Commit Graph

2877 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Trevor Gross
c8b2f7e458
Rollup merge of #131120 - tgross35:stabilize-const_option, r=RalfJung
Stabilize `const_option`

This makes the following API stable in const contexts:

```rust
impl<T> Option<T> {
    pub const fn as_mut(&mut self) -> Option<&mut T>;
    pub const fn expect(self, msg: &str) -> T;
    pub const fn unwrap(self) -> T;
    pub const unsafe fn unwrap_unchecked(self) -> T;
    pub const fn take(&mut self) -> Option<T>;
    pub const fn replace(&mut self, value: T) -> Option<T>;
}

impl<T> Option<&T> {
    pub const fn copied(self) -> Option<T>
    where T: Copy;
}

impl<T> Option<&mut T> {
    pub const fn copied(self) -> Option<T>
    where T: Copy;
}

impl<T, E> Option<Result<T, E>> {
    pub const fn transpose(self) -> Result<Option<T>, E>
}

impl<T> Option<Option<T>> {
    pub const fn flatten(self) -> Option<T>;
}
```

The following functions make use of the unstable `const_precise_live_drops` feature:

- `expect`
- `unwrap`
- `unwrap_unchecked`
- `transpose`
- `flatten`

Fixes: <https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/67441>
2024-10-12 21:38:35 -05:00
Trevor Gross
19f6c17df4 Stabilize const_option
This makes the following API stable in const contexts:

    impl<T> Option<T> {
        pub const fn as_mut(&mut self) -> Option<&mut T>;
        pub const fn expect(self, msg: &str) -> T;
        pub const fn unwrap(self) -> T;
        pub const unsafe fn unwrap_unchecked(self) -> T;
        pub const fn take(&mut self) -> Option<T>;
        pub const fn replace(&mut self, value: T) -> Option<T>;
    }

    impl<T> Option<&T> {
        pub const fn copied(self) -> Option<T>
        where T: Copy;
    }

    impl<T> Option<&mut T> {
        pub const fn copied(self) -> Option<T>
        where T: Copy;
    }

    impl<T, E> Option<Result<T, E>> {
        pub const fn transpose(self) -> Result<Option<T>, E>
    }

    impl<T> Option<Option<T>> {
        pub const fn flatten(self) -> Option<T>;
    }

The following functions make use of the unstable
`const_precise_live_drops` feature:

- `expect`
- `unwrap`
- `unwrap_unchecked`
- `transpose`
- `flatten`

Fixes: <https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/67441>
2024-10-12 17:07:13 -04:00
Matthias Krüger
de72917050
Rollup merge of #131617 - RalfJung:const_cow_is_borrowed, r=tgross35
remove const_cow_is_borrowed feature gate

The two functions guarded by this are still unstable, and there's no reason to require a separate feature gate for their const-ness -- we can just have `cow_is_borrowed` cover both kinds of stability.

Cc #65143
2024-10-12 23:00:59 +02:00
Ralf Jung
a0661ec331 remove const_cow_is_borrowed feature gate 2024-10-12 19:48:28 +02:00
Jubilee Young
ddc367ded7 library: Stabilize const_ptr_write
Const-stabilizes:
- `write`
- `write_bytes`
- `write_unaligned`

In the following paths:
- `core::ptr`
- `core::ptr::NonNull`
- pointer `<*mut T>`

Const-stabilizes the internal `core::intrinsics`:
- `write_bytes`
- `write_via_move`
2024-10-12 00:02:36 -07:00
Trevor Gross
f241d0a230
Rollup merge of #131065 - Voultapher:port-sort-test-suite, r=thomcc
Port sort-research-rs test suite to Rust stdlib tests

This PR is a followup to https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/124032. It replaces the tests that test the various sort functions in the standard library with a test-suite developed as part of https://github.com/Voultapher/sort-research-rs. The current tests suffer a couple of problems:

- They don't cover important real world patterns that the implementations take advantage of and execute special code for.
- The input lengths tested miss out on code paths. For example, important safety property tests never reach the quicksort part of the implementation.
- The miri side is often limited to `len <= 20` which means it very thoroughly tests the insertion sort, which accounts for 19 out of 1.5k LoC.
- They are split into to core and alloc, causing code duplication and uneven coverage.
- ~~The randomness is tied to a caller location, wasting the space exploration capabilities of randomized testing.~~ The randomness is not repeatable, as it relies on `std:#️⃣:RandomState::new().build_hasher()`.

