adds a column number to `dbg!()`
this would be very nice to have for a few reasons:
1. the rfc, when deciding not to add column numbers to macro, failed to acknowledge any potential ambiguous cases -- such as the one provided in #114910 -- which do exist
2. would be able to consistently and easily jump directly to the `dbg!()` regardless of the sutation
3. takes up, at a maximum, 3 characters of _horizontal_ screen space
fixes#114910
[std] Add xcoff in object's feature list
object-0.32.0 has supported XCOFF format. And backtrace in submodule has been updated to support XCOFF and AIX. Add `xcoff` to supported feature list to make backtrace built on AIX.
Collect lang items from AST, get rid of `GenericBound::LangItemTrait`
r? `@cjgillot`
cc #115178
Looking forward, the work to remove `QPath::LangItem` will also be significantly more difficult, but I plan on doing it as well. Specifically, we have to change:
1. A lot of `rustc_ast_lowering` for things like expr `..`
2. A lot of astconv, since we actually instantiate lang and non-lang paths quite differently.
3. A ton of diagnostics and clippy lints that are special-cased via `QPath::LangItem`
Meanwhile, it was pretty easy to remove `GenericBound::LangItemTrait`, so I just did that here.
Rollup of 3 pull requests
Successful merges:
- #116888 (Add discussion that concurrent access to the environment is unsafe)
- #118888 (Uplift `TypeAndMut` and `ClosureKind` to `rustc_type_ir`)
- #118929 (coverage: Tidy up early parts of the instrumentor pass)
r? `@ghost`
`@rustbot` modify labels: rollup
Add discussion that concurrent access to the environment is unsafe
The bug report #27970 has existed for 8 years, the actual bug dates back to Rust pre-1.0. I documented it since it's in the interest of the user to be aware of it. The note can be removed once #27970 is fixed.
Fix cases where std accidentally relied on inline(never)
This PR increases the power of `-Zcross-crate-inline-threshold=always` so that it applies through `#[inline(never)]`. Note that though this is called "cross-crate-inlining" in this case especially it is _just_ lazy per-CGU codegen. The MIR inliner and LLVM still respect the attribute as much as they ever have.
Trying to bootstrap with the new `-Zcross-crate-inline-threshold=always` change revealed two bugs:
We have special intrinsics `assert_inhabited`, `assert_zero_valid`, and `assert_mem_uniniitalized_valid` which codegen backends will lower to nothing or a call to `panic_nounwind`. Since we may not have any call to `panic_nounwind` in MIR but emit one anyway, we need to specially tell `MirUsedCollector` about this situation.
`#[lang = "start"]` is special-cased already so that `MirUsedCollector` will collect it, but then when we make it cross-crate-inlinable it is only assigned to a CGU based on whether `MirUsedCollector` saw a call to it, which of course we didn't.
---
I started looking into this because https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/118683 revealed a case where we were accidentally relying on a function being `#[inline(never)]`, and cranking up cross-crate-inlinability seems like a way to find other situations like that.
r? `@nnethercote` because I don't like what I'm doing to the CGU partitioning code here but I can't come up with something much better
Windows: Allow `File::create` to work on hidden files
This makes `OpenOptions::new().write(true).create(true).truncate(true).open(&path)` work if the path exists and is a hidden file. Previously it would fail with access denied.
This makes it consistent with `OpenOptions::new().write(true).truncate(true).open(&path)` (note the lack of `create`) which does not have this restriction. It's also more consistent with other platforms.
Fixes#115745 (see that issue for more details).
remove redundant imports
detects redundant imports that can be eliminated.
for #117772 :
In order to facilitate review and modification, split the checking code and removing redundant imports code into two PR.
r? `@petrochenkov`
detects redundant imports that can be eliminated.
for #117772 :
In order to facilitate review and modification, split the checking code and
removing redundant imports code into two PR.
Add emulated TLS support
This is a reopen of https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/96317 . many android devices still only use 128 pthread keys, so using emutls can be helpful.
Currently LLVM uses emutls by default for some targets (such as android, openbsd), but rust does not use it, because `has_thread_local` is false.
