move exposed-provenance APIs into separate feature gate
We have already stated explicitly for all the 'exposed' functions that
> Using this method means that code is *not* following strict provenance rules.
However, they were part of the same feature gate and still described as part of the strict provenance experiment. Unfortunately, their semantics are much less clear and certainly nowhere near stabilization, so in preparation for an attempt to stabilize the strict provenance APIs, I suggest we split the things related to "exposed" into their own feature gate. I also used this opportunity to better explain how Exposed Provenance fits into the larger plan here: this is *one possible candidate* for `as` semantics, but we don't know if it is actually viable, so we can't really promise that it is equivalent to `as`. If it works out we probably want to make `as` equivalent to the 'exposed' APIs; if it doesn't, we will remove them again and try to find some other semantics for `as`.
Add substring API for `OsStr`
This adds a method for taking a substring of an `OsStr`, which in combination with [`OsStr::as_encoded_bytes()`](https://doc.rust-lang.org/std/ffi/struct.OsStr.html#method.as_encoded_bytes) makes it possible to implement most string operations in safe code.
API:
```rust
impl OsStr {
pub fn slice_encoded_bytes<R: ops::RangeBounds<usize>>(&self, range: R) -> &Self;
}
```
Motivation, examples and research at https://github.com/rust-lang/libs-team/issues/306.
Tracking issue: #118485
cc `@epage`
r? libs-api
Implement thread parking for xous
This follows the pattern set by [the Windows parker](ddef56d5df/library/std/src/sys/windows/thread_parking.rs) when it uses keyed events. An atomic variable is used to track the state and optimize the fast path, while notifications are send via the ticktime server to block and unblock the thread.
ping `@xobs`
`@rustbot` label +T-libs +A-atomic
r? libs
Add `std:#️⃣:{DefaultHasher, RandomState}` exports (needs FCP)
This implements rust-lang/libs-team#267 to move the libstd hasher types to `std::hash` where they belong, instead of `std::collections::hash_map`.
<details><summary>The below no longer applies, but is kept for clarity.</summary>
This is a small refactor for #27242, which moves the definitions of `RandomState` and `DefaultHasher` into `std::hash`, but in a way that won't be noticed in the public API.
I've opened rust-lang/libs-team#267 as a formal ACP to move these directly into the root of `std::hash`, but for now, they're at least separated out from the collections code in a way that will make moving that around easier.
I decided to simply copy the rustdoc for `std::hash` from `core::hash` since I think it would be ideal for the two to diverge longer-term, especially if the ACP is accepted. However, I would be willing to factor them out into a common markdown document if that's preferred.
</details>
Works around #115199 by temporarily disabling CFI for core and std CFI
violations to allow the user rebuild and use both core and std with CFI
enabled using the Cargo build-std feature.
- Uses Simple Text Output Protocol and Simple Text Input Protocol
- Reading is done one character at a time
- Writing is done with max 4096 characters
Signed-off-by: Ayush Singh <ayushdevel1325@gmail.com>
Don't modify libstd to dump rustc ICEs
Do a much simpler thing and just dump a `std::backtrace::Backtrace` to file.
r? `@estebank` `@oli-obk`
Fixes#115610
Add initial libstd support for Xous
This patchset adds some minimal support to the tier-3 target `riscv32imac-unknown-xous-elf`. The following features are supported:
* alloc
* thread creation and joining
* thread sleeping
* thread_local
* panic_abort
* mutex
* condvar
* stdout
Additionally, internal support for the various Xous primitives surrounding IPC have been added as part of the Xous FFI. These may be exposed as part of `std::os::xous::ffi` in the future, however for now they are not public.
This represents the minimum viable product. A future patchset will add support for networking and filesystem support.
Also stabilizes saturating_int_assign_impl, gh-92354.
And also make pub fns const where the underlying saturating_*
fns became const in the meantime since the Saturating type was
created.
Xous passes slice pointers around in order to manipulate memory.
This is feature-gated behind `slice_ptr_len`. Xous is currently
the only target to use this feature, so gate it behind an OS flag.
