Commit Graph

5691 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Milan Landaverde
63ebfc2c55 Add abstract namespace support for Unix domain sockets 2021-10-10 14:01:06 -04:00
Matthias Krüger
4d89488c41
Rollup merge of #89735 - bjorn3:stabilize_proc_macro_is_available, r=petrochenkov
Stabilize proc_macro::is_available

Tracking issue: https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/71436

The FCP for the stabilization of `proc_macro::is_available` has completed.
2021-10-10 18:22:26 +02:00
Matthias Krüger
c8b5a7b0c4
Rollup merge of #89720 - jkugelman:must-use-math-operations, r=joshtriplett
Add #[must_use] to math and bit manipulation methods

Also tidied up a few other nearby `#[must_use]`s.

Parent issue: #89692
2021-10-10 18:22:25 +02:00
Matthias Krüger
758a901a40
Rollup merge of #89719 - jkugelman:must-use-char-escape-methods, r=joshtriplett
Add #[must_use] to char escape methods

Parent issue: #89692
2021-10-10 18:22:24 +02:00
Matthias Krüger
0c04b1fc03
Rollup merge of #89718 - jkugelman:must-use-is_condition-tests, r=joshtriplett
Add #[must_use] to is_condition tests

There's nothing insightful to say about these so I didn't write any extra explanations.

Parent issue: #89692
2021-10-10 18:22:23 +02:00
Matthias Krüger
ce6097dfa4
Rollup merge of #89705 - nbdd0121:doc, r=GuillaumeGomez
Cfg hide no_global_oom_handling and no_fp_fmt_parse

These are unstable sysroot customisation cfg options that only projects building their own sysroot will use (e.g. Rust-for-linux). Most users shouldn't care. `no_global_oom_handling` can be especially annoying since it's applied on many commonly used alloc crate methods (e.g. `Box::new`, `Vec::push`).

r? ```@GuillaumeGomez```
2021-10-10 18:22:21 +02:00
Matthias Krüger
06cfd0af48
Rollup merge of #89438 - pierwill:prefix-free-hash, r=Amanieu
docs: `std:#️⃣:Hash` should ensure prefix-free data

Attempt to synthesize the discussion in #89429 into a suggestion regarding `Hash` implementations (not a hard requirement).

Closes #89429.
2021-10-10 18:22:20 +02:00
Matthias Krüger
4473b945bf
Rollup merge of #88713 - falk-hueffner:int-log10-documentation-fixes, r=scottmcm
Improve docs for int_log

* Clarify rounding.
* Avoid "wrapping" wording.
* Omit wrong claim on 0 only being returned in error cases.
* Typo fix for one_less_than_next_power_of_two.
2021-10-10 18:22:18 +02:00
Matthias Krüger
fd5bed73d0
Rollup merge of #88374 - joshlf:patch-2, r=JohnTitor
Fix documentation in Cell
2021-10-10 18:22:17 +02:00
John Kugelman
ecd7ea8a9c
Merge branch 'rust-lang:master' into must-use-alloc-constructors 2021-10-10 10:15:16 -04:00
Clemens Wasser
71dd0b928b Apply clippy suggestions 2021-10-10 15:38:19 +02:00
bors
0c87288f92 Auto merge of #89219 - nickkuk:str_split_once_get_unchecked, r=Mark-Simulacrum
Use get_unchecked in str::[r]split_once

This PR removes indices checking in `str::split_once` and `str::rsplit_once` methods.
2021-10-10 12:29:48 +00:00
bjorn3
09dd213cd2 Stabilize proc_macro::is_available 2021-10-10 14:09:54 +02:00
bors
9e8356c6ad Auto merge of #88952 - skrap:add-armv7-uclibc, r=nagisa
Add new tier-3 target: armv7-unknown-linux-uclibceabihf

This change adds a new tier-3 target: armv7-unknown-linux-uclibceabihf

This target is primarily used in embedded linux devices where system resources are slim and glibc is deemed too heavyweight.  Cross compilation C toolchains are available [here](https://toolchains.bootlin.com/) or via [buildroot](https://buildroot.org).

The change is based largely on a previous PR #79380 with a few minor modifications.  The author of that PR was unable to push the PR forward, and graciously allowed me to take it over.

Per the [target tier 3 policy](https://github.com/rust-lang/rfcs/blob/master/text/2803-target-tier-policy.md), I volunteer to be the "target maintainer".

This is my first PR to Rust itself, so I apologize if I've missed things!
2021-10-10 08:16:22 +00:00
John Kugelman
5b5c12be1c Add #[must_use] to core and std constructors 2021-10-10 02:44:26 -04:00
John Kugelman
58cc18c56b Add #[must_use] to alloc constructors 2021-10-10 02:19:30 -04:00
John Kugelman
bc9d13e658 Add #[must_use] to math and bit manipulation methods
Also tidied up a few other nearby `#[must_use]`s.
2021-10-09 22:43:32 -04:00
John Kugelman
fec9514727 Add #[must_use] to char escape methods 2021-10-09 21:35:09 -04:00
John Kugelman
475e9925a7 Add #[must_use] to is_condition tests
There's nothing insightful to say about these so I didn't write any
extra explanations.
2021-10-09 21:27:13 -04:00
pierwill
749194d847
Update library/core/src/hash/mod.rs
Co-authored-by: Amanieu d'Antras <amanieu@gmail.com>
2021-10-09 13:53:29 -05:00
Clemens Wasser
8545472a08 Apply clippy suggestions 2021-10-09 18:56:01 +02:00
Gary Guo
01825669b8 Cfg hide no_global_oom_handling and no_fp_fmt_parse 2021-10-09 17:07:33 +01:00
Guillaume Gomez
9f32ab88af
Rollup merge of #89664 - timClicks:51430-document-boxed-conversions, r=m-ou-se
Add documentation to boxed conversions

Among other changes, documents whether allocations are necessary
to complete the type conversion.

Part of #51430, supersedes #89199
2021-10-09 17:08:41 +02:00
Guillaume Gomez
21a5101e21
Rollup merge of #89614 - cuviper:unicode-14, r=joshtriplett
Update to Unicode 14.0

The Unicode Standard [announced Version 14.0](https://home.unicode.org/announcing-the-unicode-standard-version-14-0/) on September 14, 2021, and this pull request updates the generated tables in `core` accordingly.

This did require a little prep-work in `unicode-table-generator`. First, #81358 had modified the generated file instead of the tool, so that change is now reflected in the tool as well. Next, I found that the "Alphabetic" property in version 14 was panicking when generating a bitset, "cannot pack 264 into 8 bits". We've been using the skiplist for that anyway, so I changed this to fail gracefully. Finally, I confirmed that the tool still created the exact same tables for 13 before moving to 14.
2021-10-09 17:08:40 +02:00
Guillaume Gomez
703cb973ec
Rollup merge of #88436 - lf-:stabilize-command-access, r=yaahc
std: Stabilize command_access

Tracking issue: #44434 (not yet closed but the FCP is done so that should be soon).
2021-10-09 17:08:39 +02:00
Guillaume Gomez
3e4f95612e
Rollup merge of #87528 - :stack_overflow_obsd, r=joshtriplett
stack overflow handler specific openbsd change.
2021-10-09 17:08:38 +02:00
Guillaume Gomez
86bf3ce859
Rollup merge of #75644 - c410-f3r:array, r=yaahc
Add 'core::array::from_fn' and 'core::array::try_from_fn'

These auxiliary methods fill uninitialized arrays in a safe way and are particularly useful for elements that don't implement `Default`.

```rust
// Foo doesn't implement Default
struct Foo(usize);

let _array = core::array::from_fn::<_, _, 2>(|idx| Foo(idx));
```

Different from `FromIterator`, it is guaranteed that the array will be fully filled and no error regarding uninitialized state will be throw. In certain scenarios, however, the creation of an **element** can fail and that is why the `try_from_fn` function is also provided.

```rust
#[derive(Debug, PartialEq)]
enum SomeError {
    Foo,
}

let array = core::array::try_from_fn(|i| Ok::<_, SomeError>(i));
assert_eq!(array, Ok([0, 1, 2, 3, 4]));

let another_array = core::array::try_from_fn(|_| Err(SomeError::Foo));
assert_eq!(another_array, Err(SomeError::Foo));
 ```
2021-10-09 17:08:38 +02:00
Matthias Krüger
827b540424
Rollup merge of #89694 - jkugelman:must-use-string-transforms, r=joshtriplett
Add #[must_use] to string/char transformation methods

These methods could be misconstrued as modifying their arguments instead of returning new values.

Where possible I made the note recommend a method that does mutate in place.

Parent issue: #89692
2021-10-09 11:56:07 +02:00
Matthias Krüger
ee804594c8
Rollup merge of #89693 - jkugelman:must-use-stdin-stdout-stderr-locks, r=joshtriplett
Add #[must_use] to stdin/stdout/stderr locks

Affected methods:

```rust
std::io           fn stdin_locked() -> StdinLock<'static>;
std::io::Stdin    fn lock(&self) -> StdinLock<'_>;
std::io           fn stdout_locked() -> StdoutLock<'static>;
std::io::Stdout   fn lock(&self) -> StdoutLock<'_>;
std::io           fn stderr_locked() -> StderrLock<'static>;
std::io::Stderr   fn lock(&self) -> StderrLock<'_>;
```

Parent issue: https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/89692
2021-10-09 11:56:07 +02:00
Matthias Krüger
346f833c3d
Rollup merge of #89678 - marcelo-gonzalez:master, r=joshtriplett
Fix minor std::thread documentation typo

callers of spawn_unchecked() need to make sure that the thread
not outlive references in the passed closure, not the other way around.
2021-10-09 11:56:01 +02:00
Matthias Krüger
36db658796
Rollup merge of #88707 - sylvestre:split_example, r=yaahc
String.split_terminator: Add an example when using a slice of chars
2021-10-09 11:55:58 +02:00
Tim McNamara
020ec0a039
Remove unnecessary hyphen
Co-authored-by: Laurențiu Nicola <lnicola@users.noreply.github.com>
2021-10-09 21:44:07 +13:00
Tim McNamara
fa5a212896
Simplify wording
Co-authored-by: Josh Triplett <josh@joshtriplett.org>
Co-authored-by: Laurențiu Nicola <lnicola@users.noreply.github.com>
2021-10-09 20:51:36 +13:00
John Kugelman
2ec7588aa1
Update library/core/src/num/mod.rs
Co-authored-by: Josh Triplett <josh@joshtriplett.org>
2021-10-09 02:05:03 -04:00
bors
910692de74 Auto merge of #89582 - jkugelman:optimize-file-read-to-end, r=joshtriplett
Optimize File::read_to_end and read_to_string

Reading a file into an empty vector or string buffer can incur unnecessary `read` syscalls and memory re-allocations as the buffer "warms up" and grows to its final size. This is perhaps a necessary evil with generic readers, but files can be read in smarter by checking the file size and reserving that much capacity.

`std::fs::read` and `std::fs::read_to_string` already perform this optimization: they open the file, reads its metadata, and call `with_capacity` with the file size. This ensures that the buffer does not need to be resized and an initial string of small `read` syscalls.