Most of these issues existed before https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/124032, but they are intensified by it. One thing that is new and requires additional testing, is that the new sort implementations specialize based on type properties. For example `Freeze` and non `Freeze` execute different code paths.

Effectively there are three dimensions that matter:

- Input type
- Input length
- Input pattern

The ported test-suite tests various properties along all three dimensions, greatly improving test coverage. It side-steps the miri issue by preferring sampled approaches. For example the test that checks if after a panic the set of elements is still the original one, doesn't do so for every single possible panic opportunity but rather it picks one at random, and performs this test across a range of input length, which varies the panic point across them. This allows regular execution to easily test inputs of length 10k, and miri execution up to 100 which covers significantly more code. The randomness used is tied to a fixed - but random per process execution - seed. This allows for fully repeatable tests and fuzzer like exploration across multiple runs.

Structure wise, the tests are previously found in the core integration tests for `sort_unstable` and alloc unit tests for `sort`. The new test-suite was developed to be a purely black-box approach, which makes integration testing the better place, because it can't accidentally rely on internal access. Because unwinding support is required the tests can't be in core, even if the implementation is, so they are now part of the alloc integration tests. Are there architectures that can only build and test core and not alloc? If so, do such platforms require sort testing? For what it's worth the current implementation state passes miri `--target mips64-unknown-linux-gnuabi64` which is big endian.

The test-suite also contains tests for properties that were and are given by the current and previous implementations, and likely relied upon by users but weren't tested. For example `self_cmp` tests that the two parameters `a` and `b` passed into the comparison function are never references to the same object, which if the user is sorting for example a `&mut [Mutex<i32>]` could lead to a deadlock.

Instead of using the hashed caller location as rand seed, it uses seconds since unix epoch / 10, which given timestamps in the CI should be reasonably easy to reproduce, but also allows fuzzer like space exploration.

---

Test run-time changes:

Setup:

```
Linux 6.10
rustc 1.83.0-nightly (f79a912d9 2024-09-18)
AMD Ryzen 9 5900X 12-Core Processor (Zen 3 micro-architecture)
CPU boost enabled.
```

master: e9df22f

Before core integration tests:

```
$ LD_LIBRARY_PATH=build/x86_64-unknown-linux-gnu/stage0-std/x86_64-unknown-linux-gnu/release/deps/ hyperfine build/x86_64-unknown-linux-gnu/stage0-std/x86_64-unknown-linux-gnu/release/deps/coretests-219cbd0308a49e2f
  Time (mean ± σ):     869.6 ms ±  21.1 ms    [User: 1327.6 ms, System: 95.1 ms]
  Range (min … max):   845.4 ms … 917.0 ms    10 runs

# MIRIFLAGS="-Zmiri-disable-isolation" to get real time
$ MIRIFLAGS="-Zmiri-disable-isolation" ./x.py miri library/core
  finished in 738.44s
```

After core integration tests:

```
$ LD_LIBRARY_PATH=build/x86_64-unknown-linux-gnu/stage0-std/x86_64-unknown-linux-gnu/release/deps/ hyperfine build/x86_64-unknown-linux-gnu/stage0-std/x86_64-unknown-linux-gnu/release/deps/coretests-219cbd0308a49e2f
  Time (mean ± σ):     865.1 ms ±  14.7 ms    [User: 1283.5 ms, System: 88.4 ms]
  Range (min … max):   836.2 ms … 885.7 ms    10 runs

$ MIRIFLAGS="-Zmiri-disable-isolation" ./x.py miri library/core
  finished in 752.35s
```