This commit has some changes to allow users to enable emutls:
1. add `-Zhas-thread-local` flag to specify that std uses `#[thread_local]` instead of pthread key.
2. when using emutls, decorate symbol names to find thread local symbol correctly.
3. change `-Zforce-emulated-tls` to `-Ztls-model=emulated` to explicitly specify whether to generate emutls.
r? `@Amanieu`
Currently LLVM uses emutls by default
for some targets (such as android, openbsd),
but rust does not use it, because `has_thread_local` is false.
This commit has some changes to allow users to enable emutls:
1. add `-Zhas-thread-local` flag to specify
that std uses `#[thread_local]` instead of pthread key.
2. when using emutls, decorate symbol names
to find thread local symbol correctly.
3. change `-Zforce-emulated-tls` to `-Ztls-model=emulated`
to explicitly specify whether to generate emutls.
Use `unwinding` crate for unwinding on Xous platform
This patch adds support for using [unwinding](https://github.com/nbdd0121/unwinding) on platforms where libunwinding isn't viable. An example of such a platform is `riscv32imac-unknown-xous-elf`.
### Background
The Rust project maintains a fork of llvm at [llvm-project](https://github.com/rust-lang/llvm-project/) where it applies patches on top of the llvm project. This mostly seems to be to get unwinding support for the SGX project, and there may be other patches that I'm unaware of.
There is a lot of machinery in the build system to support compiling `libunwind` on other platforms, and I needed to add additional patches to llvm in order to add support for Xous.
Rather than continuing down this path, it seemed much easier to use a Rust-based library. The `unwinding` crate by `@nbdd0121` fits this description perfectly.
### Future work
This could potentially replace the custom patches for `libunwind` on other platforms such as SGX, and could enable unwinding support on many more exotic platforms.
### Anti-goals
This is not designed to replace `libunwind` on tier-one platforms or those where unwinding support already exists. There is already a well-established approach for unwinding there. Instead, this aims to enable unwinding on new platforms where C++ code may be difficult to compile.
The main() function takes an argument that contains the eh_frame
address. Implement `unwinding` support by looking for unwinding data at
this address.
Signed-off-by: Sean Cross <sean@xobs.io>
std: Invert logic for inclusion of `sys_common::net`
The `library/std/src/sys_common/net.rs` module is intended to define common implementations of networking-related APIs across a variety of platforms that share similar APIs (e.g. Berkeley-style sockets and all). This module is not included for more fringe targets however such as UEFI or "unknown" targets to libstd (those classified as `restricted-std`). Previously the `sys_common/net.rs` file was set up such that an allow-list indicated it shouldn't be used. This commit inverts the logic to have an allow-list of when it should be used instead.
The goal of this commit is to make it a bit easier to experiment with a new Rust target. Currently more esoteric targets are required to get an exception in this `cfg_if` block to use `crate::sys::net` such as for unsupported targets. With this inversion of logic only targets which actually support networking will be listed, where most of those are lumped under `cfg(unix)`.
Given that this change is likely to cause some breakage for some target by accident I've attempted to be somewhat robust with this by following these steps to defining the new predicate for inverted logic.
1. Take all supported targets and filter out all `cfg(unix)` ones as these should all support `sys_common/net.rs`.
2. Take remaining targets and filter out `cfg(windows)` ones.
3. The remaining dozen-or-so targets were all audited by hand. Mostly this included `target_os = "hermit"` and `target_os = "solid_asp3"` which required an allow-list entry, but remaining targets were all already excluded (didn't use `sys_common/net.rs` so they were left out.
If this causes breakage it should be relatively easy to fix and I'd be happy to follow-up with any PRs necessary.
move exposed-provenance APIs into separate feature gate
We have already stated explicitly for all the 'exposed' functions that
> Using this method means that code is *not* following strict provenance rules.
