Commit Graph

4782 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
bors
48316dfea1 Auto merge of #99182 - RalfJung:mitigate-uninit, r=scottmcm
mem::uninitialized: mitigate many incorrect uses of this function

Alternative to https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/98966: fill memory with `0x01` rather than leaving it uninit. This is definitely bitewise valid for all `bool` and nonnull types, and also those `Option<&T>` that we started putting `noundef` on. However it is still invalid for `char` and some enums, and on references the `dereferenceable` attribute is still violated, so the generated LLVM IR still has UB -- but in fewer cases, and `dereferenceable` is hopefully less likely to cause problems than clearly incorrect range annotations.

This can make using `mem::uninitialized` a lot slower, but that function has been deprecated for years and we keep telling everyone to move to `MaybeUninit` because it is basically impossible to use `mem::uninitialized` correctly. For the cases where that hasn't helped (and all the old code out there that nobody will ever update), we can at least mitigate the effect of using this API. Note that this is *not* in any way a stable guarantee -- it is still UB to call `mem::uninitialized::<bool>()`, and Miri will call it out as such.

This is somewhat similar to https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/87032, which proposed to make `uninitialized` return a buffer filled with 0x00. However
- That PR also proposed to reduce the situations in which we panic, which I don't think we should do at this time.
- The 0x01 bit pattern means that nonnull requirements are satisfied, which (due to references) is the most common validity invariant.

`@5225225` I hope I am using `cfg(sanitize)` the right way; I was not sure for which ones to test here.
Cc https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/66151
Fixes https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/87675
2022-07-28 01:11:10 +00:00
Jack Wrenn
b78c3daad0 safe transmute: reference tracking issue
ref: https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/92268#discussion_r925266769
2022-07-27 17:33:57 +00:00
Jack Wrenn
21d1ab4877 safe transmute: add rustc_on_unimplemented to BikeshedIntrinsicFrom
ref: https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/92268#discussion_r925266583
2022-07-27 17:33:57 +00:00
Jack Wrenn
bc4a1dea41 Initial (incomplete) implementation of transmutability trait.
This initial implementation handles transmutations between types with specified layouts, except when references are involved.

Co-authored-by: Igor null <m1el.2027@gmail.com>
2022-07-27 17:33:56 +00:00
Guillaume Gomez
ef81fca760
Rollup merge of #94247 - saethlin:chunksmut-aliasing, r=the8472
Fix slice::ChunksMut aliasing

Fixes https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/94231, details in that issue.
cc `@RalfJung`

This isn't done just yet, all the safety comments are placeholders. But otherwise, it seems to work.

I don't really like this approach though. There's a lot of unsafe code where there wasn't before, but as far as I can tell the only other way to uphold the aliasing requirement imposed by `__iterator_get_unchecked` is to use raw slices, which I think require the same amount of unsafe code. All that would do is tie the `len` and `ptr` fields together.

Oh I just looked and I'm pretty sure that `ChunksExactMut`, `RChunksMut`, and `RChunksExactMut` also need to be patched. Even more reason to put up a draft.
2022-07-27 17:55:01 +02:00
Yuki Okushi
28b44ff5d4
Rollup merge of #99704 - fee1-dead-contrib:add_self_tilde_const_trait, r=oli-obk
Add `Self: ~const Trait` to traits with `#[const_trait]`

r? `@oli-obk`
2022-07-27 19:05:33 +09:00
Ben Kimock
746afe8952 Clarify safety comments 2022-07-26 21:25:56 -04:00
Ben Kimock
e2e3a88771 Explain how *mut [T] helps, and how we rely on the check in split_at_mut 2022-07-26 18:37:00 -04:00
Jubilee Young
d48a869b9d Force the Cow into a String 2022-07-26 14:45:28 -07:00
Jubilee Young
79e0543060 Use String::from_utf8_lossy in CStr demo 2022-07-26 13:26:05 -07:00
Matthias Krüger
a739e28aea
Rollup merge of #99757 - asquared31415:patch-1, r=Dylan-DPC
Make `transmute_copy` docs read better
2022-07-26 16:57:52 +02:00
Deadbeef
a6f9826979 Add Self: ~const Trait to traits with #[const_trait] 2022-07-26 14:14:21 +00:00
asquared31415
e241d5a093
Make transmute_copy docs read better 2022-07-26 05:59:44 -04:00
Dylan DPC
deab13c681
Rollup merge of #99692 - RalfJung:too-far, r=oli-obk
interpret, ptr_offset_from: refactor and test too-far-apart check

We didn't have any tests for the "too far apart" message, and indeed that check mostly relied on the in-bounds check and was otherwise probably not entirely correct... so I rewrote that check, and it is before the in-bounds check so we can test it separately.
2022-07-26 14:26:58 +05:30
Yuki Okushi
aeca079d7e
Rollup merge of #99084 - RalfJung:write_bytes, r=thomcc
clarify how write_bytes can lead to UB due to invalid values

Fixes https://github.com/rust-lang/unsafe-code-guidelines/issues/330

Cc ``@5225225``
2022-07-26 07:14:46 +09:00
Yuki Okushi
c1647e10ad
Rollup merge of #92390 - fee1-dead-contrib:const_cmp, r=oli-obk
Constify a few `(Partial)Ord` impls

Only a few `impl`s are constified for now, as #92257 has not landed in the bootstrap compiler yet and quite a few impls would need that fix.

This unblocks #92228, which unblocks marking iterator methods as `default_method_body_is_const`.
2022-07-26 07:14:43 +09:00
Ralf Jung
58f2ede15f interpret, ptr_offset_from: refactor and test too-far-apart check 2022-07-24 19:35:40 -04:00
Ralf Jung
d10a7b1243 add miri-track-caller to some intrinsic-exposing methods 2022-07-24 14:49:33 -04:00
David Tolnay
f1ca69d245
Revert write! and writeln! to late drop temporaries 2022-07-24 11:12:00 -07:00
Deadbeef
65fca6db19 add const hack comment 2022-07-24 12:01:23 +00:00
Deadbeef
a89510e5f9 Add issue numbers 2022-07-24 12:01:22 +00:00
Deadbeef
9fc5463c18 Constify a few const (Partial)Ord impls 2022-07-24 12:01:22 +00:00
bors
35a0617248 Auto merge of #98674 - RalfJung:miri-stacktrace-pruning, r=Mark-Simulacrum
miri: prune some atomic operation and raw pointer details from stacktrace

Since Miri removes `track_caller` frames from the stacktrace, adding that attribute can help make backtraces more readable (similar to how it makes panic locations better). I made them only show up with `cfg(miri)` to make sure the extra arguments induced by `track_caller` do not cause any runtime performance trouble.

This is also testing the waters for whether the libs team is okay with having these attributes in their code, or whether you'd prefer if we find some other way to do this. If you are fine with this, we will probably want to add it to a lot more functions (all the other atomic operations, to start).

Before:
```
error: Undefined Behavior: Data race detected between Atomic Load on Thread(id = 2) and Write on Thread(id = 1) at alloc1727 (current vector clock = VClock([9, 0, 6]), conflicting timestamp = VClock([0, 6]))
    --> /home/r/.rustup/toolchains/miri/lib/rustlib/src/rust/library/core/src/sync/atomic.rs:2594:23
     |
2594 |             SeqCst => intrinsics::atomic_load_seqcst(dst),
     |                       ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ Data race detected between Atomic Load on Thread(id = 2) and Write on Thread(id = 1) at alloc1727 (current vector clock = VClock([9, 0, 6]), conflicting timestamp = VClock([0, 6]))
     |
     = help: this indicates a bug in the program: it performed an invalid operation, and caused Undefined Behavior
     = help: see https://doc.rust-lang.org/nightly/reference/behavior-considered-undefined.html for further information

     = note: inside `std::sync::atomic::atomic_load::<usize>` at /home/r/.rustup/toolchains/miri/lib/rustlib/src/rust/library/core/src/sync/atomic.rs:2594:23
     = note: inside `std::sync::atomic::AtomicUsize::load` at /home/r/.rustup/toolchains/miri/lib/rustlib/src/rust/library/core/src/sync/atomic.rs:1719:26
note: inside closure at ../miri/tests/fail/data_race/atomic_read_na_write_race1.rs:22:13
    --> ../miri/tests/fail/data_race/atomic_read_na_write_race1.rs:22:13
     |
22   |             (&*c.0).load(Ordering::SeqCst)
     |             ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
```

After:
```
error: Undefined Behavior: Data race detected between Atomic Load on Thread(id = 2) and Write on Thread(id = 1) at alloc1727 (current vector clock = VClock([9, 0, 6]), conflicting timestamp = VClock([0, 6]))
  --> tests/fail/data_race/atomic_read_na_write_race1.rs:22:13
   |
22 |             (&*c.0).load(Ordering::SeqCst)
   |             ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ Data race detected between Atomic Load on Thread(id = 2) and Write on Thread(id = 1) at alloc1727 (current vector clock = VClock([9, 0, 6]), conflicting timestamp = VClock([0, 6]))
   |
   = help: this indicates a bug in the program: it performed an invalid operation, and caused Undefined Behavior
   = help: see https://doc.rust-lang.org/nightly/reference/behavior-considered-undefined.html for further information

   = note: inside closure at tests/fail/data_race/atomic_read_na_write_race1.rs:22:13
```
2022-07-24 06:46:46 +00:00
Ralf Jung
aed5cf3f8c say some more things about how transmute is UB 2022-07-23 08:16:55 -04:00
bors
ed793d86da Auto merge of #93397 - joshtriplett:sort-floats, r=Amanieu
Add `[f32]::sort_floats` and `[f64]::sort_floats`

It's inconvenient to sort a slice or Vec of floats, compared to sorting integers. To simplify numeric code, add a convenience method to `[f32]` and `[f64]` to sort them using `sort_unstable_by` with `total_cmp`.
2022-07-23 02:47:54 +00:00
Ralf Jung
5d95a36244 do not claim that transmute is like memcpy 2022-07-22 14:51:23 -04:00
Ralf Jung
35c6dec921 adjust UnsafeCell documentation 2022-07-22 14:25:41 -04:00
bors
41419e7036 Auto merge of #99491 - workingjubilee:sync-psimd, r=workingjubilee
Sync in portable-simd subtree

r? `@ghost`
2022-07-22 09:48:00 +00:00
Dylan DPC
5df3b98321
Rollup merge of #99579 - CleanCut:expect-warning, r=joshtriplett
Add same warning to Result::expect as Result::unwrap

I was reading a recent blog post by Jimmy Hartzell and [he noted](https://www.thecodedmessage.com/posts/2022-07-14-programming-unwrap/#context):

> I will however note that the documentation of `unwrap` comes with [a warning not to use it](https://doc.rust-lang.org/std/result/enum.Result.html#method.unwrap). The warning is framed in terms of the fact that `unwrap` may panic, but the [documentation of `expect`](https://doc.rust-lang.org/std/result/enum.Result.html#method.expect), where this is equally true, does not come with such a warning.

It _is_ equally true. Let's add the same warning to `expect`. This PR is a copy-and-paste of the warning text from the docstring for `unwrap`.
2022-07-22 11:53:43 +05:30
Dylan DPC
ad31d5c6a5
Rollup merge of #98174 - Kixunil:rename_ptr_as_mut_const_to_cast, r=scottmcm
Rename `<*{mut,const} T>::as_{const,mut}` to `cast_`

This renames the methods to use the `cast_` prefix instead of `as_` to
make it more readable and avoid confusion with `<*mut T>::as_mut()`
which is `unsafe` and returns a reference.

Sorry, didn't notice ACP process exists, opened https://github.com/rust-lang/libs-team/issues/51

See #92675
2022-07-22 11:53:39 +05:30
bors
aa01891700 Auto merge of #99420 - RalfJung:vtable, r=oli-obk
make vtable pointers entirely opaque

This implements the scheme discussed in https://github.com/rust-lang/unsafe-code-guidelines/issues/338: vtable pointers should be considered entirely opaque and not even readable by Rust code, similar to function pointers.

- We have a new kind of `GlobalAlloc` that symbolically refers to a vtable.
- Miri uses that kind of allocation when generating a vtable.
- The codegen backends, upon encountering such an allocation, call `vtable_allocation` to obtain an actually dataful allocation for this vtable.
- We need new intrinsics to obtain the size and align from a vtable (for some `ptr::metadata` APIs), since direct accesses are UB now.

I had to touch quite a bit of code that I am not very familiar with, so some of this might not make much sense...
r? `@oli-obk`
2022-07-22 01:33:49 +00:00
Nathan Stocks
7ba0be832a add same warning to Result::expect as Result::unwrap 2022-07-21 18:15:24 -06:00
Matthias Krüger
9610c71b1e
Rollup merge of #99454 - benluelo:control-flow/continue-combinators, r=scottmcm
Add map_continue and continue_value combinators to ControlFlow

As suggested in this comment: https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/75744#issuecomment-1188549494

Related tracking issue: https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/75744

r? ``````@scottmcm``````
2022-07-21 18:42:04 +02:00
Martin Habovstiak
eb5acc9b9b Rename <*{mut,const} T>::as_{const,mut} to cast_
This renames the methods to use the `cast_` prefix instead of `as_` to
make it more readable and avoid confusion with `<*mut T>::as_mut()`
which is `unsafe` and returns a reference.

See #92675
2022-07-21 18:30:05 +02:00
Jan Behrens
e6b761b902 fixup! docs: Improve AsRef / AsMut docs on blanket impls
Changed wording in sections on "Reflexivity":
replaced "that is there is" with "i.e. there would be" and removed comma
before "with"

Reason: "there is" somewhat contradicted the "would be" hypothetical.
A slightly redundant wording has now been chosen for better clarity.
The comma seemed to be superfluous.
2022-07-21 16:40:14 +02:00
Jubilee Young
f8aa494c69 Introduce core::simd trait imports in tests 2022-07-20 18:08:20 -07:00
Bruce A. MacNaughton
5d048eb69d add #inline 2022-07-20 16:13:54 -07:00
Ralf Jung
0318f07bdd various nits from review 2022-07-20 17:12:08 -04:00
Ralf Jung
114da84996 use extern type for extra opaqueness 2022-07-20 17:12:07 -04:00
Ralf Jung
5e840c5c8c incorporate some review feedback 2022-07-20 17:12:07 -04:00
Ralf Jung
8affef2ccb add intrinsic to access vtable size and align 2022-07-20 17:12:07 -04:00
Ralf Jung
13877a965d prune raw pointer read and write methods from Miri backtraces 2022-07-20 16:42:20 -04:00
Ralf Jung
2b269cad43 miri: prune some atomic operation details from stacktrace 2022-07-20 16:34:24 -04:00
benluelo
1993a5f7a8
Add map_continue and continue_value combinators to ControlFlow
Fix type error

Fix continue_value doc comment
2022-07-20 16:32:09 -04:00
Ralf Jung
2d1c683112
fix typo
Co-authored-by: Marco Colombo <mar.colombo13@gmail.com>
2022-07-20 10:39:21 -04:00
Ralf Jung
5848c27c79 make raw_eq precondition more restrictive 2022-07-20 10:22:16 -04:00
Dylan DPC
feebc5f4d5
Rollup merge of #99452 - Stargateur:fix/typo, r=JohnTitor
int_macros was only using to_xe_bytes_doc and not from_xe_bytes_doc

typo in doc [here](https://doc.rust-lang.org/std/primitive.isize.html#method.from_ne_bytes) "returns" => "takes"

`@rustbot` label +T-rustdoc
2022-07-20 11:29:40 +05:30
Bruce A. MacNaughton
e5d4de3912 generated code 2022-07-19 18:03:33 -07:00
Jan Behrens
e4a259b5e4 fixup! docs: Improve AsRef / AsMut docs on blanket impls
Better conform to Rust API Documentation Conventions
2022-07-19 23:53:40 +02:00
Jan Behrens
9f68e3ef1b fixup! docs: Improve AsRef / AsMut docs on blanket impls
Fixed examples in sections "Generic Implementations" of `AsRef`'s and
`AsMut`'s doc comments, which failed tests.
2022-07-19 23:24:51 +02:00
bors
9a7b7d5e50 Auto merge of #98180 - notriddle:notriddle/rustdoc-fn, r=petrochenkov,GuillaumeGomez
Improve the function pointer docs

This is #97842 but for function pointers instead of tuples. The concept is basically the same.

* Reduce duplicate impls; show `fn (T₁, T₂, …, Tₙ)` and include a sentence saying that there exists up to twelve of them.
* Show `Copy` and `Clone`.
* Show auto traits like `Send` and `Sync`, and blanket impls like `Any`.

https://notriddle.com/notriddle-rustdoc-test/std/primitive.fn.html
2022-07-19 19:36:57 +00:00
Michael Howell
ddb5a2638a Use T for all the function primitive docs lists 2022-07-19 08:52:25 -07:00
Michael Howell
5271e32c46 Improve the function pointer docs
* Reduce duplicate impls; show only the `fn (T)` and include a sentence
  saying that there exists up to twelve of them.
* Show `Copy` and `Clone`.
* Show auto traits like `Send` and `Sync`, and blanket impls like `Any`.
2022-07-19 08:52:24 -07:00
bors
a289cfcfb3 Auto merge of #99462 - matthiaskrgr:rollup-ihhwaru, r=matthiaskrgr
Rollup of 9 pull requests

Successful merges:

 - #98028 (Add E0790 as more specific variant of E0283)
 - #99384 (use body's param-env when checking if type needs drop)
 - #99401 (Avoid `Symbol` to `&str` conversions)
 - #99419 (Stabilize `core::task::ready!`)
 - #99435 (Revert "Stabilize $$ in Rust 1.63.0")
 - #99438 (Improve suggestions for `NonZeroT` <- `T` coercion error)
 - #99441 (Update mdbook)
 - #99453 (⬆️ rust-analyzer)
 - #99457 (use `par_for_each_in` in `par_body_owners` and `collect_crate_mono_items`)

Failed merges:

r? `@ghost`
`@rustbot` modify labels: rollup
2022-07-19 13:49:56 +00:00
Matthias Krüger
e6a100baa2
Rollup merge of #99438 - WaffleLapkin:dont_wrap_in_non_zero, r=compiler-errors
Improve suggestions for `NonZeroT` <- `T` coercion error

Currently, when encountering a type mismatch error with `NonZeroT` and `T` (for example `NonZeroU8` and `u8`) we errorneusly suggest wrapping expression in `NonZeroT`:
```text
error[E0308]: mismatched types
 --> ./t.rs:7:35
  |
7 |     let _: std::num::NonZeroU64 = 1;
  |            --------------------   ^ expected struct `NonZeroU64`, found integer
  |            |
  |            expected due to this
  |
help: try wrapping the expression in `std::num::NonZeroU64`
  |
7 |     let _: std::num::NonZeroU64 = std::num::NonZeroU64(1);
  |                                   +++++++++++++++++++++ +
```

I've removed this suggestion and added suggestions to call `new` (for `Option<NonZeroT>` <- `T` case) or `new` and `unwrap` (for `NonZeroT` <- `T` case):

```text
error[E0308]: mismatched types
 --> ./t.rs:7:35
  |
7 |     let _: std::num::NonZeroU64 = 1;
  |            --------------------   ^ expected struct `NonZeroU64`, found integer
  |            |
  |            expected due to this
  |
help: Consider calling `NonZeroU64::new`
  |
7 |     let _: std::num::NonZeroU64 = NonZeroU64::new(1).unwrap();
  |                                   ++++++++++++++++ ++++++++++

error[E0308]: mismatched types
 --> ./t.rs:8:43
  |
8 |     let _: Option<std::num::NonZeroU64> = 1;
  |            ----------------------------   ^ expected enum `Option`, found integer
  |            |
  |            expected due to this
  |
  = note: expected enum `Option<NonZeroU64>`
             found type `{integer}`
help: Consider calling `NonZeroU64::new`
  |
8 |     let _: Option<std::num::NonZeroU64> = NonZeroU64::new(1);
  |                                           ++++++++++++++++ +
```

r? `@compiler-errors`
2022-07-19 13:30:49 +02:00
Matthias Krüger
7d754976c4
Rollup merge of #99419 - yoshuawuyts:stabilize-task-ready, r=Mark-Simulacrum
Stabilize `core::task::ready!`

This stabilizes `core::task::ready!` for Rust 1.64. The FCP for stabilization was just completed here https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/70922#issuecomment-1186231855. Thanks!

Closes #70922

cc/ ``@rust-lang/libs-api``
2022-07-19 13:30:47 +02:00
bors
8bd12e8cca Auto merge of #98912 - nrc:provider-it, r=yaahc
core::any: replace some generic types with impl Trait

This gives a cleaner API since the caller only specifies the concrete type they usually want to.

r? `@yaahc`
2022-07-19 11:28:20 +00:00
Jan Behrens
551d921de0 docs: Improve AsRef / AsMut docs on blanket impls
- Explicitly mention that `AsRef` and `AsMut` do not auto-dereference
  generally for all dereferencable types (but only if inner type is a
  shared and/or mutable reference)
- Give advice to not use `AsRef` or `AsMut` for the sole purpose of
  dereferencing
- Suggest providing a transitive `AsRef` or `AsMut` implementation for
  types which implement `Deref`
- Add new section "Reflexivity" in documentation comments for `AsRef`
  and `AsMut`
- Provide better example for `AsMut`
- Added heading "Relation to `Borrow`" in `AsRef`'s docs to improve
  structure

Issue #45742 and a corresponding FIXME in the libcore suggest that
`AsRef` and `AsMut` should provide a blanket implementation over
`Deref`. As that is difficult to realize at the moment, this commit
updates the documentation to better describe the status-quo and to give
advice on how to use `AsRef` and `AsMut`.
2022-07-19 11:40:40 +02:00
Antoine PLASKOWSKI
94f633b002 int_macros was only using to_xe_bytes_doc and not from_xe_bytes_doc 2022-07-19 08:32:08 +02:00
Dylan DPC
e301cd39ad
Rollup merge of #99434 - timvermeulen:skip_next_non_fused, r=scottmcm
Fix `Skip::next` for non-fused inner iterators

`iter.skip(n).next()` will currently call `nth` and `next` in succession on `iter`, without checking whether `nth` exhausts the iterator. Using `?` to propagate a `None` value returned by `nth` avoids this.
2022-07-19 11:38:58 +05:30
Dylan DPC
9f6a2fde34
Rollup merge of #99335 - Dav1dde:fromstr-docs, r=JohnTitor
Use split_once in FromStr docs

Current implementation:

```rust
    fn from_str(s: &str) -> Result<Self, Self::Err> {
        let coords: Vec<&str> = s.trim_matches(|p| p == '(' || p == ')' )
                                 .split(',')
                                 .collect();

        let x_fromstr = coords[0].parse::<i32>()?;
        let y_fromstr = coords[1].parse::<i32>()?;

        Ok(Point { x: x_fromstr, y: y_fromstr })
    }
```

Creating the vector is not necessary, `split_once` does the job better.

Alternatively we could also remove `trim_matches` with `strip_prefix` and `strip_suffix`:

```rust
        let (x, y) = s
            .strip_prefix('(')
            .and_then(|s| s.strip_suffix(')'))
            .and_then(|s| s.split_once(','))
            .unwrap();
```

The question is how much 'correctness' is too much and distracts from the example. In a real implementation you would also not unwrap (or originally access the vector without bounds checks), but implementing a custom Error and adding a `From<ParseIntError>` and implementing the `Error` trait adds a lot of code to the example which is not relevant to the `FromStr` trait.
2022-07-19 11:38:53 +05:30
Maybe Waffle
7163e7ff65 Suggest a fix for NonZero* <- * coercion error 2022-07-19 00:13:29 +04:00
Tim Vermeulen
e52837c362 Add note to test about Unfuse 2022-07-18 21:53:35 +02:00
Tim Vermeulen
50c612faef Fix Skip::next for non-fused inner iterators 2022-07-18 21:10:47 +02:00
Dylan DPC
5ccdf1f6f7
Rollup merge of #98839 - 5225225:assert_transmute_copy_size, r=thomcc
Add assertion that `transmute_copy`'s U is not larger than T

This is called out as a safety requirement in the docs, but because knowing this can be done at compile time and constant folded (just like the `align_of` branch is removed), we can just panic here.

I've looked at the asm (using `cargo-asm`) of a function that both is correct and incorrect, and the panic is completely removed, or is unconditional, without needing build-std.

I don't expect this to cause much breakage in the wild. I scanned through https://miri.saethlin.dev/ub for issues that would look like this (error: Undefined Behavior: memory access failed: alloc1768 has size 1, so pointer to 8 bytes starting at offset 0 is out-of-bounds), but couldn't find any.

That doesn't rule out it happening in crates tested that fail earlier for some other reason, though, but it indicates that doing this is rare, if it happens at all. A crater run for this would need to be build and test, since this is a runtime thing.

Also added a few more transmute_copy tests.
2022-07-18 21:14:42 +05:30
Yoshua Wuyts
454313fe83 stabilize core::task::ready! 2022-07-18 16:04:52 +02:00
bors
9ed0bf9f2b Auto merge of #99223 - saethlin:panicless-split-mut, r=Mark-Simulacrum
Rearrange slice::split_mut to remove bounds check

Closes https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/86313

Turns out that all we need to do here is reorder the bounds checks to convince LLVM that all the bounds checks can be removed. It seems like LLVM just fails to propagate the original length information past the first bounds check and into the second one. With this implementation it doesn't need to, each check can be proven inbounds based on the one immediately previous.

I've gradually convinced myself that this implementation is unambiguously better based on the above logic, but maybe this is still deserving of a codegen test?

Also the mentioned borrowck limitation no longer seems to exist.
2022-07-18 10:16:58 +00:00
David Herberth
c1c1abc08a Use split_once in FromStr docs 2022-07-18 08:57:43 +02:00
Yuki Okushi
7c98c92ebc
Rollup merge of #99374 - TethysSvensson:patch-1, r=Dylan-DPC
Fix doc for `rchunks_exact`

`rchunks_exact` is not a more optimized version of `chunks`, but of `rchunks`.
2022-07-18 08:40:02 +09:00
Yuki Okushi
796bc7cae3
Rollup merge of #98383 - m-ou-se:remove-memory-order-restrictions, r=joshtriplett
Remove restrictions on compare-exchange memory ordering.

We currently don't allow the failure memory ordering of compare-exchange operations to be stronger than the success ordering, as was the case in C++11 when its memory model was copied to Rust. However, this restriction was lifted in C++17 as part of [p0418r2](https://wg21.link/p0418r2). It's time  we lift the restriction too.

| Success | Failure | Before | After |
|---------|---------|--------|-------|
| Relaxed | Relaxed | ✔️ | ✔️ |
| Relaxed | Acquire |                 | ✔️ |
| Relaxed | SeqCst  |                 | ✔️ |
| Acquire | Relaxed | ✔️ | ✔️ |
| Acquire | Acquire | ✔️ | ✔️ |
| Acquire | SeqCst  |                 | ✔️ |
| Release | Relaxed | ✔️ | ✔️ |
| Release | Acquire |                 | ✔️ |
| Release | SeqCst  |                 | ✔️ |
| AcqRel  | Relaxed | ✔️ | ✔️ |
| AcqRel  | Acquire | ✔️ | ✔️ |
| AcqRel  | SeqCst  |                 | ✔️ |
| SeqCst  | Relaxed | ✔️ | ✔️ |
| SeqCst  | Acquire | ✔️ | ✔️ |
| SeqCst  | SeqCst  | ✔️ | ✔️ |
| \*      | Release |                 |                 |
| \*      | AcqRel  |                 |                 |

Fixes https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/68464
2022-07-18 08:39:57 +09:00
Michael Howell
1169832f2f rustdoc: extend #[doc(tuple_variadic)] to fn pointers
The attribute is also renamed `fake_variadic`.
2022-07-17 16:32:06 -07:00
Tethys Svensson
8c58de5e2c
Fix for rchunks_exact doc
`rchunks_exact` is not a more optimized version of `chunks`, but of `rchunks`.
2022-07-17 14:18:36 +02:00
Yuki Okushi
50527690e2
Rollup merge of #99306 - JohnTitor:stabilize-future-poll-fn, r=joshtriplett
Stabilize `future_poll_fn`

FCP is done: https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/72302#issuecomment-1179620512
Closes #72302

r? `@joshtriplett` as you started FCP

Signed-off-by: Yuki Okushi <jtitor@2k36.org>
2022-07-17 13:08:52 +09:00
bors
db41351753 Auto merge of #98866 - nagisa:nagisa/align-offset-wroom, r=Mark-Simulacrum
Add a special case for align_offset /w stride != 1

This generalizes the previous `stride == 1` special case to apply to any
situation where the requested alignment is divisible by the stride. This
in turn allows the test case from #98809 produce ideal assembly, along
the lines of:

    leaq 15(%rdi), %rax
    andq $-16, %rax

This also produces pretty high quality code for situations where the
alignment of the input pointer isn’t known:

    pub unsafe fn ptr_u32(slice: *const u32) -> *const u32 {
        slice.offset(slice.align_offset(16) as isize)
    }

    // =>

    movl %edi, %eax
    andl $3, %eax
    leaq 15(%rdi), %rcx
    andq $-16, %rcx
    subq %rdi, %rcx
    shrq $2, %rcx
    negq %rax
    sbbq %rax, %rax
    orq  %rcx, %rax
    leaq (%rdi,%rax,4), %rax

Here LLVM is smart enough to replace the `usize::MAX` special case with
a branch-less bitwise-OR approach, where the mask is constructed using
the neg and sbb instructions. This appears to work across various
architectures I’ve tried.

This change ends up introducing more branches and code in situations
where there is less knowledge of the arguments. For example when the
requested alignment is entirely unknown. This use-case was never really
a focus of this function, so I’m not particularly worried, especially
since llvm-mca is saying that the new code is still appreciably faster,
despite all the new branching.

Fixes #98809.
Sadly, this does not help with #72356.
2022-07-16 23:28:28 +00:00
Simonas Kazlauskas
62a182cf7f Add a special case for align_offset /w stride != 1
This generalizes the previous `stride == 1` special case to apply to any
situation where the requested alignment is divisible by the stride. This
in turn allows the test case from #98809 produce ideal assembly, along
the lines of:

    leaq 15(%rdi), %rax
    andq $-16, %rax

This also produces pretty high quality code for situations where the
alignment of the input pointer isn’t known:

    pub unsafe fn ptr_u32(slice: *const u32) -> *const u32 {
        slice.offset(slice.align_offset(16) as isize)
    }

    // =>

    movl %edi, %eax
    andl $3, %eax
    leaq 15(%rdi), %rcx
    andq $-16, %rcx
    subq %rdi, %rcx
    shrq $2, %rcx
    negq %rax
    sbbq %rax, %rax
    orq  %rcx, %rax
    leaq (%rdi,%rax,4), %rax

Here LLVM is smart enough to replace the `usize::MAX` special case with
a branch-less bitwise-OR approach, where the mask is constructed using
the neg and sbb instructions. This appears to work across various
architectures I’ve tried.

This change ends up introducing more branches and code in situations
where there is less knowledge of the arguments. For example when the
requested alignment is entirely unknown. This use-case was never really
a focus of this function, so I’m not particularly worried, especially
since llvm-mca is saying that the new code is still appreciably faster,
despite all the new branching.

Fixes #98809.
Sadly, this does not help with #72356.
2022-07-17 01:27:37 +03:00
Ben Kimock
c9373903e7 Rearrange slice::split_mut to remove bounds check 2022-07-16 12:26:37 -04:00
Yuki Okushi
083a253e53
Rollup merge of #99277 - joshtriplett:stabilize-core-cstr-alloc-cstring, r=Mark-Simulacrum
Stabilize `core::ffi::CStr`, `alloc::ffi::CString`, and friends

Stabilize the `core_c_str` and `alloc_c_string` feature gates.

Change `std::ffi` to re-export these types rather than creating type
aliases, since they now have matching stability.
2022-07-16 17:53:04 +09:00
Yuki Okushi
084ad59622
Stabilize future_poll_fn
Signed-off-by: Yuki Okushi <jtitor@2k36.org>
2022-07-16 10:04:14 +09:00
Aaron Hill
ef8e322b14
Mark stabilized intrinsics with rustc_allowed_through_unstable_modules
Fixes #99286

PR #95956 accidentally made these intrinsics unstable when
accessed through the unstable path segment 'std::intrinsics'
2022-07-15 11:18:40 -05:00
Josh Triplett
d6b7480c2a Stabilize core::ffi::CStr, alloc::ffi::CString, and friends
Stabilize the `core_c_str` and `alloc_c_string` feature gates.

Change `std::ffi` to re-export these types rather than creating type
aliases, since they now have matching stability.
2022-07-15 03:10:35 -07:00
Gunnlaugur Þór Briem
588592b78b lint: remove unnecessary parentheses 2022-07-14 17:06:01 +00:00
Gunnlaugur Þór Briem
1dd207c10f doc: clearer and more correct Iterator::scan
The `Iterator::scan` documentation seemed a little misleading to my newcomer
eyes, and this tries to address that.

* I found “similar to `fold`” unhelpful because (a) the similarity is only that
  they maintain state between iterations, and (b) the _dissimilarity_ is no less
  important: one returns a final value and the other an iterator. So this
  replaces that with “which, like `fold`, holds internal state, but unlike
  `fold`, produces a new iterator.

* I found “the return value from the closure, an [`Option`], is yielded by the
  iterator” to be downright incorrect, because “yielded by the iterator” means
  “returned by the `next` method wrapped in `Some`”, so this implied that `scan`
  would convert an input iterator of `T` to an output iterator of `Option<T>`.
  So this replaces “yielded by the iterator” with “returned by the `next`
  method” and elaborates: “Thus the closure can return `Some(value)` to yield
  `value`, or `None` to end the iteration.”

* This also changes the example to illustrate the latter point by returning
  `None` to terminate the iteration early based on `state`.
2022-07-14 14:43:50 +00:00
bors
24699bcbad Auto merge of #95956 - yaahc:stable-in-unstable, r=cjgillot
Support unstable moves via stable in unstable items

part of https://rust-lang.zulipchat.com/#narrow/stream/131828-t-compiler/topic/moving.20items.20to.20core.20unstably and a blocker of https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/90328.

The libs-api team needs the ability to move an already stable item to a new location unstably, in this case for Error in core. Otherwise these changes are insta-stable making them much harder to merge.

This PR attempts to solve the problem by checking the stability of path segments as well as the last item in the path itself, which is currently the only thing checked.
2022-07-14 13:42:09 +00:00
Dylan DPC
103b8602b7
Rollup merge of #98315 - joshtriplett:stabilize-core-ffi-c, r=Mark-Simulacrum
Stabilize `core::ffi:c_*` and rexport in `std::ffi`

This only stabilizes the base types, not the non-zero variants, since
those have their own separate tracking issue and have not gone through
FCP to stabilize.
2022-07-14 14:14:20 +05:30
Josh Triplett
d431338b25 Stabilize core::ffi:c_* and rexport in std::ffi
This only stabilizes the base types, not the non-zero variants, since
those have their own separate tracking issue and have not gone through
FCP to stabilize.
2022-07-13 19:28:20 -07:00
Scott McMurray
a32305a80f Re-optimize Layout::array
This way it's one check instead of two, so hopefully it'll be better

Nightly:
```
layout_array_i32:
	movq	%rdi, %rax
	movl	$4, %ecx
	mulq	%rcx
	jo	.LBB1_2
	movabsq	$9223372036854775805, %rcx
	cmpq	%rcx, %rax
	jae	.LBB1_2
	movl	$4, %edx
	retq
.LBB1_2:
	…
```

This PR:
```
	movq	%rcx, %rax
	shrq	$61, %rax
	jne	.LBB2_1
	shlq	$2, %rcx
	movl	$4, %edx
	movq	%rcx, %rax
	retq
.LBB2_1:
	…
```
2022-07-13 17:07:41 -07:00
bors
87588a2afd Auto merge of #99136 - CAD97:layout-faster, r=scottmcm
Take advantage of known-valid-align in layout.rs

An attempt to improve perf by `@nnethercote's` approach suggested in #99117
2022-07-13 21:01:20 +00:00
Dylan DPC
1e7d04b23b
Rollup merge of #99011 - oli-obk:UnsoundCell, r=eddyb
`UnsafeCell` blocks niches inside its nested type from being available outside

fixes #87341

This implements the plan by `@eddyb` in https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/87341#issuecomment-886083646

Somewhat related PR (not strictly necessary, but that cleanup made this PR simpler): #94527
2022-07-13 19:32:34 +05:30
Ralf Jung
7b4149474b mention mitigation in the docs 2022-07-12 11:56:35 -04:00
Ralf Jung
84ff4da726 mem::uninitialized: mitigate many incorrect uses of this function 2022-07-12 10:05:47 -04:00
Christopher Durham
11694905b4 Remove duplication of layout size check 2022-07-11 17:58:42 -04:00
Ralf Jung
1b3870e427 remove a dubious example 2022-07-11 11:36:18 -04:00
Ralf Jung
eed5df52f6
typo
Co-authored-by: Ben Kimock <kimockb@gmail.com>
2022-07-11 09:49:55 -04:00
SOFe
01a9ff0e85
Clarify that [iu]size bounds were only defined for the target arch 2022-07-11 15:08:38 +08:00
Christopher Durham
079d3eb22f Take advantage of known-valid-align in layout.rs 2022-07-10 20:34:39 -04:00
Matthias Krüger
342b666d59
Rollup merge of #99094 - AldaronLau:atomic-ptr-extra-space, r=Dylan-DPC
Remove extra space in AtomicPtr::new docs
2022-07-11 00:33:48 +02:00
bors
268be96d6d Auto merge of #99112 - matthiaskrgr:rollup-uv2zk4d, r=matthiaskrgr
Rollup of 5 pull requests

Successful merges:

 - #99045 (improve print styles)
 - #99086 (Fix display of search result crate filter dropdown)
 - #99100 (Fix binary name in help message for test binaries)
 - #99103 (Avoid some `&str` to `String` conversions)
 - #99109 (fill new tracking issue for `feature(strict_provenance_atomic_ptr)`)

Failed merges:

r? `@ghost`
`@rustbot` modify labels: rollup
2022-07-10 11:35:12 +00:00
Maybe Waffle
e9292b7652 fill new tracking issue for feature(strict_provenance_atomic_ptr) 2022-07-10 13:17:33 +04:00
bors
4ec97d991b Auto merge of #95295 - CAD97:layout-isize, r=scottmcm
Enforce that layout size fits in isize in Layout

As it turns out, enforcing this _in APIs that already enforce `usize` overflow_ is fairly trivial. `Layout::from_size_align_unchecked` continues to "allow" sizes which (when rounded up) would overflow `isize`, but these are now declared as library UB for `Layout`, meaning that consumers of `Layout` no longer have to check this before making an allocation.

(Note that this is "immediate library UB;" IOW it is valid for a future release to make this immediate "language UB," and there is an extant patch to do so, to allow Miri to catch this misuse.)

See also #95252, [Zulip discussion](https://rust-lang.zulipchat.com/#narrow/stream/219381-t-libs/topic/Layout.20Isn't.20Enforcing.20The.20isize.3A.3AMAX.20Rule).
Fixes https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/95334

Some relevant quotes:

`@eddyb,` https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/95252#issuecomment-1078513769

> [B]ecause of the non-trivial presence of both of these among code published on e.g. crates.io:
>
>   1. **`Layout` "producers" / `GlobalAlloc` "users"**: smart pointers (including `alloc::rc` copies with small tweaks), collections, etc.
>   2. **`Layout` "consumers" / `GlobalAlloc` "providers"**: perhaps fewer of these, but anything built on top of OS APIs like `mmap` will expose `> isize::MAX` allocations (on 32-bit hosts) if they lack extra checks
>
> IMO the only responsible option is to enforce the `isize::MAX` limit in `Layout`, which:
>
>   * makes `Layout` _sound_ in terms of only ever allowing allocations where `(alloc_base_ptr: *mut u8).offset(size)` is never UB
>   * frees both "producers" and "consumers" of `Layout` from manually reimplementing the checks
>     * manual checks can be risky, e.g. if the final size passed to the allocator isn't the one being checked
>     * this applies retroactively, fixing the overall soundness of existing code with zero transition period or _any_ changes required from users (as long as going through `Layout` is mandatory, making a "choke point")
>
>
> Feel free to quote this comment onto any relevant issue, I might not be able to keep track of developments.

`@Gankra,` https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/95252#issuecomment-1078556371

> As someone who spent way too much time optimizing libcollections checks for this stuff and tried to splatter docs about it everywhere on the belief that it was a reasonable thing for people to manually take care of: I concede the point, it is not reasonable. I am wholy spiritually defeated by the fact that _liballoc_ of all places is getting this stuff wrong. This isn't throwing shade at the folks who implemented these Rc features, but rather a statement of how impractical it is to expect anyone out in the wider ecosystem to enforce them if _some of the most audited rust code in the library that defines the very notion of allocating memory_ can't even reliably do it.
>
> We need the nuclear option of Layout enforcing this rule. Code that breaks this rule is _deeply_ broken and any "regressions" from changing Layout's contract is a _correctness_ fix. Anyone who disagrees and is sufficiently motivated can go around our backs but the standard library should 100% refuse to enable them.

cc also `@RalfJung` `@rust-lang/wg-allocators.` Even though this technically supersedes #95252, those potential failure points should almost certainly still get nicer panics than just "unwrap failed" (which they would get by this PR).

It might additionally be worth recommending to users of the `Layout` API that they should ideally use `.and_then`/`?` to complete the entire layout calculation, and then `panic!` from a single location at the end of `Layout` manipulation, to reduce the overhead of the checks and optimizations preserving the exact location of each `panic` which are conceptually just one failure: allocation too big.

Probably deserves a T-lang and/or T-libs-api FCP (this technically solidifies the [objects must be no larger than `isize::MAX`](https://rust-lang.github.io/unsafe-code-guidelines/layout/scalars.html#isize-and-usize) rule further, and the UCG document says this hasn't been RFCd) and a crater run. Ideally, no code exists that will start failing with this addition; if it does, it was _likely_ (but not certainly) causing UB.

Changes the raw_vec allocation path, thus deserves a perf run as well.

I suggest hiding whitespace-only changes in the diff view.
2022-07-10 08:54:32 +00:00
Antoine PLASKOWSKI
eac1e30bd8 Add T to PhantomData impl Debug 2022-07-09 23:28:22 +02:00
Konrad Borowski
0753fd117b Partially stabilize const_slice_from_raw_parts
This doesn't stabilize methods working on mutable pointers.
2022-07-09 23:20:02 +02:00
Jeron Aldaron Lau
4944b5769b Remove extra space in AtomicPtr::new docs 2022-07-09 14:20:34 -05:00
Ralf Jung
2e0ca9472b add a concrete example 2022-07-09 10:48:43 -04:00
Ralf Jung
f6247ffa5a clarify how write_bytes can lead to UB due to invalid values 2022-07-09 09:38:07 -04:00
Dylan DPC
3c35da224b
Rollup merge of #99070 - tamird:update-tracking-issue, r=RalfJung
Update integer_atomics tracking issue

Updates #32976.
Updates #99069.

r? ``@RalfJung``
2022-07-09 11:28:09 +05:30
Tamir Duberstein
a491d4582d
Update integer_atomics tracking issue
Updates #32976.
Updates #99069.
2022-07-08 17:52:04 -04:00
Jane Lusby
0715616b51 add rt flag to allowed internal unstable for RustcEncodable/Decodable 2022-07-08 21:18:15 +00:00
Jane Lusby
b55453dbad add opt in attribute for stable-in-unstable items 2022-07-08 21:18:15 +00:00
Jane Losare-Lusby
d68cb1f9a3 revert changes to unicode stability 2022-07-08 21:18:15 +00:00
Jane Lusby
e7fe5456c5 Support unstable moves via stable in unstable items 2022-07-08 21:18:13 +00:00
Matthias Krüger
9c6bcb60f3
Rollup merge of #98718 - yoshuawuyts:stabilize-into-future, r=yaahc
Stabilize `into_future`

https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/67644 has been labeled with [S-tracking-ready-to-stabilize](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/labels/S-tracking-ready-to-stabilize) - which mentions someone needs to file a stabilization PR. So hence this PR!  Thanks!

Closes https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/67644

r? ``@joshtriplett``
2022-07-08 08:00:37 +02:00
Oli Scherer
2a899dc1cf UnsafeCell now has no niches, ever. 2022-07-07 10:46:22 +00:00
Guillaume Gomez
77ec591727
Rollup merge of #98939 - GuillaumeGomez:rustdoc-disamb-impls, r=notriddle
rustdoc: Add more semantic information to impl IDs

Take over of #92745.

I fixed the last remaining issue for the links in the sidebar (mentioned by `@jsha)` and fixed the few links broken in the std/core docs.

cc `@camelid`
r? `@notriddle`
2022-07-06 20:43:27 +02:00
Guillaume Gomez
4755173cf6
Rollup merge of #96935 - thomcc:atomicptr-strict-prov, r=dtolnay
Allow arithmetic and certain bitwise ops on AtomicPtr

This is mainly to support migrating from `AtomicUsize`, for the strict provenance experiment.

This is a pretty dubious set of APIs, but it should be sufficient to allow code that's using `AtomicUsize` to manipulate a tagged pointer atomically. It's under a new feature gate, `#![feature(strict_provenance_atomic_ptr)]`, but I'm not sure if it needs its own tracking issue. I'm happy to make one, but it's not clear that it's needed.

I'm unsure if it needs changes in the various non-LLVM backends. Because we just cast things to integers anyway (and were already doing so), I doubt it.

API change proposal: https://github.com/rust-lang/libs-team/issues/60

Fixes #95492
2022-07-06 20:43:23 +02:00
Guillaume Gomez
53db831d62 Fix links in std/core documentation 2022-07-05 21:33:39 +02:00
Nick Cameron
0c72be3e1a core::any: replace some unstable generic types with impl Trait
Signed-off-by: Nick Cameron <nrc@ncameron.org>
2022-07-05 15:06:31 +01:00
Dylan DPC
8fa1ed8f12
Rollup merge of #97712 - RalfJung:untyped, r=scottmcm
ptr::copy and ptr::swap are doing untyped copies

The consensus in https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/63159 seemed to be that these operations should be "untyped", i.e., they should treat the data as raw bytes, should work when these bytes violate the validity invariant of `T`, and should exactly preserve the initialization state of the bytes that are being copied. This is already somewhat implied by the description of "copying/swapping size*N bytes" (rather than "N instances of `T`").

The implementations mostly already work that way (well, for LLVM's intrinsics the documentation is not precise enough to say what exactly happens to poison, but if this ever gets clarified to something that would *not* perfectly preserve poison, then I strongly assume there will be some way to make a copy that *does* perfectly preserve poison). However, I had to adjust `swap_nonoverlapping`; after ``@scottmcm's`` [recent changes](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/94212), that one (sometimes) made a typed copy. (Note that `mem::swap`, which works on mutable references, is unchanged. It is documented as "swapping the values at two mutable locations", which to me strongly indicates that it is indeed typed. It is also safe and can rely on `&mut T` pointing to a valid `T` as part of its safety invariant.)

On top of adding a test (that will be run by Miri), this PR then also adjusts the documentation to indeed stably promise the untyped semantics. I assume this means the PR has to go through t-libs (and maybe t-lang?) FCP.

Fixes https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/63159
2022-07-05 16:04:31 +05:30
5225225
5f5ca88958 Add size assert in transmute_copy 2022-07-03 10:46:20 +01:00
bors
ada8c80bed Auto merge of #98673 - pietroalbini:pa-bootstrap-update, r=Mark-Simulacrum
Bump bootstrap compiler

r? `@Mark-Simulacrum`
2022-07-03 06:55:50 +00:00
Ben Kimock
7919e4208b Fix slice::ChunksMut aliasing 2022-07-03 00:15:15 -04:00
Pietro Albini
6b2d3d5f3c
update cfg(bootstrap)s 2022-07-01 15:48:23 +02:00
Thom Chiovoloni
e65ecee90e
Rename AtomicPtr::fetch_{add,sub}{,_bytes} 2022-07-01 06:21:19 -07:00
Thom Chiovoloni
2f872afdb5
Allow arithmetic and certain bitwise ops on AtomicPtr
This is mainly to support migrating from AtomicUsize, for the strict
provenance experiment.

Fixes #95492
2022-07-01 06:21:18 -07:00
bors
ca1e68b322 Auto merge of #98730 - matthiaskrgr:rollup-2c4d4x5, r=matthiaskrgr
Rollup of 10 pull requests

Successful merges:

 - #97629 ([core] add `Exclusive` to sync)
 - #98503 (fix data race in thread::scope)
 - #98670 (llvm-wrapper: adapt for LLVMConstExtractValue removal)
 - #98671 (Fix source sidebar bugs)
 - #98677 (For diagnostic information of Boolean, remind it as use the type: 'bool')
 - #98684 (add test for 72793)
 - #98688 (interpret: add From<&MplaceTy> for PlaceTy)
 - #98695 (use "or pattern")
 - #98709 (Remove unneeded methods declaration for old web browsers)
 - #98717 (get rid of tidy 'unnecessarily ignored' warnings)

Failed merges:

r? `@ghost`
`@rustbot` modify labels: rollup
2022-07-01 11:09:35 +00:00
Matthias Krüger
0e71d1f237
Rollup merge of #97629 - guswynn:exclusive_struct, r=m-ou-se
[core] add `Exclusive` to sync

(discussed here: https://rust-lang.zulipchat.com/#narrow/stream/219381-t-libs/topic/Adding.20.60SyncWrapper.60.20to.20std)

`Exclusive` is a wrapper that exclusively allows mutable access to the inner value if you have exclusive access to the wrapper. It acts like a compile time mutex, and hold an unconditional `Sync` implementation.

## Justification for inclusion into std
- This wrapper unblocks actual problems:
  - The example that I hit was a vector of `futures::future::BoxFuture`'s causing a central struct in a script to be non-`Sync`. To work around it, you either write really difficult code, or wrap the futures in a needless mutex.
- Easy to maintain: this struct is as simple as a wrapper can get, and its `Sync` implementation has very clear reasoning
- Fills a gap: `&/&mut` are to `RwLock` as `Exclusive` is to `Mutex`

## Public Api
```rust
// core::sync
#[derive(Default)]
struct Exclusive<T: ?Sized> { ... }

impl<T: ?Sized> Sync for Exclusive {}

impl<T> Exclusive<T> {
    pub const fn new(t: T) -> Self;
    pub const fn into_inner(self) -> T;
}

impl<T: ?Sized> Exclusive<T> {
    pub const fn get_mut(&mut self) -> &mut T;
    pub const fn get_pin_mut(Pin<&mut self>) -> Pin<&mut T>;
    pub const fn from_mut(&mut T) -> &mut Exclusive<T>;
    pub const fn from_pin_mut(Pin<&mut T>) -> Pin<&mut Exclusive<T>>;
}

impl<T: Future> Future for Exclusive { ... }

impl<T> From<T> for Exclusive<T> { ... }
impl<T: ?Sized> Debug for Exclusive { ... }
```

## Naming
This is a big bikeshed, but I felt that `Exclusive` captured its general purpose quite well.

## Stability and location
As this is so simple, it can be in `core`. I feel that it can be stabilized quite soon after it is merged, if the libs teams feels its reasonable to add. Also, I don't really know how unstable feature work in std/core's codebases, so I might need help fixing them

## Tips for review
The docs probably are the thing that needs to be reviewed! I tried my best, but I'm sure people have more experience than me writing docs for `Core`

### Implementation:
The API is mostly pulled from https://docs.rs/sync_wrapper/latest/sync_wrapper/struct.SyncWrapper.html (which is apache 2.0 licenesed), and the implementation is trivial:
- its an unsafe justification for pinning
- its an unsafe justification for the `Sync` impl (mostly reasoned about by ````@danielhenrymantilla```` here: https://github.com/Actyx/sync_wrapper/pull/2)
- and forwarding impls, starting with derivable ones and `Future`
2022-06-30 19:55:50 +02:00
The 8472
3fcf84a68e clarify that ExactSizeIterator::len returns the remaining length 2022-06-30 19:45:36 +02:00
Yoshua Wuyts
992cfc1683 Stabilize into_future 2022-06-30 17:22:41 +02:00
Christopher Durham
344b99bd9f
nit
Co-authored-by: scottmcm <scottmcm@users.noreply.github.com>
2022-06-30 00:17:21 -04:00
Christopher Durham
c4b4c64804 Revert isize::MAX changes to Layout helpers
The isize::MAX is enforced by the constructor; let it handle it.
2022-06-29 23:17:15 -04:00
Dylan DPC
375ab3e44f
Rollup merge of #98516 - dlrobertson:uefi_va_list, r=joshtriplett
library: fix uefi va_list type definition

For uefi the `va_list` should always be the void pointer variant.

Related to: https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/44930
2022-06-29 17:59:34 +05:30
Dylan DPC
3f2ba25159
Rollup merge of #98479 - leocth:atomic-bool-fetch-not, r=joshtriplett
Add `fetch_not` method on `AtomicBool`

This PR adds a `fetch_not` method on `AtomicBool` performs the NOT operation on the inner value.
Internally, this just calls the `fetch_xor` method with the value `true`.

[See this IRLO discussion](https://internals.rust-lang.org/t/could-we-have-fetch-not-for-atomicbool-s/16881)
2022-06-29 17:59:32 +05:30
Mara Bos
a898f41379 Only enable new cmpxchg memory orderings in cfg(not(bootstrap)).
(The bootstrap/beta compiler doesn't support them yet.)
2022-06-29 12:00:06 +02:00
Mara Bos
a7434da9be Remove restrictions on compare-exchange memory ordering. 2022-06-29 12:00:06 +02:00
Dylan DPC
45740acd34
Rollup merge of #97423 - m-ou-se:memory-ordering-intrinsics, r=tmiasko
Simplify memory ordering intrinsics

This changes the names of the atomic intrinsics to always fully include their memory ordering arguments.

```diff
- atomic_cxchg
+ atomic_cxchg_seqcst_seqcst

- atomic_cxchg_acqrel
+ atomic_cxchg_acqrel_release

- atomic_cxchg_acqrel_failrelaxed
+ atomic_cxchg_acqrel_relaxed

// And so on.
```

- `seqcst` is no longer implied
- The failure ordering on chxchg is no longer implied in some cases, but now always explicitly part of the name.
- `release` is no longer shortened to just `rel`. That was especially confusing, since `relaxed` also starts with `rel`.
- `acquire` is no longer shortened to just `acq`, such that the names now all match the `std::sync::atomic::Ordering` variants exactly.
- This now allows for more combinations on the compare exchange operations, such as `atomic_cxchg_acquire_release`, which is necessary for #68464.
- This PR only exposes the new possibilities through unstable intrinsics, but not yet through the stable API. That's for [a separate PR](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/98383) that requires an FCP.