However, if a user opens the `File` themselves and calls `file.read_to_end` or `file.read_to_string` they do not get this optimization.

```rust
let mut buf = Vec::new();
file.read_to_end(&mut buf)?;
```

I searched through this project's codebase and even here are a *lot* of examples of this. They're found all over in unit tests, which isn't a big deal, but there are also several real instances in the compiler and in Cargo. I've documented the ones I found in a comment here:

https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/89516#issuecomment-934423999

Most telling, the documentation for both the `Read` trait and the `Read::read_to_end` method both show this exact pattern as examples of how to use readers. What this says to me is that this shouldn't be solved by simply fixing the instances of it in this codebase. If it's here it's certain to be prevalent in the wider Rust ecosystem.

To that end, this commit adds specializations of `read_to_end` and `read_to_string` directly on `File`. This way it's no longer a minor footgun to start with an empty buffer when reading a file in.

A nice side effect of this change is that code that accesses a `File` as `impl Read` or `dyn Read` will benefit. For example, this code from `compiler/rustc_serialize/src/json.rs`:

```rust
pub fn from_reader(rdr: &mut dyn Read) -> Result<Json, BuilderError> {
    let mut contents = Vec::new();
    match rdr.read_to_end(&mut contents) {
```

Related changes:

- I also added specializations to `BufReader` to delegate to `self.inner`'s methods. That way it can call `File`'s optimized  implementations if the inner reader is a file.

- The private `std::io::append_to_string` function is now marked `unsafe`.

- `File::read_to_string` being more efficient means that the performance note for `io::read_to_string` can be softened. I've added `@camelid's` suggested wording from https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/80218#issuecomment-936806502.

r? `@joshtriplett`
2021-10-09 05:24:47 +00:00
John Kugelman
54d807cfc7 Add #[must_use] to string/char transformation methods
These methods could be misconstrued as modifying their arguments instead
of returning new values.

Where possible I made the note recommend a method that does mutate in
place.
2021-10-09 01:01:40 -04:00
John Kugelman
e27bfb6e23 Add #[must_use] to stdin/stdout/stderr locks 2021-10-08 23:31:57 -04:00
Marcelo Diop-Gonzalez
82c974dab5 Fix minor std::thread documentation typo
callers of spawn_unchecked() need to make sure that the thread
not outlive references in the passed closure, not the other way around.
2021-10-08 15:29:04 -04:00
Loïc BRANSTETT
0a03ec4724 Cfg hide more conditions for alloc 2021-10-08 17:11:57 +02:00
Loïc BRANSTETT
31b2eb16e3 Cfg hide more conditions for core 2021-10-08 16:13:49 +02:00
Caio
85c4a52807 Also cfg flag auxiliar function 2021-10-08 06:40:24 -03:00
Tim McNamara
6a52fb7303 Add documentation to boxed conversions
Among other changes, documents whether allocations are necessary
to complete the type conversion.

Part of #51430

Co-authored-by: Giacomo Stevanato <giaco.stevanato@gmail.com>

Co-authored-by: Joshua Nelson <github@jyn.dev>
2021-10-08 21:40:25 +13:00
Jubilee
30e068f58b
Rollup merge of #89622 - m-ou-se:debug-assert-2021, r=estebank
Use correct edition for panic in [debug_]assert!().

See https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/88638#issuecomment-915472783
2021-10-07 20:26:15 -07:00
Jubilee
37f17bca7c
Rollup merge of #89082 - smoelius:master, r=kennytm
Implement #85440 (Random test ordering)

This PR adds `--shuffle` and `--shuffle-seed` options to `libtest`. The options are similar to the [`-shuffle` option](c894b442d1/src/testing/testing.go (L1482-L1499)) that was recently added to Go.

Here are the relevant parts of the help message:
```
        --shuffle       Run tests in random order
        --shuffle-seed SEED
                        Run tests in random order; seed the random number
                        generator with SEED
...
By default, the tests are run in alphabetical order. Use --shuffle or set
RUST_TEST_SHUFFLE to run the tests in random order. Pass the generated
"shuffle seed" to --shuffle-seed (or set RUST_TEST_SHUFFLE_SEED) to run the
tests in the same order again. Note that --shuffle and --shuffle-seed do not
affect whether the tests are run in parallel.
```
Is an RFC needed for this?
2021-10-07 20:26:12 -07:00
Jubilee
2b6d7f75f7
Rollup merge of #88772 - orlp:result-map-or-else-docfix, r=yaahc
Fixed confusing wording on Result::map_or_else.

Fixes https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/88195.
2021-10-07 20:26:11 -07:00
bors
2ee06e7372 Auto merge of #89638 - rust-lang:revert-88548-intersperse, r=Mark-Simulacrum
Revert "Stabilize `Iterator::intersperse()`"

Reverts rust-lang/rust#88548

First step in resolving https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/88967
2021-10-07 23:50:54 +00:00
Ibraheem Ahmed
5f7e7d2e93 revert stabilization of core::task::ready! 2021-10-07 18:44:48 -04:00
John Kugelman
a990c76d84 Optimize File::read_to_end and read_to_string
Reading a file into an empty vector or string buffer can incur
unnecessary `read` syscalls and memory re-allocations as the buffer
"warms up" and grows to its final size. This is perhaps a necessary evil
with generic readers, but files can be read in smarter by checking the
file size and reserving that much capacity.

`std::fs::read` and `read_to_string` already perform this optimization:
they open the file, reads its metadata, and call `with_capacity` with
the file size. This ensures that the buffer does not need to be resized
and an initial string of small `read` syscalls.

However, if a user opens the `File` themselves and calls
`file.read_to_end` or `file.read_to_string` they do not get this
optimization.

```rust
let mut buf = Vec::new();
file.read_to_end(&mut buf)?;
```

I searched through this project's codebase and even here are a *lot* of
examples of this. They're found all over in unit tests, which isn't a
big deal, but there are also several real instances in the compiler and
in Cargo. I've documented the ones I found in a comment here:

https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/89516#issuecomment-934423999

Most telling, the `Read` trait and the `read_to_end` method both show
this exact pattern as examples of how to use readers. What this says to
me is that this shouldn't be solved by simply fixing the instances of it
in this codebase. If it's here it's certain to be prevalent in the wider
Rust ecosystem.

To that end, this commit adds specializations of `read_to_end` and
`read_to_string` directly on `File`. This way it's no longer a minor
footgun to start with an empty buffer when reading a file in.

A nice side effect of this change is that code that accesses a `File` as
a bare `Read` constraint or via a `dyn Read` trait object will benefit.
For example, this code from `compiler/rustc_serialize/src/json.rs`:

```rust
pub fn from_reader(rdr: &mut dyn Read) -> Result<Json, BuilderError> {
    let mut contents = Vec::new();
    match rdr.read_to_end(&mut contents) {
```

Related changes:

- I also added specializations to `BufReader` to delegate to
  `self.inner`'s methods. That way it can call `File`'s optimized
  implementations if the inner reader is a file.

- The private `std::io::append_to_string` function is now marked
  `unsafe`.

- `File::read_to_string` being more efficient means that the performance
  note for `io::read_to_string` can be softened. I've added @camelid's
  suggested wording from:

  https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/80218#issuecomment-936806502
2021-10-07 18:42:02 -04:00
Ibraheem Ahmed
a57c18b5e1 add Poll::ready 2021-10-07 15:47:28 -04:00
Jane Lusby
8965b5884a
Revert "Stabilize Iterator::intersperse()" 2021-10-07 10:39:36 -07:00
Guillaume Gomez
e32328bdc5
Rollup merge of #89596 - GuillaumeGomez:implicit-doc-cfg, r=jyn514
Make cfg imply doc(cfg)

This is a reopening of #79341, rebased and modified a bit (we made a lot of refactoring in rustdoc's types so they needed to be reflected in this PR as well):

 * `hidden_cfg` is now in the `Cache` instead of `DocContext` because `cfg` information isn't stored anymore on `clean::Attributes` type but instead computed on-demand, so we need this information in later parts of rustdoc.
 * I removed the `bool_to_options` feature (which makes the code a bit simpler to read for `SingleExt` trait implementation.
 * I updated the version for the feature.

There is only one thing I couldn't figure out: [this comment](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/79341#discussion_r561855624)

> I think I'll likely scrap the whole `SingleExt` extension trait as the diagnostics for 0 and >1 items should be different.

How/why should they differ?

EDIT: this part has been solved, the current code was fine, just needed a little simplification.

cc `@Nemo157`
r? `@jyn514`

Original PR description:

This is only active when the `doc_cfg` feature is active.

The implicit cfg can be overridden via `#[doc(cfg(...))]`, so e.g. to hide a `#[cfg]` you can use something like:

```rust
#[cfg(unix)]
#[doc(cfg(all()))]
pub struct Unix;
```

By adding `#![doc(cfg_hide(foobar))]` to the crate attributes the cfg `#[cfg(foobar)]` (and _only_ that _exact_ cfg) will not be implicitly treated as a `doc(cfg)` to render a message in the documentation.
2021-10-07 16:24:53 +02:00
Mara Bos
afe5335b97 Use correct edition for panic in [debug_]assert!() etc. 2021-10-07 14:27:08 +02:00
Josh Stone
459a7e340c Regenerate tables for Unicode 14.0.0 2021-10-06 17:49:33 -07:00
Manish Goregaokar
79a1fc8419
Rollup merge of #89531 - devnexen:stack_overflow_bsd_libc_upd, r=dtolnay
library std, libc dependency update

to solve #87528 build.
2021-10-06 12:33:22 -07:00
Manish Goregaokar
b4615b5bf9
Rollup merge of #89324 - yoshuawuyts:hardware-parallelism, r=m-ou-se
Rename `std:🧵:available_conccurrency` to `std:🧵:available_parallelism`

_Tracking issue: https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/74479_

This PR renames  `std:🧵:available_conccurrency` to `std:🧵:available_parallelism`.

## Rationale

The API was initially named `std:🧵:hardware_concurrency`, mirroring the [C++ API of the same name](https://en.cppreference.com/w/cpp/thread/thread/hardware_concurrency). We eventually decided to omit any reference to the word "hardware" after [this comment](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/74480#issuecomment-662045841). And so we ended up with `available_concurrency` instead.

---

For a talk I was preparing this week I was reading through ["Understanding and expressing scalable concurrency" (A. Turon, 2013)](http://aturon.github.io/academic/turon-thesis.pdf), and the following passage stood out to me (emphasis mine):

> __Concurrency is a system-structuring mechanism.__ An interactive system that deals with disparate asynchronous events is naturally structured by division into concurrent threads with disparate responsibilities. Doing so creates a better fit between problem and solution, and can also decrease the average latency of the system by preventing long-running computations from obstructing quicker ones.

> __Parallelism is a resource.__ A given machine provides a certain capacity for parallelism, i.e., a bound on the number of computations it can perform simultaneously. The goal is to maximize throughput by intelligently using this resource. For interactive systems, parallelism can decrease latency as well.

