Rollup of 6 pull requests
Successful merges:
- #130549 (Add RISC-V vxworks targets)
- #130595 (Initial std library support for NuttX)
- #130734 (Fix: ices on virtual-function-elimination about principal trait)
- #130787 (Ban combination of GCE and new solver)
- #130809 (Update llvm triple for OpenHarmony targets)
- #130810 (Don't trap into the debugger on panics under Linux)
r? `@ghost`
`@rustbot` modify labels: rollup
Initial std library support for NuttX
This PR add the initial libstd support for NuttX platform (Tier 3), currently it depends on https://github.com/rust-lang/libc/pull/3909 which provide the essential libc definitions.
Add `File` constructors that return files wrapped with a buffer
In addition to the light convenience, these are intended to raise visibility that buffering is something you should consider when opening a file, since unbuffered I/O is a common performance footgun to Rust newcomers.
ACP: https://github.com/rust-lang/libs-team/issues/446
Tracking Issue: #130804
Pin memchr to 2.5.0 in the library rather than rustc_ast
The latest versions of `memchr` experience LTO-related issues when compiling for windows-gnu [1], so needs to be pinned. The issue is present in the standard library.
`memchr` has been pinned in `rustc_ast`, but since the workspace was recently split, this pin no longer has any effect on library crates.
Resolve this by adding `memchr` as an _unused_ dependency in `std`, pinned to 2.5. Additionally, remove the pin in `rustc_ast` to allow non-library crates to upgrade to the latest version.
Link: https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/127890 [1]
try-job: x86_64-mingw
try-job: x86_64-msvc
Add `optimize_for_size` variants for stable and unstable sort as well as select_nth_unstable
- Stable sort uses a simple merge-sort that re-uses the existing - rather gnarly - merge function.
- Unstable sort jumps directly to the branchless heapsort fallback.
- select_nth_unstable jumps directly to the median_of_medians fallback, which is augmented with a custom tiny smallsort and partition impl.
Some code is duplicated but de-duplication would bring it's own problems. For example `swap_if_less` is critical for performance, if the sorting networks don't inline it perf drops drastically, however `#[inline(always)]` is also a poor fit, if the provided comparison function is huge, it gives the compiler an out to only instantiate `swap_if_less` once and call it. Another aspect that would suffer when making `swap_if_less` pub, is having to cfg out dozens of functions in in smallsort module.
Part of https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/125612
r? `@Kobzol`
The latest versions of `memchr` experience LTO-related issues when
compiling for windows-gnu [1], so needs to be pinned. The issue is
present in the standard library.
`memchr` has been pinned in `rustc_ast`, but since the workspace was
recently split, this pin no longer has any effect on library crates.
Resolve this by adding `memchr` as an _unused_ dependency in `std`,
pinned to 2.5. Additionally, remove the pin in `rustc_ast` to allow
non-library crates to upgrade to the latest version.
Link: https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/127890 [1]
Mark `make_ascii_uppercase` and `make_ascii_lowercase` in `[u8]` and `str` as const.
Relevant tracking issue: #130698
This PR extends #130697 and #130713 to the similar methods in byte slices (`[u8]`) and string slices (`str`).
For the `str` methods, this simply requires adding the `const` specifier to the function signatures. The `[u8]` methods, however, require (at least a temporary) reimplementation due to the use of iterators and `for` loops.
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
Add test for `available_parallelism()`
This is a redo of [this PR](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/104095).
I changed the location of the test as per comments in the original thread. Otherwise the test is practically the same.
try-job: test-various
Mark `u8::make_ascii_uppercase` and `u8::make_ascii_lowercase` as const.
Relevant tracking issue: #130698
This PR extends #130697 by also marking the `make_ascii_uppercase` and `make_ascii_lowercase` methods in `u8` as const.
The `const_char_make_ascii` feature gate is additionally renamed to `const_make_ascii`.
Support `char::encode_utf16` in const scenarios.
Relevant tracking issue: #130660
The method `char::encode_utf16` should be marked "const" to allow compile-time conversions.
This PR additionally rewrites the `encode_utf16_raw` function for better readability whilst also reducing the amount of unsafe code.
try-job: x86_64-msvc
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.
