Add basic platform support to library/{panic_}unwind for m68k
This PR adds basic platform support for m68k for library/{panic_}unwind for m68k.
Register information for UNWIND_DATA_REG has been extracted from LLVM.
Describe VecDeque with more consistent names
The public documentation of VecDeque starts describing itself as a "queue". In method descriptions, it's ~~never~~ sometimes named queue again, or `VecDeque` (IMO a sometimes useful and often noisy notation) or "deque" or "vector". In examples, `deque`, `v` (hidden in `range_mut`) or `vector`. Here is a subjective attempt at more consistency.
Since `decl_macro`s and/or `Span::def_site()` is deemed quite unstable,
no public-facing macro that relies on it can hope to be, itself, stabilized.
We circumvent the issue by no longer relying on field privacy for safety and,
instead, relying on an unstable feature-gate to act as the gate keeper for
non users of the macro (thanks to `allow_internal_unstable`).
This is technically not correct (since a `nightly` user could technically enable
the feature and cause unsoundness with it); or, in other words, this makes the
feature-gate used to gate the access to the field be (technically unsound, and
in practice) `unsafe`. Hence it having `unsafe` in its name.
Back to the macro, we go back to `macro_rules!` / `mixed_site()`-span rules thanks
to declaring the `decl_macro` as `semitransparent`, which is a hack to basically have
`pub macro_rules!`
Co-Authored-By: Mara Bos <m-ou.se@m-ou.se>
Stabilise inherent_ascii_escape (FCP in #77174)
Implements #77174, which completed its FCP.
This does *not* deprecate any existing methods or structs, as that is tracked in #93887. That stated, people should prefer using `u8::escape_ascii` to `std::ascii::escape_default`.
More practical examples for `Option::and_then` & `Result::and_then`
To be blatantly honest, I think the current example given for `Option::and_then` is objectively terrible. (No offence to whoever wrote them initially.)
```rust
fn sq(x: u32) -> Option<u32> { Some(x * x) }
fn nope(_: u32) -> Option<u32> { None }
assert_eq!(Some(2).and_then(sq).and_then(sq), Some(16));
assert_eq!(Some(2).and_then(sq).and_then(nope), None);
assert_eq!(Some(2).and_then(nope).and_then(sq), None);
assert_eq!(None.and_then(sq).and_then(sq), None);
```
Current example:
- does not demonstrate that `and_then` converts `Option<T>` to `Option<U>`
- is far removed from any realistic code
- generally just causes more confusion than it helps
So I replaced them with two blocks:
- the first one shows basic usage (including the type conversion)
- the second one shows an example of typical usage
Same thing with `Result::and_then`.
Hopefully this helps with clarity.
make `Instant::{duration_since, elapsed, sub}` saturating and remove workarounds
This removes all mutex/atomic-based workarounds for non-monotonic clocks and makes the previously panicking methods saturating instead. Additionally `saturating_duration_since` becomes deprecated since `duration_since` now fills that role.
Effectively this moves the fixup from `Instant` construction to the comparisons.
This has some observable effects, especially on platforms without monotonic clocks:
* Incorrectly ordered Instant comparisons no longer panic in release mode. This could hide some programming errors, but since debug mode still panics tests can still catch them.
* `checked_duration_since` will now return `None` in more cases. Previously it only happened when one compared instants obtained in the wrong order or manually created ones. Now it also does on backslides.
* non-monotonic intervals will not be transitive, i.e. `b.duration_since(a) + c.duration_since(b) != c.duration_since(a)`
The upsides are reduced complexity and lower overhead of `Instant::now`.
## Motivation
Currently we must choose between two poisons. One is high worst-case latency and jitter of `Instant::now()` due to explicit synchronization; see #83093 for benchmarks, the worst-case overhead is > 100x. The other is sporadic panics on specific, rare combinations of CPU/hypervisor/operating system due to platform bugs.
Use-cases where low-overhead, fine-grained timestamps are needed - such as syscall tracing, performance profiles or sensor data acquisition (drone flight controllers were mentioned in a libs meeting) in multi-threaded programs - are negatively impacted by the synchronization.
The panics are user-visible (program crashes), hard to reproduce and can be triggered by any dependency that might be using Instants for any reason.
A solution that is fast _and_ doesn't panic is desirable.
----
closes#84448closes#86470
This removes all mutex/atomics based workarounds for non-monotonic clocks and makes the previously panicking methods saturating instead.