Before alloc unit tests:

```
LD_LIBRARY_PATH=build/x86_64-unknown-linux-gnu/stage0-std/x86_64-unknown-linux-gnu/release/deps/ hyperfine build/x86_64-unknown-linux-gnu/stage0-std/x86_64-unknown-linux-gnu/release/deps/alloc-19c15e6e8565aa54
  Time (mean ± σ):     295.0 ms ±   9.9 ms    [User: 719.6 ms, System: 35.3 ms]
  Range (min … max):   284.9 ms … 319.3 ms    10 runs

$ MIRIFLAGS="-Zmiri-disable-isolation" ./x.py miri library/alloc
  finished in 322.75s
```

After alloc unit tests:

```
LD_LIBRARY_PATH=build/x86_64-unknown-linux-gnu/stage0-std/x86_64-unknown-linux-gnu/release/deps/ hyperfine build/x86_64-unknown-linux-gnu/stage0-std/x86_64-unknown-linux-gnu/release/deps/alloc-19c15e6e8565aa54
  Time (mean ± σ):      97.4 ms ±   4.1 ms    [User: 297.7 ms, System: 28.6 ms]
  Range (min … max):    92.3 ms … 109.2 ms    27 runs

$ MIRIFLAGS="-Zmiri-disable-isolation" ./x.py miri library/alloc
  finished in 309.18s
```

Before alloc integration tests:

```
$ LD_LIBRARY_PATH=build/x86_64-unknown-linux-gnu/stage0-std/x86_64-unknown-linux-gnu/release/deps/ hyperfine build/x86_64-unknown-linux-gnu/stage0-std/x86_64-unknown-linux-gnu/release/deps/alloctests-439e7300c61a8046
  Time (mean ± σ):     103.2 ms ±   1.7 ms    [User: 135.7 ms, System: 39.4 ms]
  Range (min … max):    99.7 ms … 107.3 ms    28 runs

$ MIRIFLAGS="-Zmiri-disable-isolation" ./x.py miri library/alloc
  finished in 231.35s
```

After alloc integration tests:

```
$ LD_LIBRARY_PATH=build/x86_64-unknown-linux-gnu/stage0-std/x86_64-unknown-linux-gnu/release/deps/ hyperfine build/x86_64-unknown-linux-gnu/stage0-std/x86_64-unknown-linux-gnu/release/deps/alloctests-439e7300c61a8046
  Time (mean ± σ):     379.8 ms ±   4.7 ms    [User: 4620.5 ms, System: 1157.2 ms]
  Range (min … max):   373.6 ms … 386.9 ms    10 runs

$ MIRIFLAGS="-Zmiri-disable-isolation" ./x.py miri library/alloc
  finished in 449.24s
```

In my opinion the results don't change iterative library development or CI execution in meaningful ways. For example currently the library doc-tests take ~66s and incremental compilation takes 10+ seconds. However I only have limited knowledge of the various local development workflows that exist, and might be missing one that is significantly impacted by this change.
2024-10-11 16:53:47 -05:00
Stuart Cook
dd4f062b07
Rollup merge of #128399 - mammothbane:master, r=Amanieu,tgross35
liballoc: introduce String, Vec const-slicing

This change `const`-qualifies many methods on `Vec` and `String`, notably `as_slice`, `as_str`, `len`. These changes are made behind the unstable feature flag `const_vec_string_slice`.

## Motivation
This is to support simultaneous variance over ownership and constness. I have an enum type that may contain either `String` or `&str`, and I want to produce a `&str` from it in a possibly-`const` context.

```rust
enum StrOrString<'s> {
    Str(&'s str),
    String(String),
}

impl<'s> StrOrString<'s> {
    const fn as_str(&self) -> &str {
        match self {
             // In a const-context, I really only expect to see this variant, but I can't switch the implementation
             // in some mode like #[cfg(const)] -- there has to be a single body
             Self::Str(s) => s,

             // so this is a problem, since it's not `const`
             Self::String(s) => s.as_str(),
        }
    }
}
```

Currently `String` and `Vec` don't support this, but can without functional changes. Similar logic applies for `len`, `capacity`, `is_empty`.

