Commit Graph

13213 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
r0cky
75eeb5e7b2 Remove unused struct 2024-01-21 21:58:16 +08:00
bors
4cb17b4e78 Auto merge of #111803 - scottmcm:simple-swap-alternative, r=Mark-Simulacrum
Tweak the threshold for chunked swapping

Thanks to `@AngelicosPhosphoros` for the tests here, which I copied from #98892.

This is an experiment as a simple alternative to that PR that just tweaks the existing threshold, since that PR showed that 3×Align (like `String`) currently doesn't work as well as it could.
2024-01-20 21:54:44 +00:00
bors
038d115cd8 Auto merge of #120170 - GuillaumeGomez:rollup-edqdf30, r=GuillaumeGomez
Rollup of 6 pull requests

Successful merges:

 - #119997 (Fix impl stripped in rustdoc HTML whereas it should not be in case the impl is implemented on a type alias)
 - #120000 (Ensure `callee_id`s are body owners)
 - #120063 (Remove special handling of `box` expressions from parser)
 - #120116 (Remove alignment-changing in-place collect)
 - #120138 (Increase vscode settings.json `git.detectSubmodulesLimit`)
 - #120169 (Spelling fix)

r? `@ghost`
`@rustbot` modify labels: rollup
2024-01-20 19:55:26 +00:00
Guillaume Gomez
774cd3afd5
Rollup merge of #120169 - sunrosa:patch-1, r=ChrisDenton
Spelling fix

"It's" expands to "it is". "It is use..." doesn't make sense.

"Its" is the possessive form, and the intended form here.
2024-01-20 20:06:36 +01:00
Guillaume Gomez
b917753d79
Rollup merge of #120116 - the8472:only-same-alignments, r=cuviper
Remove alignment-changing in-place collect

This removes the alignment-changing in-place collect optimization introduced in #110353
Currently stable users can't benefit from the optimization because GlobaAlloc doesn't support alignment-changing realloc and neither do most posix allocators. So in practice it has a negative impact on performance.

Explanation from https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/120091#issuecomment-1899071681:

> > You mention that in case of alignment mismatch -- when the new alignment is less than the old -- the implementation calls `mremap`.
>
> I was trying to note that this isn't really the case in practice, due to the semantics of Rust's allocator APIs. The only use of the allocator within the `in_place_collect` implementation itself is [a call to `Allocator::shrink()`](db7125f008/library/alloc/src/vec/in_place_collect.rs (L299-L303)), which per its documentation [allows decreasing the required alignment](https://doc.rust-lang.org/1.75.0/core/alloc/trait.Allocator.html). However, in stable Rust, the only available `Allocator` is [`Global`](https://doc.rust-lang.org/1.75.0/alloc/alloc/struct.Global.html), which delegates to the registered `GlobalAlloc`. Since `GlobalAlloc::realloc()` [cannot change the required alignment](https://doc.rust-lang.org/1.75.0/core/alloc/trait.GlobalAlloc.html#method.realloc), the implementation of [`<Global as Allocator>::shrink()`](db7125f008/library/alloc/src/alloc.rs (L280-L321)) must fall back to creating a brand-new allocation, `memcpy`ing the data into it, and freeing the old allocation, whenever the alignment doesn't remain exactly the same.
>
> Therefore, the underlying allocator, provided by libc or some other source, has no opportunity to internally `mremap()` the data when the alignment is changed, since it has no way of knowing that the allocation is the same.
2024-01-20 20:06:35 +01:00
sunrosa
0e96840e7e
Spelling fix
"It's" expands to "it is". "Its" is the possessive form.
2024-01-20 18:27:55 +00:00
bors
1828461982 Auto merge of #117756 - a1phyr:hashmap_fold, r=the8472
`HashMap`/`HashSet`: forward `fold` implementations of iterators

Use [rust-lang/hasbrown#480](https://github.com/rust-lang/hashbrown/pull/480) in `std`

Note: this needs a version bump of hashbrown before merging
2024-01-20 17:53:26 +00:00
Matthias Krüger
862d3fe769
Rollup merge of #120150 - Jules-Bertholet:stabilize-round-ties-even, r=cuviper
Stabilize `round_ties_even`

Closes  #96710

`@rustbot` label -T-libs T-libs-api
2024-01-20 09:37:29 +01:00
Matthias Krüger
6f67208d72
Rollup merge of #118799 - GKFX:stabilize-simple-offsetof, r=wesleywiser
Stabilize single-field offset_of