Signed-off-by: Sean Cross <sean@xobs.io>
* remove `impl Provider for Error`
* rename `Demand` to `Request`
* update docstrings to focus on the conceptual API provided by `Request`
* move `core::any::{request_ref, request_value}` functions into `core::error`
* move `core::any::tag`, `core::any::Request`, an `core::any::TaggedOption` into `core::error`
* replace `provide_any` feature name w/ `error_generic_member_access`
* move `core::error::request_{ref,value} tests into core::tests::error module
* update unit and doc tests
reduce deps for windows-msvc targets for backtrace
(eventually) mirrors https://github.com/rust-lang/backtrace-rs/pull/543
Some dependencies of backtrace don't used on windows-msvc targets, so exclude them:
miniz_oxide (+ adler)
addr2line (+ gimli)
object (+ memchr)
This saves about 30kb of std.dll + 17.5mb of rlibs
It lints against features that are inteded to be internal to the
compiler and standard library. Implements MCP #596.
We allow `internal_features` in the standard library and compiler as those
use many features and this _is_ the standard library from the "internal to the compiler and
standard library" after all.
Marking some features as internal wasn't exactly the most scientific approach, I just marked some
mostly obvious features. While there is a categorization in the macro,
it's not very well upheld (should probably be fixed in another PR).
We always pass `-Ainternal_features` in the testsuite
About 400 UI tests and several other tests use internal features.
Instead of throwing the attribute on each one, just always allow them.
There's nothing wrong with testing internal features^^
Use `LazyLock` to lazily resolve backtraces
By using TAIT to name the initializing closure, `LazyLock` can be used to replace the current `LazilyResolvedCapture`.
Implement rust-lang/compiler-team#578.
When an ICE is encountered on nightly releases, the new rustc panic
handler will also write the contents of the backtrace to disk. If any
`delay_span_bug`s are encountered, their backtrace is also added to the
file. The platform and rustc version will also be collected.
Limit read size in `File::read_to_end` loop
Fixes#110650.
Windows file reads have perf overhead that's proportional to the buffer size. When we have a reasonable expectation that we know the file size, we can set a reasonable upper bound for the size of the buffer in one read call.
Add `tidy-alphabetical` to features in `alloc` & `std`
So that people have to keep them sorted in future, rather than just sticking them on the end where they conflict more often.
Follow-up to #110269
cc `@jyn514`
Stabilize `nonnull_slice_from_raw_parts`
FCP is done: https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/71941#issuecomment-1100910416
Note that this doesn't const-stabilize `NonNull::slice_from_raw_parts` as `slice_from_raw_parts_mut` isn't const-stabilized yet. Given #67456 and #57349, it's not likely available soon, meanwhile, stabilizing only the feature makes some sense, I think.
Closes#71941
Stabilize `atomic_as_ptr`
Fixes#66893
This stabilizes the `as_ptr` methods for atomics. The stabilization feature gate used here is `atomic_as_ptr` which supersedes `atomic_mut_ptr` to match the change in https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/107736.
This needs FCP.
New stable API:
```rust
impl AtomicBool {
pub const fn as_ptr(&self) -> *mut bool;
}
impl AtomicI32 {
pub const fn as_ptr(&self) -> *mut i32;
}
// Includes all other atomic types
impl<T> AtomicPtr<T> {
pub const fn as_ptr(&self) -> *mut *mut T;
}
```
r? libs-api
``@rustbot`` label +needs-fcp
Add `round_ties_even` to `f32` and `f64`
Tracking issue: #96710
Redux of #82273. See also #55107
Adds a new method, `round_ties_even`, to `f32` and `f64`, that rounds the float to the nearest integer , rounding halfway cases to the number with an even least significant bit. Uses the `roundeven` LLVM intrinsic to do this.
Of the five IEEE 754 rounding modes, this is the only one that doesn't already have a round-to-integer function exposed by Rust (others are `round`, `floor`, `ceil`, and `trunc`). Ties-to-even is also the rounding mode used for int-to-float and float-to-float `as` casts, as well as float arithmentic operations. So not having an explicit rounding method for it seems like an oversight.
Bikeshed: this PR currently uses `round_ties_even` for the name of the method. But maybe `round_ties_to_even` is better, or `round_even`, or `round_to_even`?