Mark `char::make_ascii_uppercase` and `char::make_ascii_lowercase` as const.
Relevant tracking issue: #130698
The `make_ascii_uppercase` and `make_ascii_lowercase` methods in `char` should be marked "const."
With the stabilisation of [`const_mut_refs`](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/57349/), this simply requires adding the `const` specifier to the function signatures.
ABI compatibility: mention Result guarantee
This has been already documented in https://doc.rust-lang.org/std/result/index.html#representation, but for `Option` we mirrored those docs in the "ABI compatibility" section, so let's do the same here.
Cc ``@workingjubilee`` ``@rust-lang/lang``
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.
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
Address diagnostics regression for `const_char_encode_utf8`.
Relevant tracking issue: #130512
This PR regains full diagnostics for non-const calls to `char::encode_utf8`.
Remove macOS 10.10 dynamic linker bug workaround
Rust's current minimum macOS version is 10.12, so the hack can be removed. This PR also updates the `remove_dir_all` docs to reflect that all supported macOS versions are protected against TOCTOU race conditions (the fallback implementation was already removed in #127683).
try-job: dist-x86_64-apple
try-job: dist-aarch64-apple
try-job: dist-apple-various
try-job: aarch64-apple
try-job: x86_64-apple-1
`pal::unsupported::process::ExitCode`: use an `u8` instead of a `bool`
`ExitCode` should “represents the status code the current process can return to its parent under normal termination”, but is currently represented as a `bool` on unsupported platforms, making the `impl From<u8> for ExitCode` lossy.
Fixes#130532.
History: [IRLO thread](https://internals.rust-lang.org/t/mini-pre-rfc-redesigning-process-exitstatus/5426) (`ExitCode` as a `main` return), #48618 (initial impl), #93445 (`From<u8>` impl).
[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.
Improve documentation for <integer>::from_str_radix
Two improvements to the documentation:
- Document `-` as a valid character for signed integer destinations
- Make the documentation even more clear that extra whitespace and non-digit characters is invalid. Many other languages, e.g. c++, are very permissive in string to integer routines and simply try to consume as much as they can, ignoring the rest. This is trying to make the transition for developers who are used to the conversion semantics in these languages a bit easier.
Update the minimum external LLVM to 18
With this change, we'll have stable support for LLVM 18 and 19.
For reference, the previous increase to LLVM 17 was #122649.
cc `@rust-lang/wg-llvm`
r? nikic
Win: Open dir for sync access in remove_dir_all
A small follow up to #129800.
We should explicitly open directories for synchronous access. We ultimately use `GetFileInformationByHandleEx` to read directories which should paper over any issues caused by using async directory reads (or else return an error) but it's better to do the right thing in the first place. Note though that `delete` does not read or write any data so it's not necessary there.
Pass `fmt::Arguments` by reference to `PanicInfo` and `PanicMessage`
Resolves#129330
For some reason after #115974 and #126732 optimizations applied to panic handler became worse and compiler stopped removing panic locations if they are not used in the panic message. This PR fixes that and maybe we can merge it into beta before rust 1.81 is released.
Note: optimization only works with `lto = "fat"`.
r? libs-api
Take more advantage of the `isize::MAX` limit in `Layout`
Things like `padding_needed_for` are current implemented being super careful to handle things like `Layout::size` potentially being `usize::MAX`.
But now that #95295 has happened, that's no longer a concern. It's possible to add two `Layout::size`s together without risking overflow now.
So take advantage of that to remove a bunch of checked math that's not actually needed. For example, the round-up-and-add-next-size in `extend` doesn't need any overflow checks at all, just the final check for compatibility with the alignment.
(And while I was doing that I made it all unstably const, because there's nothing in `Layout` that's fundamentally runtime-only.)
Things like `padding_needed_for` are current implemented being super careful to handle things like `Layout::size` potentially being `usize::MAX`.
But now that 95295 has happened, that's no longer a concern. It's possible to add two `Layout::size`s together without risking overflow now.