Suffixes for operations with a single memory order:

| Order   | Before       | After      |
|---------|--------------|------------|
| Relaxed | `_relaxed`   | `_relaxed` |
| Acquire | `_acq`       | `_acquire` |
| Release | `_rel`       | `_release` |
| AcqRel  | `_acqrel`    | `_acqrel`  |
| SeqCst  | (none)       | `_seqcst`  |

Suffixes for compare-and-exchange operations with two memory orderings:

| Success | Failure | Before                   | After              |
|---------|---------|--------------------------|--------------------|
| Relaxed | Relaxed | `_relaxed`               | `_relaxed_relaxed` |
| Relaxed | Acquire |                       | `_relaxed_acquire` |
| Relaxed | SeqCst  |                       | `_relaxed_seqcst`  |
| Acquire | Relaxed | `_acq_failrelaxed`       | `_acquire_relaxed` |
| Acquire | Acquire | `_acq`                   | `_acquire_acquire` |
| Acquire | SeqCst  |                       | `_acquire_seqcst`  |
| Release | Relaxed | `_rel`                   | `_release_relaxed` |
| Release | Acquire |                       | `_release_acquire` |
| Release | SeqCst  |                       | `_release_seqcst`  |
| AcqRel  | Relaxed | `_acqrel_failrelaxed`    | `_acqrel_relaxed`  |
| AcqRel  | Acquire | `_acqrel`                | `_acqrel_acquire`  |
| AcqRel  | SeqCst  |                       | `_acqrel_seqcst`   |
| SeqCst  | Relaxed | `_failrelaxed`           | `_seqcst_relaxed`  |
| SeqCst  | Acquire | `_failacq`               | `_seqcst_acquire`  |
| SeqCst  | SeqCst  | (none)                   | `_seqcst_seqcst`   |
2022-06-29 10:28:18 +05:30
Dylan DPC
ff223ff297
Rollup merge of #98430 - camsteffen:flatten-refactor, r=joshtriplett
Refactor iter adapters with less macros

Just some code cleanup. Introduced a util `and_then_or_clear` for each of chain, flatten and fuse iter adapter impls. This reduces code nicely for flatten, but admittedly the other modules are more of a lateral move replacing macros with a function. But I think consistency across the modules and avoiding macros when possible is good.
2022-06-28 15:30:05 +05:30
Mara Bos
4982a59986 Rename/restructure memory ordering intrinsics. 2022-06-28 08:58:27 +02:00
Matthias Krüger
f266821d8f
Rollup merge of #98587 - RalfJung:core-tests, r=thomcc
libcore tests: avoid int2ptr casts

We don't need any of these pointers to actually be dereferenceable so using `ptr::invalid` should be fine. And then we can run Miri with strict provenance enforcement on the tests.
2022-06-27 22:35:14 +02:00
Ralf Jung
8c977cfda8 libcore tests: avoid int2ptr casts 2022-06-27 13:30:44 -04:00
Wilfred Hughes
1c1ae78db7
Fix spelling in SAFETY comment
"can not" should be "cannot", and add punctuation.
2022-06-26 19:17:34 -07:00
Matthias Krüger
e8a2e265b5
Rollup merge of #97908 - iago-lito:stabilize_nonzero_checked_ops_constness, r=scottmcm
Stabilize NonZero* checked operations constness.

Partial stabilization for #97547 (continued).
2022-06-26 19:47:02 +02:00
bors
788ddedb0d Auto merge of #98190 - nnethercote:optimize-derive-Debug-code, r=scottmcm
Improve `derive(Debug)`

r? `@ghost`
2022-06-26 15:00:04 +00:00
scottmcm
2339bb20a6
Update since to 1.64 (since we're after 1.63) 2022-06-26 08:45:53 +00:00
leocth
9c5ae20c59 forgot about the feature flag in the doctest 2022-06-26 10:49:05 +08:00
Dan Robertson
3b117c4823 library: fix uefi va_list type definition
For uefi the va_list should always be the void pointer variant.
2022-06-25 21:19:09 -04:00
leocth
0df7364cdf temporarily remove tests because I'm not sure if we need them 2022-06-26 00:06:50 +08:00
leocth
7d5f236c3d Add feature gate #![atomic_bool_fetch_not] 2022-06-25 18:31:01 +08:00
bors
1aabd8a4a6 Auto merge of #93700 - rossmacarthur:ft/iter-next-chunk, r=m-ou-se
Add `Iterator::next_chunk`

See also https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/92393

### Prior art

-  [`Itertools::next_tuple()`](https://docs.rs/itertools/latest/itertools/trait.Itertools.html#method.next_tuple)

### Unresolved questions

- Should we also add `next_chunk_back` to `DoubleEndedIterator`?
- Should we rather call this `next_array()` or `next_array_chunk`?
2022-06-25 09:40:54 +00:00
leocth
dcfe92e193 add fetch_not method on AtomicBool 2022-06-25 11:19:08 +08:00
Nicholas Nethercote
5b54363961 Optimize the code produced by derive(Debug).
This commit adds new methods that combine sequences of existing
formatting methods.
- `Formatter::debug_{tuple,struct}_field[12345]_finish`, equivalent to a
  `Formatter::debug_{tuple,struct}` + N x `Debug{Tuple,Struct}::field` +
  `Debug{Tuple,Struct}::finish` call sequence.
- `Formatter::debug_{tuple,struct}_fields_finish` is similar, but can
  handle any number of fields by using arrays.

These new methods are all marked as `doc(hidden)` and unstable. They are
intended for the compiler's own use.

Special-casing up to 5 fields gives significantly better performance
results than always using arrays (as was tried in #95637).

The commit also changes the `Debug` deriving code to use these new methods. For
example, where the old `Debug` code for a struct with two fields would be like
this:
```
fn fmt(&self, f: &mut ::core::fmt::Formatter) -> ::core::fmt::Result {
    match *self {
	Self {
	    f1: ref __self_0_0,
	    f2: ref __self_0_1,
	} => {
	    let debug_trait_builder = &mut ::core::fmt::Formatter::debug_struct(f, "S2");
	    let _ = ::core::fmt::DebugStruct::field(debug_trait_builder, "f1", &&(*__self_0_0));
	    let _ = ::core::fmt::DebugStruct::field(debug_trait_builder, "f2", &&(*__self_0_1));
	    ::core::fmt::DebugStruct::finish(debug_trait_builder)
	}
    }
}
```
the new code is like this:
```
fn fmt(&self, f: &mut ::core::fmt::Formatter) -> ::core::fmt::Result {
    match *self {
	Self {
	    f1: ref __self_0_0,
	    f2: ref __self_0_1,
	} => ::core::fmt::Formatter::debug_struct_field2_finish(
	    f,
	    "S2",
	    "f1",
	    &&(*__self_0_0),
	    "f2",
	    &&(*__self_0_1),
	),
    }
}
```
This shrinks the code produced for `Debug` instances
considerably, reducing compile times and binary sizes.

Co-authored-by: Scott McMurray <scottmcm@users.noreply.github.com>
2022-06-24 09:40:15 +10:00
Gus Wynn
029f9aa3bf add tracking issue for exclusive 2022-06-23 08:52:13 -07:00
Cameron Steffen
6587dda39e Refactor iter adapters with less macros 2022-06-22 17:44:39 -05:00
Yuki Okushi
25b84491f7
Rollup merge of #97516 - RalfJung:atomics, r=joshtriplett
clarify how Rust atomics correspond to C++ atomics

``@cbeuw`` noted in https://github.com/rust-lang/miri/pull/1963 that the correspondence between C++ atomics and Rust atomics is not quite as obvious as one might think, since in Rust I can use `get_mut` to treat previously non-atomic data as atomic. However, I think using C++20 `atomic_ref`, we can establish a suitable relation between the two -- or do you see problems with that ``@cbeuw?`` (I recall you said there was some issue, but it was deep inside that PR and Github makes it impossible to find...)

Cc ``@thomcc;`` not sure whom else to ping for atomic memory model things.
2022-06-22 15:16:11 +09:00
Ralf Jung
4768bfc6ef
hedge our bets
Co-authored-by: Josh Triplett <josh@joshtriplett.org>
2022-06-21 16:54:54 -07:00
Yuki Okushi
b20aff2b33
Rollup merge of #97269 - RalfJung:transmute, r=m-ou-se
adjust transmute const stabilization version

With 1.46, this became callable only in `const`/`static` items.

Only since 1.56 is this callable in `const fn`: [changelog](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/blob/master/RELEASES.md#version-1560-2021-10-21)

Also see [Zulip discussion](https://rust-lang.zulipchat.com/#narrow/stream/122651-general/topic/transmute.20const.20fn.20stabilization).
2022-06-21 20:08:08 +09:00
Ross MacArthur
bbdff1fff4
Add Iterator::next_chunk 2022-06-21 08:57:02 +02:00
bors
0887113991 Auto merge of #98307 - matthiaskrgr:rollup-rb3huha, r=matthiaskrgr
Rollup of 4 pull requests

Successful merges:

 - #98235 (Drop magic value 3 from code)
 - #98267 (Don't omit comma when suggesting wildcard arm after macro expr)
 - #98276 (Mention formatting macros when encountering `ArgumentV1` method in const)
 - #98296 (Add a link to the unstable book page on Generator doc comment)

Failed merges:

r? `@ghost`
`@rustbot` modify labels: rollup
2022-06-20 22:34:50 +00:00
Josh Triplett
bded8fcfc0 Add [f32]::sort_floats and [f64]::sort_floats
It's inconvenient to sort a slice or Vec of floats, compared to sorting
integers. To simplify numeric code, add a convenience method to `[f32]`
and `[f64]` to sort them using `sort_unstable_by` with `total_cmp`.
2022-06-20 14:58:29 -07:00
Matthias Krüger
dfa933d420
Rollup merge of #98296 - JohnTitor:generator-unstable-book-link, r=Dylan-DPC
Add a link to the unstable book page on Generator doc comment

This makes it easier to jump into the Generator section on the unstable book.

Signed-off-by: Yuki Okushi <jtitor@2k36.org>
2022-06-20 20:13:12 +02:00
Matthias Krüger
5eb7238928
Rollup merge of #98276 - compiler-errors:const-format-macro, r=oli-obk
Mention formatting macros when encountering `ArgumentV1` method in const

Also open to just closing this if it's overkill. There are a lot of other distracting error messages around, so maybe it's not worth fixing just this one.

Fixes #93665
2022-06-20 20:13:11 +02:00
bors
5750a6aa27 Auto merge of #93765 - zhangyunhao116:heapsort, r=m-ou-se
Optimize heapsort

The new implementation is about 10% faster than the previous one(sorting random 1000 items).
2022-06-20 18:09:30 +00:00
Yuki Okushi
51cc665b33
Add a link to the unstable book page on Generator doc comment
Signed-off-by: Yuki Okushi <jtitor@2k36.org>
2022-06-20 23:19:50 +09:00
Dylan DPC
625c929a9f
Rollup merge of #96719 - mbartlett21:patch-4, r=Dylan-DPC
Fix the generator example for `pin!()`

The previous generator example is not actually self-referential, since the reference is created after the yield.

CC #93178 (tracking issue)
2022-06-20 14:56:36 +02:00
Dylan DPC
fd9ca0c25e
Rollup merge of #93080 - SkiFire13:itermut-as_mut_slice, r=m-ou-se
Implement `core::slice::IterMut::as_mut_slice` and `impl<T> AsMut<[T]> for IterMut<'_, T>`

As per [the zulip discussion](https://rust-lang.zulipchat.com/#narrow/stream/219381-t-libs/topic/.60std.3A.3Aslice.3A.3AIterMut.3A.3Aas_mut_slice.60), the `AsMut` impl has been commented out, with a comment near the `#[unstable(...)]` to uncomment it when `as_mut_slice` gets stabilized.
2022-06-20 14:56:33 +02:00
zhangyunhao
98507f202d Optimize heapsort 2022-06-20 08:30:27 +00:00
Mara Bos
c867529461
Show #![feature] in example. 2022-06-20 10:00:55 +02:00
Michael Goulet
5373d738e8 Mention formatting macros when encountering ArgumentV1::new in const 2022-06-19 20:18:08 -07:00
Yuki Okushi
761f83f683
Rollup merge of #98257 - kadiwa4:into_future_doc_typos, r=Dylan-DPC
Fix typos in `IntoFuture` docs
2022-06-20 07:37:43 +09:00
Yuki Okushi
9d4e08e725
Rollup merge of #95534 - jyn514:std-mem-copy, r=joshtriplett
Add `core::mem::copy` to complement `core::mem::drop`.

This is useful for combinators. I didn't add `clone` since you can already
use `Clone::clone` in its place; copy has no such corresponding function.
2022-06-20 07:37:40 +09:00
Joshua Nelson
9ac6277bad Add core::mem::copy to complement core::mem::drop.
This is useful for combinators. I didn't add `clone` since you can already
use `Clone::clone` in its place; copy has no such corresponding function.
2022-06-19 16:43:19 -05:00
KaDiWa4
f0144aea74
typos in IntoFuture docs 2022-06-19 17:13:48 +02:00
bors
5fb8a39266 Auto merge of #97367 - WaffleLapkin:stabilize_checked_slice_to_str_conv, r=dtolnay
Stabilize checked slice->str conversion functions

This PR stabilizes the following APIs as `const` functions in Rust 1.63:
```rust
// core::str

pub const fn from_utf8(v: &[u8]) -> Result<&str, Utf8Error>;

impl Utf8Error {
    pub const fn valid_up_to(&self) -> usize;
    pub const fn error_len(&self) -> Option<usize>;
}
```

Note that the `from_utf8_mut` function is not stabilized as unique references (`&mut _`) are [unstable in const context].

FCP: https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/91006#issuecomment-1134593095

[unstable in const context]: https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/57349
2022-06-19 05:51:42 +00:00
Matthias Krüger
f351f347b8
Rollup merge of #98165 - WaffleLapkin:once_things_renamings, r=m-ou-se
once cell renamings

This PR does the renamings proposed in https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/74465#issuecomment-1153703128

- Move/rename `lazy::{OnceCell, Lazy}` to `cell::{OnceCell, LazyCell}`
- Move/rename `lazy::{SyncOnceCell, SyncLazy}` to `sync::{OnceLock, LazyLock}`

(I used `Lazy...` instead of `...Lazy` as it seems to be more consistent, easier to pronounce, etc)

```@rustbot``` label +T-libs-api -T-libs
2022-06-19 00:17:13 +02:00
Paolo Barbolini
ce3b6f505e Expose iter::ByRefSized as unstable feature and use it 2022-06-18 00:03:54 +02:00
Chase Wilson
59be3e856f
Stabilized Option::unzip() 2022-06-17 11:54:55 -05:00
Yuki Okushi
cf68fd7e8d
Rollup merge of #97675 - nvzqz:unsized-needs-drop, r=dtolnay
Make `std::mem::needs_drop` accept `?Sized`

This change attempts to make `needs_drop` work with types like `[u8]` and `str`.

This enables code in types like `Arc<T>` that was not possible before, such as https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/97676.
2022-06-17 07:16:55 +09:00
Maybe Waffle
7c360dc117 Move/rename lazy::{OnceCell, Lazy} to cell::{OnceCell, LazyCell} 2022-06-16 19:53:59 +04:00
bors
6ec3993ef4 Auto merge of #97842 - notriddle:notriddle/tuple-docs, r=jsha,GuillaumeGomez
Improve the tuple and unit trait docs

* Reduce duplicate impls; show only the `(T,)` and include a sentence saying that there exists ones up to twelve of them.
* Show `Copy` and `Clone`.
* Show auto traits like `Send` and `Sync`, and blanket impls like `Any`.

Here's the new version:

* <https://notriddle.com/notriddle-rustdoc-test/std/primitive.tuple.html>
* <https://notriddle.com/notriddle-rustdoc-test/std/primitive.unit.html>
2022-06-16 11:13:30 +00:00
Yuki Okushi
b91c4d5b45
Rollup merge of #98059 - tmiasko:inline-const-eval-select, r=Amanieu
Inline `const_eval_select`

To avoid circular link time dependency between core and compiler
builtins when building with `-Zshare-generics`.

r? ```@Amanieu```
2022-06-16 07:24:41 +09:00
Alan Egerton
97bd49bf2d
Clarify [T]::select_nth_unstable* return values
In cases where the nth element is not unique within the slice, it is not
correct to say that the values in the returned triplet include ones for
"all elements" less/greater than that at the given index: indeed one (or
more) such values would then laso contain values equal to that at the
given index.

The text proposed here clarifies exactly what is returned, but in so
doing it is also documenting an implementation detail that previously
wasn't detailed: namely that the return slices are slices into the
reordered slice.  I don't think this can be contentious, because the
lifetimes of those returned slices are bound to that of the original
(now reordered) slice—so there really isn't any other reasonable
implementation that could have this behaviour; but nevertheless it's
probably best if @rust-lang/libs-api give it a nod?

Fixes #97982
r? m-ou-se

@rustbot label +A-docs C-bug +T-libs-api
2022-06-14 21:57:57 +01:00
Michael Howell
2bbf44f655 rustdoc: change "variadic tuple" notation to look less like real syntax 2022-06-14 12:21:38 -07:00
Meziu
4e808f87cc
Horizon OS STD support
Co-authored-by: Ian Chamberlain <ian.h.chamberlain@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: Mark Drobnak <mark.drobnak@gmail.com>
2022-06-13 20:44:39 -07:00
Tomasz Miąsko
8a8404bc2b Inline const_eval_select
To avoid circular link time dependency between core and compiler
builtins when building with `-Zshare-generics`.
2022-06-13 17:10:40 +02:00
Imbolc
acda8866cc
Document an edge case of str::split_once 2022-06-13 13:35:49 +03:00
Michael Goulet
5dccf4e5fc
Rollup merge of #97950 - eggyal:issue-97945, r=Dylan-DPC
Clarify `#[derive(PartialEq)]` on enums

Fixes #97945
2022-06-12 17:35:41 -07:00
Dylan DPC
a24ca03660
Rollup merge of #97992 - m-ou-se:stabilize-scoped-threads, r=joshtriplett
Stabilize scoped threads.

Tracking issue: https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/93203

FCP finished here: https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/93203#issuecomment-1152249466
2022-06-12 12:14:29 +02:00
Michael Howell
36fb094d25 Add docs to maybe_tuple_doc! 2022-06-11 21:47:03 -07:00
Michael Howell
22c39aa835 Update library/core/src/primitive_docs.rs 2022-06-11 21:45:23 -07:00
bors
c08b235a5c Auto merge of #97996 - matthiaskrgr:rollup-bvbjlid, r=matthiaskrgr
Rollup of 5 pull requests

Successful merges:

 - #97904 (Small grammar fix in the compile_error documentation)
 - #97943 (line 1352, change `self` to `*self`, other to `*other`)
 - #97969 (Make -Cpasses= only apply to pre-link optimization)
 - #97990 (Add more eslint checks)
 - #97994 (feat(fix): update some links in `hir.rs`)

Failed merges:

r? `@ghost`
`@rustbot` modify labels: rollup
2022-06-11 17:49:22 +00:00
Michael Howell
28bd1a4847 docs: make all the variadic impls use (T, ...) exactly 2022-06-11 10:32:39 -07:00
Michael Howell
c1487550ca Add test case for #trait-implementations-1 link 2022-06-11 09:54:23 -07:00
Michael Howell
3fd16648fe Re-add explicit list of traits to tuple docs, with limit notes 2022-06-11 09:54:23 -07:00
Michael Howell
090c68ba5c Use relative path for addressing things in rust-lang/rust
Co-authored-by: Jacob Hoffman-Andrews <github@hoffman-andrews.com>
2022-06-11 09:54:23 -07:00
Michael Howell
9b31323b8f Fix incorrectly spelled "variadic" 2022-06-11 09:54:20 -07:00
Matthias Krüger
39de4e4b6f
Rollup merge of #97943 - Warrenren:master, r=Dylan-DPC
line 1352, change `self` to `*self`, other to `*other`

The current code will not results bug, but it difficult to understand. These code result to call &f32::partial_cmp(), and the performance will be lower than the changed code. I'm not sure why the current code don't use (*self) (*other), if you have some idea, please let me know.
2022-06-11 18:05:33 +02:00
Matthias Krüger
4b7ec84c31
Rollup merge of #97904 - est31:master, r=Dylan-DPC
Small grammar fix in the compile_error documentation
2022-06-11 18:05:32 +02:00
Mara Bos
ae0a533b0b Stabilize scoped threads. 2022-06-11 15:01:52 +02:00
Benjamin Herr
74ef14830f Fix typos in Provider API docs 2022-06-10 20:58:27 -07:00
Warrenren
9e1e476186
Update cmp.rs
line 1352, delete parentheses for reviewers asking for it.
2022-06-11 11:04:27 +08:00
Matthias Krüger
30a8903821
Rollup merge of #97940 - GuillaumeGomez:relative-link, r=Dylan-DPC
Use relative links instead of linking to doc.rust-lang.org when possible

Part of https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/97918.
2022-06-10 22:32:31 +02:00
Alan Egerton
7bbf914078
Clarify #[derive(PartialEq)] on enums
Fixes #97945
2022-06-10 16:26:00 +01:00
Warrenren
5e9e73cc9f
line 1352, change self to (*self), other to (*other)
The current code will not results bug, but it difficult to understand. These code result to call &f32::partial_cmp(), and the performance will be lower than the changed code. I'm not sure why the current code don't use (*self) (*other), if you have some idea, please let me know.
2022-06-10 19:08:03 +08:00
Guillaume Gomez
28ca3bdeb2 Use relative links instead of linking to doc.rust-lang.org when possible 2022-06-10 11:57:53 +02:00
Yuki Okushi
a652a4303f
Rollup merge of #97876 - yoshuawuyts:into-future-docs, r=JohnTitor,yaahc
update docs for `std::future::IntoFuture`

Ref https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/67644.

This updates the docs for `IntoFuture` providing a bit more guidance on how to use it. Thanks!
2022-06-10 17:22:29 +09:00
bors
e9aff9c42c Auto merge of #91970 - nrc:provide-any, r=scottmcm
Add the Provider api to core::any

This is an implementation of [RFC 3192](https://github.com/rust-lang/rfcs/pull/3192) ~~(which is yet to be merged, thus why this is a draft PR)~~. It adds an API for type-driven requests and provision of data from trait objects. A primary use case is for the `Error` trait, though that is not implemented in this PR. The only major difference to the RFC is that the functionality is added to the `any` module, rather than being in a sibling `provide_any` module (as discussed in the RFC thread).

~~Still todo: improve documentation on items, including adding examples.~~

cc `@yaahc`
2022-06-10 01:10:59 +00:00
est31
97519bd202 Grammar fix in the compile_error documentation 2022-06-09 12:40:10 +02:00
Iago-lito
69e8e7e73b Stabilize NonZero* checked operations constness. 2022-06-09 09:17:06 +02:00
Iago-lito
5823d7b563 Partial stabilization of "nonzero_unchecked_ops". 2022-06-09 09:13:57 +02:00
Michael Howell
9f6dcceef0 Fix bootstrap attr 2022-06-08 20:06:54 -07:00
Michael Howell
85b0c2ffbb rustdoc: fixed messed-up rustdoc auto trait impls
Before:

    impl<T, U> UnwindSafe for (T, ...) where
        T: UnwindSafe,
        U: UnwindSafe,

After:

    impl<T> UnwindSafe for (T, ...) where
        T: UnwindSafe,
2022-06-08 19:51:54 -07:00
Michael Howell
6950f144cf rustdoc: show tuple impls as impl Trait for (T, ...)
This commit adds a new unstable attribute, `#[doc(tuple_varadic)]`, that
shows a 1-tuple as `(T, ...)` instead of just `(T,)`, and links to a section
in the tuple primitive docs that talks about these.
2022-06-08 19:26:51 -07:00
Michael Goulet
1577838151
Rollup merge of #97871 - ChayimFriedman2:vec-iterator-unimplemented, r=compiler-errors
Suggest using `iter()` or `into_iter()` for `Vec`

We cannot do that for `&Vec` because `#[rustc_on_unimplemented]` is limited (it does not clean generic instantiation for references, only for ADTs).

`@rustbot` label +A-diagnostics
2022-06-08 13:32:22 -07:00
Yoshua Wuyts
a4c455080c update docs for std::future::IntoFuture 2022-06-08 15:21:16 +02:00
Yuki Okushi
2b58e6314a
Stabilize const_intrinsic_copy 2022-06-08 20:17:28 +09:00
Chayim Refael Friedman
456f1ffe12 Suggest using iter() or into_iter() for Vec
We cannot do that for `&Vec` because `#[rustc_on_unimplemented]` is limited (it does not clean generic instantiation for references, only for ADTs).
2022-06-08 11:09:08 +00:00
Dylan DPC
1660b4b70c
Rollup merge of #97851 - saethlin:use-repr-c, r=thomcc
Use repr(C) when depending on struct layout in ptr tests

The test depends on the layout of this struct `Pair`, so it should use `repr(C)` instead of the default `repr(Rust)`.
2022-06-08 07:37:33 +02:00
Ben Kimock
5dd5244423 Use repr(C) when depending on struct layout in ptr tests 2022-06-07 19:24:09 -04:00
Gus Wynn
63d1c86230 [core] add Exclusive to sync 2022-06-07 13:10:50 -07:00
Michael Howell
7a93567005 docs: show Clone and Copy on () doc pages 2022-06-07 12:12:49 -07:00
Michael Howell
1e6a85789e rustdoc: show auto/blanket docs for tuple and unit 2022-06-07 11:25:00 -07:00
Michael Howell
9940ed0805 docs: clean up trait docs for tuples 2022-06-07 11:24:57 -07:00
Dylan DPC
a9c4a7e1aa
Rollup merge of #95948 - Nilstrieb:improve-cstr-safety-docs, r=RalfJung
Improve the safety docs for `CStr`

Namely, the two functions `from_ptr` and `from_bytes_with_nul_unchecked`.
Before, these functions didn't state the requirements clearly enough,
and I was not immediately able to find them like for other functions.

This doesn't change the content of the docs, but simply rewords them for
clarity.

note: I'm not entirely sure about the '`ptr` must be valid for reads of `u8`.', there might be room for improvement for this (and maybe for the other docs as well 😄)
2022-06-07 17:25:42 +02:00
Nilstrieb
0dda42bc14 Improve the safety docs for CStr
Namely, the two functions `from_ptr` and `from_bytes_with_nul_unchecked`.
Before, this functions didn't state the requirements clearly enough,
and I was not immediately able to find them like for other functions.

This doesn't change the content of the docs, but simply rewords them for
clarity.
2022-06-07 16:42:26 +02:00
Nick Cameron
66290109bb Address reviewer comments
Signed-off-by: Nick Cameron <nrc@ncameron.org>
2022-06-06 12:19:18 +01:00
Nick Cameron
843f90cbb7 Add some more tests
Signed-off-by: Nick Cameron <nrc@ncameron.org>
2022-06-06 12:10:14 +01:00
Nick Cameron
2e0ca2537f Add tracking issue number
Signed-off-by: Nick Cameron <nrc@ncameron.org>
2022-06-06 12:10:14 +01:00
Nick Cameron
e82368d6fc Add examples to docs
Signed-off-by: Nick Cameron <nrc@ncameron.org>
2022-06-06 12:10:13 +01:00
Nick Cameron
17730e66f6 Update docs
Signed-off-by: Nick Cameron <nrc@ncameron.org>
2022-06-06 12:10:13 +01:00
Nick Cameron
57d027d23a Modify the signature of the request_* methods so that trait_upcasting is not required
Signed-off-by: Nick Cameron <nrc@ncameron.org>
2022-06-06 12:10:13 +01:00
Nick Cameron
bb5db85f74 Add the Provider api to core::any
Signed-off-by: Nick Cameron <nrc@ncameron.org>
2022-06-06 12:10:13 +01:00
Matthias Krüger
1bf1932453
Rollup merge of #97764 - RalfJung:strict, r=dtolnay
use strict provenance APIs

The stdlib was adjusted to avoid bare int2ptr casts, but recently some casts of that sort have sneaked back in. Let's fix that. :)
2022-06-06 08:37:04 +02:00
bors
760237ff78 Auto merge of #97710 - RalfJung:ptr-addr, r=thomcc
implement ptr.addr() via transmute

As per the discussion in https://github.com/rust-lang/unsafe-code-guidelines/issues/286, the semantics for ptr-to-int transmutes that we are going with for now is to make them strip provenance without exposing it. That's exactly what `ptr.addr()` does! So we can implement `ptr.addr()` via `transmute`. This also means that once https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/97684 lands, Miri can distinguish `ptr.addr()` from `ptr.expose_addr()`, and the following code will correctly be called out as having UB (if permissive provenance mode is enabled, which will become the default once the [implementation is complete](https://github.com/rust-lang/miri/issues/2133)):

```rust
fn main() {
    let x: i32 = 3;
    let x_ptr = &x as *const i32;

    let x_usize: usize = x_ptr.addr();
    // Cast back an address that did *not* get exposed.
    let ptr = std::ptr::from_exposed_addr::<i32>(x_usize);
    assert_eq!(unsafe { *ptr }, 3); //~ ERROR Undefined Behavior: dereferencing pointer failed
}
```

This completes the Miri implementation of the new distinctions introduced by strict provenance. :)

Cc `@Gankra` -- for now I left in your `FIXME(strict_provenance_magic)` saying these should be intrinsics, but I do not necessarily agree that they should be. Or if we have an intrinsic, I think it should behave exactly like the `transmute` does, which makes one wonder why the intrinsic should be needed.
2022-06-06 01:03:26 +00:00
Ralf Jung
4a41c35742 use strict provenance APIs 2022-06-05 11:50:48 -04:00
Ralf Jung
cb7cd97641 promise that ptr::copy and ptr::swap are doing untyped copies 2022-06-05 10:09:42 -04:00
Ralf Jung
b96d1e45f1 change ptr::swap methods to do untyped copies 2022-06-05 10:09:41 -04:00
Ralf Jung
4291332175 implement ptr.addr() via transmute 2022-06-03 16:45:35 -04:00
Ralf Jung
4990021082 test const_copy to make sure bytewise pointer copies are working 2022-06-03 09:20:42 -04:00
Dylan DPC
025cf96615
Rollup merge of #97366 - WaffleLapkin:stabilize_array_slice_from_ref, r=dtolnay
Stabilize `{slice,array}::from_ref`

This PR stabilizes the following APIs as `const` functions in Rust `1.63`:
```rust
// core::array
pub const fn from_ref<T>(s: &T) -> &[T; 1];

// core::slice
pub const fn from_ref<T>(s: &T) -> &[T];
```

Note that the `mut` versions are not stabilized as unique references (`&mut _`) are [unstable in const context].

FCP: https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/90206#issuecomment-1134586665

r? rust-lang/libs-api `@rustbot` label +T-libs-api -T-libs

[unstable in const context]: https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/57349
2022-06-03 11:18:23 +02:00
Nikolai Vazquez
fd38f663cd Make std::mem::needs_drop accept ?Sized 2022-06-03 03:28:19 -04:00
Dylan DPC
0b2d48e5af
Rollup merge of #97420 - WaffleLapkin:no_oxford_casts_qqq, r=Mark-Simulacrum
Be a little nicer with casts when formatting `fn` pointers

This removes a `fn(...) -> ...` -> `usize` -> `*const ()` -> `usize` cast. cc #95489.
2022-06-02 15:26:57 +02:00
Yuki Okushi
3ed9bbe970
Rollup merge of #95594 - the8472:raw_slice_methods, r=yaahc
Additional `*mut [T]` methods

Split out from #94247

This adds the following methods to raw slices that already exist on regular slices

* `*mut [T]::is_empty`
* `*mut [T]::split_at_mut`
* `*mut [T]::split_at_mut_unchecked`

These methods reduce the amount of unsafe code needed to migrate `ChunksMut` and related iterators
to raw slices (#94247)

r? `@m-ou-se`
2022-06-02 06:44:25 +09:00
Yuki Okushi
e1d2e65463
Rollup merge of #97498 - ijchen:master, r=Mark-Simulacrum
Corrected EBNF grammar for from_str

Hello! This is my first time contributing to an open-source project. I'm excited to have the chance to contribute to the rust community 🥳

I noticed an issue with the documentation for `from_str` in `f32` and `f64`. It states that "All strings that adhere to the following [EBNF](https://www.w3.org/TR/REC-xml/#sec-notation) grammar when lowercased will result in an `Ok` being returned. I believe this is incorrect for the string `"."`, which is valid for the given EBNF grammar, but does not result in an `Ok` being returned ([playground](https://play.rust-lang.org/?version=stable&mode=debug&edition=2021&gist=09f891aa87963a56d3b0d715d8cbc2b4)). I have simplified the grammar in a way which fixes that, but is otherwise identical.

Previously, the `Number` part of the EBNF grammar had an option for `'.' Digit*`, which would include the string `"."`. This is not valid, and does not return an Ok as stated. The corrected version removes this, and still allows for the `'.' Digit+` case with the already existing `Digit* '.' Digit+` case.
2022-06-01 23:36:49 +09:00
Maybe Waffle
2aef6c5436 Fixup feature name to be more consistent with others
`slice_from_mut_ptr_range_const` -> `const_slice_from_mut_ptr_range`,
we usually have `const` in the front.
2022-05-31 23:12:28 +04:00
bors
0a43923a86 Auto merge of #97419 - WaffleLapkin:const_from_ptr_range, r=oli-obk
Make `from{,_mut}_ptr_range` const

This PR makes the following APIs `const`:
```rust
// core::slice

pub const unsafe fn from_ptr_range<'a, T>(range: Range<*const T>) -> &'a [T];
pub const unsafe fn from_mut_ptr_range<'a, T>(range: Range<*mut T>) -> &'a mut [T];
```

Tracking issue: #89792.
Feature for `from_ptr_range` as a `const fn`: `slice_from_ptr_range_const`.
Feature for `from_mut_ptr_range` as a `const fn`: `slice_from_mut_ptr_range_const`.

r? `@oli-obk`
2022-05-31 14:55:33 +00:00
bors
dcbd5f5134 Auto merge of #97526 - Nilstrieb:unicode-is-printable-fastpath, r=joshtriplett
Add unicode fast path to `is_printable`

Before, it would enter the full expensive check even for normal ascii characters. Now, it skips the check for the ascii characters in `32..127`. This range was checked manually from the current behavior.

I ran the `tracing` test suite in miri, and it was really slow. I looked at a profile, and miri spent most of the time in `core::char::methods::escape_debug_ext`, where half of that was dominated by `core::unicode::printable::is_printable`. So I optimized it here.

The tracing profile:
![The tracing profile](https://user-images.githubusercontent.com/48135649/170883650-23876e7b-3fd1-4e8b-9001-47672e06d914.svg)
2022-05-31 09:34:00 +00:00
Nilstrieb
3358a41acb Add unicode fast path to is_printable
Before, it would enter the full expensive check even for normal ascii
characters. Now, it skips the check for the ascii characters in
`32..127`. This range was checked manually from the current behavior.
2022-05-31 10:51:35 +02:00
Dylan DPC
efd2519e10
Rollup merge of #97569 - thomcc:fill_with_isnt_memset, r=Amanieu
Remove `memset` alias from `fill_with`.

In https://rust-lang.zulipchat.com/#narrow/stream/219381-t-libs/topic/Unsafe.20and.20Safe.20versions.20of.20APIs.20both.20getting.20the.20same.20alias/near/284413029 `@Amanieu` pointed out that we had this, which is not really right.

In our guidelines we say that we will "not add an alias for a function that's only somewhat similar or related", which applies here. Memset doesn't take a closure, not even conceptually.
2022-05-31 07:57:37 +02:00
Thom Chiovoloni
de3ac3c3f8
Remove memset alias from fill_with. 2022-05-30 16:26:00 -07:00
Lukas
e565bb0326 Update mut_ptr.rs 2022-05-31 00:41:39 +02:00
Lukas
7a9c13985e
Update intrinsics.rs 2022-05-30 22:38:29 +00:00
Stovent
b998d82d8d Remove too long example 2022-05-30 18:32:37 -04:00
Stovent
5c690555f2 Correct signed bit int documentation 2022-05-30 18:32:37 -04:00
Stovent
1266099742 Implement carrying_add and borrowing_sub on signed numbers 2022-05-30 18:32:27 -04:00
Dylan DPC
a352ad500d
Rollup merge of #97545 - thomcc:sip-comment-safety, r=Dylan-DPC
Reword safety comments in core/hash/sip.rs

In https://rust-lang.zulipchat.com/#narrow/stream/136281-t-lang.2Fwg-unsafe-code-guidelines/topic/Is.20there.20any.20way.20to.20soundly.20do.20a.20masked.20out-of-bounds.20read.3F/near/284329248 it came up that this is using an atypical (and somewhat vague) phrasing of the safety requirement, so this slightly rewords it.
2022-05-30 14:33:53 +02:00
Dylan DPC
0ed320bdb9
Rollup merge of #97494 - est31:remove_box_alloc_tests, r=Dylan-DPC
Use Box::new() instead of box syntax in library tests

The tests inside `library/*` have no reason to use `box` syntax as they have 0 performance relevance. Therefore, we can safely remove them (instead of having to use alternatives like the one in #97293).
2022-05-30 14:33:48 +02:00
Maybe Waffle
10ee6f8e06 Rename slice_from_ptr_range_const -> const_slice_from_ptr_range
This is in line with other `const fn` features.
2022-05-30 15:44:56 +04:00
Maybe Waffle
19caa8c89b Make from{,_mut}_ptr_range const
- `from_ptr_range` uses `#![feature(slice_from_ptr_range_const)]`
- `from_mut_ptr_range` uses `#![feature(slice_from_mut_ptr_range_const)]`
2022-05-30 15:44:55 +04:00
bors
5c780b98d1 Auto merge of #96964 - oli-obk:const_trait_mvp, r=compiler-errors
Replace `#[default_method_body_is_const]` with `#[const_trait]`

pulled out of #96077

related issues:  #67792 and #92158

cc `@fee1-dead`

This is groundwork to only allowing `impl const Trait` for traits that are marked with `#[const_trait]`. This is necessary to prevent adding a new default method from becoming a breaking change (as it could be a non-const fn).
2022-05-30 09:19:03 +00:00
Deadbeef
257f06587c Remove #[default..] and add #[const_trait] 2022-05-30 08:52:24 +00:00
Thom Chiovoloni
eeacb4403c
Reword safety comments in core/hash/sip.rs 2022-05-30 01:06:08 -07:00
bors
bef2b7cd1c Auto merge of #97214 - Mark-Simulacrum:stage0-bump, r=pietroalbini
Finish bumping stage0

It looks like the last time had left some remaining cfg's -- which made me think
that the stage0 bump was actually successful. This brings us to a released 1.62
beta though.

This now brings us to cfg-clean, with the exception of check-cfg-features in bootstrap;
I'd prefer to leave that for a separate PR at this time since it's likely to be more tricky.

cc https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/97147#issuecomment-1132845061

r? `@pietroalbini`
2022-05-29 16:28:21 +00:00
Ralf Jung
f020fc08a5 clarify how Rust atomics correspond to C++ atomics 2022-05-29 13:29:36 +02:00
Maybe Waffle
ac5c15d6be Remove (fn(...) -> ...) -> usize -> *const () -> usize cast 2022-05-29 13:11:51 +04:00
est31
cdb8e64bc7 Use Box::new() instead of box syntax in core tests 2022-05-29 01:44:11 +02:00
Guillaume Gomez
774d7ced10
Rollup merge of #97482 - RalfJung:ptr-invalid, r=thomcc
ptr::invalid is not equivalent to a int2ptr cast

I just realized I forgot to update these docs when adding `from_exposed_addr`.
Right now the docs say `invalid` and `from_exposed_addr` are both equivalent to a cast, and that is clearly not what we want.

Cc ``@Gankra``
2022-05-29 01:12:33 +02:00
Isaac Chen
0484cfb6a9
Corrected EBNF grammar for from_str
Previously, the `Number` part of the EBNF grammar had an option for `'.' Digit*`, which would include the string "." (a single decimal point). This is not valid, and does not return an Ok as stated. The corrected version removes this, and still allows for the `'.' Digit+` case with the already existing `Digit* '.' Digit+` case.
2022-05-28 18:24:34 -04:00
Ralf Jung
852777eff1 note to future self 2022-05-28 18:15:04 +02:00
Ralf Jung
ad33519455 ptr::invalid is not equivalent to a int2ptr cast 2022-05-28 12:39:36 +02:00
Dylan DPC
880d3ea3c2
Rollup merge of #97034 - fee1-dead-contrib:layout-hash, r=dtolnay
Implement `Hash` for `core::alloc::Layout`

This was brought up on [reddit](https://www.reddit.com/r/rust/comments/uoypui/the_standard_library_types_are_good_except_when/), and I don't see why Layout shouldn't implement `Hash`. Feel free to comment if I am wrong though :)
2022-05-28 08:45:51 +02:00
Dylan DPC
837cd9e26c
Rollup merge of #94640 - Pointerbender:issue-71146-partial-stabilization, r=yaahc
Partially stabilize `(const_)slice_ptr_len` feature by stabilizing `NonNull::len`

This PR partially stabilizes features `const_slice_ptr_len` and `slice_ptr_len` by only stabilizing `NonNull::len`. This partial stabilization is tracked under features `slice_ptr_len_nonnull` and `const_slice_ptr_len_nonnull`, for which this PR can serve as the tracking issue.

To summarize the discussion from #71146 leading up to this partial stabilization request:

It's currently a bit footgunny to obtain the length of a raw slice pointer, stabilization of `NonNull:len` will help with removing these footguns. Some example footguns are:

```rust
/// # Safety
/// The caller must ensure that `ptr`:
/// 1. does not point to memory that was previously allocated but is now deallocated;
/// 2. is within the bounds of a single allocated object;
/// 3. does not to point to a slice for which the length exceeds `isize::MAX` bytes;
/// 4. points to a properly aligned address;
/// 5. does not point to uninitialized memory;
/// 6. does not point to a mutably borrowed memory location.
pub unsafe fn ptr_len<T>(ptr: core::ptr::NonNull<[T]>) -> usize {
   (&*ptr.as_ptr()).len()
}
```

A slightly less complicated version (but still more complicated than it needs to be):

```rust
/// # Safety
/// The caller must ensure that the start of `ptr`:
/// 1. does not point to memory that was previously allocated but is now deallocated;
/// 2. must be within the bounds of a single allocated object.
pub unsafe fn ptr_len<T>(ptr: NonNull<[T]>) -> usize {
   (&*(ptr.as_ptr() as *const [()])).len()
}
```

This PR does not stabilize `<*const [T]>::len` and  `<*mut [T]>::len` because the tracking issue #71146 list a potential blocker for these methods, but this blocker [does not apply](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/71146#issuecomment-808735714) to `NonNull::len`.

We should probably also ping the [Constant Evaluation WG](https://github.com/rust-lang/const-eval) since this PR includes a `#[rustc_allow_const_fn_unstable(const_slice_ptr_len)]`. My instinct here is that this will probably be okay because the pointer is not actually dereferenced and `len()` does not touch the address component of the pointer, but would be best to double check :)

One potential down-side was raised that stabilizing `NonNull::len` could lead to encouragement of coding patterns like:

```
pub fn ptr_len<T>(ptr: *mut [T]) -> usize {
   NonNull::new(ptr).unwrap().len()
}
```

which unnecessarily assert non-nullness. However, these are much less of a footgun than the above examples and this should be resolved when `slice_ptr_len` fully stabilizes eventually.
2022-05-28 08:45:50 +02:00
Mark Rousskov
b454991ac4 Finish bumping stage0
It looks like the last time had left some remaining cfg's -- which made me think
that the stage0 bump was actually successful. This brings us to a released 1.62
beta though.
2022-05-27 07:36:17 -04:00
bors
9a42c6509d Auto merge of #97444 - compiler-errors:rollup-2gvdav6, r=compiler-errors
Rollup of 3 pull requests

Successful merges:

 - #96051 (Use rounding in float to Duration conversion methods)
 - #97066 (rustdoc: Remove `ItemFragment(Kind)`)
 - #97436 (Update `triagebot.toml` for macos ping group)

Failed merges:

r? `@ghost`
`@rustbot` modify labels: rollup
2022-05-27 03:27:04 +00:00
Michael Goulet
e3813e46a2
Rollup merge of #96051 - newpavlov:duration_rounding, r=nagisa,joshtriplett
Use rounding in float to Duration conversion methods

Closes #96045
2022-05-26 20:15:07 -07:00
Артём Павлов [Artyom Pavlov]
6495963d5a fmt 2022-05-27 05:15:22 +03:00
Артём Павлов [Artyom Pavlov]
38609cd8a9 fix nanos overflow for f64 2022-05-27 04:59:01 +03:00
Artyom Pavlov
06af3a63a5
add debug asserts 2022-05-27 00:22:56 +00:00
Vadim Petrochenkov
5bf23f64cc libcore: Add iter::from_generator which is like iter::from_fn, but for coroutines instead of functions 2022-05-27 01:51:31 +03:00
Matthias Krüger
82beeabf54
Rollup merge of #96033 - yaahc:expect-elaboration, r=scottmcm
Add section on common message styles for Result::expect

Based on a question from https://github.com/rust-lang/project-error-handling/issues/50#issuecomment-1092339937

~~One thing I haven't decided on yet, should I duplicate this section on `Option::expect`, link to this section, or move it somewhere else and link to that location from both docs?~~: I ended up moving the section to `std::error` and referencing it from both `Result::expect` and `Option::expect`'s docs.

I think this section, when combined with the similar update I made on [`std::panic!`](https://doc.rust-lang.org/nightly/std/macro.panic.html#when-to-use-panic-vs-result) implies that we should possibly more aggressively encourage and support the "expect as precondition" style described in this section. The consensus among the libs team seems to be that panic should be used for bugs, not expected potential failure modes. The "expect as error message" style seems to align better with the panic for unrecoverable errors style where they're seen as normal errors where the only difference is a desire to kill the current execution unit (aka erlang style error handling). I'm wondering if we should be providing a panic hook similar to `human-panic` or more strongly recommending the "expect as precondition" style of expect message.
2022-05-26 20:59:40 +02:00
Maybe Waffle
89295352ee Allow some internal instability 2022-05-26 13:00:14 +04:00
Jane Lusby
ef879c680e fix broken doctest 2022-05-25 12:20:48 -07:00
Jane Lusby
720e987ac0 update option and result references to expect message docs 2022-05-25 11:37:39 -07:00
bors
9fed13030c Auto merge of #94954 - SimonSapin:null-thin3, r=yaahc
Extend ptr::null and null_mut to all thin (including extern) types

Fixes https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/93959

This change was accepted in https://rust-lang.github.io/rfcs/2580-ptr-meta.html

Note that this changes the signature of **stable** functions. The change should be backward-compatible, but it is **insta-stable** since it cannot (easily, at all?) be made available only through a `#![feature(…)]` opt-in.

The RFC also proposed the same change for `NonNull::dangling`, which makes sense it terms of its signature but not in terms of its implementation. `dangling` uses `align_of()` as an address. But what `align_of()` should be for extern types or whether it should be allowed at all remains an open question.

This commit depends on https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/93977, which is not yet part of the bootstrap compiler. So `#[cfg]` is used to only apply the change in stage 1+. As far a I know bounds cannot be made conditional with `#[cfg]`, so the entire functions are duplicated. This is unfortunate but temporary.

Since this duplication makes it less obvious in the diff, the new definitions differ in:

* More permissive bounds (`Thin` instead of implied `Sized`)
* Different implementation
* Having `rustc_allow_const_fn_unstable(const_fn_trait_bound)`
* Having `rustc_allow_const_fn_unstable(ptr_metadata)`
2022-05-25 13:58:51 +00:00
Dylan DPC
ca269b1e79
Rollup merge of #97233 - c410-f3r:assert-lib, r=scottmcm
[RFC 2011] Library code

CC https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/96496

Based on https://github.com/dtolnay/case-studies/tree/master/autoref-specialization.

Basically creates two traits with the same method name. One trait is generic over any `T` and the other is specialized to any `T: Printable`.

The compiler will then call the corresponding trait method through auto reference.

```rust
fn main() {
    let mut a = Capture::new();
    let mut b = Capture::new();

    (&Wrapper(&1i32)).try_capture(&mut a); // `try_capture` from `TryCapturePrintable`
    (&Wrapper(&vec![1i32])).try_capture(&mut b); // `try_capture` from `TryCaptureGeneric`

    assert_eq!(format!("{:?}", a), "1");
    assert_eq!(format!("{:?}", b), "N/A");
}
```

r? `@scottmcm`
2022-05-25 10:48:29 +02:00
Dylan DPC
fbb17777fe
Rollup merge of #97026 - Nilstrieb:make-atomic-debug-relaxed, r=scottmcm
Change orderings of `Debug` for the Atomic types to `Relaxed`.

This reduces synchronization between threads when debugging the atomic types.  Reducing the synchronization means that executions with and without the debug calls will be more consistent, making it easier to debug.

We discussed this on the Rust Community Discord with `@ibraheemdev` before.
2022-05-25 07:31:42 +02:00
Артём Павлов [Artyom Pavlov]
26f859463e tweak doctests 2022-05-25 05:14:30 +03:00
Артём Павлов [Artyom Pavlov]
c2d8445cde implement tie to even 2022-05-25 05:01:11 +03:00
Yuki Okushi
7ed7f65bac
Rollup merge of #97363 - wackbyte:sliceindex-doc-typo, r=JohnTitor
Fix a small mistake in `SliceIndex`'s documentation

Originally, it said "`get_(mut_)unchecked`," but the method's actual name is `get_unchecked_mut`.
2022-05-25 07:08:44 +09:00
Yuki Okushi
33f45b167e
Rollup merge of #93966 - rkuhn:patch-1, r=tmandry
document expectations for Waker::wake

fixes #93961

Opened PR for a discussion on the precise wording.
2022-05-25 07:08:41 +09:00
Maybe Waffle
138aa99503 Stabilize checked slice->str conversion functions 2022-05-24 22:58:28 +04:00
Maybe Waffle
7a09b8a7b5 Stabilize {slice,array}::from_ref 2022-05-24 22:33:31 +04:00
wackbyte
ce947735c0
Fix a mistake in SliceIndex's documentation 2022-05-24 13:22:41 -04:00
Dylan DPC
4bd40186db
Rollup merge of #97321 - RalfJung:int-to-fnptr, r=Dylan-DPC
explain how to turn integers into fn ptrs

(with an intermediate raw ptr, not a direct transmute)
Direct int2ptr transmute, under the semantics I am imagining, will produce a ptr with "invalid" provenance that is invalid to deref or call. We cannot give it the same semantics as int2ptr casts since those do [something complicated](https://www.ralfj.de/blog/2022/04/11/provenance-exposed.html).

To my great surprise, that is already what the example in the `transmute` docs does. :)  I still added a comment to say that that part is important, and I added a section explicitly talking about this to the `fn()` type docs.

With https://github.com/rust-lang/miri/pull/2151, Miri will start complaining about direct int-to-fnptr transmutes (in the sense that it is UB to call the resulting pointer).
2022-05-24 15:58:26 +02:00
Dylan DPC
af15e45e28
Rollup merge of #97308 - JohnTitor:stabilize-cell-filter-map, r=Mark-Simulacrum
Stabilize `cell_filter_map`

FCP has been completed: https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/81061#issuecomment-1081806326
Closes #81061
2022-05-24 15:58:25 +02:00
Ralf Jung
cec6dfcd67 explain how to turn integers into fn ptrs
(with an intermediate raw ptr, not a direct transmute)
2022-05-23 18:47:08 +02:00
Dylan DPC
98a8035bed
Rollup merge of #96129 - mattheww:2022-04_float_rounding, r=Dylan-DPC
Document rounding for floating-point primitive operations and string parsing

The docs for floating point don't have much to say at present about either the precision of their results or rounding behaviour.

As I understand it[^1][^2], Rust doesn't support operating with non-default rounding directions, so we need only describe roundTiesToEven.

[^1]: https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/41753#issuecomment-299322887
[^2]: https://github.com/llvm/llvm-project/issues/8472#issuecomment-980888781

This PR makes a start by documenting that for primitive operations and `from_str()`.
2022-05-23 15:11:02 +02:00
Yuki Okushi
65242592c9
Stabilize cell_filter_map 2022-05-23 18:04:53 +09:00
bors
9e2f655863 Auto merge of #97304 - Dylan-DPC:rollup-qxrfddc, r=Dylan-DPC
Rollup of 5 pull requests

Successful merges:

 - #97087 (Clarify slice and Vec iteration order)
 - #97254 (Remove feature: `crate` visibility modifier)
 - #97271 (Add regression test for #91949)
 - #97294 (std::time : fix variable name in the doc)
 - #97303 (Fix some typos in arg checking algorithm)

Failed merges:

r? `@ghost`
`@rustbot` modify labels: rollup
2022-05-23 07:57:15 +00:00
Dylan DPC
e5cf3cb97d
Rollup merge of #97087 - Nilstrieb:clarify-slice-iteration-order, r=dtolnay
Clarify slice and Vec iteration order

While already being inferable from the doc examples, it wasn't fully specified. This is the only logical way to do a slice iterator, so I think this should be uncontroversial. It also improves the `Vec::into_iter` example to better show the order and that the iterator returns owned values.
2022-05-23 07:43:49 +02:00
bors
03c8b0b6ed Auto merge of #96100 - Raekye:master, r=dtolnay
Change `NonNull::as_uninit_*` to take self by value (as opposed to reference), matching primitive pointers.

Copied from my comment on [#75402](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/75402#issuecomment-1100496823):

> I noticed that `as_uninit_*` on pointers take `self` by value (and pointers are `Copy`), e.g. see [`as_uninit_mut`](https://doc.rust-lang.org/core/primitive.pointer.html#method.as_uninit_mut).
>
> However, on `NonNull`, these functions take `self` by reference, e.g. see the function with the same name by for `NonNull`: [`as_uninit_mut`](https://doc.rust-lang.org/std/ptr/struct.NonNull.html#method.as_uninit_mut) takes `self` by mutable reference. Even more inconsistent, [`as_uninit_slice_mut`](https://doc.rust-lang.org/std/ptr/struct.NonNull.html#method.as_uninit_slice_mut) returns a mutable reference, but takes `self` by immutable reference.
>
> I think these methods should take `self` by value for consistency. The returned lifetime is unbounded anyways and not tied to the pointer/NonNull value anyways

I realized the change is trivial (if desired) so here I am creating my first PR. I think it's not a breaking change since (it's on nightly and) `NonNull` is `Copy`; all previous usages of these methods taking `self` by reference should continue to compile. However, it might cause warnings to appear on usages of `NonNull::as_uninit_mut`, which used to require the the `NonNull` variable be declared `mut`, but now it's not necessary.
2022-05-23 05:32:04 +00:00
David Tolnay
0502496b1e
Make write/print macros eagerly drop temporaries 2022-05-22 16:11:08 -07:00
Caio
664e8a9ce5 [RFC 2011] Library code 2022-05-22 07:18:32 -03:00
Ralf Jung
4505579713 adjust transmute const stabilization version 2022-05-22 08:10:53 +02:00
bors
bb5e6c984d Auto merge of #97265 - JohnTitor:rollup-kgthnjt, r=JohnTitor
Rollup of 6 pull requests

Successful merges:

 - #97144 (Fix rusty grammar in `std::error::Reporter` docs)
 - #97225 (Fix `Display` for `cell::{Ref,RefMut}`)
 - #97228 (Omit stdarch workspace from rust-src)
 - #97236 (Recover when resolution did not resolve lifetimes.)
 - #97245 (Fix typo in futex RwLock::write_contended.)
 - #97259 (Fix typo in Mir phase docs)

Failed merges:

r? `@ghost`
`@rustbot` modify labels: rollup
2022-05-22 04:27:10 +00:00
Yuki Okushi
d22ebf0d13
Rollup merge of #97225 - cuviper:ref-display, r=scottmcm
Fix `Display` for `cell::{Ref,RefMut}`

These guards changed to pointers in #97027, but their `Display` was
formatting that field directly, which made it show the raw pointer
value. Now we go through `Deref` to display the real value again.

Miri noticed this change, #97204, so hopefully that will be fixed.
2022-05-22 11:53:05 +09:00
bors
09ea21343a Auto merge of #94119 - c410-f3r:array-again-and-again, r=scottmcm
Stabilize `array_from_fn`

## Overall

Stabilizes `core::array::from_fn` ~~and `core::array::try_from_fn`~~ to allow the creation of custom infallible ~~and fallible~~ arrays.

Signature proposed for stabilization here, tweaked as requested in the meeting:

```rust
// in core::array

pub fn from_fn<T, const N: usize, F>(_: F) -> [T; N];
```

Examples in https://doc.rust-lang.org/nightly/std/array/fn.from_fn.html

## History

* On 2020-08-17, implementation was [proposed](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/75644).
* On 2021-09-29, tracking issue was [created](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/89379).
* On 2021-10-09, the proposed implementation was [merged](bc8ad24020).
* On 2021-12-03, the return type of `try_from_fn` was [changed](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/91286#issuecomment-985513407).

## Considerations

* It is being assumed that indices are useful and shouldn't be removed from the callbacks
* The fact that `try_from_fn` returns an unstable type `R: Try` does not prevent stabilization. Although I'm honestly not sure about it.
* The addition or not of repeat-like variants is orthogonal to this PR.

These considerations are not ways of saying what is better or what is worse. In reality, they are an attempt to move things forward, anything really.

cc https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/89379
2022-05-22 01:56:50 +00:00
bors
9257f5aad0 Auto merge of #94530 - tmiasko:alignment-impls, r=dtolnay
Implement Copy, Clone, PartialEq and Eq for core::fmt::Alignment

Alignment is a fieldless exhaustive enum, so it is already possible to
clone and compare it by matching, but it is inconvenient to do so. For
example, if one would like to create a struct describing a formatter
configuration and provide a clone implementation:

```rust
pub struct Format {
    fill: char,
    width: Option<usize>,
    align: fmt::Alignment,
}

impl Clone for Format {
    fn clone(&self) -> Self {
        Format {
            align: match self.align {
                fmt::Alignment::Left => fmt::Alignment::Left,
                fmt::Alignment::Right => fmt::Alignment::Right,
                fmt::Alignment::Center => fmt::Alignment::Center,
            },
            .. *self
        }
    }
}
```

Derive Copy, Clone, PartialEq, and Eq for Alignment for convenience.
2022-05-21 19:49:51 +00:00
Guillaume Gomez
6fef5f1e24
Rollup merge of #97219 - RalfJung:ptr-invalid, r=thomcc
make ptr::invalid not the same as a regular int2ptr cast

In Miri, we would like to distinguish `ptr::invalid` from `ptr::from_exposed_provenance`, so that we can provide better diagnostics issues like https://github.com/rust-lang/miri/issues/2134, and so that we can detect the UB in programs like
```rust
fn main() {
    let x = 0u8;
    let original_ptr = &x as *const u8;
    let addr = original_ptr.expose_addr();
    let new_ptr: *const u8 = core::ptr::invalid(addr);
    unsafe {
        dbg!(*new_ptr);
    }
}
```

To achieve that, the two functions need to have different implementations. Currently, both are just `as` casts. We *could* add an intrinsic for this, but it turns out `transmute` already has the right behavior, at least as far as Miri is concerned. So I propose we just use that.

Cc `@Gankra`
2022-05-21 11:39:50 +02:00
Guillaume Gomez
1210b50dbb
Rollup merge of #97190 - SylvainDe:master, r=Dylan-DPC
Add implicit call to from_str via parse in documentation

The documentation mentions "FromStr’s from_str method is often used implicitly,
through str’s parse method. See parse’s documentation for examples.".

It may be nicer to show that in the code example as well.
2022-05-21 11:39:48 +02:00
Josh Stone
83abb7c18f Fix Display for cell::{Ref,RefMut}
These guards changed to pointers in #97027, but their `Display` was
formatting that field directly, which made it show the raw pointer
value. Now we go through `Deref` to display the real value again.
2022-05-20 11:16:30 -07:00
Ralf Jung
31c3c04498 make ptr::invalid not the same as a regular int2ptr cast 2022-05-20 17:16:41 +02:00
Caio
d917112606 Stabilize core::array::from_fn 2022-05-20 11:04:13 -03:00
Guillaume Gomez
9b25cc0543
Rollup merge of #97192 - sunfishcode:sunfishcode/rightmost, r=thomcc
Say "last" instead of "rightmost" in the documentation for `std::str:rfind`

In the documentation comment for `std::str::rfind`, say "last" instead
of "rightmost" to describe the match that `rfind` finds. This follows the
spirit of #30459, for which `trim_left` and `trim_right` were replaced by
`trim_start` and `trim_end` to be more clear about how they work on
text which is displayed right-to-left.
2022-05-20 14:03:06 +02:00
bors
52cc779524 Auto merge of #97147 - Mark-Simulacrum:stage0-bump, r=pietroalbini
stage0 bootstrap bump

r? `@pietroalbini`
2022-05-20 05:44:52 +00:00
bors
4d6992bc18 Auto merge of #97027 - cuviper:yesalias-refcell, r=thomcc
Use pointers in `cell::{Ref,RefMut}` to avoid `noalias`

When `Ref` and `RefMut` were based on references, they would get LLVM `noalias` attributes that were incorrect, because that alias guarantee is only true until the guard drops. A `&RefCell` on the same value can get a new borrow that aliases the previous guard, possibly leading to miscompilation. Using `NonNull` pointers in `Ref` and `RefCell` avoids `noalias`.

Fixes the library side of #63787, but we still might want to explore language solutions there.
2022-05-20 01:05:53 +00:00
Dan Gohman
b836cf6fb8 Say "last" instead of "rightmost" in the documentation for std::str::rfind.
In the documentation comment for `std::str::rfind`, say "last" instead
of "rightmost" to describe the match that `rfind` finds. This follows the
spirit of #30459, for which `trim_left` and `trim_right` were replaced by
`trim_start` and `trim_end` to be more clear about how they work on
text which is displayed right-to-left.
2022-05-19 15:31:17 -07:00
SylvainDe
4c1daba940 Add implicit call to from_str via parse in documentation
The documentation mentions "FromStr’s from_str method is often used implicitly,
through str’s parse method. See parse’s documentation for examples.".

It may be nicer to show that in the code example as well.
2022-05-19 22:01:43 +02:00
Dylan DPC
12644bc39d
Rollup merge of #97155 - alygin:patch-1, r=JohnTitor
Fix doc typo

Fixes a minor doc typo for `atomic::fence()`.
2022-05-19 17:22:49 +02:00
bors
d8a3fc4d71 Auto merge of #95643 - WaffleLapkin:ptr_convenience, r=joshtriplett
Add convenience byte offset/check align functions to pointers

This PR adds the following APIs:
```rust
impl *const T {
    // feature gates `pointer_byte_offsets` and `const_pointer_byte_offsets
    pub const unsafe fn byte_offset(self, count: isize) -> Self;
    pub const fn wrapping_byte_offset(self, count: isize) -> Self;
    pub const unsafe fn byte_offset_from(self, origin: *const T) -> isize;
    pub const unsafe fn byte_add(self, count: usize) -> Self;
    pub const unsafe fn byte_sub(self, count: usize) -> Self;
    pub const fn wrapping_byte_add(self, count: usize) -> Self;
    pub const fn wrapping_byte_sub(self, count: usize) -> Self;

    // feature gate `pointer_is_aligned`
    pub fn is_aligned(self) -> bool where T: Sized;
    pub fn is_aligned_to(self, align: usize) -> bool;
}
// ... and the same for` *mut T`
```

Note that all functions except `is_aligned` do **not** require `T: Sized` as their pointee-sized-offset counterparts.

cc `@oli-obk` (you may want to check that I've correctly placed `const`s)
cc `@RalfJung`
2022-05-18 23:18:03 +00:00
Andrew Lygin
0d99b90983
Fix doc typo 2022-05-19 00:25:14 +03:00
Mark Rousskov
32fdc6b207 Stage-step cfgs 2022-05-18 12:29:35 -04:00
Pointerbender
021a7e4877 bump stable version #94640 2022-05-17 16:50:49 +02:00
Josh Stone
1f33c921d1 Add a comment for covariant Ref 2022-05-16 17:24:53 -07:00
Josh Stone
1e53fab55a Remove outdated references to nll-rfc#40 2022-05-16 17:22:51 -07:00
Nilstrieb
4a2214885d Clarify slice and Vec iteration order
While already being inferable from the doc examples, it wasn't
fully specified. This is the only logical way to do a slice
iterator.
2022-05-16 19:29:45 +02:00
bors
56d540e057 Auto merge of #97053 - CAD97:realloc-clarification, r=dtolnay
Remove potentially misleading realloc parenthetical

This parenthetical is problematic, because it suggests that the following is sound:

```rust
let layout = Layout:🆕:<[u8; 32]>();
let p1 = alloc(layout);
let p2 = realloc(p1, layout, 32);
if p1 == p2 {
    p1.write([0; 32]);
    dealloc(p1, layout);
} else {
    dealloc(p2, layout);
}
```

At the very least, this isn't the case for [ANSI `realloc`](https://en.cppreference.com/w/c/memory/realloc)

> The original pointer `ptr` is invalidated and any access to it is undefined behavior (even if reallocation was in-place).

and [Windows `HeapReAlloc`](https://docs.microsoft.com/en-us/windows/win32/api/heapapi/nf-heapapi-heaprealloc) is unclear at best (`HEAP_REALLOC_IN_PLACE_ONLY`'s description may imply that the old pointer may be used if `HEAP_REALLOC_IN_PLACE_ONLY` is provided).

The conservative position is to just remove the parenthetical.

cc `@rust-lang/wg-unsafe-code-guidelines` `@rust-lang/wg-allocators`
2022-05-16 02:33:34 +00:00
gabriel-doriath-dohler
26265319c7 Rename eq_ignore_case to starts_with_ignore_case
The method doesn't test for equality. It tests if the object starts with
a given byte array, so its name is confusing.
2022-05-15 23:59:59 +00:00
CAD97
09dc24bc04 Remove potentially misleading realloc parenthetical 2022-05-14 22:30:14 -05:00
Deadbeef
af9168c467 Implement Hash for core::alloc::Layout 2022-05-14 14:44:42 +10:00
bors
9fbbe75fd7 Auto merge of #95602 - scottmcm:faster-array-intoiter-fold, r=the8472
Fix `array::IntoIter::fold` to use the optimized `Range::fold`

It was using `Iterator::by_ref` in the implementation, which ended up pessimizing it enough that, for example, it didn't vectorize when we tried it in the <https://rust-lang.zulipchat.com/#narrow/stream/257879-project-portable-simd/topic/Reducing.20sum.20into.20wider.20types> conversation.

Demonstration that the codegen test doesn't pass on the current nightly: <https://rust.godbolt.org/z/Taxev5eMn>
2022-05-14 03:12:53 +00:00
Nilstrieb
d11667f5cc Change orderings of Debug for the Atomic types to Relaxed.
This reduces synchronization between threads when
debugging the atomic types.
Reducing the synchronization means that executions with and
without the debug calls will be more consistent,
making it easier to debug.
2022-05-13 21:22:54 +02:00
Josh Stone
2b8041f574 Use a pointer in cell::RefMut so it's not noalias 2022-05-13 12:08:54 -07:00
Josh Stone
d369045aed Use a pointer in cell::Ref so it's not noalias 2022-05-13 11:42:10 -07:00
Simon Sapin
7ccc09b210 Extend ptr::null and null_mut to all thin (including extern) types
Fixes https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/93959

This change was accepted in https://rust-lang.github.io/rfcs/2580-ptr-meta.html

Note that this changes the signature of **stable** functions.
The change should be backward-compatible, but it is **insta-stable**
since it cannot (easily, at all?) be made available only
through a `#![feature(…)]` opt-in.

The RFC also proposed the same change for `NonNull::dangling`,
which makes sense it terms of its signature but not in terms of its implementation.
`dangling` uses `align_of()` as an address. But what `align_of()` should be for
extern types or whether it should be allowed at all remains an open question.

This commit depends on https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/93977, which is not yet
part of the bootstrap compiler. So `#[cfg]` is used to only apply the change in
stage 1+. As far a I know bounds cannot be made conditional with `#[cfg]`, so the
entire functions are duplicated. This is unfortunate but temporary.

Since this duplication makes it less obvious in the diff,
the new definitions differ in:

* More permissive bounds (`Thin` instead of implied `Sized`)
* Different implementation
* Having `rustc_allow_const_fn_unstable(ptr_metadata)`
2022-05-13 18:03:06 +02:00
Matthias Krüger
a56211a44e
Rollup merge of #97003 - nnethercote:rm-const_fn-attrs, r=fee1-dead
Remove some unnecessary `rustc_allow_const_fn_unstable` attributes.

r? `@fee1-dead`
2022-05-13 16:03:25 +02:00
Matthias Krüger
feb18d102a
Rollup merge of #96154 - lukaslueg:unreachablehint, r=scottmcm
Expand core::hint::unreachable_unchecked() docs

Rework the docs for `unreachable_unchecked`, encouraging deliberate use, and providing a better example for action at a distance.

Fixes #95865
2022-05-13 16:03:22 +02:00
Scott McMurray
e8fc7ba6a7 Slap #[inline] on all the ByRefSized methods, per the8472's suggestion 2022-05-13 00:43:15 -07:00
Nicholas Nethercote
fd01fbc058 Remove some unnecessary rustc_allow_const_fn_unstable attributes. 2022-05-13 16:01:18 +10:00
Maybe Waffle
03d4569939 Fill-in tracking issues for features pointer_byte_offsets, const_pointer_byte_offsets and pointer_is_aligned 2022-05-12 12:54:21 +04:00
Maybe Waffle
5a5d62aeb2 Optimize ptr.is_aligned_to()
Apparently LLVM is unable to understand that if count_ones() == 1 then self != 0.
Adding `assume(align != 0)` helps generating better asm:
https://rust.godbolt.org/z/ja18YKq91
2022-05-12 12:54:21 +04:00
Maybe Waffle
6c1ebff59e Implement ptr.is_aligned() in terms of .is_aligned_to() 2022-05-12 12:54:21 +04:00
Maybe Waffle
a908eec438 Lift the Sized requirement from convenience ptr fns
Since they work on byte pointers (by `.cast::<u8>()`ing them), there is
no need to know the size of `T` and so there is no need for `T: Sized`.

The `is_aligned_to` is similar, though it doesn't need the _alignment_
of `T`.
2022-05-12 12:54:21 +04:00
Maybe Waffle
c8c91f757a Add convenience functions to pointers
The functions added:
- {*const T,*mut T}::{wrapping_,}byte_{offset,add,sub}
- {*const T,*mut T}::{byte_offset_from,is_aligned,is_aligned_to}
2022-05-12 12:54:16 +04:00
Scott McMurray
003b954a43 Apply CR suggestions; add real tracking issue 2022-05-11 17:16:25 -07:00
Scott McMurray
4bb15b3797 Add a debug check for ordering, and check for isize overflow in CTFE 2022-05-11 17:16:25 -07:00
Scott McMurray
e76b3f3b5b Rename unsigned_offset_from to sub_ptr 2022-05-11 17:16:25 -07:00
Scott McMurray
89a18cb600 Add unsigned_offset_from on pointers
Like we have `add`/`sub` which are the `usize` version of `offset`, this adds the `usize` equivalent of `offset_from`.  Like how `.add(d)` replaced a whole bunch of `.offset(d as isize)`, you can see from the changes here that it's fairly common that code actually knows the order between the pointers and *wants* a `usize`, not an `isize`.

As a bonus, this can do `sub nuw`+`udiv exact`, rather than `sub`+`sdiv exact`, which can be optimized slightly better because it doesn't have to worry about negatives.  That's why the slice iterators weren't using `offset_from`, though I haven't updated that code in this PR because slices are so perf-critical that I'll do it as its own change.

This is an intrinsic, like `offset_from`, so that it can eventually be allowed in CTFE.  It also allows checking the extra safety condition -- see the test confirming that CTFE catches it if you pass the pointers in the wrong order.
2022-05-11 17:16:25 -07:00
Dylan DPC
c5c273b30e
Rollup merge of #96674 - bstrie:vardoc, r=thomcc
docs: add link explaining variance to NonNull docs
2022-05-10 08:24:02 +02:00
Matthias Krüger
6c8001b85c
Rollup merge of #96008 - fmease:warn-on-useless-doc-hidden-on-assoc-impl-items, r=lcnr
Warn on unused `#[doc(hidden)]` attributes on trait impl items

[Zulip conversation](https://rust-lang.zulipchat.com/#narrow/stream/266220-rustdoc/topic/.E2.9C.94.20Validy.20checks.20for.20.60.23.5Bdoc.28hidden.29.5D.60).

Whether an associated item in a trait impl is shown or hidden in the documentation entirely depends on the corresponding item in the trait declaration. Rustdoc completely ignores `#[doc(hidden)]` attributes on impl items. No error or warning is emitted:

```rust
pub trait Tr { fn f(); }
pub struct Ty;
impl Tr for Ty { #[doc(hidden)] fn f() {} }
//               ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ ignored by rustdoc and currently
//                              no error or warning issued
```

This may lead users to the wrong belief that the attribute has an effect. In fact, several such cases are found in the standard library (I've removed all of them in this PR).
There does not seem to exist any incentive to allow this in the future either: Impl'ing a trait for a type means the type *fully* conforms to its API. Users can add `#[doc(hidden)]` to the whole impl if they want to hide the implementation or add the attribute to the corresponding associated item in the trait declaration to hide the specific item. Hiding an implementation of an associated item does not make much sense: The associated item can still be found on the trait page.

This PR emits the warn-by-default lint `unused_attribute` for this case with a future-incompat warning.

`@rustbot` label T-compiler T-rustdoc A-lint
2022-05-09 18:45:36 +02:00
Matthias Krüger
28d800ce1c
Rollup merge of #95483 - golddranks:improve_float_docs, r=joshtriplett
Improve floating point documentation

This is my attempt to improve/solve https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/95468 and https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/73328 .

Added/refined explanations:
- Refine the "NaN as a special value" top level explanation of f32
- Refine `const NAN` docstring: add an explanation about there being multitude of NaN bitpatterns and disclaimer about the portability/stability guarantees.
- Refine `fn is_sign_positive` and `fn is_sign_negative` docstrings: add disclaimer about the sign bit of NaNs.
- Refine `fn min` and `fn max` docstrings: explain the semantics and their relationship to the standard and libm better.
- Refine `fn trunc` docstrings: explain the semantics slightly more.
- Refine `fn powi` docstrings: add disclaimer that the rounding behaviour might be different from `powf`.
- Refine `fn copysign` docstrings: add disclaimer about payloads of NaNs.
- Refine `minimum` and `maximum`: add disclaimer that "propagating NaN" doesn't mean that propagating the NaN bit patterns is guaranteed.
- Refine `max` and `min` docstrings: add "ignoring NaN" to bring the one-row explanation to parity with `minimum` and `maximum`.

Cosmetic changes:
- Reword `NaN` and `NAN` as plain "NaN", unless they refer to the specific `const NAN`.
- Reword "a number" to `self` in function docstrings to clarify.
- Remove "Returns NAN if the number is NAN" from `abs`, as this is told to be the default behavior in the top explanation.
2022-05-09 18:45:35 +02:00
bors
8a2fe75d0e Auto merge of #95960 - jhpratt:remove-rustc_deprecated, r=compiler-errors
Remove `#[rustc_deprecated]`

This removes `#[rustc_deprecated]` and introduces diagnostics to help users to the right direction (that being `#[deprecated]`). All uses of `#[rustc_deprecated]` have been converted. CI is expected to fail initially; this requires #95958, which includes converting `stdarch`.

I plan on following up in a short while (maybe a bootstrap cycle?) removing the diagnostics, as they're only intended to be short-term.
2022-05-09 04:47:30 +00:00
bors
cb12198715 Auto merge of #96846 - matthiaskrgr:rollup-yxu9ot9, r=matthiaskrgr
Rollup of 5 pull requests

Successful merges:

 - #96617 (Fix incorrect syntax suggestion with `pub async fn`)
 - #96828 (Further elaborate the lack of guarantees from `Hasher`)
 - #96829 (Fix the `x.py clippy` command)
 - #96830 (Add and tweak const-generics tests)
 - #96835 (Add more eslint rules)

Failed merges:

r? `@ghost`
`@rustbot` modify labels: rollup
2022-05-08 21:37:26 +00:00
León Orell Valerian Liehr
9d157ada35 Warn on unused doc(hidden) on trait impl items 2022-05-08 22:53:14 +02:00
Matthias Krüger
2c4d7a5463
Rollup merge of #96828 - scottmcm:clarify-hasher-write, r=Amanieu
Further elaborate the lack of guarantees from `Hasher`

I realized that I got too excited in #94598 by adding new methods, and forgot to do the documentation to really answer the core question in #94026.

This PR just has that doc update.

r? `@Amanieu`
2022-05-08 21:31:17 +02:00
bors
68461648bf Auto merge of #96302 - Serial-ATA:more-diagnostic-items, r=manishearth
Add more diagnostic items

This just adds a handful diagnostic items I noticed were missing.

Would it be worth doing this for all of the remaining types? I'm willing to do it if it'd be helpful.
2022-05-08 19:08:34 +00:00
Scott McMurray
83f785bff9 Further elaborate the lack of guarantees from Hasher 2022-05-07 17:44:30 -07:00
Matthias Krüger
1386a02dc1
Rollup merge of #96336 - Nilstrieb:link-to-correct-as_mut-in-ptr-as_ref, r=JohnTitor
Link to correct `as_mut` in docs for `pointer::as_ref`

It previously linked to the unstable const-mut-cast method instead of
the `mut` counterpart for `as_ref`.

Closes #96327
2022-05-07 22:44:36 +02:00
Nikolaos Chatzikonstantinou
7c1d241f2b
Fix a minor typo in the description of Formatter 2022-05-07 19:32:54 +09:00
Jane Lusby
7b5dce900d This is a pretty good start if you ask me 2022-05-06 15:03:25 -07:00
bors
8c4fc9d9a4 Auto merge of #94598 - scottmcm:prefix-free-hasher-methods, r=Amanieu
Add a dedicated length-prefixing method to `Hasher`

This accomplishes two main goals:
- Make it clear who is responsible for prefix-freedom, including how they should do it
- Make it feasible for a `Hasher` that *doesn't* care about Hash-DoS resistance to get better performance by not hashing lengths

This does not change rustc-hash, since that's in an external crate, but that could potentially use it in future.

Fixes #94026

r? rust-lang/libs

---

The core of this change is the following two new methods on `Hasher`:

```rust
pub trait Hasher {
    /// Writes a length prefix into this hasher, as part of being prefix-free.
    ///
    /// If you're implementing [`Hash`] for a custom collection, call this before
    /// writing its contents to this `Hasher`.  That way
    /// `(collection![1, 2, 3], collection![4, 5])` and
    /// `(collection![1, 2], collection![3, 4, 5])` will provide different
    /// sequences of values to the `Hasher`
    ///
    /// The `impl<T> Hash for [T]` includes a call to this method, so if you're
    /// hashing a slice (or array or vector) via its `Hash::hash` method,
    /// you should **not** call this yourself.
    ///
    /// This method is only for providing domain separation.  If you want to
    /// hash a `usize` that represents part of the *data*, then it's important
    /// that you pass it to [`Hasher::write_usize`] instead of to this method.
    ///
    /// # Examples
    ///
    /// ```
    /// #![feature(hasher_prefixfree_extras)]
    /// # // Stubs to make the `impl` below pass the compiler
    /// # struct MyCollection<T>(Option<T>);
    /// # impl<T> MyCollection<T> {
    /// #     fn len(&self) -> usize { todo!() }
    /// # }
    /// # impl<'a, T> IntoIterator for &'a MyCollection<T> {
    /// #     type Item = T;
    /// #     type IntoIter = std::iter::Empty<T>;
    /// #     fn into_iter(self) -> Self::IntoIter { todo!() }
    /// # }
    ///
    /// use std:#️⃣:{Hash, Hasher};
    /// impl<T: Hash> Hash for MyCollection<T> {
    ///     fn hash<H: Hasher>(&self, state: &mut H) {
    ///         state.write_length_prefix(self.len());
    ///         for elt in self {
    ///             elt.hash(state);
    ///         }
    ///     }
    /// }
    /// ```
    ///
    /// # Note to Implementers
    ///
    /// If you've decided that your `Hasher` is willing to be susceptible to
    /// Hash-DoS attacks, then you might consider skipping hashing some or all
    /// of the `len` provided in the name of increased performance.
    #[inline]
    #[unstable(feature = "hasher_prefixfree_extras", issue = "88888888")]
    fn write_length_prefix(&mut self, len: usize) {
        self.write_usize(len);
    }

    /// Writes a single `str` into this hasher.
    ///
    /// If you're implementing [`Hash`], you generally do not need to call this,
    /// as the `impl Hash for str` does, so you can just use that.
    ///
    /// This includes the domain separator for prefix-freedom, so you should
    /// **not** call `Self::write_length_prefix` before calling this.
    ///
    /// # Note to Implementers
    ///
    /// The default implementation of this method includes a call to
    /// [`Self::write_length_prefix`], so if your implementation of `Hasher`
    /// doesn't care about prefix-freedom and you've thus overridden
    /// that method to do nothing, there's no need to override this one.
    ///
    /// This method is available to be overridden separately from the others
    /// as `str` being UTF-8 means that it never contains `0xFF` bytes, which
    /// can be used to provide prefix-freedom cheaper than hashing a length.
    ///
    /// For example, if your `Hasher` works byte-by-byte (perhaps by accumulating
    /// them into a buffer), then you can hash the bytes of the `str` followed
    /// by a single `0xFF` byte.
    ///
    /// If your `Hasher` works in chunks, you can also do this by being careful
    /// about how you pad partial chunks.  If the chunks are padded with `0x00`
    /// bytes then just hashing an extra `0xFF` byte doesn't necessarily
    /// provide prefix-freedom, as `"ab"` and `"ab\u{0}"` would likely hash
    /// the same sequence of chunks.  But if you pad with `0xFF` bytes instead,
    /// ensuring at least one padding byte, then it can often provide
    /// prefix-freedom cheaper than hashing the length would.
    #[inline]
    #[unstable(feature = "hasher_prefixfree_extras", issue = "88888888")]
    fn write_str(&mut self, s: &str) {
        self.write_length_prefix(s.len());
        self.write(s.as_bytes());
    }
}
```

With updates to the `Hash` implementations for slices and containers to call `write_length_prefix` instead of `write_usize`.

`write_str` defaults to using `write_length_prefix` since, as was pointed out in the issue, the `write_u8(0xFF)` approach is insufficient for hashers that work in chunks, as those would hash `"a\u{0}"` and `"a"` to the same thing.  But since `SipHash` works byte-wise (there's an internal buffer to accumulate bytes until a full chunk is available) it overrides `write_str` to continue to use the add-non-UTF-8-byte approach.

---

Compatibility:

Because the default implementation of `write_length_prefix` calls `write_usize`, the changed hash implementation for slices will do the same thing the old one did on existing `Hasher`s.
2022-05-06 09:43:57 +00:00
Lukas Lueg
cd1746b2b4 Clarify unreachable_unchecked docs 2022-05-06 09:34:41 +02:00
Scott McMurray
ebdcb08abf For now, don't change the details of hashing a str
We might want to change the default before stabilizing (or maybe even after), but for getting in the new unstable methods, leave it as-is for now.  That way it won't break cargo and such.
2022-05-06 00:14:44 -07:00
Scott McMurray
98054377ee Add a dedicated length-prefixing method to Hasher
This accomplishes two main goals:
- Make it clear who is responsible for prefix-freedom, including how they should do it
- Make it feasible for a `Hasher` that *doesn't* care about Hash-DoS resistance to get better performance by not hashing lengths

This does not change rustc-hash, since that's in an external crate, but that could potentially use it in future.
2022-05-06 00:03:38 -07:00
Michael Goulet
ef949daf03
Rollup merge of #96639 - adpaco-aws:fix-offset-from-typo, r=scottmcm
Fix typo in `offset_from` documentation

Small fix for what I think is a typo in the `offset_from` documentation.

Someone reading this may understand that the distance in bytes is obtained by dividing the distance by `mem::size_of::<T>()`, but here we just want to define "units of T" in terms of bytes (i.e., units of T == bytes / `mem::size_of::<T>()`).
2022-05-05 19:34:23 -07:00
Michael Goulet
87ad928c15
Rollup merge of #96174 - RalfJung:no-run-transmute, r=scottmcm
mark ptr-int-transmute test as no_run

This causes [CI failures in Miri](https://github.com/rust-lang/miri-test-libstd/runs/6062500259?check_suite_focus=true) since ptr-int-transmutes are rejected there (when strict provenance is enabled).
2022-05-05 19:34:22 -07:00
bors
74cea9fdb9 Auto merge of #96520 - lcnr:general-incoherent-impls, r=petrochenkov
generalize "incoherent impls" impl for user defined types

To allow the move of `trait Error` into core.

continues the work from #94963, finishes https://github.com/rust-lang/compiler-team/issues/487

r? `@petrochenkov` cc `@yaahc`
2022-05-05 23:24:36 +00:00
Matthias Krüger
47801413d9
Rollup merge of #95359 - jhpratt:int_roundings, r=joshtriplett
Update `int_roundings` methods from feedback

This updates `#![feature(int_roundings)]` (#88581) from feedback. All methods now take `NonZeroX`. The documentation makes clear that they panic in debug mode and wrap in release mode.

r? `@joshtriplett`

`@rustbot` label +T-libs +T-libs-api +S-waiting-on-review
2022-05-05 15:43:00 +02:00
lcnr
209dd2cb0a generalize "incoherent impls" impl for custom types 2022-05-05 10:53:00 +02:00
bors
3d18f945ca Auto merge of #96630 - m-ysk:fix/issue-88038, r=notriddle
Include nonexported macro_rules! macros in the doctest target

Fixes #88038

This PR aims to include nonexported `macro_rules!` macros in the doctest target. For more details, please see the above issue.
2022-05-05 07:25:18 +00:00
bors
12d3f107c1 Auto merge of #96626 - thomcc:rand-bump, r=m-ou-se
Avoid using `rand::thread_rng` in the stdlib benchmarks.

This is kind of an anti-pattern because it introduces extra nondeterminism for no real reason. In thread_rng's case this comes both from the random seed and also from the reseeding operations it does, which occasionally does syscalls (which adds additional nondeterminism). The impact of this would be pretty small in most cases, but it's a good practice to avoid (particularly because avoiding it was not hard).

Anyway, several of our benchmarks already did the right thing here anyway, so the change was pretty easy and mostly just applying it more universally. That said, the stdlib benchmarks aren't particularly stable (nor is our benchmark framework particularly great), so arguably this doesn't matter that much in practice.

~~Anyway, this also bumps the `rand` dev-dependency to 0.8, since it had fallen somewhat out of date.~~ Nevermind, too much of a headache.
2022-05-05 05:08:44 +00:00
Jacob Pratt
dde590d180
Update int_roundings methods from feedback 2022-05-04 23:20:29 -04:00
mbartlett21
6d523e9a75
Fix the generator example for pin!() 2022-05-05 09:58:13 +10:00
Emilio Cobos Álvarez
93e587b817
slice: #[inline] a couple iterator methods.
The one I care about and actually saw in the wild not getting inlined is
clone(). We ended up doing a whole function call for something that just
copies two pointers.

I ended up marking as_slice / as_ref as well because make_slice is
inline(always) itself, and is also the kind of think that can kill
performance in hot loops if you expect it to get inlined. But happy to
undo those.
2022-05-04 17:35:29 +02:00
Josh Triplett
0fc5c524f5 Stabilize bool::then_some 2022-05-04 13:22:08 +02:00
Roland Kuhn
3d808d52de
add caveat discussed in #74335 2022-05-04 10:58:23 +02:00
bors
086bf7a8ff Auto merge of #96280 - lygstate:ffi-fixes, r=joshtriplett
library/core: Fixes implement of c_uint, c_long, c_ulong

Fixes: aa67016624 ("make memcmp return a value of c_int_width instead of i32")
Introduce c_num_definition to getting the cfg_if logic easier to maintain
Add newlines for easier code reading

Signed-off-by: Yonggang Luo <luoyonggang@gmail.com>
2022-05-03 17:22:58 +00:00
bstrie
6096cfbfff docs: add link explaining variance to NonNull docs 2022-05-03 11:57:24 -04:00
Yoshiki Matsuda
3d12fd0faf ignore a doctest for the non-exported macro 2022-05-03 18:33:56 +09:00
Yonggang Luo
2e69549043
Update library/core/src/ffi/mod.rs
Co-authored-by: Josh Triplett <josh@joshtriplett.org>
2022-05-03 10:42:46 +08:00
The 8472
a68a5d219d This aligns the inline attributes of existing __iterator_get_unchecked with those of next() on adapters that have both.
It improves the performance of iterators using unchecked access when building in incremental mode
(due to the larger CGU count?). It might negatively affect incremental compile times for better runtime results,
but considering that the equivalent `next()` implementations also are `#[inline]` and usually are more complex this
should be ok.

```
./x.py bench library/core -i --stage 0 --test-args bench_trusted_random_access

OLD: 119,172 ns/iter
NEW:  17,714 ns/iter
```
2022-05-02 20:54:46 +02:00
The 8472
e3db41bf97 add benchmark 2022-05-02 20:54:46 +02:00
Adrian Palacios
9b36a47831 Fix typo in offset_from documentation 2022-05-02 14:41:21 +00:00
Pyry Kontio
dea776512b Fix nits 2022-05-02 23:29:02 +09:00
Thom Chiovoloni
0812759840
Avoid use of rand::thread_rng in stdlib benchmarks 2022-05-02 00:08:21 -07:00
Yuki Okushi
f58135449e
Rollup merge of #96567 - alex-semenyuk:fix_docs_for_logs_func, r=Mark-Simulacrum
Fix docs for u32 and i32 logs func

Closes #96545
2022-05-02 10:41:57 +09:00
bors
4dd8b420c0 Auto merge of #96521 - petrochenkov:docrules, r=notriddle,GuillaumeGomez
rustdoc: Resolve doc links referring to `macro_rules` items

cc https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/81633

UPD: the fallback to considering *all* `macro_rules` in the crate for unresolved names is not removed in this PR, it will be removed separately and will be run through crater.
2022-05-01 20:28:10 +00:00
Scott McMurray
e094ee5f10 Add do yeet expressions to allow experimentation in nightly
Using an obviously-placeholder syntax.  An RFC would still be needed before this could have any chance at stabilization, and it might be removed at any point.

But I'd really like to have it in nightly at least to ensure it works well with try_trait_v2, especially as we refactor the traits.
2022-04-30 17:40:27 -07:00
Vadim Petrochenkov
6083db7c4e Fix some links in the standard library 2022-05-01 00:02:34 +03:00
bors
579d26876d Auto merge of #96348 - overdrivenpotato:inline-location, r=the8472
Inline core::panic::Location methods

This avoids the overhead of a function call when used.
2022-04-30 16:33:12 +00:00
Jane Losare-Lusby
72898acdba spicy 2022-04-30 03:32:41 +00:00
alexey semenyuk
6ee70bc6b3
Fix documentation for log functions int 2022-04-29 23:21:50 +00:00
alexey semenyuk
ec90f9dd33
Fix documentation for log functions unsigned int 2022-04-29 23:16:53 +00:00
Serial
09b0b8b6e2 Add more diagnostic items 2022-04-28 16:42:20 -04:00
Dylan DPC
2c1d58b8cc
Rollup merge of #96480 - user-simon:patch-1, r=Dylan-DPC
Fixed grammatical error in example comment

Added missing "we" in sentence.
2022-04-28 20:13:03 +02:00
Simon
332f326334
Fixed grammatical error in example comment 2022-04-27 17:27:02 +02:00
Michael Goulet
83d701e569 Better error messages when collecting into [T; n] 2022-04-26 21:37:10 -07:00
Guillaume Gomez
2b8bf0d530
Rollup merge of #95949 - SoniEx2:patch-5, r=m-ou-se
Implement Default for AssertUnwindSafe

Trait impls are still insta-stable yeah...?
2022-04-26 13:22:27 +02:00
Dylan DPC
93db30aa7f
Rollup merge of #96149 - est31:remove_unused_macro_matchers, r=petrochenkov
Remove unused macro rules

Removes rules of internal macros that weren't triggered.
2022-04-26 01:21:20 +02:00
Dylan DPC
51b86848ff
Rollup merge of #90312 - r00ster91:search, r=Dylan-DPC
Fix some confusing wording and improve slice-search-related docs

This adds more links between `contains` and `binary_search` because I do think they have some relevant connections. If your (big) slice happens to be sorted and you know it, surely you should be using `[3; 100].binary_search(&5).is_ok()` over `[3; 100].contains(&5)`?
This also fixes the confusing "searches this sorted X" wording which just sounds really weird because it doesn't know whether it's actually sorted. It should be but it may not be. The new wording should make it clearer that you will probably want to sort it and in the same sentence it also mentions the related function `contains`.
Similarly, this mentions `binary_search` on `contains`' docs.
This also fixes some other minor stuff and inconsistencies.
2022-04-26 01:21:20 +02:00
Marko Mijalkovic
92a584177d Inline core::panic::Location methods 2022-04-23 14:41:47 -04:00
bors
6b4563bf93 Auto merge of #90602 - mbartlett21:const-intoiterator, r=oli-obk
Unstably constify `impl<I: Iterator> IntoIterator for I`

This constifies the default `IntoIterator` implementation under the `const_intoiterator_identity` feature.

Tracking Issue: #90603
2022-04-23 15:41:45 +00:00
bors
1e9aa8a96b Auto merge of #95971 - workingjubilee:no-weird-fp-in-const, r=oli-obk
No "weird" floats in const fn {from,to}_bits

I suspect this code is subtly incorrect and that we don't even e.g. use x87-style floats in CTFE, so I don't have to guard against that case. A future PR will be hopefully removing them from concern entirely, anyways. But at the moment I wanted to get this rolling because small questions like that one seem best answered by review.

r? `@oli-obk`
cc `@eddyb` `@thomcc`
2022-04-23 13:00:54 +00:00
Nilstrieb
521bb810be Link to correct as_mut in docs for pointer::as_ref
It previously linked to the unstable const-mut-cast method instead of
the `mut` counterpart for `as_ref`.
2022-04-23 13:42:26 +02:00
Jubilee Young
4da8682523 Remove unnecessary const-time x87-related checks 2022-04-22 19:34:33 -07:00
Jubilee Young
bb555b828c Fix comments for float classify 2022-04-22 18:34:34 -07:00
Yonggang Luo
1d5948f473 library/core: Fixes implement of c_uint, c_long, c_ulong
Fixes: aa67016624 ("make memcmp return a value of c_int_width instead of i32")
Introduce c_num_definition to getting the cfg_if logic easier to maintain
Add newlines for easier code reading

Signed-off-by: Yonggang Luo <luoyonggang@gmail.com>
2022-04-21 17:18:32 +08:00
mbartlett21
4879875c76
Change file locations to be links to GitHub 2022-04-20 13:14:32 +10:00
mbartlett21
671a8723c6
Fix locations for intrinsics impls 2022-04-20 09:28:07 +10:00
bors
d5ae66c12c Auto merge of #92287 - JulianKnodt:slice_remainder, r=yaahc
Add slice::remainder

This adds a remainder function to the Slice iterator, so that a caller can access unused
elements if iteration stops.

Addresses #91733
2022-04-18 23:34:24 +00:00
Jane Lusby
00a315c515
Update library/core/src/result.rs
Co-authored-by: Emil Thorenfeldt <emt@magenta.dk>
2022-04-18 16:31:21 -07:00
Jane Lusby
eca7dd20d5
Update library/core/src/result.rs
Co-authored-by: Emil Thorenfeldt <emt@magenta.dk>
2022-04-18 16:31:13 -07:00
est31
3c1e1661e7 Remove unused macro rules 2022-04-18 23:28:06 +02:00
Dylan DPC
55e399771e
Rollup merge of #96156 - est31:use_from_le_bytes, r=Dylan-DPC
Replace u8to64_le macro with u64::from_le_bytes

The macro was a reimplementation of the function.
2022-04-18 18:22:07 +02:00
Dylan DPC
a6ad1394f3
Rollup merge of #96136 - thomcc:lifetime-wording, r=RalfJung
Reword clarification on lifetime for ptr->ref safety docs

I believe the current wording of the safety comment is somewhat misleading, and that this is more accurate. Suggested by `@CAD97` in this thread on the topic https://rust-lang.zulipchat.com/#narrow/stream/136281-t-lang.2Fwg-unsafe-code-guidelines/topic/Lifetime.20of.20reference.20pointer.20docs.20issue

Just to check that this is correct, CC `@RalfJung.`

I suppose it's open for interpretation as to whether or not this is more clear. I think it is.
2022-04-18 18:22:04 +02:00
Ralf Jung
74d77d058b mark ptr-int-transmute test as no_run 2022-04-18 10:04:31 -04:00
est31
9e7a319f01 Replace u8to64_le macro with u64::from_le_bytes
The macro was a reimplementation of the function.
2022-04-17 22:55:33 +02:00
Lukas Lueg
3615cb476b Expand core::hint::unreachable_unchecked() docs
Fixes #95865
2022-04-17 20:58:36 +02:00
kadmin
494901ced6 Add slice::remainder
This adds a remainder function to the Slice iterator, so that a caller can access unused
elements if iteration stops.
2022-04-17 17:19:45 +00:00
bors
ac8b11810f Auto merge of #96010 - eduardosm:Unique-on-top-of-NonNull, r=m-ou-se,tmiasko
Implement `core::ptr::Unique` on top of `NonNull`

Removes the use `rustc_layout_scalar_valid_range_start` and some `unsafe` blocks.
2022-04-17 05:26:08 +00:00
Thom Chiovoloni
be30e40440
Reword clarification on lifetime for ptr->ref safety docs 2022-04-16 21:39:43 -07:00
Matthew Woodcraft
16c81fa9a6 Document the numeric value returned by string parsing for floats 2022-04-16 22:03:24 +01:00
Matthew Woodcraft
6fa061c5f9 Document rounding for floating-point primitive operations
State that the four primitive operations honour IEEE 754 roundTiesToEven.

Documenting under "Primitive Type f32"; f64 refers to that.
2022-04-16 21:58:36 +01:00
Giles Cope
bf02d1ea5f
No need to check the assert all the time. 2022-04-16 19:30:23 +01:00
Dylan DPC
4ed7627117
Rollup merge of #96081 - eduardosm:masks_usize_size_agnostic, r=yaahc
Make some `usize`-typed masks definitions agnostic to the size of `usize`

Some masks where defined as
```rust
const NONASCII_MASK: usize = 0x80808080_80808080u64 as usize;
```
where it was assumed that `usize` is never wider than 64, which is currently true.

To make those constants valid in a hypothetical 128-bit target, these constants have been redefined in an `usize`-width-agnostic way
```rust
const NONASCII_MASK: usize = usize::from_ne_bytes([0x80; size_of::<usize>()]);
```

There are already some cases where Rust anticipates the possibility of supporting 128-bit targets, such as not implementing `From<usize>` for `u64`.
2022-04-16 14:26:01 +02:00
Dylan DPC
bd007ba928
Rollup merge of #96038 - beyarkay:patch-1, r=m-ou-se
docs: add link from zip to unzip

The docs for `Iterator::unzip` explain that it is kind of an inverse operation to `Iterator::zip` and guide the reader to the `zip` docs, but the `zip` docs don't let the user know that they can undo the `zip` operation with `unzip`. This change modifies the docs to help the user find `unzip`.
2022-04-16 14:25:58 +02:00
Raekye
d5f96e6ade Change as_uninit_* methods on NonNull from taking self by
reference to taking `self` by value. This is consistent with the methods
of the same names on primitive pointers. The returned lifetime was
already previously unbounded.
2022-04-15 21:21:02 -04:00
ltdk
63a8652961 MaybeUninit array cleanup
* Links MaybeUninit::uninit_array to meta-tracking issue
* Links MaybeUninit::array_assume_init to meta-tracking issue
* Unstably constifies MaybeUninit::array_assume_init
2022-04-15 20:53:50 -04:00
Dylan DPC
20bf34f8c5
Rollup merge of #94461 - jhpratt:2024-edition, r=pnkfelix
Create (unstable) 2024 edition

[On Zulip](https://rust-lang.zulipchat.com/#narrow/stream/213817-t-lang/topic/Deprecating.20macro.20scoping.20shenanigans/near/272860652), there was a small aside regarding creating the 2024 edition now as opposed to later. There was a reasonable amount of support and no stated opposition.

This change creates the 2024 edition in the compiler and creates a prelude for the 2024 edition. There is no current difference between the 2021 and 2024 editions. Cargo and other tools will need to be updated separately, as it's not in the same repository. This change permits the vast majority of work towards the next edition to proceed _now_ instead of waiting until 2024.

For sanity purposes, I've merged the "hello" UI tests into a single file with multiple revisions. Otherwise we'd end up with a file per edition, despite them being essentially identical.

````@rustbot```` label +T-lang +S-waiting-on-review

Not sure on the relevant team, to be honest.
2022-04-15 20:50:43 +02:00
Dylan DPC
27e2d811e6
Rollup merge of #94457 - jhpratt:stabilize-derive_default_enum, r=davidtwco
Stabilize `derive_default_enum`

This stabilizes `#![feature(derive_default_enum)]`, as proposed in [RFC 3107](https://github.com/rust-lang/rfcs/pull/3107) and tracked in #87517. In short, it permits you to `#[derive(Default)]` on `enum`s, indicating what the default should be by placing a `#[default]` attribute on the desired variant (which must be a unit variant in the interest of forward compatibility).

```````@rustbot``````` label +S-waiting-on-review +T-lang
2022-04-15 20:50:43 +02:00
Jane Lusby
5d98acb19c update docs for option to crossreference to the result docs 2022-04-15 10:24:34 -07:00
Eduardo Sánchez Muñoz
93ae6f80e3 Make some usize-typed masks definition agnostic to the size of usize
Some masks where defined as
```rust
const NONASCII_MASK: usize = 0x80808080_80808080u64 as usize;
```
where it was assumed that `usize` is never wider than 64, which is currently true.

To make those constants valid in a hypothetical 128-bit target, these constants have been redefined in an `usize`-width-agnostic way
```rust
const NONASCII_MASK: usize = usize::from_ne_bytes([0x80; size_of::<usize>()]);
```

There are already some cases where Rust anticipates the possibility of supporting 128-bit targets, such as not implementing `From<usize>` for `u64`.
2022-04-15 17:04:59 +02:00
Jane Lusby
80c362b92b add should_panic annotations 2022-04-14 13:22:24 -07:00
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
Jane Lusby
3d951b3d21 add necessary text attribute to code block of panic output 2022-04-14 11:40:27 -07:00
Артём Павлов
65c75b2db7 Use rounding in float to Duration conversion methods 2022-04-14 20:44:09 +03:00
Eduardo Sánchez Muñoz
2a91eeac1a Implement core::ptr::Unique on top of NonNull
Removes the use `rustc_layout_scalar_valid_range_start` and some `unsafe` blocks.
2022-04-14 19:35:40 +02:00
Boyd Kane
d73e32867f
Remove trailing whitespace
Co-authored-by: Mara Bos <m-ou.se@m-ou.se>
2022-04-14 11:19:49 +02:00
Boyd Kane
f6d957701f
docs: add link from zip to unzip
The docs for `Iterator::unzip` explain that it is kind of an inverse operation to `Iterator::zip` and guide the reader to the `zip` docs, but the `zip` docs don't let the user know that they can undo the `zip` operation with `unzip`. This change modifies the docs to help the user find `unzip`.
2022-04-14 09:51:47 +02:00
Jacob Pratt
4fbe73e0b7
Remove use of #[rustc_deprecated] 2022-04-14 01:33:13 -04:00
Jane Lusby
dfb37cb088 Add section on common message styles for Result::expect 2022-04-13 19:08:10 -07:00
Dylan DPC
e95f2db98f
Rollup merge of #96006 - hkBst:patch-2, r=Dylan-DPC
Add a missing article

Add a missing article
2022-04-13 17:35:37 +02:00
Marijn Schouten
c008d45187
Add a missing article
Add a missing article
2022-04-13 13:33:09 +02:00
Marijn Schouten
212e98bc3e
Add missing article to fix "few" to "a few".
Add missing article to fix "few" (not many) to "a few" (some).
2022-04-13 13:24:28 +02:00
Dylan DPC
633c391225
Rollup merge of #95984 - wcampbell0x2a:fix-spelling, r=thomcc
Fix spelling in docs for `can_not_overflow`

Introduced in https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/95399
2022-04-13 05:54:13 +02:00
Dylan DPC
6aa875aa96
Rollup merge of #95914 - c410-f3r:meta-vars, r=petrochenkov
Implement tuples using recursion

Because it is c00l3r™, requires less repetition and can be used as a reference for external people.

This change is non-essential and I am not sure about potential performance impacts so feel free to close this PR if desired.

r? `@petrochenkov`
2022-04-12 23:16:58 +02:00
Caio
23bf977758 Implement tuples using recursion 2022-04-12 16:23:36 -03:00
wcampbell
9ea89e1d3d Fix spelling in docs for can_not_overflow 2022-04-12 13:29:56 -04:00
Jubilee Young
83581796b2 Ban subnormals and NaNs in const {from,to}_bits 2022-04-12 02:27:25 -07:00
Jubilee Young
b200483412 Rectify float classification impls for weird FPUs
Careful handling does its best to take care of both Armv7's
"unenhanced" Neon as well as the x87 FPU.
2022-04-12 02:27:25 -07:00
bors
4e1927db3c Auto merge of #95399 - gilescope:plan_b, r=scottmcm
Faster parsing for lower numbers for radix up to 16 (cont.)

( Continuation of https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/83371 )

With LingMan's change I think this is potentially ready.
2022-04-12 05:54:50 +00:00
bors
36f4ded69e Auto merge of #93408 - liangyongrui:master, r=scottmcm
fix Layout struct member naming style
2022-04-12 00:18:51 +00:00
Soni L
8d5a4963df
Implement Default for AssertUnwindSafe
Trait impls are still insta-stable yeah...?
2022-04-11 17:56:27 -03:00
Dylan DPC
ae6f75a0c3
Rollup merge of #95895 - CAD97:patch-2, r=Dylan-DPC
Clarify str::from_utf8_unchecked's invariants

Specifically, make it clear that it is immediately UB to pass ill-formed UTF-8 into the function. The previous wording left space to interpret that the UB only occurred when calling another function, which "assumes that `&str`s are valid UTF-8."

This does not change whether str being UTF-8 is a safety or a validity invariant. (As per previous discussion, it is a safety invariant, not a validity invariant.) It just makes it clear that valid UTF-8 is a precondition of str::from_utf8_unchecked, and that emitting an Abstract Machine fault (e.g. UB or a sanitizer error) on invalid UTF-8 is a valid thing to do.

If user code wants to create an unsafe `&str` pointing to ill-formed UTF-8, it must be done via transmutes. Also, just, don't.

Zulip discussion: https://rust-lang.zulipchat.com/#narrow/stream/136281-t-lang.2Fwg-unsafe-code-guidelines/topic/str.3A.3Afrom_utf8_unchecked.20Safety.20requirement
2022-04-11 20:00:44 +02:00
Dylan DPC
82a6463b1c
Rollup merge of #95894 - nyanpasu64:fix-pin-docs, r=Dylan-DPC
Fix formatting error in pin.rs docs

Not sure if there's more formatting issues I missed; I kinda lost interest reading midway through.
2022-04-11 20:00:43 +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
Giles Cope
3ee7bb19c6
better def of is signed in tests. 2022-04-11 07:37:53 +01:00
liangyongrui
03b2588837 fix Layout struct member naming style 2022-04-11 13:35:18 +08:00
Christopher Durham
b92cd1a32c
Clarify str::from_utf8_unchecked's invariants
Specifically, make it clear that it is immediately UB to pass ill-formed UTF-8 into the function. The previous wording left space to interpret that the UB only occurred when calling another function, which "assumes that `&str`s are valid UTF-8."

This does not change whether str being UTF-8 is a safety or a validity invariant. (As per previous discussion, it is a safety invariant, not a validity invariant.) It just makes it clear that valid UTF-8 is a precondition of str::from_utf8_unchecked, and that emitting an Abstract Machine fault (e.g. UB or a sanitizer error) on invalid UTF-8 is a valid thing to do.

If user code wants to create an unsafe `&str` pointing to ill-formed UTF-8, it must be done via transmutes. Also, just, don't.
2022-04-10 15:04:57 -05:00
nyanpasu64
bb3a071df8
Fix formatting error in pin.rs docs 2022-04-10 12:41:31 -07:00
Dylan DPC
c0655dec7e
Rollup merge of #95566 - eduardosm:std_char_consts_and_methods, r=Mark-Simulacrum
Avoid duplication of doc comments in `std::char` constants and functions

For those consts and functions, only the summary is kept and a reference to the `char` associated const/method is included.

Additionaly, re-exported functions have been converted to function definitions that call the previously re-exported function. This makes it easier to add a deprecated attribute to these functions in the future.
2022-04-10 21:03:34 +02:00
Giles Cope
79e8653656
No need to use Default 2022-04-10 18:20:13 +01:00
Giles Cope
515906a669
Use Add, Sub, Mul traits instead of unsafe 2022-04-10 18:13:48 +01:00
Dylan DPC
7726265ae0
Rollup merge of #95831 - redzic:xor-uppercase, r=workingjubilee
Use bitwise XOR in to_ascii_uppercase

This saves an instruction compared to the previous approach, which
was to unset the fifth bit with bitwise OR.

Comparison of generated assembly on x86: https://godbolt.org/z/GdfvdGs39

This can also affect autovectorization, saving SIMD instructions as well: https://godbolt.org/z/cnPcz75T9

Not sure if `u8::to_ascii_lowercase` should also be changed, since using bitwise OR for that function does not require an extra bitwise negate since the code is setting a bit rather than unsetting a bit. `char::to_ascii_uppercase` already uses XOR, so no change seems to be required there.
2022-04-09 18:26:30 +02:00
Dylan DPC
5092946041
Rollup merge of #95805 - c410-f3r:meta-vars, r=petrochenkov
Left overs of #95761

These are just nits. Feel free to close this PR if all modifications are not worth merging.

* `#![feature(decl_macro)]` is not needed anymore in `rustc_expand`
* `tuple_impls` does not require `$Tuple:ident`. I guess it is there to enhance readability?

r? ```@petrochenkov```
2022-04-09 18:26:27 +02:00
Dylan DPC
e4b4bf1535
Rollup merge of #95361 - scottmcm:valid-align, r=Mark-Simulacrum
Make non-power-of-two alignments a validity error in `Layout`

Inspired by the zulip conversation about how `Layout` should better enforce `size <= isize::MAX as usize`, this uses an N-variant enum on N-bit platforms to require at the validity level that the existing invariant of "must be a power of two" is upheld.

This was MIRI can catch it, and means there's a more-specific type for `Layout` to store than just `NonZeroUsize`.

It's left as `pub(crate)` here; a future PR could consider giving it a tracking issue for non-internal usage.
2022-04-09 18:26:25 +02:00
Dylan DPC
8d7392232c
Rollup merge of #95787 - yaahc:panic-doc-update-v2, r=dtolnay
reword panic vs result section to remove recoverable vs unrecoverable framing

Based on feedback from the Error Handling FAQ: https://github.com/rust-lang/project-error-handling/issues/50#issuecomment-1090876982

r? ````@dtolnay````
2022-04-09 05:58:44 +02:00
Scott McMurray
fe0c08a4f2 Make non-power-of-two alignments a validity error in Layout
Inspired by the zulip conversation about how `Layout` should better enforce `size < isize::MAX as usize`, this uses an N-variant enum on N-bit platforms to require at the validity level that the existing invariant of "must be a power of two" is upheld.

This was MIRI can catch it, and means there's a more-specific type for `Layout` to store than just `NonZeroUsize`.
2022-04-08 20:17:38 -07:00
Redzic
1e6365d075 Use bitwise XOR in to_ascii_uppercase
This saves an instruction compared to the previous approach, which
was to unset the fifth bit with bitwise OR.
2022-04-08 20:06:54 -05:00
Caio
e946aa3a74 Left overs of #95761 2022-04-08 10:30:24 -03:00
Dylan DPC
1f80881a94
Rollup merge of #95761 - c410-f3r:meta-var-stuff, r=petrochenkov
Kickstart the inner usage of `macro_metavar_expr`

There can be more use-cases but I am out of ideas.

cc #83527
r? ``@petrochenkov``
2022-04-08 11:48:24 +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
Jacob Pratt
a3dd654ae9
Add documentation 2022-04-07 20:03:24 -04:00
Jacob Pratt
abf2b4c04d
Stabilize derive_default_enum 2022-04-07 20:03:19 -04:00
Jane Lusby
aa3c141c86 reword panic vs result section to remove recoverable vs unrecoverable framing 2022-04-07 13:44:57 -07:00
Caio
3191d27f48 Kickstart the inner usage of macro_metavar_expr 2022-04-07 08:13:41 -03:00
bors
ed6c958ee4 Auto merge of #95760 - Dylan-DPC:rollup-uskzggh, r=Dylan-DPC
Rollup of 4 pull requests

Successful merges:

 - #95189 (Stop flagging unexpected inner attributes as outer ones in certain diagnostics)
 - #95752 (Regression test for #82866)
 - #95753 (Correct safety reasoning in `str::make_ascii_{lower,upper}case()`)
 - #95757 (Use gender neutral terms)

Failed merges:

r? `@ghost`
`@rustbot` modify labels: rollup
2022-04-07 09:50:11 +00:00
Dylan DPC
6639604bd6
Rollup merge of #95753 - ChayimFriedman2:patch-1, r=dtolnay
Correct safety reasoning in `str::make_ascii_{lower,upper}case()`

I don't understand why the previous comment was used (it was inserted in #66564), but it doesn't explain why these functions are safe, only why `str::as_bytes{_mut}()` are safe.

If someone thinks they make perfect sense, I'm fine with closing this PR.
2022-04-07 11:17:16 +02:00
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
Chayim Refael Friedman
b399e7ea7c
Correct safety reasoning in str::make_ascii_{lower,upper}case() 2022-04-07 07:52:07 +03:00
Dylan DPC
939f84ab00
Rollup merge of #95725 - hkBst:patch-1, r=Dylan-DPC
Message: Chunks cannot have a size of zero.

Add a message to the assertion that chunks cannot have a size of zero.
2022-04-07 06:04:54 +02:00
Dylan DPC
eeabdec14c
Rollup merge of #95708 - fee1-dead:doc_whitespace_trim, r=Dylan-DPC
Update documentation for `trim*` and `is_whitespace` to include newlines
2022-04-07 06:04:52 +02:00
Dylan DPC
a2df05d4d5
Rollup merge of #95646 - mgeisler:mention-std-env-var, r=Dylan-DPC
Mention `std::env::var` in `env!`

When searching for how to read an environment variable, I first encountered the `env!` macro. It would have been useful to me if the documentation had included a link to `std::env::var`, which is what I was actually looking for.
2022-04-07 06:04:52 +02:00
Dylan DPC
c331a9293a
Update library/core/src/slice/mod.rs
Co-authored-by: Janusz Marcinkiewicz <virrages@gmail.com>
2022-04-07 04:44:30 +02:00
Dylan DPC
7660b2fd74
remove exclamation mark
Co-authored-by: Janusz Marcinkiewicz <virrages@gmail.com>
2022-04-07 04:44:11 +02:00
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
bjorn3
6a7ff98a99 Revert "Mark Location::caller() as #[inline]"
This reverts commit 6d0b61e2f5.
2022-04-06 18:45:11 +02:00
Martin Geisler
4f08d75375 Mention std::env::var in env!
When searching for how to read an environment variable, I first encountered the `env!` macro. It would have been useful to me if the documentation had included a link to `std::env::var`, which is what I was actually looking for.
2022-04-06 14:23:42 +02:00
Marijn Schouten
2b76da86ef
Message: Chunks cannot have a size of zero.
Add a message to the assertion that chunks cannot have a size of zero.
2022-04-06 09:54:43 +02:00
Deadbeef
9a2d0e53f1
Update documentation for trim* and is_whitespace to include newlines 2022-04-06 11:03:36 +10:00
Pietro Albini
181d28bb61
trivial cfg(bootstrap) changes 2022-04-05 23:18:40 +02:00
Dylan DPC
1e555bac14
Rollup merge of #95663 - notriddle:notriddle/unsafe-fn-closure, r=compiler-errors
diagnostics: give a special note for unsafe fn / Fn/FnOnce/FnMut

Fixes #90073
2022-04-05 22:58:59 +02:00
Dylan DPC
e597d06144
Rollup merge of #95547 - RalfJung:ptr-int-transmutes, r=scottmcm
caution against ptr-to-int transmutes

I don't know how strong of a statement we want to make here, but I am very concerned that the current docs could be interpreted as saying that ptr-to-int transmutes are just as okay as transmuting `*mut T` into an `&mut T`.

Examples [like this](https://github.com/rust-lang/unsafe-code-guidelines/issues/286#issuecomment-1085144431) show that ptr-to-int transmutes are deeply suspicious -- they are either UB, or they don't round-trip properly, or we have to basically say that `transmute` will actively look for pointers and do all the things a ptr-to-int cast does (which includes a global side-effect of marking the pointed-to allocation as 'exposed').

Another alternative might be to simply not talk about them... but we *do* want people to use casts rather than transmutes for this.

Cc `@rust-lang/lang`
2022-04-05 22:58:56 +02:00
Michael Howell
6d18fbbc3f diagnostics: tweak error message to give more rationale to unsafe Fn 2022-04-05 11:13:48 -07:00
Dylan DPC
b5e763ace3
Rollup merge of #95660 - yaahc:panic-docs-update, r=Dylan-DPC
Update panic docs to make it clearer when to use panic vs Result

This is based on a question that came up in one of my [error handling office hours](https://twitter.com/yaahc_/status/1506376624509374467?s=20&t=Sp-cEjrx5kpMdNsAGPOo9w) meetings. I had a user who was fairly familiar with error type design, thiserror and anyhow, and rust in general, but who was still confused about when to use panics vs when to use Result and `Error`.

This will also be cross referenced in an error handling FAQ that I will be creating in the https://github.com/rust-lang/project-error-handling repo shortly.
2022-04-05 15:56:50 +02:00
Michael Howell
dcf7ce8356 Fix bogus tidy errors 2022-04-04 17:54:20 -07:00
Michael Howell
bec8dbdb60 diagnostics: give a special note for unsafe fn / Fn/FnOnce/FnMut
Fixes #90073
2022-04-04 17:39:35 -07:00
Dylan DPC
1c2b4b7af5
Rollup merge of #95630 - declanvk:update-nonnull-doc, r=RalfJung
Update `NonNull` pointer provenance methods' documentation

 - Add links to equivalent methods on raw pointers
2022-04-05 01:53:34 +02:00
Dylan DPC
3bf33b9060
Rollup merge of #95588 - RalfJung:strict-provenance, r=scottmcm
explicitly distinguish pointer::addr and pointer::expose_addr

``@bgeron`` pointed out that the current docs promise that `ptr.addr()` and `ptr as usize` are equivalent. I don't think that is a promise we want to make. (Conceptually, `ptr as usize` might 'escape' the provenance to enable future `usize as ptr` casts, but `ptr.addr()` dertainly does not do that.)

So I propose we word the docs a bit more carefully here. ``@Gankra`` what do you think?
2022-04-05 01:53:31 +02:00
Dylan DPC
a5c81695a9
Rollup merge of #91873 - estebank:mention-impls-for-unsatisfied-trait, r=davidtwco
Mention implementers of unsatisfied trait

When encountering an unsatisfied trait bound, if there are no other
suggestions, mention all the types that *do* implement that trait:

```
error[E0277]: the trait bound `f32: Foo` is not satisfied
  --> $DIR/impl_wf.rs:22:6
   |
LL | impl Baz<f32> for f32 { }
   |      ^^^^^^^^ the trait `Foo` is not implemented for `f32`
   |
   = help: the trait `Foo` is implemented for `i32`
note: required by a bound in `Baz`
  --> $DIR/impl_wf.rs:18:31
   |
LL | trait Baz<U: ?Sized> where U: Foo { }
   |                               ^^^ required by this bound in `Baz`
```
```
error[E0277]: the trait bound `u32: Foo` is not satisfied
  --> $DIR/associated-types-path-2.rs:29:5
   |
LL |     f1(2u32, 4u32);
   |     ^^ the trait `Foo` is not implemented for `u32`
   |
   = help: the trait `Foo` is implemented for `i32`
note: required by a bound in `f1`
  --> $DIR/associated-types-path-2.rs:13:14
   |
LL | pub fn f1<T: Foo>(a: T, x: T::A) {}
   |              ^^^ required by this bound in `f1`
```

Suggest dereferencing in more cases.

Fix #87437, fix #90970.
2022-04-05 01:53:31 +02:00
Jane Lusby
ccb704c73d Update panic docs to make it clearer when to use panic vs Result 2022-04-04 16:09:49 -07:00
Ralf Jung
0252fc9619 explicitly distinguish pointer::addr and pointer::expose_addr 2022-04-04 17:56:12 -04:00
Esteban Kuber
3aac307ca6 Mention implementers of unsatisfied trait
When encountering an unsatisfied trait bound, if there are no other
suggestions, mention all the types that *do* implement that trait:

```
error[E0277]: the trait bound `f32: Foo` is not satisfied
  --> $DIR/impl_wf.rs:22:6
   |
LL | impl Baz<f32> for f32 { }
   |      ^^^^^^^^ the trait `Foo` is not implemented for `f32`
   |
   = help: the following other types implement trait `Foo`:
             Option<T>
             i32
             str
note: required by a bound in `Baz`
  --> $DIR/impl_wf.rs:18:31
   |
LL | trait Baz<U: ?Sized> where U: Foo { }
   |                               ^^^ required by this bound in `Baz`
```

Mention implementers of traits in `ImplObligation`s.

Do not mention other `impl`s for closures, ranges and `?`.
2022-04-04 21:01:42 +00:00
Dylan DPC
4d7d9d422b
Rollup merge of #95438 - m-ou-se:sync-unsafe-cell, r=joshtriplett
Add SyncUnsafeCell.

This adds `SyncUnsafeCell`, which is just `UnsafeCell` except it implements `Sync`.

This was first proposed under the name `RacyUnsafeCell` here: https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/53639#issuecomment-415515748 and here: https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/53639#issuecomment-432741659 and here: https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/53639#issuecomment-888435728

It allows you to create an UnsafeCell that is Sync without having to wrap it in a struct first (and then implement Sync for that struct).

E.g. `static X: SyncUnsafeCell<i32>`. Using a regular `UnsafeCell` as `static` is not possible, because it isn't `Sync`. We have a language workaround for it called `static mut`, but it's nice to be able to use the proper type for such unsafety instead.

It also makes implementing synchronization primitives based on unsafe cells slightly less verbose, because by using `SyncUnsafeCell` for `UnsafeCell`s that are shared between threads, you don't need a separate `impl<..> Sync for ..`. Using this type also clearly documents that the cell is expected to be accessed from multiple threads.
2022-04-04 20:41:32 +02:00
Giles Cope
82e9d9ebac
from_u32(0) can just be default() 2022-04-04 15:53:53 +01:00
Pyry Kontio
1b9cd5bb62 Stabilize total_cmp 2022-04-04 18:57:49 +09:00
Declan Kelly
637592d8c3 Add doc links referencing raw pointer methods 2022-04-03 20:56:35 -07:00
bors
596deceaac Auto merge of #95619 - bjorn3:inline_location_caller, r=scottmcm
Mark Location::caller() as #[inline]

This function gets compiled to a single register move as it actually gets it's return value passed in as argument.
2022-04-03 23:42:31 +00:00
Dylan DPC
1ea6e93610
Rollup merge of #95618 - adamse:master, r=dtolnay
core: document that the align_of* functions return the alignment in bytes
2022-04-03 23:21:45 +02:00
Dylan DPC
f7f2d83eda
Rollup merge of #95617 - saethlin:swap-test-invalidation, r=Dylan-DPC
Fix &mut invalidation in ptr::swap doctest

Under Stacked Borrows with raw pointer tagging, the previous code was UB
because the code which creates the the second pointer borrows the array
through a tag in the borrow stacks below the Unique tag that our first
pointer is based on, thus invalidating the first pointer.

This is not definitely a bug and may never be real UB, but I desperately
want people to write code that conforms to SB with raw pointer tagging
so that I can write good diagnostics. The alternative aliasing models
aren't possible to diagnose well due to state space explosion.
Therefore, it would be super cool if the standard library nudged people
towards writing code that is valid with respect to SB with raw pointer
tagging.

The diagnostics that I want to write are implemented in a branch of Miri and the one for this case is below:
```
error: Undefined Behavior: attempting a read access using <2170> at alloc1068[0x0], but that tag does not exist in the borrow stack for this location
    --> /home/ben/rust/library/core/src/intrinsics.rs:2103:14
     |
2103 |     unsafe { copy_nonoverlapping(src, dst, count) }
     |              ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
     |              |
     |              attempting a read access using <2170> at alloc1068[0x0], but that tag does not exist in the borrow stack for this location
     |              this error occurs as part of an access at alloc1068[0x0..0x8]
     |
     = help: this indicates a potential bug in the program: it performed an invalid operation, but the rules it violated are still experimental
     = help: see https://github.com/rust-lang/unsafe-code-guidelines/blob/master/wip/stacked-borrows.md for further information
help: <2170> was created due to a retag at offsets [0x0..0x10]
    --> ../libcore/src/ptr/mod.rs:640:9
     |
8    | let x = array[0..].as_mut_ptr() as *mut [u32; 2]; // this is `array[0..2]`
     |         ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
help: <2170> was later invalidated due to a retag at offsets [0x0..0x10]
    --> ../libcore/src/ptr/mod.rs:641:9
     |
9    | let y = array[2..].as_mut_ptr() as *mut [u32; 2]; // this is `array[2..4]`
     |         ^^^^^
     = note: inside `std::intrinsics::copy_nonoverlapping::<[u32; 2]>` at /home/ben/rust/library/core/src/intrinsics.rs:2103:14
     = note: inside `std::ptr::swap::<[u32; 2]>` at /home/ben/rust/library/core/src/ptr/mod.rs:685:9
note: inside `main::_doctest_main____libcore_src_ptr_mod_rs_635_0` at ../libcore/src/ptr/mod.rs:12:5
    --> ../libcore/src/ptr/mod.rs:644:5
     |
12   |     ptr::swap(x, y);
     |     ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
note: inside `main` at ../libcore/src/ptr/mod.rs:15:3
    --> ../libcore/src/ptr/mod.rs:647:3
     |
15   | } _doctest_main____libcore_src_ptr_mod_rs_635_0() }
     |   ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^

note: some details are omitted, run with `MIRIFLAGS=-Zmiri-backtrace=full` for a verbose backtrace

error: aborting due to previous error
```
2022-04-03 23:21:43 +02:00
Scott McMurray
4d37d1f422
Refer to the exposed versions of the methods instead
Changing to those doesn't introduce any new unsoundness over the existing ones, so they're the better "if you won't want to think about it" replacement.  But also mention the strict provenance APIs, as that's what we'd rather they use instead.
2022-04-03 13:19:30 -07:00
Ben Kimock
f4a7ed4338 Fix &mut invalidation in ptr::swap doctest
Under Stacked Borrows with raw pointer tagging, the previous code was UB
because the code which creates the the second pointer borrows the array
through a tag in the borrow stacks below the Unique tag that our first
pointer is based on, thus invalidating the first pointer.

This is not definitely a bug and may never be real UB, but I desperately
want people to write code that conforms to SB with raw pointer tagging
so that I can write good diagnostics. The alternative aliasing models
aren't possible to diagnose well due to state space explosion.
Therefore, it would be super cool if the standard library nudged people
towards writing code that is valid with respect to SB with raw pointer
tagging.
2022-04-03 16:16:33 -04:00
bors
2ad4eb207b Auto merge of #95610 - createyourpersonalaccount:derefmut-docfix, r=Dylan-DPC
Improve doc example of DerefMut

It is more illustrative, after using `*x` to modify the field, to show
in the assertion that the field has indeed been modified.
2022-04-03 19:06:20 +00:00
bjorn3
6d0b61e2f5 Mark Location::caller() as #[inline]
This function gets compiled to a single register move as it actually
gets it's return value passed in as argument.
2022-04-03 20:32:39 +02:00
Adam Sandberg Ericsson
9d4d5a4eeb core: document that the align_of* functions return the alignment in bytes 2022-04-03 19:06:21 +01:00
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
The 8472
b0ca46e90d Update safety comments, make split_at_mut unsafe
`&mut [T]` implies validity which automatically makes `ptr::add` ok within its bounds.
But `*mut [T]` does not. Since we still want the benefits of in-bounds pointer arithmetic
`split_at_must` must require the caller to pass valid pointers and therefore it is `unsafe`.
2022-04-03 13:51:38 +02:00
Nikolaos Chatzikonstantinou
53887a5d9e
Improve doc example of DerefMut
It is more illustrative, after using `*x` to modify the field, to show
in the assertion that the field has indeed been modified.
2022-04-03 12:42:19 +09:00
David Morrison
aa67016624 make memcmp return a value of c_int_width instead of i32 2022-04-02 17:21:08 -07:00
Scott McMurray
83595f9242 Fix array::IntoIter::fold to use the optimized Range::fold
It was using `Iterator::by_ref` in the implementation, which ended up pessimizing it enough that, for example, it didn't vectorize when we tried it in the <https://rust-lang.zulipchat.com/#narrow/stream/257879-project-portable-simd/topic/Reducing.20sum.20into.20wider.20types> conversation.

Demonstration that the codegen test doesn't pass on the current nightly: <https://rust.godbolt.org/z/Taxev5eMn>
2022-04-02 14:29:41 -07:00
The 8472
a671fa1b15 add tracking issue 2022-04-02 19:48:24 +02:00
Ben Kimock
4242335b1b Additional *mut [T] methods
Split out from #94247

This adds the following methods to raw slices that already exist on regular slices

* `*mut [T]::is_empty`
* `*mut [T]::split_at_mut`
* `*mut [T]::split_at_unchecked`

These methods reduce the amount of unsafe code needed to migrate ChunksMut and related iterators
to raw slices (#94247)

Co-authored-by:: The 8472 <git@infinite-source.de>
2022-04-02 19:48:24 +02:00
Ralf Jung
dd85a7682c refine wording and describe alternatives 2022-04-02 11:19:29 -04:00
Giles Cope
72a5e7e810
need guidence on testing 2022-04-02 11:13:44 +01:00
Giles Cope
4bfea71637
incorporating feedback 2022-04-02 10:28:33 +01:00
Jacob Pratt
6b75406f5a
Create 2024 edition 2022-04-02 02:45:49 -04:00
Scott McMurray
90722811c8
Deprecate the ptr_to_from_bits feature
The strict provenance APIs are a better version of these, and things like `.addr()` work for the "that cast looks sketchy" case even if the full strict provenance stuff never happens.  So I think it's fine to move away from these, and encourage the others instead.
2022-04-01 18:51:57 -07:00
Dylan DPC
d6f6084b24
Rollup merge of #95556 - declanvk:nonnull-provenance, r=dtolnay
Implement provenance preserving methods on NonNull

### Description
 Add the `addr`, `with_addr`, `map_addr` methods to the `NonNull` type, and map the address type to `NonZeroUsize`.

 ### Motivation
 The `NonNull` type is useful for implementing pointer types which have  the 0-niche. It is currently possible to implement these provenance  preserving functions by calling `NonNull::as_ptr` and `new_unchecked`. The adding these methods makes it more ergonomic.

 ### Testing
 Added a unit test of a non-null tagged pointer type. This is based on some real code I have elsewhere, that currently routes the pointer through a `NonZeroUsize` and back out to produce a usable pointer. I wanted to produce an ideal version of the same tagged pointer struct that preserved pointer provenance.

### Related

Extension of APIs proposed in #95228 . I can also split this out into a separate tracking issue if that is better (though I may need some pointers on how to do that).
2022-04-02 03:34:24 +02:00
Dylan DPC
d7a24003d8
Rollup merge of #95354 - dtolnay:rustc_const_stable, r=lcnr
Handle rustc_const_stable attribute in library feature collector

The library feature collector in [compiler/rustc_passes/src/lib_features.rs](551b4fa395/compiler/rustc_passes/src/lib_features.rs) has only been looking at `#[stable(…)]`, `#[unstable(…)]`, and `#[rustc_const_unstable(…)]` attributes, while ignoring `#[rustc_const_stable(…)]`. The consequences of this were:

- When any const feature got stabilized (changing one or more `rustc_const_unstable` to `rustc_const_stable`), users who had previously enabled that unstable feature using `#![feature(…)]` would get told "unknown feature", rather than rustc's nicer "the feature … has been stable since … and no longer requires an attribute to enable".

    This can be seen in the way that https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/93957#issuecomment-1079794660 failed after rebase:

    ```console
    error[E0635]: unknown feature `const_ptr_offset`
      --> $DIR/offset_from_ub.rs:1:35
       |
    LL | #![feature(const_ptr_offset_from, const_ptr_offset)]
       |                                   ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
    ```

- We weren't enforcing that a particular feature is either stable everywhere or unstable everywhere, and that a feature that has been stabilized has the same stabilization version everywhere, both of which we enforce for the other stability attributes.

This PR updates the library feature collector to handle `rustc_const_stable`, and fixes places in the standard library and test suite where `rustc_const_stable` was being used in a way that does not meet the rules for a stability attribute.
2022-04-02 03:34:21 +02:00
Eduardo Sánchez Muñoz
a8ff1aead8 Avoid duplication of doc comments in std::char constants and functions.
For those consts and functions, only the summary is kept and a reference to the `char` associated const/method is included.

Additionaly, re-exported functions have been converted to function definitions that call the previously re-exported function. This makes it easier to add a deprecated attribute to these functions in the future.
2022-04-01 18:36:53 +02:00
Matthias Krüger
a92286f9c9
Rollup merge of #95546 - autumnontape:allocator-realloc-align-docs, r=Amanieu
add notes about alignment-altering reallocations to Allocator docs

As I said in https://github.com/rust-lang/wg-allocators/issues/97, the fact that calls to `grow`, `grow_zeroed`, and `shrink` may request altered alignments is surprising and may be a pitfall for implementors of `Allocator` if it's left implicit. This pull request adds a note to the "Safety" section of each function's docs making it explicit.
2022-04-01 12:07:05 +02:00
Matthias Krüger
c37aeb0299
Rollup merge of #95528 - RalfJung:miri-is-too-slow, r=scottmcm
skip slow int_log tests in Miri

Iterating over i16::MAX many things takes a long time in Miri, let's not do that.
I added https://github.com/rust-lang/miri/pull/2044 on the Miri side to still give us some test coverage.
2022-04-01 12:07:03 +02:00
Matthias Krüger
3245e61298
Rollup merge of #95516 - RalfJung:ptrs-not-ints, r=dtolnay
ptr_metadata test: avoid ptr-to-int transmutes

Pointers can have provenance, integers don't, so transmuting pointers to integers creates "non-standard" values and it is unclear how well those can be supported (https://github.com/rust-lang/unsafe-code-guidelines/issues/286).

So for this test let's take the safer option and use a pointer type instead. That also makes Miri happy. :)
2022-04-01 12:07:02 +02:00
Declan Kelly
2a827635ba Implement provenance preserving method on NonNull
**Description**
 Add the `addr`, `with_addr, `map_addr` methods to the `NonNull` type,
 and map the address type to `NonZeroUsize`.

 **Motiviation**
 The `NonNull` type is useful for implementing pointer types which have
 the 0-niche. It is currently possible to implement these provenance
 preserving functions by calling `NonNull::as_ptr` and `new_unchecked`.
 The addition of these methods simply make it more ergonomic to use.

 **Testing**
 Added a unit test of a nonnull tagged pointer type. This is based on
 some real code I have elsewhere, that currently routes the pointer
 through a `NonZeroUsize` and back out to produce a usable pointer.
2022-04-01 00:23:09 -07:00
Ralf Jung
2d74528c21 caution against ptr-to-int transmutes 2022-03-31 21:11:37 -04:00
Autumn
e2466821ad add notes about alignment-altering reallocs to Allocator docs 2022-03-31 16:13:19 -07:00
David Tolnay
971ecff70f
Fix feature name of stable parts of strict_provenance 2022-03-31 12:46:30 -07:00
David Tolnay
3c8e7b9e56
Adjust MaybeUninit feature names to avoid changing unstable one 2022-03-31 12:34:49 -07:00
David Tolnay
4246916619
Adjust feature names that disagree on const stabilization version 2022-03-31 12:34:48 -07:00
Ralf Jung
487bd8184f skip slow int_log tests in Miri 2022-03-31 11:48:51 -04:00
Dylan DPC
b4f140f75c
Rollup merge of #95520 - rust-lang:ptrtypo, r=lcnr
Fix typos in core::ptr docs
2022-03-31 17:29:55 +02:00
Dylan DPC
eb0e8c3418
Rollup merge of #95384 - ehuss:doc-target_has_atomic-stabilized, r=Dylan-DPC
Update target_has_atomic documentation for stabilization

`cfg(target_has_atomic)` was stabilized in #93824, but this small note in the docs was not updated at the time.
2022-03-31 17:29:53 +02:00
bstrie
bd49581dcf
Fix typos in core::ptr docs 2022-03-31 09:56:36 -04:00
Ralf Jung
907ba11490 ptr_metadata test: avoid ptr-to-int transmutes 2022-03-31 09:32:30 -04:00
Pyry Kontio
21f1037c58 Further refine the disclaimer about NaN bit patterns. 2022-03-31 18:18:10 +09:00
Pyry Kontio
57eec0ce13 Re-introduce "propagating NaN" to maximum/minimum, add "ignoring NaN" to max/min, add disclaimer about the "propagation". 2022-03-31 17:59:36 +09:00
Pyry Kontio
4ee8b64a81 Improve wording of "NaN as a special value" top level explanation 2022-03-31 11:27:23 +09:00
Pyry Kontio
fff5a06f28 Add references to explanation about portability to f{32,64}::{from,to}_{be,le,ne}_bytes 2022-03-31 02:28:52 +09:00
Pyry Kontio
a965778928 Fix: is_sign_positive -> is_sign_negative 2022-03-31 02:22:26 +09:00
Pyry Kontio
3561187221 Improve floating point documentation:
- Refine the "NaN as a special value" top level explanation of f32
- Refine `const NAN` docstring.
- Refine `fn is_sign_positive` and `fn is_sign_negative` docstrings.
- Refine `fn min` and `fn max` docstrings.
- Refine `fn trunc` docstrings.
- Refine `fn powi` docstrings.
- Refine `fn copysign` docstrings.
- Reword `NaN` and `NAN` as plain "NaN", unless they refer to the specific `const NAN`.
- Reword "a number" to `self` in function docstrings to clarify.
- Remove "Returns NAN if the number is NAN" as this is told to be the default behavior in the top explanation.
- Remove "propagating NaNs", as full propagation (preservation of payloads) is not guaranteed.
2022-03-31 02:10:13 +09:00
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
a91a9eefff clarify that WASM has address spaces 2022-03-29 20:18:28 -04:00
Aria Beingessner
075c576182 fix doc link 2022-03-29 20:18:28 -04:00
Aria Beingessner
378ed259d9 refine the definition of temporal provenance 2022-03-29 20:18:28 -04:00
Aria Beingessner
28576e9c51 mark FIXMES for all the places found that are probably offset_from 2022-03-29 20:18:28 -04:00
Aria Beingessner
5f720fa55e more review fixes to ptr docs 2022-03-29 20:18:28 -04:00
Aria Beingessner
9efcd996d5 Add even more details to top-level pointer docs 2022-03-29 20:18:27 -04:00
Aria Beingessner
7514d760b8 cleanup some of the less terrifying library code 2022-03-29 20:18:27 -04:00
Aria Beingessner
31e1cde4b5 clean up pointer docs 2022-03-29 20:18:27 -04:00
Aria Beingessner
b608df8277 revert changes that cast functions to raw pointers, portability hazard 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
Aria Beingessner
5167b6891c Introduce experimental APIs for conforming to "strict provenance".
This patch series examines the question: how bad would it be if we adopted
an extremely strict pointer provenance model that completely banished all
int<->ptr casts.

The key insight to making this approach even *vaguely* pallatable is the

ptr.with_addr(addr) -> ptr

function, which takes a pointer and an address and creates a new pointer
with that address and the provenance of the input pointer. In this way
the "chain of custody" is completely and dynamically restored, making the
model suitable even for dynamic checkers like CHERI and Miri.

This is not a formal model, but lots of the docs discussing the model
have been updated to try to the *concept* of this design in the hopes
that it can be iterated on.
2022-03-29 20:16:34 -04:00
Mara Bos
f225808f49 Add tracking issue for sync_unsafe_cell. 2022-03-29 19:54:00 +02:00
Mara Bos
750ab0370e Add SyncUnsafeCell. 2022-03-29 19:48:39 +02:00
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
Konrad Borowski
12c085a057 Inline u8::is_utf8_char_boundary 2022-03-28 18:37:11 +02:00
Dylan DPC
9412316ac3
Rollup merge of #88375 - joshlf:patch-3, r=dtolnay
Clarify that ManuallyDrop<T> has same layout as T

This PR implements the documentation change under discussion in https://github.com/rust-lang/unsafe-code-guidelines/issues/302. It should not be approved or merged until the discussion there is resolved.
2022-03-28 04:12:09 +02:00
Eric Huss
182d4b32d5 Update target_has_atomic documentation for stabilization 2022-03-27 15:13:17 -07:00
David Tolnay
2ac9efbe95
Debug print char 0 as '\0' rather than '\u{0}' 2022-03-27 04:49:10 -07:00
David Tolnay
333756f1c5
Bump const_ptr_offset stabilization to 1.61 2022-03-26 21:15:16 -07:00
bors
1d9c262eea Auto merge of #95274 - jendrikw:slice-must-use, r=Dylan-DPC
add #[must_use] to functions of slice and its iterators.

Continuation of #92853.

Tracking issue: #89692.
2022-03-26 20:17:04 +00:00
gilescope
d27454eda5
Using macro to avoid performance hit (thanks LingMan) 2022-03-26 14:53:56 +00:00
Squirrel
e93d03b28a
Update library/core/src/num/mod.rs
Co-authored-by: LingMan <LingMan@users.noreply.github.com>
2022-03-26 14:25:48 +00:00
Giles Cope
5f78bb48ec
Better explanation 2022-03-26 14:25:45 +00:00
Squirrel
e898257c08
Update library/core/src/num/mod.rs
Co-authored-by: Ivan Tham <pickfire@riseup.net>
2022-03-26 14:25:41 +00:00
Giles Cope
70b04fd04d
removed likely 2022-03-26 14:25:39 +00:00
Squirrel
b9923a80c2
Update library/core/src/num/mod.rs
Co-authored-by: LingMan <LingMan@users.noreply.github.com>
2022-03-26 14:25:36 +00:00
Squirrel
48b7cc49a3
Update library/core/src/num/mod.rs
Co-authored-by: LingMan <LingMan@users.noreply.github.com>
2022-03-26 14:25:32 +00:00
Giles Cope
13d85ea880
add likely and clearer comments 2022-03-26 14:25:29 +00:00
Giles Cope
0a11090053
faster parsing when not possible to overflow 2022-03-26 14:25:18 +00:00
Jendrik
5f88c23c39 add #[must_use] to functions of slice and its iterators. 2022-03-26 10:24:25 +01:00
dlup
15134249f4 Remove mention of HashMap<K, V> not offering iter_mut 2022-03-26 02:05:34 -04:00
CAD97
3cd49a0fa8 Enforce that layout size fits in isize in Layout 2022-03-24 23:49:46 -05:00
Dylan DPC
3716c4275f
Rollup merge of #95276 - FoseFx:clippy_trim_split_whitespace, r=flip1995
add diagnostic items for clippy's `trim_split_whitespace`

Adding the following diagnostic items:
 * str_split_whitespace,
 * str_trim,
 * str_trim_start,
 * str_trim_end

They are needed for https://github.com/rust-lang/rust-clippy/pull/8575

r? `@flip1995`
2022-03-25 01:34:32 +01:00
bors
4b133a7e27 Auto merge of #94517 - aDotInTheVoid:inline_wrapping_next_power_two, r=yaahc
Mark `uint::wrapping_next_power_of_two` as `#[inline]`

This brings it in line with `next_power_of_two` and `checked_next_power_of_two`

https://godbolt.org/z/Tr18GnqKj

<details>
<summary> Output as of `rustc 1.61.0-nightly (4ce374923 2022-02-28)` </summary>

```asm
example::npot:
        lea     eax, [rdi - 1]
        movzx   eax, al
        lzcnt   ecx, eax
        add     ecx, -24
        mov     al, -1
        shr     al, cl
        inc     al
        cmp     dil, 2
        movzx   ecx, al
        mov     eax, 1
        cmovae  eax, ecx
        ret

example::cnpot:
        lea     eax, [rdi - 1]
        movzx   eax, al
        lzcnt   ecx, eax
        add     ecx, -24
        mov     al, -1
        shr     al, cl
        xor     ecx, ecx
        cmp     dil, 2
        movzx   edx, al
        cmovb   edx, ecx
        inc     dl
        setne   al
        ret

example::wrapping_next_power_of_two:
        jmp     qword ptr [rip + _ZN4core3num20_$LT$impl$u20$u8$GT$26wrapping_next_power_of_two17hd879a85055735264E@GOTPCREL]
```

</details>
2022-03-24 17:32:40 +00:00
Max Baumann
64ad96dd9a
add diagnostic items for clippy's 2022-03-24 18:18:44 +01:00
Jendrik
dcdde01aa3 add #[must_use] to functions of slice and its iterators. 2022-03-24 15:21:03 +01:00
bors
6970f88db3 Auto merge of #87667 - the8472:document-in-place-iter, r=yaahc
add module-level documentation for vec's in-place iteration

As requested in the last libs team meeting and during previous reviews.

Feel free to point out any gaps you encounter, after all non-obvious things may with hindsight seem obvious to me.

r? `@yaahc`

CC `@steffahn`
2022-03-24 01:43:21 +00:00
Andreas Molzer
d489ea777d Refactor set_ptr_value as with_metadata_of
By reversing the arguments we achieve several clarifications:

- The function closely resembles `cast` but with an argument to
  initialized the metadata. This is easier to teach and answers an long
  outstanding question that had restricted cast to `Sized` targets
  initially. See multiples reviews of
  <https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/47631>
- The 'object identity', in the form or provenance, is now preserved
  from the call receiver 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.
2022-03-23 19:59:37 +01:00
bors
9280445570 Auto merge of #94901 - fee1-dead:destructable, r=oli-obk
Rename `~const Drop` to `~const Destruct`

r? `@oli-obk`

Completely switching to `~const Destructible` would be rather complicated, so it seems best to add it for now and wait for it to be backported to beta in the next release.

The rationale is to prevent complications such as #92149 and #94803 by introducing an entirely new trait. And `~const Destructible` reads a bit better than `~const Drop`. Name Bikesheddable.
2022-03-23 14:04:38 +00:00
asquared31415
0b81628aba ptr::guaranteed_eq doc typo 2022-03-23 04:51:59 -04:00
bors
7b0bf9efc9 Auto merge of #95223 - Dylan-DPC:rollup-idpb7ka, r=Dylan-DPC
Rollup of 6 pull requests

Successful merges:

 - #91608 (Fold aarch64 feature +fp into +neon)
 - #92955 (add perf side effect docs to `Iterator::cloned()`)
 - #94713 (Add u16::is_utf16_surrogate)
 - #95212 (Replace `this.clone()` with `this.create_snapshot_for_diagnostic()`)
 - #95219 (Modernize `alloc-no-oom-handling` test)
 - #95222 (interpret/validity: improve clarity)

Failed merges:

r? `@ghost`
`@rustbot` modify labels: rollup
2022-03-23 03:31:20 +00:00
Dylan DPC
25acd9331e
Rollup merge of #94713 - clarfonthey:is_char_surrogate, r=scottmcm
Add u16::is_utf16_surrogate

Right now, there are methods in the standard library for encoding and decoding UTF-16, but at least for the moment, there aren't any methods specifically for `u16` to help work with UTF-16 data. Since the full logic already exists, this wouldn't really add any code, just expose what's already there.

This method in particular is useful for working with the data returned by Windows `OsStrExt::encode_wide`. Initially, I was planning to also offer a `TryFrom<u16> for char`, but decided against it for now. There is plenty of code in rustc that could be rewritten to use this method, but I only checked within the standard library to replace them.

I think that offering more UTF-16-related methods to u16 would be useful, but I think this one is a good start. For example, one useful method might be `u16::is_pattern_whitespace`, which would check if something is the Unicode `Pattern_Whitespace` category. We can get away with this because all of the `Pattern_Whitespace` characters are in the basic multilingual plane, and hence we don't need to check for surrogates.
2022-03-23 03:05:31 +01:00
bors
2b50739b49 Auto merge of #95088 - bjorn3:fix_test_variadic_fnptr, r=dtolnay
Don't declare test_variadic_fnptr with two conflicting signatures

It is UB for LLVM and results in a compile error for Cranelift.

cc https://github.com/bjorn3/rustc_codegen_cranelift/issues/806
Fixes https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/66690
2022-03-23 00:50:33 +00:00
bjorn3
4af755baf5 Limit test_variadic_fnptr to unix 2022-03-22 22:27:13 +01:00
Andre Bogus
1fb43f6662 add perf side effect docs to Iterator::cloned() 2022-03-22 19:07:23 +01:00
bors
3ea44938e2 Auto merge of #95107 - r00ster91:fmt, r=joshtriplett
Improve formatting in macro

CC `@dtolnay`
2022-03-22 08:47:16 +00:00
ltdk
d5803678c1 Add u16::is_utf16_surrogate 2022-03-21 22:51:32 -04:00
The8472
a1a602adde add module-level documentation for vec's in-place iteration 2022-03-21 22:29:38 +01:00
Deadbeef
1f3ee7f32e
Rename ~const Drop to ~const Destruct 2022-03-21 17:04:03 +11:00
Deadbeef
4df2a28aee
Add Destructible for replacing ~const Drop 2022-03-21 17:04:02 +11:00
bjorn3
56939ffe7d Don't declare test_variadic_fnptr with two conflicting signatures
It is UB for LLVM and results in a compile error for Cranelift
2022-03-20 21:09:35 +01:00
Matthias Krüger
9725caf9e9
Rollup merge of #95110 - wmstack:patch-1, r=Dylan-DPC
Provide more useful documentation of conversion methods

I thought that the documentation for these methods needed to be a bit more explanatory for new users. For advanced users, the comments are relatively unnecessary. I think it would be useful to explain precisely what the method does. As a new user, when you see the `into` method, where the type is inferred, if you are new you don't even know what you convert to, because it is implicit. I believe this can help new users understand.
2022-03-20 09:15:01 +01:00
Matthias Krüger
24a7aad082
Rollup merge of #94989 - compiler-errors:stream-alias, r=Dylan-DPC
Add Stream alias for AsyncIterator

Fixes #94965
2022-03-20 09:15:00 +01:00
bors
f2661cfe34 Auto merge of #94372 - erikdesjardins:asrefinl, r=dtolnay
Add #[inline] to trivial AsRef/AsMut impls

These appeared uninlined in some perf runs, but they're trivial.

r? `@ghost`
2022-03-19 22:32:28 +00:00
r00ster91
7e3fd5957b Improve formatting in macro 2022-03-19 09:44:52 +01:00
Waleed Dahshan
edee46e257
Provide more useful documentation of conversion methods
I thought that the documentation for these methods needed to be a bit more explanatory for new users. For advanced users, the comments are relatively unnecessary. I think it would be useful to explain precisely what the method does. As a new user, when you see the `into` method, where the type is inferred, if you are new you don't even know what you convert to, because it is implicit. I believe this can help new users understand.
2022-03-19 18:52:30 +11:00
Matthias Krüger
9c40db22ff
Rollup merge of #95083 - danielhenrymantilla:patch-2, r=RalfJung
Document that `Option<extern "abi" fn>` discriminant elision applies for any ABI

The current phrasing was not very clear on that aspect.

r? `@RalfJung`

`@rustbot` modify labels: A-docs A-ffi
2022-03-18 21:50:50 +01:00
Matthias Krüger
4ead6d9dc7
Rollup merge of #95017 - zachs18:cmp_ordering_derive_eq, r=Dylan-DPC
Derive Eq for std::cmp::Ordering, instead of using manual impl.

This allows consts of type Ordering to be used in patterns, and with feature(adt_const_params) allows using `Ordering` as a const generic parameter.

Currently, `std::cmp::Ordering` implements `Eq` using a manually written `impl Eq for Ordering {}`, instead of `derive(Eq)`. This means that it does not implement `StructuralEq`.

This commit removes the manually written impl, and adds `derive(Eq)` to `Ordering`, so that it will implement `StructuralEq`.
2022-03-18 21:50:48 +01:00
Matthias Krüger
c183d4a510
Rollup merge of #94115 - scottmcm:iter-process-by-ref, r=yaahc
Let `try_collect` take advantage of `try_fold` overrides

No public API changes.

With this change, `try_collect` (#94047) is no longer going through the `impl Iterator for &mut impl Iterator`, and thus will be able to use `try_fold` overrides instead of being forced through `next` for every element.

Here's the test added, to see that it fails before this PR (once a new enough nightly is out): https://play.rust-lang.org/?version=nightly&mode=debug&edition=2021&gist=462f2896f2fed2c238ee63ca1a7e7c56

This might as well go to the same person as my last `try_process` PR  (#93572), so
r? ``@yaahc``
2022-03-18 21:50:44 +01:00
Daniel Henry-Mantilla
156734dda0
Document that Option<extern "abi" fn> discriminant elision applies for any ABI
The current phrasing was not very clear on that aspect.
2022-03-18 18:14:34 +01:00
Dylan DPC
270a41c33e
Rollup merge of #94960 - codehorseman:master, r=oli-obk
Fix many spelling mistakes

Signed-off-by: codehorseman <cricis@yeah.net>
2022-03-17 22:55:05 +01:00
Dylan DPC
07121c88ad
Rollup merge of #93745 - tarcieri:stabilize-adx, r=cjgillot
Stabilize ADX target feature

This is a continuation of #60109, which noted that while the ADX intrinsics were stabilized, the corresponding target feature never was.

This PR follows the same general structure and stabilizes the ADX target feature.

See also https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/44839 - tracking issue for target feature
2022-03-17 22:55:01 +01:00
Zachary S
b13b495b91 Add test for StructuralEq for std::cmp::Ordering.
Added test in library/core/tests/cmp.rs that ensures that `const`s of type `Ordering`s can be used in patterns.
2022-03-16 14:01:48 -05:00
Zachary S
ba611d55f3 Derive Eq for std::cmp::Ordering, instead of using manual impl.
This allows consts of type Ordering to be used in patterns, and (with feature(adt_const_params)) allows using Orderings as const generic parameters.
2022-03-16 11:36:31 -05:00
codehorseman
01dbfb3eb2 resolve the conflict in compiler/rustc_session/src/parse.rs
Signed-off-by: codehorseman <cricis@yeah.net>
2022-03-16 20:12:30 +08:00
Michael Goulet
8a75d55514 Add Stream alias for AsyncIterator 2022-03-15 20:59:13 -07:00
Dylan DPC
f986c7434a
Rollup merge of #94868 - dtolnay:noblock, r=Dylan-DPC
Format core and std macro rules, removing needless surrounding blocks

Many of the asserting and printing macros in `core` and `std` are written with prehistoric-looking formatting, like this:

335ffbfa54/library/std/src/macros.rs (L96-L101)

In modern Rust style this would conventionally be written as follows instead, always using braces and a trailing semicolon on the macro arms:

af53809c87/library/std/src/macros.rs (L98-L105)

Getting rid of the unneeded braces inside the expansion reduces extraneous indentation in macro-expanded code. For example:

```rust
println!("repro {}", true);
```

```rust
// before:

{
    ::std::io::_print(
        ::core::fmt::Arguments::new_v1(
            &["repro ", "\n"],
            &[::core::fmt::ArgumentV1::new_display(&true)],
        ),
    );
};
```

```rust
// after:

::std::io::_print(
    ::core::fmt::Arguments::new_v1(
        &["repro ", "\n"],
        &[::core::fmt::ArgumentV1::new_display(&true)],
    ),
);
```
2022-03-16 03:34:32 +01:00
mbartlett21
91eda96e38 Unstably constify impl IntoIterator for I: ~const Iterator 2022-03-15 06:07:18 +00:00
Tony Arcieri
78567df575 Stabilize ADX target feature
This is a continuation of #60109, which noted that while the ADX
intrinsics were stabilized, the corresponding target feature never was.

This PR follows the same general structure and stabilizes the ADX target
feature.
2022-03-14 18:56:39 -06:00
Matthias Krüger
0e423932f8
Rollup merge of #90621 - adamgemmell:dev/stabilise-target-feature, r=Amanieu
Stabilise `aarch64_target_feature`

This PR stabilises `aarch64_target_feature` - see https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/90620
2022-03-14 17:24:56 +01:00
Adam Gemmell
5a5621791f Stabilise aarch64_target_feature 2022-03-14 11:02:50 +00:00
bors
e95b10ba4a Auto merge of #94916 - matthiaskrgr:rollup-s6zedfl, r=matthiaskrgr
Rollup of 5 pull requests

Successful merges:

 - #93292 (Implement `BITS` constant for non-zero integers)
 - #94777 (Update armv7-unknown-linux-uclibceabi platform support page.)
 - #94816 (Add `Atomic*::get_mut_slice`)
 - #94844 (Reduce rustbuild bloat caused by serde_derive)
 - #94907 (Omit stdarch test crates from the rust-src component)

Failed merges:

r? `@ghost`
`@rustbot` modify labels: rollup
2022-03-13 20:59:29 +00:00
Matthias Krüger
8dad2d172c
Rollup merge of #94816 - WaffleLapkin:atomic_get_mut_slice, r=Mark-Simulacrum
Add `Atomic*::get_mut_slice`

This PR adds the inverse of `Atomic*::from_mut_slice` introduced in #94384 with the following API:
```rust
// core::sync::atomic

impl Atomic* {
    fn get_mut_slice(this: &mut [Self]) -> &mut [*];
}
```

cc `@cuviper`

-----

For now I've used the same tracking issue as `Atomic*::from_mut_slice`, should I open a new one?
2022-03-13 20:02:00 +01:00
Matthias Krüger
2f9bc56e5a
Rollup merge of #93292 - nvzqz:nonzero-bits, r=dtolnay
Implement `BITS` constant for non-zero integers

This adds the associated [`BITS`](https://doc.rust-lang.org/stable/std/primitive.usize.html#associatedconstant.BITS) constant to `NonZero{U,I}{8,16,32,64,128,size}`.

This is useful when a type alias refers to either a regular or non-zero integer.
2022-03-13 20:01:58 +01:00
bors
21b0325c68 Auto merge of #94738 - Urgau:rustbuild-check-cfg-values, r=Mark-Simulacrum
Enable conditional checking of values in the Rust codebase

This pull-request enable conditional checking of (well known) values in the Rust codebase.

Well known values were added in https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/94362. All the `target_*` values are taken from all the built-in targets which is why some extra values were needed do be added as they are not (yet ?) defined in any built-in targets.

r? `@Mark-Simulacrum`
2022-03-13 18:34:00 +00:00
Jubilee Young
2b1f249ecf Use reduce_sum in as_simd example 2022-03-12 16:43:38 -08:00
Nikolai Vazquez
6b5acf0d40 Use Self::BITS in log2 implementation 2022-03-12 08:01:35 -05:00
Nikolai Vazquez
1d13de6867 Implement BITS constant for non-zero integers 2022-03-12 08:00:45 -05:00
David Tolnay
af53809c87
Format core and std macro rules, removing needless surrounding blocks 2022-03-11 15:26:51 -08:00
Dylan DPC
ad513548ce
Rollup merge of #94838 - antonok-edm:float-parse-docs, r=Dylan-DPC
Make float parsing docs more comprehensive

I was working on some code with some specialized restrictions on float parsing. I noticed the doc comments for `f32::from_str` and `f64::from_str` were missing several cases of valid inputs that are otherwise difficult to discover without looking at source code.

I'm not sure if the doc comments were initially intended to contain a comprehensive description of valid inputs, but I figured it's useful to include these extra cases for reference.
2022-03-11 20:29:46 +01:00
Dylan DPC
fedf70acb1
Rollup merge of #94818 - yoshuawuyts:into-future-associated-type, r=joshtriplett
Rename `IntoFuture::Future` to `IntoFuture::IntoFuture`

Ref: https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/67644#issuecomment-1051401459

This renames `IntoFuture::Future` to `IntoFuture::IntoFuture`. This adds the `Into*` prefix to the associated type, similar to the [`IntoIterator::IntoIter`](https://doc.rust-lang.org/std/iter/trait.IntoIterator.html#associatedtype.IntoIter) associated type. It's my mistake we didn't do so in the first place. This fixes that and brings the two closer together. Thanks!

### References
__`IntoIterator` trait def__
```rust
pub trait IntoIterator {
    type Item;
    type IntoIter: Iterator<Item = Self::Item>;
    fn into_iter(self) -> Self::IntoIter;
}
```
__`IntoFuture` trait def__
```rust
pub trait IntoFuture {
    type Output;
    type IntoFuture: Future<Output = Self::Output>; // Prior to this PR: `type Future:`
    fn into_future(self) -> Self::IntoFuture;
}
```

cc/ `@eholk` `@rust-lang/wg-async`
2022-03-11 20:29:45 +01:00
Dylan DPC
85056107fa
Rollup merge of #87618 - GuillaumeGomez:std-char-types-doc, r=jyn514,camelid
Add missing documentation for std::char types
2022-03-11 20:29:42 +01:00
Dylan DPC
fb3d126458
Rollup merge of #94842 - tspiteri:there-is-no-try, r=Dylan-DPC
Remove unnecessary try_opt for operations that cannot fail

As indicated in the added comments, some operation cannot overflow, so using `try_opt!` for them is unnecessary.
2022-03-11 13:38:39 +01:00
Dylan DPC
cdd6d39ecc
Rollup merge of #94776 - martingms:optimize-escape-default, r=nnethercote
Optimize ascii::escape_default

`ascii::escape_default` showed up as a hot function when compiling `deunicode-1.3.1` in `@nnethercote's` [analysis](https://hackmd.io/mxdn4U58Su-UQXwzOHpHag) of `@lqd's` [rustc-benchmarking-data](https://github.com/lqd/rustc-benchmarking-data).
After taking a look at the generated assembly it looked like a LUT-based approach could be faster for `hexify()`-ing ascii characters, so that's what this PR implements

The patch looks like it provides about a 1-2% improvement in instructions for that particular crate. This should definitely be verified with a perf run as I'm still getting used to the `rustc-perf` tooling and might easily have made an error!
2022-03-11 13:38:37 +01:00
Trevor Spiteri
ed10356d52 remove unnecessary try_opt for operations that cannot fail 2022-03-11 11:07:45 +01:00
Anton Lazarev
4c17217f99
make float parsing docs more comprehensive 2022-03-10 22:26:30 -08:00
Dylan DPC
6d66020594
Rollup merge of #94765 - m-ou-se:is-some-and, r=Dylan-DPC
Rename is_{some,ok,err}_with to is_{some,ok,err}_and.

This renames `is_{some,ok,err}_with` to `is_{some,ok,err}_and`. This was discussed on the [tracking issue](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/93050).
2022-03-11 03:32:04 +01:00
Dylan DPC
d58c69ae96
Rollup merge of #93293 - nvzqz:nonzero-min-max, r=joshtriplett
Implement `MIN`/`MAX` constants for non-zero integers

This adds the associated [`MIN`](https://doc.rust-lang.org/stable/std/primitive.usize.html#associatedconstant.MIN)/[`MAX`](https://doc.rust-lang.org/stable/std/primitive.usize.html#associatedconstant.MAX) constants to `NonZero{U,I}{8,16,32,64,128,size}`, requested in #89065.

This reimplements #89077 due that PR being stagnant for 4 months. I am fine with closing this in favor of that one if the author revisits it. If so, I'd like to see that PR have the docs link to the `$Int`'s constants.
2022-03-11 03:32:02 +01:00
Nikolai Vazquez
ecb7927050 Move note about 0 gap to signed integers
Was accidentally placed on unsigned integers, where it is not relevant.
2022-03-10 17:52:48 -05:00
Dylan DPC
3979e150cc
Rollup merge of #94790 - RalfJung:portable-simd-miri, r=Dylan-DPC
enable portable-simd doctests in Miri

With https://github.com/rust-lang/miri/pull/2013 we shouldn't need to disable these tests any more. :)
2022-03-10 23:13:01 +01:00
Dylan DPC
5a7f09d9a3
Rollup merge of #93950 - T-O-R-U-S:use-modern-formatting-for-format!-macros, r=Mark-Simulacrum
Use modern formatting for format! macros

This updates the standard library's documentation to use the new format_args syntax.
The documentation is worthwhile to update as it should be more idiomatic
(particularly for features like this, which are nice for users to get acquainted
with). The general codebase is likely more hassle than benefit to update: it'll
hurt git blame, and generally updates can be done by folks updating the code if
(and when) that makes things more readable with the new format.

A few places in the compiler and library code are updated (mostly just due to
already having been done when this commit was first authored).

`eprintln!("{}", e)` becomes `eprintln!("{e}")`, but `eprintln!("{}", e.kind())` remains untouched.
2022-03-10 23:12:57 +01:00
Maybe Waffle
ecf46d1074 Add Atomic*::get_mut_slice
Just as `get_mut` is the inverse of `from_mut`, `get_mut_slice` is the
inverse of `from_mut_slice`.
2022-03-11 00:31:19 +04:00
Yoshua Wuyts
3f2cb6eba1 Rename IntoFuture::Future to IntoFuture::IntoFuture 2022-03-10 20:51:52 +01:00
Matthias Krüger
b5127202b2
Rollup merge of #94587 - JKAnderson409:issue-90107-fix, r=scottmcm
Document new recommended use of `FromIterator::from_iter`

#90107
Most of the added prose was paraphrased from the links provided in the issue. The suggested `VecDeque` example seemed to make the point well enough so I just used that.
2022-03-10 19:00:06 +01:00
T-O-R-U-S
72a25d05bf Use implicit capture syntax in format_args
This updates the standard library's documentation to use the new syntax. The
documentation is worthwhile to update as it should be more idiomatic
(particularly for features like this, which are nice for users to get acquainted
with). The general codebase is likely more hassle than benefit to update: it'll
hurt git blame, and generally updates can be done by folks updating the code if
(and when) that makes things more readable with the new format.

A few places in the compiler and library code are updated (mostly just due to
already having been done when this commit was first authored).
2022-03-10 10:23:40 -05:00
Martin Gammelsæter
c62ab422d0 Inline <EscapeDefault as Iterator>::next 2022-03-10 15:35:22 +01:00
Matthias Krüger
e7281d08de
Rollup merge of #94746 - notriddle:notriddle/method-rustc-on-unimplemented, r=davidtwco
diagnostics: use rustc_on_unimplemented to recommend `[].iter()`

To make this work, the `#[rustc_on_unimplemented]` data needs to be used to
report method resolution errors, which is most of what this commit does.

Fixes #94581
2022-03-10 12:20:53 +01:00
Matthias Krüger
fe034cb43b
Rollup merge of #94657 - fee1-dead:const_slice_index, r=oli-obk
Constify `Index{,Mut}` for `[T]`, `str`, and `[T; N]`

Several panic functions were rewired (via `const_eval_select`) to simpler implementations that do not require formatting for compile-time usage.

r? ```@oli-obk```
2022-03-10 12:20:52 +01:00
Matthias Krüger
313a668234
Rollup merge of #94635 - jhpratt:merge-deprecated-attrs, r=davidtwco
Merge `#[deprecated]` and `#[rustc_deprecated]`

The first commit makes "reason" an alias for "note" in `#[rustc_deprecated]`, while still prohibiting it in `#[deprecated]`.

The second commit changes "suggestion" to not just be a feature of `#[rustc_deprecated]`. This is placed behind the new `deprecated_suggestion` feature. This needs a tracking issue; let me know if this PR will be approved and I can create one.

The third commit is what permits `#[deprecated]` to be used when `#![feature(staged_api)]` is enabled. This isn't yet used in stdlib (only tests), as it would require duplicating all deprecation attributes until a bootstrap occurs. I intend to submit a follow-up PR that replaces all uses and removes the remaining `#[rustc_deprecated]` code after the next bootstrap.

`@rustbot` label +T-libs-api +C-feature-request +A-attributes +S-waiting-on-review
2022-03-10 12:20:51 +01:00
Scott McMurray
7ef74bc8b9 Let try_collect take advantage of try_fold overrides
Without this change it's going through `&mut impl Iterator`, which handles `?Sized` and thus currently can't forward generics.

Here's the test added, to see that it fails before this PR (once a new enough nightly is out): https://play.rust-lang.org/?version=nightly&mode=debug&edition=2021&gist=462f2896f2fed2c238ee63ca1a7e7c56
2022-03-10 00:16:06 -08:00
Ralf Jung
29d979fb3c enable portable-simd doctests in Miri 2022-03-09 19:31:25 -05:00
Matthias Krüger
d5c05fcc8a
Rollup merge of #93057 - frengor:iter_collect_into, r=m-ou-se
Add Iterator::collect_into

This PR adds `Iterator::collect_into` as proposed by ``@cormacrelf`` in #48597 (see https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/48597#issuecomment-842083688).
Followup of #92982.

This adds the following method to the Iterator trait:

```rust
fn collect_into<E: Extend<Self::Item>>(self, collection: &mut E) -> &mut E
```
2022-03-09 23:14:11 +01:00
Matthias Krüger
2567d0f883
Rollup merge of #92541 - asquared31415:from-docs, r=m-ou-se
Mention intent of `From` trait in its docs

This pr is a docs modification to add to the documentation of the `From` trait a note about its intent as a perfect conversion.  This is already stated in the `TryFrom` docs so this is simply adding that information in a more visible way.
2022-03-09 23:14:10 +01:00
Matthias Krüger
c0259626b6
Rollup merge of #91804 - woppopo:const_clone, r=oli-obk
Make some `Clone` impls `const`

Tracking issue: #91805
`Clone::clone_from` and some impls (Option, Result) bounded on `~const Drop`.

