Commit Graph

3491 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Marcus Calhoun-Lopez
8c18844324 Fix build on i686-apple-darwin systems
On 32-bit systems, fdopendir is called `_fdopendir$INODE64$UNIX2003`.
On 64-bit systems, fdopendir is called `_fdopendir$INODE64`.
2022-03-28 12:52:14 -07:00
Marcus Calhoun-Lopez
c2d5c64132 Fix build on i686-apple-darwin systems
Replace `target_arch = "x86_64"` with `not(target_arch = "aarch64")` so that i686-apple-darwin systems dynamically choose implementation.
2022-03-28 12:52:14 -07:00
Noa
97c58e8a87 Touch up ExitCode docs 2022-03-28 09:54:57 -07:00
David Tolnay
d55854d484
Link to std::io's platform-specific behavior disclaimer 2022-03-27 21:01:28 -07:00
Chris Denton
7200afaadb
Check for " and \ in a filename
And also fix typo.
2022-03-25 18:03:03 +00:00
est31
8c0e6a8f10 std::process docs: linkify references to output, spawn and status 2022-03-25 14:41:37 +01:00
Martin Pool
93e9f5e966 Document Linux kernel handoff in std::io::copy and std::fs::copy 2022-03-24 21:44:39 -07:00
Mara Bos
c9ae3fe68f Explicitly use CLOCK_MONOTONIC in futex_wait.
Instant might be changed to use CLOCK_BOOTTIME at some point.
2022-03-24 11:11:31 +01:00
Mara Bos
23badeb4cb Make Timespec available in sys::unix. 2022-03-24 11:11:03 +01:00
Mara Bos
87299298d9 Use FUTEX_WAIT_BITSET rather than FUTEX_WAIT on Linux. 2022-03-24 09:51:48 +01:00
Thom Chiovoloni
09d83e292d
Add a compile_fail doctest to check that io::Error: !UnwindSafe 2022-03-23 17:29:19 -07:00
Thom Chiovoloni
b898ad499f
Ensure io::Error's bitpacked repr doesn't accidentally impl UnwindSafe 2022-03-23 17:12:47 -07:00
Mara Bos
da4ef044c1 Spin before blocking in Mutex::lock. 2022-03-23 14:58:44 +01:00
Mara Bos
10b6f33508 Update tests. 2022-03-23 14:58:44 +01:00
Mara Bos
7f26adeac1 Replace Linux Mutex and Condvar with futex based ones. 2022-03-23 14:58:44 +01:00
Mara Bos
73d63488e4 Add futex_wake_all. 2022-03-23 14:53:59 +01:00
Mara Bos
4fbd71c943 Return timeout status in futex_wait. 2022-03-23 14:53:59 +01:00
bors
36748cf814 Auto merge of #95173 - m-ou-se:sys-locks-module, r=dtolnay
Move std::sys::{mutex, condvar, rwlock} to std::sys::locks.

This cleans up the the std::sys modules a bit by putting the locks in a single module called `locks` rather than spread over the three modules `mutex`, `condvar`, and `rwlock`. This makes it easier to organise lock implementations, which helps with https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/93740.
2022-03-23 06:01:48 +00:00
Chris Denton
9270ca193f
Add test for issue #95178 2022-03-23 05:33:44 +00:00
Chris Denton
23320a2f83
Command: handle exe and batch files separately 2022-03-23 05:33:43 +00:00
Chris Denton
d59cf5629e
Refactor: Move argument building into args 2022-03-23 04:18:47 +00:00
Dylan DPC
67d6cc6ef3
Rollup merge of #91608 - workingjubilee:fold-neon-fp, r=nagisa,Amanieu
Fold aarch64 feature +fp into +neon

Arm's FEAT_FP and Feat_AdvSIMD describe the same thing on AArch64:
The Neon unit, which handles both floating point and SIMD instructions.
Moreover, a configuration for AArch64 must include both or neither.
Arm says "entirely proprietary" toolchains may omit floating point:
https://developer.arm.com/documentation/102374/0101/Data-processing---floating-point
In the Programmer's Guide for Armv8-A, Arm says AArch64 can have
both FP and Neon or neither in custom implementations:
https://developer.arm.com/documentation/den0024/a/AArch64-Floating-point-and-NEON

In "Bare metal boot code for Armv8-A", enabling Neon and FP
is just disabling the same trap flag:
https://developer.arm.com/documentation/dai0527/a

In an unlikely future where "Neon and FP" become unrelated,
we can add "[+-]fp" as its own feature flag.
Until then, we can simplify programming with Rust on AArch64 by
folding both into "[+-]neon", which is valid as it supersets both.

"[+-]neon" is retained for niche uses such as firmware, kernels,
"I just hate floats", and so on.

I am... pretty sure no one is relying on this.

An argument could be made that, as we are not an "entirely proprietary" toolchain, we should not support AArch64 without floats at all. I think that's a bit excessive. However, I want to recognize the intent: programming for AArch64 should be simplified where possible. For x86-64, programmers regularly set up illegal feature configurations because it's hard to understand them, see https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/89586. And per the above notes, plus the discussion in https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/86941, there should be no real use cases for leaving these features split: the two should in fact always go together.

- Fixes rust-lang/rust#95002.
- Fixes rust-lang/rust#95064.
- Fixes rust-lang/rust#95122.
2022-03-23 03:05:28 +01:00
Jubilee Young
b807d5970b Fold aarch64 feature +fp into +neon
Arm's FEAT_FP and Feat_AdvSIMD describe the same thing on AArch64:
The Neon unit, which handles both floating point and SIMD instructions.
Moreover, a configuration for AArch64 must include both or neither.
Arm says "entirely proprietary" toolchains may omit floating point:
https://developer.arm.com/documentation/102374/0101/Data-processing---floating-point
In the Programmer's Guide for Armv8-A, Arm says AArch64 can have
both FP and Neon or neither in custom implementations:
https://developer.arm.com/documentation/den0024/a/AArch64-Floating-point-and-NEON

In "Bare metal boot code for Armv8-A", enabling Neon and FP
is just disabling the same trap flag:
https://developer.arm.com/documentation/dai0527/a

In an unlikely future where "Neon and FP" become unrelated,
we can add "[+-]fp" as its own feature flag.
Until then, we can simplify programming with Rust on AArch64 by
folding both into "[+-]neon", which is valid as it supersets both.

"[+-]neon" is retained for niche uses such as firmware, kernels,
"I just hate floats", and so on.
2022-03-22 15:14:33 -07:00
Mara Bos
733153f2e5 Move std::sys::{mutex, condvar, rwlock} to std::sys::locks. 2022-03-22 18:19:47 +01:00
ZHANGWENTAI
71e34231e0 add some fix
Signed-off-by: ZHANGWENTAI <2092913428@qq.com>
2022-03-22 23:33:08 +08:00
ZHANGWENTAI
161b01a9ac fix the lint problem
Signed-off-by: ZHANGWENTAI <2092913428@qq.com>
2022-03-22 23:10:00 +08:00
ZHANGWENTAI
6e971a8bc2 update Termination trait docs 2022-03-22 22:37:17 +08:00
bors
b9c4067417 Auto merge of #95158 - sunfishcode:sunfishcode/windows-8, r=joshtriplett
Preserve the Windows `GetLastError` error in `HandleOrInvalid`.

In the `TryFrom<HandleOrInvalid> for OwnedHandle` and
`TryFrom<HandleOrNull> for OwnedHandle` implemenations, `forget` the
owned handle on the error path, to avoid calling `CloseHandle` on an
invalid handle. It's harmless, except that it may overwrite the
thread's `GetLastError` error.

r? `@joshtriplett`
2022-03-22 05:48:49 +00:00
Mara Bos
2437422622 Stabilize Stdin::lines. 2022-03-21 22:57:31 +01:00
Mara Bos
ac6996345d Move pthread locks to own module. 2022-03-21 15:51:25 +01:00
Dan Gohman
6c407d0592 Add a testcase. 2022-03-20 15:56:25 -07:00
Dan Gohman
95e1702284 Preserve the Windows GetLastError error in HandleOrInvalid.
In the `TryFrom<HandleOrInvalid> for OwnedHandle` and
`TryFrom<HandleOrNull> for OwnedHandle` implemenations, `forget` the
owned handle on the error path, to avoid calling `CloseHandle` on an
invalid handle. It's harmless, except that it may overwrite the
thread's `GetLastError` error.
2022-03-20 15:37:31 -07:00
Matthias Krüger
3c02b5192e
Rollup merge of #95114 - ChrisDenton:symlink-test, r=the8472
Skip a test if symlink creation is not possible

If someone running tests on Windows does not have Developer Mode enabled then creating symlinks will fail which in turn would cause this test to fail. This can be a stumbling block for contributors.
2022-03-20 20:42:43 +01:00
Matthias Krüger
acb7ed141b
Rollup merge of #94749 - RalfJung:remove-dir-all-miri, r=cuviper
remove_dir_all: use fallback implementation on Miri

Fixes https://github.com/rust-lang/miri/issues/1966

The new implementation requires `openat`, `unlinkat`, and `fdopendir`. These cannot easily be shimmed in Miri since libstd does not expose APIs corresponding to them. So for now it is probably easiest to just use the fallback code in Miri. Nobody should run Miri as root anyway...
2022-03-20 09:14:58 +01:00
Jubilee Young
5a25e228eb Stabilize thread::is_finished 2022-03-19 19:53:26 -07:00
Chris Denton
68c03cd386
Skip a test if symlink creation is not possible 2022-03-19 15:09:36 +00:00
Dylan DPC
d1ef570a2f
Rollup merge of #94650 - ChrisDenton:windows-absolute-fix, r=dtolnay
Relax tests for Windows dos device names

Windows 11 no longer turn paths ending with dos device names into device paths.

E.g. `C:\path\to\COM1.txt` used to get turned into `\\.\COM1`. Whereas now this path is left as is.

