Rename WASI's `FileTypeExt::is_character_device` to
`FileTypeExt::is_char_device`, for consistency with the Unix
`FileTypeExt::is_char_device`.
Also, add a `FileTypeExt::is_socket` function, for consistency with the
Unix `FileTypeExt::is_socket` function.
For small types with padding, the current implementation is UB because it does integer operations on uninit values. But LLVM has gotten smarter since I wrote the previous implementation in 2017, so remove all the manual magic and just write it in such a way that LLVM will vectorize. This code is much simpler (albeit nuanced) and has very little `unsafe`, and is actually faster to boot!
Optimize pattern matching
These commits speed up the `match-stress-enum` benchmark, which is very artificial, but the changes are simple enough that it's probably worth doing.
r? `@Nadrieril`
As discussed here
https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/88300#issuecomment-936097710
I felt this was the best place to put this (rather than next to
ExitStatusExt). After all, it's a property of the ExitStatus type on
Unix.
Signed-off-by: Ian Jackson <ijackson@chiark.greenend.org.uk>
As discussed here
https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/88300#issuecomment-936085371
exit is (conventionally) a library function, with _exit being the
actual system call.
I have checked the other references and they say "if the process
terminated by calling `exti`". I think despite the slight
imprecision (strictly, it should read iff ... `_exit`), this is
clearer. Anyone who knows about the distinction between `exit` and
`_exit` will not be confused.
`_exit` is the correct traditional name for the system call, despite
Linux calling it `exit_group` or `exit`:
https://www.freebsd.org/cgi/man.cgi?query=_exit&sektion=2&n=1
Signed-off-by: Ian Jackson <ijackson@chiark.greenend.org.uk>
The `unreachable!` docs previously did not mention that there was a second
form, `unreachable!("message")` that could be used to specify a custom panic
message,
The docs now mention this in the same style as currently used for `unimplemented!`:
https://doc.rust-lang.org/core/macro.unimplemented.html#panics
Fix assertion failures in `OwnedHandle` with `windows_subsystem`.
As discussed in #88576, raw handle values in Windows can be null, such
as in `windows_subsystem` mode, or when consoles are detached from a
process. So, don't use `NonNull` to hold them, don't assert that they're
not null, and remove `OwnedHandle`'s `repr(transparent)`. Introduce a
new `HandleOrNull` type, similar to `HandleOrInvalid`, to cover the FFI
use case.
r? `@joshtriplett`
Added the --temps-dir option
Fixes#10971.
The new `--temps-dir` option puts intermediate files in a user-specified directory. This provides a fix for the issue where parallel invocations of rustc would overwrite each other's intermediate files.
No files are kept in the intermediate directory unless `-C save-temps=yes`.
If additional files are specifically requested using `--emit asm,llvm-bc,llvm-ir,obj,metadata,link,dep-info,mir`, these will be put in the output directory rather than the intermediate directory.
This is a backward-compatible change, i.e. if `--temps-dir` is not specified, the behavior is the same as before.
We would like to check for errors with AVX512,
but we don't pick our CPU. So, detect available features.
This variance in checks stochastically reveals issues.
Nondeterminism is acceptable as our goal is protecting downstream.
adjust documented inline-asm register constraints
This change more clearly specifies how `reg` and `reg_thumb` work with ARM, Thumb2, and Thumb1 code.
Based upon the [llvm documentation](https://llvm.org/docs/LangRef.html#supported-constraint-code-list) for register constraint codes.
To be clear, this just updates the docs to match what already happens with rustc/llvm.
No change in the compiler is required to make it match this new documentation.
Only use `clone3` when needed for pidfd
In #89522 we learned that `clone3` is interacting poorly with Gentoo's
`sandbox` tool. We only need that for the unstable pidfd extensions, so
otherwise avoid that and use a normal `fork`.
This is a re-application of beta #89924, now that we're aware that we need
more than just a temporary release fix. I also reverted 12fbabd27f, as
that was just fallout from using `clone3` instead of `fork`.
r? `@Mark-Simulacrum`
cc `@joshtriplett`
This commit tweaks the expansion of `thread_local!` when combined with a
`const { ... }` value to help ensure that the rules which apply to
`const { ... }` blocks will be the same as when they're stabilized.
Previously with this invocation:
thread_local!(static NAME: Type = const { init_expr });
this would generate (on supporting platforms):
#[thread_local]
static NAME: Type = init_expr;
instead the macro now expands to:
const INIT_EXPR: Type = init_expr;
#[thread_local]
static NAME: Type = INIT_EXPR;
with the hope that because `init_expr` is defined as a `const` item then
it's not accidentally allowing more behavior than if it were put into a
`static`. For example on the stabilization issue [this example][ex] now
gives the same error both ways.
[ex]: https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/84223#issuecomment-953384298