_Chapter 2.1: Concurrency is not Parallelism. Page 30._

---

_"Concurrency is a system-structuring mechanism. Parallelism is a resource."_ — It feels like this accurately captures the way we should be thinking about these APIs. What this API returns is not "the amount of concurrency available to the program" which is a property of the program, and thus even with just a single thread is effectively unbounded. But instead it returns "the amount of _parallelism_ available to the program", which is a resource hard-constrained by the machine's capacity (and can be further restricted by e.g. operating systems).

That's why I'd like to propose we rename this API from `available_concurrency` to `available_parallelism`. This still meets the criteria we previously established of not attempting to define what exactly we mean by "hardware", "threads", and other such words. Instead we only talk about "concurrency" as an abstract resource available to our program.

r? `@joshtriplett`
2021-10-06 12:33:17 -07:00
Manish Goregaokar
14da7fc9ae
Rollup merge of #89245 - DeveloperC286:iter_mut_fields_to_private, r=joshtriplett
refactor: make VecDeque's IterMut fields module-private, not just crate-private

Made the fields of VecDeque's IterMut private by creating a IterMut::new(...) function to create a new instance of IterMut and migrating usage to use IterMut::new(...).
2021-10-06 12:33:16 -07:00
Manish Goregaokar
91e3b5172c
Rollup merge of #89050 - DeveloperC286:drain_fields_to_private, r=joshtriplett
refactor: VecDeques Drain fields to private

Made the fields of VecDeque's Drain private by creating a Drain::new(...) function to create a new instance of Drain and migrating usage to use Drain::new(...).
2021-10-06 12:33:15 -07:00
Manish Goregaokar
1e3b5d6725
Rollup merge of #88523 - kpreid:category, r=yaahc
Expand documentation for `FpCategory`.

I intend these changes to be helpful to readers who are not yet familiar with the quirks of floating-point numbers. Additionally, I felt it was misleading to describe `Nan` as being the result of division by zero, since most divisions by zero (except for 0/0) produce `Infinite` floats, so I moved that remark to the `Infinite` variant with adjustment.

The first sentence of the `Nan` documentation is copied from `f32`; I followed the example of the `f64` documentation by referring to `f32` for general concepts, rather than duplicating the text.

----

I considered making similar changes to the documentation of the `is_*` methods of floats, but decided that that was a much larger and trickier problem; here, each of the variants' descriptions can be expected to be read in context of being mutually exclusive with the others.
2021-10-06 12:33:14 -07:00
Manish Goregaokar
3209582a87
Rollup merge of #87601 - a1phyr:feature_uint_add_signed, r=kennytm
Add functions to add unsigned and signed integers

This PR adds methods to unsigned integers to add signed integers with good overflow semantics under `#![feature(mixed_integer_ops)]`.

The added API is:

```rust
// `uX` is `u8`, `u16`, `u32`, `u64`,`u128`, `usize`
impl uX {
    pub const fn checked_add_signed(self, iX) -> Option<Self>;
    pub const fn overflowing_add_signed(self, iX) -> (Self, bool);
    pub const fn saturating_add_signed(self, iX) -> Self;
    pub const fn wrapping_add_signed(self, iX) -> Self;
}

impl iX {
    pub const fn checked_add_unsigned(self, uX) -> Option<Self>;
    pub const fn overflowing_add_unsigned(self, uX) -> (Self, bool);
    pub const fn saturating_add_unsigned(self, uX) -> Self;
    pub const fn wrapping_add_unsigned(self, uX) -> Self;

    pub const fn checked_sub_unsigned(self, uX) -> Option<Self>;
    pub const fn overflowing_sub_unsigned(self, uX) -> (Self, bool);
    pub const fn saturating_sub_unsigned(self, uX) -> Self;
    pub const fn wrapping_sub_unsigned(self, uX) -> Self;
}
```

Maybe it would be interesting to also have `add_signed` that panics in debug and wraps in release ?
2021-10-06 12:33:13 -07:00
Guillaume Gomez
8fac41a530 Clean up code a bit:
* Remove "bool_to_options" feature
 * Update version for compiler feature
 * rustfmt
2021-10-06 20:23:57 +02:00
Jonah Petri
bd821729cb Update libc to 0.2.103. 2021-10-06 14:33:13 +00:00
Jonah Petri
bc3eb354e7 add platform support details file for armv7-unknown-linux-uclibc 2021-10-06 14:33:13 +00:00
Yannick Koehler
11381a5a3a Add new target armv7-unknown-linux-uclibceabihf
Co-authored-by: Jonah Petri <jonah@petri.us>
2021-10-06 14:33:13 +00:00
Orson Peters
c3dfda0e3d Rebase Result::map_or_else doc wording on top of #89400. 2021-10-06 09:03:18 +02:00
Jane Lusby
0866b9627c
Apply suggestions from code review 2021-10-05 15:33:33 -07:00
Jane Lusby
5e1941c058
Apply suggestions from code review 2021-10-05 15:09:11 -07:00
Manish Goregaokar
4e8c853c9e
Rollup merge of #89502 - FabianWolff:issue-89493, r=joshtriplett
Fix Lower/UpperExp formatting for integers and precision zero

Fixes the integer part of #89493 (I daren't touch the floating-point formatting code). The issue is that the "subtracted" precision essentially behaves like extra trailing zeros, but this is not currently reflected in the code properly.
2021-10-05 12:52:46 -07:00
Manish Goregaokar
e745e098c4
Rollup merge of #89351 - tspiteri:wrapping_rem, r=dtolnay
for signed wrapping remainder, do not compare lhs with MIN

Since the wrapped remainder is going to be 0 for all cases when the rhs is -1, there is no need to compare the lhs with MIN.
2021-10-05 12:52:45 -07:00
Manish Goregaokar
eb860987cf
Rollup merge of #88828 - FabianWolff:issue-88585, r=dtolnay
Use `libc::sigaction()` instead of `sys::signal()` to prevent a deadlock

Fixes #88585. POSIX [specifies](https://man7.org/linux/man-pages/man3/fork.3p.html) that after forking,
> to avoid errors, the child process may only execute async-signal-safe operations until such time as one of the exec functions is called.

Rust's standard library does not currently adhere to this, as evidenced by #88585. The child process calls [`sys::signal()`](7bf0736e13/library/std/src/sys/unix/android.rs (L76)), which on Android calls [`libc::dlsym()`](7bf0736e13/library/std/src/sys/unix/weak.rs (L101)), which is [**not**](https://man7.org/linux/man-pages/man7/signal-safety.7.html) async-signal-safe, and in fact causes a deadlock in the example in #88585.

I think the easiest solution here would be to just call `libc::sigaction()` instead, which [is](https://man7.org/linux/man-pages/man7/signal-safety.7.html) async-signal-safe, provides the functionality we need, and is apparently available on all Android versions because it is also used e.g. [here](7bf0736e13/library/std/src/sys/unix/stack_overflow.rs (L112-L114)).
2021-10-05 12:52:42 -07:00
DeveloperC
5af61cb114 refactor: VecDeques IterMut fields to private
Made the fields of VecDeque's IterMut private by creating a IterMut::new(...) function to create a new instance of IterMut and migrating usage to use IterMut::new(...).
2021-10-05 19:09:49 +01:00
DeveloperC286
b2e4e59fbe refactor: VecDeques Drain fields to private 2021-10-05 19:02:36 +01:00
Wim Looman
0031ce3a91 Suppress some cfg from being shown in the stdlib docs 2021-10-05 18:15:29 +02:00
Trevor Spiteri
4ec0377d6a for signed overflowing remainder, delay comparing lhs with MIN
Since the wrapped remainder is going to be 0 for all cases when the rhs is -1,
there is no need to divide in this case. Comparing the lhs with MIN is only done
for the overflow bool. In particular, this results in better code generation for
wrapping remainder, which discards the overflow bool completely.
2021-10-05 15:15:24 +02:00
nickkuk
a35aaa2108 Use get_unchecked in str::[r]split_once 2021-10-05 14:42:08 +05:00
Manish Goregaokar
a23d7f01d3
Rollup merge of #89462 - devnexen:haiku_thread_aff_build_fix, r=nagisa
haiku thread affinity build fix
2021-10-04 23:56:22 -07:00
Manish Goregaokar
eeadc9d63f
Rollup merge of #89244 - DeveloperC286:pair_slices_fields_to_private, r=joshtriplett
refactor: VecDeques PairSlices fields to private

Reducing VecDeque's PairSlices fields to private, a `from(...)` method is already used to create PairSlices.
2021-10-04 23:56:18 -07:00
Manish Goregaokar
dd223d5c6d
Rollup merge of #88651 - AGSaidi:monotonize-inner-64b-aarch64, r=dtolnay
Use the 64b inner:monotonize() implementation not the 128b one for aarch64

aarch64 prior to v8.4 (FEAT_LSE2) doesn't have an instruction that guarantees
untorn 128b reads except for completing a 128b load/store exclusive pair
(ldxp/stxp) or compare-and-swap (casp) successfully. The requirement to
complete a 128b read+write atomic is actually more expensive and more unfair
than the previous implementation of monotonize() which used a Mutex on aarch64,
especially at large core counts.  For aarch64 switch to the 64b atomic
implementation which is about 13x faster for a benchmark that involves many
calls to Instant::now().
2021-10-04 23:56:17 -07:00
Manish Goregaokar
0fb01224dd
Rollup merge of #87631 - :solarish_upd_fs, r=joshtriplett
os current_exe using same approach as linux to get always the full ab…

…solute path
2021-10-04 23:56:15 -07:00
David Carlier
c79447e708 library std, libc dependency update
to solve #87528 build.
2021-10-05 05:58:09 +01:00
Jubilee
05b4cd6789
Rollup merge of #89413 - matthewjasper:spec-marker-fix, r=nikomatsakis
Correctly handle supertraits for min_specialization

Supertraits of specialization markers could circumvent checks for
min_specialization. Elaborating predicates prevents this.

r? ````@nikomatsakis````
2021-10-04 21:12:35 -07:00
Jubilee
7aa9ce55b9
Rollup merge of #89270 - seanyoung:join_fold, r=m-ou-se
path.push() should work as expected on windows verbatim paths

On Windows, std::fs::canonicalize() returns an so-called UNC path.  UNC paths differ with regular paths because:

- This type of path can much longer than a non-UNC path (32k vs 260 characters).
- The prefix for a UNC path is ``Component::Prefix(Prefix::DiskVerbatim(..)))``
- No `/` is allowed
- No `.` is allowed
- No `..` is allowed

Rust has poor handling of such paths. If you join a UNC path with a path with any of the above, then this will not work.

I've implemented a new method `fn join_fold()` which joins paths and also removes any `.` and `..` from it, and replaces `/` with `\` on Windows. Using this function it is possible to use UNC paths without issue. In addition, this function is useful on Linux too; paths can be appended without having to call `canonicalize()` to remove the `.` and `..`.

This PR needs test cases, which can I add. I hope this will a start of a discussion.
2021-10-04 21:12:35 -07:00
Jubilee
234fa90878
Rollup merge of #88780 - orlp:int-abs-diff, r=m-ou-se
Added abs_diff for integer types.