Note though that if the given path is an exact (case-insensitive) match for the string `COM1` then it'll still be converted to `\\.\COM1`.
2022-03-19 14:50:24 +01:00
Dylan DPC
3545003b29
Rollup merge of #93858 - krallin:process-process_group, r=dtolnay
Add a `process_group` method to UNIX `CommandExt`

- Tracking issue: #93857
- RFC: https://github.com/rust-lang/rfcs/pull/3228

Add a `process_group` method to `std::os::unix::process::CommandExt` that
allows setting the process group id (i.e. calling `setpgid`) in the child, thus
enabling users to set process groups while leveraging the `posix_spawn` fast
path.
2022-03-19 14:50:24 +01:00
Dylan DPC
30b4182fa7
Rollup merge of #94984 - ericseppanen:cstr_from_bytes, r=Mark-Simulacrum
add `CStr` method that accepts any slice containing a nul-terminated string

I haven't created an issue (tracking or otherwise) for this yet; apologies if my approach isn't correct. This is my first code contribution.

This change adds a member fn that converts a slice into a `CStr`; it is intended to be safer than `from_ptr` (which is unsafe and may read out of bounds), and more useful than `from_bytes_with_nul` (which requires that the caller already know where the nul byte is).

The reason I find this useful is for situations like this:
```rust
let mut buffer = [0u8; 32];
unsafe {
    some_c_function(buffer.as_mut_ptr(), buffer.len());
}
let result = CStr::from_bytes_with_nul(&buffer).unwrap();
```

This code above returns an error with `kind = InteriorNul`, because `from_bytes_with_nul` expects that the caller has passed in a slice with the NUL byte at the end of the slice. But if I just got back a nul-terminated string from some FFI function, I probably don't know where the NUL byte is.

I would wish for a `CStr` constructor with the following properties:
- Accept `&[u8]` as input
- Scan for the first NUL byte and return the `CStr` that spans the correct sub-slice (see [future note below](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/94984#issuecomment-1070754281)).
- Return an error if no NUL byte is found within the input slice

I asked on [Zulip](https://rust-lang.zulipchat.com/#narrow/stream/122651-general/topic/CStr.20from.20.26.5Bu8.5D.20without.20knowing.20the.20NUL.20location.3F) whether this sounded like a good idea, and got a couple of positive-sounding responses from ``@joshtriplett`` and ``@AzureMarker.``

This is my first draft, so feedback is welcome.

A few issues that definitely need feedback:

1. Naming. ``@joshtriplett`` called this `from_bytes_with_internal_nul` on Zulip, but after staring at all of the available methods, I believe that this function is probably what end users want (rather than the existing fn `from_bytes_with_nul`). Giving it a simpler name (**`from_bytes`**) implies that this should be their first choice.
2. Should I add a similar method on `CString` that accepts `Vec<u8>`? I'd assume the answer is probably yes, but I figured I'd try to get early feedback before making this change bigger.
3. What should the error type look like? I made a unit struct since `CStr::from_bytes` can only fail in one obvious way, but if I need to do this for `CString` as well then that one may want to return `FromVecWithNulError`. And maybe that should dictate the shape of the `CStr` error type also?

Also, cc ``@poliorcetics`` who wrote #73139 containing similar fns.
2022-03-19 02:02:02 +01:00
Dylan DPC
463e516b0c
Rollup merge of #93692 - mfrw:mfrw/document-keyword-in, r=dtolnay
keyword_docs: document use of `in` with `pub` keyword

Signed-off-by: Muhammad Falak R Wani <falakreyaz@gmail.com>

Fixes: #93609
2022-03-19 02:02:02 +01:00
Dylan DPC
fe55eee9a5
Rollup merge of #93263 - sunfishcode:sunfishcode/detatched-console-handle, r=dtolnay
Consistently present absent stdio handles on Windows as NULL handles.

This addresses #90964 by making the std API consistent about presenting
absent stdio handles on Windows as NULL handles. Stdio handles may be
absent due to `#![windows_subsystem = "windows"]`, due to the console
being detached, or due to a child process having been launched from a
parent where stdio handles are absent.

Specifically, this fixes the case of child processes of parents with absent
stdio, which previously ended up with `stdin().as_raw_handle()` returning
`INVALID_HANDLE_VALUE`, which was surprising, and which overlapped with an
unrelated valid handle value. With this patch, `stdin().as_raw_handle()`
now returns null in these situation, which is consistent with what it
does in the parent process.

And, document this in the "Windows Portability Considerations" sections of
the relevant documentation.
2022-03-19 02:02:01 +01:00
Dylan DPC
e9f63fdf86
Rollup merge of #92663 - cuviper:generic-write-cursor, r=dtolnay
Implement `Write for Cursor<[u8; N]>`, plus `A: Allocator` cursor support

This implements `Write for Cursor<[u8; N]>`, and also adds support for generic `A: Allocator` in `Box` and `Vec` cursors.

This was inspired by a user questioning why they couldn't write a `Cursor<[u8; N]>`:
https://users.rust-lang.org/t/why-vec-and-not-u8-makes-cursor-have-write/68210

Related history:
- #27197 switched `AsRef<[u8]>` for reading and seeking
- #67415 tried to use `AsMut<[u8]>` for writing, but did not specialize `Vec`.
2022-03-19 02:02:00 +01:00
Dylan DPC
a87590e34e
Rollup merge of #92612 - atopia:update-lib-l4re, r=dtolnay
Update stdlib for the l4re target

This PR contains the work by ``@humenda`` and myself to update standard library support for the x86_64-unknown-l4re-uclibc tier 3 target, split out from  humenda/rust as requested in #85967. The changes have been rebased on current master and updated in follow up commits by myself. The publishing of the changes is authorized and preferred by the original author. To preserve attribution, when standard library changes were introduced as part of other changes to the compiler, I have kept the changes concerning the standard library and altered the commit messages as indicated. Any incompatibilities have been remedied in follow up commits, so that the PR as a whole should result in a clean update of the target.
2022-03-19 02:01:59 +01:00
Dylan DPC
ba2d5ede70
Rollup merge of #92519 - ChrisDenton:command-maybe-verbatim, r=dtolnay
Use verbatim paths for `process::Command` if necessary

In #89174, the standard library started using verbatim paths so longer paths are usable by default. However, `Command` was originally left out because of the way `CreateProcessW` was being called. This was changed as a side effect of #87704 so now `Command` paths can be converted to verbatim too (if necessary).
2022-03-19 02:01:59 +01:00
Eric Seppanen
d5fe4cad5a add CStr::from_bytes_until_nul
This adds a member fn that converts a slice into a CStr; it is intended
to be safer than from_ptr (which is unsafe and may read out of bounds),
and more useful than from_bytes_with_nul (which requires that the caller
already know where the nul byte is).

feature gate: cstr_from_bytes_until_nul

Also add an error type FromBytesUntilNulError for this fn.
2022-03-18 15:46:49 -07:00
David Tolnay
7d44316bcf
Bump impl Write for Cursor<[u8; N]> to 1.61 2022-03-18 15:04:37 -07:00
Matthias Krüger
c8cf9e3a8f
Rollup merge of #95058 - wcampbell0x2a:use-then-in-unix-process, r=dtolnay
Add use of bool::then in sys/unix/process

Remove `else { None }` in favor of using `bool::then()`
2022-03-18 21:50:49 +01:00
bors
d6f3a4ecb4 Auto merge of #88098 - Amanieu:oom_panic, r=nagisa
Implement -Z oom=panic

This PR removes the `#[rustc_allocator_nounwind]` attribute on `alloc_error_handler` which allows it to unwind with a panic instead of always aborting. This is then used to implement `-Z oom=panic` as per RFC 2116 (tracking issue #43596).

Perf and binary size tests show negligible impact.
2022-03-18 03:01:46 +00:00
wcampbell
b1f3179804 feat: Add use of bool::then in sys/unix/process
Remove else { None } in favor of using bool::then()
2022-03-17 19:12:09 -04:00
codehorseman
01dbfb3eb2 resolve the conflict in compiler/rustc_session/src/parse.rs
Signed-off-by: codehorseman <cricis@yeah.net>
2022-03-16 20:12:30 +08:00
Dylan DPC
0732ea2f3e
Rollup merge of #94957 - iamzhangyong:explanation-read_line, r=Dylan-DPC
Improve the explanation about the behaviour of read_line

Close issue like https://github.com/rust-lang/book/issues/2574
2022-03-16 03:34:34 +01:00
Dylan DPC
2c06c861de
changed wording 2022-03-16 03:04:40 +01:00
zed.zy
7da07ff48b Improve the explanation about the behaviour of read_line 2022-03-15 19:37:52 +08:00
Thomas Orozco
b628497b7c Add a process_group method to UNIX CommandExt 2022-03-14 14:33:41 +00:00
David Tolnay
af53809c87
Format core and std macro rules, removing needless surrounding blocks 2022-03-11 15:26:51 -08:00
Mara Bos
1890372c9e Update tests. 2022-03-11 17:38:29 +01:00
Mara Bos
4d7daa07b1 Update advance and advance_slices docs. 2022-03-11 17:29:53 +01:00
Mara Bos
a23e7513fa Panic when advance_slices()'ing too far. 2022-03-11 17:29:53 +01:00
Dylan DPC
7189fceab7
Rollup merge of #93283 - m1guelperez:master, r=Mark-Simulacrum
Fix for localized windows editions in testcase fn read_link() Issue#93211

This PR aims to fix the issue with localized windows versions that do not necessarily have the folder "Documents and settings" in English.

The idea was provided by `@the8472.` We check if the "CI" environment variable is set, then we always check for the "Documents and Settings"-folder, otherwise we check if the folder exists on the local machine, and if not we skip this assert.

