Fix handling of macro arguments within the `dropping_copy_types` lint
This PR fixes the handling of spans with different context (aka macro arguments) than the primary expression within the different `{drop,forget}ing_copy_types` and `{drop,forget}ing_references` lints.
<details>
<summary>Before</summary>
```
warning: calls to `std::mem::drop` with a value that implements `Copy` does nothing
--> drop_writeln.rs:5:5
|
5 | drop(writeln!(&mut msg, "test"));
| ^^^^^--------------------------^
| |
| argument has type `Result<(), std::fmt::Error>`
|
= note: `#[warn(dropping_copy_types)]` on by default
help: use `let _ = ...` to ignore the expression or result
--> /home/[..]/.rustup/toolchains/nightly-x86_64-unknown-linux-gnu/lib/rustlib/src/rust/library/core/src/macros/mod.rs:688:9
|
68| let _ =
| ~~~~~~~
```
</details>
<details>
<summary>With this PR</summary>
```
warning: calls to `std::mem::drop` with a value that implements `Copy` does nothing
--> drop_writeln.rs:5:5
|
5 | drop(writeln!(&mut msg, "test"));
| ^^^^^--------------------------^
| |
| argument has type `Result<(), std::fmt::Error>`
|
= note: `#[warn(dropping_copy_types)]` on by default
help: use `let _ = ...` to ignore the expression or result
|
5 - drop(writeln!(&mut msg, "test"));
5 + let _ = writeln!(&mut msg, "test");
|
```
</details>
``````@rustbot`````` label +L-dropping_copy_types
Stabilize feature `char_indices_offset`
Stabilized API:
```rust
impl CharIndices<'_> {
pub fn offset(&self) -> usize;
}
```
Tracking issue: https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/83871
Closes https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/83871
I also attempted to improved the documentation to make it more clear that it returns the offset of the character that will be returned by the next call to `next()`.
Document WebAssembly target feature expectations
This commit is a result of the discussion on #128475 and incorporates parts of #109807 as well. This is all done as a new page of documentation for the `wasm32-unknown-unknown` target which previously did not exist. This new page goes into details about the preexisting target and additionally documents the expectations for WebAssembly features and code generation.
The tl;dr is that LLVM will enable features over time after most engines have had support for awhile. Compiling without features requires `-Ctarget-cpu=mvp` to rustc plus `-Zbuild-std` to Cargo.
Closes#109807Closes#119811Closes#128475
Revert #129187 and #129302
The two PRs naively switched to `std::fs::remove_dir_all`, but failed to gracefully handle the failure case where the top-level directory entry does not exist, causing https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/129187#issuecomment-2304849757 `./x clean` to fail locally when `tmp` does not exist.
I plan to reland the two PRs with fixed top-level dir entry handling and more testing, but let's quickly revert to unblock people.
Reverts #129187.
Reverts #129302.
r? bootstrap
Allow rust staticlib to work with MSVC's /WHOLEARCHIVE
This fixes#129020 by renaming the `__NULL_IMPORT_DESCRIPTOR` to prevent conflicts.
try-job: dist-i686-msvc
Make Tree Borrows Provenance GC no longer produce stack overflows
Most functions operating on Tree Borrows' trees are carefully written to not cause stack overflows due to too much recursion. The one exception is [`Tree::keep_only_needed`](94f5588faf/src/borrow_tracker/tree_borrows/tree.rs (L724)), which just uses regular recursion.
This function is part of the provenance GC, so it is called regularly for every allocation in the program.
Tests show that this is a problem in practice. For example, the test `fill::horizontal_line` in crate `tiny-skia` (version 0.11.4) is such a test.
This PR changes this, this test no now longer crashes. Instead, it succeeds (after a _long_ time).