However, they were part of the same feature gate and still described as part of the strict provenance experiment. Unfortunately, their semantics are much less clear and certainly nowhere near stabilization, so in preparation for an attempt to stabilize the strict provenance APIs, I suggest we split the things related to "exposed" into their own feature gate. I also used this opportunity to better explain how Exposed Provenance fits into the larger plan here: this is *one possible candidate* for `as` semantics, but we don't know if it is actually viable, so we can't really promise that it is equivalent to `as`. If it works out we probably want to make `as` equivalent to the 'exposed' APIs; if it doesn't, we will remove them again and try to find some other semantics for `as`.
Add substring API for `OsStr`
This adds a method for taking a substring of an `OsStr`, which in combination with [`OsStr::as_encoded_bytes()`](https://doc.rust-lang.org/std/ffi/struct.OsStr.html#method.as_encoded_bytes) makes it possible to implement most string operations in safe code.
API:
```rust
impl OsStr {
pub fn slice_encoded_bytes<R: ops::RangeBounds<usize>>(&self, range: R) -> &Self;
}
```
Motivation, examples and research at https://github.com/rust-lang/libs-team/issues/306.
Tracking issue: #118485
cc `@epage`
r? libs-api
The `library/std/src/sys_common/net.rs` module is intended to define
common implementations of networking-related APIs across a variety of
platforms that share similar APIs (e.g. Berkeley-style sockets and all).
This module is not included for more fringe targets however such as UEFI
or "unknown" targets to libstd (those classified as `restricted-std`).
Previously the `sys_common/net.rs` file was set up such that an
allow-list indicated it shouldn't be used. This commit inverts the logic
to have an allow-list of when it should be used instead.
The goal of this commit is to make it a bit easier to experiment with a
new Rust target. Currently more esoteric targets are required to get an
exception in this `cfg_if` block to use `crate::sys::net` such as for
unsupported targets. With this inversion of logic only targets which
actually support networking will be listed, where most of those are
lumped under `cfg(unix)`.
Given that this change is likely to cause some breakage for some target
by accident I've attempted to be somewhat robust with this by following
these steps to defining the new predicate for inverted logic.
1. Take all supported targets and filter out all `cfg(unix)` ones as
these should all support `sys_common/net.rs`.
2. Take remaining targets and filter out `cfg(windows)` ones.
3. The remaining dozen-or-so targets were all audited by hand. Mostly
this included `target_os = "hermit"` and `target_os = "solid_asp3"`
which required an allow-list entry, but remaining targets were all
already excluded (didn't use `sys_common/net.rs` so they were left
out.
If this causes breakage it should be relatively easy to fix and I'd be
happy to follow-up with any PRs necessary.
Implement thread parking for xous
This follows the pattern set by [the Windows parker](ddef56d5df/library/std/src/sys/windows/thread_parking.rs) when it uses keyed events. An atomic variable is used to track the state and optimize the fast path, while notifications are send via the ticktime server to block and unblock the thread.
ping `@xobs`
`@rustbot` label +T-libs +A-atomic
r? libs
unify read_to_end and io::copy impls for reading into a Vec
This ports over the initial probe (to avoid allocation) and the dynamic read sizing from the io::copy specialization to the `default_read_to_end` implementation which already had its own optimizations for different cases.
I think it should be a best-of-both now.
suggested by `@a1phyr` in https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/117576#issuecomment-1803408492
Use an absolute path to the NUL device
While a bare "NUL" *should* be redirected to the NUL device, especially in this simple case, let's be explicit that we aren't opening a file called "NUL" and instead open it directly.
This will also set a good example for people copying std code.
r? libs
Update windows-bindgen and define `INVALID_HANDLE_VALUE` ourselves
We generate bindings to the Windows API via the `windows-bindgen` crate, which is ultimately what's also used to generate the `windows-sys` and `windows` crates. However, there currently is some custom sauce just for std which makes it a bit different from the vanilla bindings. I would love for us to reduce and eventually remove the differences entirely so that std is using the exact same bindings as everyone else. Maybe in the future we can even just have a normal dependency on `windows-sys`.
This PR removes one of those special things. Our definition of `INVALID_HANDLE_VALUE` relies on an experimental nightly feature for strict provenance, so lets bring that back in house. It also excludes it from the codegen step though that isn't strictly necessary as we override it in any case.
This PR also updates windows-bingen to 0.52.0.