Resoles #93211.
2022-03-11 13:38:36 +01:00
Dylan DPC
f97a1c6909
Rollup merge of #94826 - allgoewer:fix-retain-documentation, r=yaahc
Improve doc wording for retain on some collections

I found the documentation wording on the various retain methods on many collections to be unusual.
I tried to invert the relation by switching `such that` with `for which` .
2022-03-11 03:32:06 +01:00
Dylan DPC
ab851653a5
Rollup merge of #94356 - Thomasdezeeuw:stabilize_unix_socket_creation, r=dtolnay
Rename unix::net::SocketAddr::from_path to from_pathname and stabilize it

Stabilizes `unix_socket_creation`.

Closes https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/93423
r? `@m-ou-se`
2022-03-11 03:32:03 +01:00
Maik Allgöwer
229e01d11f Improve doc wording for retain on some collections 2022-03-11 00:29:43 +01:00
Dylan DPC
3979e150cc
Rollup merge of #94790 - RalfJung:portable-simd-miri, r=Dylan-DPC
enable portable-simd doctests in Miri

With https://github.com/rust-lang/miri/pull/2013 we shouldn't need to disable these tests any more. :)
2022-03-10 23:13:01 +01:00
Dylan DPC
5a7f09d9a3
Rollup merge of #93950 - T-O-R-U-S:use-modern-formatting-for-format!-macros, r=Mark-Simulacrum
Use modern formatting for format! macros

This updates the standard library's documentation to use the new format_args syntax.
The documentation is worthwhile to update as it should be more idiomatic
(particularly for features like this, which are nice for users to get acquainted
with). The general codebase is likely more hassle than benefit to update: it'll
hurt git blame, and generally updates can be done by folks updating the code if
(and when) that makes things more readable with the new format.

A few places in the compiler and library code are updated (mostly just due to
already having been done when this commit was first authored).

`eprintln!("{}", e)` becomes `eprintln!("{e}")`, but `eprintln!("{}", e.kind())` remains untouched.
2022-03-10 23:12:57 +01:00
Matthias Krüger
f1a677789a
Rollup merge of #94644 - m-ou-se:scoped-threads-drop-soundness, r=joshtriplett
Fix soundness issue in scoped threads.

This was discovered in https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/94559#discussion_r820116323

The `scope()` function returns when all threads are finished, but I accidentally considered a thread 'finished' before dropping their panic payload or ignored return value.

So if a thread returned (or panics with) something that in its `Drop` implementation still uses borrowed stuff, it goes wrong.

https://play.rust-lang.org/?version=nightly&mode=debug&edition=2021&gist=2a1f19ac4676cdabe43e24e536ff9358
2022-03-10 19:00:07 +01:00
T-O-R-U-S
72a25d05bf Use implicit capture syntax in format_args
This updates the standard library's documentation to use the new syntax. The
documentation is worthwhile to update as it should be more idiomatic
(particularly for features like this, which are nice for users to get acquainted
with). The general codebase is likely more hassle than benefit to update: it'll
hurt git blame, and generally updates can be done by folks updating the code if
(and when) that makes things more readable with the new format.

A few places in the compiler and library code are updated (mostly just due to
already having been done when this commit was first authored).
2022-03-10 10:23:40 -05:00
Matthias Krüger
313a668234
Rollup merge of #94635 - jhpratt:merge-deprecated-attrs, r=davidtwco
Merge `#[deprecated]` and `#[rustc_deprecated]`

The first commit makes "reason" an alias for "note" in `#[rustc_deprecated]`, while still prohibiting it in `#[deprecated]`.

The second commit changes "suggestion" to not just be a feature of `#[rustc_deprecated]`. This is placed behind the new `deprecated_suggestion` feature. This needs a tracking issue; let me know if this PR will be approved and I can create one.

The third commit is what permits `#[deprecated]` to be used when `#![feature(staged_api)]` is enabled. This isn't yet used in stdlib (only tests), as it would require duplicating all deprecation attributes until a bootstrap occurs. I intend to submit a follow-up PR that replaces all uses and removes the remaining `#[rustc_deprecated]` code after the next bootstrap.

`@rustbot` label +T-libs-api +C-feature-request +A-attributes +S-waiting-on-review
2022-03-10 12:20:51 +01:00
Ralf Jung
29d979fb3c enable portable-simd doctests in Miri 2022-03-09 19:31:25 -05:00
Matthias Krüger
06944d9e49
Rollup merge of #94768 - fortanix:raoul/fix_close_read_wakes_up_test_sgx_platform, r=dtolnay
Ignore `close_read_wakes_up` test on SGX platform

PR #94714 enabled the `close_read_wakes_up` test for all platforms. This is incorrect. This test should be ignored at least for the SGX platform.

cc: ``@mzohreva`` ``@jethrogb``
2022-03-09 23:14:15 +01:00
Jacob Pratt
5636655d0f
New deprecated_suggestion feature, use in tests 2022-03-09 16:32:47 -05:00
Mara Bos
4d56c1563c Add documentation about lifetimes to thread::scope. 2022-03-09 15:20:00 +01:00
Raoul Strackx
491350ce75 Ignore close_read_wakes_up test on SGX platform 2022-03-09 12:28:16 +01:00
Benjamin Lamowski
bc199b5778 add as_raw() method to L4Re's Socket mock
Minimally comply with with #87329 to avoid breaking tests on L4Re.
2022-03-09 11:53:27 +01:00
Benjamin Lamowski
cb013d4802 put L4Re specifics into their own platform
The initial stdlib modifications for L4Re just used the linux specifics
directly because they were reasonably close to L4Re's behavior.
However, this breaks when Linux-specific code relies on code that is
only available for the linux target, such as in #81825.

Put L4Re into its own platform to avoid such breakage in the future.
This uses the Linux-specific code as a starting point, which seems to be
in line with other OSes with a unix-y interface such as Fuchsia.
2022-03-09 11:53:27 +01:00
Benjamin Lamowski
997dc5899a adapt L4Re network interface mock to #87329
Copy the relevant trait implementations from the Unix default.
2022-03-09 11:53:27 +01:00
Benjamin Lamowski
c0dc41f5ff L4Re does not support sanitizing standard streams
L4Re provides limited POSIX support which includes support for
standard I/O streams, and a limited implementation of the standard file
handling API. However, because as a capability based OS it strives to
only make a local view available to each application, there are
currently no standardized special files like /dev/null that could serve
to sanitize closed standard FDs.

For now, skip any attempts to sanitize standard streams until a more
complete POSIX runtime is available.
2022-03-09 11:53:27 +01:00
Benjamin Lamowski
898f379817 drop unused libc imports on L4Re
As a capability-based microkernel OS, L4Re only has incomplete support
for POSIX APIs, in particular it does not implement UIDs and GIDs.
2022-03-09 11:53:27 +01:00
Sebastian Humenda
11b717647e fix return value of LookupHost::port()
[Benjamin Lamowski: Reworded commit message after split commit.]
2022-03-09 11:53:27 +01:00
Sebastian Humenda
7a74d28c38 fix return values in L4Re networking stub
[Benjamin Lamowski: Reworded commit message after split commit.]
2022-03-09 11:53:27 +01:00
Mara Bos
b97d87518d Add soundness test for dropping scoped thread results before joining. 2022-03-09 11:47:53 +01:00
Mara Bos
1c06eb7c1f Remove outdated comment. 2022-03-09 11:47:46 +01:00
Mara Bos
7a481ff8a4 Properly abort when thread result panics on drop. 2022-03-09 11:44:24 +01:00
Mara Bos
5226395d6f Fix soundness issue in scoped threads. 2022-03-09 11:44:24 +01:00
Dylan DPC
28d06bdec9
Rollup merge of #94756 - ChrisDenton:unreachable, r=yaahc
Use `unreachable!` for an unreachable code path

Closes #73212
2022-03-09 06:38:53 +01:00
bors
163c207fc2 Auto merge of #94750 - cuviper:dirent64_min, r=joshtriplett
unix: reduce the size of DirEntry

On platforms where we call `readdir` instead of `readdir_r`, we store
the name as an allocated `CString` for variable length. There's no point
carrying around a full `dirent64` with its fixed-length `d_name` too.
2022-03-09 02:17:58 +00:00
Ralf Jung
28eb06bd98 docs 2022-03-08 20:09:44 -05:00
Chris Denton
57442beb18
Use unreachable! for an unreachable code path 2022-03-09 01:05:47 +00:00
Dylan DPC
5629026e90
Rollup merge of #94730 - msabansal:sabansal/b-atomic-mut-ptr, r=Dylan-DPC
Reverted atomic_mut_ptr feature removal causing compilation break

Fixes a regression introduced as part of https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/94546

Std no longer compiles on nightly while using the following commnd:

export RUSTFLAGS='-C target-feature=+atomics,+bulk-memory'
cargo build --target wasm32-unknown-unknown -Z build-std=panic_abort,std

I can help add tests to avoid future breaks but i couldn't understand the test framework
2022-03-08 22:44:01 +01:00
Dylan DPC
a67b6299b4
Rollup merge of #94724 - cuviper:rmdirall-cstr, r=Dylan-DPC
unix: Avoid name conversions in `remove_dir_all_recursive`

Each recursive call was creating an `OsString` for a `&Path`, only for
it to be turned into a `CString` right away. Instead we can directly
pass `.name_cstr()`, saving two allocations each time.
2022-03-08 22:44:00 +01:00
Dylan DPC
ee8109d12d
Rollup merge of #94714 - ChrisDenton:win-close_read_wakes_up, r=Mark-Simulacrum
Enable `close_read_wakes_up` test on Windows

I wonder if we could/should try enabling this again? It was closed by #38867 due to #31657. I've tried running this test (along with other tests) on my machine a number of times and haven't seen this fail yet,

Caveat: the worst that can happen is this succeeds initially but then causes random hangs in CI. This is not a great failure mode and would be a reason not to do this.