Effectively this moves the monotonization from `Instant` construction to the comparisons.
This has some observable effects, especially on platforms without monotonic clocks:
* Incorrectly ordered Instant comparisons no longer panic. This may hide some programming errors until someone actually looks at the resulting `Duration`
* `checked_duration_since` will now return `None` in more cases. Previously it only happened when one compared instants obtained in the wrong order or
manually created ones. Now it also does on backslides.
The upside is reduced complexity and lower overhead of `Instant::now`.
Fix hashing for windows paths containing a CurDir component
* the logic only checked for / but not for \
* verbatim paths shouldn't skip items at all since they don't get normalized
* the extra branches get optimized out on unix since is_sep_byte is a trivial comparison and is_verbatim is always-false
* tests lacked windows coverage for these cases
That lead to equal paths not having equal hashes and to unnecessary collisions.
Rollup of 10 pull requests
Successful merges:
- #90955 (Rename `FilenameTooLong` to `InvalidFilename` and also use it for Windows' `ERROR_INVALID_NAME`)
- #91607 (Make `span_extend_to_prev_str()` more robust)
- #92895 (Remove some unused functionality)
- #93635 (Add missing platform-specific information on current_dir and set_current_dir)
- #93660 (rustdoc-json: Add some tests for typealias item)
- #93782 (Split `pauth` target feature)
- #93868 (Fix incorrect register conflict detection in asm!)
- #93888 (Implement `AsFd` for `&T` and `&mut T`.)
- #93909 (Fix typo: explicitely -> explicitly)
- #93910 (fix mention of moved function in `rustc_hir` docs)
Failed merges:
r? `@ghost`
`@rustbot` modify labels: rollup
Implement `AsFd` for `&T` and `&mut T`.
Add implementations of `AsFd` for `&T` and `&mut T`, so that users can
write code like this:
```rust
pub fn fchown<F: AsFd>(fd: F, uid: Option<u32>, gid: Option<u32>) -> io::Result<()> {
```
with `fd: F` rather than `fd: &F`.
And similar for `AsHandle` and `AsSocket` on Windows.
Also, adjust the `fchown` example to pass the file by reference. The
code can work either way now, but passing by reference is more likely
to be what users will want to do.
This is an alternative to #93869, and is a simpler way to achieve the
same goals: users don't need to pass borrowed-`BorrowedFd` arguments,
and it prevents a pitfall in the case where users write `fd: F` instead
of `fd: &F`.
r? ```@joshtriplett```
Rename `FilenameTooLong` to `InvalidFilename` and also use it for Windows' `ERROR_INVALID_NAME`
Address https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/90940#issuecomment-970157931
`ERROR_INVALID_NAME` (i.e. "The filename, directory name, or volume label syntax is incorrect") happens if we pass an invalid filename, directory name, or label syntax, so mapping as `InvalidInput` is reasonable to me.
Stabilise `is_aarch64_feature_detected!` under `simd_aarch64` feature
Initial implementation, looking for feedback on the approach here. https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/86941
One point I noticed was that I haven't seen different "since" versions for the same feature - does this mean that other features can't be added to to the `simd_aarch64` feature once this is in stable? If so it might need a more specific name.
r? `@Amanieu`
Add implementations of `AsFd` for `&T` and `&mut T`, so that users can
write code like this:
```rust
pub fn fchown<F: AsFd>(fd: F, uid: Option<u32>, gid: Option<u32>) -> io::Result<()> {
```
with `fd: F` rather than `fd: &F`.
And similar for `AsHandle` and `AsSocket` on Windows.
Also, adjust the `fchown` example to pass the file by reference. The
code can work either way now, but passing by reference is more likely
to be what users will want to do.
This is an alternative to #93869, and is a simpler way to achieve the
same goals: users don't need to pass borrowed-`BorrowedFd` arguments,
and it prevents a pitfall in the case where users write `fd: F` instead
of `fd: &F`.
kmc-solid: Fix wait queue manipulation errors in the `Condvar` implementation
This PR fixes a number of bugs in the `Condvar` wait queue implementation used by the [`*-kmc-solid_*`](https://doc.rust-lang.org/nightly/rustc/platform-support/kmc-solid.html) Tier 3 targets. These bugs can occur when there are multiple threads waiting on the same `Condvar` and sometimes manifest as an `unwrap` failure.