## Changes

The essential thing enabling this change is that `Unique::as_ptr` is `const`. This lets us convert `RawVec::ptr` -> `Vec::as_ptr` -> `Vec::as_slice` -> `String::as_str`.

I had to move the `Deref` implementations into `as_{str,slice}` because `Deref` isn't `#[const_trait]`, but I would expect this change to be invisible up to inlining. I moved the `DerefMut` implementations as well for uniformity.
2024-10-07 15:37:06 +11:00
Nathan Perry
d793766a61 liballoc: introduce String, Vec const-slicing
This change `const`-qualifies many methods on Vec and String, notably
`as_slice`, `as_str`, `len`. These changes are made behind the unstable
feature flag `const_vec_string_slice` with the following tracking issue:

https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/129041
2024-10-06 19:58:35 -04:00
Trevor Gross
7c0c511933 Update compiler-builtins to 0.1.133
This includes [1], which should help resolve an infinite recusion issue
on WASM and SPARC (possibly other platforms). See [2] and [3] for
further details.

[1]: https://github.com/rust-lang/compiler-builtins/pull/708
[2]: https://rust-lang.zulipchat.com/#narrow/stream/131828-t-compiler/topic/sparc-unknown-none-elf.20regresssion.20between.20compiler-built.2E.2E.2E
[3]: https://rust-lang.zulipchat.com/#narrow/stream/131828-t-compiler/topic/.5Bwasm32.5D.20Infinite.20recursion.20.60compiler-builtins.60.20.60__multi3.60
2024-10-05 21:34:51 -05:00
bors
2b21f90d5e Auto merge of #131221 - XrXr:bump-compiler-builtins, r=tgross35
Update compiler-builtins to 0.1.132

This commit updates compiler-builtins from 0.1.130 to 0.1.132.

PRs in the delta:
 - rust-lang/compiler-builtins#698
 - rust-lang/compiler-builtins#699
 - rust-lang/compiler-builtins#701
 - rust-lang/compiler-builtins#704
 - rust-lang/compiler-builtins#627
 - rust-lang/compiler-builtins#706
2024-10-05 17:07:21 +00:00
Jubilee
49c6d78117
Rollup merge of #130403 - eduardosm:stabilize-const_slice_from_raw_parts_mut, r=workingjubilee
Stabilize `const_slice_from_raw_parts_mut`

Stabilizes https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/67456, since https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/57349 has been stabilized.

Stabilized const API:
```rust
// core::ptr
pub const fn slice_from_raw_parts_mut<T>(data: *mut T, len: usize) -> *mut [T];

// core::slice
pub const unsafe fn from_raw_parts_mut<'a, T>(data: *mut T, len: usize) -> &'a mut [T];

// core::ptr::NonNull
pub const fn slice_from_raw_parts(data: NonNull<T>, len: usize) -> Self
```

Closes https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/67456.

r? libs-api
2024-10-04 19:19:23 -07:00
Alan Wu
b955480d05 Update compiler-builtins to 0.1.132
This commit updates compiler-builtins from 0.1.130 to 0.1.132.

PRs in the delta:
 - rust-lang/compiler-builtins#698
 - rust-lang/compiler-builtins#699
 - rust-lang/compiler-builtins#701
 - rust-lang/compiler-builtins#704
 - rust-lang/compiler-builtins#627
 - rust-lang/compiler-builtins#706
2024-10-04 18:50:30 -04:00
EFanZh
d47e388843 Avoid emptiness check in PeekMut::pop 2024-10-03 22:15:52 +08:00
Eduardo Sánchez Muñoz
0dc250c497 Stabilize const_slice_from_raw_parts_mut 2024-10-01 22:02:19 +02:00
Trevor Gross
2fe41869c9
Rollup merge of #130914 - compiler-errors:insignificant-dtor, r=Amanieu
Mark some more types as having insignificant dtor

These were caught by https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/129864#issuecomment-2376658407, which is implementing a lint for some changes in drop order for temporaries in tail expressions.