Closes https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/62111.
2021-10-04 21:12:34 -07:00
Jubilee
99e6e3ff07
Rollup merge of #87993 - kornelski:try_reserve_stable, r=joshtriplett
Stabilize try_reserve

Stabilization PR for the [`try_reserve` feature](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/48043#issuecomment-898040475).
2021-10-04 21:12:33 -07:00
Jubilee
9866b090f4
Rollup merge of #89508 - jhpratt:stabilize-const_panic, r=joshtriplett
Stabilize `const_panic`

Closes #51999

FCP completed in #89006

```@rustbot``` label +A-const-eval +A-const-fn +T-lang

cc ```@oli-obk``` for review (not `r?`'ing as not on lang team)
2021-10-04 13:58:17 -07:00
Jubilee
5352e17df3
Rollup merge of #89483 - hkmatsumoto:patch-diagnostics-2, r=estebank
Practice diagnostic message convention

Detected by #89455.

r? ```@estebank```
2021-10-04 13:58:15 -07:00
Jubilee
e1478d650d
Rollup merge of #89443 - cuviper:btree-hash-len, r=dtolnay
Include the length in BTree hashes

This change makes it consistent with `Hash` for all other collections.
2021-10-04 13:58:11 -07:00
Jubilee
9e387cf27e
Rollup merge of #89400 - Nitepone:nitepone/map-or-else-docfix, r=dtolnay
Improve wording of `map_or_else` docs

Changes doc text to refer to the "default" parameter as the "default"
function.

Previously, the doc text referred to the "f" parameter as the "default" function; and the "default" parameter as the "fallback" function.
2021-10-04 13:58:09 -07:00
Jubilee
19d9a147be
Rollup merge of #88452 - xu-cheng:vecdeque-from-array, r=m-ou-se
VecDeque: improve performance for From<[T; N]>

Create `VecDeque` directly from the array instead of inserting items one-by-one.

Benchmark
```
./x.py bench library/alloc --test-args vec_deque::bench_from_array_1000
```

* Before
```
test vec_deque::bench_from_array_1000                    ... bench:       3,991 ns/iter (+/- 717)
```

* After
```
test vec_deque::bench_from_array_1000                    ... bench:         268 ns/iter (+/- 37)
```
2021-10-04 13:58:08 -07:00
Jubilee
ca8a10845f
Rollup merge of #87091 - the8472:more-advance-by-impls, r=joshtriplett
implement advance_(back_)_by on more iterators

Add more efficient, non-default implementations for `feature(iter_advance_by)` (#77404) on more iterators and adapters.

This PR only contains implementations where skipping over items doesn't elide any observable side-effects such as user-provided closures or `clone()` functions. I'll put those in a separate PR.
2021-10-04 13:58:07 -07:00
Benoît du Garreau
47edde1086 Optimize saturating_add_signed 2021-10-04 18:52:17 +02:00
bors
175b8db73b Auto merge of #88834 - the8472:char-count, r=joshtriplett
optimize str::from_utf8() validation when slice contains multibyte chars and str.chars().count() in all cases

The change shows small but consistent improvements across several x86 target feature levels. I also tried to optimize counting with `slice.as_chunks` but that yielded more inconsistent results, bigger improvements for some optimization levels, lesser ones in others.

```
old, -O2, x86-64
test str::str_char_count_emoji                                  ... bench:       1,924 ns/iter (+/- 26)
test str::str_char_count_lorem                                  ... bench:         879 ns/iter (+/- 12)
test str::str_char_count_lorem_short                            ... bench:           5 ns/iter (+/- 0)

new, -O2, x86-64
test str::str_char_count_emoji                                  ... bench:       1,878 ns/iter (+/- 21)
test str::str_char_count_lorem                                  ... bench:         851 ns/iter (+/- 11)
test str::str_char_count_lorem_short                            ... bench:           4 ns/iter (+/- 0)

old, -O2, x86-64-v2
test str::str_char_count_emoji                                  ... bench:       1,477 ns/iter (+/- 46)
test str::str_char_count_lorem                                  ... bench:         675 ns/iter (+/- 15)
test str::str_char_count_lorem_short                            ... bench:           5 ns/iter (+/- 0)

new, -O2, x86-64-v2
test str::str_char_count_emoji                                  ... bench:       1,323 ns/iter (+/- 39)
test str::str_char_count_lorem                                  ... bench:         593 ns/iter (+/- 18)
test str::str_char_count_lorem_short                            ... bench:           4 ns/iter (+/- 0)

old, -O2, x86-64-v3
test str::str_char_count_emoji                                  ... bench:         748 ns/iter (+/- 7)
test str::str_char_count_lorem                                  ... bench:         348 ns/iter (+/- 2)
test str::str_char_count_lorem_short                            ... bench:           5 ns/iter (+/- 0)

new, -O2, x86-64-v3
test str::str_char_count_emoji                                  ... bench:         650 ns/iter (+/- 4)
test str::str_char_count_lorem                                  ... bench:         301 ns/iter (+/- 1)
test str::str_char_count_lorem_short                            ... bench:           5 ns/iter (+/- 0)
```

and for the multibyte-char string validation:

```
old, -O2, x86-64
test str::str_validate_emoji                                    ... bench:       4,606 ns/iter (+/- 64)

new, -O2, x86-64
test str::str_validate_emoji                                    ... bench:       3,837 ns/iter (+/- 60)
```
2021-10-04 12:49:57 +00:00
Kornel
00152d8977 Stabilize try_reserve 2021-10-04 10:29:46 +01:00
Yoshua Wuyts
03fbc160cd Add doc aliases to std:🧵:available_parallelism 2021-10-04 11:13:39 +02:00
bors
44593aeb13 Auto merge of #89512 - Manishearth:rollup-meh9x7r, r=Manishearth
Rollup of 14 pull requests

Successful merges:

 - #86434 (Add `Ipv6Addr::is_benchmarking`)
 - #86828 (const fn for option copied, take & replace)
 - #87679 (BTree: refine some comments)
 - #87910 (Mark unsafe methods NonZero*::unchecked_(add|mul) as const.)
 - #88286 (Remove unnecessary unsafe block in `process_unix`)
 - #88305 (Manual Debug for Unix ExitCode ExitStatus ExitStatusError)
 - #88353 (Partially stabilize `array_methods`)
 - #88370 (Add missing `# Panics` section to `Vec` method)
 - #88481 (Remove some feature gates)
 - #89138 (Fix link in Ipv6Addr::to_ipv4 docs)
 - #89401 (Add truncate note to Vec::resize)
 - #89467 (Fix typos in rustdoc/lints)
 - #89472 (Only register `WSACleanup` if `WSAStartup` is actually ever called)
 - #89505 (Add regression test for spurious const error with NLL)

Failed merges:

r? `@ghost`
`@rustbot` modify labels: rollup
2021-10-04 07:25:50 +00:00
Jacob Pratt
bce8621983
Stabilize const_panic 2021-10-04 02:33:33 -04:00
Manish Goregaokar
e021a10395
Rollup merge of #89472 - nagisa:nagisa/wsa-cleanup, r=dtolnay
Only register `WSACleanup` if `WSAStartup` is actually ever called

See https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/85595

Fixes #85441
2021-10-03 23:13:24 -07:00
Manish Goregaokar
d236c04bbf
Rollup merge of #89401 - owengage:master, r=joshtriplett
Add truncate note to Vec::resize

A very minor addition to the `Vec::resize` documentation to point out the `truncate` method.
When I was searching for something matching `truncate` I managed to miss it, along with some colleagues. We later found it by chance. We did find `resize` however, so I was hoping to point it out in the documentation.
2021-10-03 23:13:22 -07:00
Manish Goregaokar
c167eeedf4
Rollup merge of #89138 - newpavlov:patch-2, r=dtolnay
Fix link in Ipv6Addr::to_ipv4 docs
2021-10-03 23:13:21 -07:00
Manish Goregaokar
5e66ba799b
Rollup merge of #88370 - Seppel3210:master, r=dtolnay
Add missing `# Panics` section to `Vec` method

namely `Vec::extend_from_within`
2021-10-03 23:13:20 -07:00
Manish Goregaokar
70d82e0a6e
Rollup merge of #88353 - jhpratt:stabilize-array-as-ref, r=joshtriplett
Partially stabilize `array_methods`

This stabilizes `<[T; N]>::as_slice` and `<[T; N]>::as_mut_slice`, which is forms part of the `array_methods` feature: #76118.

This also makes `<[T; N]>::as_slice` const due to its trivial nature.
2021-10-03 23:13:19 -07:00
Manish Goregaokar
e4d257e1d3
Rollup merge of #88305 - ijackson:exitstatus-debug, r=dtolnay
Manual Debug for Unix ExitCode ExitStatus ExitStatusError

These structs have misleading names.  An ExitStatus[Error] is actually a Unix wait status; an ExitCode is actually an exit status.  These misleading names appear in the `Debug` output.

The `Display` impls on Unix have been improved, but the `Debug` impls are still misleading, as reported in #74832.

Fix this by pretending that these internal structs are called `unix_exit_status` and `unix_wait_status` as applicable.  (We can't actually rename the structs because of the way that the cross-platform machinery works: the names are cross-platform.)

After this change, this program
```
#![feature(exit_status_error)]
fn main(){
    let x = std::process::Command::new("false").status().unwrap();
    dbg!(x.exit_ok());
    eprintln!("x={:?}",x);
}
```
produces this output
```
[src/main.rs:4] x.exit_ok() = Err(
    ExitStatusError(
        unix_wait_status(
            256,
        ),
    ),
)
x=ExitStatus(unix_wait_status(256))
```

Closes #74832
2021-10-03 23:13:18 -07:00
Manish Goregaokar
f2ec71fe74
Rollup merge of #88286 - LeSeulArtichaut:unnecessary-unsafe-block-std, r=dtolnay
Remove unnecessary unsafe block in `process_unix`

Because it's nested under this unsafe fn!

This block isn't detected as unnecessary because of a bug in the compiler: #88260.
2021-10-03 23:13:18 -07:00
Manish Goregaokar
e500f1c1e9
Rollup merge of #87910 - iago-lito:mark_unsafe_nonzero_arithmetics_as_const, r=joshtriplett
Mark unsafe methods NonZero*::unchecked_(add|mul) as const.

Now that https://github.com/rust-lang/rfcs/pull/3016 has landed, these two unstable `std` function can be marked `const`, according to this detail of #84186.
2021-10-03 23:13:17 -07:00
Manish Goregaokar
0f9e960241
Rollup merge of #87679 - ssomers:btree_comments, r=joshtriplett
BTree: refine some comments
2021-10-03 23:13:16 -07:00
Manish Goregaokar
287af0403a
Rollup merge of #86828 - lambinoo:67441-const-fn-copied-take-replace, r=joshtriplett
const fn for option copied, take & replace

Tracking issue: [#67441](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/67441)

Adding const fn for the copied, take and replace method of Option. Also adding necessary unit test.

It's my first contribution so I am pretty sure I don't know what I'm doing but there's a first for everything!
2021-10-03 23:13:16 -07:00
Manish Goregaokar
22714ed4e3
Rollup merge of #86434 - CDirkx:ipv6-benchmarking, r=joshtriplett
Add `Ipv6Addr::is_benchmarking`

This PR adds the unstable method `Ipv6Addr::is_benchmarking`. This method is added for parity with `Ipv4Addr::is_benchmarking`, and I intend to use it in a future rework of `Ipv6Addr::is_global` (edit: #86634) to more accurately follow the [IANA Special Address Registry](https://www.iana.org/assignments/iana-ipv6-special-registry/iana-ipv6-special-registry.xhtml) (like is done in `Ipv4Addr::is_global`).

With `Ipv6Addr::is_benchmarking` and `Ipv4Addr::is_benchmarking` now both existing, `IpAddr::is_benchmarking` is also added.
2021-10-03 23:13:15 -07:00
Jacob Pratt
11140ff1a0
Stabilize unreachable_unchecked as const fn 2021-10-04 01:04:17 -04:00
bors
d25de31a0e Auto merge of #89165 - jkugelman:read-to-end-overallocation, r=joshtriplett
Fix read_to_end to not grow an exact size buffer

If you know how much data to expect and use `Vec::with_capacity` to pre-allocate a buffer of that capacity, `Read::read_to_end` will still double its capacity. It needs some space to perform a read, even though that read ends up returning `0`.

It's a bummer to carefully pre-allocate 1GB to read a 1GB file into memory and end up using 2GB.

This fixes that behavior by special casing a full buffer and reading into a small "probe" buffer instead. If that read returns `0` then it's confirmed that the buffer was the perfect size. If it doesn't, the probe buffer is appended to the normal buffer and the read loop continues.

Fixing this allows several workarounds in the standard library to be removed:

- `Take` no longer needs to override `Read::read_to_end`.
- The `reservation_size` callback that allowed `Take` to inhibit the previous over-allocation behavior isn't needed.
- `fs::read` doesn't need to reserve an extra byte in `initial_buffer_size`.

Curiously, there was a unit test that specifically checked that `Read::read_to_end` *does* over-allocate. I removed that test, too.
2021-10-04 04:44:56 +00:00
Ryan Lopopolo
e41bb97c25
Add #[repr(i8)] to Ordering
Followup to #89491 to allow `Ordering` to auto-derive `AsRepr` once
the proposal to add `AsRepr` (#81642) lands.
2021-10-03 20:59:54 -07:00
Josh Triplett
199b33f0d7
Use a test value that doesn't depend on the handling of even/odd rounding 2021-10-03 20:15:12 -07:00
Fabian Wolff
e3996ffcb6 Fix Lower/UpperExp formatting for integers and precision zero 2021-10-03 23:05:03 +02:00
Benoît du Garreau
4846fd92c0 Revert suggested use of unwrap_or 2021-10-03 22:56:34 +02:00
Alphyr
70e55a8938
Apply suggestions
Co-authored-by: kennytm <kennytm@gmail.com>
2021-10-03 22:44:07 +02:00
Xinye Tao
cd773c3587
Update outdated comment 2021-10-04 00:27:32 +08:00
bors
08759c691e Auto merge of #88086 - ssomers:btree_clone_testing, r=dtolnay
BTree: toughen panicky test of clone()

Test did not cover the second half of `clone_subtree` and why this clones key & value first.
2021-10-03 16:22:37 +00:00
Orson Peters
6dd6e7c002 Added tracking issue numbers for int_abs_diff. 2021-10-03 17:44:07 +02:00
Caio
91ad91efb6 Skip platforms without unwinding support 2021-10-03 12:25:23 -03:00
bors
5051904d66 Auto merge of #87870 - WaffleLapkin:pub_split_at_unchecked, r=dtolnay
Make `<[T]>::split_at_unchecked` and `<[T]>::split_at_mut_unchecked` public

The methods were originally added in https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/75936 (30dc32b10e), but for some reason as private. Nevertheless, the methods have documentation and even a [tracking issue](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/76014).

It's very weird to have a tracking issue for private methods and these methods may be useful outside of the standard library. As such, this PR makes the methods public.
2021-10-03 13:41:52 +00:00
bors
4479cb82e5 Auto merge of #89459 - tspiteri:idiv-overflow-bitand, r=kennytm
Use bitand when checking for signed integer division overflow

For `self == Self::MIN && rhs == -1`, LLVM does not realize that this is the same check made by `self / rhs`, so the code generated may have some unnecessary duplication. For `(self == Self::MIN) & (rhs == -1)`, LLVM realizes it is the same check.
2021-10-03 10:34:57 +00:00
Hirochika Matsumoto
3818981ca1 Practice diagnostic message convention 2021-10-03 16:16:28 +09:00
bors
c24c9067ee Auto merge of #88060 - TennyZhuang:optimize-vec-retain, r=dtolnay
Optimize unnecessary check in Vec::retain

The function `vec::Vec::retain` only have two stages:

1. Nothing was deleted.
2. Some elements were deleted.

Here is an unnecessary check `if g.deleted_cnt > 0` in the loop, and it's difficult for compiler to optimize it. I split the loop into two stages manully and keep the code clean using const generics.

I write a special but common bench case for this optimization. I call retain on vec but keep all elements.

Before and after this optimization:

```
test vec::bench_retain_whole_100000                      ... bench:      84,803 ns/iter (+/- 17,314)
```

```
test vec::bench_retain_whole_100000                      ... bench:      42,638 ns/iter (+/- 16,910)
```

The result is expected, there are two `if`s before the optimization and one `if` after.
2021-10-03 06:24:06 +00:00
Cameron Steffen
eec856bfbc Make diangostic item names consistent 2021-10-02 19:38:19 -05:00
Simonas Kazlauskas
5b4873a759 Run the #85441 regression test on MSVC only
On MinGW toolchains the various features (such as function sections)
necessary to eliminate dead function references are disabled due to
various bugs. This means that the windows sockets library will most
likely remain linked to any mingw toolchain built program that also
utilizes libstd.

That said, I made an attempt to also enable `function-sections` and
`--gc-sections` during my experiments, but the symbol references
remained, sadly.
2021-10-02 22:16:23 +03:00
Christiaan Dirkx
9a6f2e655a Only register WSACleanup if WSAStartup is actually ever called 2021-10-02 22:08:35 +03:00
David Carlier
98dde56eb1 haiku thread affinity build fix 2021-10-02 13:24:30 +01:00
Trevor Spiteri
1139ee32aa Use bitand when checking for signed integer division overflow
For `self == Self::MIN && rhs == -1`, LLVM does not realize that this is the
same check made by `self / rhs`, so the code generated may have some unnecessary
duplication. For `(self == Self::MIN) & (rhs == -1)`, LLVM realizes it is the
same check.
2021-10-02 12:16:08 +02:00
bors
a8387aef8c Auto merge of #89450 - usbalbin:const_try_revert, r=oli-obk
Revert #86853

Should fix issue found in #89432
2021-10-02 07:41:25 +00:00
Albin Hedman
81bb5a54c3
Revert "Auto merge of #86853 - usbalbin:const_try, r=oli-obk"
This reverts commit c6007fdc70, reversing
changes made to 69c1c6a173.
2021-10-02 00:07:48 +02:00
Josh Stone
d6fde80cb4 Include the length in BTree hashes
This change makes it consistent with `Hash` for all other collections.
2021-10-01 12:29:09 -07:00
Fabian Wolff
65ef265c12 Call libc::sigaction() only on Android 2021-10-01 21:22:18 +02:00
Sean Young
fa4072f7d3 path.push() should work as expected on windows verbatim paths 2021-10-01 19:54:57 +01:00
pierwill
2a5dcd5890 fix: edit description of "prefix-free" 2021-10-01 13:18:06 -05:00
chrismit3s
1a796441f5 Clarify a sentence in the documentation of Vec (#84488) 2021-10-01 20:07:36 +02:00
pierwill
f531b8122e docs: std:#️⃣:Hash should ensure prefix-free data
Closes #89429
2021-10-01 12:41:22 -05:00
Benoît du Garreau
9faf621355 Add methods to add/sub uX to/from iX 2021-10-01 19:09:52 +02:00
Benoît du Garreau
b5dd5227ee Fix doc test 2021-10-01 19:08:14 +02:00
Alphyr
ab9f8a0b59 Apply suggestion for overflowing_add_signed
Co-authored-by: kennytm <kennytm@gmail.com>
2021-10-01 19:08:13 +02:00
Benoît du Garreau
fe11483afa Add functions to add unsigned and signed integers 2021-10-01 19:08:13 +02:00
Arlo Siemsen
273e522af6 Fix ctrl-c causing reads of stdin to return empty on Windows.
Fixes #89177
2021-10-01 08:53:13 -07:00
bors
ed937594d3 Auto merge of #89403 - camsteffen:fmt-unsafe-private, r=Mark-Simulacrum
Add private arg to fmt::UnsafeArg

As discussed [here](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/89139#discussion_r719467357)

r? `@Mark-Simulacrum`
2021-10-01 12:08:35 +00:00
Manish Goregaokar
fccfc981d6
Rollup merge of #89306 - devnexen:haiku_ncpus, r=nagisa
thread: implements available_concurrency on haiku
2021-09-30 18:05:24 -07:00
Manish Goregaokar
7b40d4240e
Rollup merge of #89303 - guswynn:std_suspend, r=dtolnay
Add `#[must_not_suspend]` to some types in std

I am not sure what else should have it? `Ref`?
2021-09-30 18:05:23 -07:00
Matthew Jasper
051d5b0118 Fix standard library for min_specialization changes 2021-09-30 21:42:41 +01:00
The8472
ffd7ade203 fix issues pointed out in review 2021-09-30 21:23:30 +02:00
the8472
6654a0bbdc from review: code style
Co-authored-by: Ivan Tham <pickfire@riseup.net>
2021-09-30 21:23:30 +02:00
The8472
2c6e67105e implement advance_(back_)_by on more iterators 2021-09-30 21:23:28 +02:00
Cameron Steffen
f5e4f78eb7 Add private arg to fmt::UnsafeArg 2021-09-30 12:32:05 -05:00
Samuel E. Moelius III
32b6ac5b44 Check allow_unstable before checking environment variables 2021-09-30 12:57:34 -04:00
Owen Gage
e8e7f6e05c Add truncate note to Vec::resize 2021-09-30 17:21:03 +01:00
Tyler Hart
35b0015b09
Improve wording of map_or_else docs
Changes doc text to refer to the "default" parameter as the "default"
function.
2021-09-30 11:12:09 -04:00
Frank Steffahn
355c7e9415 Remove an unnecessary use of unwrap_unchecked
also add a new SAFETY comment and simplify/remove a closure
2021-09-30 10:09:03 -03:00
Frank Steffahn
325025e74b Improve previous commit 2021-09-30 13:53:24 +02:00
Caio
fdccc7dad9 Use reference instead of raw pointer 2021-09-30 08:40:05 -03:00
Caio
4be574e6c9 Add 'core::array::from_fn' and 'core::array::try_from_fn' 2021-09-30 07:49:32 -03:00
bors
c6007fdc70 Auto merge of #86853 - usbalbin:const_try, r=oli-obk
Constify ?-operator for Result and Option

Try to make `?`-operator usable in `const fn` with `Result` and `Option`, see #74935 . Note that the try-operator itself was constified in #87237.

TODO
* [x] Add tests for const T -> T conversions
* [x] cleanup commits
* [x] Remove `#![allow(incomplete_features)]`
* [?] Await decision in #86808 - I'm not sure
* [x] Await support for parsing `~const` in bootstrapping compiler
* [x] Tracking issue(s)? - #88674
2021-09-30 10:35:24 +00:00
Eric Huss
8f9f3aa04d
Rollup merge of #89335 - mbrubeck:range-is-sorted, r=cuviper
Optimize is_sorted for Range and RangeInclusive

The [`Step`] trait guarantees that `Range<impl Step>` yields items in sorted order.  We can override `Iterator::is_sorted` based on this guarantee, as we already do for `Iterator::min` and `max`.

Thank you to ``@fiveseven-lambda`` who pointed this out [on the Rust Users Forum](https://users.rust-lang.org/t/is-sorted-method-in-impl-iterator-for-range/64717).

[`Step`]: https://doc.rust-lang.org/stable/std/iter/trait.Step.html
2021-09-29 19:33:42 -07:00
Eric Huss
e392f5d90d
Rollup merge of #89315 - et342:cstr_from_vec_unchecked_doc, r=yaahc
Clarify that `CString::from_vec_unchecked` appends 0 byte.
2021-09-29 19:33:41 -07:00
Eric Huss
e24f52294a
Rollup merge of #88412 - mdsn:slice-sort-safety, r=dtolnay
Remove ignore-tidy-undocumented-unsafe from core::slice::sort

Write down the missing safety arguments to be able to remove `ignore-tidy-undocumented-unsafe` from `core::slice::sort`.

Helps with #66219

``@rustbot`` label C-cleanup T-libs
2021-09-29 19:33:35 -07:00
Samuel E. Moelius III
a6738c7231 Add tests 2021-09-29 21:51:59 -04:00
Samuel E. Moelius III
fa23d4fe93 Implement #85440 2021-09-29 21:51:46 -04:00
bors
11491938f8 Auto merge of #89011 - bjorn3:restructure_rt, r=dtolnay
Restructure std::rt

These changes should reduce binary size slightly while at the same slightly improving performance of startup, thread spawning and `std:🧵:current()`. I haven't verified if the compiler is able to optimize some of these cases already, but at least for some others the compiler is unable to do these optimizations as they slightly change behavior in cases where program startup would crash anyway by omitting a backtrace and panic location.

I can remove 6f6bb16 if preferred.
2021-09-29 17:58:08 +00:00
David Tolnay
e3e5ae91d0
Clean up unneeded explicit pointer cast
The reference automatically coerces to a pointer. Writing an explicit
cast here is slightly misleading because that's most commonly used when
a pointer needs to be converted from one pointer type to another, e.g.
`*const c_void` to `*const sigaction` or vice versa.
2021-09-28 21:22:37 -07:00
Gus Wynn
cb8e83caeb ref/refmut 2021-09-28 17:57:08 -07:00
Matt Brubeck
1fca2ce901 Additional docs about Vec::leak behavior 2021-09-28 16:27:47 -07:00
Matt Brubeck
58b1a127d6 Avoid allocations and copying in Vec::leak
Don't shrink the Vec (by calling into_boxed_slice) before leaking it.
2021-09-28 13:23:54 -07:00
Matt Brubeck
830ecbd96c Optimize is_sorted for Range and RangeInclusive
The `Step` trait guarantees that `Range<impl Step>` yields items in
sorted order.  We can override the `Iterator::is_sorted` method based on
this guarantee, as we already do for `Iterator::min` and `max`.
2021-09-28 12:50:38 -07:00
Guillaume Gomez
e601554dc0
Rollup merge of #89235 - yaahc:junit-formatting, r=kennytm
make junit output more consistent with default format

The default format of libtest includes new-lines between each section to ensure the label output from cargo is on it's own line

<pre><font color="#A1B56C"><b>❯</b></font> <font color="#A1B56C">cargo</font><font color="#D8D8D8"> </font><font color="#A1B56C">test</font>
<font color="#A1B56C"><b>   Compiling</b></font> test-test v0.1.0 (/home/jlusby/tmp/test-test)
<font color="#A1B56C"><b>    Finished</b></font> test [unoptimized + debuginfo] target(s) in 0.59s
<font color="#A1B56C"><b>     Running</b></font> unittests (target/debug/deps/test_test-639f369234319c09)

running 1 test
test tests::it_works ... <font color="#A1B56C">ok</font>

test result: <font color="#A1B56C">ok</font>. 1 passed; 0 failed; 0 ignored; 0 measured; 0 filtered out; finished in 0.00s

<font color="#A1B56C"><b>   Doc-tests</b></font> test-test

running 0 tests

test result: <font color="#A1B56C">ok</font>. 0 passed; 0 failed; 0 ignored; 0 measured; 0 filtered out; finished in 0.00s

</pre>

But when the junit outputter was added to libtest these newlines were omitted, resulting in some "fun" output when run via cargo.

Note the `Doc-tests` text at the end of the first line of xml.

<pre><font color="#A1B56C"><b>❯</b></font> <font color="#A1B56C">cargo</font><font color="#D8D8D8"> </font><font color="#A1B56C">test</font><font color="#D8D8D8"> </font><font color="#A1B56C">--</font><font color="#D8D8D8"> </font><font color="#A1B56C">-Zunstable-options</font><font color="#D8D8D8"> </font><font color="#A1B56C">--format</font><font color="#D8D8D8"> </font><font color="#A1B56C">junit</font>
<font color="#A1B56C"><b>    Finished</b></font> test [unoptimized + debuginfo] target(s) in 0.00s
<font color="#A1B56C"><b>     Running</b></font> unittests (target/debug/deps/test_test-639f369234319c09)
&lt;?xml version=&quot;1.0&quot; encoding=&quot;UTF-8&quot;?&gt;&lt;testsuites&gt;&lt;testsuite name=&quot;test&quot; package=&quot;test&quot; id=&quot;0&quot; errors=&quot;0&quot; failures=&quot;0&quot; tests=&quot;1&quot; skipped=&quot;0&quot; &gt;&lt;testcase classname=&quot;tests&quot; name=&quot;it_works&quot; time=&quot;0&quot;/&gt;&lt;system-out/&gt;&lt;system-err/&gt;&lt;/testsuite&gt;&lt;/testsuites&gt;<font color="#A1B56C"><b>   Doc-tests</b></font> test-test
&lt;?xml version=&quot;1.0&quot; encoding=&quot;UTF-8&quot;?&gt;&lt;testsuites&gt;&lt;testsuite name=&quot;test&quot; package=&quot;test&quot; id=&quot;0&quot; errors=&quot;0&quot; failures=&quot;0&quot; tests=&quot;0&quot; skipped=&quot;0&quot; &gt;&lt;system-out/&gt;&lt;system-err/&gt;&lt;/testsuite&gt;&lt;/testsuites&gt;

</pre>

After this PR the junit output includes the same style of newlines as the pretty format

<pre><font color="#A1B56C"><b>❯</b></font> <font color="#A1B56C">cargo</font><font color="#D8D8D8"> </font><font color="#A1B56C">test</font><font color="#D8D8D8"> </font><font color="#A1B56C">--</font><font color="#D8D8D8"> </font><font color="#A1B56C">-Zunstable-options</font><font color="#D8D8D8"> </font><font color="#A1B56C">--format</font><font color="#D8D8D8"> </font><font color="#A1B56C">junit</font>