Update cargo
12 commits in ba8b39413c74d08494f94a7542fe79aa636e1661..8f40fc59fb0c8df91c97405785197f3c630304ea
2024-08-16 22:48:57 +0000 to 2024-08-21 22:37:06 +0000
- Tests rely on absence of RUST_BACKTRACE (rust-lang/cargo#14441)
- fix: -Cmetadata includes whether extra rustflags is same as host (rust-lang/cargo#14432)
- [mdman] Normalize newlines when rendering options (rust-lang/cargo#14428)
- fix: doctest respects Cargo's color options (rust-lang/cargo#14425)
- Be more permissive while packaging unpublishable crates. (rust-lang/cargo#14408)
- fix: Limiting pre-release match semantics to use only on `OptVersionReq::Req` (rust-lang/cargo#14412)
- test: add a regression test for Issue 14409 (rust-lang/cargo#14430)
- chore: update label trigger for Command-info (rust-lang/cargo#14422)
- doc: add lockfile-path unstable doc section (rust-lang/cargo#14423)
- doc: update lockfile-path tracking issue (rust-lang/cargo#14424)
- fix: remove list owners feature of info subcommand (rust-lang/cargo#14418)
- Lockfile path tests (follow-up) (rust-lang/cargo#14417)
epoll test: avoid some subtly dangling pointers
Turns out `let data = MaybeUninit::<u64>::uninit().as_ptr();` is a dangling pointer, the memory gets freed at the end of that line. For these cases we don't care as we don't actually access the pointer, but let's not do such subtle things.
Rollup of 8 pull requests
Successful merges:
- #128432 (WASI: forbid `unsafe_op_in_unsafe_fn` for `std::{os, sys}`)
- #129373 (Add missing module flags for CFI and KCFI sanitizers)
- #129374 (Use `assert_unsafe_precondition!` in `AsciiChar::digit_unchecked`)
- #129376 (Change `assert_unsafe_precondition` docs to refer to `check_language_ub`)
- #129382 (Add `const_cell_into_inner` to `OnceCell`)
- #129387 (Advise against removing the remaining Python scripts from `tests/run-make`)
- #129388 (Do not rely on names to find lifetimes.)
- #129395 (Pretty-print own args of existential projections (dyn-Trait w/ GAT constraints))
r? `@ghost`
`@rustbot` modify labels: rollup
Pretty-print own args of existential projections (dyn-Trait w/ GAT constraints)
Previously we would just drop them. This bug isn't that significant as it can only be triggered by user code that constrains GATs inside trait object types which is currently gated under the interim feature `generic_associated_types_extended` (whose future is questionable) or on stable if the GATs are 'disabled' in dyn-Trait via `where Self: Sized` (in which case the assoc type bindings get ignored anyway (and trigger the warn-by-default lint `unused_associated_type_bounds`)), so yeah.
Affects diagnostic output and output of `std::any::type_name{_of_val}`.
Do not rely on names to find lifetimes.
For some reason, we were trying to find the lifetime parameter from its name, instead of using the def_id we have.
This PR uses it instead. This changes some ui tests, I think to be more sensible.
Advise against removing the remaining Python scripts from `tests/run-make`
After some recent PRs (e.g. #129185), there are only two Python scripts left in `tests/run-make`.
Having come so far, it's tempting to try to get rid of the remaining ones. But after trying that myself, I've come to the conclusion that it's not worth the extra hassle, especially if it means pulling in an XML-parsing crate just for one test.
This PR therefore leaves behind a few signpost comments to explain why getting rid of these particular scripts has low value.
Add `const_cell_into_inner` to `OnceCell`
`Cell` and `RefCell` have their `into_inner` methods const unstable. `OnceCell` has the same logic, so add it under the same gate.
Tracking issue: https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/78729
Add missing module flags for CFI and KCFI sanitizers
Set the cfi-normalize-integers and kcfi-offset module flags when Control-Flow Integrity sanitizers are used, so functions generated by the LLVM backend use the same CFI/KCFI options as rustc.
cfi-normalize-integers tells LLVM to also use integer normalization for generated functions when -Zsanitizer-cfi-normalize-integers is used.
kcfi-offset specifies the number of prefix nops between the KCFI type hash and the function entry when -Z patchable-function-entry is used. Note that LLVM assumes all indirectly callable functions use the same number of prefix NOPs with -Zsanitizer=kcfi.
Trying to get rid of this Python script looks tempting, because it's currently
the only Python script in the whole `run-make` suite that we actually run.
But getting rid of it would require pulling in a Rust crate to parse XML
instead, and that's probably not worth the extra hassle for a relatively-minor
test.