So take advantage of that to remove a bunch of checked math that's not actually needed. For example, the round-up-and-add-next-size in `extend` doesn't need any overflow checks at all, just the final check for compatibility with the alignment.
(And while I was doing that I made it all unstably const, because there's nothing in `Layout` that's fundamentally runtime-only.)
Remove uneeded PartialOrd bound in cmp::Ord::clamp
There is a `Self: PartialOrd` bound in `Ord::clamp`, but it is already required by the trait itself. Likely a left-over from the const trait deletion in 76dbe29104.
Reported-by: `@noeensarguet`
There is a Self: PartialOrd bound in Ord::clamp, but it is already
required by the trait itself. Likely a left-over from the const trait
deletion in 76dbe29104.
Reported-by: @noeensarguet
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?
In the implementation of `force_mut`, I chose performance over safety.
For `LazyLock` this isn't really a choice; the code has to be unsafe.
But for `LazyCell`, we can have a full-safe implementation, but it will
be a bit less performant, so I went with the unsafe approach.
fix: Remove duplicate `LazyLock` example.
The top-level docs for `LazyLock` included two lines of code, each with an accompanying comment, that were identical and with nearly- identical comments. This looks like an oversight from a past edit which was perhaps trying to rewrite an existing example but ended up duplicating rather than replacing, though I haven't gone back through the Git history to check.
This commit removes what I personally think is the less-clear of the two examples.
[library/std/src/process.rs] `PartialEq` for `ExitCode`
Converting a third-party CLI to a library so started passing around [`std::process::ExitCode`](https://doc.rust-lang.org/std/process/struct.ExitCode.html) in an `Either`. Then I realised the tests can't be modified to compare equality of `ExitCode`s.
This PR fixes this oversight.
The top-level docs for `LazyLock` included two lines of code, each
with an accompanying comment, that were identical and with nearly-
identical comments. This looks like an oversight from a past edit
which was perhaps trying to rewrite an existing example but ended
up duplicating rather than replacing, though I haven't gone back
through the Git history to check.
This commit removes what I personally think is the less-clear of
the two examples.
Signed-off-by: Andrew Lilley Brinker <alilleybrinker@gmail.com>
Document futility of printing temporary pointers
In the user forum I've seen a few people trying to understand how borrowing and moves are implemented by peppering their code with printing of `{:p}` of references to variables and expressions. This is a bad idea. It gives misleading and confusing results, because of autoderef magic, printing pointers of temporaries on the stack, and/or causes LLVM to optimize code differently when values had their address exposed.
simplify float::classify logic
I played around with the float-classify test in the hope of triggering x87 bugs by strategically adding `black_box`, and still the exact expression `@beetrees` suggested [here](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/129835#issuecomment-2325661597) remains the only case I found where we get the wrong result on x87. Curiously, this bug only occurs when MIR optimizations are enabled -- probably the extra inlining that does is required for LLVM to hit the right "bad" case in the backend. But even for that case, it makes no difference whether `classify` is implemented in the simple bit-pattern-based version or the more complicated version we had before.
Without even a single testcase that can distinguish our `classify` from the naive version, I suggest we switch to the naive version.
Add `core::panic::abort_unwind`
`abort_unwind` is like `catch_unwind` except that it aborts the process if it unwinds, using the `#[rustc_nounwind]` mechanism also used by `extern "C" fn` to abort unwinding. The docs attempt to make it clear when to (rarely) and when not to (usually) use the function.
Although usage of the function is discouraged, having it available will help to normalize the experience when abort_unwind shims are hit, as opposed to the current ecosystem where there exist multiple common patterns for converting unwinding into a process abort.
For further information and justification, see the linked ACP.
- Tracking issue: https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/130338
- ACP: https://github.com/rust-lang/libs-team/issues/441
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
library: Compute Rust exception class from its string repr
Noticed this awkwardness while scanning through the code. I think we can do better than that.
move Option::unwrap_unchecked into const_option feature gate
That's where `unwrap` and `expect` are so IMO it makes more sense to group them together.