Specifically, the destructors of `CString` and the bitpacked repr for `std::io::Error` are insignificant insofar as they don't have side-effects on things like locking or synchronization; they just free memory.

See some discussion on #89144 for what makes a drop impl "significant"
2024-09-30 19:18:50 -04:00
Lukas Bergdoll
71bb0e72ce Port sort-research-rs test suite Rust stdlib tests
This commit is a followup to https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/124032. It
replaces the tests that test the various sort functions in the standard library
with a test-suite developed as part of
https://github.com/Voultapher/sort-research-rs. The current tests suffer a
couple of problems:

- They don't cover important real world patterns that the implementations take
  advantage of and execute special code for.
- The input lengths tested miss out on code paths. For example, important safety
  property tests never reach the quicksort part of the implementation.
- The miri side is often limited to `len <= 20` which means it very thoroughly
  tests the insertion sort, which accounts for 19 out of 1.5k LoC.
- They are split into to core and alloc, causing code duplication and uneven
  coverage.
- The randomness is not repeatable, as it
  relies on `std:#️⃣:RandomState::new().build_hasher()`.

Most of these issues existed before
https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/124032, but they are intensified by it.
One thing that is new and requires additional testing, is that the new sort
implementations specialize based on type properties. For example `Freeze` and
non `Freeze` execute different code paths.

Effectively there are three dimensions that matter:

- Input type
- Input length
- Input pattern

The ported test-suite tests various properties along all three dimensions,
greatly improving test coverage. It side-steps the miri issue by preferring
sampled approaches. For example the test that checks if after a panic the set of
elements is still the original one, doesn't do so for every single possible
panic opportunity but rather it picks one at random, and performs this test
across a range of input length, which varies the panic point across them. This
allows regular execution to easily test inputs of length 10k, and miri execution
up to 100 which covers significantly more code. The randomness used is tied to a
fixed - but random per process execution - seed. This allows for fully
repeatable tests and fuzzer like exploration across multiple runs.

Structure wise, the tests are previously found in the core integration tests for
`sort_unstable` and alloc unit tests for `sort`. The new test-suite was
developed to be a purely black-box approach, which makes integration testing the
better place, because it can't accidentally rely on internal access. Because
unwinding support is required the tests can't be in core, even if the
implementation is, so they are now part of the alloc integration tests. Are
there architectures that can only build and test core and not alloc? If so, do
such platforms require sort testing? For what it's worth the current
implementation state passes miri `--target mips64-unknown-linux-gnuabi64` which
is big endian.

The test-suite also contains tests for properties that were and are given by the
current and previous implementations, and likely relied upon by users but
weren't tested. For example `self_cmp` tests that the two parameters `a` and `b`
passed into the comparison function are never references to the same object,
which if the user is sorting for example a `&mut [Mutex<i32>]` could lead to a
deadlock.

Instead of using the hashed caller location as rand seed, it uses seconds since
unix epoch / 10, which given timestamps in the CI should be reasonably easy to
reproduce, but also allows fuzzer like space exploration.
2024-09-30 15:05:30 +02:00
Guillaume Gomez
6799b80c79
Rollup merge of #130416 - BatmanAoD:130122-sort-by-docs, r=Mark-Simulacrum
resolve #130122: reword 'sort-by' edge-conditions documentation

See #130122 for rationale & preliminary discussion.
2024-09-29 12:37:51 +02:00
bors
55cb7359c7 Auto merge of #123778 - jhorstmann:optimize-upper-lower-auto-vectorization, r=the8472
Improve autovectorization of to_lowercase / to_uppercase functions

Refactor the code in the `convert_while_ascii` helper function to make it more suitable for auto-vectorization and also process the full ascii prefix of the string. The generic case conversion logic will only be invoked starting from the first non-ascii character.