```rust
// core::clone
impl const Clone for INTEGER
impl const Clone for FLOAT
impl const Clone for bool
impl const Clone for char
impl const Clone for !
impl<T: ?Sized> const Clone for *const T
impl<T: ?Sized> const Clone for *mut T
impl<T: ?Sized> const Clone for &T

// core::option
impl<T> const Clone for Option<T>
where
    T: ~const Clone + ~const Drop

// core::result
impl<T, E> const Clone for Result<T, E>
where
    T: ~const Clone + ~const Drop,
    E: ~const Clone + ~const Drop,

// core::convert
impl const Clone for Infallible

// core::ptr
impl<T: ?Sized> const Clone for NonNull<T>
impl<T: ?Sized> const Clone for Unique<T>
```
2022-03-09 23:14:09 +01:00
Jacob Pratt
5636655d0f
New deprecated_suggestion feature, use in tests 2022-03-09 16:32:47 -05:00
Martin Gammelsæter
7f4f4fc34c Use indexing instead of .get_unchecked() for LUT lookup
Based on @paolobarbolini's tip that the unsafe block was unnecessary in
this case.

Not much left of `hexify()` after this, so seemed clearer to just inline
it.
2022-03-09 22:21:35 +01:00
fren_gor
63eddb3e68
Add tracking issue 2022-03-09 21:12:07 +01:00
Michael Howell
32d7f8145a diagnostics: use rustc_on_unimplemented to recommend [].iter()
To make this work, the `#[rustc_on_unimplemented]` data needs to be used to
report method resolution errors, which is most of what this commit does.

Fixes #94581
2022-03-09 09:52:55 -07:00
Martin Gammelsæter
876142417c Optimize ascii::escape_default by using a digit LUT 2022-03-09 17:10:34 +01:00
Mara Bos
7c7411fb5d Rename is_{some,ok,err}_with to is_{some,ok,err}_and. 2022-03-09 11:20:36 +01:00
Loïc BRANSTETT
e3ea59ada5 Remove unexpected #[cfg(target_pointer_width = "8")] in tests 2022-03-09 00:30:17 +01:00
Dylan DPC
ff54e34463
Rollup merge of #94723 - dtolnay:mustuse, r=Mark-Simulacrum
Add core::hint::must_use

The example code in this documentation is minimized from a real-world situation in the `anyhow` crate where this function would have been valuable.

Having this provided by the standard library is especially useful for proc macros, even more than for macro_rules. That's because proc macro crates aren't allowed to export anything other than macros, so they couldn't make their own `must_use` function for their macro-generated code to call.

<br>

## Rendered documentation

> An identity function that causes an `unused_must_use` warning to be triggered if the given value is not used (returned, stored in a variable, etc) by the caller.
>
> This is primarily intended for use in macro-generated code, in which a [`#[must_use]` attribute][must_use] either on a type or a function would not be convenient.
>
> [must_use]: https://doc.rust-lang.org/reference/attributes/diagnostics.html#the-must_use-attribute
>
> ### Example
>
> ```rust
> #![feature(hint_must_use)]
>
> use core::fmt;
>
> pub struct Error(/* ... */);
>
> #[macro_export]
> macro_rules! make_error {
>     ($($args:expr),*) => {
>         core::hint::must_use({
>             let error = $crate::make_error(core::format_args!($($args),*));
>             error
>         })
>     };
> }
>
> // Implementation detail of make_error! macro.
> #[doc(hidden)]
> pub fn make_error(args: fmt::Arguments<'_>) -> Error {
>     Error(/* ... */)
> }
>
> fn demo() -> Option<Error> {
>     if true {
>         // Oops, meant to write `return Some(make_error!("..."));`
>         Some(make_error!("..."));
>     }
>     None
> }
> ```
>
> In the above example, we'd like an `unused_must_use` lint to apply to the value created by `make_error!`. However, neither `#[must_use]` on a struct nor `#[must_use]` on a function is appropriate here, so the macro expands using `core::hint::must_use` instead.
>
> - We wouldn't want `#[must_use]` on the `struct Error` because that would make the following unproblematic code trigger a warning:
>
>   ```rust
>   fn f(arg: &str) -> Result<(), Error>
>
>   #[test]
>   fn t() {
>       // Assert that `f` returns error if passed an empty string.
>       // A value of type `Error` is unused here but that's not a problem.
>       f("").unwrap_err();
>   }
>   ```
>
> - Using `#[must_use]` on `fn make_error` can't help because the return value *is* used, as the right-hand side of a `let` statement. The `let` statement looks useless but is in fact necessary for ensuring that temporaries within the `format_args` expansion are not kept alive past the creation of the `Error`, as keeping them alive past that point can cause autotrait issues in async code:
>
>   ```rust
>   async fn f() {
>       // Using `let` inside the make_error expansion causes temporaries like
>       // `unsync()` to drop at the semicolon of that `let` statement, which
>       // is prior to the await point. They would otherwise stay around until
>       // the semicolon on *this* statement, which is after the await point,
>       // and the enclosing Future would not implement Send.
>       log(make_error!("look: {:p}", unsync())).await;
>   }
>
>   async fn log(error: Error) {/* ... */}
>
>   // Returns something without a Sync impl.
>   fn unsync() -> *const () {
>       0 as *const ()
>   }
>   ```
2022-03-08 22:43:59 +01:00
David Tolnay
b2473e988f
Add core::hint::must_use 2022-03-08 10:58:03 -08:00
Matthias Krüger
aec535f805
Rollup merge of #94559 - m-ou-se:thread-scope-spawn-closure-without-arg, r=Mark-Simulacrum
Remove argument from closure in thread::Scope::spawn.

This implements ```@danielhenrymantilla's``` [suggestion](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/93203#issuecomment-1040798286) for improving the scoped threads interface.

Summary:

The `Scope` type gets an extra lifetime argument, which represents basically its own lifetime that will be used in `&'scope Scope<'scope, 'env>`:

```diff
- pub struct Scope<'env> { .. };
+ pub struct Scope<'scope, 'env: 'scope> { .. }

  pub fn scope<'env, F, T>(f: F) -> T
  where
-     F: FnOnce(&Scope<'env>) -> T;
+     F: for<'scope> FnOnce(&'scope Scope<'scope, 'env>) -> T;
```

This simplifies the `spawn` function, which now no longer passes an argument to the closure you give it, and now uses the `'scope` lifetime for everything:

```diff
-     pub fn spawn<'scope, F, T>(&'scope self, f: F) -> ScopedJoinHandle<'scope, T>
+     pub fn spawn<F, T>(&'scope self, f: F) -> ScopedJoinHandle<'scope, T>
      where
-         F: FnOnce(&Scope<'env>) -> T + Send + 'env,
+         F: FnOnce() -> T + Send + 'scope,
-         T: Send + 'env;
+         T: Send + 'scope;
```

The only difference the user will notice, is that their closure now takes no arguments anymore, even when spawning threads from spawned threads:

```diff
  thread::scope(|s| {
-     s.spawn(|_| {
+     s.spawn(|| {
          ...
      });
-     s.spawn(|s| {
+     s.spawn(|| {
          ...
-         s.spawn(|_| ...);
+         s.spawn(|| ...);
      });
  });
```

<details><summary>And, as a bonus, errors get <em>slightly</em> better because now any lifetime issues point to the outermost <code>s</code> (since there is only one <code>s</code>), rather than the innermost <code>s</code>, making it clear that the lifetime lasts for the entire <code>thread::scope</code>.

</summary>

```diff
  error[E0373]: closure may outlive the current function, but it borrows `a`, which is owned by the current function
   --> src/main.rs:9:21
    |
- 7 |         s.spawn(|s| {
-   |                  - has type `&Scope<'1>`
+ 6 |     thread::scope(|s| {
+   |                    - lifetime `'1` appears in the type of `s`
  9 |             s.spawn(|| println!("{:?}", a)); // might run after `a` is dropped
    |                     ^^                  - `a` is borrowed here
    |                     |
    |                     may outlive borrowed value `a`
    |
  note: function requires argument type to outlive `'1`
   --> src/main.rs:9:13
    |
  9 |             s.spawn(|| println!("{:?}", a)); // might run after `a` is dropped
    |             ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
  help: to force the closure to take ownership of `a` (and any other referenced variables), use the `move` keyword
    |
  9 |             s.spawn(move || println!("{:?}", a)); // might run after `a` is dropped
    |                     ++++
"
```
</details>

The downside is that the signature of `scope` and `Scope` gets slightly more complex, but in most cases the user wouldn't need to write those, as they just use the argument provided by `thread::scope` without having to name its type.

Another downside is that this does not work nicely in Rust 2015 and Rust 2018, since in those editions, `s` would be captured by reference and not by copy. In those editions, the user would need to use `move ||` to capture `s` by copy. (Which is what the compiler suggests in the error.)
2022-03-08 11:04:51 +01:00
Matthias Krüger
e22331ce02
Rollup merge of #92385 - clarfonthey:const_option, r=fee1-dead
Add Result::{ok, err, and, or, unwrap_or} as const

Already opened tracking issue #92384.

I don't think that this should actually cause any issues as long as the constness is unstable, but we may want to double-check that this doesn't get interpreted as a weird `Drop` bound even for non-const usages.
2022-03-08 11:04:50 +01:00
Eric Holk
8700b45b67 Stabilize const_impl_trait as well 2022-03-07 08:47:18 -08:00
Eric Holk
7723506d13 Stabilize const_fn_fn_ptr_basics and const_fn_trait_bound 2022-03-07 08:47:15 -08:00
Guillaume Gomez
5b5649fd73 Add missing documentation for std::char types 2022-03-07 13:59:10 +01:00
Matthias Krüger
e8f38a03b5
Rollup merge of #94671 - csmoe:pin-typo, r=m-ou-se
fix pin doc typo

r? `@m-ou-se`
2022-03-06 19:08:38 +01:00
csmoe
bf089331b4 fix pin doc typo 2022-03-06 21:40:30 +08:00
Deadbeef
4654a91001
Constify slice index for strings 2022-03-06 17:28:50 +11:00
Gentoli
62a65945b7
doc: Iterator::partition use partial type hints 2022-03-05 19:40:40 -05:00
Pointerbender
613f569080 partially stabilize (const_)slice_ptr_len by stabilizing NonNull::len #71146 2022-03-05 13:37:16 +01:00
Dylan DPC
a3fe63e9fe
Rollup merge of #94620 - pierwill:partialord-constistency, r=yaahc
Edit docs on consistency of `PartialOrd` and `PartialEq`

Use ordered list to make the information about implementations more readable.
2022-03-05 04:46:38 +01:00
bors
69f11fff33 Auto merge of #94628 - Dylan-DPC:rollup-v2slupe, r=Dylan-DPC
Rollup of 5 pull requests

Successful merges:

 - #94362 (Add well known values to `--check-cfg` implementation)
 - #94577 (only disable SIMD for doctests in Miri (not for the stdlib build itself))
 - #94595 (Fix invalid `unresolved imports` errors for a single-segment import)
 - #94596 (Delay bug in expr adjustment when check_expr is called multiple times)
 - #94618 (Don't round stack size up for created threads in Windows)

Failed merges:

r? `@ghost`
`@rustbot` modify labels: rollup
2022-03-05 00:15:54 +00:00
Tomasz Miąsko
a8acfa8986 Implement Copy, Clone, PartialEq and Eq for core::fmt::Alignment
Alignment is a fieldless exhaustive enum, so it is already possible to
clone and compare it by matching, but it is inconvenient to do so. For
example, if one would like to create a struct describing a formatter
configuration and provide a clone implementation:

```rust
pub struct Format {
    fill: char,
    width: Option<usize>,
    align: fmt::Alignment,
}

impl Clone for Format {
    fn clone(&self) -> Self {
        Format {
            align: match self.align {
                fmt::Alignment::Left => fmt::Alignment::Left,
                fmt::Alignment::Right => fmt::Alignment::Right,
                fmt::Alignment::Center => fmt::Alignment::Center,
            },
            .. *self
        }
    }
}
```

Derive Copy, Clone, PartialEq, and Eq for Alignment for convenience.
2022-03-04 23:06:31 +01:00
Dylan DPC
18a07a78a5
Rollup merge of #94577 - RalfJung:simd-miri, r=scottmcm
only disable SIMD for doctests in Miri (not for the stdlib build itself)

Also we can enable library/core/tests/simd.rs now, Miri supports enough SIMD for that.
2022-03-04 22:58:34 +01:00
pierwill
f0257b1b4c Edit docs on consistency of PartialOrd and PartialEq
Use ordered list to make the information about implementations more readable.
2022-03-04 13:31:32 -06:00
Jeff
b363f13069 Add suggested changes to the docs 2022-03-04 09:48:51 -05:00
Jeff
5f34c04de6 Make use statement visible 2022-03-04 09:45:18 -05:00
Loïc BRANSTETT
a93c7abc69 Add #![allow(unexpected_cfgs)] in preparation of global --check-cfg 2022-03-04 11:34:51 +01:00
Jeff
c956fe5cea Document new recommended use of method 2022-03-03 19:45:53 -05:00
Ralf Jung
50e7450bac only disable SIMD for doctests in Miri (not for the stdlib build itself) 2022-03-03 15:11:06 -05:00
Ralf Jung
e9149b6773 Miri can run this test now 2022-03-03 14:54:18 -05:00
Ralf Jung
d233570fab fix a warning when building core tests with cfg(miri) 2022-03-03 14:54:18 -05:00
Matthias Krüger
40c146cebd
Rollup merge of #94551 - darnuria:doc-map-backstick, r=dtolnay
Doc: Fix use of quote instead of backstick in Adapter::map.

A little commit to fix documentation rendering and semantics in https://doc.rust-lang.org/std/iter/struct.Map.html#notes-about-side-effects `"` where used around an expression instead \`.

Screenshot on doc.rust-lang.org:
![2022-03-03 11-21-43_backstick](https://user-images.githubusercontent.com/2827553/156546536-569b7692-7ac4-4388-8e93-c1628ddc6a0f.png)

Looking forward: Maybe reworking the doc to use assert_eq like the upper paragraph:
```
let v: Vec<i32> = vec![1, 2, 3].into_iter().map(|x| x + 1).rev().collect();

assert_eq!(v, [4, 3, 2]);
```
2022-03-03 20:01:47 +01:00
Mara Bos
6b46a52577 Fix doctests. 2022-03-03 15:23:12 +01:00
bors
4566094913 Auto merge of #94512 - RalfJung:sdiv-ub, r=oli-obk
Miri/CTFE: properly treat overflow in (signed) division/rem as UB

To my surprise, it looks like LLVM treats overflow of signed div/rem as UB. From what I can tell, MIR `Div`/`Rem` directly lowers to the corresponding LLVM operation, so to make that correct we also have to consider these overflows UB in the CTFE/Miri interpreter engine.

r? `@oli-obk`
2022-03-03 12:56:24 +00:00
Axel Viala
37c1eb0a47 Doc: Fix use of quote instead of backstick in Adapter::map. 2022-03-03 11:25:01 +01:00
Sébastien Marie
fa8e1bedd3 merge the char signess list of archs with freebsd as it is the same 2022-03-02 12:12:28 +00:00
Sébastien Marie
3768f0b813 update char signess for openbsd
adds more archs for openbsd: arm, mips64, powerpc, powerpc64, and riscv64.
2022-03-02 10:33:50 +00:00
Nixon Enraght-Moony
3f04c85e24 Mark uint::wrapping_next_power_of_two as #[inline]
This brings it in line with `next_power_of_two` and
`checked_next_power_of_two`
2022-03-02 09:15:14 +00:00
Ralf Jung
6739299d18 Miri/CTFE: properly treat overflow in (signed) division/rem as UB 2022-03-01 20:39:51 -05:00
Josh Triplett
75c3e9c23f Temporarily make CStr not a link in the c_char docs
When CStr moves to core with an alias in std, this can link to
`crate::ffi::CStr`. However, linking in the reverse direction (from core
to std) requires a relative path, and that path can't work from both
core::ffi and std::os::raw (different number of `../` traversals
required).
2022-03-01 17:36:40 -08:00
Josh Triplett
335c9609c6 Provide C FFI types via core::ffi, not just in std
The ability to interoperate with C code via FFI is not limited to crates
using std; this allows using these types without std.

The existing types in `std::os::raw` become type aliases for the ones in
`core::ffi`. This uses type aliases rather than re-exports, to allow the
std types to remain stable while the core types are unstable.

This also moves the currently unstable `NonZero_` variants and
`c_size_t`/`c_ssize_t`/`c_ptrdiff_t` types to `core::ffi`, while leaving
them unstable.
2022-03-01 17:16:05 -08:00
Josh Triplett
0f505c6377 Add a copy of cfg_if to core's internal_macros.rs
core can't depend on external crates the way std can. Rather than revert
usage of cfg_if, add a copy of it to core. This does not export our
copy, even unstably; such a change could occur in a later commit.
2022-03-01 16:24:10 -08:00
Dylan DPC
5bd119da84
Rollup merge of #94384 - cuviper:atomic-slice, r=dtolnay
Add Atomic*::from_mut_slice

Tracking issue #76314 for `from_mut` has a question about the possibility of `from_mut_slice`, and I found a real case for it. A user in the forum had a parallelism problem that could be solved by open-indexing updates to a vector of atomics, but they didn't want to affect the other code using that vector. Using `from_mut_slice`, they could borrow that data as atomics just long enough for their parallel loop.

ref: https://users.rust-lang.org/t/sharing-vector-with-rayon-par-iter-correctly/72022
2022-03-01 03:41:51 +01:00
Matthias Krüger
770ee32b34
Rollup merge of #89793 - ibraheemdev:from_ptr_range, r=m-ou-se
Add `slice::{from_ptr_range, from_mut_ptr_range} `

Adds `slice::{from_ptr_range, from_mut_ptr_range}` as counterparts to `slice::{as_ptr_range, as_mut_ptr_range}`.
2022-02-28 12:57:44 +01:00
Ibraheem Ahmed
aac0281d30 add slice::{from_ptr_range, from_mut_ptr_range} 2022-02-27 16:53:26 -05:00
Scott McMurray
b582bd388f For MIRI, cfg out the swap logic from 94212 2022-02-26 18:57:15 -08:00
bors
12b71ed4c5 Auto merge of #94385 - matthiaskrgr:rollup-4pwegqk, r=matthiaskrgr
Rollup of 5 pull requests

Successful merges:

 - #93603 (Populate liveness facts when calling `get_body_with_borrowck_facts` without `-Z polonius`)
 - #93870 (Fix switch on discriminant detection in a presence of coverage counters)
 - #94355 (Add one more case to avoid ICE)
 - #94363 (Remove needless borrows from core::fmt)
 - #94377 (`check_used` should only look at actual `used` attributes)

Failed merges:

r? `@ghost`
`@rustbot` modify labels: rollup
2022-02-26 02:09:29 +00:00
Matthias Krüger
0c9d5e3c77
Rollup merge of #94363 - aDotInTheVoid:fmt-needless-borrows, r=scottmcm
Remove needless borrows from core::fmt
2022-02-26 00:49:23 +01:00
bors
d973b358c6 Auto merge of #94342 - ibraheemdev:swap-regression, r=Dylan-DPC
Revert implementation of `slice::swap`

Due to the perf regressions noticed here, possible due to inlining? https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/88540#issuecomment-944344343

r? `@kennytm`
2022-02-25 23:47:00 +00:00
Josh Stone
d3d2a279fe Add Atomic*::from_mut_slice 2022-02-25 15:30:29 -08:00
Erik Desjardins
4194d7537e Add #[inline] to trivial AsRef impls
These appeared uninlined in some perf runs, but they're trivial.
2022-02-25 15:18:16 -05:00
Nixon Enraght-Moony
6b68882e45 Remove needless borrows from core::fmt 2022-02-25 16:06:23 +00:00
Mark Rousskov
3c62f2f635 Re-add track_caller to panic_no_unwind in bootstrap
This function was updated in a recent PR (92911) to be called without the caller
information passed in, but the function signature itself was not altered with
cfg_attr at the time.
2022-02-25 08:00:53 -05:00
Mark Rousskov
22c3a71de1 Switch bootstrap cfgs 2022-02-25 08:00:52 -05:00
Ibraheem Ahmed
072d35dc2d revert implementation of slice::swap 2022-02-24 19:32:54 -05:00
Dylan DPC
7fb55b4c3a
Rollup merge of #94212 - scottmcm:swapper, r=dtolnay
Stop manually SIMDing in `swap_nonoverlapping`

Like I previously did for `reverse` (#90821), this leaves it to LLVM to pick how to vectorize it, since it can know better the chunk size to use, compared to the "32 bytes always" approach we currently have.

A variety of codegen tests are included to confirm that the various cases are still being vectorized.

It does still need logic to type-erase in some cases, though, as while LLVM is now smart enough to vectorize over slices of things like `[u8; 4]`, it fails to do so over slices of `[u8; 3]`.

As a bonus, this change also means one no longer gets the spurious `memcpy`(s?) at the end up swapping a slice of `__m256`s: <https://rust.godbolt.org/z/joofr4v8Y>

<details>

<summary>ASM for this example</summary>

## Before (from godbolt)

note the `push`/`pop`s and `memcpy`

```x86
swap_m256_slice:
        push    r15
        push    r14
        push    r13
        push    r12
        push    rbx
        sub     rsp, 32
        cmp     rsi, rcx
        jne     .LBB0_6
        mov     r14, rsi
        shl     r14, 5
        je      .LBB0_6
        mov     r15, rdx
        mov     rbx, rdi
        xor     eax, eax
.LBB0_3:
        mov     rcx, rax
        vmovaps ymm0, ymmword ptr [rbx + rax]
        vmovaps ymm1, ymmword ptr [r15 + rax]
        vmovaps ymmword ptr [rbx + rax], ymm1
        vmovaps ymmword ptr [r15 + rax], ymm0
        add     rax, 32
        add     rcx, 64
        cmp     rcx, r14
        jbe     .LBB0_3
        sub     r14, rax
        jbe     .LBB0_6
        add     rbx, rax
        add     r15, rax
        mov     r12, rsp
        mov     r13, qword ptr [rip + memcpy@GOTPCREL]
        mov     rdi, r12
        mov     rsi, rbx
        mov     rdx, r14
        vzeroupper
        call    r13
        mov     rdi, rbx
        mov     rsi, r15
        mov     rdx, r14
        call    r13
        mov     rdi, r15
        mov     rsi, r12
        mov     rdx, r14
        call    r13
.LBB0_6:
        add     rsp, 32
        pop     rbx
        pop     r12
        pop     r13
        pop     r14
        pop     r15
        vzeroupper
        ret
```

## After (from my machine)

Note no `rsp` manipulation, sorry for different ASM syntax

```x86
swap_m256_slice:
	cmpq	%r9, %rdx
	jne	.LBB1_6
	testq	%rdx, %rdx
	je	.LBB1_6
	cmpq	$1, %rdx
	jne	.LBB1_7
	xorl	%r10d, %r10d
	jmp	.LBB1_4
.LBB1_7:
	movq	%rdx, %r9
	andq	$-2, %r9
	movl	$32, %eax
	xorl	%r10d, %r10d
	.p2align	4, 0x90
.LBB1_8:
	vmovaps	-32(%rcx,%rax), %ymm0
	vmovaps	-32(%r8,%rax), %ymm1
	vmovaps	%ymm1, -32(%rcx,%rax)
	vmovaps	%ymm0, -32(%r8,%rax)
	vmovaps	(%rcx,%rax), %ymm0
	vmovaps	(%r8,%rax), %ymm1
	vmovaps	%ymm1, (%rcx,%rax)
	vmovaps	%ymm0, (%r8,%rax)
	addq	$2, %r10
	addq	$64, %rax
	cmpq	%r10, %r9
	jne	.LBB1_8
.LBB1_4:
	testb	$1, %dl
	je	.LBB1_6
	shlq	$5, %r10
	vmovaps	(%rcx,%r10), %ymm0
	vmovaps	(%r8,%r10), %ymm1
	vmovaps	%ymm1, (%rcx,%r10)
	vmovaps	%ymm0, (%r8,%r10)
.LBB1_6:
	vzeroupper
	retq
```

</details>

This does all its copying operations as either the original type or as `MaybeUninit`s, so as far as I know there should be no potential abstract machine issues with reading padding bytes as integers.

<details>

<summary>Perf is essentially unchanged</summary>

Though perhaps with more target features this would help more, if it could pick bigger chunks

## Before

```
running 10 tests
test slice::swap_with_slice_4x_usize_30                            ... bench:         894 ns/iter (+/- 11)
test slice::swap_with_slice_4x_usize_3000                          ... bench:      99,476 ns/iter (+/- 2,784)
test slice::swap_with_slice_5x_usize_30                            ... bench:       1,257 ns/iter (+/- 7)
test slice::swap_with_slice_5x_usize_3000                          ... bench:     139,922 ns/iter (+/- 959)
test slice::swap_with_slice_rgb_30                                 ... bench:         328 ns/iter (+/- 27)
test slice::swap_with_slice_rgb_3000                               ... bench:      16,215 ns/iter (+/- 176)
test slice::swap_with_slice_u8_30                                  ... bench:         312 ns/iter (+/- 9)
test slice::swap_with_slice_u8_3000                                ... bench:       5,401 ns/iter (+/- 123)
test slice::swap_with_slice_usize_30                               ... bench:         368 ns/iter (+/- 3)
test slice::swap_with_slice_usize_3000                             ... bench:      28,472 ns/iter (+/- 3,913)
```

## After

```
running 10 tests
test slice::swap_with_slice_4x_usize_30                            ... bench:         868 ns/iter (+/- 36)
test slice::swap_with_slice_4x_usize_3000                          ... bench:      99,642 ns/iter (+/- 1,507)
test slice::swap_with_slice_5x_usize_30                            ... bench:       1,194 ns/iter (+/- 11)
test slice::swap_with_slice_5x_usize_3000                          ... bench:     139,761 ns/iter (+/- 5,018)
test slice::swap_with_slice_rgb_30                                 ... bench:         324 ns/iter (+/- 6)
test slice::swap_with_slice_rgb_3000                               ... bench:      15,962 ns/iter (+/- 287)
test slice::swap_with_slice_u8_30                                  ... bench:         281 ns/iter (+/- 5)
test slice::swap_with_slice_u8_3000                                ... bench:       5,324 ns/iter (+/- 40)
test slice::swap_with_slice_usize_30                               ... bench:         275 ns/iter (+/- 5)
test slice::swap_with_slice_usize_3000                             ... bench:      28,277 ns/iter (+/- 277)
```

</detail>
2022-02-24 21:42:14 +01:00
Matthias Krüger
bdcdd1b122
Rollup merge of #94300 - WaffleLapkin:patch-4, r=scottmcm
Fix a typo in documentation of `array::IntoIter::new_unchecked`

🌸
2022-02-24 07:48:12 +01:00
Matthias Krüger
f3433d1b59
Rollup merge of #94283 - hellow554:stable_flow_control, r=Dylan-DPC
remove feature gate in control_flow examples

Stabilization was done in https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/91091, but the two examples weren't updated accordingly.

Probably too late to put it into stable, but it should be in the next release :)
2022-02-24 07:48:08 +01:00
Waffle Maybe
715262f151
Fix a typo in documentation of array::IntoIter::new_unchecked 2022-02-23 21:10:04 +03:00
Matthias Krüger
40afbdd148
Rollup merge of #94240 - compiler-errors:pathbuf-display, r=lcnr
Suggest calling .display() on `PathBuf` too

Fixes #94210
2022-02-23 12:26:42 +01:00
Matthias Krüger
0c676a8a84
Rollup merge of #94128 - mqy:master, r=Dylan-DPC
rustdoc: several minor fixes

``@rustbot`` label A-docs
2022-02-23 12:26:40 +01:00
Marcel Hellwig
c403424203 remove feature gate in control_flow examples 2022-02-23 10:42:46 +01:00
Deadbeef
5941fef292
Constify slice indexing 2022-02-22 12:39:36 +11:00
Michael Goulet
a08809ff7b Suggest calling .display() on PathBuf too 2022-02-21 16:58:12 -08:00
Matthias Krüger
74cb6b77a0
Rollup merge of #94186 - ehuss:pin-stable-1.61, r=m-ou-se
Update pin_static_ref stabilization version.

#93580 slipped into 1.61

cc `@m-ou-se`
2022-02-21 19:36:49 +01:00
Matthias Krüger
12705b4700
Rollup merge of #91192 - r00ster91:futuredocs, r=GuillaumeGomez
Some improvements to the async docs

The goal here is to make the docs overall a little bit more comprehensive and add more links between the things.

One thing that's not working yet is the links to the keywords. Somehow I couldn't get them to work.

r? ````@GuillaumeGomez```` do you know how I could get the keyword links to work?
2022-02-21 19:36:46 +01:00
Scott McMurray
8ca47d7ae4 Stop manually SIMDing in swap_nonoverlapping
Like I previously did for `reverse`, this leaves it to LLVM to pick how to vectorize it, since it can know better the chunk size to use, compared to the "32 bytes always" approach we currently have.

It does still need logic to type-erase where appropriate, though, as while LLVM is now smart enough to vectorize over slices of things like `[u8; 4]`, it fails to do so over slices of `[u8; 3]`.

As a bonus, this also means one no longer gets the spurious `memcpy`(s?) at the end up swapping a slice of `__m256`s: <https://rust.godbolt.org/z/joofr4v8Y>
2022-02-21 00:54:02 -08:00
Eric Huss
72a7e731e1 Update pin_static_ref stabilization version. 2022-02-20 06:42:20 -08:00
Roland Kuhn
2946f7aad1
improve wording of Waker::wake documentation 2022-02-20 12:23:26 +01:00
bors
25ad89e47b Auto merge of #94174 - matthiaskrgr:rollup-snyrlhy, r=matthiaskrgr
Rollup of 14 pull requests

Successful merges:

 - #93580 (Stabilize pin_static_ref.)
 - #93639 (Release notes for 1.59)
 - #93686 (core: Implement ASCII trim functions on byte slices)
 - #94002 (rustdoc: Avoid duplicating macros in sidebar)
 - #94019 (removing architecture requirements for RustyHermit)
 - #94023 (adapt static-nobundle test to use llvm-nm)
 - #94091 (Fix rustdoc const computed value)
 - #94093 (Fix pretty printing of enums without variants)
 - #94097 (Add module-level docs for `rustc_middle::query`)
 - #94112 (Optimize char_try_from_u32)
 - #94113 (document rustc_middle::mir::Field)
 - #94122 (Fix miniz_oxide types showing up in std docs)
 - #94142 (rustc_typeck: adopt let else in more places)
 - #94146 (Adopt let else in more places)

Failed merges:

r? `@ghost`
`@rustbot` modify labels: rollup
2022-02-20 02:19:41 +00:00
fren_gor
04b3162764
Add collect_into 2022-02-20 01:57:32 +01:00
Matthias Krüger
7cd857dc34
Rollup merge of #94112 - digama0:patch-3, r=scottmcm
Optimize char_try_from_u32

The optimization was proposed by ```````@falk-hueffner``````` in https://rust-lang.zulipchat.com/#narrow/stream/219381-t-libs/topic/Micro-optimizing.20char.3A.3Afrom_u32/near/272146171,  and I simplified it a bit and added an explanation of why the optimization is correct. The generated code is 2 instructions shorter and uses 2 registers instead of 4 on x86.
2022-02-20 00:37:30 +01:00
Matthias Krüger
575f6c5cc1
Rollup merge of #93686 - dbrgn:trim-on-byte-slices, r=joshtriplett
core: Implement ASCII trim functions on byte slices

Hi ````````@rust-lang/libs!```````` This is a feature that I wished for when implementing serial protocols with microcontrollers. Often these protocols may contain leading or trailing whitespace, which needs to be removed. Because oftentimes drivers will operate on the byte level, decoding to unicode and checking for unicode whitespace is unnecessary overhead.

This PR adds three new methods to byte slices:

- `trim_ascii_start`
- `trim_ascii_end`
- `trim_ascii`

I did not find any pre-existing discussions about this, which surprises me a bit. Maybe I'm missing something, and this functionality is already possible through other means? There's https://github.com/rust-lang/rfcs/issues/2547 ("Trim methods on slices"), but that has a different purpose.

As per the [std dev guide](https://std-dev-guide.rust-lang.org/feature-lifecycle/new-unstable-features.html), this is a proposed implementation without any issue / RFC. If this is the wrong process, please let me know. However, I thought discussing code is easier than discussing a mere idea, and hacking on the stdlib was fun.

Tracking issue: https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/94035
2022-02-20 00:37:23 +01:00
Matthias Krüger
7977af5975
Rollup merge of #93580 - m-ou-se:stabilize-pin-static-ref, r=scottmcm
Stabilize pin_static_ref.

FCP finished here: https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/78186#issuecomment-1024987221

Closes #78186
2022-02-20 00:37:21 +01:00
bors
2690468727 Auto merge of #92911 - nbdd0121:unwind, r=Amanieu
Guard against unwinding in cleanup code

Currently the only safe guard we have against double unwind is the panic count (which is local to Rust). When double unwinds indeed happen (e.g. C++ exception + Rust panic, or two C++ exceptions), then the second unwind actually goes through and the first unwind is leaked. This can cause UB. cc rust-lang/project-ffi-unwind#6

E.g. given the following C++ code:
```c++
extern "C" void foo() {
    throw "A";
}

extern "C" void execute(void (*fn)()) {
    try {
        fn();
    } catch(...) {
    }
}
```

This program is well-defined to terminate:
```c++
struct dtor {
    ~dtor() noexcept(false) {
        foo();
    }
};

void a() {
    dtor a;
    dtor b;
}

int main() {
    execute(a);
    return 0;
}
```

But this Rust code doesn't catch the double unwind:
```rust
extern "C-unwind" {
    fn foo();
    fn execute(f: unsafe extern "C-unwind" fn());
}

struct Dtor;

impl Drop for Dtor {
    fn drop(&mut self) {
        unsafe { foo(); }
    }
}

extern "C-unwind" fn a() {
    let _a = Dtor;
    let _b = Dtor;
}

fn main() {
    unsafe { execute(a) };
}
```

To address this issue, this PR adds an unwind edge to an abort block, so that the Rust example aborts. This is similar to how clang guards against double unwind (except clang calls terminate per C++ spec and we abort).

The cost should be very small; it's an additional trap instruction (well, two for now, since we use TrapUnreachable, but that's a different issue) for each function with landing pads; if LLVM gains support to encode "abort/terminate" info directly in LSDA like GCC does, then it'll be free. It's an additional basic block though so compile time may be worse, so I'd like a perf run.

r? `@ghost`
`@rustbot` label: F-c_unwind
2022-02-19 23:25:06 +00:00
r00ster91
c186460677 Fix some confusing wording and improve slice-search-related docs 2022-02-19 17:29:51 +01:00
r00ster91
297364eb07 Some improvements to the async docs 2022-02-19 17:17:40 +01:00
Matthias Krüger
f19adc7acc
Rollup merge of #93658 - cchiw:issue-77443-fix, r=joshtriplett
Stabilize `#[cfg(panic = "...")]`

[Stabilization PR](https://rustc-dev-guide.rust-lang.org/stabilization_guide.html#stabilization-pr) for #77443
2022-02-19 06:45:29 +01:00
mqy
997492538b rustdoc: several minor fixes 2022-02-19 03:47:41 +08:00
Matthias Krüger
f1c918f1f3
Rollup merge of #93613 - crlf0710:rename_to_async_iter, r=yaahc
Move `{core,std}::stream::Stream` to `{core,std}::async_iter::AsyncIterator`

Following amendments in https://github.com/rust-lang/rfcs/pull/3208/.

cc #79024
cc ``@yoshuawuyts`` ``@joshtriplett``
2022-02-18 16:23:32 +01:00
Mario Carneiro
7c3ebec0ca
fix 2022-02-17 22:14:54 -08:00
Mario Carneiro
0f14bea448
Optimize char_try_from_u32
The optimization was proposed by @falk-hueffner in https://rust-lang.zulipchat.com/#narrow/stream/219381-t-libs/topic/Micro-optimizing.20char.3A.3Afrom_u32/near/272146171,  and I simplified it a bit and added an explanation of why the optimization is correct.
2022-02-17 20:27:53 -08:00
Matthias Krüger
a4be35e321
Rollup merge of #94041 - a-lafrance:try-collect, r=scottmcm
Add a `try_collect()` helper method to `Iterator`

Implement `Iterator::try_collect()` as a helper around `Iterator::collect()` as discussed [here](https://internals.rust-lang.org/t/idea-fallible-iterator-mapping-with-try-map/15715/5?u=a.lafrance).

First time contributor so definitely open to any feedback about my implementation! Specifically wondering if I should open a tracking issue for the unstable feature I introduced.

As the main participant in the internals discussion: r? `@scottmcm`
2022-02-17 23:01:00 +01:00
Danilo Bargen
f7448a77e4 core: Implement trim functions on byte slices
Co-authored-by: Jubilee Young <workingjubilee@gmail.com>
2022-02-17 21:19:42 +01:00
Matthias Krüger
1cc0ae4cbb
Rollup merge of #89869 - kpreid:from-doc, r=yaahc
Add documentation to more `From::from` implementations.

For users looking at documentation through IDE popups, this gives them relevant information rather than the generic trait documentation wording “Performs the conversion”. For users reading the documentation for a specific type for any reason, this informs them when the conversion may allocate or copy significant memory versus when it is always a move or cheap copy.

Notes on specific cases:
* The new documentation for `From<T> for T` explains that it is not a conversion at all.
* Also documented `impl<T, U> Into<U> for T where U: From<T>`, the other central blanket implementation of conversion.
* The new documentation for construction of maps and sets from arrays of keys mentions the handling of duplicates. Future work could be to do this for *all* code paths that convert an iterable to a map or set.
* I did not add documentation to conversions of a specific error type to a more general error type.
* I did not add documentation to unstable code.

This change was prepared by searching for the text "From<... for" and so may have missed some cases that for whatever reason did not match. I also looked for `Into` impls but did not find any worth documenting by the above criteria.
2022-02-17 06:29:57 +01:00
bors
930fc4f59d Auto merge of #94040 - Mark-Simulacrum:destabilize-load-store, r=Amanieu
Destabilize cfg(target_has_atomic_load_store = ...)

This was not intended to be stabilized yet.

This keeps the cfg_target_has_atomic feature gate name since compiler-builtins otherwise depends on it and I'd rather not try to manage a bump across a crates.io published repository given the time-sensitivity here (we need to land this quickly to avoid a beta backport).

Closes https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/32976

r? `@Amanieu`
2022-02-17 01:56:40 +00:00
Arthur Lafrance
47d5196a00 Add a try_collect() helper method to Iterator
Tweaked `try_collect()` to accept more `Try` types

Updated feature attribute for tracking issue
2022-02-16 14:26:39 -08:00
Matthias Krüger
9a42121135
Rollup merge of #93962 - joboet:branchless_slice_ord, r=Mark-Simulacrum
Make [u8]::cmp implementation branchless

The current implementation generates rather ugly assembly code, branching when the common parts are equal. By performing the comparison of the lengths upfront using a subtraction, the assembly gets much prettier: https://godbolt.org/z/4e5fnEKGd.

This will probably not impact speed too much, as the expensive part is in most cases the `memcmp`, but it sure looks better (I'm porting a sorting algorithm currently, and that branch just bothered me).
2022-02-16 18:59:29 +01:00
Mark Rousskov
fc01d2b854 Destabilize cfg(target_has_atomic_load_store = ...)
This was not intended to be stabilized yet.
2022-02-16 10:28:12 -05:00
joboet
3960ce6ec5
Make [u8]::cmp implementation branchless 2022-02-14 23:16:35 +01:00
Daniel Henry-Mantilla
002f627d38 Add a comment to justify why the pointer field is pub.
Addresses https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/93176/files#r795258110.
2022-02-14 17:35:27 +01:00
Daniel Henry-Mantilla
6df63cc148 Replace def_site-&-privacy implementation with a stability-based one.
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>
2022-02-14 17:27:37 +01:00
Daniel Henry-Mantilla
54e443dceb Improve documentation.
Co-Authored-By: Mara Bos <m-ou.se@m-ou.se>
2022-02-14 17:27:32 +01:00
Daniel Henry-Mantilla
42d69e2793 Write {ui,} tests for pin_macro and pin! 2022-02-14 16:56:37 +01:00
Daniel Henry-Mantilla
ee9cd7bb6a Add a stack-pin!-ning macro to the pin module.
Add a type annotation to improve error messages with type mismatches

Add a link to the temporary-lifetime-extension section of the reference
2022-02-14 16:56:37 +01:00
Roland Kuhn
f52ebaa45d
document expectations for Waker::wake
fixes #93961
2022-02-13 17:08:30 +01:00
SaltyKitkat
ee87c80a85
allow const_mut_refs 2022-02-13 16:16:41 +08:00
SaltyKitkat
3c142b0ffe
stabilize const_ptr_offset 2022-02-13 15:26:14 +08:00
Matthias Krüger
2b7f3ee89d
Rollup merge of #93930 - name1e5s:chore/docs, r=Mark-Simulacrum
add link to format_args! when mention it in docs

close #93904
2022-02-13 06:44:18 +01:00
Matthias Krüger
5699f683a4
Rollup merge of #93886 - clarfonthey:stable_ascii_escape, r=Mark-Simulacrum
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`.
2022-02-13 06:44:17 +01:00
Matthias Krüger
783b56ba68
Rollup merge of #93851 - cyqsimon:option-examples, r=scottmcm
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.
2022-02-13 06:44:15 +01:00
Gary Guo
f74e8c7afc Guard against unwinding in cleanup code 2022-02-13 03:10:09 +00:00
ltdk
de6e973176 Stabilise inherent_ascii_escape (FCP in #77174) 2022-02-12 13:21:59 -05:00
ltdk
9efe61df7f Fix signature of u8::escape_ascii 2022-02-12 13:15:10 -05:00
Deadbeef
f7f0f843b7
Improve error messages even more 2022-02-12 19:24:08 +11:00
cyqsimon
f6f93fd7ba
Add note on Windows path behaviour 2022-02-12 12:52:42 +08:00
yuhaixin.hx
daa3c795dc add link to format_args! when being mentioned in doc 2022-02-12 12:35:30 +08:00
cyqsimon
160faf1b30
Option::and_then basic example: show failure 2022-02-12 12:23:38 +08:00
cyqsimon
adfac00f45
Result::and_then: show type conversion 2022-02-12 12:19:03 +08:00
cyqsimon
7eaecc6508
Result::and_then: improve basic example 2022-02-12 12:12:11 +08:00
cyqsimon
942eaa7ffc
Add negative example for Result::and_then 2022-02-11 09:57:19 +08:00
Charisee
dbeab9c532 added space 2022-02-10 22:30:51 +00:00
Charisee
a889079b29 add cfg_panic bootstrap 2022-02-10 22:10:08 +00:00
Charisee
d018a8b624 remove mention of cfg_panic from library tests 2022-02-10 22:09:11 +00:00
Charisee
5e6be7df94 replace feature expression (cfg_panic) in lib and remove expression from tests
Rebase commit
2022-02-10 22:06:47 +00:00
Matthias Krüger
aa2095936a
Rollup merge of #93824 - Amanieu:stable_cfg_target_has_atomic, r=davidtwco
Stabilize cfg_target_has_atomic

`target_has_atomic_equal_alignment` is now tracked separately in #93822.

Closes #32976
2022-02-10 12:10:00 +01:00
cyqsimon
bd421e2880
More practical examples for Result::and_then 2022-02-10 17:59:46 +08:00
cyqsimon
73a5f01263
Use 0-based idx for array content 2022-02-10 16:32:53 +08:00
cyqsimon
a8e9708aeb
More practical examples for Option::and_then 2022-02-10 16:09:49 +08:00
Amanieu d'Antras
49d4823112 Stabilize cfg_target_has_atomic
Closes #32976
2022-02-09 18:45:44 +00:00
Michael Goulet
fea0015f93 Suggest collecting into Vec<_> when collecting into [_] 2022-02-09 09:35:46 -08:00
Yuki Okushi
56094651b8
Rollup merge of #93735 - m-ou-se:stabilize-int-abs-diff, r=joshtriplett
Stabilize int_abs_diff in 1.60.0.

FCP finished here: https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/89492#issuecomment-1030694522
2022-02-09 14:12:21 +09:00
bors
0c292c9667 Auto merge of #93572 - scottmcm:generic-iter-process, r=yaahc
Change `ResultShunt` to be generic over `Try`

Just a refactor (and rename) for now, so it's not `Result`-specific.

This could be used for a future `Iterator::try_collect`, or similar, but anything like that is left for a future PR.
2022-02-08 13:41:40 +00:00
Matthias Krüger
1f841fc5fe
Rollup merge of #86497 - clarfonthey:nearest_char_boundary, r=scottmcm
Add {floor,ceil}_char_boundary methods to str

This is technically already used internally by the standard library in the form of `truncate_to_char_boundary`.

Essentially these are two building blocks to allow for approximate string truncation, where you want to cut off the string at "approximately" a given length in bytes but don't know exactly where the character boundaries lie. It's also a good candidate for the standard library as it can easily be done naively, but would be difficult to properly optimise. Although the existing code that's done in error messages is done naively, this code will explicitly only check a window of 4 bytes since we know that a boundary must lie in that range, and because it will make it possible to vectorise.

Although this method doesn't take into account graphemes or other properties, this would still be a required building block for splitting that takes those into account. For example, if you wanted to split at a grapheme boundary, you could take your approximate splitting point and then determine the graphemes immediately following and preceeding the split. If you then notice that these two graphemes could be merged, you can decide to either include the whole grapheme or exclude it depending on whether you decide splitting should shrink or expand the string.

This takes the most conservative approach and just offers the raw indices to the user, and they can decide how to use them. That way, the methods are as useful as possible despite having as few methods as possible.

(Note: I'll add some tests and a tracking issue if it's decided that this is worth including.)
2022-02-08 06:47:31 +01:00
Scott McMurray
413945ecc5 Change ResultShunt to be generic over Try
Just a refactor (and rename) for now, so it's not `Result`-specific.

This could be used for a future `Iterator::try_collect`, or similar, but anything like that is left for a future PR.
2022-02-07 12:57:25 -08:00
ltdk
edd318c313 Add {floor,ceil}_char_boundary methods to str 2022-02-07 13:34:08 -05:00
bors
f52c31840d Auto merge of #93738 - m-ou-se:rollup-zjyd2et, r=m-ou-se
Rollup of 13 pull requests

Successful merges:

 - #88313 (Make the pre-commit script pre-push instead)
 - #91530 (Suggest 1-tuple parentheses on exprs without existing parens)
 - #92724 (Cleanup c_str.rs)
 - #93208 (Impl {Add,Sub,Mul,Div,Rem,BitXor,BitOr,BitAnd}Assign<$t> for Wrapping<$t> for rust 1.60.0)
 - #93394 (Don't allow {} to refer to implicit captures in format_args.)
 - #93416 (remove `allow_fail` test flag)
 - #93487 (Fix linking stage1 toolchain in `./x.py setup`)
 - #93673 (Linkify sidebar headings for sibling items)
 - #93680 (Drop json::from_reader)
 - #93682 (Update tracking issue for `const_fn_trait_bound`)
 - #93722 (Use shallow clones for submodules managed by rustbuild, not just bootstrap.py)
 - #93723 (Rerun bootstrap's build script when RUSTC changes)
 - #93737 (bootstrap: prefer using '--config' over 'RUST_BOOTSTRAP_CONFIG')

Failed merges:

r? `@ghost`
`@rustbot` modify labels: rollup
2022-02-07 15:32:19 +00:00
Mara Bos
e3c972e252
Rollup merge of #93208 - kellerkindt:wrapping_int_assign_impl, r=m-ou-se
Impl {Add,Sub,Mul,Div,Rem,BitXor,BitOr,BitAnd}Assign<$t> for Wrapping<$t> for rust 1.60.0

Tracking issue #93204

This is about adding basic integer operations to the `Wrapping` type:

```rust
let mut value = Wrapping(2u8);
value += 3u8;
value -= 1u8;
value *= 2u8;
value /= 2u8;
value %= 2u8;
value ^= 255u8;
value |= 123u8;
value &= 2u8;
```

Because this adds stable impls on a stable type, it runs into the following issue if an `#[unstable(...)]` attribute is used:

```
an `#[unstable]` annotation here has no effect
note: see issue #55436 <https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/55436> for more information
```

This means - if I understood this correctly - the new impls have to be stabilized instantly.
Which in turn means, this PR has to kick of an FCP on the tracking issue as well?

This impl is analog to 1c0dc1810d #92356 for the `Saturating` type ``@dtolnay``  ``@Mark-Simulacrum``
2022-02-07 14:08:32 +00:00
bors
c5e414843e Auto merge of #93719 - scottmcm:core-as-2021-everywhere, r=Mark-Simulacrum
Build libcore as 2021 in a few more places

The `Cargo.toml` has `edition = "2021"` (as of #92068), so that's what these command lines should use too.
2022-02-07 12:38:21 +00:00
Mara Bos
687d20afb8 Mark int_abs_diff as const stable. 2022-02-07 12:16:44 +01:00
Mara Bos
7d91d42993 Stabilize int_abs_diff in 1.60.0. 2022-02-07 12:02:56 +01:00
Mara Bos
14ff58cd86 Stabilize wrapping_int_assign_impl in 1.60.0. 2022-02-07 11:45:12 +01:00
bors
25b21a1d16 Auto merge of #93179 - Urgau:unreachable-2021, r=m-ou-se,oli-obk
Fix invalid special casing of the unreachable! macro

This pull-request fix an invalid special casing of the `unreachable!` macro in the same way the `panic!` macro was solved, by adding two new internal only macros `unreachable_2015` and `unreachable_2021` edition dependent and turn `unreachable!` into a built-in macro that do dispatching. This logic is stolen from the `panic!` macro.

~~This pull-request also adds an internal feature `format_args_capture_non_literal` that allows capturing arguments from formatted string that expanded from macros. The original RFC #2795 mentioned this as a future possibility. This feature is [required](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/92137#issuecomment-1018630522) because of concatenation that needs to be done inside the macro:~~
```rust
$crate::concat!("internal error: entered unreachable code: ", $fmt)
```

**In summary** the new behavior for the `unreachable!` macro with this pr is:

Edition 2021:
```rust
let x = 5;
unreachable!("x is {x}");
```
```
internal error: entered unreachable code: x is 5
```

Edition <= 2018:
```rust
let x = 5;
unreachable!("x is {x}");
```
```
internal error: entered unreachable code: x is {x}
```

Also note that the change in this PR are **insta-stable** and **breaking changes** but this a considered as being a [bug](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/92137#issuecomment-998441613).
If someone could start a perf run and then a crater run this would be appreciated.

Fixes https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/92137
2022-02-07 00:26:52 +00:00
Scott McMurray
d91e7a3663 Build libcore as 2021 in a few more places
The `Cargo.toml` has `edition = "2021"`, so that's what these command lines should use too.
2022-02-06 15:41:01 -08:00
bors
7b43cfc9b2 Auto merge of #93695 - matthiaskrgr:rollup-zslgooo, r=matthiaskrgr
Rollup of 2 pull requests

Successful merges:

 - #90998 (Require const stability attribute on all stable functions that are `const`)
 - #93489 (Mark the panic_no_unwind lang item as nounwind)

Failed merges:

r? `@ghost`
`@rustbot` modify labels: rollup
2022-02-06 21:41:00 +00:00
Matthias Krüger
4695c2157c
Rollup merge of #93489 - Amanieu:panic_no_unwind, r=nagisa
Mark the panic_no_unwind lang item as nounwind

This has 2 effects:
- It helps LLVM when inlining since it doesn't need to generate landing pads for `panic_no_unwind`.
- It makes it sound for a panic handler to unwind even if `PanicInfo::can_unwind` returns true. This will simply cause another panic once the unwind tries to go past the `panic_no_unwind` lang item. Eventually this will cause a stack overflow, which is safe.
2022-02-06 10:43:51 +01:00
Matthias Krüger
9f4559c345
Rollup merge of #90998 - jhpratt:require-const-stability, r=oli-obk
Require const stability attribute on all stable functions that are `const`

This PR requires all stable functions (of all kinds) that are `const fn` to have a `#[rustc_const_stable]` or `#[rustc_const_unstable]` attribute. Stability was previously implied if omitted; a follow-up PR is planned to change the fallback to be unstable.
2022-02-06 10:43:50 +01:00
bors
f624427f87 Auto merge of #90414 - thomcc:count-chars-faster, r=nagisa
Optimize `core::str::Chars::count`

I wrote this a while ago after seeing this function as a bottleneck in a profile, but never got around to contributing it. I saw it again, and so here it is. The implementation is fairly complex, but I tried to explain what's happening at both a high level (in the header comment for the file), and in line comments in the impl. Hopefully it's clear enough.

This implementation (`case00_cur_libcore` in the benchmarks below) is somewhat consistently around 4x to 5x faster than the old implementation (`case01_old_libcore` in the benchmarks below), for a wide variety of workloads, without regressing performance on any of the workload sizes I've tried.

I also improved the benchmarks for this code, so that they explicitly check text in different languages and of different sizes (err, the cross product of language x size). The results of the benchmarks are here:

<details>
<summary>Benchmark results</summary>
<pre>
test str::char_count::emoji_huge::case00_cur_libcore       ... bench:      20,216 ns/iter (+/- 3,673) = 17931 MB/s
test str::char_count::emoji_huge::case01_old_libcore       ... bench:     108,851 ns/iter (+/- 12,777) = 3330 MB/s
test str::char_count::emoji_huge::case02_iter_increment    ... bench:     329,502 ns/iter (+/- 4,163) = 1100 MB/s
test str::char_count::emoji_huge::case03_manual_char_len   ... bench:     223,333 ns/iter (+/- 14,167) = 1623 MB/s
test str::char_count::emoji_large::case00_cur_libcore      ... bench:         293 ns/iter (+/- 6) = 19331 MB/s
test str::char_count::emoji_large::case01_old_libcore      ... bench:       1,681 ns/iter (+/- 28) = 3369 MB/s
test str::char_count::emoji_large::case02_iter_increment   ... bench:       5,166 ns/iter (+/- 85) = 1096 MB/s
test str::char_count::emoji_large::case03_manual_char_len  ... bench:       3,476 ns/iter (+/- 62) = 1629 MB/s
test str::char_count::emoji_medium::case00_cur_libcore     ... bench:          48 ns/iter (+/- 0) = 14750 MB/s
test str::char_count::emoji_medium::case01_old_libcore     ... bench:         217 ns/iter (+/- 4) = 3262 MB/s
test str::char_count::emoji_medium::case02_iter_increment  ... bench:         642 ns/iter (+/- 7) = 1102 MB/s
test str::char_count::emoji_medium::case03_manual_char_len ... bench:         445 ns/iter (+/- 3) = 1591 MB/s
test str::char_count::emoji_small::case00_cur_libcore      ... bench:          18 ns/iter (+/- 0) = 3777 MB/s
test str::char_count::emoji_small::case01_old_libcore      ... bench:          23 ns/iter (+/- 0) = 2956 MB/s
test str::char_count::emoji_small::case02_iter_increment   ... bench:          66 ns/iter (+/- 2) = 1030 MB/s
test str::char_count::emoji_small::case03_manual_char_len  ... bench:          29 ns/iter (+/- 1) = 2344 MB/s
test str::char_count::en_huge::case00_cur_libcore          ... bench:      25,909 ns/iter (+/- 39,260) = 13299 MB/s
test str::char_count::en_huge::case01_old_libcore          ... bench:     102,887 ns/iter (+/- 3,257) = 3349 MB/s
test str::char_count::en_huge::case02_iter_increment       ... bench:     166,370 ns/iter (+/- 12,439) = 2071 MB/s
test str::char_count::en_huge::case03_manual_char_len      ... bench:     166,332 ns/iter (+/- 4,262) = 2071 MB/s
test str::char_count::en_large::case00_cur_libcore         ... bench:         281 ns/iter (+/- 6) = 19160 MB/s
test str::char_count::en_large::case01_old_libcore         ... bench:       1,598 ns/iter (+/- 19) = 3369 MB/s
test str::char_count::en_large::case02_iter_increment      ... bench:       2,598 ns/iter (+/- 167) = 2072 MB/s
test str::char_count::en_large::case03_manual_char_len     ... bench:       2,578 ns/iter (+/- 55) = 2088 MB/s
test str::char_count::en_medium::case00_cur_libcore        ... bench:          44 ns/iter (+/- 1) = 15295 MB/s
test str::char_count::en_medium::case01_old_libcore        ... bench:         201 ns/iter (+/- 51) = 3348 MB/s
test str::char_count::en_medium::case02_iter_increment     ... bench:         322 ns/iter (+/- 40) = 2090 MB/s
test str::char_count::en_medium::case03_manual_char_len    ... bench:         319 ns/iter (+/- 5) = 2109 MB/s
test str::char_count::en_small::case00_cur_libcore         ... bench:          15 ns/iter (+/- 0) = 2333 MB/s
test str::char_count::en_small::case01_old_libcore         ... bench:          14 ns/iter (+/- 0) = 2500 MB/s
test str::char_count::en_small::case02_iter_increment      ... bench:          30 ns/iter (+/- 1) = 1166 MB/s
test str::char_count::en_small::case03_manual_char_len     ... bench:          30 ns/iter (+/- 1) = 1166 MB/s
test str::char_count::ru_huge::case00_cur_libcore          ... bench:      16,439 ns/iter (+/- 3,105) = 19777 MB/s
test str::char_count::ru_huge::case01_old_libcore          ... bench:      89,480 ns/iter (+/- 2,555) = 3633 MB/s
test str::char_count::ru_huge::case02_iter_increment       ... bench:     217,703 ns/iter (+/- 22,185) = 1493 MB/s
test str::char_count::ru_huge::case03_manual_char_len      ... bench:     157,330 ns/iter (+/- 19,188) = 2066 MB/s
test str::char_count::ru_large::case00_cur_libcore         ... bench:         243 ns/iter (+/- 6) = 20905 MB/s
test str::char_count::ru_large::case01_old_libcore         ... bench:       1,384 ns/iter (+/- 51) = 3670 MB/s
test str::char_count::ru_large::case02_iter_increment      ... bench:       3,381 ns/iter (+/- 543) = 1502 MB/s
test str::char_count::ru_large::case03_manual_char_len     ... bench:       2,423 ns/iter (+/- 429) = 2096 MB/s
test str::char_count::ru_medium::case00_cur_libcore        ... bench:          42 ns/iter (+/- 1) = 15119 MB/s
test str::char_count::ru_medium::case01_old_libcore        ... bench:         180 ns/iter (+/- 4) = 3527 MB/s
test str::char_count::ru_medium::case02_iter_increment     ... bench:         402 ns/iter (+/- 45) = 1579 MB/s
test str::char_count::ru_medium::case03_manual_char_len    ... bench:         280 ns/iter (+/- 29) = 2267 MB/s
test str::char_count::ru_small::case00_cur_libcore         ... bench:          12 ns/iter (+/- 0) = 2666 MB/s
test str::char_count::ru_small::case01_old_libcore         ... bench:          12 ns/iter (+/- 0) = 2666 MB/s
test str::char_count::ru_small::case02_iter_increment      ... bench:          19 ns/iter (+/- 0) = 1684 MB/s
test str::char_count::ru_small::case03_manual_char_len     ... bench:          14 ns/iter (+/- 1) = 2285 MB/s
test str::char_count::zh_huge::case00_cur_libcore          ... bench:      15,053 ns/iter (+/- 2,640) = 20067 MB/s
test str::char_count::zh_huge::case01_old_libcore          ... bench:      82,622 ns/iter (+/- 3,602) = 3656 MB/s
test str::char_count::zh_huge::case02_iter_increment       ... bench:     230,456 ns/iter (+/- 7,246) = 1310 MB/s
test str::char_count::zh_huge::case03_manual_char_len      ... bench:     220,595 ns/iter (+/- 11,624) = 1369 MB/s
test str::char_count::zh_large::case00_cur_libcore         ... bench:         227 ns/iter (+/- 65) = 20792 MB/s
test str::char_count::zh_large::case01_old_libcore         ... bench:       1,136 ns/iter (+/- 144) = 4154 MB/s
test str::char_count::zh_large::case02_iter_increment      ... bench:       3,147 ns/iter (+/- 253) = 1499 MB/s
test str::char_count::zh_large::case03_manual_char_len     ... bench:       2,993 ns/iter (+/- 400) = 1577 MB/s
test str::char_count::zh_medium::case00_cur_libcore        ... bench:          36 ns/iter (+/- 5) = 16388 MB/s
test str::char_count::zh_medium::case01_old_libcore        ... bench:         142 ns/iter (+/- 18) = 4154 MB/s
test str::char_count::zh_medium::case02_iter_increment     ... bench:         379 ns/iter (+/- 37) = 1556 MB/s
test str::char_count::zh_medium::case03_manual_char_len    ... bench:         364 ns/iter (+/- 51) = 1620 MB/s
test str::char_count::zh_small::case00_cur_libcore         ... bench:          11 ns/iter (+/- 1) = 3000 MB/s
test str::char_count::zh_small::case01_old_libcore         ... bench:          11 ns/iter (+/- 1) = 3000 MB/s
test str::char_count::zh_small::case02_iter_increment      ... bench:          20 ns/iter (+/- 3) = 1650 MB/s
</pre>
</details>

I also added fairly thorough tests for different sizes and alignments. This completes on my machine in 0.02s, which is surprising given how thorough they are, but it seems to detect bugs in the implementation. (I haven't run the tests on a 32 bit machine yet since before I reworked the code a little though, so... hopefully I'm not about to embarrass myself).

This uses similar SWAR-style techniques to the `is_ascii` impl I contributed in https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/74066, so I'm going to request review from the same person who reviewed that one. That said am not particularly picky, and might not have the correct syntax for requesting a review from someone (so it goes).

r? `@nagisa`
2022-02-06 08:34:48 +00:00
Thom Chiovoloni
41f821461f
Fix comment grammar for do_count_chars 2022-02-05 11:17:10 -08:00
Thom Chiovoloni
ebbccaf6bf
Respond to review feedback, and improve implementation somewhat 2022-02-05 11:15:18 -08:00
Thom Chiovoloni
ed01324835
Fix zh::SMALL string in core::str benchmarks 2022-02-05 11:15:17 -08:00
Thom Chiovoloni
628b217326
Optimize core::str::Chars::count 2022-02-05 11:15:17 -08:00
Matthias Krüger
9ba09f976c
Rollup merge of #93612 - tspiteri:master, r=m-ou-se
doc: use U+2212 for minus sign in integer MIN/MAX text

Closes #90793.
2022-02-04 18:42:17 +01:00
Trevor Spiteri
d6e1df8d59 doc: use U+2212 for minus sign in integer MIN/MAX text 2022-02-04 17:59:53 +01:00
Matthias Krüger
ca2ef71e96
Rollup merge of #93585 - tamaroning:add_tests_for_92630, r=m-ou-se
Missing tests for #92630

fixes #93143
2022-02-04 14:59:03 +01:00
Mara Bos
c05276ae7b Stabilize pin_static_ref. 2022-02-04 12:27:33 +01:00
Jacob Pratt
1911eb8b61
Add missing const stability attributes 2022-02-03 19:15:57 -05:00
Charles Lew
18130a21dc Move {core,std}::stream::Stream to {core,std}::async_iter::AsyncIterator. 2022-02-03 21:03:06 +08:00
tamaron
83242897fb add tests 2022-02-02 23:07:02 +09:00
Matthias Krüger
a3deca4675
Rollup merge of #93493 - GKFX:char-docs-2, r=scottmcm
Document valid values of the char type

As discussed at #93392, the current documentation on what constitutes a valid char isn't very detailed and is partly on the MAX constant rather than the type itself.

This PR expands on that information, stating the actual numerical range, giving examples of what won't work, and also mentions how a `char` might be a valid USV but still not be a defined character (terminology checked against [Unicode 14.0, table 2-3](https://www.unicode.org/versions/Unicode14.0.0/ch02.pdf#M9.61673.TableTitle.Table.22.Types.of.Code.Points)).
2022-02-02 07:11:07 +01:00
George Bateman
d372baf3f9
Fix annotation of code blocks 2022-02-01 21:44:53 +00:00
Matthias Krüger
a643e59800
Rollup merge of #91828 - oxalica:feat/waker-getters, r=dtolnay
Implement `RawWaker` and `Waker` getters for underlying pointers

implement #87021

New APIs:
- `RawWaker::data(&self) -> *const ()`
- `RawWaker::vtable(&self) -> &'static RawWakerVTable`
- ~`Waker::as_raw_waker(&self) -> &RawWaker`~ `Waker::as_raw(&self) -> &RawWaker`

This third one is an auxiliary function to make the two APIs above more useful. Since we can only get `&Waker` in `Future::poll`, without this, we need to `transmute` it into `&RawWaker` (relying on `repr(transparent)`) in order to access its data/vtable pointers.

~Not sure if it should be named `as_raw` or `as_raw_waker`. Seems we always use `as_<something-raw>` instead of just `as_raw`. But `as_raw_waker` seems not quite consistent with `Waker::from_raw`.~ As suggested in https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/91828#discussion_r770729837, use `as_raw`.
2022-02-01 16:08:02 +01:00
bors
547f2ba06b Auto merge of #86988 - thomcc:chunky-splitz-says-no-checking, r=the8472
Carefully remove bounds checks from some chunk iterator functions

So, I was writing code that requires the equivalent of `rchunks(N).rev()` (which isn't the same as forward `chunks(N)` — in particular, if the buffer length is not a multiple of `N`, I must handle the "remainder" first).

I happened to look at the codegen output of the function (I was actually interested in whether or not a nested loop was being unrolled — it was), and noticed that in the outer `rchunks(n).rev()` loop, LLVM seemed to be unable to remove the bounds checks from the iteration: https://rust.godbolt.org/z/Tnz4MYY8f (this panic was from the split_at in `RChunks::next_back`).

After doing some experimentation, it seems all of the `next_back` in the non-exact chunk iterators have the issue: (`Chunks::next_back`, `RChunks::next_back`, `ChunksMut::next_back`, and `RChunksMut::next_back`)...

Even worse, the forward `rchunks` iterators sometimes have the issue as well (... but only sometimes). For example https://rust.godbolt.org/z/oGhbqv53r has bounds checks, but if I uncomment the loop body, it manages to remove the check (which is bizarre, since I'd expect the opposite...). I suspect it's highly dependent on the surrounding code, so I decided to remove the bounds checks from them anyway. Overall, this change includes:
- All `next_back` functions on the non-`Exact` iterators (e.g. `R?Chunks(Mut)?`).
- All `next` functions on the non-exact rchunks iterators (e.g. `RChunks(Mut)?`).

I wasn't able to catch any of the other chunk iterators failing to remove the bounds checks (I checked iterations over `r?chunks(_exact)?(_mut)?` with constant chunk sizes under `-O3`, `-Os`, and `-Oz`), which makes sense, since these were the cases where it was harder to prove the bounds check correct to remove...

In fact, it took quite a bit of thinking to convince myself that using unchecked_ here was valid — so I'm not really surprised that LLVM had trouble (although compilers are slightly better at this sort of reasoning than humans). A consequence of that is the fact that the `// SAFETY` comment for these are... kinda long...

---

I didn't do this for, or even think about it for, any of the other iteration methods; just `next` and `next_back` (where it mattered). If this PR is accepted, I'll file a follow up for someone (possibly me) to look at the others later (in particular, `nth`/`nth_back` looked like they had similar logic), but I wanted to do this now, as IMO `next`/`next_back` are the most important here, since they're what gets used by the iteration protocol.

---

Note: While I don't expect this to impact performance directly, the panic is a side effect, which would otherwise not exist in these loops. That is, this could prevent the compiler from being able to move/remove/otherwise rework a loop over these iterators (as an example, it could not delete the code for a loop whose body computes a value which doesn't get used).

Also, some like to be able to have confidence this code has no panicking branches in the optimized code, and "no bounds checks" is kinda part of the selling point of Rust's iterators anyway.
2022-02-01 10:11:59 +00:00
Thom Chiovoloni
9c62455e2f
Improve test coverage of {Chunks,RChunks,RChunksMut}::{next,next_back} 2022-01-31 17:35:19 -08:00
George Bateman
5357ec1473
(#93493) Add items from code review 2022-01-31 23:49:16 +00:00
Loïc BRANSTETT
a4b93eb188 Take in account the unreachable! macro in the non_fmt_panic lint 2022-01-31 17:09:31 +01:00
Loïc BRANSTETT
565710b33c Fix invalid special casing of the unreachable! macro 2022-01-31 17:09:31 +01:00
bors
86f5e177bc Auto merge of #93498 - matthiaskrgr:rollup-k5shwrc, r=matthiaskrgr
Rollup of 8 pull requests

Successful merges:

 - #90277 (Improve terminology around "after typeck")
 - #92918 (Allow eliding GATs in expression position)
 - #93039 (Don't suggest inaccessible fields)
 - #93155 (Switch pretty printer to block-based indentation)
 - #93214 (Respect doc(hidden) when suggesting available fields)
 - #93347 (Make `char::DecodeUtf16::size_hist` more precise)
 - #93392 (Clarify documentation on char::MAX)
 - #93444 (Fix some CSS warnings and errors from VS Code)

Failed merges:

r? `@ghost`
`@rustbot` modify labels: rollup
2022-01-31 11:24:03 +00:00
Matthias Krüger
24737bd1ab
Rollup merge of #93485 - est31:remove_curly, r=joshtriplett
core: Remove some redundant {}s from the sorting code
2022-01-31 07:00:46 +01:00
Matthias Krüger
b0cdf7e995
Rollup merge of #93480 - est31:remove_unstable_deprecated, r=Mark-Simulacrum
Remove deprecated and unstable slice_partition_at_index functions

They have been deprecated since commit 01ac5a97c9
which was part of the 1.49.0 release, so from the point of nightly,
11 releases ago.
2022-01-31 07:00:45 +01:00
Matthias Krüger
8fd2ff57fa
Rollup merge of #93403 - nagisa:total-cmp-review, r=joshtriplett
review the total_cmp documentation

The documentation has been restructured to split out a brief summary
paragraph out from the following elaborating paragraphs.

I also attempted my hand at wording improvements and adding articles
where I felt them missing, but being non-native english speaker these
may need more thorough review.

cc https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/72599
2022-01-31 07:00:41 +01:00
Matthias Krüger
c03bf54dd1
Rollup merge of #93392 - GKFX:char-docs, r=scottmcm
Clarify documentation on char::MAX

As mentioned in https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/91836#issuecomment-994106874, the documentation on `char::MAX` is not quite correct – USVs are not "only ones within a certain range", they are code points _outside_ a certain range. I have corrected this and given the actual numbers as there is no reason to hide them.
2022-01-31 06:58:32 +01:00
Matthias Krüger
76857fb3fb
Rollup merge of #93347 - WaffleLapkin:better_char_decode_utf16_size_hint, r=dtolnay
Make `char::DecodeUtf16::size_hist` more precise

New implementation takes into account contents of `self.buf` and rounds lower bound up instead of down.

Fixes #88762
Revival of #88763
2022-01-31 06:58:31 +01:00
bors
e58e7b10e1 Auto merge of #90891 - nbdd0121:format, r=Mark-Simulacrum
Create `core::fmt::ArgumentV1` with generics instead of fn pointer

Split from (and prerequisite of) #90488, as this seems to have perf implication.

`@rustbot` label: +T-libs
2022-01-31 00:04:46 +00:00
George Bateman
9aaf52b66a
(#93392) Update char::MAX docs and core::char::MAX 2022-01-30 23:10:24 +00:00
George Bateman
4d4ec97e0a
Document char validity 2022-01-30 22:16:41 +00:00
Simonas Kazlauskas
78efb075d9 review the total_cmp documentation
The documentation has been restructured to split out a brief summary
paragraph out from the following elaborating paragraphs.

I also attempted my hand at wording improvements and adding articles
where I felt them missing, but being non-native english speaker these
may need more thorough review.
2022-01-30 23:20:54 +02:00
Amanieu d'Antras
f738669b63 Clarify safety of PanicInfo::can_unwind 2022-01-30 21:33:51 +01:00
est31
cde240c1e8 core: Remove some redundant {}s from the sorting code 2022-01-30 18:32:24 +01:00
Eric Huss
0610d4fa66
Rollup merge of #92887 - pietroalbini:pa-bootstrap-update, r=Mark-Simulacrum
Bootstrap compiler update

r? ``@Mark-Simulacrum``
2022-01-30 08:37:46 -08:00
est31
105a7461b9 Remove deprecated and unstable slice_partition_at_index functions
They have been deprecated since commit 01ac5a97c9
which was part of the 1.49.0 release, so from the point of nightly,
11 releases ago.
2022-01-30 16:19:03 +01:00
Maybe Waffle
17cd2cd592 Fix an edge case in chat::DecodeUtf16::size_hint
There are cases, when data in the buf might or might not be an error.
2022-01-30 15:32:21 +03:00
ltdk
19645ac05a Add Result::{ok, err, and, or, unwrap_or} as const 2022-01-29 18:37:55 -05:00
Matthias Krüger
6e2593d343
Rollup merge of #93256 - EFanZh:patch-1, r=joshtriplett
Make `join!` description more accurate
2022-01-30 00:04:10 +01:00
Gary Guo
a832f5f7bc Create core::fmt::ArgumentV1 with generics instead of fn pointer 2022-01-29 13:52:19 +00:00
Matthias Krüger
37e9cb34e5
Rollup merge of #93236 - woppopo:const_nonnull_new, r=oli-obk
Make `NonNull::new` `const`

Tracking issue: #93235
2022-01-29 14:46:31 +01:00
Matthias Krüger
9e86a434a7
Rollup merge of #92274 - woppopo:const_deallocate, r=oli-obk
Add `intrinsics::const_deallocate`

Tracking issue: #79597
Related: #91884

This allows deallocation of a memory allocated by `intrinsics::const_allocate`. At the moment, this can be only used to reduce memory usage, but in the future this may be useful to detect memory leaks (If an allocated memory remains after evaluation, raise an error...?).
2022-01-29 14:46:30 +01:00
woppopo
9728cc4e26 Document about some behaviors of const_(de)allocate and add some tests. 2022-01-29 19:13:23 +09:00
Matthias Krüger
27f68212ab
Rollup merge of #93404 - rust-lang:scottmcm-patch-1, r=wesleywiser
Fix a typo from #92899

Just happened to notice this in passing
2022-01-28 15:20:30 +01:00
Matthias Krüger
cfe03006b7
Rollup merge of #93356 - pierwill:partialord-headline, r=dtolnay
Edit docs introduction for `std::cmp::PartialOrd`

This makes `PartialOrd` consistent with the other three traits in this module, which all include links to their corresponding mathematical concepts on Wikipedia.

<img width="500" alt="Screen Shot 2022-01-26 at 10 24 23 PM" src="https://user-images.githubusercontent.com/19642016/151291720-decd85ed-cd6e-4be0-84a9-619b98ceb386.png">
2022-01-28 15:20:27 +01:00
Matthias Krüger
25cd639a4b
Rollup merge of #93353 - kellerkindt:saturating_int_assign_impl, r=joshtriplett
Unimpl {Add,Sub,Mul,Div,Rem,BitXor,BitOr,BitAnd}<$t> for Saturating<$t>

Tracking issue #92354

Analog to 9648b313cc #93208 reduce `saturating_int_assign_impl` (#93208) to:

```rust
let mut value = Saturating(2u8);
value += 3u8;
value -= 1u8;
value *= 2u8;
value /= 2u8;
value %= 2u8;
value ^= 255u8;
value |= 123u8;
value &= 2u8;
```

See https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/93208#issuecomment-1022564429
2022-01-28 15:20:26 +01:00
Matthias Krüger
db6ca25325
Rollup merge of #92611 - Amanieu:asm-reference, r=m-ou-se
Add links to the reference and rust by example for asm! docs and lints

These were previously removed in #91728 due to broken links.

cc ``@ehuss`` since this updates the rust-by-example submodule
2022-01-28 15:20:21 +01:00
Pietro Albini
5b3462c556
update cfg(bootstrap)s 2022-01-28 15:01:07 +01:00
woppopo
cdd0873db6 Add a test case for using NonNull::new in const context 2022-01-28 18:41:35 +09:00
Maybe Waffle
2c97d1012e Fix wrong assumption in DecodeUtf16::size_hint
`self.buf` can contain a surrogate, but only a leading one.
2022-01-28 12:40:59 +03:00
woppopo
7a7144f413 test_const_allocate_at_runtime 2022-01-28 17:27:33 +09:00
pierwill
7c7509bc3b Edit docs introduction for std::cmp::PartialOrd
This makes `PartialOrd` consistent with the other three traits in this
module, which all include links to their respective mathematical concepts
on Wikipedia.
2022-01-28 00:46:04 -06:00
scottmcm
81b4e51c41
Fix a typo from #92899
Just happened to notice this in passing
2022-01-28 01:35:33 +00:00
George Bateman
2fb617ca0f
Clarify documentation on char::MAX 2022-01-27 22:13:01 +00:00
Matthias Krüger
54f357836e
Rollup merge of #92899 - cameron1024:zip-docs, r=dtolnay
Mention std::iter::zip in Iterator::zip docs

Closes https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/91960

I'm not sure about the wording. I think it's alright, but happy to change.
2022-01-27 22:32:23 +01:00
David Tolnay
857ea1e7eb
Touch up PR 92899 Iterator::zip docs 2022-01-27 12:41:03 -08:00
cameron
f27758e8d7 mention std::iter::zip in Iterator::zip docs 2022-01-27 06:47:52 +00:00
Michael Watzko
a6c0a3d9c2 Unimpl {Add,Sub,Mul,Div,Rem,BitXor,BitOr,BitAnd}<$t> for Saturating<$t>
Analog to 9648b313cc #93208
2022-01-26 23:49:54 +01:00
Matthias Krüger
e2b2bfe10c
Rollup merge of #92256 - fee1-dead:improve-selection-err, r=oli-obk
Improve selection errors for `~const` trait bounds
2022-01-26 23:45:22 +01:00
Maybe Waffle
9c8cd1ff37 Add a test for char::DecodeUtf16::size_hint 2022-01-27 00:50:34 +03:00
Maybe Waffle
cd4245d318 Make char::DecodeUtf16::size_hist more precise
New implementation takes into account contents of `self.buf` and rounds
lower bound up instead of down.
2022-01-27 00:30:33 +03:00
Артём Павлов [Artyom Pavlov]
e0bcf771d6 Improve Duration::try_from_secs_f32/64 accuracy by directly processing exponent and mantissa 2022-01-26 18:14:25 +03:00
woppopo
29932db09b const_deallocate: Don't deallocate memory allocated in an another const. Does nothing at runtime.
`const_allocate`:  Returns a null pointer at runtime.
2022-01-26 13:06:09 +09:00
Deadbeef
8b76cad0a7
Add a minimal working append_const_msg argument 2022-01-26 00:48:08 +11:00
Nikolai Vazquez
fe71c7431a Implement MIN/MAX constants for non-zero integers 2022-01-25 04:29:40 -05:00
Michael Watzko
9648b313cc Impl {Add,Sub,Mul,Div,Rem,BitXor,BitOr,BitAnd}Assign<$t> for Wrapping<$t>
Analog to 1c0dc1810d #92356
2022-01-25 08:43:30 +01:00
EFanZh
571356c24a
Make join! description more accurate 2022-01-24 16:17:40 +08:00
woppopo
5e97fc9aa2 Make NonNull::new const 2022-01-23 23:04:39 +09:00
woppopo
aa6795e2d4 Add intrinsics::const_deallocate 2022-01-23 15:13:44 +09:00
Matthias Krüger
55a1f8b955
Rollup merge of #91122 - dtolnay:not, r=m-ou-se
impl Not for !

The lack of this impl caused trouble for me in some degenerate cases of macro-generated code of the form `if !$cond {...}`, even without `feature(never_type)` on a stable compiler. Namely if `$cond` contains a `return` or `break` or similar diverging expression, which would otherwise be perfectly legal in boolean position, the code previously failed to compile with:

```console
error[E0600]: cannot apply unary operator `!` to type `!`
   --> library/core/tests/ops.rs:239:8
    |
239 |     if !return () {}
    |        ^^^^^^^^^^ cannot apply unary operator `!`
```
2022-01-23 01:09:41 +01:00
Matthias Krüger
9d7c8edd6c
Rollup merge of #92828 - Amanieu:unwind-abort, r=dtolnay
Print a helpful message if unwinding aborts when it reaches a nounwind function

This is implemented by routing `TerminatorKind::Abort` back through the panic handler, but with a special flag in the `PanicInfo` which indicates that the panic handler should *not* attempt to unwind the stack and should instead abort immediately.

This is useful for the planned change in https://github.com/rust-lang/lang-team/issues/97 which would make `Drop` impls `nounwind` by default.

### Code

```rust
#![feature(c_unwind)]

fn panic() {
    panic!()
}

extern "C" fn nounwind() {
    panic();
}

fn main() {
    nounwind();
}
```

### Before

```
$ ./test
thread 'main' panicked at 'explicit panic', test.rs:4:5
note: run with `RUST_BACKTRACE=1` environment variable to display a backtrace
Illegal instruction (core dumped)
```

### After

```
$ ./test
thread 'main' panicked at 'explicit panic', test.rs:4:5
note: run with `RUST_BACKTRACE=1` environment variable to display a backtrace
thread 'main' panicked at 'panic in a function that cannot unwind', test.rs:7:1
stack backtrace:
   0:     0x556f8f86ec9b - <std::sys_common::backtrace::_print::DisplayBacktrace as core::fmt::Display>::fmt::hdccefe11a6ac4396
   1:     0x556f8f88ac6c - core::fmt::write::he152b28c41466ebb
   2:     0x556f8f85d6e2 - std::io::Write::write_fmt::h0c261480ab86f3d3
   3:     0x556f8f8654fa - std::panicking::default_hook::{{closure}}::h5d7346f3ff7f6c1b
   4:     0x556f8f86512b - std::panicking::default_hook::hd85803a1376cac7f
   5:     0x556f8f865a91 - std::panicking::rust_panic_with_hook::h4dc1c5a3036257ac
   6:     0x556f8f86f079 - std::panicking::begin_panic_handler::{{closure}}::hdda1d83c7a9d34d2
   7:     0x556f8f86edc4 - std::sys_common::backtrace::__rust_end_short_backtrace::h5b70ed0cce71e95f
   8:     0x556f8f865592 - rust_begin_unwind
   9:     0x556f8f85a764 - core::panicking::panic_no_unwind::h2606ab3d78c87899
  10:     0x556f8f85b910 - test::nounwind::hade6c7ee65050347
  11:     0x556f8f85b936 - test::main::hdc6e02cb36343525
  12:     0x556f8f85b7e3 - core::ops::function::FnOnce::call_once::h4d02663acfc7597f
  13:     0x556f8f85b739 - std::sys_common::backtrace::__rust_begin_short_backtrace::h071d40135adb0101
  14:     0x556f8f85c149 - std::rt::lang_start::{{closure}}::h70dbfbf38b685e93
  15:     0x556f8f85c791 - std::rt::lang_start_internal::h798f1c0268d525aa
  16:     0x556f8f85c131 - std::rt::lang_start::h476a7ee0a0bb663f
  17:     0x556f8f85b963 - main
  18:     0x7f64c0822b25 - __libc_start_main
  19:     0x556f8f85ae8e - _start
  20:                0x0 - <unknown>
thread panicked while panicking. aborting.
Aborted (core dumped)
```
2022-01-22 15:32:49 +01:00
Matthias Krüger
98cb33894c
Rollup merge of #89747 - Amanieu:maybeuninit_bytes, r=m-ou-se
Add MaybeUninit::(slice_)as_bytes(_mut)

This adds methods to convert between `MaybeUninit<T>` and a slice of `MaybeUninit<u8>`. This is safe since `MaybeUninit<u8>` can correctly handle padding bytes in any `T`.

These methods are added:
```rust
impl<T> MaybeUninit<T> {
	pub fn as_bytes(&self) -> &[MaybeUninit<u8>];
	pub fn as_bytes_mut(&mut self) -> &mut [MaybeUninit<u8>];
	pub fn slice_as_bytes(this: &[MaybeUninit<T>]) -> &[MaybeUninit<u8>];
	pub fn slice_as_bytes_mut(this: &mut [MaybeUninit<T>]) -> &mut [MaybeUninit<u8>];
}
```
2022-01-20 17:10:30 +01:00
David Tolnay
3136c5f752
Update stabilization version of impl Not for ! 2022-01-19 23:30:55 -08:00
Amanieu d'Antras
5c96dcf961 Add MaybeUninit::as_bytes 2022-01-19 21:27:29 +00:00
Amanieu d'Antras
5eb6fff824 Add links to the reference and rust by example for asm! docs and lints 2022-01-19 20:00:10 +00:00
Matthias Krüger
dfbb6b246d
Rollup merge of #92630 - steffahn:lift_bounds_on_BuildHasherDefault, r=yaahc
Change PhantomData type for `BuildHasherDefault` (and more)

Changes `PhantomData<H>` to `PhantomData<fn() -> H>` for `BuildHasherDefault`. This preserves the covariance of `H`, while it lifts the currently inferred unnecessary bounds like [`H: Send` for `BuildHasherDefault<H>: Send`](https://doc.rust-lang.org/1.57.0/std/hash/struct.BuildHasherDefault.html#impl-Send), etc.

_Edit:_ Also does a similar change for `iter::Empty` and `future::Pending`.
2022-01-19 19:19:47 +01:00
Giacomo Stevanato
967c0ad587 Implement IterMut::as_mut_slice 2022-01-19 16:44:17 +01:00
Matthias Krüger
d5bc168d65
Rollup merge of #93051 - m-ou-se:is-some-with, r=yaahc
Add Option::is_some_with and Result::is_{ok,err}_with

See https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/62358#issuecomment-1015827777
2022-01-19 10:42:20 +01:00
Mara Bos
5fee3e7a9c Fix is_some_with tests. 2022-01-19 00:12:35 +01:00
Mara Bos
45dee47fec Improve is_err_with example. 2022-01-18 22:53:43 +01:00
Mara Bos
148234ff73 Add is_some_with tracking issue number. 2022-01-18 22:18:16 +01:00
Mara Bos
aaebae973f Add Result::{is_ok_with, is_err_with}. 2022-01-18 22:17:44 +01:00
Mara Bos
282224edf1 Add Option::is_some_with. 2022-01-18 22:17:34 +01:00
Matthias Krüger
63376bb0fa
Rollup merge of #93026 - klensy:f-typo, r=scottmcm
fix typo in `max` description for f32/f64
2022-01-18 22:00:51 +01:00
klensy
51cd00c32f fix typo in max description for f32/f64 2022-01-18 10:30:32 +03:00
Matthias Krüger
83b1a9452a
Rollup merge of #93016 - Amanieu:vec_spare_capacity, r=Mark-Simulacrum
Stabilize vec_spare_capacity

Closes #75017
2022-01-18 04:42:11 +01:00
Matthias Krüger
6a5663ed82
Rollup merge of #92870 - llogiq:atomic_bool_sym, r=Manishearth
add `rustc_diagnostic_item` attribute to `AtomicBool` type

I wanted to use this in clippy and found that it didn't work. So hopefully this addition will fix it.
2022-01-18 04:42:04 +01:00
Amanieu d'Antras
e012b9a78d Stabilize vec_spare_capacity
Closes #75017
2022-01-17 21:07:02 +00:00
Matthias Krüger
68d47def01
Rollup merge of #92960 - scottmcm:carrying-bignum, r=Mark-Simulacrum
Use `carrying_{mul|add}` in `num::bignum`

Now that we have (unstable) methods for this, we don't need the bespoke trait methods for it in the `bignum` implementation.

cc #85532
2022-01-17 20:07:10 +01:00
Matthias Krüger
731af70217
Rollup merge of #92956 - scottmcm:nonzero-log2, r=dtolnay
Add `log2` and `log10` to `NonZeroU*`

This version is nice in that it doesn't need to worry about zeros, and thus doesn't have any error cases.

cc `int_log` tracking issue #70887

(I didn't add them to `NonZeroI*` despite it being on `i*` since allowing negatives bring back the error cases again.)
2022-01-17 20:07:09 +01:00
bors
a34c079752 Auto merge of #92816 - tmiasko:rm-llvm-asm, r=Amanieu
Remove deprecated LLVM-style inline assembly

The `llvm_asm!` was deprecated back in #87590 1.56.0, with intention to remove
it once `asm!` was stabilized, which already happened in #91728 1.59.0. Now it
is time to remove `llvm_asm!` to avoid continued maintenance cost.

Closes #70173.
Closes #92794.
Closes #87612.
Closes #82065.

cc `@rust-lang/wg-inline-asm`

r? `@Amanieu`
2022-01-17 09:40:29 +00:00
Matthias Krüger
9612038a7e
Rollup merge of #92981 - RalfJung:const_ptr_offset_from, r=dtolnay
fix const_ptr_offset_from tracking issue

The old tracking issue #41079 was for exposing those functions at all, and got closed when they were stabilized. We had nothing tracking their `const`ness so I opened a new tracking issue: https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/92980.
2022-01-17 06:08:19 +01:00
Matthias Krüger
775fe37ca9
Rollup merge of #92953 - azdavis:azdavis-copy-example, r=dtolnay
Copy an example to PartialOrd as well

In https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/88202 I added an example for deriving PartialOrd on enums, but only later did I realize that I actually put the example on Ord.

This copies the example to PartialOrd as well, which is where I intended for it to be.

We could also delete the example on Ord, but I see there's already some highly similar examples shared between Ord and PartialOrd, so I figured we could leave it.

I also changed some type annotations in an example from `x : T` to the more common style (in Rust) of `x: T`.
2022-01-17 06:08:17 +01:00
Amanieu d'Antras
fe9dc6e62a Change TerminatorKind::Abort to call the panic handler instead of
aborting immediately.

The panic handler is called with a special flag which forces it to abort
after calling the panic hook.
2022-01-17 00:39:34 +00:00
Amanieu d'Antras
528c4f9158 Add PanicInfo::can_unwind which indicates whether a panic handler is
allowed to trigger unwinding.
2022-01-17 00:39:28 +00:00
Ralf Jung
bb1423e019 fix const_ptr_offset_from tracking issue 2022-01-16 15:21:42 -05:00
Matthias Krüger
cf4549c920
Rollup merge of #92619 - Alexendoo:macro-diagnostic-items, r=matthewjasper
Add diagnostic items for macros

For use in Clippy, it adds diagnostic items to all the stable public macros

Clippy has lints that look for almost all of these (currently by name or path), but there are a few that aren't currently part of any lint, I could remove those if it's preferred to add them as needed rather than ahead of time
2022-01-16 16:58:14 +01:00
bors
26c06cf8e2 Auto merge of #92356 - kellerkindt:saturating_int_assign_impl, r=dtolnay
Add {Add,Sub,Mul,Div,Rem,BitXor,BitOr,BitAnd}{,Assign}<$t> to Saturat…

Tracking issue #92354
2022-01-16 05:23:44 +00:00
David Tolnay
bfe0a4e06e
Touch up stray comment in PR 92953 2022-01-15 20:44:47 -08:00
Ariel Davis
828febf9e0 Clear up discriminants with more examples 2022-01-15 20:24:38 -08:00
Scott McMurray
e0e15c9747 Use carrying_{mul|add} in num::bignum
Now that we have (unstable) methods for this, we don't need the bespoke trait methods for it in the `bignum` implementation.
2022-01-15 20:22:34 -08:00
Scott McMurray
3dfcc66d48 Add log2 and log10 to NonZeroU*
This version is nice in that it doesn't need to worry about zeros, and thus doesn't have any error cases.
2022-01-15 17:14:13 -08:00
Ariel Davis
8f33b4eed1 Copy an example to PartialOrd as well 2022-01-15 16:25:09 -08:00
Matthias Krüger
f511360fd2
Rollup merge of #92747 - swenson:bignum-bit-length-optimization, r=scottmcm
Simplification of BigNum::bit_length

As indicated in the comment, the BigNum::bit_length function could be
optimized by using CLZ, which is often a single instruction instead a
loop.

I think the code is also simpler now without the loop.

I added some additional tests for Big8x3 and Big32x40 to ensure that
there were no regressions.
2022-01-15 11:28:22 +01:00
Matthias Krüger
1d9ab77eb7
Rollup merge of #92382 - clarfonthey:const_convert, r=scottmcm
Extend const_convert to rest of blanket core::convert impls

This adds constness to all the blanket impls in `core::convert` under the existing `const_convert` feature, tracked by #88674.

Existing impls under that feature:

```rust
impl<T> const From<T> for T;
impl<T, U> const Into<U> for T where U: ~const From<T>;

impl<T> const ops::Try for Option<T>;
impl<T> const ops::FromResidual for Option<T>;

impl<T, E> const ops::Try for Result<T, E>;
impl<T, E, F> const ops::FromResidual<Result<convert::Infallible, E>> for Result<T, F> where F: ~const From<E>;
```

Additional impls:

```rust
impl<T: ?Sized, U: ?Sized> const AsRef<U> for &T where T: ~const AsRef<U>;
impl<T: ?Sized, U: ?Sized> const AsRef<U> for &mut T where T: ~const AsRef<U>;
impl<T: ?Sized, U: ?Sized> const AsMut<U> for &mut T where T: ~const AsMut<U>;

impl<T, U> const TryInto<U> for T where U: ~const TryFrom<T>;
impl<T, U> const TryFrom<U> for T where U: ~const Into<T>;
```
2022-01-15 02:25:14 +01:00
Matthias Krüger
558da934c1
Rollup merge of #92768 - ojeda:stabilize-maybe_uninit_extra, r=Mark-Simulacrum
Partially stabilize `maybe_uninit_extra`

This covers:

```rust
impl<T> MaybeUninit<T> {
    pub unsafe fn assume_init_read(&self) -> T { ... }
    pub unsafe fn assume_init_drop(&mut self) { ... }
}
```

It does not cover the const-ness of `write` under `const_maybe_uninit_write` nor the const-ness of `assume_init_read` (this commit adds `const_maybe_uninit_assume_init_read` for that).

FCP: https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/63567#issuecomment-958590287.

Signed-off-by: Miguel Ojeda <ojeda@kernel.org>
2022-01-14 07:47:33 +01:00
Andre Bogus
5431d5b58e Add rustc_diagnostic_item attribute to AtomicBool 2022-01-13 23:32:49 +01:00
Tomasz Miąsko
000b36c505 Remove deprecated LLVM-style inline assembly 2022-01-12 18:51:31 +01:00
Matthias Krüger
677f8f0f4f
Rollup merge of #92328 - camelid:sentence, r=scottmcm
Tweak sentence in `transmute` docs
2022-01-12 07:12:05 +01:00
Miguel Ojeda
8680a44c0f Partially stabilize maybe_uninit_extra
This covers:

    impl<T> MaybeUninit<T> {
        pub unsafe fn assume_init_read(&self) -> T { ... }
        pub unsafe fn assume_init_drop(&mut self) { ... }
    }

It does not cover the const-ness of `write` under
`const_maybe_uninit_write` nor the const-ness of
`assume_init_read` (this commit adds
`const_maybe_uninit_assume_init_read` for that).

FCP: https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/63567#issuecomment-958590287.

Signed-off-by: Miguel Ojeda <ojeda@kernel.org>
2022-01-11 17:01:13 +01:00
bors
2e2c86eba2 Auto merge of #92070 - rukai:replace_vec_into_iter_with_array_into_iter, r=Mark-Simulacrum
Replace usages of vec![].into_iter with [].into_iter

`[].into_iter` is idiomatic over `vec![].into_iter` because its simpler and faster (unless the vec is optimized away in which case it would be the same)

So we should change all the implementation, documentation and tests to use it.

I skipped:
* `src/tools` - Those are copied in from upstream
* `src/test/ui` - Hard to tell if `vec![].into_iter` was used intentionally or not here and not much benefit to changing it.
*  any case where `vec![].into_iter` was used because we specifically needed a `Vec::IntoIter<T>`
*  any case where it looked like we were intentionally using `vec![].into_iter` to test it.
2022-01-11 14:23:24 +00:00
Christopher Swenson
0589cace8c Simplify BigNum::bit_length() with log2()
Thank you to @scottmcm for suggesting the handy `log2()` function.
2022-01-10 15:31:11 -08:00
Christopher Swenson
424f38f211 Simplification of BigNum::bit_length
As indicated in the comment, the BigNum::bit_length function could be
optimized by using CLZ, which is often a single instruction instead a
loop.

I think the code is also simpler now without the loop.

I added some additional tests for Big8x3 and Big32x40 to ensure that
there were no regressions.
2022-01-10 14:18:28 -08:00
Lamb
3a77bb86ff Compute most of Public/Exported access level in rustc_resolve
Mak DefId to AccessLevel map in resolve for export

hir_id to accesslevel in resolve and applied in privacy
using local def id
removing tracing probes
making function not recursive and adding comments

Move most of Exported/Public res to rustc_resolve

moving public/export res to resolve

fix missing stability attributes in core, std and alloc

move code to access_levels.rs

return for some kinds instead of going through them

Export correctness, macro changes, comments

add comment for import binding

add comment for import binding

renmae to access level visitor, remove comments, move fn as closure, remove new_key

fmt

fix rebase

fix rebase

fmt

fmt

fix: move macro def to rustc_resolve

fix: reachable AccessLevel for enum variants

fmt

fix: missing stability attributes for other architectures

allow unreachable pub in rustfmt

fix: missing impl access level + renaming export to reexport

Missing impl access level was found thanks to a test in clippy
2022-01-09 21:33:14 +00:00
Matthias Krüger
0871a38adf
Rollup merge of #92671 - WaffleLapkin:atomic_from_mut_unique_ref, r=m-ou-se
Make `Atomic*::from_mut` return `&mut Atomic*`

```rust
impl Atomic* {
    pub fn from_mut(v: &mut bool) -> &mut Self;
    //                               ^^^^---- previously was just a &
}
```

This PR makes `from_mut` atomic methods tracked in #76314 return unique references to atomic types, instead of shared ones. This makes `from_mut` and `get_mut` inverses of each other, allowing to undo either of them by the other.

r? `@RalfJung`
(as Ralf was [concerned](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/76314#issuecomment-955062593) about this)
2022-01-09 13:38:33 +01:00
Matthias Krüger
295ef3a336
Rollup merge of #92657 - Kixunil:ptr_as_const_mut, r=m-ou-se
Implemented const casts of raw pointers

This adds `as_mut()` method for `*const T` and `as_const()` for `*mut T`
which are intended to make casting of consts safer. This was discussed
in the [internals discussion][discussion].

Given that this is a simple change and multiple people agreed to it including `@RalfJung` I decided to go ahead and open the PR.

[discussion]: https://internals.rust-lang.org/t/casting-constness-can-be-risky-heres-a-simple-fix/15933
2022-01-09 13:38:33 +01:00
Lucas Kent
08829853d3 eplace usages of vec![].into_iter with [].into_iter 2022-01-09 14:09:25 +11:00
bors
23ce5fc465 Auto merge of #92068 - fee1-dead:libcore2021, r=m-ou-se
Switch all libraries to the 2021 edition

The fix for https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/88638#issuecomment-996620107 is to simply add const-stability for these functions.

r? `@m-ou-se`

Closes #88638.
2022-01-08 21:41:48 +00:00
Martin Habovstiak
1a96623513 Implemented const casts of raw pointers
This adds `as_mut()` method for `*const T` and `as_const()` for `*mut T`
which are intended to make casting of consts safer. This was discussed
in the [internals discussion][discussion].

[discussion]: https://internals.rust-lang.org/t/casting-constness-can-be-risky-heres-a-simple-fix/15933
2022-01-08 18:04:51 +01:00
Maybe Waffle
2b03ed19f6 Make Atomic*::from_mut return &mut Atomic* 2022-01-08 16:57:20 +03:00
Eric Huss
d43c9ad5d3
Rollup merge of #92600 - asquared31415:float-must-use, r=joshtriplett
Add some missing `#[must_use]` to some `f{32,64}` operations

This PR adds `#[must_use]` to the following methods:
 - `f32::recip`
 - `f32::max`
 - `f32::min`
 - `f32::maximum`
 - `f32::minimum`
 and their equivalents in `f64`.
 These methods all produce a new value without modifying the original and so are pointless to call without using the result.
2022-01-07 20:21:00 -08:00
Eric Huss
0bd7e2ff2e
Rollup merge of #92568 - Mark-Simulacrum:non-exhaustive-variant-count, r=the8472
Add note about non_exhaustive to variant_count

Since `variant_count` isn't returning something opaque, I thought it makes sense to explicitly call out that its return value may change for some enums.

cc #73662
2022-01-07 20:20:59 -08:00
Ian Douglas Scott
a02639dc09 Implement TryFrom<char> for u8
Previously suggested in https://github.com/rust-lang/rfcs/issues/2854.

It makes sense to have this since `char` implements `From<u8>`. Likewise
`u32`, `u64`, and `u128` (since #79502) implement `From<char>`.
2022-01-07 12:28:47 -08:00
Frank Steffahn
731bbae816 Also change PhantomData parameter of iter::Empty, and future::Pending 2022-01-07 01:53:51 +01:00
Frank Steffahn
a043acd0b2 change PhantomData type for BuildHasherDefault 2022-01-07 00:39:48 +01:00
Alex Macleod
7ea03db04a Add diagnostic items for macros 2022-01-06 14:59:33 +00:00
asquared31415
dd364ed226 add some missing must use to float ops 2022-01-06 00:20:58 -05:00
bors
f1ce0e6a00 Auto merge of #92587 - matthiaskrgr:rollup-qnwa8qx, r=matthiaskrgr
Rollup of 7 pull requests

Successful merges:

 - #92092 (Drop guards in slice sorting derive src pointers from &mut T, which is invalidated by interior mutation in comparison)
 - #92388 (Fix a minor mistake in `String::try_reserve_exact` examples)
 - #92442 (Add negative `impl` for `Ord`, `PartialOrd` on `LocalDefId`)
 - #92483 (Stabilize `result_cloned` and `result_copied`)
 - #92574 (Add RISC-V detection macro and more architecture instructions)
 - #92575 (ast: Always keep a `NodeId` in `ast::Crate`)
 - #92583 (⬆️ rust-analyzer)

Failed merges:

r? `@ghost`
`@rustbot` modify labels: rollup
2022-01-05 15:28:36 +00:00
Matthias Krüger
c570fcb0c4
Rollup merge of #92574 - luojia65:riscv-kernel-dev-rust, r=Amanieu
Add RISC-V detection macro and more architecture instructions

This pull request includes:

- Update `stdarch` dependency to include ratified RISC-V supervisor and hypervisor instruction intrinsics which is useful in Rust kernel development
- Add macro `is_riscv_feature_detected!`
- Modify impl of `core::hint::spin_loop` to comply with latest version of `core::arch`

After this update, users may now develop RISC-V kernels and user applications more freely.

r? `@Amanieu`
2022-01-05 15:05:48 +01:00
Matthias Krüger
051d591edf
Rollup merge of #92483 - ksqsf:master, r=dtolnay
Stabilize `result_cloned` and `result_copied`

Tracking issue: #63168

The FCP is now completed.
2022-01-05 15:05:47 +01:00
Matthias Krüger
56d11a446b
Rollup merge of #92092 - saethlin:fix-sort-guards-sb, r=danielhenrymantilla
Drop guards in slice sorting derive src pointers from &mut T, which is invalidated by interior mutation in comparison

I tried to run https://github.com/rust-lang/miri-test-libstd on `alloc` with `-Zmiri-track-raw-pointers`, and got a failure on the test `slice::panic_safe`. The test failure has nothing to do with panic safety, it's from how the test tests for panic safety.

I minimized the test failure into this very silly program:
```rust
use std::cell::Cell;
use std::cmp::Ordering;

#[derive(Clone)]
struct Evil(Cell<usize>);

fn main() {
    let mut input = vec![Evil(Cell::new(0)); 3];

    // Hits the bug pattern via CopyOnDrop in core
    input.sort_unstable_by(|a, _b| {
        a.0.set(0);
        Ordering::Less
    });

    // Hits the bug pattern via InsertionHole in alloc
    input.sort_by(|_a, b| {
        b.0.set(0);
        Ordering::Less
    });
}
```

To fix this, I'm just removing the mutability/uniqueness where it wasn't required.
2022-01-05 15:05:44 +01:00
Matthias Krüger
a0262fdf1f
Rollup merge of #92322 - alper:add_debug_trait_documentation, r=dtolnay
Add another implementation example to Debug trait

As per the discussion in: #92276
2022-01-05 11:26:05 +01:00
luojia65
06f4453027 Add is_riscv_feature_detected!; modify impl of hint::spin_loop
Update library/core/src/hint.rs

Co-authored-by: Amanieu d'Antras <amanieu@gmail.com>

Remove redundant config gate
2022-01-05 15:44:52 +08:00
Mark Rousskov
57b59af9fb Add note about non_exhaustive to variant_count 2022-01-04 21:58:36 -05:00
bors
5883b87563 Auto merge of #92560 - matthiaskrgr:rollup-jeli7ip, r=matthiaskrgr
Rollup of 7 pull requests

Successful merges:

 - #91587 (core::ops::unsize: improve docs for DispatchFromDyn)
 - #91907 (Allow `_` as the length of array types and repeat expressions)
 - #92515 (RustWrapper: adapt for an LLVM API change)
 - #92516 (Do not use deprecated -Zsymbol-mangling-version in bootstrap)
 - #92530 (Move `contains` method of Option and Result lower in docs)
 - #92546 (Update books)
 - #92551 (rename StackPopClean::None to Root)

Failed merges:

r? `@ghost`
`@rustbot` modify labels: rollup
2022-01-04 23:01:49 +00:00
David Tolnay
4df1a5561a
Touch up Debug example from PR 92322 2022-01-04 14:28:28 -08:00
Matthias Krüger
af49d81e04
Rollup merge of #92530 - dtolnay:contains, r=yaahc
Move `contains` method of Option and Result lower in docs

Follow-up to #92444 trying to get the `Option` and `Result` rustdocs in better shape.

This addresses the request in https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/62358#issuecomment-645676285. The `contains` methods are previously too high up in the docs on both `Option` and `Result` &mdash; stuff like `ok` and `map` and `and_then` should all be featured higher than `contains`. All of those are more ubiquitously useful than `contains`.
2022-01-04 21:23:10 +01:00
Matthias Krüger
d49c692eeb
Rollup merge of #91587 - nrc:dispatchfromdyn-docs, r=yaahc
core::ops::unsize: improve docs for DispatchFromDyn

Docs-only PR, improves documentation for DispatchFromDyn.
2022-01-04 21:23:05 +01:00
ksqsf
1c547f422a Stabilize result_cloned and result_copied 2022-01-04 13:23:32 +08:00
asquared31415
9054fbb03a mirror mention of intent of From 2022-01-03 17:12:59 -05:00
Daniel Henry-Mantilla
f20ccc0748 Make the documentation of builtin macro attributes accessible
- Do not `#[doc(hidden)]` the `#[derive]` macro attribute

  - Add a link to the reference section to `derive`'s inherent docs

  - Do the same for `#[test]` and `#[global_allocator]`

  - Fix `GlobalAlloc` link (why is it on `core` and not `alloc`?)

  - Try `no_inline`-ing the `std` reexports from `core`

  - Revert "Try `no_inline`-ing the `std` reexports from `core`"

  - Address PR review

  - Also document the unstable macros
2022-01-03 20:43:16 +01:00
David Tolnay
7dec41a236
Move contains method of Option and Result lower in docs 2022-01-03 10:46:15 -08:00
Matthias Krüger
13e284033e
Rollup merge of #92444 - dtolnay:coremethods, r=joshtriplett
Consolidate Result's and Option's methods into fewer impl blocks

`Result`'s and `Option`'s methods have historically been separated up into `impl` blocks based on their trait bounds, with the bounds specified on type parameters of the impl block. I find this unhelpful because closely related methods, like `unwrap_or` and `unwrap_or_default`, end up disproportionately far apart in source code and rustdocs:

<pre>
impl&lt;T&gt; Option&lt;T&gt; {
    pub fn unwrap_or(self, default: T) -&gt; T {
        ...
    }

    <img alt="one eternity later" src="https://user-images.githubusercontent.com/1940490/147780325-ad4e01a4-c971-436e-bdf4-e755f2d35f15.jpg" width="750">
}

impl&lt;T: Default&gt; Option&lt;T&gt; {
    pub fn unwrap_or_default(self) -&gt; T {
        ...
    }
}
</pre>

I'd prefer for method to be in as few impl blocks as possible, with the most logical grouping within each impl block. Any bounds needed can be written as `where` clauses on the method instead:

```rust
impl<T> Option<T> {
    pub fn unwrap_or(self, default: T) -> T {
        ...
    }

    pub fn unwrap_or_default(self) -> T
    where
        T: Default,
    {
        ...
    }
}
```

*Warning: the end-to-end diff of this PR is computed confusingly by git / rendered confusingly by GitHub; it's practically impossible to review that way. I've broken the PR into commits that move small groups of methods for which git behaves better &mdash; these each should be easily individually reviewable.*
2022-01-03 14:44:21 +01:00
bors
82418f93ac Auto merge of #91961 - kornelski:track_split_caller, r=joshtriplett
Track caller of slice split and swap

Improves error location for `slice.split_at*()` and `slice.swap()`.

These are generic inline functions, so the `#[track_caller]` on them is free — only changes a value of an argument already passed to panicking code.
2022-01-02 09:35:24 +00:00
David Tolnay
dc3291614a
Consolidate impl Option<&mut T> 2021-12-30 10:37:53 -08:00
David Tolnay
538fe4b28d
Consolidate impl Option<&T> 2021-12-30 10:37:27 -08:00
David Tolnay
9d65bc51c1
Move Option::as_deref_mut 2021-12-30 10:36:55 -08:00
David Tolnay
48a91a08d1
Move Option::as_deref 2021-12-30 10:36:37 -08:00
David Tolnay
bbcf09f2fb
Move Option::unwrap_or_default 2021-12-30 10:34:35 -08:00
David Tolnay
b7a0ab18f6
Consolidate impl Result<&mut T, E> 2021-12-30 10:31:26 -08:00
David Tolnay
e63e2680da
Consolidate impl Result<&T, E> 2021-12-30 10:30:28 -08:00
David Tolnay
b2df61fa9f
Move Result::into_err 2021-12-30 10:28:54 -08:00
David Tolnay
778ca204a6
Move Result::into_ok 2021-12-30 10:28:23 -08:00
David Tolnay
06ea5ebe4e
Move Result::expect_err and Result::unwrap_err 2021-12-30 10:27:43 -08:00
David Tolnay
aa2aca2c8c
Move Result::unwrap_or_default 2021-12-30 10:26:36 -08:00
David Tolnay
15f57a6c59
Move Result::expect and Result::unwrap 2021-12-30 10:25:42 -08:00
David Tolnay
5aa8f91ff0
Move Result::as_deref_mut 2021-12-30 10:24:23 -08:00
David Tolnay
eda61d8d8a
Move Result::as_deref 2021-12-30 10:23:46 -08:00
Chayim Refael Friedman
e86ecdf9fe
Use UnsafeCell::get_mut() in core::lazy::OnceCell::get_mut()
This removes one unnecessary `unsafe` block.
2021-12-30 05:04:44 +02:00
bors
b70cc6422c Auto merge of #92291 - AngelicosPhosphoros:typeid_inline_revert_92135, r=joshtriplett
Reverts #92135 because perf regression

Please, start a perf test for this.

r? `@joshtriplett` You approved original PR.
2021-12-29 05:53:19 +00:00
ltdk
b1b873f365 Extend const_convert to rest of blanket core::convert impls 2021-12-28 20:53:51 -05:00
Michael Watzko
1c0dc1810d Add {Add,Sub,Mul,Div,Rem,BitXor,BitOr,BitAnd}{,Assign}<$t> to Saturating<$t> 2021-12-28 17:25:00 +01:00
Matthias Krüger
c9cc9e589c
Rollup merge of #92335 - ecstatic-morse:std-column-unicode, r=Manishearth
Document units for `std::column`

Fixes #92301.

r? ``@Manishearth`` (for the terminology and the Chinese)
2021-12-28 13:59:26 +01:00
Dylan MacKenzie
3115d8413a Document units for std::column 2021-12-27 15:39:35 -08:00
Noah Lev
60ec6a0e38
Tweak sentence in transmute docs 2021-12-27 11:40:17 -08:00
Alper Çugun
1773e8318f
Add another implementation example to Debug trait 2021-12-27 12:28:11 +01:00
AngelicosPhosphoros
72b0c8f233 Reverts #92135 because perf regression 2021-12-26 16:02:33 +03:00
bors
475b00aa40 Auto merge of #92135 - AngelicosPhosphoros:typeid_inline_74362, r=dtolnay
Add `#[inline]` modifier to `TypeId::of`

It was already inlined but it happened only in 4th InlinerPass on my testcase.
With `#[inline]` modifier it happens on 2nd pass.

Closes #74362
2021-12-24 20:06:15 +00:00
bors
fca4b155a7 Auto merge of #92226 - woppopo:const_black_box, r=joshtriplett
Constify `core::intrinsics::black_box` and `core::hint::black_box`.

`core::intrinsics::black_box` is already constified, but it wasn't marked as const (see: https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/blob/master/compiler/rustc_const_eval/src/interpret/intrinsics.rs#L471).

Tracking issue: None
2021-12-24 10:02:54 +00:00
Matthias Krüger
94b9b5f35f
Rollup merge of #92121 - RalfJung:miri-core-test, r=kennytm
disable test with self-referential generator on Miri

Running the libcore test suite in Miri currently fails due to the known incompatibility of self-referential generators with Miri's aliasing checks (https://github.com/rust-lang/unsafe-code-guidelines/issues/148). So let's disable that test in Miri for now.
2021-12-23 17:48:30 +01:00
woppopo
72f15ea22a Constify core::intrinsics::black_box 2021-12-23 20:07:41 +09:00
Deadbeef
06a1c14d52
Switch all libraries to the 2021 edition 2021-12-23 19:03:47 +08:00
Deadbeef
f52eb4ca8b
Add const-stability to panicking::panic_* fns
This allows us to use `panic!` and friends in a const-stable context
within libcore.
2021-12-23 19:03:43 +08:00
bors
390bb3406d Auto merge of #92155 - m-ou-se:panic-fn, r=eddyb
Use panic() instead of panic!() in some places in core.

See https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/92068 and https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/92140.

This avoids the `panic!()` macro in a few potentially hot paths. This becomes more relevant when switching `core` to Rust 2021, as it'll avoid format_args!() and save some compilation time. (It doesn't make a huge difference, but still.) (Also the errors in const panic become slightly nicer.)
2021-12-23 05:17:47 +00:00
Matthias Krüger
60625a6ef0
Rollup merge of #88858 - spektom:to_lower_upper_rev, r=dtolnay
Allow reverse iteration of lowercase'd/uppercase'd chars

The PR implements `DoubleEndedIterator` trait for `ToLowercase` and `ToUppercase`.

This enables reverse iteration of lowercase/uppercase variants of character sequences.
One of use cases:  determining whether a char sequence is a suffix of another one.

Example:

```rust
fn endswith_ignore_case(s1: &str, s2: &str) -> bool {
    for eob in s1
        .chars()
        .flat_map(|c| c.to_lowercase())
        .rev()
        .zip_longest(s2.chars().flat_map(|c| c.to_lowercase()).rev())
    {
        match eob {
            EitherOrBoth::Both(c1, c2) => {
                if c1 != c2 {
                    return false;
                }
            }
            EitherOrBoth::Left(_) => return true,
            EitherOrBoth::Right(_) => return false,
        }
    }
    true
}
```
2021-12-23 00:28:51 +01:00
David Tolnay
417b6f354e
Update stability attribute for double ended case mapping iterators 2021-12-22 10:49:51 -08:00
Mara Bos
ad6ef48dd9 Use panic() instead of panic!() in some places in core. 2021-12-21 10:39:00 +01:00
Matthias Krüger
4d840a6e45
Rollup merge of #91823 - woppopo:const_ptr_as_ref, r=lcnr
Make `PTR::as_ref` and similar methods `const`.

Tracking issue: #91822
Feature gate: `#![feature(const_ptr_as_ref)]`

```rust
// core::ptr
impl<T: ?Sized> *const T {
    pub const unsafe fn as_ref<'a>(self) -> Option<&'a T>;
    pub const unsafe fn as_uninit_ref<'a>(self) -> Option<&'a MaybeUninit<T>>
    where
        T: Sized;
    pub const unsafe fn as_uninit_slice<'a>(self) -> Option<&'a [MaybeUninit<T>]>;
}

impl<T: ?Sized> *mut T {
    pub const unsafe fn as_ref<'a>(self) -> Option<&'a T>;
    pub const unsafe fn as_uninit_ref<'a>(self) -> Option<&'a MaybeUninit<T>>
    where
        T: Sized;
    pub const unsafe fn as_mut<'a>(self) -> Option<&'a mut T>;
    pub const unsafe fn as_uninit_mut<'a>(self) -> Option<&'a mut MaybeUninit<T>>
    where
        T: Sized;
    pub const unsafe fn as_uninit_slice<'a>(self) -> Option<&'a [MaybeUninit<T>]>;
    pub const unsafe fn as_uninit_slice_mut<'a>(self) -> Option<&'a mut [MaybeUninit<T>]>;
}

impl<T: Sized> NonNull<T> {
    pub const unsafe fn as_uninit_ref<'a>(&self) -> &'a MaybeUninit<T>;
    pub const unsafe fn as_uninit_mut<'a>(&mut self) -> &'a mut MaybeUninit<T>;
}

impl<T: ?Sized> NonNull<T> {
    pub const unsafe fn as_ref<'a>(&self) -> &'a T;
    pub const unsafe fn as_mut<'a>(&mut self) -> &'a mut T;
    pub const unsafe fn as_uninit_slice<'a>(&self) -> &'a [MaybeUninit<T>];
    pub const unsafe fn as_uninit_slice_mut<'a>(&self) -> &'a mut [MaybeUninit<T>];
}
```
2021-12-21 08:33:40 +01:00
AngelicosPhosphoros
756d163741 Add #[inline] modifier to TypeId::of
It was already inlined but it happened only in 4th InlinerPass on my testcase.
With `#[inline]` modifier it happens on 2nd pass.

Closes #74362
2021-12-20 23:08:57 +03:00
Ralf Jung
5994990088 disable test with self-referential generator on Miri 2021-12-20 12:33:55 +01:00
Matthias Krüger
6d2689526b
Rollup merge of #91141 - jhpratt:int_roundings, r=joshtriplett
Revert "Temporarily rename int_roundings functions to avoid conflicts"

This reverts commit 3ece63b64e.

This should be okay because #90329 has been merged.

r? `@joshtriplett`
2021-12-19 10:45:50 +01:00
Ben Kimock
a5a91c8e07 Derive src pointers in sort drop guards from &T
The src pointers in CopyOnDrop and InsertionHole used to be *mut T, and
were derived via automatic conversion from &mut T. According to Stacked
Borrows 2.1, this means that those pointers become invalidated by
interior mutation in the comparison function.

But there's no need for mutability in this code path. Thus, we can
change the drop guards to use *const and derive those from &T.
2021-12-18 20:02:03 -05:00
Matthias Krüger
e22aae009f
Rollup merge of #92020 - Folyd:stream-unpin, r=m-ou-se
Remove P: Unpin bound on impl Stream for Pin

Similar to https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/81363.
2021-12-19 00:38:42 +01:00
Matthias Krüger
1ac1f24ddd
Rollup merge of #92050 - r00ster91:patch-5, r=camelid
Add a space and 2 grave accents

I only noticed this because I have this implementation copy pasted in some places in my code and I really can't wait for this to be stabilized...
2021-12-18 14:49:45 +01:00
bors
d3f300477b Auto merge of #92062 - matthiaskrgr:rollup-en3p4sb, r=matthiaskrgr
Rollup of 7 pull requests

Successful merges:

 - #91439 (Mark defaulted `PartialEq`/`PartialOrd` methods as const)
 - #91516 (Improve suggestion to change struct field to &mut)
 - #91896 (Remove `in_band_lifetimes` for `rustc_passes`)
 - #91909 (⬆️ rust-analyzer)
 - #91922 (Remove `in_band_lifetimes` from `rustc_mir_dataflow`)
 - #92025 (Revert "socket ancillary data implementation for dragonflybsd.")
 - #92030 (Update stdlib to the 2021 edition)

Failed merges:

r? `@ghost`
`@rustbot` modify labels: rollup
2021-12-18 10:20:24 +00:00
Matthias Krüger
359c88e426
Rollup merge of #91439 - ecstatic-morse:const-cmp-trait-default-methods, r=oli-obk
Mark defaulted `PartialEq`/`PartialOrd` methods as const

WIthout it, `const` impls of these traits are unpleasant to write. I think this kind of change is allowed now. although it looks like it might require some Miri tweaks. Let's find out.

r? ```@fee1-dead```
2021-12-18 10:26:35 +01:00
Matthias Krüger
fcc59794a7
Rollup merge of #91928 - fee1-dead:constification1, r=oli-obk
Constify (most) `Option` methods

r? ``@oli-obk``
2021-12-18 08:16:29 +01:00
r00ster
afdd3561de
Add space and 2 grave accents 2021-12-17 23:11:04 +01:00
bors
7abab1efb2 Auto merge of #91838 - scottmcm:array-slice-eq-via-arrays-not-slices, r=dtolnay
Do array-slice equality via array equality, rather than always via slices

~~Draft because it needs a rebase after #91766 eventually gets through bors.~~

This enables the optimizations from #85828 to be used for array-to-slice comparisons too, not just array-to-array.

For example, <https://play.rust-lang.org/?version=nightly&mode=release&edition=2021&gist=5f9ba69b3d5825a782f897c830d3a6aa>
```rust
pub fn demo(x: &[u8], y: [u8; 4]) -> bool {
    *x == y
}
```
Currently writes the array to stack for no reason:
```nasm
	sub	rsp, 4
	mov	dword ptr [rsp], edx
	cmp	rsi, 4
	jne	.LBB0_1
	mov	eax, dword ptr [rdi]
	cmp	eax, dword ptr [rsp]
	sete	al
	add	rsp, 4
	ret

.LBB0_1:
	xor	eax, eax
	add	rsp, 4
	ret
```
Whereas with the change in this PR it just compares it directly:
```nasm
	cmp	rsi, 4
	jne	.LBB1_1
	cmp	dword ptr [rdi], edx
	sete	al
	ret

.LBB1_1:
	xor	eax, eax
	ret
```
2021-12-17 19:17:29 +00:00
Deadbeef
f141bedd90
Point to the tracking issue 2021-12-17 20:48:04 +08:00
Deadbeef
6b5f63c3fc
Constify (most) Option methods 2021-12-17 20:46:47 +08:00
Dylan MacKenzie
2049287030 Disable test on bootstrap compiler 2021-12-16 22:11:17 -08:00
Dylan MacKenzie
1606335a93 Test const impl of cmp traits 2021-12-16 21:35:25 -08:00
Dylan MacKenzie
9c83b56056 Mark defaulted PartialEq/PartialOrd methods as const 2021-12-16 21:35:25 -08:00
Folyd
5c77116230 Remove P: Unpin bound on impl Stream for Pin 2021-12-17 11:14:02 +08:00
bors
23c2723269 Auto merge of #92003 - matthiaskrgr:rollup-obgv0rt, r=matthiaskrgr
Rollup of 7 pull requests

Successful merges:

 - #91172 (Warn when a `#[test]`-like built-in attribute macro is present multiple times.)
 - #91796 (Fix since attribute for const_manually_drop feature)
 - #91879 (Remove `in_band_lifetimes` from `rustc_borrowck`)
 - #91947 (Add `io::Error::other`)
 - #91967 (Pull in libdevstat on FreeBSD)
 - #91987 (Add module documentation for rustdoc passes)
 - #92001 (Fix default_method_body_is_const when used across crates)

Failed merges:

r? `@ghost`
`@rustbot` modify labels: rollup
2021-12-16 23:08:02 +00:00
oxalica
bae0da8361
Implement data and vtable getters for RawWaker 2021-12-17 04:30:13 +08:00
Matthias Krüger
95d8aadcfc
Rollup merge of #91796 - not-my-profile:fix-const_manually_drop-since, r=kennytm
Fix since attribute for const_manually_drop feature

const_manually_drop was stabilized in 1.32 as mentioned in
https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/blob/master/RELEASES.md#version-1320-2019-01-17
2021-12-16 17:23:08 +01:00
Ben Kimock
3a0fa0375d Fix SB problems in slice sorting
Most of these problems originate in use of get_unchecked_mut.

When calling ptr::copy_nonoverlapping, using get_unchecked_mut for both
arguments causes the borrow created to make the second pointer to invalid the
first.

The pairs of identical MaybeUninit::slice_as_mut_ptr calls similarly
invalidate each other.

There was also a similar borrow invalidation problem with the use of
slice::get_unchecked_mut to derive the pointer for the CopyOnDrop.
2021-12-16 10:31:46 -05:00
Ralf Jung
58fd2ffc96 link to pref_align_of tracking issue 2021-12-15 18:39:17 +01:00
bors
c5ecc15704 Auto merge of #91962 - matthiaskrgr:rollup-2g082jw, r=matthiaskrgr
Rollup of 7 pull requests

Successful merges:

 - #91880 (fix clippy::single_char_pattern perf findings)
 - #91885 (Remove `in_band_lifetimes` from `rustc_codegen_ssa`)
 - #91898 (Make `TyS::is_suggestable` check for non-suggestable types structually)
 - #91915 (Add another regression test for unnormalized fn args with Self)
 - #91916 (Fix a bunch of typos)
 - #91918 (Constify `bool::then{,_some}`)
 - #91920 (Use `tcx.def_path_hash` in `ExistentialPredicate.stable_cmp`)

Failed merges:

r? `@ghost`
`@rustbot` modify labels: rollup
2021-12-15 12:41:42 +00:00
Matthias Krüger
13fb051074
Rollup merge of #91918 - fee1-dead:constification0-the-great-constification-begins, r=oli-obk
Constify `bool::then{,_some}`

Note on `~const Drop`: it has no effect when called from runtime functions, when called from const contexts, the trait system ensures that the type can be dropped in const contexts.
2021-12-15 10:57:03 +01:00
Matthias Krüger
99f4458a8c
Rollup merge of #91916 - steffahn:fix-typos, r=dtolnay
Fix a bunch of typos

I hope that none of these files is not supposed to be modified.

FYI, I opened separate PRs for typos in submodules, in the respective repositories
* https://github.com/rust-lang/stdarch/pull/1267
* https://github.com/rust-lang/backtrace-rs/pull/455
2021-12-15 10:57:02 +01:00
bors
3ee016ae4d Auto merge of #91959 - matthiaskrgr:rollup-rhajuvw, r=matthiaskrgr
Rollup of 7 pull requests

Successful merges:

 - #90521 (Stabilize `destructuring_assignment`)
 - #91479 (Add `[T]::as_simd(_mut)`)
 - #91584 (Improve code for rustdoc-gui tester)
 - #91886 (core: minor `Option` doc correction)
 - #91888 (Handle unordered const/ty generics for object lifetime defaults)
 - #91905 (Fix source code page sidebar on mobile)
 - #91906 (Removed `in_band_lifetimes` from `library\proc_macro`)

Failed merges:

r? `@ghost`
`@rustbot` modify labels: rollup
2021-12-15 09:31:59 +00:00
Kornel
084ea21f17 Track caller of slice split and swap 2021-12-15 08:48:26 +00:00
Matthias Krüger
e6c495dd59
Rollup merge of #91886 - euclio:option-doc, r=dtolnay
core: minor `Option` doc correction
2021-12-15 08:36:22 +01:00
Matthias Krüger
efc49c142a
Rollup merge of #91479 - scottmcm:slice-as-simd, r=workingjubilee
Add `[T]::as_simd(_mut)`

SIMD-style optimizations are the most common use for `[T]::align_to(_mut)`, but that's `unsafe`.  So these are *safe* wrappers around it, now that we have the `Simd` type available, to make it easier to use.

```rust
impl [T] {
    pub fn as_simd<const LANES: usize>(&self) -> (&[T], &[Simd<T, LANES>], &[T]);
    pub fn as_simd_mut<const LANES: usize>(&mut self) -> (&mut [T], &mut [Simd<T, LANES>], &mut [T]);
}
```

They're `cfg`'d out for miri because the `simd` module as a whole is unavailable there.
2021-12-15 08:36:20 +01:00
bors
df89fd2063 Auto merge of #91752 - yaahc:track-caller-result, r=cuviper
Readd track_caller to Result::from_residual

This is a followup on https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/87401 in and an attempt to move the issue towards resolution.

As part of the overhaul of the Try trait we removed the ability for errors to grab location information during propagation via `?` with the builtin `std::result::Result`. The previously linked issue has a fair bit of discussion into the reasons for and against the usage of `#[track_caller]` on the `FromResidual` impl on `Result` that I will do my best to summarize.

---
### For

- https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/87401#issuecomment-915053533: Difficulties with using non `std::result::Result` like types
- https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/87401#issuecomment-978355102: Inconsistency with functionality provided for recoverable (Result) and non-recoverable errors (panic), where panic provides a location and Result does not, pushing some users towards using panic

### Against

- https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/84277#issuecomment-885322833: concern that this will bloat callers that never use this data

---

Personally, I want to quantify the performance / bloat impact of re-adding this attribute, and fully evaluate the pros and cons before deciding if I need to switch `eyre` to have a custom `Result` type, which would also mean I need `try_trait_v2` to be stabilized, cc `@scottmcm.` If the performance impact is minor enough in the general case I think I would prefer that the default `Result` type has the ability to track location information for consistency with `panic` error reporting, and leave it to applications that need particularly high performance to handle the micro optimizations of introducing their own efficient custom Result type or matching manually.

Alternatively, I wonder if the performance penalty on code that doesn't use the location information on `FromResidual` could be mitigated via new optimizations.
2021-12-15 06:34:00 +00:00
bors
195e931b02 Auto merge of #91945 - matthiaskrgr:rollup-jszf9zp, r=matthiaskrgr
Rollup of 7 pull requests

Successful merges:

 - #90939 (Tweak errors coming from `for`-loop, `?` and `.await` desugaring)
 - #91859 (Iterator::cycle() — document empty iterator special case)
 - #91868 (Use `OutputFilenames` to generate output file for `-Zllvm-time-trace`)
 - #91870 (Revert setting a default for the MACOSX_DEPLOYMENT_TARGET env var for linking)
 - #91881 (Stabilize `iter::zip`)
 - #91882 (Remove `in_band_lifetimes` from `rustc_typeck`)
 - #91940 (Update cargo)

Failed merges:

r? `@ghost`
`@rustbot` modify labels: rollup
2021-12-15 03:28:55 +00:00
Matthias Krüger
4e7497bda0
Rollup merge of #91881 - Patrick-Poitras:stabilize-iter-zip, r=scottmcm
Stabilize `iter::zip`

Hello all!

As the tracking issue (#83574) for `iter::zip` completed the final commenting period without any concerns being raised, I hereby submit this stabilization PR on the issue.

As the pull request that introduced the feature (#82917) states, the `iter::zip` function is a shorter way to zip two iterators. As it's generally a quality-of-life/ergonomic improvement, it has been integrated into the codebase without any trouble, and has been
used in many places across the rust compiler and standard library since March without any issues.

For more details, I would refer to `@cuviper's` original PR, or the [function's documentation](https://doc.rust-lang.org/std/iter/fn.zip.html).
2021-12-15 01:28:08 +01:00
Matthias Krüger
d6c802ee7a
Rollup merge of #91859 - xkr47:patch-2, r=yaahc
Iterator::cycle() — document empty iterator special case
2021-12-15 01:28:05 +01:00
Matthias Krüger
272188eecd
Rollup merge of #90939 - estebank:wg-af-polish, r=tmandry
Tweak errors coming from `for`-loop, `?` and `.await` desugaring

 * Suggest removal of `.await` on non-`Future` expression
 * Keep track of obligations introduced by desugaring
 * Remove span pointing at method for obligation errors coming from desugaring
 * Point at called local sync `fn` and suggest making it `async`

```
error[E0277]: `()` is not a future
  --> $DIR/unnecessary-await.rs:9:10
   |
LL |     boo().await;
   |     -----^^^^^^ `()` is not a future
   |     |
   |     this call returns `()`
   |
   = help: the trait `Future` is not implemented for `()`
help: do not `.await` the expression
   |
LL -     boo().await;
LL +     boo();
   |
help: alternatively, consider making `fn boo` asynchronous
   |
LL | async fn boo () {}
   | +++++
```

Fix #66731.
2021-12-15 01:28:04 +01:00
bors
d594910a2d Auto merge of #91933 - matthiaskrgr:rollup-cw9qolb, r=matthiaskrgr
Rollup of 7 pull requests

Successful merges:

 - #89825 (Make split_inclusive() on an empty slice yield an empty output)
 - #91239 (regression test for issue 87490)
 - #91597 (Recover on invalid operators `<>` and `<=>`)
 - #91774 (Fix typo for MutVisitor)
 - #91786 (Return an error when `eval_rvalue_with_identities` fails)
 - #91798 (Avoid suggest adding `self` in visibility spec)
 - #91856 (Looser check for overflowing_binary_op)

Failed merges:

r? `@ghost`
`@rustbot` modify labels: rollup
2021-12-15 00:23:44 +00:00
Scott McMurray
e4c44c5df7 Update comments per review feedback 2021-12-14 15:48:46 -08:00
PFPoitras
304ede6bcc Stabilize iter::zip. 2021-12-14 18:50:31 -04:00
bors
2f4da6243f Auto merge of #91728 - Amanieu:stable_asm, r=joshtriplett
Stabilize asm! and global_asm!

Tracking issue: #72016

It's been almost 2 years since the original [RFC](https://github.com/rust-lang/rfcs/pull/2850) was posted and we're finally ready to stabilize this feature!

The main changes in this PR are:
- Removing `asm!` and `global_asm!` from the prelude as per the decision in #87228.
- Stabilizing the `asm` and `global_asm` features.
- Removing the unstable book pages for `asm` and `global_asm`. The contents are moved to the [reference](https://github.com/rust-lang/reference/pull/1105) and [rust by example](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust-by-example/pull/1483).
  - All links to these pages have been removed to satisfy the link checker. In a later PR these will be replaced with links to the reference or rust by example.
- Removing the automatic suggestion for using `llvm_asm!` instead of `asm!` if you're still using the old syntax, since it doesn't work anymore with `asm!` no longer being in the prelude. This only affects code that predates the old LLVM-style `asm!` being renamed to `llvm_asm!`.
- Updating `stdarch` and `compiler-builtins`.
- Updating all the tests.

r? `@joshtriplett`
2021-12-14 21:15:22 +00:00
Scott McMurray
a0b96902e4 Do array-slice equality via arrays, rather than always via slices
This'll still go via slices eventually for large arrays, but this way slice comparisons to short arrays can use the same memcmp-avoidance tricks.

Added some tests for all the combinations to make sure I didn't accidentally infinitely-recurse something.
2021-12-14 13:15:15 -08:00
Matthias Krüger
50327d2c91
Rollup merge of #89825 - martinvonz:split-inclusive-empty, r=m-ou-se
Make split_inclusive() on an empty slice yield an empty output

`[].split_inclusive()` currently yields a single, empty slice. That's
different from `"".split_inslusive()`, which yields no output at
all. I think that makes the slice version harder to use.

The case where I ran into this bug was when writing code for
generating a diff between two slices of bytes. I wanted to prefix
removed lines with "-" and a added lines with "+". Due to
`split_inclusive()`'s current behavior, that means that my code prints
just a "-" or "+" for empty files. I suspect most existing callers
have similar "bugs" (which would be fixed by this patch).

Closes #89716.
2021-12-14 20:47:26 +01:00
Deadbeef
4f4b2c7271
Constify bool::then{,_some} 2021-12-15 00:11:23 +08:00
Frank Steffahn
a957cefda6 Fix a bunch of typos 2021-12-14 16:40:43 +01:00
bors
404c8471ab Auto merge of #91902 - matthiaskrgr:rollup-hjjyhow, r=matthiaskrgr
Rollup of 7 pull requests

Successful merges:

 - #91529 (add BinaryHeap::try_reserve and BinaryHeap::try_reserve_exact)
 - #91820 (Suggest to specify a target triple when lang item is missing)
 - #91851 (Make `MaybeUninit::zeroed` `const`)
 - #91875 (Use try_normalize_erasing_regions in RevealAllVisitor)
 - #91887 (Remove `in_band_lifetimes` from `rustc_const_eval`)
 - #91892 (Fix HashStable implementation on InferTy)
 - #91893 (Remove `in_band_lifetimes` from `rustc_hir`)

Failed merges:

r? `@ghost`
`@rustbot` modify labels: rollup
2021-12-14 11:30:17 +00:00
bors
83b32f27fc Auto merge of #91766 - scottmcm:more-array-raw-eq, r=yaahc
Allow `memcmp` for more array comparisons

This way comparing `[NonZeroU8; 8]` is just as fast as comparing `[u8; 8]`.
2021-12-14 08:22:31 +00:00
Andy Russell
4e38807166
core: minor Option doc correction 2021-12-13 22:23:55 -05:00
Esteban Kuber
caf0c1bb1c Reduce verbosity for ? on non-Try expressions 2021-12-13 17:09:15 +00:00
Jonas Berlin
715c562d71
[ReviewFix] Linguistics 2021-12-13 13:52:17 +02:00
Jonas Berlin
7f2f9c60c2
Iterator::cycle() — document empty iterator special case 2021-12-13 13:23:33 +02:00
woppopo
2a5a6680fc Make MaybeUninit::zeroed const 2021-12-13 14:17:35 +09:00
bors
f7fd79ac1d Auto merge of #91841 - matthiaskrgr:rollup-zlhsg5a, r=matthiaskrgr
Rollup of 5 pull requests

Successful merges:

 - #91086 (Implement `TryFrom<&'_ mut [T]>` for `[T; N]`)
 - #91091 (Stabilize `ControlFlow::{is_break, is_continue}`)
 - #91749 (BTree: improve public descriptions and comments)
 - #91819 (rustbot: Add autolabeling for `T-compiler`)
 - #91824 (Make `(*mut T)::write_bytes` `const`)

Failed merges:

r? `@ghost`
`@rustbot` modify labels: rollup
2021-12-13 00:56:18 +00:00
Matthias Krüger
9e662d0c03
Rollup merge of #91824 - woppopo:const_ptr_write_bytes, r=oli-obk
Make `(*mut T)::write_bytes` `const`

Tracking issue: #86302
2021-12-13 00:20:10 +01:00
Matthias Krüger
6227d42928
Rollup merge of #91091 - ecstatic-morse:control-flow-enum-is, r=m-ou-se
Stabilize `ControlFlow::{is_break, is_continue}`

The type itself was stabilized in 1.55, but using it is not ergonomic without these helper functions. Stabilize them.

r? rust-lang/libs-api
2021-12-13 00:20:07 +01:00
Matthias Krüger
42f8d4833f
Rollup merge of #91086 - rhysd:issue-91085, r=m-ou-se
Implement `TryFrom<&'_ mut [T]>` for `[T; N]`

Fixes #91085.
2021-12-13 00:20:06 +01:00
bors
22f8bde876 Auto merge of #91549 - fee1-dead:const_env, r=spastorino
Eliminate ConstnessAnd again

Closes #91489.
Closes #89432.

Reverts #91491.
Reverts #89450.

r? `@spastorino`
2021-12-12 22:15:32 +00:00
Amanieu d'Antras
44a3a66ee8 Stabilize asm! and global_asm!
They are also removed from the prelude as per the decision in
https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/87228.

stdarch and compiler-builtins are updated to work with the new, stable
asm! and global_asm! macros.
2021-12-12 11:20:03 +00:00
Matthias Krüger
955e552d31
Rollup merge of #91814 - japm48:spelling-fix, r=RalfJung
doc: fix typo in comments

`dereferencable -> dereferenceable`

Fixes #91802.
2021-12-12 07:45:30 +01:00
woppopo
7f5dc0f609 Make (*mut T)::write_bytes const 2021-12-12 14:02:53 +09:00
woppopo
a4b3fe0887 Make PTR::as_ref and similar methods const. 2021-12-12 13:45:27 +09:00
Deadbeef
e22fe4008c
Revert "Auto merge of #89450 - usbalbin:const_try_revert, r=oli-obk"
This reverts commit a8387aef8c, reversing
changes made to 6e12110812.
2021-12-12 12:34:59 +08:00
japm48
0d7b830139 doc: fix typo in comments
dereferencable -> dereferenceable
2021-12-12 00:27:27 +01:00
Matthias Krüger
9031ac4840
Rollup merge of #91806 - woppopo:const_unique, r=dtolnay
Make `Unique`s methods `const`

Tracking issue: None
2021-12-11 23:31:55 +01:00
Matthias Krüger
90eb610d14
Rollup merge of #91737 - Manishearth:panic-immediate-stdlib, r=joshtriplett
Make certain panicky stdlib functions behave better under panic_immediate_abort

The stdlib has a `panic_immediate_abort` feature that turns panics into immediate aborts, without any formatting/display logic. This feature was [introduced](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/55011) primarily for codesize-constrained situations.

Unfortunately, this win doesn't quite propagate to `Result::expect()` and `Result::unwrap()`, while the formatting machinery is reduced, `expect()` and `unwrap()` both call `unwrap_failed("msg", &err)` which has a signature of `fn unwrap_failed(msg: &str, error: &dyn fmt::Debug)` and is `#[inline(never)]`. This means that `unwrap_failed` will unconditionally construct a `dyn Debug` trait object even though the object is never used in the function.

Constructing a trait object (even if you never call a method on it!) forces rust to include the vtable and any dependencies. This means that in `panic_immediate_abort` mode, calling expect/unwrap on a Result will pull in a whole bunch of formatting code for the error type even if it's completely unused.

This PR swaps out the function with one that won't require a trait object such that it won't force the inclusion of vtables in the code. It also gates off `#[inline(never)]` in a bunch of other places where allowing the inlining of an abort may be useful (this kind of thing is already done elsewhere in the stdlib).

I don't know how to write a test for this; we don't really seem to have any tests for `panic_immediate_abort` anyway so perhaps it's fine as is.
2021-12-11 23:31:50 +01:00
Matthias Krüger
9383a49cd4
Rollup merge of #90081 - woppopo:const_write_bytes, r=oli-obk
Make `intrinsics::write_bytes` const

This is required to constify `MaybeUninit::zeroed` and `(*mut T)::write_bytes`.

Tracking issue: #86302
2021-12-11 23:31:48 +01:00
woppopo
34eaf52829 Make Uniques methods const 2021-12-12 04:27:43 +09:00
woppopo
662024478d Make some Clone impls const 2021-12-12 04:19:23 +09:00
bors
928783de66 Auto merge of #91799 - matthiaskrgr:rollup-b38xx6i, r=matthiaskrgr
Rollup of 6 pull requests

Successful merges:

 - #83174 (Suggest using a temporary variable to fix borrowck errors)
 - #89734 (Point at capture points for non-`'static` reference crossing a `yield` point)
 - #90270 (Make `Borrow` and `BorrowMut` impls `const`)
 - #90741 (Const `Option::cloned`)
 - #91548 (Add spin_loop hint for RISC-V architecture)
 - #91721 (Minor improvements to `future::join!`'s implementation)

Failed merges:

r? `@ghost`
`@rustbot` modify labels: rollup
2021-12-11 18:56:59 +00:00
Matthias Krüger
ed81098fcc
Rollup merge of #91721 - danielhenrymantilla:patch-1, r=joshtriplett
Minor improvements to `future::join!`'s implementation

This is a follow-up from #91645, regarding [some remarks I made](https://rust-lang.zulipchat.com/#narrow/stream/187312-wg-async-foundations/topic/join!/near/264293660).

Mainly:
  - it hides the recursive munching through a private `macro`, to avoid leaking such details (a corollary is getting rid of the need to use ``@`` to disambiguate);
  - it uses a `match` binding, _outside_ the `async move` block, to better match the semantics from function-like syntax;
  - it pre-pins the future before calling into `poll_fn`, since `poll_fn`, alone, cannot guarantee that its capture does not move (to clarify: I believe the previous code was sound, thanks to the outer layer of `async`. But I find it clearer / more robust to refactorings this way 🙂).
  - it uses `@ibraheemdev's` very neat `.ready()?`;
  - it renames `Took` to `Taken` for consistency with `Done` (tiny nit 😄).

~~TODO~~Done:

  - [x] Add unit tests to enforce the function-like `:value` semantics are respected.

r? `@nrc`
2021-12-11 17:35:27 +01:00
Matthias Krüger
60b9f3130d
Rollup merge of #91548 - luojia65:hint-spin-loop-riscv, r=Amanieu
Add spin_loop hint for RISC-V architecture

This commit uses the PAUSE instruction (https://github.com/rust-lang/stdarch/pull/1262) to implement RISC-V spin loop, and updates `stdarch` submodule to use the merged PAUSE instruction.
2021-12-11 17:35:26 +01:00
Matthias Krüger
7fbaf33a3c
Rollup merge of #90741 - mbartlett21:patch-4, r=dtolnay
Const `Option::cloned`

This constifies the two `Option::cloned` functions, bounded on `~const Clone`.
2021-12-11 17:35:25 +01:00
Matthias Krüger
40482bb539
Rollup merge of #90270 - woppopo:const_borrow_trait, r=dtolnay
Make `Borrow` and `BorrowMut` impls `const`

Tracking issue: #91522
2021-12-11 17:35:24 +01:00
Martin Fischer
e1c9a88152 Fix since attribute for const_manually_drop feature
const_manually_drop was stabilized in 1.32 as mentioned in
https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/blob/master/RELEASES.md#version-1320-2019-01-17
2021-12-11 17:10:03 +01:00
Matthias Krüger
94ac197585
Rollup merge of #91711 - andrewbanchich:improve-zip-example, r=Mark-Simulacrum
Improve `std::iter::zip` example

`println!` isn't great for doc comments / tests.
2021-12-11 16:02:48 +01:00
Matthias Krüger
27c791ca86
Rollup merge of #91515 - jethrogb:rsplit_array, r=yaahc
Add rsplit_array variants to slices and arrays

By request: https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/90091#issuecomment-985903239

r? `@yaahc`
2021-12-11 08:22:32 +01:00
Matthias Krüger
2f8e2ff6ba
Rollup merge of #91127 - scottmcm:ptr_to_from_bits, r=dtolnay
Add `<*{const|mut} T>::{to|from}_bits`

Named based on the floating-point methods of the same name, as those are also about returning the *representation* of the value.

Tracking issue: https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/91126

Based on the conversation in https://rust-lang.zulipchat.com/#narrow/stream/219381-t-libs/topic/Adding.20methods.20as.20more.20specific.20versions.20of.20.60as.60/near/238391074

r? `@joshtriplett`
2021-12-11 08:22:29 +01:00
bors
c185610ebc Auto merge of #91761 - matthiaskrgr:rollup-bjowmvz, r=matthiaskrgr
Rollup of 11 pull requests

Successful merges:

 - #91668 (Remove the match on `ErrorKind::Other`)
 - #91678 (Add tests fixed by #90023)
 - #91679 (Move core/stream/stream/mod.rs to core/stream/stream.rs)
 - #91681 (fix typo in `intrinsics::raw_eq` docs)
 - #91686 (Fix `Vec::reserve_exact` documentation)
 - #91697 (Delete Utf8Lossy::from_str)
 - #91706 (Add unstable book entries for parts of asm that are not being stabilized)
 - #91709 (Replace iterator-based set construction by *Set::From<[T; N]>)
 - #91716 (Improve x.py logging and defaults a bit more)
 - #91747 (Add pierwill to .mailmap)
 - #91755 (Fix since attribute for const_linked_list_new feature)

Failed merges:

r? `@ghost`
`@rustbot` modify labels: rollup
2021-12-11 03:52:12 +00:00
Scott McMurray
24affba02e Allow memcmp for more array comparisons
This way comparing `[NonZeroU8; 8]` is just as fast as comparing `[u8; 8]`.
2021-12-10 17:30:39 -08:00
Matthias Krüger
2784051c11
Rollup merge of #91697 - dtolnay:lossyfromstr, r=Mark-Simulacrum
Delete Utf8Lossy::from_str

This whole type is marked as being for str internals only, but this constructor is never used by str internals. If you had a &amp;str already and wanted to lossy display it or iterate its lossy utf8 chunks, you would simply not use Utf8Lossy because the whole &amp;str is known to be one contiguous valid utf8 chunk.

If code really does need to obtain a value of type &amp;Utf8Lossy somewhere, and has only a &amp;str, `Utf8Lossy::from_bytes(s.as_bytes())` remains available. As currently implemented, there is no performance penalty relative to `from_str` i.e. the Utf8Lossy does not "remember" that it was constructed using `from_str` to bypass later utf8 decoding.
2021-12-10 22:41:26 +01:00
Matthias Krüger
4286ade8c9
Rollup merge of #91681 - WaffleLapkin:patch-3, r=scottmcm
fix typo in `intrinsics::raw_eq` docs
2021-12-10 22:41:24 +01:00
Matthias Krüger
6451de0a5d
Rollup merge of #91679 - ibraheemdev:stream-mod, r=Mark-Simulacrum
Move core/stream/stream/mod.rs to core/stream/stream.rs

Removes an unnecessary nested module.
2021-12-10 22:41:23 +01:00
Matthias Krüger
1fca934898
Rollup merge of #91646 - ibraheemdev:patch-9, r=dtolnay
Fix documentation for `core::ready::Ready`
2021-12-10 22:40:37 +01:00
Matthias Krüger
d317da48b1
Rollup merge of #91325 - RalfJung:const_eval_select, r=dtolnay
adjust const_eval_select documentation

"The Rust compiler assumes" indicates that this is language UB, but [I don't think that is a good idea](https://rust-lang.zulipchat.com/#narrow/stream/146212-t-compiler.2Fconst-eval/topic/const_eval_select.20assumptions). This UB would be very hard to test for and looks like a way-too-big footgun. ``@oli-obk`` suggested this is meant to be more like "library UB", so I tried to adjust the docs accordingly.

I also removed all references to "referential transparency". That is a rather vague concept used to mean many different things, and I honestly have no idea what exactly is meant by it in this specific instance. But I assume ``@fee1-dead`` had in their mind a property that all `const fn` code upholds, so by demanding that the runtime code and the const-time code are *observably equivalent*, whatever that property is would also be enforced here.

Cc ``@rust-lang/wg-const-eval``
2021-12-10 22:40:32 +01:00
Matthias Krüger
60aa03aa71
Rollup merge of #91105 - jplatte:stream-docs, r=dtolnay
Fix method name reference in stream documentation
2021-12-10 22:40:31 +01:00
Matthias Krüger
616f9efebb
Rollup merge of #90897 - jhpratt:fix-incorrect-feature-flags, r=dtolnay
Fix incorrect stability attributes

These two instances were caught in #90356, but that PR isn't going to be merged. I've extracted these to ensure it's still correct.

``@rustbot`` label: +A-stability +C-cleanup +S-waiting-on-review
2021-12-10 22:40:29 +01:00
Jethro Beekman
203cf2d366 Add rsplit_array variants to slices and arrays 2021-12-10 21:34:19 +01:00
Jane Lusby
44756d8d96 Readd track_caller to Result::from_residual 2021-12-10 09:17:55 -08:00
Josh Triplett
67ab53daee
Update library/core/tests/future.rs
Co-authored-by: Daniel Henry-Mantilla <daniel.henry.mantilla@gmail.com>
2021-12-10 05:07:52 -08:00
Manish Goregaokar
917dafc73a Add separate impl of unwrap_failed to avoid constructing trait objects 2021-12-10 13:12:26 +05:30
Manish Goregaokar
0adee2c01e inline Option panics on panic_immediate_abort 2021-12-10 13:08:06 +05:30
Manish Goregaokar
3cf9ae6ff3 inline slice panics on panic_immediate_abort 2021-12-10 13:05:06 +05:30
Andrew Banchich
c78fb62255 Improve std::iter::zip example.
Update library/core/src/iter/adapters/zip.rs

Co-authored-by: r00ster <r00ster91@protonmail.com>

Update library/core/src/iter/adapters/zip.rs

Co-authored-by: r00ster <r00ster91@protonmail.com>
2021-12-09 17:29:36 -05:00
Daniel Henry-Mantilla
f8dc13db43 Add tests asserting the function-like semantics of join!() 2021-12-09 22:57:30 +01:00
Daniel Henry-Mantilla
e277a98758
Fix missing mut typo
Co-authored-by: Ibraheem Ahmed <ibrah1440@gmail.com>
2021-12-09 21:21:37 +01:00
Daniel Henry-Mantilla
07bcf4aad3 Bring back the colon separators for the macro munching.
Co-Authored-By: Ibraheem Ahmed <ibrah1440@gmail.com>
2021-12-09 21:05:34 +01:00
Daniel Henry-Mantilla
846cb9c583 Fix two false positive lints 2021-12-09 21:05:34 +01:00
Daniel Henry-Mantilla
e936071fbf Minor improvements to future::join!'s implementation
This is a follow-up from #91645, regarding [some remarks I made](https://rust-lang.zulipchat.com/#narrow/stream/187312-wg-async-foundations/topic/join!/near/264293660).

Mainly:
  - it hides the recursive munching through a private `macro`, to avoid leaking such details (a corollary is getting rid of the need to use `@` to disambiguate);
  - it uses a `match` binding, _outside_ the `async move` block, to better match the semantics from function-like syntax;
  - it pre-pins the future before calling into `poll_fn`, since `poll_fn`, alone, cannot guarantee that its capture does not move;
  - it uses `.ready()?` since it's such a neat pattern;
  - it renames `Took` to `Taken` for consistency with `Done`.
2021-12-09 21:05:29 +01:00
bors
600820da45 Auto merge of #91692 - matthiaskrgr:rollup-u7dvh0n, r=matthiaskrgr
Rollup of 6 pull requests

Successful merges:

 - #87599 (Implement concat_bytes!)
 - #89999 (Update std::env::temp_dir to use GetTempPath2 on Windows when available.)
 - #90796 (Remove the reg_thumb register class for asm! on ARM)
 - #91042 (Use Vec extend instead of repeated pushes on several places)
 - #91634 (Do not attempt to suggest help for overly malformed struct/function call)
 - #91685 (Install llvm tools to sysroot when assembling local toolchain)

Failed merges:

r? `@ghost`
`@rustbot` modify labels: rollup
2021-12-09 07:08:32 +00:00
David Tolnay
4b0a9c9bc3
Delete Utf8Lossy::from_str 2021-12-08 22:54:51 -08:00
Matthias Krüger
3fc5bd7abc
Rollup merge of #87599 - Smittyvb:concat_bytes, r=Mark-Simulacrum
Implement concat_bytes!

This implements the unstable `concat_bytes!` macro, which has tracking issue #87555. It can be used like:
```rust
#![feature(concat_bytes)]

fn main() {
    assert_eq!(concat_bytes!(), &[]);
    assert_eq!(concat_bytes!(b'A', b"BC", [68, b'E', 70]), b"ABCDEF");
}
```
If strings or characters are used where byte strings or byte characters are required, it suggests adding a `b` prefix. If a number is used outside of an array it suggests arrayifying it. If a boolean is used it suggests replacing it with the numeric value of that number. Doubly nested arrays of bytes are disallowed.
2021-12-09 05:08:30 +01:00
Matthias Krüger
90c3e9a2c2
Rollup merge of #91645 - ibraheemdev:future-join, r=joshtriplett
Implement `core::future::join!`

`join!` polls multiple futures concurrently and returns their outputs.