Part of #91930, #67441
Stabilize `&mut` (and `*mut`) as well as `&Cell` (and `*const Cell`) in const
This stabilizes `const_mut_refs` and `const_refs_to_cell`. That allows a bunch of new things in const contexts:
- Mentioning `&mut` types
- Creating `&mut` and `*mut` values
- Creating `&T` and `*const T` values where `T` contains interior mutability
- Dereferencing `&mut` and `*mut` values (both for reads and writes)
The same rules as at runtime apply: mutating immutable data is UB. This includes mutation through pointers derived from shared references; the following is diagnosed with a hard error:
```rust
#[allow(invalid_reference_casting)]
const _: () = {
let mut val = 15;
let ptr = &val as *const i32 as *mut i32;
unsafe { *ptr = 16; }
};
```
The main limitation that is enforced is that the final value of a const (or non-`mut` static) may not contain `&mut` values nor interior mutable `&` values. This is necessary because the memory those references point to becomes *read-only* when the constant is done computing, so (interior) mutable references to such memory would be pretty dangerous. We take a multi-layered approach here to ensuring no mutable references escape the initializer expression:
- A static analysis rejects (interior) mutable references when the referee looks like it may outlive the current MIR body.
- To be extra sure, this static check is complemented by a "safety net" of dynamic checks. ("Dynamic" in the sense of "running during/after const-evaluation, e.g. at runtime of this code" -- in contrast to "static" which works entirely by looking at the MIR without evaluating it.)
- After the final value is computed, we do a type-driven traversal of the entire value, and if we find any `&mut` or interior-mutable `&` we error out.
- However, the type-driven traversal cannot traverse `union` or raw pointers, so there is a second dynamic check where if the final value of the const contains any pointer that was not derived from a shared reference, we complain. This is currently a future-compat lint, but will become an ICE in #128543. On the off-chance that it's actually possible to trigger this lint on stable, I'd prefer if we could make it an ICE before stabilizing const_mut_refs, but it's not a hard blocker. This part of the "safety net" is only active for mutable references since with shared references, it has false positives.
Altogether this should prevent people from leaking (interior) mutable references out of the const initializer.
While updating the tests I learned that surprisingly, this code gets rejected:
```rust
const _: Vec<i32> = {
let mut x = Vec::<i32>::new(); //~ ERROR destructor of `Vec<i32>` cannot be evaluated at compile-time
let r = &mut x;
let y = x;
y
};
```
The analysis that rejects destructors in `const` is very conservative when it sees an `&mut` being created to `x`, and then considers `x` to be always live. See [here](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/65394#issuecomment-541499219) for a longer explanation. `const_precise_live_drops` will solve this, so I consider this problem to be tracked by https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/73255.
Cc `@rust-lang/wg-const-eval` `@rust-lang/lang`
Cc https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/57349
Cc https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/80384
Add `NonNull` convenience methods to `Box` and `Vec`
Implements the ACP: https://github.com/rust-lang/libs-team/issues/418.
The docs for the added methods are mostly copied from the existing methods that use raw pointers instead of `NonNull`.
I'm new to this "contributing to rustc" thing, so I'm sorry if I did something wrong. In particular, I don't know what the process is for creating a new unstable feature. Please advise me if I should do something. Thank you.
Stabilize entry_insert
This stabilises `HashMap::Entry::insert_entry`, following the FCP in tracking issue #65225.
This was implemented in #64656 five years ago.
simd_shuffle: require index argument to be a vector
Remove some codegen hacks by forcing the SIMD shuffle `index` argument to be a vector, which means (thanks to https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/128537) that it will automatically be passed as an immediate in LLVM. The only special-casing we still have is for the extra sanity-checks we add that ensure that the indices are all in-bounds. (And the GCC backend needs to do a bunch of work since the Rust intrinsic is modeled after what LLVM expects, which seems to be quite different from what GCC expects.)