<font color="#A1B56C"><b>   Compiling</b></font> test-test v0.1.0 (/home/jlusby/tmp/test-test)
<font color="#A1B56C"><b>    Finished</b></font> test [unoptimized + debuginfo] target(s) in 0.39s
<font color="#A1B56C"><b>     Running</b></font> unittests (target/debug/deps/test_test-42c2320bb9450c69)

&lt;?xml version=&quot;1.0&quot; encoding=&quot;UTF-8&quot;?&gt;&lt;testsuites&gt;&lt;testsuite name=&quot;test&quot; package=&quot;test&quot; id=&quot;0&quot; errors=&quot;0&quot; failures=&quot;0&quot; tests=&quot;1&quot; skipped=&quot;0&quot; &gt;&lt;testcase classname=&quot;tests&quot; name=&quot;it_works&quot; time=&quot;0&quot;/&gt;&lt;system-out/&gt;&lt;system-err/&gt;&lt;/testsuite&gt;&lt;/testsuites&gt;

<font color="#A1B56C"><b>   Doc-tests</b></font> test-test

&lt;?xml version=&quot;1.0&quot; encoding=&quot;UTF-8&quot;?&gt;&lt;testsuites&gt;&lt;testsuite name=&quot;test&quot; package=&quot;test&quot; id=&quot;0&quot; errors=&quot;0&quot; failures=&quot;0&quot; tests=&quot;0&quot; skipped=&quot;0&quot; &gt;&lt;system-out/&gt;&lt;system-err/&gt;&lt;/testsuite&gt;&lt;/testsuites&gt;

</pre>
2021-09-28 20:00:15 +02:00
Yoshua Wuyts
6cc91cb3d8 Rename std:🧵:available_onccurrency to std:🧵:available_parallelism 2021-09-28 14:59:33 +02:00
bors
1d71ba8623 Auto merge of #86191 - kawadakk:release-add-solid-support, r=nagisa,estebank,m-ou-se,
Add SOLID targets

This PR introduces new tier 3 targets for [SOLID](https://www.kmckk.co.jp/eng/SOLID/) embedded development platform by Kyoto Microcomputer Co., Ltd.

|          Target name           | `target_arch` | `target_vendor` | `target_os`  |
|--------------------------------|---------------|-----------------|--------------|
| `aarch64-kmc-solid_asp3`       | `aarch64`     | `kmc`           | `solid_asp3` |
| `armv7a-kmc-solid_asp3-eabi`   | `arm`         | `kmc`           | `solid_asp3` |
| `armv7a-kmc-solid_asp3-eabihf` | `arm`         | `kmc`           | `solid_asp3` |

## Related PRs

- [ ] `libc`: https://github.com/rust-lang/libc/pull/2227
- [ ] `cc`: https://github.com/alexcrichton/cc-rs/pull/609

## Non-blocking Issues

- [ ] The target kernel can support `Thread::unpark` directly, but this property is not utilized because the underlying kernel feature is used to implement `Condvar` and it's unclear whether `std` should guarantee that parking tokens are not clobbered by other synchronization primitives.
- [ ] The rustc book: The page title "\*-kmc-solid-\*" shows up as "-kmc-solid-" in TOC

## Tier 3 Target Policy

As tier 3 targets, the new targets are required to adhere to [the tier 3 target policy](https://doc.rust-lang.org/nightly/rustc/target-tier-policy.html#tier-3-target-policy) requirements. This section quotes each requirement in entirety and describes how they are met.

> - A tier 3 target must have a designated developer or developers (the "target maintainers") on record to be CCed when issues arise regarding the target. (The mechanism to track and CC such developers may evolve over time.)

See [`src/doc/rustc/src/platform-support/kmc-solid.md`](https://github.com/kawadakk/rust/blob/release-add-solid-support/src/doc/rustc/src/platform-support/kmc-solid.md).

> - Targets must use naming consistent with any existing targets; for instance, a target for the same CPU or OS as an existing Rust target should use the same name for that CPU or OS. Targets should normally use the same names and naming conventions as used elsewhere in the broader ecosystem beyond Rust (such as in other toolchains), unless they have a very good reason to diverge. Changing the name of a target can be highly disruptive, especially once the target reaches a higher tier, so getting the name right is important even for a tier 3 target.
>     - Target names should not introduce undue confusion or ambiguity unless absolutely necessary to maintain ecosystem compatibility. For example, if the name of the target makes people extremely likely to form incorrect beliefs about what it targets, the name should be changed or augmented to disambiguate it.

The new target names follow this format: `$ARCH-$VENDOR-$OS-$ABI`, which is already adopted by most existing targets. `$ARCH` and `$ABI` follow the convention: `aarch64-*` for AArch64, `armv7a-*-eabi` for Armv7-A with EABI. `$OS` is used to distinguish multiple variations of the platform in a somewhat similar way to the Apple targets, though we are only adding one variation in this PR. `$VENDOR` denotes the platform vendor name similarly to the Apple, Solaris, SGX, and VxWorks targets.

`$OS` corresponds to the value of `target_os` and takes the format `solid-$KERNEL`. The inclusion of a hyphen prevents unique decomposition of target names, though the mapping between target names and target attributes isn't trivial in the first place, e.g., because of the Android targets.

More targets may be added later, as we support other base kernels (there are at least three at the point of writing) and are interested in supporting other processor architectures in the future.

> - Tier 3 targets may have unusual requirements to build or use, but must not create legal issues or impose onerous legal terms for the Rust project or for Rust developers or users.
>     - The target must not introduce license incompatibilities.
>     - Anything added to the Rust repository must be under the standard Rust license (`MIT OR Apache-2.0`).
>     - The target must not cause the Rust tools or libraries built for any other host (even when supporting cross-compilation to the target) to depend on any new dependency less permissive than the Rust licensing policy. This applies whether the dependency is a Rust crate that would require adding new license exceptions (as specified by the `tidy` tool in the rust-lang/rust repository), or whether the dependency is a native library or binary. In other words, the introduction of the target must not cause a user installing or running a version of Rust or the Rust tools to be subject to any new license requirements.
>     - If the target supports building host tools (such as `rustc` or `cargo`), those host tools must not depend on proprietary (non-FOSS) libraries, other than ordinary runtime libraries supplied by the platform and commonly used by other binaries built for the target. For instance, `rustc` built for the target may depend on a common proprietary C runtime library or console output library, but must not depend on a proprietary code generation library or code optimization library. Rust's license permits such combinations, but the Rust project has no interest in maintaining such combinations within the scope of Rust itself, even at tier 3.
>     - Targets should not require proprietary (non-FOSS) components to link a functional binary or library.
>     - "onerous" here is an intentionally subjective term. At a minimum, "onerous" legal/licensing terms include but are *not* limited to: non-disclosure requirements, non-compete requirements, contributor license agreements (CLAs) or equivalent, "non-commercial"/"research-only"/etc terms, requirements conditional on the employer or employment of any particular Rust developers, revocable terms, any requirements that create liability for the Rust project or its developers or users, or any requirements that adversely affect the livelihood or prospects of the Rust project or its developers or users.

We intend to make the contribution fully available under the standard Rust license with no additional legal restrictions whatsoever. This PR does not introduce any new dependency less permissive than the Rust license policy, and we are willing to ensure this doesn't happen for future contributions regarding the new targets.

The new targets don't support building host tools.

Although the new targets use a platform-provided C compiler toolchain, it can be substituted by [GNU Arm Embedded Toolchain](https://developer.arm.com/tools-and-software/open-source-software/developer-tools/gnu-toolchain/gnu-rm) for testing purposes.

> - Tier 3 targets should attempt to implement as much of the standard libraries as possible and appropriate (`core` for most targets, `alloc` for targets that can support dynamic memory allocation, `std` for targets with an operating system or equivalent layer of system-provided functionality), but may leave some code unimplemented (either unavailable or stubbed out as appropriate), whether because the target makes it impossible to implement or challenging to implement. The authors of pull requests are not obligated to avoid calling any portions of the standard library on the basis of a tier 3 target not implementing those portions.

Most features are implemented. The following features are not implemented due to the lack of native support:

- `fs::File::{file_attr, truncate, duplicate, set_permissions}`
- `fs::{symlink, link, canonicalize}`
- Process creation
- Command-line arguments

~~Networking is not implemented yet, and we intend to add it as soon as it's ready.~~
Edit (2021-07-07): Networking is now implemented.

Backtrace generation is not really a good fit for embedded targets, so it's intentionally left unimplemented. Unwinding is functional, however.

> - The target must provide documentation for the Rust community explaining how to build for the target, using cross-compilation if possible. If the target supports running tests (even if they do not pass), the documentation must explain how to run tests for the target, using emulation if possible or dedicated hardware if necessary.

See [`src/doc/rustc/src/platform-support/kmc-solid.md`](https://github.com/kawadakk/rust/blob/release-add-solid-support/src/doc/rustc/src/platform-support/kmc-solid.md). Running tests is not supported.

> - Neither this policy nor any decisions made regarding targets shall create any binding agreement or estoppel by any party. If any member of an approving Rust team serves as one of the maintainers of a target, or has any legal or employment requirement (explicit or implicit) that might affect their decisions regarding a target, they must recuse themselves from any approval decisions regarding the target's tier status, though they may otherwise participate in discussions.
>     - This requirement does not prevent part or all of this policy from being cited in an explicit contract or work agreement (e.g. to implement or maintain support for a target). This requirement exists to ensure that a developer or team responsible for reviewing and approving a target does not face any legal threats or obligations that would prevent them from freely exercising their judgment in such approval, even if such judgment involves subjective matters or goes beyond the letter of these requirements.
> - Tier 3 targets must not impose burden on the authors of pull requests, or other developers in the community, to maintain the target. In particular, do not post comments (automated or manual) on a PR that derail or suggest a block on the PR based on a tier 3 target. Do not send automated messages or notifications (via any medium, including via ``@`)` to a PR author or others involved with a PR regarding a tier 3 target, unless they have opted into such messages.