If this does work out, closes #39006

r? `@Mark-Simulacrum`
2022-03-08 22:43:57 +01:00
Josh Stone
e8b9ba84be unix: reduce the size of DirEntry
On platforms where we call `readdir` instead of `readdir_r`, we store
the name as an allocated `CString` for variable length. There's no point
carrying around a full `dirent64` with its fixed-length `d_name` too.
2022-03-08 13:36:01 -08:00
Ralf Jung
2a2b212ea3 remove_dir_all: use fallback implementation on Miri 2022-03-08 16:26:10 -05:00
Matthias Krüger
a077e44c14
Rollup merge of #94712 - kckeiks:remove-rwlock-read-error-assumption, r=Mark-Simulacrum
promot debug_assert to assert

Fixes #94705
2022-03-08 11:04:55 +01:00
Matthias Krüger
aec535f805
Rollup merge of #94559 - m-ou-se:thread-scope-spawn-closure-without-arg, r=Mark-Simulacrum
Remove argument from closure in thread::Scope::spawn.

This implements ```@danielhenrymantilla's``` [suggestion](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/93203#issuecomment-1040798286) for improving the scoped threads interface.

Summary:

The `Scope` type gets an extra lifetime argument, which represents basically its own lifetime that will be used in `&'scope Scope<'scope, 'env>`:

```diff
- pub struct Scope<'env> { .. };
+ pub struct Scope<'scope, 'env: 'scope> { .. }

  pub fn scope<'env, F, T>(f: F) -> T
  where
-     F: FnOnce(&Scope<'env>) -> T;
+     F: for<'scope> FnOnce(&'scope Scope<'scope, 'env>) -> T;
```

This simplifies the `spawn` function, which now no longer passes an argument to the closure you give it, and now uses the `'scope` lifetime for everything:

```diff
-     pub fn spawn<'scope, F, T>(&'scope self, f: F) -> ScopedJoinHandle<'scope, T>
+     pub fn spawn<F, T>(&'scope self, f: F) -> ScopedJoinHandle<'scope, T>
      where
-         F: FnOnce(&Scope<'env>) -> T + Send + 'env,
+         F: FnOnce() -> T + Send + 'scope,
-         T: Send + 'env;
+         T: Send + 'scope;
```

The only difference the user will notice, is that their closure now takes no arguments anymore, even when spawning threads from spawned threads:

```diff
  thread::scope(|s| {
-     s.spawn(|_| {
+     s.spawn(|| {
          ...
      });
-     s.spawn(|s| {
+     s.spawn(|| {
          ...
-         s.spawn(|_| ...);
+         s.spawn(|| ...);
      });
  });
```

<details><summary>And, as a bonus, errors get <em>slightly</em> better because now any lifetime issues point to the outermost <code>s</code> (since there is only one <code>s</code>), rather than the innermost <code>s</code>, making it clear that the lifetime lasts for the entire <code>thread::scope</code>.

</summary>

```diff
  error[E0373]: closure may outlive the current function, but it borrows `a`, which is owned by the current function
   --> src/main.rs:9:21
    |
- 7 |         s.spawn(|s| {
-   |                  - has type `&Scope<'1>`
+ 6 |     thread::scope(|s| {
+   |                    - lifetime `'1` appears in the type of `s`
  9 |             s.spawn(|| println!("{:?}", a)); // might run after `a` is dropped
    |                     ^^                  - `a` is borrowed here
    |                     |
    |                     may outlive borrowed value `a`
    |
  note: function requires argument type to outlive `'1`
   --> src/main.rs:9:13
    |
  9 |             s.spawn(|| println!("{:?}", a)); // might run after `a` is dropped
    |             ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
  help: to force the closure to take ownership of `a` (and any other referenced variables), use the `move` keyword
    |
  9 |             s.spawn(move || println!("{:?}", a)); // might run after `a` is dropped
    |                     ++++
"
```
</details>

The downside is that the signature of `scope` and `Scope` gets slightly more complex, but in most cases the user wouldn't need to write those, as they just use the argument provided by `thread::scope` without having to name its type.

Another downside is that this does not work nicely in Rust 2015 and Rust 2018, since in those editions, `s` would be captured by reference and not by copy. In those editions, the user would need to use `move ||` to capture `s` by copy. (Which is what the compiler suggests in the error.)
2022-03-08 11:04:51 +01:00
Miguel Perez
b795ae5280 Fix for issue #93283 2022-03-08 10:16:18 +01:00
Sandeep Bansal
d8e75bc1b7 Reverted atomic-mut-ptr feature removal causing compilation break 2022-03-07 23:41:52 -08:00
Josh Stone
ef3e33bd16 unix: Avoid name conversions in remove_dir_all_recursive
Each recursive call was creating an `OsString` for a `&Path`, only for
it to be turned into a `CString` right away. Instead we can directly
pass `.name_cstr()`, saving two allocations each time.
2022-03-07 18:51:53 -08:00
Chris Denton
24ec0f223d
Enable close_read_wakes_up on Windows 2022-03-07 22:35:17 +00:00
Mara Bos
a3d269e91c
Use f instead of || f().
Co-authored-by: Mark Rousskov <mark.simulacrum@gmail.com>
2022-03-07 22:14:02 +00:00
Fausto
776be7e73e promot debug_assert to assert 2022-03-07 15:48:35 -05:00
Eric Holk
7723506d13 Stabilize const_fn_fn_ptr_basics and const_fn_trait_bound 2022-03-07 08:47:15 -08:00
bors
2631aeef82 Auto merge of #94272 - tavianator:readdir-reclen-for-real, r=cuviper
fs: Don't dereference a pointer to a too-small allocation

ptr::addr_of!((*ptr).field) still requires ptr to point to an
appropriate allocation for its type.  Since the pointer returned by
readdir() can be smaller than sizeof(struct dirent), we need to entirely
avoid dereferencing it as that type.

Link: https://github.com/rust-lang/miri/pull/1981#issuecomment-1048278492
Link: https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/93459#discussion_r795089971
2022-03-07 04:48:23 +00:00
fee1-dead
8ea3f236dc
Rollup merge of #94649 - ChrisDenton:unix-absolute-fix, r=Dylan-DPC
Unix path::absolute: Fix leading "." component

Testing leading `.` and `..` components were missing from the unix tests.

This PR adds them and fixes the leading `.` case. It also fixes the test cases so that they do an exact comparison.

This problem reported by ``@axetroy``
2022-03-06 22:35:31 +11:00
bors
c274e4969f Auto merge of #94648 - RalfJung:rollup-4iorcrd, r=RalfJung
Rollup of 4 pull requests

Successful merges:

 - #94630 (Update note about tier 2 docs.)
 - #94633 (Suggest removing a semicolon after derive attributes)
 - #94642 (Fix source code pages scroll)
 - #94645 (do not attempt to open cgroup files under Miri)

Failed merges:

r? `@ghost`
`@rustbot` modify labels: rollup
2022-03-05 19:53:45 +00:00
Chris Denton
3009eec10d
Use as_os_str to compare exact paths 2022-03-05 18:15:58 +00:00
Chris Denton
27f6d2c7f6
Relax tests for Windows dos device names
Windows 11 no longer turn paths ending with dos device names into device paths.

E.g. `C:\path\to\COM1.txt` used to get turned into `\\.\COM1`. Whereas now the path is left as is.
2022-03-05 18:14:34 +00:00
Chris Denton
0421af9a46
Use as_os_str to compare exact paths 2022-03-05 17:58:08 +00:00
Chris Denton
e8b7371a23
Unix path::absolute: Fix leading "." component
Testing leading `.` and `..` components were missing from the unix tests.
2022-03-05 17:57:12 +00:00
Ralf Jung
51b4ea2ba1 do not attempt to open cgroup files under Miri 2022-03-05 11:23:25 -05:00
Mara Bos
3b9e214c40 Small fixes in thread local code. 2022-03-05 11:39:03 +01:00
Mara Bos
c68c384b88 Update documentation in thread/local.rs. 2022-03-05 11:39:03 +01:00
Mara Bos
36c904594e Add debug asserts in thread local cell set methods. 2022-03-05 11:39:03 +01:00
Mara Bos
93c409d6e2 Add tracking issue number for local_key_cell_methods. 2022-03-05 11:39:03 +01:00
Mara Bos
88a693c4f4 Rename LocalKey's with_{ref,mut} to with_borrow{,_mut}. 2022-03-05 11:39:03 +01:00
Mara Bos
52ce11996b Implement RFC 3184 - thread local cell methods. 2022-03-05 11:39:03 +01:00
bors
86067bb461 Auto merge of #94546 - JmPotato:std-features-cleanup, r=m-ou-se
Clean up the std library's #![feature]s

Signed-off-by: JmPotato <ghzpotato@gmail.com>

This is part of https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/87766.

r? `@m-ou-se`
2022-03-05 07:26:54 +00:00
Dylan DPC
3e1e9b4866
Rollup merge of #94446 - rusticstuff:remove_dir_all-illumos-fix, r=cuviper
UNIX `remove_dir_all()`: Try recursing first on the slow path

This only affects the _slow_ code path - if there is no `dirent.d_type` or if it is `DT_UNKNOWN`.

POSIX specifies that calling `unlink()` or `unlinkat(..., 0)` on a directory is allowed to succeed:
> The _path_ argument shall not name a directory unless the process has appropriate privileges and the implementation supports using _unlink()_ on directories.

This however can cause dangling inodes requiring an fsck e.g. on Illumos UFS, so we have to avoid that in the common case. We now just try to recurse into it first and unlink() if we can't open it as a directory.

The other two commits integrate the Macos x86-64 implementation reducing redundancy. Split into two commits for better reviewing.

