Apply "polymorphization at home" to RawVec
The idea here is to move all the logic in RawVec into functions with explicit size and alignment parameters. This should eliminate all the fussing about how tweaking RawVec code produces large swings in compile times.
This uncovered https://github.com/rust-lang/rust-clippy/issues/12979, so I've modified the relevant test in a way that tries to preserve the spirit of the test without tripping the ICE.
core: optimise Debug impl for ascii::Char
Rather than writing character at a time, optimise Debug implementation
for core::ascii::Char such that it writes the entire representation
with a single write_str call.
With that, add tests for Display and Debug.
Issue: https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/110998
Improve `Ord` violation help
Recent experience in #128083 showed that the panic message when an Ord violation is detected by the new sort implementations can be confusing. So this PR aims to improve it, together with minor bug fixes in the doc comments for sort*, sort_unstable* and select_nth_unstable*.
Is it possible to get these changes into the 1.81 release? It doesn't change behavior and would greatly help when users encounter this panic for the first time, which they may after upgrading to 1.81.
Tagging `@orlp`
Rather than writing character at a time, optimise Debug implementation
for core::ascii::Char such that it writes the entire representation as
with a single write_str call.
With that, add tests for Display and Debug implementations.
VxWorks code refactored
1. Extern TaskNameSet as minimum supported version of os is VxWorks 7 which would have taskNameSet
2. Vx_TASK_NAME_LEN is 31 on VxWorks7, defined variable res.
3. Add unsafe blocks on Non::Zero usage in available_parallelism()
4. Update vxworks docs.
r? `@tgross35`
cc `@devnexen`
Added `#[inline]` to the `drop` method in the `Guard` implementation to ensure that the method is removed by the compiler at optimization level `opt-level=s` for `Copy` types. This change aims to align the method's behavior with optimization expectations and ensure it does not affect performance.
rwlock: disable 'frob' test in Miri on macOS
Due to https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/121950, Miri will sometimes complain about this test on macOS. Better disable the test, as otherwise it can fail for unrelated PRs.
r? ``@joboet``
Mark `{f32,f64}::{next_up,next_down,midpoint}` inline
Most float functions are marked `#[inline]` so any float symbols used by these functions only need to be provided if the function itself is used. RFL recently noticed that `next_up`, `next_down`, and `midpoint` for `f32` and `f64` are not inline, which causes linker errors when building with certain configurations <https://lore.kernel.org/all/20240806150619.192882-1-ojeda@kernel.org/>.
Add the missing attributes so the symbols should no longer be required.
Add tracking issue to core-pattern-type
While the actual `pattern_types` feature flag has an issue assigned, the exported macro and its module do not.
cc #123646
impl `Default` for collection iterators that don't already have it
There is a pretty strong precedent for implementing `Default` for collection iterators, and this does so for some where this implementation was missed.
I don't think this needs a separate ACP (since this precedent already exists, and these feel like they were just missed), however, it *will* need an FCP since these implementations are instantly stable.
Most float functions are marked `#[inline]` so any float symbols used by
these functions only need to be provided if the function itself is used.
RFL recently noticed that `next_up`, `next_down`, and `midpoint` for
`f32` and `f64` are not inline, which causes linker errors when building
with certain configurations [1].
Add the missing attributes so the symbols should no longer be required.
Cc: Gary Guo <gary@garyguo.net>
Reported-by: Alice Ryhl <aliceryhl@google.com>
Link: https://lore.kernel.org/all/20240806150619.192882-1-ojeda@kernel.org/ [1]
Trivial grammar fix in const keyword docs
This PR makes a trivial fix to the wording of a sentence in the `const` keyword docs.
> `const` items looks remarkably similar to `static` items, [...]
Either this should be written as
> A `const` items looks remarkably similar to a `static` item, [...]
or "looks" should be changed to "look".
I have selected the smaller diff.
Add `f16` and `f128` math functions
This adds intrinsics and math functions for `f16` and `f128` floating point types. Support is quite limited and some things are broken so tests don't run on many platforms, but this provides a starting point.
> `const` items looks remarkably similar to `static` items, [...]
Either this should be written as
> A `const` items looks remarkably similar to a `static` item,
or "looks" should be changed to "look".
I have selected the smaller diff.
Forbid unused unsafe in vxworks-specific std modules
Tracking issue #127747
Adding deny(unsafe_op_in_unsafe_fn) in VxWorks specific files did not cause any error.