>     - Backlinks such as those generated by the issue/PR tracker when linking to an issue or PR are not considered a violation of this policy, within reason. However, such messages (even on a separate repository) must not generate notifications to anyone involved with a PR who has not requested such notifications.
> - Patches adding or updating tier 3 targets must not break any existing tier 2 or tier 1 target, and must not knowingly break another tier 3 target without approval of either the compiler team or the maintainers of the other tier 3 target.
>     - In particular, this may come up when working on closely related targets, such as variations of the same architecture with different features. Avoid introducing unconditional uses of features that another variation of the target may not have; use conditional compilation or runtime detection, as appropriate, to let each target run code supported by that target.

We acknowledge these requirements and intend to ensure they are met.

There are no closely related targets at the moment.
2021-09-28 11:50:33 +00:00
Tomoaki Kawada
da9ca41c31 Add SOLID targets
SOLID[1] is an embedded development platform provided by Kyoto
Microcomputer Co., Ltd. This commit introduces a basic Tier 3 support
for SOLID.

# New Targets

The following targets are added:

 - `aarch64-kmc-solid_asp3`
 - `armv7a-kmc-solid_asp3-eabi`
 - `armv7a-kmc-solid_asp3-eabihf`

SOLID's target software system can be divided into two parts: an
RTOS kernel, which is responsible for threading and synchronization,
and Core Services, which provides filesystems, networking, and other
things. The RTOS kernel is a μITRON4.0[2][3]-derived kernel based on
the open-source TOPPERS RTOS kernels[4]. For uniprocessor systems
(more precisely, systems where only one processor core is allocated for
SOLID), this will be the TOPPERS/ASP3 kernel. As μITRON is
traditionally only specified at the source-code level, the ABI is
unique to each implementation, which is why `asp3` is included in the
target names.

More targets could be added later, as we support other base kernels
(there are at least three at the point of writing) and are interested
in supporting other processor architectures in the future.

# C Compiler

Although SOLID provides its own supported C/C++ build toolchain, GNU Arm
Embedded Toolchain seems to work for the purpose of building Rust.

# Unresolved Questions

A μITRON4 kernel can support `Thread::unpark` natively, but it's not
used by this commit's implementation because the underlying kernel
feature is also used to implement `Condvar`, and it's unclear whether
`std` should guarantee that parking tokens are not clobbered by other
synchronization primitives.

# Unsupported or Unimplemented Features

Most features are implemented. The following features are not
implemented due to the lack of native support:

- `fs::File::{file_attr, truncate, duplicate, set_permissions}`
- `fs::{symlink, link, canonicalize}`
- Process creation
- Command-line arguments

Backtrace generation is not really a good fit for embedded targets, so
it's intentionally left unimplemented. Unwinding is functional, however.

## Dynamic Linking

Dynamic linking is not supported. The target platform supports dynamic
linking, but enabling this in Rust causes several problems.

 - The linker invocation used to build the shared object of `std` is
   too long for the platform-provided linker to handle.

 - A linker script with specific requirements is required for the
   compiled shared object to be actually loadable.

As such, we decided to disable dynamic linking for now. Regardless, the
users can try to create shared objects by manually invoking the linker.

## Executable

Building an executable is not supported as the notion of "executable
files" isn't well-defined for these targets.

[1] https://solid.kmckk.com/SOLID/
[2] http://ertl.jp/ITRON/SPEC/mitron4-e.html
[3] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ITRON_project
[4] https://toppers.jp/
2021-09-28 11:31:47 +09:00
et342
dd0b5f4815
Clarify that CString::from_vec_unchecked appends 0 byte. 2021-09-28 05:51:52 +05:00
Jane Lusby
0911069feb
Apply suggestions from code review
Co-authored-by: kennytm <kennytm@gmail.com>
2021-09-27 14:50:35 -07:00
David Carlier
5d4048b66f thread: implements available_concurrency on haiku 2021-09-27 18:51:52 +01:00
Gus Wynn
0f9c349834 lock types 2021-09-27 08:43:30 -07:00
bors
c81c3ea321 Auto merge of #89145 - rusticstuff:bump_stdarch, r=kennytm
Update stdarch submodule

This is mainly to fix the critical issue of aarch64 store intrinsics overwriting additional memory, see https://github.com/rust-lang/stdarch/issues/1220

Changes:
* aarch64/armv7: additional vld1/vst1 intrinsics + perf fixes for existing ones
  * https://github.com/rust-lang/stdarch/pull/1205
  * https://github.com/rust-lang/stdarch/pull/1207
  * https://github.com/rust-lang/stdarch/pull/1216
* armv7: Make FMA work with vfpv4 and optimize
  * https://github.com/rust-lang/stdarch/pull/1219
* Non-visible changes to the testing framework
  * https://github.com/rust-lang/stdarch/pull/1208
  * https://github.com/rust-lang/stdarch/pull/1211
  * https://github.com/rust-lang/stdarch/pull/1213
  * https://github.com/rust-lang/stdarch/pull/1215
  * https://github.com/rust-lang/stdarch/pull/1218
2021-09-27 02:11:52 +00:00
bors
05044c2e6c Auto merge of #89144 - sexxi-goose:insig_stdlib, r=nikomatsakis
2229: Mark insignificant dtor in stdlib

I looked at all public [stdlib Drop implementations](https://doc.rust-lang.org/stable/std/ops/trait.Drop.html#implementors) and categorized them into Insigificant/Maybe/Significant Drop.

Reasons are noted here: https://docs.google.com/spreadsheets/d/19edb9r5lo2UqMrCOVjV0fwcSdS-R7qvKNL76q7tO8VA/edit#gid=1838773501

One thing missing from this PR is tagging HashMap as insigificant destructor as that needs some discussion.

r? `@Mark-Simulacrum`

cc `@nikomatsakis`
2021-09-26 19:36:00 +00:00
Manish Goregaokar
653dcaac2b
Rollup merge of #89216 - r00ster91:bigo, r=dtolnay
Consistent big O notation

This makes the big O time complexity notation in places with markdown support more consistent.
Inspired by #89210
2021-09-25 18:22:20 -07:00
Manish Goregaokar
b8c3a6cfb9
Rollup merge of #89010 - est31:intra_doc_links, r=m-ou-se
Add some intra doc links
2021-09-25 18:22:19 -07:00
Manish Goregaokar
f9d4eb0ae3
Rollup merge of #88973 - lu-zero:std_detect-env_override, r=Amanieu
Expose the std_detect env_override feature
2021-09-25 18:22:18 -07:00
bors
addb4da686 Auto merge of #88343 - steffahn:fix_code_spacing, r=jyn514
Fix spacing of links in inline code.

Similar to #80733, but the focus is different. This PR eliminates all occurrences of pieced-together inline code blocks like [`Box`]`<`[`Option`]`<T>>` and replaces them with good-looking ones (using HTML-syntax), like <code>[Box]<[Option]\<T>></code>. As far as I can tell, I should’ve found all of these in the standard library (regex search with `` r"`\]`|`\[`" ``) \[except for in `core::convert` where I’ve noticed other things in the docs that I want to fix in a separate PR]. In particular, unlike #80733, I’ve added almost no new instance of inline code that’s broken up into multiple links (or some link and some link-free part). I also added tooltips (the stuff in quotes for the markdown link listings) in places that caught my eye, but that’s by no means systematic, just opportunistic.

[Box]: https://doc.rust-lang.org/std/boxed/struct.Box.html "Box"
[`Box`]: https://doc.rust-lang.org/std/boxed/struct.Box.html "Box"
[Option]: https://doc.rust-lang.org/std/option/enum.Option.html "Option"
[`Option`]: https://doc.rust-lang.org/std/option/enum.Option.html "Option"

Context: I got annoyed by repeatedly running into new misformatted inline code while reading the standard library docs. I know that once issue #83997 (and/or related ones) are resolved, these changes become somewhat obsolete, but I fail to notice much progress on that end right now.

r? `@jyn514`
2021-09-25 20:08:11 +00:00
Luca Barbato
160b93903c Expose the std_detect env_override feature 2021-09-25 20:30:25 +02:00
Frank Steffahn
67065fe933 Apply 16 commits (squashed)
----------

Fix spacing for links inside code blocks, and improve link tooltips in alloc::fmt

----------

Fix spacing for links inside code blocks, and improve link tooltips in alloc::{rc, sync}

----------

Fix spacing for links inside code blocks, and improve link tooltips in alloc::string

----------

Fix spacing for links inside code blocks in alloc::vec

----------

Fix spacing for links inside code blocks in core::option

----------

Fix spacing for links inside code blocks, and improve a few link tooltips in core::result

----------

Fix spacing for links inside code blocks in core::{iter::{self, iterator}, stream::stream, poll}

----------

Fix spacing for links inside code blocks, and improve a few link tooltips in std::{fs, path}

----------

Fix spacing for links inside code blocks in std::{collections, time}

----------

Fix spacing for links inside code blocks in and make formatting of `&str`-like types consistent in std::ffi::{c_str, os_str}

----------

Fix spacing for links inside code blocks, and improve link tooltips in std::ffi

----------

Fix spacing for links inside code blocks, and improve a few link tooltips
in std::{io::{self, buffered::{bufreader, bufwriter}, cursor, util}, net::{self, addr}}

----------

Fix typo in link to `into` for `OsString` docs

----------

Remove tooltips that will probably become redundant in the future

----------

Apply suggestions from code review

Replacing `…std/primitive.reference.html` paths with just `reference`

Co-authored-by: Joshua Nelson <github@jyn.dev>

----------

Also replace `…std/primitive.reference.html` paths with just `reference` in `core::pin`
2021-09-25 20:04:35 +02:00
DeveloperC
f83853e342 refactor: VecDeques PairSlices fields to private 2021-09-25 13:09:17 +01:00
bors
e9f29a8519 Auto merge of #89030 - nbdd0121:box2, r=jonas-schievink
Introduce `Rvalue::ShallowInitBox`

Polished version of #88700.

Implements MCP rust-lang/compiler-team#460, and should allow #43596 to go forward.

In short, creating an empty box is split from a nullary-op `NullOp::Box` into two steps, first a call to `exchange_malloc`, then a `Rvalue::ShallowInitBox` which transmutes `*mut u8` to a shallow-initialized `Box<T>`. This allows the `exchange_malloc` call to unwind. Details can be found in the MCP.

`NullOp::Box` is not yet removed, purely to make reverting easier in case anything goes wrong as the result of this PR. If revert is needed a reversion of "Use Rvalue::ShallowInitBox for box expression" commit followed by a test bless should be sufficient.

Experiments in #88700 showed a very slight compile-time perf regression due to (supposedly) slightly more time spent in LLVM. We could omit unwind edge generation (in non-`oom=panic` case) in box expression MIR construction to restore perf; but I don't think it's necessary since runtime perf isn't affected and perf difference is rather small.
2021-09-25 11:01:13 +00:00
Gary Guo
511333fcc4 Use Rvalue::ShallowInitBox for box expression 2021-09-25 01:08:41 +01:00
Jane Lusby
7779eb74c8 make junit output more consistent with default format 2021-09-24 14:45:09 -07:00
Jubilee
0fa43494bd
Rollup merge of #89210 - Takashiidobe:master, r=kennytm
Add missing time complexities to linked_list.rs

Most functions in LinkedList have time complexities in their description:
Like push front:

```
Adds an element first in the list.

This operation should compute in O(1) time.
```

Time complexities were missing for the following, so I've added them in this PR:

contains: O(n)
front: O(1)
front_mut: O(1)
back: O(1)
back_mut: O(1)
2021-09-24 11:40:15 -07:00
bors
f06f9bbd3a Auto merge of #88999 - Migi:master, r=oli-obk
Make `Duration` respect `width` when formatting using `Debug`

When printing or writing a `std::time::Duration` using `Debug` formatting, it previously completely ignored any specified `width`. This is unlike types like integers and floats, which do pad to `width`, for both `Display` and `Debug`, though not all types consider `width` in their `Debug` output (see e.g. #30164). Curiously, `Duration`'s `Debug` formatting *did* consider `precision`.

This PR makes `Duration` pad to `width` just like integers and floats, so that
```rust
format!("|{:8?}|", Duration::from_millis(1234))
```
returns
```
|1.234s  |
```

Before you ask "who formats `Debug` output?", note that `Duration` doesn't actually implement `Display`, so `Debug` is currently the only way to format `Duration`s. I think that's wrong, and `Duration` should get a `Display` implementation, but in the meantime there's no harm in making the `Debug` formatting respect `width` rather than ignore it.

I chose the default alignment to be left-aligned. The general rule Rust uses is: numeric types are right-aligned by default, non-numeric types left-aligned. It wasn't clear to me whether `Duration` is a numeric type or not. The fact that a formatted `Duration` can end with suffixes of variable length (`"s"`, `"ms"`, `"µs"`, etc.) made me lean towards left-alignment, but it would be trivial to change it.

Fixes issue #88059.
2021-09-24 15:22:26 +00:00
Takashi Idobe
cebba31d4a
unitalicize O(1) complexities 2021-09-24 08:33:49 -05:00
Takashi Idobe
cb1c06fdd8
Merge branch 'rust-lang:master' into master 2021-09-24 08:31:03 -05:00
r00ster91
956f87fb04 consistent big O notation 2021-09-24 12:44:28 +02:00
Jubilee
384dd53641
Rollup merge of #89184 - joshtriplett:master, r=estebank
Temporarily rename int_roundings functions to avoid conflicts

These functions are unstable, but because they're inherent they still
introduce conflicts with stable trait functions in crates. Temporarily
rename them to fix these conflicts, until we can resolve those conflicts
in a better way.
2021-09-23 17:31:46 -07:00
Jubilee
586d028d0e
Rollup merge of #88612 - lovasoa:patch-1, r=m-ou-se
Add a better error message for #39364

There is a known bug in the implementation of mpsc channels in rust.
This adds a clearer error message when the bug occurs, so that developers don't lose too much time looking for the origin of the bug.
See https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/39364
2021-09-23 17:31:41 -07:00
Takashi Idobe
b146525140
remove trailing whitespace 2021-09-23 18:20:46 -05:00
Takashi Idobe
d63e0f0e47
Add time complexities to linked_list.rs 2021-09-23 17:58:02 -05:00
bors
15d9ba0133 Auto merge of #88587 - bdbai:fix/uwpio, r=joshtriplett
Fix WinUWP std compilation errors due to I/O safety

I/O safety for Windows has landed in #87329. However, it does not cover UWP specific parts and prevents all UWP targets from building. See https://github.com/YtFlow/Maple/issues/18. This PR fixes these compile errors when building std for UWP targets.
2021-09-23 06:18:07 +00:00
bors
67365d64bc Auto merge of #89139 - camsteffen:write-perf, r=Mark-Simulacrum
Use ZST for fmt unsafety

as suggested here - https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/83302#issuecomment-923529151.
2021-09-23 02:10:26 +00:00
bdbai
4e01157969 Reason safety for unsafe blocks for uwp stdin 2021-09-23 07:29:52 +08:00
Josh Triplett
3ece63b64e Temporarily rename int_roundings functions to avoid conflicts
These functions are unstable, but because they're inherent they still
introduce conflicts with stable trait functions in crates. Temporarily
rename them to fix these conflicts, until we can resolve those conflicts
in a better way.
2021-09-22 13:56:01 -07:00
Mara Bos
598e5b27be
Update library/std/src/sync/mpsc/shared.rs 2021-09-22 20:20:33 +02:00