This PR stabilizes offset_of for a single field. There has been some further discussion at https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/106655 about whether this is advisable; I'm opening the PR anyway so that the code is available.
2024-01-20 09:37:26 +01:00
Matthias Krüger
17c95b6330
Rollup merge of #113142 - the8472:opt-cstr-display, r=Mark-Simulacrum
optimize EscapeAscii's Display  and CStr's Debug

```
old:
    ascii::bench_ascii_escape_display_mixed      17.97µs/iter +/- 204.00ns
    ascii::bench_ascii_escape_display_no_escape 545.00ns/iter   +/- 6.00ns
new:
    ascii::bench_ascii_escape_display_mixed      4.99µs/iter +/- 56.00ns
    ascii::bench_ascii_escape_display_no_escape 91.00ns/iter  +/- 1.00ns
```
2024-01-20 09:37:25 +01:00
Matthias Krüger
f1713b0447
Rollup merge of #103730 - SOF3:nonzero-from-mut, r=Mark-Simulacrum,dtolnay
Added NonZeroXxx::from_mut(_unchecked)?

ACP: rust-lang/libs-team#129
Tracking issue: #106290
2024-01-20 09:37:24 +01:00
AngelicosPhosphoros
60208a0517 Tweak the threshold for chunked swapping
Thanks to 98892 for the tests I brought in here, as it demonstrated that 3×usize is currently suboptimal.
2024-01-19 23:00:34 -08:00
Jules Bertholet
b72af9fe9b
Stabilize round_ties_even 2024-01-19 18:05:53 -05:00
SOFe
596410eb36
Assign tracking issue number for feature(nonzero_from_mut) 2024-01-19 13:53:13 -08:00
SOFe
3acb445f15
Added assert_unsafe_precondition! check for NonZeroXxx::from_mut_unchecked 2024-01-19 13:52:17 -08:00
SOFe
4459be7bd5
Added NonZeroXxx::from_mut(_unchecked)? 2024-01-19 13:50:24 -08:00
George Bateman
803b810eac
Remove feature(offset_of) from tests 2024-01-19 20:38:51 +00:00
George Bateman
615946db4f
Stabilize simple offset_of 2024-01-19 20:38:51 +00:00
Matthias Krüger
455382d8df
Rollup merge of #119984 - kpreid:waker-noop, r=dtolnay
Change return type of unstable `Waker::noop()` from `Waker` to `&Waker`.

The advantage of this is that it does not need to be assigned to a variable to be used in a `Context` creation, which is the most common thing to want to do with a noop waker. It also avoids unnecessarily executing the dynamically dispatched drop function when the noop waker is dropped.

If an owned noop waker is desired, it can be created by cloning, but the reverse is harder to do since it requires declaring a constant. Alternatively, both versions could be provided, like `futures::task::noop_waker()` and `futures::task::noop_waker_ref()`, but that seems to me to be API clutter for a very small benefit, whereas having the `&'static` reference available is a large reduction in boilerplate.

[Previous discussion on the tracking issue starting here](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/98286#issuecomment-1862159766)
2024-01-19 19:27:01 +01:00
Matthias Krüger
64461dab01
Rollup merge of #117561 - tgross35:split-array, r=scottmcm
Stabilize `slice_first_last_chunk`

This PR does a few different things based around stabilizing `slice_first_last_chunk`. They are split up so this PR can be by-commit reviewed, I can move parts to a separate PR if desired.

This feature provides a very elegant API to extract arrays from either end of a slice, such as for parsing integers from binary data.

## Stabilize `slice_first_last_chunk`

ACP: https://github.com/rust-lang/libs-team/issues/69
Implementation: https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/90091
Tracking issue: https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/111774

This stabilizes the functionality from https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/111774:

```rust
impl [T] {
    pub const fn first_chunk<const N: usize>(&self) -> Option<&[T; N]>;
    pub fn first_chunk_mut<const N: usize>(&mut self) -> Option<&mut [T; N]>;
    pub const fn last_chunk<const N: usize>(&self) -> Option<&[T; N]>;
    pub fn last_chunk_mut<const N: usize>(&mut self) -> Option<&mut [T; N]>;
    pub const fn split_first_chunk<const N: usize>(&self) -> Option<(&[T; N], &[T])>;
    pub fn split_first_chunk_mut<const N: usize>(&mut self) -> Option<(&mut [T; N], &mut [T])>;
    pub const fn split_last_chunk<const N: usize>(&self) -> Option<(&[T], &[T; N])>;
    pub fn split_last_chunk_mut<const N: usize>(&mut self) -> Option<(&mut [T], &mut [T; N])>;
}
```

Const stabilization is included for all non-mut methods, which are blocked on `const_mut_refs`. This change includes marking the trivial function `slice_split_at_unchecked` const-stable for internal use (but not fully stable).