The runtime on a microbenchmark with a small ascii-only input decreases from ~55ns to ~18ns per iteration. The new implementation also reduces the amount of unsafe code and encapsulates all unsafe inside the helper function.

Fixes #123712
2024-09-28 23:56:37 +00:00
Trevor Gross
fd36e8b0ec Update compiler_builtins to 0.1.130
This includes the following which add `__divtf3` and `__powtf2`, and do
some feature cleanup:

- https://github.com/rust-lang/compiler-builtins/pull/622
- https://github.com/rust-lang/compiler-builtins/pull/692
- https://github.com/rust-lang/compiler-builtins/pull/614
- https://github.com/rust-lang/compiler-builtins/pull/694

The `cc` bump [1] was previously included but was reverted due to
problems updating.

[1]: https://github.com/rust-lang/compiler-builtins/pull/690
2024-09-28 11:25:47 -04:00
Michael Goulet
24290efaff Mark some more smart pointers as insignificant 2024-09-27 11:59:39 -04:00
Michael Goulet
7033468a67 Mark some more types as having insignificant dtor 2024-09-27 11:59:39 -04:00
Jubilee
1e882537d4
Rollup merge of #130875 - folkertdev:naked-asm-bootstrap, r=tgross35
update `compiler-builtins` to 0.1.126

this requires the addition of a bootstrap variant of the new `naked_asm!` macro

r? `@tgross35`

extracted from https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/128651
2024-09-26 22:20:55 -07:00
Folkert de Vries
42542d8cda update compiler_builtins to 0.1.126 2024-09-26 09:54:28 +02:00
Josh Stone
f4d9d1a0ea Use &raw in the standard library
Since the stabilization in #127679 has reached stage0, 1.82-beta, we can
start using `&raw` freely, and even the soft-deprecated `ptr::addr_of!`
and `ptr::addr_of_mut!` can stop allowing the unstable feature.

I intentionally did not change any documentation or tests, but the rest
of those macro uses are all now using `&raw const` or `&raw mut` in the
standard library.
2024-09-25 17:03:20 -07:00
Jörn Horstmann
e393f56d37 Improve autovectorization of to_lowercase / to_uppercase functions
Refactor the code in the `convert_while_ascii` helper function to make
it more suitable for auto-vectorization and also process the full ascii
prefix of the string. The generic case conversion logic will only be
invoked starting from the first non-ascii character.

The runtime on microbenchmarks with ascii-only inputs improves between
1.5x for short and 4x for long inputs on x86_64 and aarch64.

The new implementation also encapsulates all unsafe inside the
`convert_while_ascii` function.

Fixes #123712
2024-09-23 11:31:29 +02:00
Matthias Krüger
510fc3432e
Rollup merge of #129550 - kornelski:boxasstr, r=joshtriplett,dtolnay
Add str.as_str() for easy Deref to string slices

Working with `Box<str>` is cumbersome, because in places like `iter.filter()` it can end up being `&Box<str>` or even `&&Box<str>`, and such type doesn't always get auto-dereferenced as expected.

Dereferencing such box to `&str` requires ugly syntax like `&**boxed_str` or `&***boxed_str`, with the exact amount of `*`s.

`Box<str>` is [not easily comparable with other string types](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/129852) via `PartialEq`. `Box<str>` won't work for lookups in types like `HashSet<String>`, because `Borrow<String>` won't take types like `&Box<str>`. OTOH `set.contains(s.as_str())` works nicely regardless of levels of indirection.