Fixes #94335.
2022-03-05 04:46:37 +01:00
JmPotato
9b952b7d3a Clean up the std library's #![feature]s
Signed-off-by: JmPotato <ghzpotato@gmail.com>
2022-03-05 11:17:43 +08:00
bors
69f11fff33 Auto merge of #94628 - Dylan-DPC:rollup-v2slupe, r=Dylan-DPC
Rollup of 5 pull requests

Successful merges:

 - #94362 (Add well known values to `--check-cfg` implementation)
 - #94577 (only disable SIMD for doctests in Miri (not for the stdlib build itself))
 - #94595 (Fix invalid `unresolved imports` errors for a single-segment import)
 - #94596 (Delay bug in expr adjustment when check_expr is called multiple times)
 - #94618 (Don't round stack size up for created threads in Windows)

Failed merges:

r? `@ghost`
`@rustbot` modify labels: rollup
2022-03-05 00:15:54 +00:00
Dylan DPC
629e7aa718
Rollup merge of #94618 - lewisclark:remove-stack-size-rounding, r=yaahc
Don't round stack size up for created threads in Windows

Fixes #94454

Windows does the rounding itself, so there isn't a need to explicity do the rounding beforehand, as mentioned by ```@ChrisDenton``` in #94454

> The operating system rounds up the specified size to the nearest multiple of the system's allocation granularity (typically 64 KB). To retrieve the allocation granularity of the current system, use the [GetSystemInfo](https://docs.microsoft.com/en-us/windows/win32/api/sysinfoapi/nf-sysinfoapi-getsysteminfo) function.

https://docs.microsoft.com/en-us/windows/win32/procthread/thread-stack-size
2022-03-04 22:58:37 +01:00
bors
5a7e4c6b5a Auto merge of #94298 - Urgau:rustbuild-check-cfg, r=Mark-Simulacrum
Enable conditional compilation checking on the Rust codebase

This pull-request enable conditional compilation checking on every rust project build by the `bootstrap` tool.

To be more specific, this PR only enable well known names checking + extra names (bootstrap, parallel_compiler, ...).

r? `@Mark-Simulacrum`
2022-03-04 21:52:34 +00:00
Lewis Clark
6843dd5013 Don't round stack size up for created threads 2022-03-04 18:04:43 +00:00
Matthias Krüger
ee3a2c7a8c
Rollup merge of #94549 - m-ou-se:thread-is-finished, r=yaahc
Rename JoinHandle::is_running to is_finished.

This is renaming `is_running` to `is_finished` as discussed on the tracking issue here: https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/90470#issuecomment-1050188499

Taking some of the docs suggestions from https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/94033
2022-03-04 17:31:06 +01:00
Matthias Krüger
904c6ca95c
Rollup merge of #94236 - reez12g:add_track_caller_87707, r=yaahc
Add #[track_caller] to track callers when initializing poisoned Once

This PR is for this Issue.
https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/87707

With this fix, we expect to be able to track the caller when poisoned Once is initialized.
2022-03-04 17:31:04 +01:00
Dan Gohman
7ddf41c7b1 Remove redundant code for handling NULL handles on Windows.
Before calling `CreateProcessW`, stdio handles are passed through
`stdio::get_handle`, which already converts NULL to
`INVALID_HANDLE_VALUE`, so we don't need extra checks for NULL after
that point.
2022-03-04 05:09:40 -08:00
Dan Gohman
7dd32469e5 Fix a compilation error. 2022-03-04 05:09:40 -08:00
Dan Gohman
ee02f01ea6 Consistently present absent stdio handles on Windows as NULL handles.
This addresses #90964 by making the std API consistent about presenting
absent stdio handles on Windows as NULL handles. Stdio handles may be
absent due to `#![windows_subsystem = "windows"]`, due to the console
being detached, or due to a child process having been launched from a
parent where stdio handles are absent.

Specifically, this fixes the case of child processes of parents with absent
stdio, which previously ended up with `stdin().as_raw_handle()` returning
`INVALID_HANDLE_VALUE`, which was surprising, and which overlapped with an
unrelated valid handle value. With this patch, `stdin().as_raw_handle()`
now returns null in these situation, which is consistent with what it
does in the parent process.

And, document this in the "Windows Portability Considerations" sections of
the relevant documentation.
2022-03-04 05:09:38 -08:00
Hans Kratz
735f60c34f Integrate macos x86-64 remove_dir_all() impl. Step 2: readd 2022-03-04 13:47:50 +01:00
Hans Kratz
41b4423cdf Integrate macos x86-64 remove_dir_all() impl. Step 1: remove 2022-03-04 13:47:36 +01:00
Hans Kratz
e427333071 remove_dir_all(): try recursing first instead of trying to unlink()
This only affects the `slow` code path, if there is no `dirent.d_type` or if
the type is `DT_UNKNOWN`.

POSIX specifies that calling `unlink()` or `unlinkat(..., 0)` on a directory can
succeed:
> "The _path_ argument shall not name a directory unless the process has
> appropriate privileges and the implementation supports using _unlink()_ on
> directories."
This however can cause orphaned directories requiring an fsck e.g. on Illumos
UFS, so we have to avoid that in the common case. We now just try to recurse
into it first and unlink() if we can't open it as a directory.
2022-03-04 13:33:35 +01:00
Mara Bos
9099353ea8
Use '_ for irrelevant lifetimes in Debug impl.
Co-authored-by: Daniel Henry-Mantilla <daniel.henry.mantilla@gmail.com>
2022-03-04 10:41:39 +00:00
Loïc BRANSTETT
a93c7abc69 Add #![allow(unexpected_cfgs)] in preparation of global --check-cfg 2022-03-04 11:34:51 +01:00
reez12g
bca67fe02f Add #[track_caller] to track callers when initializing poisoned Once 2022-03-03 22:41:27 -05:00
Dylan DPC
308efafc77
Rollup merge of #94572 - sunfishcode:sunfishcode/handle-or, r=joshtriplett
Use `HandleOrNull` and `HandleOrInvalid` in the Windows FFI bindings.

Use the new `HandleOrNull` and `HandleOrInvalid` types that were introduced
as part of [I/O safety] in a few functions in the Windows FFI bindings.

This factors out an `unsafe` block and two `unsafe` function calls in the
Windows implementation code.

And, it helps test `HandleOrNull` and `HandleOrInvalid`, and indeed, it
turned up a bug: `OwnedHandle` also needs to be `#[repr(transparent)]`,
as it's used inside of `HandleOrNull` and `HandleOrInvalid` which are also
`#[repr(transparent)]`.

r? ```@joshtriplett```

[I/O safety]: https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/87074
2022-03-04 02:06:42 +01:00
Dylan DPC
cdfb39ef07
Rollup merge of #93965 - Mark-Simulacrum:owned-stdio, r=dtolnay
Make regular stdio lock() return 'static handles

This also deletes the unstable API surface area previously added to expose this
functionality on new methods rather than built into the current set.

Closes #86845 (tracking issue for unstable API needed without this)

r? ``````@dtolnay`````` to kick off T-libs-api FCP
2022-03-04 02:06:39 +01:00
Dylan DPC
4c70200476
Rollup merge of #88805 - krhancoc:master, r=dtolnay
Clarification of default socket flags

This PR outlines the decision to disable inheritance of socket objects when possible to child processes in the documentation.
2022-03-04 02:06:37 +01:00
Dan Gohman
35606490ab Use HandleOrNull and HandleOrInvalid in the Windows FFI bindings.
Use the new `HandleOrNull` and `HandleOrInvalid` types that were introduced
as part of [I/O safety] in a few functions in the Windows FFI bindings.

This factors out an `unsafe` block and two `unsafe` function calls in the
Windows implementation code.

And, it helps test `HandleOrNull` and `HandleOrInvalid`, which indeed turned
up a bug: `OwnedHandle` also needs to be `#[repr(transparent)]`, as it's
used inside of `HandleOrNull` and `HandleOrInvalid` which are also
`#[repr(transparent)]`.

[I/O safety]: https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/87074
2022-03-03 11:20:49 -08:00
Matthias Krüger
a638f50d8d
Rollup merge of #92697 - the8472:cgroups, r=joshtriplett
Use cgroup quotas for calculating `available_parallelism`

Automated tests for this are possible but would require a bunch of assumptions. It requires root + a recent kernel, systemd and maybe docker. And even then it would need a helper binary since the test has to run in a separate process.

Limitations

* only supports cgroup v2 and assumes it's mounted under `/sys/fs/cgroup`
* procfs must be available
* the quota gets mixed into `sched_getaffinity`, so if the latter doesn't work then quota information gets ignored too

Manually tested via

```
// spawn a new cgroup scope for the current user
$ sudo systemd-run -p CPUQuota="300%" --uid=$(id -u) -tdS

// quota.rs
#![feature(available_parallelism)]
fn main() {
    println!("{:?}", std:🧵:available_parallelism()); // prints Ok(3)
}
```