## Remove `split_array` slice methods

Tracking issue: https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/90091
Implementation: https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/83233#pullrequestreview-780315524

This PR also removes the following unstable methods from the `split_array` feature, https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/90091:

```rust
impl<T> [T] {
    pub fn split_array_ref<const N: usize>(&self) -> (&[T; N], &[T]);
    pub fn split_array_mut<const N: usize>(&mut self) -> (&mut [T; N], &mut [T]);

    pub fn rsplit_array_ref<const N: usize>(&self) -> (&[T], &[T; N]);
    pub fn rsplit_array_mut<const N: usize>(&mut self) -> (&mut [T], &mut [T; N]);
}
```

This is done because discussion at #90091 and its implementation PR indicate a strong preference for nonpanicking APIs that return `Option`. The only difference between functions under the `split_array` and `slice_first_last_chunk` features is `Option` vs. panic, so remove the duplicates as part of this stabilization.

This does not affect the array methods from `split_array`. We will want to revisit these once `generic_const_exprs` is further along.

## Reverse order of return tuple for `split_last_chunk{,_mut}`

An unresolved question for #111774 is whether to return `(preceding_slice, last_chunk)` (`(&[T], &[T; N])`) or the reverse (`(&[T; N], &[T])`), from `split_last_chunk` and `split_last_chunk_mut`. It is currently implemented as `(last_chunk, preceding_slice)` which matches `split_last -> (&T, &[T])`. The first commit changes these to `(&[T], &[T; N])` for these reasons:

- More consistent with other splitting methods that return multiple values: `str::rsplit_once`, `slice::split_at{,_mut}`, `slice::align_to` all return tuples with the items in order
- More intuitive (arguably opinion, but it is consistent with other language elements like pattern matching `let [a, b, rest @ ..] ...`
- If we ever added a varidic way to obtain multiple chunks, it would likely return something in order: `.split_many_last::<(2, 4)>() -> (&[T], &[T; 2], &[T; 4])`
- It is the ordering used in the `rsplit_array` methods

I think the inconsistency with `split_last` could be acceptable in this case, since for `split_last` the scalar `&T` doesn't have any internal order to maintain with the other items.

## Unresolved questions

Do we want to reserve the same names on `[u8; N]` to avoid inference confusion? https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/117561#issuecomment-1793388647

---

`slice_first_last_chunk` has only been around since early 2023, but `split_array` has been around since 2021.

`@rustbot` label -T-libs +T-libs-api -T-libs +needs-fcp
cc `@rust-lang/wg-const-eval,` `@scottmcm` who raised this topic, `@clarfonthey` implementer of `slice_first_last_chunk` `@jethrogb` implementer of `split_array`

Zulip discussion: https://rust-lang.zulipchat.com/#narrow/stream/219381-t-libs/topic/Stabilizing.20array-from-slice.20*something*.3F

Fixes: #111774
2024-01-19 19:26:59 +01:00
Matthias Krüger
7219bd22ed
Rollup merge of #120110 - invpt:patch-1, r=the8472
Update documentation for Vec::into_boxed_slice to be more clear about excess capacity

Currently, the documentation for Vec::into_boxed_slice says that "if the vector has excess capacity, its items will be moved into a newly-allocated buffer with exactly the right capacity." This is misleading, as copies do not necessarily occur, depending on if the allocator supports in-place shrinking. I copied some of the wording from shrink_to_fit, though it could potentially still be worded better than this.
2024-01-19 08:15:05 +01:00
Matthias Krüger
332f8f73ea
Rollup merge of #120107 - shepmaster:dead-code-repr-transparent, r=Nilstrieb
dead_code treats #[repr(transparent)] the same as #[repr(C)]

In #92972 we enabled linting on unused fields in tuple structs. In #118297 that lint was enabled by default. That exposed issues like #119659, where the fields of a struct marked `#[repr(transparent)]` were reported by the `dead_code` lint. The language team [decided](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/119659#issuecomment-1885172045) that the lint should treat `repr(transparent)` the same as `#[repr(C)]`.