`Cell` and `RefCell` have their `into_inner` methods const unstable.
`OnceCell` has the same logic, so add it under the same gate.
Tracking issue: https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/78729
Set the cfi-normalize-integers and kcfi-offset module flags when
Control-Flow Integrity sanitizers are used, so functions generated by
the LLVM backend use the same CFI/KCFI options as rustc.
cfi-normalize-integers tells LLVM to also use integer normalization
for generated functions when -Zsanitizer-cfi-normalize-integers is
used.
kcfi-offset specifies the number of prefix nops between the KCFI
type hash and the function entry when -Z patchable-function-entry is
used. Note that LLVM assumes all indirectly callable functions use the
same number of prefix NOPs with -Zsanitizer=kcfi.
Force `LC_ALL=C` for all run-make tests
This PR adds `LC_ALL=C` for all run-make tests so that they become locale independent.
Fixes#129362
r? `@jieyouxu`
llvm-wrapper: adapt for LLVM 20 API changes
No functional changes intended.
Adapts llvm-wrapper for the LLVM commits 0f22d47a7a and d6d8243dcd.
`@rustbot` label: +llvm-main
r? `@nikic`
Fix `thread::sleep` Duration-handling for ESP-IDF
Addresses the ESP-IDF specific aspect of https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/129212
#### A short summary of the problems addressed by this PR:
================================================
1. **Problem 1** - the current implementation of `std:🧵:sleep` does not properly round up the passed `Duration`
As per the documentation of `std:🧵:sleep`, the implementation should sleep _at least_ for the provided duration, but not less. Since the minimum supported resolution of the `usleep` syscall which is used with ESP-IDF is one microsecond, this means that we need to round-up any sub-microsecond nanos to one microsecond. Moreover, in the edge case where the user had passed a duration of < 1000 nanos (i.e. less than one microsecond), the current implementation will _not_ sleep _at all_.
This is addressed by this PR.
2. **Problem 2** - the implementation of `usleep` on the ESP-IDF can overflow if the passed number of microseconds is >= `u32::MAX - 1_000_000`
This is also addressed by this PR.
Extra details for Problem 2:
`u32::MAX - 1_000_000` is chosen to accommodate for the longest possible systick on the ESP IDF which is 1000ms.
The systick duration is selected when compiling the ESP IDF FreeRTOS task scheduler itself, so we can't know it from within `STD`. The default systick duration is 10ms, and might be lowered down to 1ms. (Making it longer I have never seen, but in theory it can go up to a 1000ms max, even if obviously a one second systick is unrealistic - but we are paranoid in the PR.)
While the overflow is reported upstream in the ESP IDF repo[^1], I still believe we should workaround it in the Rust wrappers as well, because it might take time until it is fixed, and they might not fix it for all released ESP IDF versions.
For big durations, rather than calling `usleep` repeatedly on the ESP-IDF in chunks of `u32::MAX - 1_000_000`us, it might make sense to call instead with 1_000_000us (one second) as this is the max period that seems to be agreed upon as a safe max period in the `usleep` POSIX spec. On the other hand, that might introduce less precision (as we need to call more times `usleep` in a loop) and, we would be fighting a theoretical problem only, as I have big doubts the ESP IDF will stop supporting durations higher than 1_000_000us - ever - because of backwards compatibility with code which already calls `usleep` on the ESP IDF with bigger durations.
[^1]: https://github.com/espressif/esp-idf/issues/14390
bump conflicting_repr_hints lint to be shown in dependencies
This has been a future compatibility lint for years, let's bump it up to be shown in dependencies (so that hopefully we can then make it a hard error fairly soon).
Cc https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/68585
compiletest: use `std::fs::remove_dir_all` now that it is available
It turns out `aggressive_rm_rf` is not sufficiently aggressive (RAGEY) on Windows and obviously handles Windows symlinks incorrectly. Instead of rolling our own version, let's use `std::fs::remove_dir_all` now that it's available (well, it's been available for a good while, but probably wasn't available when this helper was written).
cc #129187 since basically this is failing due to similar problems.
Blocker for #128562.
Fixes#129155.
Fixes#126334.