Most of VxWorks falls back on Unix libraries. So we'll have to wait for Unix changes.
r? ```@workingjubilee```
Rollup of 8 pull requests
Successful merges:
- #128026 (std:🧵 available_parallelism implementation for vxWorks proposal.)
- #128471 (rustdoc: Fix handling of `Self` type in search index and refactor its representation)
- #128607 (Use `object` in `run-make/symbols-visibility`)
- #128609 (Remove unnecessary constants from flt2dec dragon)
- #128611 (run-make: Remove cygpath)
- #128619 (Correct the const stabilization of `<[T]>::last_chunk`)
- #128630 (docs(resolve): more explain about `target`)
- #128660 (tests: more crashes)
r? `@ghost`
`@rustbot` modify labels: rollup
Correct the const stabilization of `<[T]>::last_chunk`
`<[T]>::first_chunk` became const stable in 1.77, but `<[T]>::last_chunk` was left out. This was fixed in 3488679768, which reached stable in 1.80, making `<[T]>::last_chunk` const stable as of that version, but it is documented as being const stable as 1.77. While this is what should have happened, the documentation should reflect what actually did happen.
Remove unnecessary constants from flt2dec dragon
The "dragon" `flt2dec` algorithm uses multi-precision multiplication by (sometimes large) powers of 10. It has precomputed some values to help with these calculations.
BUT:
* There is no need to store powers of 10 and 2 * powers of 10: it is trivial to compute the second from the first.
* We can save a chunk of memory by storing powers of 5 instead of powers of 10 for the large powers (and just shifting as appropriate).
* This also slightly speeds up the routines (by ~1-3%) since the intermediate products are smaller and the shift is cheap.
In this PR, we remove the unnecessary constants and do the necessary adjustments.
Relevant benchmarks before (on my Threadripper 3970X, x86_64-unknown-linux-gnu):
```
num::flt2dec::bench_big_shortest 137.92/iter +/- 2.24
num::flt2dec::strategy:🐉:bench_big_exact_12 2135.28/iter +/- 38.90
num::flt2dec::strategy:🐉:bench_big_exact_3 904.95/iter +/- 10.58
num::flt2dec::strategy:🐉:bench_big_exact_inf 47230.33/iter +/- 320.84
num::flt2dec::strategy:🐉:bench_big_shortest 3915.05/iter +/- 51.37
```
and after:
```
num::flt2dec::bench_big_shortest 137.40/iter +/- 2.03
num::flt2dec::strategy:🐉:bench_big_exact_12 2101.10/iter +/- 25.63
num::flt2dec::strategy:🐉:bench_big_exact_3 873.86/iter +/- 4.20
num::flt2dec::strategy:🐉:bench_big_exact_inf 47468.19/iter +/- 374.45
num::flt2dec::strategy:🐉:bench_big_shortest 3877.01/iter +/- 45.74
```
Implement cursors for `BTreeSet`
Tracking issue: https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/107540
This is a straightforward wrapping of the map API, except that map's `CursorMut` does not make sense, because there is no value to mutate. Hence, map's `CursorMutKey` is wrapped here as just `CursorMut`, since it's unambiguous for sets and we don't normally speak of "keys". On the other hand, I can see some potential for confusion with `CursorMut` meaning different things in each module. I'm happy to take suggestions to improve that.
r? ````@Amanieu````
`<[T]>::first_chunk` became const stable in 1.77, but `<[T]>::last_chunk` was
left out. This was fixed in 3488679768, which reached stable in 1.80,
making `<[T]>::last_chunk` const stable as of that version, but it is
documented as being const stable as 1.77. While this is what should have
happened, the documentation should reflect what actually did happen.
Move the standard library to a separate workspace
This ensures that the Cargo.lock packaged for it in the rust-src component is up-to-date, allowing rust-analyzer to run cargo metadata on the standard library even when the rust-src component is stored in a read-only location as is necessary for loading crates.io dependencies of the standard library.
This also simplifies tidy's license check for runtime dependencies as it can now look at all entries in library/Cargo.lock without having to filter for just the dependencies of runtime crates. In addition this allows removing an exception in check_runtime_license_exceptions that was necessary due to the compiler enabling a feature on the object crate which pulls in a dependency not allowed for the standard library.