Fixes #119659
2024-01-19 08:15:05 +01:00
Matthias Krüger
48ba7217c6
Rollup merge of #119907 - asquared31415:fn_trait_docs, r=Nilstrieb
Update `fn()` trait implementation docs

Fixes #119903

This was FCP'd and approved for the 1.70.0 release, this is just a docs update to match that change.
2024-01-19 08:15:04 +01:00
Matthias Krüger
f9076bbcf1
Rollup merge of #119138 - AngelicosPhosphoros:use_proper_atomics_in_spinlock_example, r=Nilstrieb
Docs: Use non-SeqCst in module example of atomics

I done this for this reasons:
1. The example now shows that there is more Orderings than just SeqCst.
2. People who would copy from example would now have more suitable orderings for the job.
3. SeqCst is both much harder to reason about and not needed in most situations.

IMHO, we should encourage people to think and use memory orderings that is suitable to task instead of blindly defaulting to SeqCst.

r? `@m-ou-se`
2024-01-19 08:15:03 +01:00
Matthias Krüger
2d828cd253
Rollup merge of #118798 - GnomedDev:use-atomicu8-backtrace, r=Nilstrieb
Use AtomicU8 instead of AtomicUsize in backtrace.rs

Just a small inefficiency I saw when looking at std sources.
2024-01-19 08:15:02 +01:00
Matthias Krüger
122b3f9303
Rollup merge of #118665 - dtolnay:signedness, r=Nilstrieb
Consolidate all associated items on the NonZero integer types into a single impl block per type

**Before:**

```rust
#[repr(transparent)]
#[rustc_layout_scalar_valid_range_start(1)]
pub struct NonZeroI8(i8);

impl NonZeroI8 {
    pub const fn new(n: i8) -> Option<Self> ...
    pub const fn get(self) -> i8 ...
}

impl NonZeroI8 {
    pub const fn leading_zeros(self) -> u32 ...
    pub const fn trailing_zeros(self) -> u32 ...
}

impl NonZeroI8 {
    pub const fn abs(self) -> NonZeroI8 ...
}
...
```

**After:**

```rust
#[repr(transparent)]
#[rustc_layout_scalar_valid_range_start(1)]
pub struct NonZeroI8(i8);

impl NonZeroI8 {
    pub const fn new(n: i8) -> Option<Self> ...
    pub const fn get(self) -> i8 ...
    pub const fn leading_zeros(self) -> u32 ...
    pub const fn trailing_zeros(self) -> u32 ...
    pub const fn abs(self) -> NonZeroI8 ...
    ...
}
```

Having 6-7 different impl blocks per type is not such a problem in today's implementation, but becomes awful upon the switch to a generic `NonZero<T>` type (context: https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/82363#issuecomment-921513910).

In the implementation from https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/100428, there end up being **67** impl blocks on that type.

<img src="https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/assets/1940490/5b68bd6f-8a36-4922-baa3-348e30dbfcc1" width="200"><img src="https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/assets/1940490/2cfec71e-c2cd-4361-a542-487f13f435d9" width="200"><img src="https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/assets/1940490/2fe00337-7307-405d-9036-6fe1e58b2627" width="200">

Without the refactor to a single impl block first, introducing `NonZero<T>` would be a usability regression compared to today's separate pages per type. With all those blocks expanded, Ctrl+F is obnoxious because you need to skip 12&times; past every match you don't care about. With all the blocks collapsed, Ctrl+F is useless. Getting to a state in which exactly one type's (e.g. `NonZero<u32>`) impl blocks are expanded while the rest are collapsed is annoying.

After this refactor to a single impl block, we can move forward with making `NonZero<T>` a generic struct whose docs all go on the same rustdoc page. The rustdoc will have 12 impl blocks, one per choice of `T` supported by the standard library. The reader can expand a single one of those impl blocks e.g. `NonZero<u32>` to understand the entire API of that type.

Note that moving the API into a generic `impl<T> NonZero<T> { ... }` is not going to be an option until after `NonZero<T>` has been stabilized, which may be months or years after its introduction. During the period while generic `NonZero` is unstable, it will be extra important to offer good documentation on all methods demonstrating the API being used through the stable aliases such as `NonZeroI8`.