```rust
async fn run() {
    let (a, b) = join!(async { 0 }, async { 1 });
}
```

cc `@rust-lang/wg-async-foundations`
2021-12-09 05:02:22 +01:00
Waffle Maybe
9f6da95abd
fix typo in intrinsics::raw_eq docs 2021-12-09 02:23:11 +03:00
Ibraheem Ahmed
c025a5d962 move core/stream/stream/mod.rs to core/stream/stream.rs 2021-12-08 17:54:05 -05:00
Ibraheem Ahmed
5478f439e1 trim down expansion of core::future::join 2021-12-08 17:21:32 -05:00
Ibraheem Ahmed
a8c9314100 remove implicit .await from core::future::join 2021-12-08 16:44:48 -05:00
bors
ce0f7baf56 Auto merge of #91512 - scottmcm:array-intoiter-advance, r=Mark-Simulacrum
Override `Iterator::advance(_back)_by` for `array::IntoIter`

Because I happened to notice that `nth` is currently getting codegen'd as a loop even for `Copy` types: <https://rust.godbolt.org/z/fPqv7Gvs7>

<details>
<summary>LLVM before and after</summary>

Rust:

```rust
#[no_mangle]
pub fn array_intoiter_nth(it: &mut std::array::IntoIter<i32, 100>, n: usize) -> Option<i32> {
    it.nth(n)
}
```

Current nightly:
```llvmir
define { i32, i32 } `@array_intoiter_nth(%"core::array::iter::IntoIter<i32,` 100_usize>"* noalias nocapture align 8 dereferenceable(416) %it, i64 %n) unnamed_addr #0 personality i32 (i32, i32, i64, %"unwind::libunwind::_Unwind_Exception"*, %"unwind::libunwind::_Unwind_Context"*)* `@rust_eh_personality` !dbg !6 {
start:
  %_3.i.i.i4.i.i = getelementptr inbounds %"core::array::iter::IntoIter<i32, 100_usize>", %"core::array::iter::IntoIter<i32, 100_usize>"* %it, i64 0, i32 0, i32 0
  %_4.i.i.i5.i.i = getelementptr inbounds %"core::array::iter::IntoIter<i32, 100_usize>", %"core::array::iter::IntoIter<i32, 100_usize>"* %it, i64 0, i32 0, i32 1
  %_4.i.i.i.i.i.i = load i64, i64* %_4.i.i.i5.i.i, align 8, !alias.scope !10
  %.not.i.i = icmp eq i64 %n, 0, !dbg !15
  %_3.i.i.i.i.pre.i = load i64, i64* %_3.i.i.i4.i.i, align 8, !dbg !40, !alias.scope !41
  br i1 %.not.i.i, label %bb4.i, label %bb4.preheader.i.i, !dbg !42

bb4.preheader.i.i:                                ; preds = %start
  %umax.i = tail call i64 `@llvm.umax.i64(i64` %_3.i.i.i.i.pre.i, i64 %_4.i.i.i.i.i.i) #3, !dbg !43
  %0 = sub i64 %umax.i, %_3.i.i.i.i.pre.i, !dbg !43
  br label %bb4.i.i, !dbg !43

bb4.i.i:                                          ; preds = %bb3.i.i.i.i, %bb4.preheader.i.i
  %_3.i.i.i.i.i.i = phi i64 [ %2, %bb3.i.i.i.i ], [ %_3.i.i.i.i.pre.i, %bb4.preheader.i.i ], !dbg !52
  %iter.sroa.0.016.i.i = phi i64 [ %1, %bb3.i.i.i.i ], [ 0, %bb4.preheader.i.i ]
  %1 = add nuw i64 %iter.sroa.0.016.i.i, 1, !dbg !54
  %exitcond.not.i = icmp eq i64 %iter.sroa.0.016.i.i, %0, !dbg !52
  br i1 %exitcond.not.i, label %core::iter::traits::iterator::Iterator::nth.exit, label %bb3.i.i.i.i, !dbg !43

bb3.i.i.i.i:                                      ; preds = %bb4.i.i
  %2 = add nuw i64 %_3.i.i.i.i.i.i, 1, !dbg !63
  store i64 %2, i64* %_3.i.i.i4.i.i, align 8, !dbg !66, !alias.scope !75
  %exitcond.not.i.i = icmp eq i64 %1, %n, !dbg !15
  br i1 %exitcond.not.i.i, label %bb4.i, label %bb4.i.i, !dbg !42

bb4.i:                                            ; preds = %bb3.i.i.i.i, %start
  %_3.i.i.i.i.i = phi i64 [ %_3.i.i.i.i.pre.i, %start ], [ %2, %bb3.i.i.i.i ], !dbg !84
  %3 = icmp ult i64 %_3.i.i.i.i.i, %_4.i.i.i.i.i.i, !dbg !84
  br i1 %3, label %bb3.i.i.i, label %core::iter::traits::iterator::Iterator::nth.exit, !dbg !89

bb3.i.i.i:                                        ; preds = %bb4.i
  %4 = add nuw i64 %_3.i.i.i.i.i, 1, !dbg !90
  store i64 %4, i64* %_3.i.i.i4.i.i, align 8, !dbg !93, !alias.scope !96
  %5 = getelementptr inbounds %"core::array::iter::IntoIter<i32, 100_usize>", %"core::array::iter::IntoIter<i32, 100_usize>"* %it, i64 0, i32 1, i64 %_3.i.i.i.i.i, !dbg !105
  %6 = load i32, i32* %5, align 4, !dbg !131, !alias.scope !141, !noalias !144
  br label %core::iter::traits::iterator::Iterator::nth.exit, !dbg !149

core::iter::traits::iterator::Iterator::nth.exit: ; preds = %bb4.i.i, %bb4.i, %bb3.i.i.i
  %.sroa.3.0.i = phi i32 [ %6, %bb3.i.i.i ], [ undef, %bb4.i ], [ undef, %bb4.i.i ], !dbg !40
  %.sroa.0.0.i = phi i32 [ 1, %bb3.i.i.i ], [ 0, %bb4.i ], [ 0, %bb4.i.i ], !dbg !40
  %7 = insertvalue { i32, i32 } undef, i32 %.sroa.0.0.i, 0, !dbg !150
  %8 = insertvalue { i32, i32 } %7, i32 %.sroa.3.0.i, 1, !dbg !150
  ret { i32, i32 } %8, !dbg !151
}
```

With this PR:
```llvmir
define { i32, i32 } `@array_intoiter_nth(%"core::array::iter::IntoIter<i32,` 100_usize>"* noalias nocapture align 8 dereferenceable(416) %it, i64 %n) unnamed_addr #0 personality i32 (...)* `@__CxxFrameHandler3` {
start:
  %0 = getelementptr inbounds %"core::array::iter::IntoIter<i32, 100_usize>", %"core::array::iter::IntoIter<i32, 100_usize>"* %it, i64 0, i32 0, i32 1
  %_2.i.i.i.i = load i64, i64* %0, align 8, !alias.scope !6, !noalias !13
  %1 = getelementptr inbounds %"core::array::iter::IntoIter<i32, 100_usize>", %"core::array::iter::IntoIter<i32, 100_usize>"* %it, i64 0, i32 0, i32 0
  %_3.i.i.i.i = load i64, i64* %1, align 8, !alias.scope !16
  %2 = sub i64 %_2.i.i.i.i, %_3.i.i.i.i
  %3 = icmp ult i64 %2, %n
  %.0.sroa.speculated.i.i.i.i.i = select i1 %3, i64 %2, i64 %n
  %_10.i.i = add i64 %.0.sroa.speculated.i.i.i.i.i, %_3.i.i.i.i
  store i64 %_10.i.i, i64* %1, align 8, !alias.scope !16
  %.not.i = xor i1 %3, true
  %4 = icmp ult i64 %_10.i.i, %_2.i.i.i.i
  %or.cond.i = select i1 %.not.i, i1 %4, i1 false
  br i1 %or.cond.i, label %bb3.i.i.i, label %_ZN4core4iter6traits8iterator8Iterator3nth17hcbc727011e9e2a3bE.exit

bb3.i.i.i:                                        ; preds = %start
  %5 = add nuw i64 %_10.i.i, 1
  store i64 %5, i64* %1, align 8, !alias.scope !17
  %6 = getelementptr inbounds %"core::array::iter::IntoIter<i32, 100_usize>", %"core::array::iter::IntoIter<i32, 100_usize>"* %it, i64 0, i32 1, i64 %_10.i.i
  %7 = load i32, i32* %6, align 4, !alias.scope !26, !noalias !29
  br label %_ZN4core4iter6traits8iterator8Iterator3nth17hcbc727011e9e2a3bE.exit

_ZN4core4iter6traits8iterator8Iterator3nth17hcbc727011e9e2a3bE.exit: ; preds = %start, %bb3.i.i.i
  %.sroa.3.0.i = phi i32 [ undef, %start ], [ %7, %bb3.i.i.i ]
  %.sroa.0.0.i = phi i32 [ 0, %start ], [ 1, %bb3.i.i.i ]
  %8 = insertvalue { i32, i32 } undef, i32 %.sroa.0.0.i, 0
  %9 = insertvalue { i32, i32 } %8, i32 %.sroa.3.0.i, 1
  ret { i32, i32 } %9
}
```
</details>
2021-12-08 07:54:30 +00:00
Ibraheem Ahmed
d9e45026b3
fix documentation for core::ready::Ready 2021-12-07 23:25:44 -05:00
Ibraheem Ahmed
d07cef22b0 add tests for core::future::join 2021-12-07 21:20:58 -05:00
Ibraheem Ahmed
08dca1933b generate MaybeDone futures inline join 2021-12-07 21:07:47 -05:00
Ibraheem Ahmed
d761e84968 implement core::future::join 2021-12-07 21:07:47 -05:00
bors
11fb21fd0e Auto merge of #91484 - workingjubilee:simd-remove-autosplats, r=Mark-Simulacrum
Sync portable-simd to remove autosplats

This PR syncs portable-simd in up to a8385522ad in order to address the type inference breakages documented on nightly in https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/90904 by removing the vector + scalar binary operations (called "autosplats", "broadcasting", or "rank promotion", depending on who you ask) that allow `{scalar} + &'_ {scalar}` to fail in some cases, because it becomes possible the programmer may have meant `{scalar} + &'_ {vector}`.

A few quality-of-life improvements make their way in as well:
- Lane counts can now go to 64, as LLVM seems to have fixed their miscompilation for those.
- `{i,u}8x64` to `__m512i` is now available.
- a bunch of `#[must_use]` notes appear throughout the module.
- Some implementations, mostly instances of `impl core::ops::{Op}<Simd> for Simd` that aren't `{vector} + {vector}` (e.g. `{vector} + &'_ {vector}`), leverage some generics and `where` bounds now to make them easier to understand by reducing a dozen implementations into one (and make it possible for people to open the docs on less burly devices).
- And some internal-only improvements.

None of these changes should affect a beta backport, only actual users of `core::simd` (and most aren't even visible in the programmatic sense), though I can extract an even more minimal changeset for beta if necessary. It seemed simpler to just keep moving forward.
2021-12-08 01:37:59 +00:00
Nick Cameron
b3573c5e63 core::ops::unsize: improve docs for DispatchFromDyn
Signed-off-by: Nick Cameron <nrc@ncameron.org>
2021-12-07 12:27:41 +00:00
Scott McMurray
9b86c5998c s/from_raw_parts/new_unchecked/ 2021-12-06 22:59:04 -08:00
Smitty
eb56693a37 Implement concat_bytes!
The tracking issue for this is #87555.
2021-12-06 21:05:13 -05:00
Scott McMurray
0b90204bc8 Add tracking issue; make empty const too (unstably) 2021-12-06 01:12:59 -08:00
Scott McMurray
ef7c833c20 Move the doc test to edition2021 2021-12-06 00:58:40 -08:00
Scott McMurray
a30f96311a Add array::IntoIter::{empty, from_raw_parts}
`array::IntoIter` has a bunch of really handy logic for dealing with partial arrays, but it's currently hamstrung by only being creatable from a fully-initialized array.

This PR adds two new constructors:
- a safe & const `empty`, since `[].into_iter()` gives `<T, 0>`, not `<T, N>`.
- an unsafe `from_raw_parts`, to allow experimentation with new uses.

(Slice & vec iterators don't need `from_raw_parts` because you `from_raw_parts` the slice or vec instead, but there's no useful way to made a `<[T; N]>::from_raw_parts`, so I think this is a reasonable place to have one.)
2021-12-06 00:58:40 -08:00
mbartlett21
9eb7c34f9b
Add tracking issue number 2021-12-06 15:26:32 +10:00
luojia65
70855b24b8 Add spin_loop hint for RISC-V architecture
This commit also updates `stdarch` git submodule.
2021-12-05 16:39:21 +08:00
Mara Bos
27d39357b7 Update array::IntoIter::new deprecation version. 2021-12-04 19:42:37 +01:00
Mara Bos
eb3fc45c87 Update docs. 2021-12-04 19:40:33 +01:00
Mara Bos
1acb44f03c Use IntoIterator for array impl everywhere. 2021-12-04 19:40:33 +01:00
Mara Bos
b34cf1a9e1 Swap body of array::IntoIter::new and IntoIterator::new. 2021-12-04 19:15:47 +01:00
Mara Bos
911ee9403e Deprecate array::IntoIter::new. 2021-12-04 19:15:44 +01:00
Mara Bos
16711fe076
Update stabilization version of try_from_mut_slice_to_array 2021-12-04 17:17:12 +01:00
Kevin Reid
6fd5cf51c1 Add documentation to more From::from implementations.
For users looking at documentation through IDE popups, this gives them
relevant information rather than the generic trait documentation wording
“Performs the conversion”. For users reading the documentation for a
specific type for any reason, this informs them when the conversion may
allocate or copy significant memory versus when it is always a move or
cheap copy.

Notes on specific cases:
* The new documentation for `From<T> for T` explains that it is not a
  conversion at all.
* Also documented `impl<T, U> Into<U> for T where U: From<T>`, the other
  central blanket implementation of conversion.
* I did not add documentation to conversions of a specific error type to
  a more general error type.
* I did not add documentation to unstable code.

This change was prepared by searching for the text "From<... for" and so
may have missed some cases that for whatever reason did not match. I
also looked for `Into` impls but did not find any worth documenting by
the above criteria.
2021-12-04 07:46:36 -08:00
woppopo
8f68bdc380 Make Borrow and BorrowMut impls const 2021-12-04 21:57:39 +09:00
Matthias Krüger
c223a1c109
Rollup merge of #87054 - kit-981:master, r=scottmcm
Add a `try_reduce` method to the Iterator trait

Tracking issue: #87053
2021-12-04 10:42:19 +01:00
Scott McMurray
eb846dbaca Override Iterator::advance(_back)_by for array::IntoIter
Because I happened to notice that `nth` is currently getting codegen'd as a loop even for `Copy` types: <https://rust.godbolt.org/z/fPqv7Gvs7>
2021-12-03 21:36:51 -08:00
kit
aef59e4fb8 Add a try_reduce method to the Iterator trait 2021-12-04 15:17:14 +11:00
Matthias Krüger
0bd4ee79e0
Rollup merge of #90851 - ibraheemdev:downcast-unchecked, r=scottmcm
Add unchecked downcast methods

```rust
impl dyn Any (+ Send + Sync) {
    pub unsafe fn downcast_ref_unchecked<T: Any>(&self) -> &T;
    pub unsafe fn downcast_mut_unchecked<T: Any>(&mut self) -> &mut T;
}

impl<A: Allocator> Box<dyn Any (+ Send + Sync), A> {
    pub unsafe fn downcast_unchecked<T: Any>(&self) -> Box<T, A>;
}
```
2021-12-04 02:26:21 +01:00
bors
532d2b14c0 Auto merge of #90737 - eholk:intofuture, r=tmandry
Reintroduce `into_future` in `.await` desugaring

This is a reintroduction of the remaining parts from https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/65244 that have not been relanded yet.

This isn't quite ready to merge yet. The last attempt was reverting due to performance regressions, so we need to make sure this does not introduce those issues again.

Issues #67644, #67982

/cc `@yoshuawuyts`
2021-12-03 19:29:21 +00:00
bors
d47a6cc3f2 Auto merge of #91286 - scottmcm:residual-trait, r=joshtriplett
Make `array::{try_from_fn, try_map}` and `Iterator::try_find` generic over `Try`

Fixes #85115

This only updates unstable functions.

`array::try_map` didn't actually exist before; this adds it under the still-open tracking issue #79711 from the old PR #79713.

Tracking issue for the new trait: #91285

This would also solve the return type question in for the proposed `Iterator::try_reduce` in #87054
2021-12-03 10:15:11 +00:00
Matthias Krüger
94cd0259f2
Rollup merge of #90269 - woppopo:const_option_expect, r=yaahc
Make `Option::expect` unstably const

Tracking issue: #67441
2021-12-03 06:24:11 +01:00
Jubilee Young
eef4371a98 Force splatting in SIMD test 2021-12-02 19:22:00 -08:00
Scott McMurray
92c8317d2a Add [T]::as_simd(_mut)
SIMD-style optimizations are the most common use for `[T]::align_to(_mut)`, but that's `unsafe`.  So these are *safe* wrappers around it, now that we have the `Simd` type available, to make it easier to use.

```rust
impl [T] {
    pub fn as_simd<const LANES: usize>(&self) -> (&[T], &[Simd<T, LANES>], &[T]);
    pub fn as_simd_mut<const LANES: usize>(&mut self) -> (&mut [T], &mut [Simd<T, LANES>], &mut [T]);
}
```
2021-12-02 18:14:37 -08:00
Matthias Krüger
fbfa003016
Rollup merge of #91444 - RalfJung:miri-tests, r=dtolnay
disable tests in Miri that take too long

Comparing slices of length `usize::MAX` diverges in Miri. In fact these tests even diverge in rustc unless `-O` is passed. I tried this code to check that:
```rust
#![feature(slice_take)]

const EMPTY_MAX: &'static [()] = &[(); usize::MAX];

fn main() {
    let mut slice: &[_] = &[(); usize::MAX];
    println!("1");
    assert_eq!(Some(&[] as _), slice.take(usize::MAX..));
    println!("2");
    let remaining: &[_] = EMPTY_MAX;
    println!("3");
    assert_eq!(remaining, slice);
    println!("4");
}
```
So, disable these tests in Miri for now.
2021-12-02 22:16:14 +01:00
Eric Holk
0cb769347d Code review feedback
Add a note about `IntoFuture` in error messages where T is not a future.

Change await-into-future.rs to be a run-pass test.
2021-12-02 11:36:56 -08:00
Scott McMurray
b96b9b4093 Make array::{try_from_fn, try_map} and Iterator::try_find generic over Try
Fixes 85115

This only updates unstable functions.

`array::try_map` didn't actually exist before, despite the tracking issue 79711 still being open from the old PR 79713.
2021-12-02 11:23:50 -08:00
Matthias Krüger
d96ce3ea8e
Rollup merge of #91394 - Mark-Simulacrum:bump-stage0, r=pietroalbini
Bump stage0 compiler

r? `@pietroalbini` (or anyone else)
2021-12-02 15:52:03 +01:00
Ralf Jung
b11d88006c disable tests in Miri that take too long 2021-12-01 22:48:59 -05:00
Matthias Krüger
9f1f42897d
Rollup merge of #88502 - ibraheemdev:slice-take, r=dtolnay
Add slice take methods

Revival of #62282

This PR adds the following slice methods:

- `take`
- `take_mut`
- `take_first`
- `take_first_mut`
- `take_last`
- `take_last_mut`

r? `@LukasKalbertodt`
2021-12-01 20:57:42 +01:00
Matthias Krüger
ce197e2bce
Rollup merge of #91346 - ibraheemdev:result-inspect, r=dtolnay
Add `Option::inspect` and `Result::{inspect, inspect_err}`

```rust
// core::result

impl Result<T, E> {
    pub fn inspect<F: FnOnce(&T)>(self, f: F) -> Self;
    pub fn inspect_err<F: FnOnce(&E)>(self, f: F) -> Self;
}

// core::option

impl Option<T> {
    pub fn inspect<F: FnOnce(&T)>(self, f: F) -> Self;
}
```
2021-12-01 10:50:22 +01:00
Mark Rousskov
b221c877e8 Apply cfg-bootstrap switch 2021-11-30 10:51:42 -05:00
Yuki Okushi
28176a4a33
Rollup merge of #91383 - ScriptDevil:drop-while-doc-alias, r=joshtriplett
Add `drop_while` as doc alias to `Iterator::skip_while`

`skip_while` is commonly referred to as `drop_while` in other languages (clojure/c++/haskell). This recently came up in [Zulip](https://rust-lang.zulipchat.com/#narrow/stream/122651-general/topic/.E2.9C.94.20DropWhile/near/262203352) as well.

This pull request adds 'drop_while' as a doc-alias for 'skip_while'.

r? `@joshtriplett`
2021-11-30 17:29:13 +09:00
Yuki Okushi
a940c68035
Rollup merge of #91323 - RalfJung:assert-type, r=oli-obk
CTFE: support assert_zero_valid and assert_uninit_valid

This ensures the implementation of all three type-based assert_ intrinsics remains consistent in Miri.

`assert_inhabited` recently got stabilized in https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/90896 (meaning stable `const fn` can call it), so do the same with these other intrinsics.

Cc ```@rust-lang/wg-const-eval```
2021-11-30 17:29:09 +09:00
Ashok Gautham Jadatharan
dea3494b31 Add drop_while as doc alias to Iterator::skip_while 2021-11-30 10:27:16 +05:30
bors
94bec90702 Auto merge of #91244 - dtolnay:lossy, r=Mark-Simulacrum
Eliminate bunch of copies of error codepath from Utf8LossyChunksIter

Using a macro to stamp out 7 identical copies of the nontrivial slicing logic to exit this loop didn't seem like a necessary use of a macro. The early return case can be handled by `break` without practically any changes to the logic inside the loop.

All this code is from early 2014 (#12062&mdash;nearly 8 years ago; pre-1.0) so it's possible there were compiler limitations that forced the macro way at the time.

Confirmed that `x.py bench library/alloc --stage 0 --test-args from_utf8_lossy` is unaffected on my machine.
2021-11-30 01:08:56 +00:00
Ralf Jung
6c3c3e0952 CTFE: support assert_zero_valid and assert_uninit_valid 2021-11-29 11:49:31 -05:00
Ibraheem Ahmed
2e8358e1ab add Option::inspect and Result::{inspect, inspect_err} 2021-11-28 23:31:45 -05:00
Ralf Jung
85558ad5b3 adjust some const_eval_select safety comments 2021-11-28 14:00:58 -05:00
Ralf Jung
15a4ed6937 adjust const_eval_select documentation 2021-11-28 13:54:56 -05:00
Matthias Krüger
af0cf34787
Rollup merge of #90896 - jhpratt:stabilize_const_maybe_uninit, r=oli-obk
Stabilize some `MaybeUninit` behavior as const

This stabilizes the `MaybeUninit::as_ptr`, `MaybeUninit::assume_init`, and `MaybeUninit::assume_init_ref` as `const fn`. `MaybeUninit::as_mut_ptr` has been moved to a new flag: `const_maybe_uninit_as_mut_ptr`, which is blocked on #57349. `MaybeUninit::slice_assume_init_ref` can be `const fn` when the method is stabilized in general.

The relevant intrinsic has been stabilized as `const` as well, though this isn't user-visible. Due to the seemingly unrelated feature name I performed `rg const_assert_type` and found no other instances of it being used.

r? `@oli-obk`

`@rustbot` label: +A-const-fn +S-waiting-on-review +T-libs-api
2021-11-28 10:42:38 +01:00
Jacob Pratt
44b5b838d2
Add test for const MaybeUninit 2021-11-28 01:31:25 -05:00
Jacob Pratt
ad8e6bf5cc
Stabilize some MaybeUninit behavior as const 2021-11-28 01:01:47 -05:00
bors
27d5935df1 Auto merge of #91301 - scottmcm:stabilize-nonzero-ipot, r=nagisa
Stabilize nonzero_is_power_of_two

Closes #81106
FCP has finished in the tracking issue
2021-11-28 05:55:09 +00:00
Scott McMurray
23045eb622 Stabilize nonzero_is_power_of_two
Fixes 81106
FCP has finished in the tracking issue
2021-11-27 13:13:04 -08:00
bors
686e313a9a Auto merge of #91288 - matthiaskrgr:rollup-yp5h41r, r=matthiaskrgr
Rollup of 6 pull requests

Successful merges:

 - #83791 (Weaken guarantee around advancing underlying iterators in zip)
 - #90995 (Document non-guarantees for Hash)
 - #91057 (Expand `available_parallelism` docs in anticipation of cgroup quota support)
 - #91062 (rustdoc: Consolidate static-file replacement mechanism)
 - #91208 (Account for incorrect `where T::Assoc = Ty` bound)
 - #91266 (Use non-generic inner function for pointer formatting)

Failed merges:

r? `@ghost`
`@rustbot` modify labels: rollup
2021-11-27 14:29:12 +00:00
bors
5fd3a5c7c1 Auto merge of #89916 - the8472:advance_by-avoid-err-0, r=dtolnay
Fix Iterator::advance_by contract inconsistency

The `advance_by(n)` docs state that in the error case `Err(k)` that k is always less than n.
It also states that `advance_by(0)` may return `Err(0)` to indicate an exhausted iterator.
These statements are inconsistent.
Since only one implementation (Skip) actually made use of that I changed it to return Ok(()) in that case too.

While adding some tests I also found a bug in `Take::advance_back_by`.
2021-11-27 11:31:26 +00:00
Matthias Krüger
073b1208f0
Rollup merge of #91266 - jam1garner:fmt-ptr-fix, r=dtolnay
Use non-generic inner function for pointer formatting

Previously, despite the implementation being type-unaware, `fmt::Pointer`'s implementation for `*const T` in monomorphized. This affects:

* `fmt::Debug` for `*const T`
* `fmt::Debug` for `*mut T`
* `fmt::Pointer` for `*const T`
* `fmt::Pointer` for `*mut T`

And since the implementation is non-trivial, this results in a large amount of LLVM bitcode being generated. For example, with a large bindgen project with Debug implementations enabled, it will generate a lot of calls to `fmt::Debug for *const T`, which in turn will perform codegen for a copy of this function for every type.

For example, in a real-world bindgen'd header I've been testing with (4,189,245 lines of bindgen Rust with layout tests disabled) the difference between a slightly old nightly (`rustc 1.58.0-nightly (e249ce6b2 2021-10-30)`) and this PR:

<details>
<summary>Nightly (Click to Expand)</summary>

```
  Lines           Copies         Function name
  -----           ------         -------------
  7256000 (100%)  216544 (100%)  (TOTAL)
  1815449 (25.0%)  24206 (11.2%) <*const T as core::fmt::Pointer>::fmt
   300248 (4.1%)   29579 (13.7%) <&T as core::fmt::Debug>::fmt
   290328 (4.0%)   24194 (11.2%) <*mut T as core::fmt::Pointer>::fmt
   217746 (3.0%)   24194 (11.2%) <*mut T as core::fmt::Debug>::fmt
   123329 (1.7%)    1486 (0.7%)  core::fmt::builders::DebugList::entries
    72790 (1.0%)    1486 (0.7%)  core::slice::iter::Iter<T>::post_inc_start
    71313 (1.0%)    1486 (0.7%)  core::slice::iter::Iter<T>::new
    68329 (0.9%)    1486 (0.7%)  <core::slice::iter::Iter<T> as core::iter::traits::iterator::Iterator>::next
    38636 (0.5%)    1486 (0.7%)  <[T] as core::fmt::Debug>::fmt
    26874 (0.4%)    1493 (0.7%)  core::array::<impl core::fmt::Debug for [T; N]>::fmt
    22290 (0.3%)    1486 (0.7%)  core::slice::index::<impl core::ops::index::Index<I> for [T]>::index
    19407 (0.3%)    1493 (0.7%)  core::array::<impl core::ops::index::Index<I> for [T; N]>::index
    19318 (0.3%)    1486 (0.7%)  core::slice::<impl [T]>::iter
    17832 (0.2%)    1486 (0.7%)  core::ptr::const_ptr::<impl *const T>::offset
    17832 (0.2%)    1486 (0.7%)  core::ptr::mut_ptr::<impl *mut T>::offset
    16346 (0.2%)    1486 (0.7%)  <core::ops::range::RangeFull as core::slice::index::SliceIndex<[T]>>::index
    13374 (0.2%)    1486 (0.7%)  <I as core::iter::traits::collect::IntoIterator>::into_iter
    13374 (0.2%)    1486 (0.7%)  core::ptr::const_ptr::<impl *const T>::add
    13371 (0.2%)    1486 (0.7%)  core::ptr::const_ptr::<impl *const T>::is_null
    13371 (0.2%)    1486 (0.7%)  core::ptr::mut_ptr::<impl *mut T>::is_null
    11888 (0.2%)    1486 (0.7%)  core::slice::<impl [T]>::as_ptr
    11879 (0.2%)    1486 (0.7%)  core::ptr::non_null::NonNull<T>::new_unchecked
     7421 (0.1%)    1486 (0.7%)  core::ptr::non_null::NonNull<T>::as_ptr

```

</details>

<details>
<summary>This PR (Click to Expand)</summary>

```
   Lines           Copies         Function name
  -----           ------         -------------
  5684504 (100%)  216542 (100%)  (TOTAL)
   300248 (5.3%)   29579 (13.7%) <&T as core::fmt::Debug>::fmt
   290328 (5.1%)   24194 (11.2%) <*mut T as core::fmt::Pointer>::fmt
   266265 (4.7%)   24206 (11.2%) <*const T as core::fmt::Pointer>::fmt
   217746 (3.8%)   24194 (11.2%) <*mut T as core::fmt::Debug>::fmt
   101039 (1.8%)    1486 (0.7%)  core::fmt::builders::DebugList::entries
    72790 (1.3%)    1486 (0.7%)  core::slice::iter::Iter<T>::post_inc_start
    71313 (1.3%)    1486 (0.7%)  core::slice::iter::Iter<T>::new
    68329 (1.2%)    1486 (0.7%)  <core::slice::iter::Iter<T> as core::iter::traits::iterator::Iterator>::next
    38636 (0.7%)    1486 (0.7%)  <[T] as core::fmt::Debug>::fmt
    26874 (0.5%)    1493 (0.7%)  core::array::<impl core::fmt::Debug for [T; N]>::fmt
    22290 (0.4%)    1486 (0.7%)  core::slice::index::<impl core::ops::index::Index<I> for [T]>::index
    19407 (0.3%)    1493 (0.7%)  core::array::<impl core::ops::index::Index<I> for [T; N]>::index
    19318 (0.3%)    1486 (0.7%)  core::slice::<impl [T]>::iter
    17832 (0.3%)    1486 (0.7%)  core::ptr::const_ptr::<impl *const T>::offset
    17832 (0.3%)    1486 (0.7%)  core::ptr::mut_ptr::<impl *mut T>::offset
    16346 (0.3%)    1486 (0.7%)  <core::ops::range::RangeFull as core::slice::index::SliceIndex<[T]>>::index
    13374 (0.2%)    1486 (0.7%)  <I as core::iter::traits::collect::IntoIterator>::into_iter
    13374 (0.2%)    1486 (0.7%)  core::ptr::const_ptr::<impl *const T>::add
    13371 (0.2%)    1486 (0.7%)  core::ptr::const_ptr::<impl *const T>::is_null
    13371 (0.2%)    1486 (0.7%)  core::ptr::mut_ptr::<impl *mut T>::is_null
    11888 (0.2%)    1486 (0.7%)  core::slice::<impl [T]>::as_ptr
    11879 (0.2%)    1486 (0.7%)  core::ptr::non_null::NonNull<T>::new_unchecked
     7421 (0.1%)    1486 (0.7%)  core::ptr::non_null::NonNull<T>::as_ptr

```

</details>

Output generated using `cargo llvm-lines` version 0.4.12.

Summary of differences:

| rustc Version | Total LLVM line count | `*const T as fmt::Pointer` LLVM lines | Compilation Time |
|-|-|-|-|
| `nightly` | 7256000 | 1815449 (25.0% of binary) | 537.014 |
| PR | 5684504 (-21.65%) | 266265 (4.7% of binary) (-85.3% from nightly) | 502.990 |

This results in a pretty noticeable as the majority of rustc's time is spent in either codegen or LLVM, in this case, and is significantly improved by disabling derives for `fmt::Debug`, as it prevents generating all this LLVM IR to be handled.

Here's a run time comparison with nightly on the same codebase (commit 454cc5fb built from source vs 37c8f25 from my PR built from source):

<details>
<summary>nightly (Click to Expand)</summary>

```
time:   2.370; rss:   56MB -> 1118MB (+1062MB)	parse_crate
time:   0.000; rss: 1118MB -> 1118MB (   +0MB)	attributes_injection
time:   0.000; rss: 1118MB -> 1118MB (   +0MB)	incr_comp_prepare_session_directory
time:   0.000; rss: 1118MB -> 1118MB (   +0MB)	incr_comp_garbage_collect_session_directories
time:   0.000; rss: 1120MB -> 1120MB (   +0MB)	plugin_loading
time:   0.000; rss: 1120MB -> 1120MB (   +0MB)	plugin_registration
time:   0.000; rss: 1120MB -> 1120MB (   +0MB)	crate_injection
time:  13.897; rss: 1120MB -> 3147MB (+2027MB)	expand_crate
time:   0.002; rss: 3147MB -> 3147MB (   +0MB)	check_unused_macros
time:  13.900; rss: 1120MB -> 3147MB (+2027MB)	macro_expand_crate
time:   0.002; rss: 3147MB -> 3147MB (   +0MB)	maybe_building_test_harness
time:   0.503; rss: 3147MB -> 3147MB (   +0MB)	AST_validation
time:   0.000; rss: 3147MB -> 3147MB (   +0MB)	maybe_create_a_macro_crate
time:   0.002; rss: 3147MB -> 3147MB (   +0MB)	finalize_imports
time:   0.502; rss: 3147MB -> 3153MB (   +6MB)	finalize_macro_resolutions
time:   4.478; rss: 3153MB -> 3574MB ( +420MB)	late_resolve_crate
time:   0.000; rss: 3574MB -> 3574MB (   +0MB)	resolve_main
time:   0.332; rss: 3574MB -> 3574MB (   +0MB)	resolve_check_unused
time:   0.000; rss: 3574MB -> 3574MB (   +0MB)	resolve_report_errors
time:   0.279; rss: 3574MB -> 3574MB (   +0MB)	resolve_postprocess
time:   5.595; rss: 3147MB -> 3574MB ( +427MB)	resolve_crate
time:   0.382; rss: 3574MB -> 3574MB (   +0MB)	complete_gated_feature_checking
time:  20.526; rss: 1120MB -> 3574MB (+2454MB)	configure_and_expand
time:   0.000; rss: 3574MB -> 3574MB (   +0MB)	prepare_outputs
time:   0.000; rss: 3574MB -> 3574MB (   +0MB)	blocked_on_dep_graph_loading
time:  65.992; rss: 3574MB -> 6317MB (+2743MB)	hir_lowering
time:   1.117; rss: 6317MB -> 6323MB (   +6MB)	early_lint_checks
time:   1.447; rss: 6323MB -> 6271MB (  -52MB)	drop_ast
time:   0.002; rss: 5838MB -> 5838MB (   +0MB)	setup_global_ctxt
time:   0.000; rss: 5843MB -> 5843MB (   +0MB)	looking_for_entry_point
time:   0.313; rss: 5843MB -> 5844MB (   +1MB)	looking_for_derive_registrar
time:   9.652; rss: 5843MB -> 6065MB ( +222MB)	misc_checking_1
time:   9.713; rss: 6065MB -> 6769MB ( +704MB)	type_collecting
time:   0.665; rss: 6769MB -> 6769MB (   +0MB)	impl_wf_inference
time:   0.064; rss: 6769MB -> 6769MB (   +0MB)	unsafety_checking
time:   3.095; rss: 6769MB -> 6792MB (  +23MB)	coherence_checking
time:  21.282; rss: 6792MB -> 7546MB ( +754MB)	wf_checking
time:   5.404; rss: 7546MB -> 7681MB ( +135MB)	item_types_checking
time:  79.665; rss: 7681MB -> 8075MB ( +394MB)	item_bodies_checking
time: 120.166; rss: 6065MB -> 8081MB (+2016MB)	type_check_crate
time:   2.038; rss: 8081MB -> 8085MB (   +4MB)	match_checking
time:   1.300; rss: 8085MB -> 8113MB (  +28MB)	liveness_and_intrinsic_checking
time:   3.338; rss: 8081MB -> 8113MB (  +32MB)	misc_checking_2
time:  68.612; rss: 8113MB -> 9285MB (+1172MB)	MIR_borrow_checking
time:   0.622; rss: 9285MB -> 9301MB (  +17MB)	MIR_effect_checking
time:   0.000; rss: 9301MB -> 9301MB (   +0MB)	layout_testing
time:   4.331; rss: 9383MB -> 9510MB ( +127MB)	death_checking
time:   0.032; rss: 9510MB -> 9510MB (   +0MB)	unused_lib_feature_checking
time:   4.444; rss: 9510MB -> 9568MB (  +58MB)	crate_lints
time:  59.563; rss: 9568MB -> 9576MB (   +8MB)	module_lints
time:  64.006; rss: 9510MB -> 9576MB (  +66MB)	lint_checking
time:   4.127; rss: 9576MB -> 9639MB (  +62MB)	privacy_checking_modules
time:  77.984; rss: 9301MB -> 9639MB ( +337MB)	misc_checking_3
time:   0.311; rss: 10357MB -> 10357MB (   +0MB)	monomorphization_collector_root_collections
time:  14.051; rss: 10357MB -> 10573MB ( +217MB)	monomorphization_collector_graph_walk
time:   1.759; rss: 10573MB -> 10652MB (  +79MB)	partition_and_assert_distinct_symbols
time:  28.518; rss: 9639MB -> 10711MB (+1072MB)	generate_crate_metadata
time:   0.000; rss: 10711MB -> 10711MB (   +0MB)	find_cgu_reuse
time:  63.408; rss: 10711MB -> 12272MB (+1560MB)	codegen_to_LLVM_IR
time:  64.916; rss: 10711MB -> 12267MB (+1556MB)	codegen_crate
time:   0.000; rss: 12261MB -> 12261MB (   +0MB)	assert_dep_graph
time:   0.000; rss: 12261MB -> 12261MB (   +0MB)	check_dirty_clean
time:   0.664; rss: 12230MB -> 12210MB (  -20MB)	encode_query_results_for(rustc_query_impl::queries::type_of)
time:   2.111; rss: 12210MB -> 12043MB ( -167MB)	encode_query_results_for(rustc_query_impl::queries::generics_of)
time:   0.108; rss: 12043MB -> 12057MB (  +14MB)	encode_query_results_for(rustc_query_impl::queries::predicates_of)
time:   0.004; rss: 12057MB -> 12059MB (   +2MB)	encode_query_results_for(rustc_query_impl::queries::mir_const_qualif)
time:   0.665; rss: 12059MB -> 12121MB (  +62MB)	encode_query_results_for(rustc_query_impl::queries::mir_for_ctfe)
time:  16.149; rss: 12121MB -> 12148MB (  +28MB)	encode_query_results_for(rustc_query_impl::queries::optimized_mir)
time:   0.000; rss: 12148MB -> 12148MB (   +0MB)	encode_query_results_for(rustc_query_impl::queries::covered_file_name)
time:   0.000; rss: 12148MB -> 12148MB (   +0MB)	encode_query_results_for(rustc_query_impl::queries::covered_code_regions)
time:   0.010; rss: 12148MB -> 12150MB (   +2MB)	encode_query_results_for(rustc_query_impl::queries::promoted_mir)
time:   0.052; rss: 12150MB -> 12155MB (   +4MB)	encode_query_results_for(rustc_query_impl::queries::unsafety_check_result)
time:   0.003; rss: 12155MB -> 12156MB (   +1MB)	encode_query_results_for(rustc_query_impl::queries::thir_check_unsafety)
time:  11.428; rss: 12156MB -> 11748MB ( -408MB)	encode_query_results_for(rustc_query_impl::queries::typeck)
time:   0.000; rss: 11748MB -> 11748MB (   +0MB)	encode_query_results_for(rustc_query_impl::queries::diagnostic_only_typeck)
time:   0.094; rss: 11748MB -> 11756MB (   +8MB)	encode_query_results_for(rustc_query_impl::queries::used_trait_imports)
time:   0.272; rss: 11756MB -> 11778MB (  +22MB)	encode_query_results_for(rustc_query_impl::queries::mir_borrowck)
time:   0.054; rss: 11778MB -> 11778MB (   +0MB)	encode_query_results_for(rustc_query_impl::queries::eval_to_allocation_raw)
time:   0.005; rss: 11778MB -> 11779MB (   +1MB)	encode_query_results_for(rustc_query_impl::queries::eval_to_const_value_raw)
time:   0.021; rss: 11779MB -> 11784MB (   +5MB)	encode_query_results_for(rustc_query_impl::queries::check_match)
time:   0.041; rss: 11784MB -> 11786MB (   +2MB)	encode_query_results_for(rustc_query_impl::queries::symbol_name)
time:   0.743; rss: 11786MB -> 11815MB (  +29MB)	encode_query_results_for(rustc_query_impl::queries::codegen_fn_attrs)
time:   0.043; rss: 11815MB -> 11816MB (   +1MB)	encode_query_results_for(rustc_query_impl::queries::codegen_fulfill_obligation)
time:   0.674; rss: 11816MB -> 11840MB (  +25MB)	encode_query_results_for(rustc_query_impl::queries::specialization_graph_of)
time:   0.000; rss: 11840MB -> 11840MB (   +0MB)	encode_query_results_for(rustc_query_impl::queries::adt_drop_tys)
time:   0.000; rss: 11840MB -> 11840MB (   +0MB)	encode_query_results_for(rustc_query_impl::queries::adt_significant_drop_tys)
time:   0.005; rss: 11840MB -> 11841MB (   +1MB)	encode_query_results_for(rustc_query_impl::queries::unused_generic_params)
time:  33.153; rss: 12232MB -> 11841MB ( -390MB)	encode_query_results
time:  88.943; rss: 11955MB -> 11783MB ( -173MB)	LLVM_passes(crate)
time:  38.854; rss: 12259MB -> 10095MB (-2164MB)	incr_comp_serialize_result_cache
time:  39.030; rss: 12261MB -> 10095MB (-2166MB)	incr_comp_persist_result_cache
time:   0.000; rss: 10095MB -> 10095MB (   +0MB)	incr_comp_persist_dep_graph
time:  39.064; rss: 12257MB -> 10095MB (-2162MB)	serialize_dep_graph
time:  19.047; rss: 10095MB -> 10307MB ( +212MB)	free_global_ctxt
time:   0.000; rss: 10307MB -> 10307MB (   +0MB)	join_worker_thread
time:   0.519; rss: 10307MB -> 10307MB (   +0MB)	copy_all_cgu_workproducts_to_incr_comp_cache_dir
time:   0.522; rss: 10307MB -> 10307MB (   +0MB)	finish_ongoing_codegen
time:   0.000; rss: 10307MB -> 10307MB (   +0MB)	llvm_dump_timing_file
time:   0.002; rss: 10307MB -> 10307MB (   +0MB)	serialize_work_products
time:   0.001; rss: 9542MB -> 9542MB (   +0MB)	incr_comp_finalize_session_directory
time:   0.000; rss: 9542MB -> 9542MB (   +0MB)	link_binary_check_files_are_writeable
time:   7.835; rss: 9542MB -> 9544MB (   +2MB)	link_rlib
time:   0.000; rss: 9544MB -> 9544MB (   +0MB)	link_binary_remove_temps
time:   7.872; rss: 9542MB -> 9544MB (   +2MB)	link_binary
time:   7.944; rss: 9542MB -> 9201MB ( -341MB)	link_crate
time:   8.495; rss: 10307MB -> 9201MB (-1106MB)	link
time: 537.014; rss:   33MB -> 3715MB (+3682MB)	total
```

</details>

<details>
<summary>This PR (Click to Expand)</summary>

```
time:   2.379; rss:   51MB -> 1116MB (+1064MB)	parse_crate
time:   0.003; rss: 1116MB -> 1116MB (   +0MB)	attributes_injection
time:   0.002; rss: 1116MB -> 1116MB (   +0MB)	incr_comp_prepare_session_directory
time:   0.000; rss: 1116MB -> 1116MB (   +0MB)	incr_comp_garbage_collect_session_directories
time:   0.000; rss: 1116MB -> 1116MB (   +0MB)	plugin_loading
time:   0.000; rss: 1116MB -> 1116MB (   +0MB)	plugin_registration
time:   0.003; rss: 1118MB -> 1118MB (   +0MB)	crate_injection
time:  13.376; rss: 1118MB -> 3143MB (+2025MB)	expand_crate
time:   0.002; rss: 3143MB -> 3143MB (   +0MB)	check_unused_macros
time:  13.379; rss: 1118MB -> 3143MB (+2025MB)	macro_expand_crate
time:   0.002; rss: 3143MB -> 3143MB (   +0MB)	maybe_building_test_harness
time:   0.479; rss: 3143MB -> 3143MB (   +0MB)	AST_validation
time:   0.002; rss: 3143MB -> 3143MB (   +0MB)	maybe_create_a_macro_crate
time:   0.005; rss: 3143MB -> 3143MB (   +0MB)	finalize_imports
time:   0.520; rss: 3143MB -> 3125MB (  -18MB)	finalize_macro_resolutions
time:   4.446; rss: 3125MB -> 3577MB ( +453MB)	late_resolve_crate
time:   0.000; rss: 3577MB -> 3577MB (   +0MB)	resolve_main
time:   0.336; rss: 3577MB -> 3577MB (   +0MB)	resolve_check_unused
time:   0.000; rss: 3577MB -> 3577MB (   +0MB)	resolve_report_errors
time:   0.295; rss: 3577MB -> 3578MB (   +0MB)	resolve_postprocess
time:   5.602; rss: 3143MB -> 3578MB ( +435MB)	resolve_crate
time:   0.388; rss: 3578MB -> 3578MB (   +0MB)	complete_gated_feature_checking
time:  20.014; rss: 1116MB -> 3578MB (+2462MB)	configure_and_expand
time:   0.000; rss: 3578MB -> 3578MB (   +0MB)	prepare_outputs
time:   0.000; rss: 3578MB -> 3578MB (   +0MB)	blocked_on_dep_graph_loading
time:  64.219; rss: 3578MB -> 6313MB (+2736MB)	hir_lowering
time:   1.102; rss: 6313MB -> 6319MB (   +6MB)	early_lint_checks
time:   1.426; rss: 6319MB -> 6268MB (  -52MB)	drop_ast
time:   0.005; rss: 5834MB -> 5836MB (   +2MB)	setup_global_ctxt
time:   0.000; rss: 5838MB -> 5838MB (   +0MB)	looking_for_entry_point
time:   0.292; rss: 5838MB -> 5840MB (   +1MB)	looking_for_derive_registrar
time:   9.553; rss: 5838MB -> 6060MB ( +222MB)	misc_checking_1
time:   9.949; rss: 6060MB -> 6764MB ( +704MB)	type_collecting
time:   0.630; rss: 6764MB -> 6764MB (   +0MB)	impl_wf_inference
time:   0.060; rss: 6764MB -> 6764MB (   +0MB)	unsafety_checking
time:   3.054; rss: 6764MB -> 6787MB (  +23MB)	coherence_checking
time:  20.702; rss: 6787MB -> 7533MB ( +746MB)	wf_checking
time:   5.194; rss: 7533MB -> 7668MB ( +135MB)	item_types_checking
time:  74.677; rss: 7668MB -> 8062MB ( +394MB)	item_bodies_checking
time: 114.497; rss: 6060MB -> 8068MB (+2008MB)	type_check_crate
time:   1.891; rss: 8068MB -> 8072MB (   +4MB)	match_checking
time:   1.292; rss: 8072MB -> 8100MB (  +28MB)	liveness_and_intrinsic_checking
time:   3.183; rss: 8068MB -> 8100MB (  +32MB)	misc_checking_2
time:  68.845; rss: 8100MB -> 9279MB (+1179MB)	MIR_borrow_checking
time:   0.587; rss: 9279MB -> 9295MB (  +17MB)	MIR_effect_checking
time:   0.000; rss: 9295MB -> 9295MB (   +0MB)	layout_testing
time:   4.443; rss: 9377MB -> 9504MB ( +127MB)	death_checking
time:   0.034; rss: 9504MB -> 9504MB (   +0MB)	unused_lib_feature_checking
time:   4.409; rss: 9504MB -> 9562MB (  +58MB)	crate_lints
time:  56.490; rss: 9562MB -> 9571MB (   +8MB)	module_lints
time:  60.900; rss: 9504MB -> 9571MB (  +66MB)	lint_checking
time:   4.147; rss: 9571MB -> 9633MB (  +62MB)	privacy_checking_modules
time:  75.094; rss: 9295MB -> 9633MB ( +337MB)	misc_checking_3
time:   0.315; rss: 10357MB -> 10357MB (   +0MB)	monomorphization_collector_root_collections
time:  14.501; rss: 10357MB -> 10571MB ( +215MB)	monomorphization_collector_graph_walk
time:   1.763; rss: 10571MB -> 10661MB (  +89MB)	partition_and_assert_distinct_symbols
time:  29.035; rss: 9633MB -> 10706MB (+1073MB)	generate_crate_metadata
time:   0.000; rss: 10706MB -> 10706MB (   +0MB)	find_cgu_reuse
time:  30.913; rss: 10706MB -> 12150MB (+1444MB)	codegen_to_LLVM_IR
time:  31.108; rss: 10706MB -> 12150MB (+1444MB)	codegen_crate
time:   0.000; rss: 12150MB -> 12150MB (   +0MB)	assert_dep_graph
time:   0.000; rss: 12150MB -> 12150MB (   +0MB)	check_dirty_clean
time:   0.416; rss: 12152MB -> 12199MB (  +46MB)	encode_query_results_for(rustc_query_impl::queries::type_of)
time:   1.259; rss: 12199MB -> 12211MB (  +12MB)	encode_query_results_for(rustc_query_impl::queries::generics_of)
time:   0.095; rss: 12211MB -> 12193MB (  -18MB)	encode_query_results_for(rustc_query_impl::queries::predicates_of)
time:   0.005; rss: 12193MB -> 12195MB (   +2MB)	encode_query_results_for(rustc_query_impl::queries::mir_const_qualif)
time:   0.828; rss: 12195MB -> 12208MB (  +14MB)	encode_query_results_for(rustc_query_impl::queries::mir_for_ctfe)
time:  17.880; rss: 12208MB -> 11987MB ( -222MB)	encode_query_results_for(rustc_query_impl::queries::optimized_mir)
time:   0.000; rss: 11987MB -> 11987MB (   +0MB)	encode_query_results_for(rustc_query_impl::queries::covered_file_name)
time:   0.000; rss: 11987MB -> 11987MB (   +0MB)	encode_query_results_for(rustc_query_impl::queries::covered_code_regions)
time:   0.007; rss: 11987MB -> 11988MB (   +1MB)	encode_query_results_for(rustc_query_impl::queries::promoted_mir)
time:   0.049; rss: 11988MB -> 11992MB (   +4MB)	encode_query_results_for(rustc_query_impl::queries::unsafety_check_result)
time:   0.002; rss: 11992MB -> 11994MB (   +1MB)	encode_query_results_for(rustc_query_impl::queries::thir_check_unsafety)
time:  38.049; rss: 11994MB -> 12093MB (  +99MB)	encode_query_results_for(rustc_query_impl::queries::typeck)
time:   0.000; rss: 12093MB -> 12093MB (   +0MB)	encode_query_results_for(rustc_query_impl::queries::diagnostic_only_typeck)
time:   0.024; rss: 12093MB -> 12095MB (   +2MB)	encode_query_results_for(rustc_query_impl::queries::used_trait_imports)
time:   0.372; rss: 12095MB -> 12053MB (  -42MB)	encode_query_results_for(rustc_query_impl::queries::mir_borrowck)
time:   0.015; rss: 12053MB -> 12053MB (   +0MB)	encode_query_results_for(rustc_query_impl::queries::eval_to_allocation_raw)
time:   0.005; rss: 12053MB -> 12054MB (   +1MB)	encode_query_results_for(rustc_query_impl::queries::eval_to_const_value_raw)
time:   0.003; rss: 12054MB -> 12056MB (   +2MB)	encode_query_results_for(rustc_query_impl::queries::check_match)
time:   0.037; rss: 12056MB -> 11899MB ( -157MB)	encode_query_results_for(rustc_query_impl::queries::symbol_name)
time:   0.667; rss: 11899MB -> 11708MB ( -191MB)	encode_query_results_for(rustc_query_impl::queries::codegen_fn_attrs)
time:   0.045; rss: 11708MB -> 11709MB (   +1MB)	encode_query_results_for(rustc_query_impl::queries::codegen_fulfill_obligation)
time:   0.295; rss: 11709MB -> 11734MB (  +25MB)	encode_query_results_for(rustc_query_impl::queries::specialization_graph_of)
time:   0.000; rss: 11734MB -> 11734MB (   +0MB)	encode_query_results_for(rustc_query_impl::queries::adt_drop_tys)
time:   0.000; rss: 11734MB -> 11734MB (   +0MB)	encode_query_results_for(rustc_query_impl::queries::adt_significant_drop_tys)
time:   0.005; rss: 11734MB -> 11734MB (   +1MB)	encode_query_results_for(rustc_query_impl::queries::unused_generic_params)
time:  60.063; rss: 12152MB -> 11734MB ( -418MB)	encode_query_results
time:  76.745; rss: 12007MB -> 11699MB ( -308MB)	LLVM_passes(crate)
time:  61.634; rss: 12150MB -> 10557MB (-1593MB)	incr_comp_serialize_result_cache
time:  61.637; rss: 12150MB -> 10557MB (-1593MB)	incr_comp_persist_result_cache
time:   0.001; rss: 10557MB -> 10557MB (   +0MB)	incr_comp_persist_dep_graph
time:  61.641; rss: 12150MB -> 10557MB (-1593MB)	serialize_dep_graph
time:  15.601; rss: 10557MB -> 10242MB ( -315MB)	free_global_ctxt
time:   0.000; rss: 10242MB -> 10242MB (   +0MB)	join_worker_thread
time:   0.368; rss: 10242MB -> 10242MB (   +0MB)	copy_all_cgu_workproducts_to_incr_comp_cache_dir
time:   0.375; rss: 10242MB -> 10242MB (   +0MB)	finish_ongoing_codegen
time:   0.000; rss: 10242MB -> 10242MB (   +0MB)	llvm_dump_timing_file
time:   0.002; rss: 10242MB -> 10242MB (   +0MB)	serialize_work_products
time:   0.001; rss: 9668MB -> 9668MB (   +0MB)	incr_comp_finalize_session_directory
time:   0.000; rss: 9668MB -> 9668MB (   +0MB)	link_binary_check_files_are_writeable
time:   1.469; rss: 9668MB -> 9671MB (   +3MB)	link_rlib
time:   0.000; rss: 9671MB -> 9671MB (   +0MB)	link_binary_remove_temps
time:   1.506; rss: 9668MB -> 9671MB (   +3MB)	link_binary
time:   1.622; rss: 9668MB -> 9329MB ( -339MB)	link_crate
time:   2.037; rss: 10242MB -> 9329MB ( -913MB)	link
time: 502.990; rss:   32MB -> 5888MB (+5855MB)	total
```

</details>

(6.34% decrease in runtime, results are consistent across multiple runs)
2021-11-27 11:46:45 +01:00
Matthias Krüger
43279b2749
Rollup merge of #90995 - the8472:hash-portability, r=dtolnay
Document non-guarantees for Hash

Dependence on endianness and type sizes was reported for enum discriminants in #74215 but it is a more general
issue since for example the default implementation of `Hasher::write_usize` uses native endianness.
Additionally the implementations of library types are occasionally changed as their internal fields
change or hashing gets optimized.

## Question

Should this go on the module level documentation instead since it also concerns `Hasher` to some extent and not just `Hash`?

resolves #74215
2021-11-27 11:46:42 +01:00
Matthias Krüger
14ef447d12
Rollup merge of #83791 - the8472:relax-zip-side-effect-guarantee, r=dtolnay
Weaken guarantee around advancing underlying iterators in zip

The current guarantee (introduced in #52279) is too strong as it prevents adapters from exploiting knowledge about the iterator length and using counted loops for example because they would stop calling `next()` before it ever returned `None`. Additionally several nested zip iterators already fail to uphold this.

This does not yet remove any of the specialization code that tries (and sometimes fails) to uphold the guarantee for `next()`
because removing it would also affect `next_back()` in more surprising ways.

The intent is to be able to remove for example this branch

36bcf40697/library/core/src/iter/adapters/zip.rs (L234-L243)

or this test

36bcf40697/library/core/tests/iter/adapters/zip.rs (L177-L188)

Solves #82303 by declaring it a non-issue.
2021-11-27 11:46:40 +01:00
bors
bbad745a68 Auto merge of #91269 - matthiaskrgr:rollup-jh8i8eh, r=matthiaskrgr
Rollup of 7 pull requests

Successful merges:

 - #90611 (Fix another ICE in rustdoc scrape_examples)
 - #91197 (rustdoc: Rename `Type::ResolvedPath` to `Type::Path` and don't re-export it)
 - #91223 (Fix headings indent)
 - #91240 (Saner formatting for UTF8_CHAR_WIDTH table)
 - #91248 (Bump compiler-builtins to 0.1.53)
 - #91252 (Fix bug where submodules wouldn't be updated when running x.py from a subdirectory)
 - #91259 (Remove `--display-doctest-warnings`)

Failed merges:

r? `@ghost`
`@rustbot` modify labels: rollup
2021-11-27 00:42:30 +00:00
bors
ccce98535b Auto merge of #91246 - nnethercote:faster-layout-array, r=dtolnay
Faster `Layout::array`

`Layout::array` is called (indirectly) by `Vec::push()`, which is typically instantiated many times, and so making it smaller can help with compile times because less LLVM IR is generated.

r? `@ghost`
2021-11-26 21:35:53 +00:00
David Tolnay
c6810a569f
Clarify safety comment on using i to index into self.source 2021-11-26 12:57:36 -08:00
jam1garner
37c8f254ed Use non-generic inner function for pointer formatting 2021-11-26 13:59:57 -05:00
Nicholas Nethercote
f3bda74d36 Optimize Layout::array.
The current implementation is much more conservative than it needs to
be, because it's dealing with the size and alignment of a given `T`,
which are more restricted than an arbitrary `Layout`.

For example, imagine a struct with a `u32` and a `u4`. You can safely
create a `Layout { size_: 5, align_: 4 }` by hand, but
`Layout:🆕:<T>` will give `Layout { size_: 8, align_: 4}`, where the
size already has padding that accounts for the alignment. (And the
existing `debug_assert_eq!` in `Layout::array` already demonstrates that
no additional padding is required.)
2021-11-26 19:30:35 +11:00
Nicholas Nethercote
026edbb4ef Use unchecked construction in Layout::pad_to_align.
Other, similar methods for `Layout` do likewise, and there's already an
`unwrap()` around the result demonstrating the safety.
2021-11-26 19:30:35 +11:00
David Tolnay
2be9a8349f
Eliminate bunch of copies of error codepath from Utf8LossyChunksIter
Using a macro to stamp out 7 identical copies of the nontrivial slicing
logic to exit this loop didn't seem like a necessary use of a macro. The
early return case can be handled by `break` without practically any
changes to the logic inside the loop.

All this code is from early 2014 (7.5 years old, pre-1.0) so it's
possible there were compiler limitations that forced the macro way at
the time.

Confirmed that `x.py bench library/alloc --stage 0 --test-args from_utf8_lossy`
is unaffected on my machine.
2021-11-25 19:52:45 -08:00
David Tolnay
553a84c445
Saner formatting for UTF8_CHAR_WIDTH table 2021-11-25 18:18:36 -08:00
Matthias Krüger
6970cf5a23
Rollup merge of #91096 - compiler-errors:elaborate_opaque_trait, r=estebank
Print associated types on opaque `impl Trait` types

This PR generalizes #91021, printing associated types for all opaque `impl Trait` types instead of just special-casing for future.

before:
```
error[E0271]: type mismatch resolving `<impl Iterator as Iterator>::Item == u32`
```

after:
```
error[E0271]: type mismatch resolving `<impl Iterator<Item = usize> as Iterator>::Item == u32`
```

---

Questions:
1. I'm kinda lost in binders hell with this one. Is all of the `rebind`ing necessary?
2. Is there a map collection type that will give me a stable iteration order? Doesn't seem like TraitRef is Ord, so I can't just sort later..
3. I removed the logic that suppresses printing generator projection types. It creates outputs like this [gist](https://gist.github.com/compiler-errors/d6f12fb30079feb1ad1d5f1ab39a3a8d). Should I put that back?
4. I also added spaces between traits, `impl A+B` -> `impl A + B`. I quite like this change, but is there a good reason to keep it like that?

r? ````@estebank````
2021-11-25 15:05:37 +01:00
Guillaume Gomez
a6a1d7ca29
Rollup merge of #90420 - GuillaumeGomez:rustdoc-internals-feature, r=camelid
Create rustdoc_internals feature gate

As suggested by ``@camelid`` [here](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/90398#issuecomment-955093851), since `doc_keyword` and `doc_primitive` aren't meant to be stabilized, we could put them behind a same feature flag.

This is pretty much what it would look like (needs to update the tests too).

The tracking issue is https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/90418.

What do you think ``@rust-lang/rustdoc`` ?
2021-11-24 22:56:37 +01:00
Guillaume Gomez
658c148b87
Rollup merge of #89542 - jhpratt:stabilize-duration-const-fns, r=oli-obk
Partially stabilize `duration_consts_2`

Methods that were only blocked on `const_panic` have been stabilized.
The remaining methods of `duration_consts_2` are all related to floats,
and as such have been placed behind the `duration_consts_float` feature
gate.
2021-11-24 22:56:35 +01:00
Guillaume Gomez
1e6ced3532 Create rustdoc_internals feature gate 2021-11-24 21:57:18 +01:00
woppopo
89b2e0c9d5 Make intrinsics::write_bytes const 2021-11-24 13:05:26 +09:00
the8472
53fc69f87c
Apply suggestions from code review
Co-authored-by: pierwill <19642016+pierwill@users.noreply.github.com>
2021-11-23 23:55:05 +01:00
Michael Goulet
b84a52c95a Add generator lang-item 2021-11-23 10:34:16 -08:00
Jacob Pratt
7b103e7dd2
Use derive_default_enum in the compiler 2021-11-22 20:17:53 -05:00
Eric Holk
dfa0db5961 Reintroduce into_future in .await desugaring
This is a reintroduction of the remaining parts from
https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/65244 that have not been relanded
yet.

Issues GH-67644, GH-67982
2021-11-22 14:57:27 -08:00
Jacob Pratt
41f70f3491
Revert "Temporarily rename int_roundings functions to avoid conflicts"
This reverts commit 3ece63b64e.
2021-11-22 15:49:04 -05:00
Jacob Pratt
88b0d7cfc5
Partially stabilize duration_consts_2
Methods that were only blocked on `const_panic` have been stabilized.
The remaining methods of `duration_consts_2` are all related to floats,
and as such have been placed behind the `duration_consts_float` feature
gate.
2021-11-22 13:09:08 -05:00