involve the `Pointee` trait in any form. This may be regarded as a very, very light form that does not commit to any details of the pointee trait, or its associated metadata. There are several use cases for which this is already sufficient and no further inspection of metadata is necessary.

- Storing the coercion of `*mut T` into `*mut dyn Trait` as a way to dynamically cast some an arbitrary instance of the same type to a dyn trait instance. In particular, one can have a field of type `Option<*mut dyn io::Seek>` to memorize if a particular writer is seekable. Then a method `fn(self: &T) -> Option<&dyn Seek>` can be provided, which does _not_ involve the static trait bound `T: Seek`. This makes it possible to create an API that is capable of utilizing seekable streams and non-seekable streams (instead of a possible less efficient manner such as more buffering) through the same entry-point.

- Enabling more generic forms of unsizing for no-`std` smart pointers. Using the stable APIs only few concrete cases are available. One can unsize arrays to `[T]` by `ptr::slice_from_raw_parts` but unsizing a custom smart pointer to, e.g., `dyn Iterator`, `dyn Future`, `dyn Debug`, can't easily be done generically. Exposing `with_metadata_of` would allow smart pointers to offer their own `unsafe` escape hatch with similar parameters where the caller provides the unsized metadata. This is particularly interesting for embedded where `dyn`-trait usage can drastically reduce code size.
2022-03-28 22:47:31 +00:00
Dylan DPC
8bfc03fde0
Rollup merge of #95098 - shepmaster:vec-from-array-ref, r=dtolnay
impl From<&[T; N]> and From<&mut [T; N]> for Vec<T>

I really wanted to write:

```rust
fn example(a: impl Into<Vec<u8>>) {}

fn main() {
    example(b"raw");
}
```
2022-03-28 04:12:11 +02:00
Dylan DPC
d88c03c0f1
Rollup merge of #95016 - janpaul123:patch-1, r=dtolnay
Docs: make Vec::from_raw_parts documentation less strict

This is my first PR; be gentle!

In https://users.rust-lang.org/t/why-does-vec-from-raw-parts-require-same-size-and-not-same-size-capacity/73036/2?u=janpaul123 it was suggested to me that I should make a PR to make the documentation of `Vec::from_raw_parts` less strict, since we don't require `T` to have the same size, just `size_of::<T>() * capacity` to be the same, since that is what results in `Layout::size` being the same in `dealloc`, which is really what matters.

Also in https://users.rust-lang.org/t/why-does-vec-from-raw-parts-require-same-size-and-not-same-size-capacity/73036/8?u=janpaul123 it was suggested that it's better to use `slice::from_raw_parts`, which I think is useful advise that could also be mentioned in the docs, so I added that too.

Let me know what you think! :)
2022-03-28 04:12:10 +02:00