This PR follows a `key = $value` syntax for the macros which is similar to the macros we already use for producing a single large impl block on the integer primitives.

1dd4db5062/library/core/src/num/mod.rs (L288-L309)

Best reviewed one commit at a time.
2024-01-19 08:15:02 +01:00
invpt
35a9fc3472 Clarify docs for Vec::into_boxed_slice, Vec::shrink_to_fit 2024-01-18 18:01:36 -05:00
The 8472
85d1787962 remove alignment-changing in-place collect
Currently stable users can't benefit from this because GlobaAlloc doesn't support
alignment-changing realloc and neither do most posix allocators.
So in practice it always results in an extra memcpy.
2024-01-18 22:50:14 +01:00
The 8472
b28a95391b update internal ASCII art comment for vec specializations 2024-01-18 22:47:20 +01:00
Jake Goulding
fb7762b1c5 Remove no-longer-needed allow(dead_code) from the standard library
`repr(transparent)` now silences the lint.
2024-01-18 13:14:42 -05:00
Kevin Reid
c48cdfe8ee Remove unnecessary lets and borrowing from Waker::noop() usage.
`Waker::noop()` now returns a `&'static Waker` reference, so it can be
passed directly to `Context` creation with no temporary lifetime issue.
2024-01-17 12:00:27 -08:00
Kevin Reid
6f8a944ba4 Change return type of unstable Waker::noop() from Waker to &Waker.
The advantage of this is that it does not need to be assigned to a
variable to be used in a `Context` creation, which is the most common
thing to want to do with a noop waker.

If an owned noop waker is desired, it can be created by cloning, but the
reverse is harder. Alternatively, both versions could be provided, like
`futures::task::noop_waker()` and `futures::task::noop_waker_ref()`, but
that seems to me to be API clutter for a very small benefit, whereas
having the `&'static` reference available is a large benefit.

Previous discussion on the tracking issue starting here:
https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/98286#issuecomment-1862159766
2024-01-17 11:53:16 -08:00
Matthias Krüger
a2eefd2718
Rollup merge of #120044 - Storyyeller:patch-2, r=lqd
Fix typo in comments (in_place_collect)
2024-01-17 20:21:23 +01:00
Matthias Krüger
c9779afc9c
Rollup merge of #119855 - rellerreller:freebsd-static, r=wesleywiser
Enable Static Builds for FreeBSD

Enable crt-static for FreeBSD to enable statically compiled binaries.
2024-01-17 20:21:19 +01:00
Robert Grosse
db7125f008
Fix typo in comments (in_place_collect) 2024-01-16 20:48:22 -08:00
novafacing
ee007ab187 proc_macro_c_str_literals: Implement Literal::c_string constructor 2024-01-16 13:27:58 -08:00
bors
e64f8495e7 Auto merge of #120025 - matthiaskrgr:rollup-e9ai06k, r=matthiaskrgr
Rollup of 8 pull requests

Successful merges:

 - #118361 (stabilise bound_map)
 - #119816 (Define hidden types in confirmation)
 - #119900 (Inline `check_closure`, simplify `deduce_sig_from_projection`)
 - #119969 (Simplify `closure_env_ty` and `closure_env_param`)
 - #119990 (Add private `NonZero<T>` type alias.)
 - #119998 (Update books)
 - #120002 (Lint `overlapping_ranges_endpoints` directly instead of collecting into a Vec)
 - #120018 (Don't allow `.html` files in `tests/mir-opt/`)

r? `@ghost`
`@rustbot` modify labels: rollup
2024-01-16 17:33:12 +00:00
Matthias Krüger
ac3108f208
Rollup merge of #119990 - reitermarkus:nonzero-type-alias, r=dtolnay
Add private `NonZero<T>` type alias.

According to step 2 suggested in https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/100428#pullrequestreview-1767139731.

This adds a private type alias for `NonZero<T>` so that some parts of the code can already start using `NonZero<T>` syntax.