While cargo workspaces normally enable dependencies of multiple targets to be reused, for the standard library we do not want this reusing to prevent conflicts between dependencies of the sysroot and of tools that are built using this sysroot. For this reason we already use an unstable cargo feature to ensure that any dependencies which would otherwise be shared get a different -Cmetadata argument as well as using separate build dirs.
This doesn't change the situation around vendoring. We already have several cargo workspaces that need to be vendored. Adding another one doesn't change much.
There are also no cargo profiles that are shared between the root workspace and the library workspace anyway, so it doesn't add any extra work when changing cargo profiles.
This PR makes a number of changes to the UNIX randomness implementation:
* Use `io::Error` for centralized error handling
* Move the file-fallback logic out of the `getrandom`-specific module
* Stop redefining the syscalls on macOS and DragonFly, they have appeared in `libc`
* Add a `OnceLock` to cache the random device file descriptor
chore: refactor backtrace style in panic
# Refactor get_backtrace_style for better readability and potential performance improvements
This PR aims to improve the readability and maintainability of the `set_backtrace_style` and `get_backtrace_style` function.
Implement `UncheckedIterator` directly for `RepeatN`
This just pulls the code out of `next` into `next_unchecked`, rather than making the `Some` and `unwrap_unchecked`ing it.
And while I was touching it, I added a codegen test that `array::repeat` for something that's just `Clone`, not `Copy`, still ends up optimizing to the same thing as `[x; n]`: <https://rust.godbolt.org/z/YY3a5ajMW>.
The "dragon" `flt2dec` algorithm uses multi-precision multiplication by
(sometimes large) powers of 10. It has precomputed some values to help
with these calculations.
BUT:
* There is no need to store powers of 10 and 2 * powers of 10: it is
trivial to compute the second from the first.
* We can save a chunk of memory by storing powers of 5 instead of powers
of 10 for the large powers (and just shifting by 2 as appropriate).
* This also slightly speeds up the routines (by ~1-3%) since the
intermediate products are smaller and the shift is cheap.
In this PR, we remove the unnecessary constants and do the necessary
adjustments.
Relevant benchmarks before (on my Threadripper 3970X, x86_64-unknown-linux-gnu):
```
num::flt2dec::bench_big_shortest 137.92/iter +/- 2.24
num::flt2dec::strategy:🐉:bench_big_exact_12 2135.28/iter +/- 38.90
num::flt2dec::strategy:🐉:bench_big_exact_3 904.95/iter +/- 10.58
num::flt2dec::strategy:🐉:bench_big_exact_inf 47230.33/iter +/- 320.84
num::flt2dec::strategy:🐉:bench_big_shortest 3915.05/iter +/- 51.37
```
and after:
```
num::flt2dec::bench_big_shortest 137.40/iter +/- 2.03
num::flt2dec::strategy:🐉:bench_big_exact_12 2101.10/iter +/- 25.63
num::flt2dec::strategy:🐉:bench_big_exact_3 873.86/iter +/- 4.20
num::flt2dec::strategy:🐉:bench_big_exact_inf 47468.19/iter +/- 374.45
num::flt2dec::strategy:🐉:bench_big_shortest 3877.01/iter +/- 45.74
```
Revert recent changes to dead code analysis
This is a revert to recent changes to dead code analysis, namely:
* efdf219 Rollup merge of #128104 - mu001999-contrib:fix/128053, r=petrochenkov
* a70dc297a8 Rollup merge of #127017 - mu001999-contrib:dead/enhance, r=pnkfelix
* 31fe9628cf Rollup merge of #127107 - mu001999-contrib:dead/enhance-2, r=pnkfelix
* 2724aeaaeb Rollup merge of #126618 - mu001999-contrib:dead/enhance, r=pnkfelix
* 977c5fd419 Rollup merge of #126315 - mu001999-contrib:fix/126289, r=petrochenkov
* 13314df21b Rollup merge of #125572 - mu001999-contrib:dead/enhance, r=pnkfelix
There is an additional change stacked on top, which suppresses false-negatives that were masked by this work. I believe the functions that are touched in that code are legitimately unused functions and the types are not reachable since this `AnonPipe` type is not publically reachable -- please correct me if I'm wrong cc `@NobodyXu` who added these in ##127153.
Some of these reverts (#126315 and #126618) are only included because it makes the revert apply cleanly, and I think these changes were only done to fix follow-ups from the other PRs?