Fixes https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/128738, see that issue for more context.
fix doc comments for Peekable::next_if(_eq)
Fix references to a nonexistent `consume` function in the doc comments for `Peekable::next_if` and `Peekable::next_if_eq`.
some const cleanup: remove unnecessary attributes, add const-hack indications
I learned that we use `FIXME(const-hack)` on top of the "const-hack" label. That seems much better since it marks the right place in the code and moves around with the code. So I went through the PRs with that label and added appropriate FIXMEs in the code. IMO this means we can then remove the label -- Cc ``@rust-lang/wg-const-eval.``
I also noticed some const stability attributes that don't do anything useful, and removed them.
r? ``@fee1-dead``
Expand documentation of PathBuf, discussing lack of sanitization
Various methods in `PathBuf`, in particular `set_file_name` and `set_extension` accept strings which include path seperators (like `../../etc`). These methods just glue together strings, so you can end up with strange strings.
This isn't reasonable to change/fix at this point, and might not even be fixable, but I think should be documented. In particular, you probably shouldn't blindly build paths using strings given by possibly malicious users.
Limit `libc::link` usage to `nto70` target only, not NTO OS
It seems QNX 7.0 does not support `linkat` at all (most tests were failing). Limiting to QNX 7.0 only, while using `linkat` for the future versions seems like the right path forward (tested on 7.0).
Fixes#129895
CC: `@japaric` `@flba-eb` `@saethlin`
enable const-float-classify test, and test_next_up/down on 32bit x86
The test_next_up/down tests have been disabled on all 32bit x86 targets, which goes too far -- they should definitely work on our (tier 1) i686 target, it is only without SSE that we might run into trouble due to https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/114479. However, I cannot reproduce that trouble any more -- maybe that got fixed by https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/123351?
The const-float-classify test relied on const traits "because we can", and got disabled when const traits got removed. That's an unfortunate reduction in test coverage of our float functionality, so let's restore the test in a way that does not rely on const traits.
The const-float tests are actually testing runtime behavior as well, and I don't think that runtime behavior is covered anywhere else. Probably they shouldn't be called "const-float", but we don't have a `tests/ui/float` folder... should I create one and move them there? Are there any other ui tests that should be moved there?
I also removed some FIXME referring to not use x87 for Rust-to-Rust-calls -- that has happened in #123351 so this got fixed indeed. Does that mean we can simplify all that float code again? I am not sure how to test it. Is running the test suite with an i586 target enough?
Cc ```@tgross35``` ```@workingjubilee```
It seems QNX 7.0 does not support `linkat` at all (most tests were failing). Limiting to QNX 7.0 only, while using `linkat` for the future versions seems like the right path forward (tested on 7.0).
Fixes 129895
Map `ERROR_CANT_RESOLVE_FILENAME` to `ErrorKind::FilesystemLoop`
cc #86442
As summarized in #130188, there seems to be a consensus that this should be done.
Clarify documentation labelling and definitions for std::collections
Page affected: https://doc.rust-lang.org/std/collections/index.html#performance
Changes:
- bulleted conventions
- expanded definitions on terms used
- more accessible language
- more informative headings
Also emit `missing_docs` lint with `--test` to fulfil expectations
This PR removes the "test harness" suppression of the `missing_docs` lint to be able to fulfil `#[expect]` (expectations) as it is now "relevant".
I think the goal was to maybe avoid false-positive while linting on public items under `#[cfg(test)]` but with effective visibility we should no longer have any false-positive.
Another possibility would be to query the lint level and only emit the lint if it's of expect level, but that is even more hacky.
Fixes https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/130021
try-job: x86_64-gnu-aux
Rollup of 11 pull requests
Successful merges:
- #128316 (Stabilize most of `io_error_more`)
- #129473 (use `download-ci-llvm=true` in the default compiler config)
- #129529 (Add test to build crates used by r-a on stable)
- #129981 (Remove `serialized_bitcode` from `LtoModuleCodegen`.)
- #130094 (Inform the solver if evaluation is concurrent)
- #130132 ([illumos] enable SIGSEGV handler to detect stack overflows)
- #130146 (bootstrap `naked_asm!` for `compiler-builtins`)
- #130149 (Helper function for formatting with `LifetimeSuggestionPosition`)
- #130152 (adapt a test for llvm 20)
- #130162 (bump download-ci-llvm-stamp)
- #130164 (move some const fn out of the const_ptr_as_ref feature)
r? `@ghost`
`@rustbot` modify labels: rollup
move some const fn out of the const_ptr_as_ref feature
When a `const fn` is still `#[unstable]`, it should generally use the same feature to track its regular stability and const-stability. Then when that feature moves towards stabilization we can decide whether the const-ness can be stabilized as well, or whether it should be moved into a new feature.