Using `NonZero<T>` for `convert` and other parts which implement `From` doesn't work while it is a type alias, since this results in conflicting implementations.
2024-01-16 17:55:24 +01:00
Matthias Krüger
304a17a475
Rollup merge of #118361 - Dylan-DPC:80626/stab/bound-map, r=Amanieu
stabilise bound_map

Closes https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/86026
2024-01-16 17:55:21 +01:00
bors
bf2637f4e8 Auto merge of #119954 - scottmcm:option-unwrap-failed, r=WaffleLapkin
Split out `option::unwrap_failed` like we have `result::unwrap_failed`

...and like `option::expect_failed`
2024-01-16 15:32:39 +00:00
David Tolnay
604d2083d3
Revert unrelated changes from PR 119990 2024-01-15 13:09:46 -08:00
bors
67e7b84425 Auto merge of #119987 - matthiaskrgr:rollup-f7lkx4w, r=matthiaskrgr
Rollup of 6 pull requests

Successful merges:

 - #119818 (Silence some follow-up errors [3/x])
 - #119870 (std: Doc blocking behavior of LazyLock)
 - #119897 (`OutputTypeParameterMismatch` -> `SignatureMismatch`)
 - #119963 (Fix `allow_internal_unstable` for `(min_)specialization`)
 - #119971 (Use `zip_eq` to enforce that things being zipped have equal sizes)
 - #119974 (Minor `trimmed_def_paths` improvements)

r? `@ghost`
`@rustbot` modify labels: rollup
2024-01-15 16:45:41 +00:00
Markus Reiter
f7602232a5
Add private NonZero<T> type alias. 2024-01-15 13:44:52 +01:00
bors
1ead4761e9 Auto merge of #119878 - scottmcm:inline-always-unwrap, r=workingjubilee
Tune the inlinability of `unwrap`

Fixes #115463
cc `@thomcc`

This tweaks `unwrap` on ~~`Option` &~~ `Result` to be two parts:
- `#[inline(always)]` for checking the discriminant
- `#[cold]` for actually panicking

The idea here is that checking the discriminant on a `Result` ~~or `Option`~~ should always be trivial enough to be worth inlining, even in `opt-level=z`, especially compared to passing it to a function.

As seen in the issue and codegen test, this will hopefully help particularly for things like `.try_into().unwrap()`s that are actually infallible, but in a way that's only visible with the inlining.

EDIT: I've restricted this to `Result` to avoid combining effects
2024-01-15 09:20:46 +00:00
Matthias Krüger
6f2670da7b
Rollup merge of #119870 - behnam-oneschema:lazylock-blocking-1, r=tgross35,ChrisDenton
std: Doc blocking behavior of LazyLock

Adding notes about blocking behavior of calls that can block the current thread, similar to those on https://doc.rust-lang.org/std/sync/struct.OnceLock.html

I'm not sure if the "This method never blocks." counterparts would be desired. If so, can add those, as well.
2024-01-15 08:44:48 +01:00
bors
30dfb9e046 Auto merge of #119970 - GuillaumeGomez:rollup-p53c19o, r=GuillaumeGomez
Rollup of 3 pull requests

Successful merges:

 - #119561 (rustdoc: rename `issue-\d+.rs` tests to have meaningful names (part 5))
 - #119742 (ARMv6K HorizonOS - Fix backlog for UnixListener)
 - #119960 (Inline 2 functions that appear in dep-graph profiles.)

r? `@ghost`
`@rustbot` modify labels: rollup
2024-01-14 21:15:48 +00:00
David Tolnay
cdee1feb49
Unbreak tidy's feature parser
tidy error: /git/rust/library/core/src/num/nonzero.rs:67: malformed stability attribute: missing `feature` key
    tidy error: /git/rust/library/core/src/num/nonzero.rs:82: malformed stability attribute: missing `feature` key
    tidy error: /git/rust/library/core/src/num/nonzero.rs:98: malformed stability attribute: missing the `since` key
    tidy error: /git/rust/library/core/src/num/nonzero.rs:112: malformed stability attribute: missing `feature` key
    tidy error: /git/rust/library/core/src/num/nonzero.rs:450: malformed stability attribute: missing `feature` key
    some tidy checks failed
2024-01-14 12:45:46 -08:00
David Tolnay
c53713274c
Move BITS into omnibus impl block 2024-01-14 12:45:46 -08:00
David Tolnay
66cda3b75f
Move signed MIN and MAX into signedness_dependent_methods 2024-01-14 12:45:45 -08:00
David Tolnay
7f7c5af097
Move unsigned MIN and MAX into signedness_dependent_methods 2024-01-14 12:45:44 -08:00