I apologize for the size of the PR and the churn that it has on the codebase (and for reverting `@mu001999's` work here), but I'm putting this PR up because I am concerned that we're making ad-hoc changes to fix bugs that are fallout of these PRs, and I'd like to see these changes reimplemented in a way that's more separable from the existing dead code pass. I am happy to review any code to reapply these changes in a more separable way.
cc `@mu001999`
r? `@pnkfelix`
Fixes#128272Fixes#126169
Add `#[must_use]` to some `into_raw*` functions.
cc #121287
r? ``@cuviper``
Adds `#[must_use = "losing the pointer will leak memory"]`[^1] to `Box::into_raw(_with_allocator)`, `Vec::into_raw_parts(_with_alloc)`, `String::into_raw_parts`[^2], and `rc::{Rc, Weak}::into_raw_with_allocator` (Rc's normal `into_raw` and all of `Arc`'s `into_raw*`s are already `must_use`).
Adds `#[must_use = "losing the raw <resource name may leak resources"]` to `IntoRawFd::into_raw_fd`, `IntoRawSocket::into_raw_socket`, and `IntoRawHandle::into_raw_handle`.
[^1]: "*will* leak memory" may be too-strong wording (since `Box`/`Vec`/`String`/`rc::Weak` might not have a backing allocation), but I left it as-is for simplicity and consistency.
[^2]: `String::into_raw_parts`'s `must_use` message is changed from the previous (possibly misleading) "`self` will be dropped if the result is not used".
Added SHA512, SM3, SM4 target-features and `sha512_sm_x86` feature gate
This is an effort towards #126624. This adds support for these 3 target-features and introduces the feature flag `sha512_sm_x86`, which would gate these target-features and the yet-to-be-implemented detection and intrinsics in stdarch.
This ensures that the Cargo.lock packaged for it in the rust-src
component is up-to-date, allowing rust-analyzer to run cargo metadata on
the standard library even when the rust-src component is stored in a
read-only location as is necessary for loading crates.io dependencies of
the standard library.
This also simplifies tidy's license check for runtime dependencies as it
can now look at all entries in library/Cargo.lock without having to
filter for just the dependencies of runtime crates. In addition this
allows removing an exception in check_runtime_license_exceptions that
was necessary due to the compiler enabling a feature on the object crate
which pulls in a dependency not allowed for the standard library.
While cargo workspaces normally enable dependencies of multiple targets
to be reused, for the standard library we do not want this reusing to
prevent conflicts between dependencies of the sysroot and of tools that
are built using this sysroot. For this reason we already use an unstable
cargo feature to ensure that any dependencies which would otherwise be
shared get a different -Cmetadata argument as well as using separate
build dirs.
This doesn't change the situation around vendoring. We already have
several cargo workspaces that need to be vendored. Adding another one
doesn't change much.
There are also no cargo profiles that are shared between the root
workspace and the library workspace anyway, so it doesn't add any extra
work when changing cargo profiles.
Rewrite binary search implementation
This PR builds on top of #128250, which should be merged first.
This restores the original binary search implementation from #45333 which has the nice property of having a loop count that only depends on the size of the slice. This, along with explicit conditional moves from #128250, means that the entire binary search loop can be perfectly predicted by the branch predictor.
Additionally, LLVM is able to unroll the loop when the slice length is known at compile-time. This results in a very compact code sequence of 3-4 instructions per binary search step and zero branches.
Fixes#53823Fixes#115271
raw_eq: using it on bytes with provenance is not UB (outside const-eval)
The current behavior of raw_eq violates provenance monotonicity. See https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/124921 for an explanation of provenance monotonicity. It is violated in raw_eq because comparing bytes without provenance is well-defined, but adding provenance makes the operation UB.
So remove the no-provenance requirement from raw_eq. However, the requirement stays in-place for compile-time invocations of raw_eq, that indeed cannot deal with provenance.
Cc `@rust-lang/opsem`
Due to a LLVM bug, `f128` math functions link successfully but LLVM
chooses the wrong symbols (`long double` symbols rather than those for
binary128).
Since this is a notable problem that may surprise a number of users, add
a note about it.
Link: https://github.com/llvm/llvm-project/issues/44744
`min`, `max`, and similar functions require external math routines. Add
these under the same gates as `std` math functions (`reliable_f16_math`
and `reliable_f128_math`).
This adds missing functions for math operations on the new float types.
Platform support is pretty spotty at this point, since even platforms
with generally good support can be missing math functions.
`std/build.rs` is updated to reflect this.