[stdio][windows] Use MBTWC and WCTMB
`MultiByteToWideChar` and `WideCharToMultiByte` are extremely well optimized, and therefore should probably be used when we know we can (specifically in the Windows stdio stuff).
Fixes#107092
Update `rand` in the stdlib tests, and remove the `getrandom` feature from it.
The main goal is actually removing `getrandom`, so that eventually we can allow running the stdlib test suite on tier3 targets which don't have `getrandom` support. Currently those targets can only run the subset of stdlib tests that exist in uitests, and (generally speaking), we prefer not to test libstd functionality in uitests, which came up recently in https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/104095 and https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/104185. Additionally, the fact that we can't update `rand`/`getrandom` means we're stuck with the old set of tier3 targets, so can't test new ones.
~~Anyway, I haven't checked that this actually does allow use on tier3 targets (I think it does not, as some work is needed in stdlib submodules) but it moves us slightly closer to this, and seems to allow at least finally updating our `rand` dep, which definitely improves the status quo.~~ Checked and works now.
For the most part, our tests and benchmarks are fine using hard-coded seeds. A couple tests seem to fail with this (stuff manipulating the environment expecting no collisions, for example), or become pointless (all inputs to a function become equivalent). In these cases I've done a (gross) dance (ab)using `RandomState` and `Location::caller()` for some extra "entropy".
Trying to share that code seems *way* more painful than it's worth given that the duplication is a 7-line function, even if the lines are quite gross. (Keeping in mind that sharing it would require adding `rand` as a non-dev dep to std, and exposing a type from it publicly, all of which sounds truly awful, even if done behind a perma-unstable feature).
See also some previous attempts:
- https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/86963 (in particular https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/86963#issuecomment-885438936 which explains why this is non-trivial)
- https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/89131
- https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/96626#issuecomment-1114562857 (I tried in that PR at the same time, but settled for just removing the usage of `thread_rng()` from the benchmarks, since that was the main goal).
- https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/104185
- Probably more. It's very tempting of a thing to "just update".
r? `@Mark-Simulacrum`
The UNIX and WASI implementations use `isatty`. The Windows
implementation uses the same logic the `atty` crate uses, including the
hack needed to detect msys terminals.
Implement this trait for `File` and for `Stdin`/`Stdout`/`Stderr` and
their locked counterparts on all platforms. On UNIX and WASI, implement
it for `BorrowedFd`/`OwnedFd`. On Windows, implement it for
`BorrowedHandle`/`OwnedHandle`.
Based on https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/91121
Co-authored-by: Matt Wilkinson <mattwilki17@gmail.com>
PR #98165 with commits 7c360dc117 and c1a2db3372
has moved all of the components of these modules into different places,
namely {std,core}::sync and {std,core}::cell. The empty
modules remained. As they are unstable, we can simply remove them.
Stabilize bench_black_box
This PR stabilize `feature(bench_black_box)`.
```rust
pub fn black_box<T>(dummy: T) -> T;
```
The FCP was completed in https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/64102.
`@rustbot` label +T-libs-api -T-libs
Stabilize `#![feature(mixed_integer_ops)]`
Tracked and FCP completed in #87840.
````@rustbot```` label +T-libs-api +S-waiting-on-review +relnotes
r? rust-lang/t-libs-api
Make `from_waker`, `waker` and `from_raw` unstably `const`
Make
- `Context::from_waker`
- `Context::waker`
- `Waker::from_raw`
`const`.
Also added a small test.
On later stages, the feature is already stable.
Result of running:
rg -l "feature.let_else" compiler/ src/librustdoc/ library/ | xargs sed -s -i "s#\\[feature.let_else#\\[cfg_attr\\(bootstrap, feature\\(let_else\\)#"
Revert let_chains stabilization
This is the revert against master, the beta revert was already done in #100538.
Bumps the stage0 compiler which already has it reverted.
Make use of `[wrapping_]byte_{add,sub}`
These new methods trivially replace old `.cast().wrapping_offset().cast()` & similar code.
Note that [`arith_offset`](https://doc.rust-lang.org/std/intrinsics/fn.arith_offset.html) and `wrapping_offset` are the same thing.
r? ``@scottmcm``
_split off from #100746_