strace:

```
sched_getaffinity(3041643, 32, [0, 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, 11, 12, 13, 14, 15, 16, 17, 18, 19, 20, 21, 22, 23, 24, 25, 26, 27, 28, 29, 30, 31, 32, 33, 34, 35, 36, 37, 38, 39, 40, 41, 42, 43, 44, 45, 46, 47]) = 32
openat(AT_FDCWD, "/proc/self/cgroup", O_RDONLY|O_CLOEXEC) = 3
statx(0, NULL, AT_STATX_SYNC_AS_STAT, STATX_ALL, NULL) = -1 EFAULT (Bad address)
statx(3, "", AT_STATX_SYNC_AS_STAT|AT_EMPTY_PATH, STATX_ALL, {stx_mask=STATX_BASIC_STATS|STATX_MNT_ID, stx_attributes=0, stx_mode=S_IFREG|0444, stx_size=0, ...}) = 0
lseek(3, 0, SEEK_CUR)                   = 0
read(3, "0::/system.slice/run-u31477.serv"..., 128) = 36
read(3, "", 92)                         = 0
close(3)                                = 0
statx(AT_FDCWD, "/sys/fs/cgroup/system.slice/run-u31477.service/cgroup.controllers", AT_STATX_SYNC_AS_STAT, STATX_ALL, {stx_mask=STATX_BASIC_STATS|STATX_MNT_ID, stx_attributes=0, stx_mode=S_IFREG|0444, stx_size=0, ...}) = 0
openat(AT_FDCWD, "/sys/fs/cgroup/system.slice/run-u31477.service/cpu.max", O_RDONLY|O_CLOEXEC) = 3
statx(3, "", AT_STATX_SYNC_AS_STAT|AT_EMPTY_PATH, STATX_ALL, {stx_mask=STATX_BASIC_STATS|STATX_MNT_ID, stx_attributes=0, stx_mode=S_IFREG|0644, stx_size=0, ...}) = 0
lseek(3, 0, SEEK_CUR)                   = 0
read(3, "300000 100000\n", 20)          = 14
read(3, "", 6)                          = 0
close(3)                                = 0
openat(AT_FDCWD, "/sys/fs/cgroup/system.slice/cpu.max", O_RDONLY|O_CLOEXEC) = 3
statx(3, "", AT_STATX_SYNC_AS_STAT|AT_EMPTY_PATH, STATX_ALL, {stx_mask=STATX_BASIC_STATS|STATX_MNT_ID, stx_attributes=0, stx_mode=S_IFREG|0644, stx_size=0, ...}) = 0
lseek(3, 0, SEEK_CUR)                   = 0
read(3, "max 100000\n", 20)             = 11
read(3, "", 9)                          = 0
close(3)                                = 0
openat(AT_FDCWD, "/sys/fs/cgroup/cpu.max", O_RDONLY|O_CLOEXEC) = -1 ENOENT (No such file or directory)
sched_getaffinity(0, 128, [0, 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, 11, 12, 13, 14, 15, 16, 17, 18, 19, 20, 21, 22, 23, 24, 25, 26, 27, 28, 29, 30, 31, 32, 33, 34, 35, 36, 37, 38, 39, 40, 41, 42, 43, 44, 45, 46, 47]) = 40
```

r? ```````@joshtriplett```````
cc ```````@yoshuawuyts```````

Tracking issue and previous discussion: #74479
2022-03-03 20:01:43 +01:00
Amanieu d'Antras
aa36237e16 Add -Z oom={panic,abort} command-line option 2022-03-03 12:58:38 +00:00
Mara Bos
24fe35a3e1 Remove argument from closure in thread::Scope::spawn. 2022-03-03 13:04:14 +01:00
Mara Bos
af86b55735 Remove unnecessary #![feature]s from doctest. 2022-03-03 12:09:18 +01:00
Mara Bos
c021ac35fa Update test. 2022-03-03 12:09:18 +01:00
Mara Bos
dadf2adbe9 Rename JoinHandle::is_running to is_finished and update docs.
Co-authored-by: Josh Triplett <josh@joshtriplett.org>
2022-03-03 12:09:17 +01:00
Matthias Krüger
6f1730c9e3
Rollup merge of #94534 - bstrie:cffistd, r=Mark-Simulacrum
Re-export (unstable) core::ffi types from std::ffi
2022-03-03 11:02:53 +01:00
Matthias Krüger
afd6f5c478
Rollup merge of #93562 - sunfishcode:sunfishcode/io-docs, r=joshtriplett
Update the documentation for `{As,Into,From}Raw{Fd,Handle,Socket}`.

This change weakens the descriptions of the
`{as,into,from}_raw_{fd,handle,socket}` descriptions from saying that
they *do* express ownership relations to say that they are *typically used*
in ways that express ownership relations. This is needed since, for
example, std's own [`RawFd`] implements `{As,From,Into}Fd` without any of
the ownership relationships.

This adds proper `# Safety` comments to `from_raw_{fd,handle,socket}`,
adds the requirement that raw handles be not opened with the
`FILE_FLAG_OVERLAPPED` flag, and merges the `OwnedHandle::from_raw_handle`
comment into the main `FromRawHandle::from_raw_handle` comment.

And, this changes `HandleOrNull` and `HandleOrInvalid` to not implement
`FromRawHandle`, since they are intended for limited use in FFI situations,
and not for generic use, and they have constraints that are stronger than
the those of `FromRawHandle`.

[`RawFd`]: https://doc.rust-lang.org/stable/std/os/unix/io/type.RawFd.html
2022-03-03 11:02:49 +01:00
Dan Gohman
8253cfef7a Remove the comment about FILE_FLAG_OVERLAPPED.
There may eventually be something to say about `FILE_FLAG_OVERLAPPED` here,
however this appears to be independent of the other changes in this PR,
so remove them from this PR so that it can be discussed separately.
2022-03-02 16:25:31 -08:00
Dylan DPC
c9dc44be24
Rollup merge of #93663 - sunfishcode:sunfishcode/as-raw-name, r=joshtriplett
Rename `BorrowedFd::borrow_raw_fd` to `BorrowedFd::borrow_raw`.

Also, rename `BorrowedHandle::borrow_raw_handle` and
`BorrowedSocket::borrow_raw_socket` to `BorrowedHandle::borrow_raw` and
`BorrowedSocket::borrow_raw`.

This is just a minor rename to reduce redundancy in the user code calling
these functions, and to eliminate an inessential difference between
`BorrowedFd` code and `BorrowedHandle`/`BorrowedSocket` code.

While here, add a simple test exercising `BorrowedFd::borrow_raw_fd`.

r? ``````@joshtriplett``````
2022-03-03 01:09:10 +01:00
Dylan DPC
bc1a8905d6
Rollup merge of #93354 - sunfishcode:sunfishcode/document-borrowedfd-toowned, r=joshtriplett
Add documentation about `BorrowedFd::to_owned`.

Following up on #88564, this adds documentation explaining why
`BorrowedFd::to_owned` returns another `BorrowedFd` rather than an
`OwnedFd`. And similar for `BorrowedHandle` and `BorrowedSocket`.

r? `````@joshtriplett`````
2022-03-03 01:09:09 +01:00
The 8472
e18abbf2ac update available_parallelism docs since cgroups and sched_getaffinity are now taken into account 2022-03-03 00:43:46 +01:00
The 8472
af6d2ed245 hardcode /sys/fs/cgroup instead of doing a lookup via mountinfo
this avoids parsing mountinfo which can be huge on some systems and
something might be emulating cgroup fs for sandboxing reasons which means
it wouldn't show up as mountpoint

additionally the new implementation operates on a single pathbuffer, reducing allocations
2022-03-03 00:43:46 +01:00
The 8472
bac5523ea0 Use cgroup quotas for calculating available_parallelism
Manually tested via


```
// spawn a new cgroup scope for the current user
$ sudo systemd-run -p CPUQuota="300%" --uid=$(id -u) -tdS


// quota.rs
#![feature(available_parallelism)]
fn main() {
    println!("{:?}", std:🧵:available_parallelism()); // prints Ok(3)
}
```


Caveats

* cgroup v1 is ignored
* funky mountpoints (containing spaces, newlines or control chars) for cgroupfs will not be handled correctly since that would require unescaping /proc/self/mountinfo
  The escaping behavior of procfs seems to be undocumented. systemd and docker default to `/sys/fs/cgroup` so it should be fine for most systems.
* quota will be ignored when `sched_getaffinity` doesn't work
* assumes procfs is mounted under `/proc` and cgroupfs mounted and readable somewhere in the directory tree
2022-03-03 00:43:45 +01:00
Dan Gohman
af642bb466 Fix a broken doc link on Windows. 2022-03-02 12:39:36 -08:00
bstrie
9aed829fe6 Re-export core::ffi types from std::ffi 2022-03-02 13:52:31 -05:00
Josh Triplett
335c9609c6 Provide C FFI types via core::ffi, not just in std
The ability to interoperate with C code via FFI is not limited to crates
using std; this allows using these types without std.

The existing types in `std::os::raw` become type aliases for the ones in
`core::ffi`. This uses type aliases rather than re-exports, to allow the
std types to remain stable while the core types are unstable.

This also moves the currently unstable `NonZero_` variants and
`c_size_t`/`c_ssize_t`/`c_ptrdiff_t` types to `core::ffi`, while leaving
them unstable.
2022-03-01 17:16:05 -08:00
Dylan DPC
06d47a414b
Rollup merge of #94094 - chrisnc:tcp-nodelay-windows-bool, r=dtolnay
use BOOL for TCP_NODELAY setsockopt value on Windows

This issue was found by the Wine project and mitigated there [^1].

Windows' setsockopt expects a BOOL (a typedef for int) for TCP_NODELAY
[^2]. Windows itself is forgiving and will accept any positive optlen and
interpret the first byte of *optval as the value, so this bug does not
affect Windows itself, but does affect systems implementing Windows'
interface more strictly, such as Wine. Wine was previously passing this
through to the host's setsockopt, where, e.g., Linux requires that
optlen be correct for the chosen option, and TCP_NODELAY expects an int.

[^1]: d6ea38f32d
[^2]: https://docs.microsoft.com/en-us/windows/win32/api/winsock/nf-winsock-setsockopt
2022-03-01 03:41:50 +01:00
Thomas de Zeeuw
a84e77bebf Stabilize unix_socket_creation 2022-02-27 15:34:48 +01:00
bors
035a717ee8 Auto merge of #94373 - erikdesjardins:getitinl, r=Mark-Simulacrum
Make TLS __getit #[inline(always)] on non-Windows

This may improve perf, and/or stop `externs` perf benchmarks from being flaky.

r? `@ghost`
2022-02-27 01:23:48 +00:00
Erik Desjardins
2d6d30f4a8 Make TLS __getit #[inline(always)] on non-Windows
This may improve perf.
2022-02-25 15:21:27 -05:00
bors
d981633ed6 Auto merge of #94290 - Mark-Simulacrum:bump-bootstrap, r=pietroalbini
Bump bootstrap to 1.60

This bumps the bootstrap compiler to 1.60 and cleans up cfgs and Span's rustc_pass_by_value (enabled by the bootstrap bump).
2022-02-25 18:34:02 +00:00
Mark Rousskov
22c3a71de1 Switch bootstrap cfgs 2022-02-25 08:00:52 -05:00
Thomas de Zeeuw
7f44b3a118 Rename unix::net::SocketAddr::from_path to from_pathname
Matching SocketAddr::as_pathname.
2022-02-25 13:05:49 +01:00
Jethro Beekman
355d503ace Fix SGX docs build 2022-02-25 12:12:37 +01:00
Matthias Krüger
aa0b7ac0bf
Rollup merge of #94273 - Dylan-DPC:doc/errorkind, r=joshtriplett
add matching doc to errorkind

Rework of #90706
2022-02-24 07:48:07 +01:00
Dylan DPC
3f4b039e33 word wrpa 2022-02-24 00:37:06 +01:00
Dylan DPC
eb795c24fb word wrpa 2022-02-24 00:30:07 +01:00
Dylan DPC
c46d9f6c89
Update library/std/src/io/error.rs
Co-authored-by: Josh Triplett <josh@joshtriplett.org>
2022-02-23 23:18:42 +01:00
Tavian Barnes
478cf8b3a4 fs: Don't dereference a pointer to a too-small allocation
ptr::addr_of!((*ptr).field) still requires ptr to point to an
appropriate allocation for its type.  Since the pointer returned by
readdir() can be smaller than sizeof(struct dirent), we need to entirely
avoid dereferencing it as that type.