Also, functions like `ptr::as_ref` (which returns an `Option<&mut T>`) require `is_null`, which is tricky and blocked on some design concerns (see #74939). So move those to the is_null feature gate, as they should be stabilized together with `ptr.is_null()`.
Affects #91822, #122034, #75402, https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/74939
bootstrap `naked_asm!` for `compiler-builtins`
tracking issue: https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/90957
parent PR: https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/128651
in this PR, `naked_asm!` is added as an alias for `asm!` with one difference: `options(noreturn)` is always enabled by `naked_asm!`. That makes it future-compatible for when `naked_asm!` starts disallowing `options(noreturn)` later.
The `naked_asm!` macro must be introduced first so that we can upgrade `compiler-builtins` to use it, and can then change the implementation of `naked_asm!` in https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/128651
I've added some usages for `naked_asm!` in the tests, so we can be confident that it works, but I've left upgrading the whole test suite to the parent PR.
r? ``@Amanieu``
[illumos] enable SIGSEGV handler to detect stack overflows
Use the same code as Solaris. I couldn't find any tests regarding this, but I did test a stage0 build against my stack-exhaust-test binary [1]. Before:
```
running with use_stacker = No, new_thread = false, make_large_local = false
zsh: segmentation fault (core dumped) cargo run
```
After:
```
running with use_stacker = No, new_thread = false, make_large_local = false
thread 'main' has overflowed its stack
fatal runtime error: stack overflow
zsh: IOT instruction (core dumped) cargo +stage0 run
```
Fixes#128568.
[1] https://github.com/sunshowers/stack-exhaust-test/
Stabilize most of `io_error_more`
Sadly, venting my frustration with t-libs-api is not a constructive way to solve problems and get things done, so I will try to stick to stuff that actually matters here.
- Tracking issue for this feature was opened 3 years ago: #86442
- FCP to stabilize it was completed 19(!!) months ago: https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/86442#issuecomment-1368082102
- A PR with stabilization was similarly open for 19 months: #106375, but nothing ever came out of it. Presumably (it is hard to judge given the lack of communication) because a few of the variants still had some concerns voiced about them, even after the FCP.
So, to highlight a common sentiment:
> Maybe uncontroversial variants can be stabilised first and other variants (such as `QuotaExceeded` or `FilesystemLoop`) later? [^1]
[^1]: https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/106375#issuecomment-1435762236
> I would like to voice support stabilization of the uncontroversial variants. This would get those variants to stable and focus the discussion around the more controversial ones. I don't see any particular reason that all of these must be stabilized at the same time. [...] [^2]
[^2]: https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/106375#issuecomment-1742661555
> Maybe some less-controversial subset could be stabilized sooner? What’s blocking this issue from making progress? [^3]
[^3]: https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/86442#issuecomment-1691187483 (got 30 upvotes btw) (and no response)
So this is exactly what this PR does. It stabilizes the non-controversial variants now, leaving just a few of them behind.
Namely, this PR stabilizes:
- `HostUnreachable`
- `NetworkUnreachable`
- `NetworkDown`
- `NotADirectory`
- `IsADirectory`
- `DirectoryNotEmpty`
- `ReadOnlyFilesystem`
- `StaleNetworkFileHandle`
- `StorageFull`
- `NotSeekable`
- `FileTooLarge`
- `ResourceBusy`
- `ExecutableFileBusy`
- `Deadlock`
- `TooManyLinks`
- `ArgumentListTooLong`
- `Unsupported`
This PR does not stabilize:
- `FilesystemLoop`
- `FilesystemQuotaExceeded`
- `CrossesDevices`
- `InvalidFilename`
Hopefully, this will allow us to move forward with this highly and long awaited addition to std, both allowing to still polish the less clear parts of it and not leading to stagnation.
r? joshtriplett
because they seem to be listed as a part of t-libs-api and were one of the most responsive persons previously