`String` has a simple solution for this: the `as_str()` method, and `Box<str>` should too.
2024-09-23 06:45:32 +02:00
Michael Goulet
c682aa162b Reformat using the new identifier sorting from rustfmt 2024-09-22 19:11:29 -04:00
Kyle J Strand
e7e0dc70fa reword edge-conditions documentation on all slice 'sort' functions; resolves #130122 2024-09-22 16:51:33 -06:00
Michael Goulet
493852ccd6
Rollup merge of #130408 - okaneco:into_lossy_refactor, r=Noratrieb
Avoid re-validating UTF-8 in `FromUtf8Error::into_utf8_lossy`

Part of the unstable feature `string_from_utf8_lossy_owned` - #129436

Refactor `FromUtf8Error::into_utf8_lossy` to copy valid UTF-8 bytes into the buffer, avoiding double validation of bytes.
Add tests that mirror the `String::from_utf8_lossy` tests.
2024-09-21 15:18:56 -04:00
okaneco
b94c5a169b Avoid re-validating UTF-8 in FromUtf8Error::into_utf8_lossy
Refactor `into_utf8_lossy` to copy valid UTF-8 bytes into the buffer,
avoiding double validation of bytes.
Add tests that mirror the `String::from_utf8_lossy` tests
2024-09-20 20:56:07 -04:00
bors
da889684c8 Auto merge of #130631 - GuillaumeGomez:rollup-jpgy1iv, r=GuillaumeGomez
Rollup of 7 pull requests

Successful merges:

 - #128209 (Remove macOS 10.10 dynamic linker bug workaround)
 - #130526 (Begin experimental support for pin reborrowing)
 - #130611 (Address diagnostics regression for `const_char_encode_utf8`.)
 - #130614 (Add arm64e-apple-tvos target)
 - #130617 (bail if there are too many non-region infer vars in the query response)
 - #130619 (Fix scraped examples height)
 - #130624 (Add `Vec::as_non_null`)

r? `@ghost`
`@rustbot` modify labels: rollup
2024-09-20 19:51:45 +00:00
bors
5ba6db1b64 Auto merge of #124895 - obeis:static-mut-hidden-ref, r=compiler-errors
Disallow hidden references to mutable static

Closes #123060

Tracking:
- https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/123758
2024-09-20 17:25:34 +00:00
Tim (Theemathas) Chirananthavat
ff86269368 Add Vec::as_non_null 2024-09-20 22:19:53 +07:00
Matthias Krüger
569153a432
Rollup merge of #130553 - GnomedDev:remove-clippy-paths, r=compiler-errors
[Clippy] Get rid of most `std` `match_def_path` usage, swap to diagnostic items.

Part of https://github.com/rust-lang/rust-clippy/issues/5393.

This was going to remove all `std` paths, but `SeekFrom` has issues being cleanly replaced with a diagnostic item as the paths are for variants, which currently cannot be diagnostic items.

This also, as a last step, categories the paths to help with future path removals.
2024-09-19 20:37:07 +02:00
Kornel
3dcb5a3962
Add str.as_str() for easy dereferencing of Box<str> 2024-09-19 16:25:56 +01:00
GnomedDev
5f85f73f63
[Clippy] Swap unnecessary_owned_empty_strings to use diagnostic item instead of path 2024-09-19 13:13:43 +01:00
GnomedDev
89532c0f30
[Clippy] Swap unnecessary_to_owned to use diagnostic item instead of path 2024-09-19 13:13:42 +01:00
GnomedDev
25da0e2e5d
[Clippy] Swap manual_while_let_some to use diagnostic items instead of paths 2024-09-19 13:13:42 +01:00
GnomedDev
15240a93c9
[Clippy] Swap repeat_vec_with_capacity to use diagnostic item instead of path 2024-09-19 13:13:42 +01:00
GnomedDev
846ae57fc1
[Clippy] Swap VecArgs::hir to use diagnostic items instead of paths 2024-09-19 13:13:40 +01:00
GnomedDev
28f4c8293a
[Clippy] Swap single_char_add_str/format_push_string to use diagnostic items instead of paths 2024-09-19 13:13:20 +01:00
GnomedDev
5e4716888a
[Clippy] Swap option_as_ref_deref to use diagnostic items instead of paths 2024-09-19 13:13:19 +01:00
GnomedDev
a786be5d06
[Clippy] Swap map_entry to use diagnostic items instead of paths 2024-09-19 08:26:37 +01:00
ultrabear
63f14b3a1e
remove feature attributes as const_maybe_uninit_as_mut_ptr is stabilized 2024-09-18 20:22:10 -07:00
Jubilee
4bd9de5512
Rollup merge of #130522 - GnomedDev:clippy-manual-retain-paths, r=compiler-errors
[Clippy] Swap `manual_retain` to use diagnostic items instead of paths