Link: https://github.com/rust-lang/miri/pull/1981#issuecomment-1048278492
Link: https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/93459#discussion_r795089971
2022-02-23 09:51:02 -05:00
Dylan DPC
057dc09eae add some more summary from pr discussion 2022-02-23 03:29:02 +01:00
Dylan DPC
37cbc7d120 add some more summary from pr discussion 2022-02-23 03:28:27 +01:00
Dylan DPC
4905814249 add matching to errorkind 2022-02-23 03:22:23 +01:00
Jane Lusby
7bdad89f95 Stabilize Termination and ExitCode 2022-02-22 12:40:46 -08:00
NyantasticUwU
c61d5923f2
Fix typo.
Yeah just a typo (probably some breaking changes in here be careful) :)
2022-02-22 11:44:45 -06:00
Matthias Krüger
21fb81405e
Rollup merge of #94179 - devnexen:getexecname_directcall, r=kennytm
solarish current_exe using libc call directly
2022-02-22 12:16:30 +01:00
Matthias Krüger
ed3530925e
Rollup merge of #94220 - GuillaumeGomez:miniz-oxide-decl, r=Amanieu
Correctly handle miniz_oxide extern crate declaration

Fixes https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/94219.

Follow-up of https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/94122.

The `miniz_oxide` dependency is optional and therefore should allow be "imported" when it makes sense.

r? `@ivmarkov`
2022-02-21 19:36:55 +01:00
Matthias Krüger
12705b4700
Rollup merge of #91192 - r00ster91:futuredocs, r=GuillaumeGomez
Some improvements to the async docs

The goal here is to make the docs overall a little bit more comprehensive and add more links between the things.

One thing that's not working yet is the links to the keywords. Somehow I couldn't get them to work.

r? ````@GuillaumeGomez```` do you know how I could get the keyword links to work?
2022-02-21 19:36:46 +01:00
Guillaume Gomez
910d46fd60 Correctly handle miniz_oxide extern crate declaration 2022-02-21 17:27:55 +01:00
Chris Copeland
b02698c7e6
use BOOL for TCP_NODELAY setsockopt value on Windows
This issue was found by the Wine project and mitigated there [1].

Windows' documented interface for `setsockopt` expects a `BOOL` (a
`typedef` for `int`) for `TCP_NODELAY` [2]. Windows is forgiving and
will accept any positive length and interpret the first byte of
`*option_value` as the value, so this bug does not affect Windows
itself, but does affect systems implementing Windows' interface more
strictly, such as Wine. Wine was previously passing this through to the
host's `setsockopt`, where, e.g., Linux requires that `option_len` be
correct for the chosen option, and `TCP_NODELAY` expects an `int`.

[1]: d6ea38f32d
[2]: https://docs.microsoft.com/en-us/windows/win32/api/winsock/nf-winsock-setsockopt
2022-02-20 21:27:36 -08:00
Chris Copeland
f2ebd0a11f
Remove assertion on output length for getsockopt.
POSIX allows `getsockopt` to set `*option_len` to a smaller value if
necessary. Windows will set `*option_len` to 1 for boolean options even
when the caller passes a `BOOL` (`int`) with `*option_len` as 4.
2022-02-20 21:27:36 -08:00
Chris Copeland
3eb983ed99
Fix setsockopt and getsockopt parameter names.
Previously `level` was named `opt` and `option_name` was named `val`,
then extra names of `payload` or `slot` were used for the option value.
This change aligns the wrapper parameters with their names in POSIX.
Winsock uses similar but more abbreviated names: `level`, `optname`,
`optval`, `optlen`.
2022-02-20 21:27:22 -08:00
David Carlier
f810314bc6 solarish current_exe using libc call directly 2022-02-20 08:53:18 +00:00
Matthias Krüger
a69aaf4aee
Rollup merge of #94122 - GuillaumeGomez:miniz-oxide-std, r=notriddle
Fix miniz_oxide types showing up in std docs

Fixes #90526.

Thanks to ```````@camelid,``````` I rediscovered `doc(masked)`, allowing us to prevent `miniz_oxide` type to show up in std docs.

r? ```````@notriddle```````
2022-02-20 00:37:32 +01:00
Matthias Krüger
6b69121d0d
Rollup merge of #94019 - hermitcore:target, r=Mark-Simulacrum
removing architecture requirements for RustyHermit

RustHermit and HermitCore is able to run on aarch64 and x86_64. In the future these operating systems will also support RISC-V. Consequently, the dependency to a specific target should be removed.

The build process of `hermit-abi` fails if the architecture isn't supported.
2022-02-20 00:37:25 +01:00
Matthias Krüger
7977af5975
Rollup merge of #93580 - m-ou-se:stabilize-pin-static-ref, r=scottmcm
Stabilize pin_static_ref.

FCP finished here: https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/78186#issuecomment-1024987221

Closes #78186
2022-02-20 00:37:21 +01:00
r00ster91
297364eb07 Some improvements to the async docs 2022-02-19 17:17:40 +01:00
bors
e08d569360 Auto merge of #94148 - matthiaskrgr:rollup-jgea68f, r=matthiaskrgr
Rollup of 7 pull requests

Successful merges:

 - #92902 (Improve the documentation of drain members)
 - #93658 (Stabilize `#[cfg(panic = "...")]`)
 - #93954 (rustdoc-json: buffer output)
 - #93979 (Add debug assertions to validate NUL terminator in c strings)
 - #93990 (pre #89862 cleanup)
 - #94006 (Use a `Field` in `ConstraintCategory::ClosureUpvar`)
 - #94086 (Fix ScalarInt to char conversion)

Failed merges:

r? `@ghost`
`@rustbot` modify labels: rollup
2022-02-19 12:15:10 +00:00
Matthias Krüger
26dd6ac830
Rollup merge of #93979 - SUPERCILEX:debug_check, r=dtolnay
Add debug assertions to validate NUL terminator in c strings

The `unchecked` variants from the stdlib usually perform the check anyway if debug assertions are on (for example, `unwrap_unchecked`). This PR does the same thing for `CStr` and `CString`, validating the correctness for the NUL byte in debug mode.
2022-02-19 06:45:30 +01:00
Matthias Krüger
4fa71ed0f0
Rollup merge of #92902 - ssomers:docter_drain, r=yaahc
Improve the documentation of drain members

hopefully fixes #92765
2022-02-19 06:45:28 +01:00
bors
cb4ee81ef5 Auto merge of #94105 - 5225225:destabilise-entry-insert, r=Mark-Simulacrum
Destabilise entry_insert

See: https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/90345

I didn't revert the rename that was done in that PR, I left it as `entry_insert`.

Additionally, before that PR, `VacantEntry::insert_entry` seemingly had no stability attribute on it? I kept the attribute, just made it an unstable one, same as the one on `Entry`.

There didn't seem to be any mention of this in the RELEASES.md, so I don't think there's anything for me to do other than this?
2022-02-19 05:08:13 +00:00
Stein Somers
a677e60840 Collections: improve the documentation of drain members 2022-02-19 00:55:31 +01:00
Matthias Krüger
724cca6d7f
Rollup merge of #93847 - solid-rs:fix-kmc-solid-fs-ts, r=yaahc
kmc-solid: Use the filesystem thread-safety wrapper

Fixes the thread unsafety of the `std::fs` implementation used by the [`*-kmc-solid_*`](https://doc.rust-lang.org/nightly/rustc/platform-support/kmc-solid.html) Tier 3 targets.

Neither the SOLID filesystem API nor built-in filesystem drivers guarantee thread safety by default. Although this may suffice in general embedded-system use cases, and in fact the API can be used from multiple threads without any problems in many cases, this has been a source of unsoundness in `std::sys::solid::fs`.

This commit updates the implementation to leverage the filesystem thread-safety wrapper (which uses a pluggable synchronization mechanism) to enforce thread safety. This is done by prefixing all paths passed to the filesystem API with `\TS`. (Note that relative paths aren't supported in this platform.)
2022-02-18 23:23:07 +01:00
Guillaume Gomez
b78123cdcf Fix miniz_oxide types showing up in std 2022-02-18 17:31:38 +01:00
Matthias Krüger
f1c918f1f3
Rollup merge of #93613 - crlf0710:rename_to_async_iter, r=yaahc
Move `{core,std}::stream::Stream` to `{core,std}::async_iter::AsyncIterator`

Following amendments in https://github.com/rust-lang/rfcs/pull/3208/.

cc #79024
cc ``@yoshuawuyts`` ``@joshtriplett``
2022-02-18 16:23:32 +01:00
5225225
319dd150fc Destabilise entry_insert 2022-02-17 22:23:31 +00:00
Matthias Krüger
09350d2cf0
Rollup merge of #93976 - SUPERCILEX:separator_str, r=yaahc
Add MAIN_SEPARATOR_STR

Currently, if someone needs access to the path separator as a str, they need to go through this mess:

```rust
unsafe {
    std::str::from_utf8_unchecked(slice::from_ref(&(MAIN_SEPARATOR as u8)))
}
```

This PR just re-exports an existing path separator str API.
2022-02-17 23:00:58 +01:00
Chris Denton
93f627daa5
Keep the path after program_exists succeeds 2022-02-17 13:17:19 +00:00
Chris Denton
d4686c6066
Use verbatim paths for process::Command if necessary 2022-02-17 13:12:49 +00:00
Matthias Krüger
1cc0ae4cbb
Rollup merge of #89869 - kpreid:from-doc, r=yaahc
Add documentation to more `From::from` implementations.