Part of https://github.com/rust-lang/rust-clippy/issues/5393, just a chore.
2024-09-18 14:32:28 -07:00
GnomedDev
a18564c198
[Clippy] Swap manual_retain to use diagnostic items instead of paths 2024-09-18 17:20:44 +01:00
Ben Kimock
46761442b0 read_volatile __rust_no_alloc_shim_is_unstable in alloc_zeroed 2024-09-17 22:26:21 -04:00
Matthias Krüger
f6fd305282
Rollup merge of #129674 - matthewpipie:rc-arc-new-cyclic-in, r=dtolnay
Add new_cyclic_in for Rc and Arc

Currently, new_cyclic_in does not exist for Rc and Arc. This is an oversight according to https://github.com/rust-lang/wg-allocators/issues/132.

This PR adds new_cyclic_in for Rc and Arc. The implementation is almost the exact same as new_cyclic with some small differences to make it allocator-specific. new_cyclic's implementation has been replaced with a call to `new_cyclic_in(data_fn, Global)`.

Remaining questions:
* ~~Is requiring Allocator to be Clone OK? According to https://github.com/rust-lang/wg-allocators/issues/88, Allocators should be cheap to clone. I'm just hesitant to add unnecessary constraints, though I don't see an obvious workaround for this function since many called functions in new_cyclic_in expect an owned Allocator. I see Allocator.by_ref() as an option, but that doesn't work on when creating Weak { ptr: init_ptr, alloc: alloc.clone() }, because the type of Weak then becomes Weak<T, &A> which is incompatible.~~ Fixed, thank you `@zakarumych!` This PR no longer requires the allocator to be Clone.
* Currently, new_cyclic_in's documentation is almost entirely copy-pasted from new_cyclic, with minor tweaks to make it more accurate (e.g. Rc<T> -> Rc<T, A>). The example section is removed to mitigate redundancy and instead redirects to cyclic_in. Is this appropriate?
* ~~The comments in new_cyclic_in (and much of the implementation) are also copy-pasted from new_cyclic. Would it be better to make a helper method new_cyclic_in_internal that both functions call, with either Global or the custom allocator? I'm not sure if that's even possible, since the internal method would have to return Arc<T, Global> and I don't know if it's possible to "downcast" that to an Arc<T>. Maybe transmute would work here?~~ Done, thanks `@zakarumych`
* Arc::new_cyclic is #[inline], but Rc::new_cyclic is not. Which is preferred?
* nit: does it matter where in the impl block new_cyclic_in is defined?
2024-09-17 20:45:50 +02:00
matthewpipie
6750f042ca
Update library/alloc/src/sync.rs
Co-authored-by: David Tolnay <dtolnay@gmail.com>
2024-09-16 20:05:15 -05:00
Matthias Krüger
df3cf91b63
Rollup merge of #129439 - okaneco:vec_string_lossy, r=Noratrieb
Implement feature `string_from_utf8_lossy_owned` for lossy conversion from `Vec<u8>` to `String` methods

Accepted ACP: https://github.com/rust-lang/libs-team/issues/116
Tracking issue: #129436

Implement feature for lossily converting from `Vec<u8>` to `String`
- Add `String::from_utf8_lossy_owned`
- Add `FromUtf8Error::into_utf8_lossy`

---
Related to #64727, but unsure whether to mark it "fixed" by this PR.
That issue partly asks for in-place replacement of the original allocation. We fulfill the other half of that request with these functions.

closes #64727
2024-09-15 16:01:36 +02:00