For users looking at documentation through IDE popups, this gives them relevant information rather than the generic trait documentation wording “Performs the conversion”. For users reading the documentation for a specific type for any reason, this informs them when the conversion may allocate or copy significant memory versus when it is always a move or cheap copy.

Notes on specific cases:
* The new documentation for `From<T> for T` explains that it is not a conversion at all.
* Also documented `impl<T, U> Into<U> for T where U: From<T>`, the other central blanket implementation of conversion.
* The new documentation for construction of maps and sets from arrays of keys mentions the handling of duplicates. Future work could be to do this for *all* code paths that convert an iterable to a map or set.
* I did not add documentation to conversions of a specific error type to a more general error type.
* I did not add documentation to unstable code.

This change was prepared by searching for the text "From<... for" and so may have missed some cases that for whatever reason did not match. I also looked for `Into` impls but did not find any worth documenting by the above criteria.
2022-02-17 06:29:57 +01:00
Alex Saveau
80fde23a75
Add MAIN_SEPARATOR_STR
Signed-off-by: Alex Saveau <saveau.alexandre@gmail.com>
2022-02-16 19:38:12 -08:00
Alex Saveau
897c8d0ab9
Add debug asserts to validate NUL terminator in c strings
Signed-off-by: Alex Saveau <saveau.alexandre@gmail.com>
2022-02-16 18:34:17 -08:00
Stefan Lankes
227d106aec remove compiler warnings 2022-02-15 14:03:26 +01:00
Stefan Lankes
1ab5b0bc05 removing architecture requirements for RustyHermit
RustHermit and HermitCore is able to run on aarch64 and x86_64.
In the future these operating systems will also support RISC-V.
Consequently, the dependency to a specific target should be removed.
Building hermit-abi fails if the architecture isn't supported.
2022-02-15 13:57:07 +01:00
Chris Denton
9a7a8b9255
Maintain broken symlink behaviour for the Windows exe resolver 2022-02-14 12:50:18 +00:00
Mark Rousskov
398cccd42e Make default stdio lock() return 'static handles
This also deletes the unstable API surface area previously added to expose this
functionality on new methods rather than built into the current set.
2022-02-13 10:23:16 -05:00
bors
1f4681ad7a Auto merge of #91673 - ChrisDenton:path-absolute, r=Mark-Simulacrum
`std::path::absolute`

Implements #59117 by adding a `std::path::absolute` function that creates an absolute path without reading the filesystem. This is intended to be a drop-in replacement for [`std::fs::canonicalize`](https://doc.rust-lang.org/std/fs/fn.canonicalize.html) in cases where it isn't necessary to resolve symlinks. It can be used on paths that don't exist or where resolving symlinks is unwanted. It can also be used to avoid circumstances where `canonicalize` might otherwise fail.

On Windows this is a wrapper around [`GetFullPathNameW`](https://docs.microsoft.com/en-us/windows/win32/api/fileapi/nf-fileapi-getfullpathnamew). On Unix it partially implements the POSIX [pathname resolution](https://pubs.opengroup.org/onlinepubs/9699919799/basedefs/V1_chap04.html#tag_04_13) specification, stopping just short of actually resolving symlinks.
2022-02-13 12:03:52 +00:00
Matthias Krüger
92613a25fc
Rollup merge of #89926 - the8472:saturate-instant, r=Mark-Simulacrum
make `Instant::{duration_since, elapsed, sub}` saturating and remove workarounds

This removes all mutex/atomic-based workarounds for non-monotonic clocks and makes the previously panicking methods saturating instead. Additionally `saturating_duration_since` becomes deprecated since `duration_since` now fills that role.

Effectively this moves the fixup from `Instant` construction to the comparisons.

This has some observable effects, especially on platforms without monotonic clocks:

* Incorrectly ordered Instant comparisons no longer panic in release mode. This could hide some programming errors, but since debug mode still panics tests can still catch them.
* `checked_duration_since` will now return `None` in more cases. Previously it only happened when one compared instants obtained in the wrong order or manually created ones. Now it also does on backslides.
* non-monotonic intervals will not be transitive, i.e. `b.duration_since(a) + c.duration_since(b) != c.duration_since(a)`

The upsides are reduced complexity and lower overhead of `Instant::now`.

## Motivation

Currently we must choose between two poisons. One is high worst-case latency and jitter of `Instant::now()` due to explicit synchronization; see #83093 for benchmarks, the worst-case overhead is > 100x. The other is sporadic panics on specific, rare combinations of CPU/hypervisor/operating system due to platform bugs.

Use-cases where low-overhead, fine-grained timestamps are needed - such as syscall tracing, performance profiles or sensor data acquisition (drone flight controllers were mentioned in a libs meeting) in multi-threaded programs - are negatively impacted by the synchronization.

The panics are user-visible (program crashes), hard to reproduce and can be triggered by any dependency that might be using Instants for any reason.

A solution that is fast _and_ doesn't panic is desirable.

----

closes #84448
closes #86470
2022-02-13 06:44:12 +01:00
bors
01c4c41301 Auto merge of #93696 - Amanieu:compiler-builtins-0.1.68, r=Mark-Simulacrum
Bump compiler-builtins to 0.1.69

This includes https://github.com/rust-lang/compiler-builtins/pull/452 which should fix some issues with duplicate symbol defintions of some intrinsics.
2022-02-13 02:40:56 +00:00
Josh Triplett
37a1fc542f Capitalize "Rust"
Co-authored-by: Mark Rousskov <mark.simulacrum@gmail.com>
2022-02-13 01:06:36 +01:00
The 8472
376d955a32 Add panic docs describing old, current and possible future behavior 2022-02-13 01:06:34 +01:00
The 8472
bda2693e9b Add caveat about the monotonicity guarantee by linking to the later section 2022-02-13 01:05:00 +01:00
The8472
9d8ef11607 make Instant::{duration_since, elapsed, sub} saturating and remove workarounds
This removes all mutex/atomics based workarounds for non-monotonic clocks and makes the previously panicking methods saturating instead.

Effectively this moves the monotonization from `Instant` construction to the comparisons.

This has some observable effects, especially on platforms without monotonic clocks:

* Incorrectly ordered Instant comparisons no longer panic. This may hide some programming errors until someone actually looks at the resulting `Duration`
* `checked_duration_since` will now return `None` in more cases. Previously it only happened when one compared instants obtained in the wrong order or
  manually created ones. Now it also does on backslides.

The upside is reduced complexity and lower overhead of `Instant::now`.
2022-02-13 01:04:55 +01:00
bors
9c3a3e3d5b Auto merge of #93697 - the8472:fix-windows-path-hash, r=Mark-Simulacrum
Fix hashing for windows paths containing a CurDir component

* the logic only checked for / but not for \
* verbatim paths shouldn't skip items at all since they don't get normalized
* the extra branches get optimized out on unix since is_sep_byte is a trivial comparison and is_verbatim is always-false
* tests lacked windows coverage for these cases

That lead to equal paths not having equal hashes and to unnecessary collisions.
2022-02-12 14:01:13 +00:00
bors
f19851069e Auto merge of #93921 - matthiaskrgr:rollup-wn3jlxj, r=matthiaskrgr
Rollup of 10 pull requests

Successful merges:

 - #90955 (Rename `FilenameTooLong` to `InvalidFilename` and also use it for Windows' `ERROR_INVALID_NAME`)
 - #91607 (Make `span_extend_to_prev_str()` more robust)
 - #92895 (Remove some unused functionality)
 - #93635 (Add missing platform-specific information on current_dir and set_current_dir)
 - #93660 (rustdoc-json: Add some tests for typealias item)
 - #93782 (Split `pauth` target feature)
 - #93868 (Fix incorrect register conflict detection in asm!)
 - #93888 (Implement `AsFd` for `&T` and `&mut T`.)
 - #93909 (Fix typo: explicitely -> explicitly)
 - #93910 (fix mention of moved function in `rustc_hir` docs)

Failed merges:

r? `@ghost`
`@rustbot` modify labels: rollup
2022-02-11 23:01:50 +00:00
Matthias Krüger
34997f0114
Rollup merge of #93888 - sunfishcode:sunfishcode/impl-asfd-for-ref, r=joshtriplett
Implement `AsFd` for `&T` and `&mut T`.

Add implementations of `AsFd` for `&T` and `&mut T`, so that users can
write code like this:

```rust
pub fn fchown<F: AsFd>(fd: F, uid: Option<u32>, gid: Option<u32>) -> io::Result<()> {
```

with `fd: F` rather than `fd: &F`.

And similar for `AsHandle` and `AsSocket` on Windows.

Also, adjust the `fchown` example to pass the file by reference. The
code can work either way now, but passing by reference is more likely
to be what users will want to do.

This is an alternative to #93869, and is a simpler way to achieve the
same goals: users don't need to pass borrowed-`BorrowedFd` arguments,
and it prevents a pitfall in the case where users write `fd: F` instead
of `fd: &F`.

r? ```@joshtriplett```
2022-02-11 21:48:50 +01:00
Matthias Krüger
15d71cff2d
Rollup merge of #93635 - GuillaumeGomez:missing-platform-spec-info, r=Amanieu
Add missing platform-specific information on current_dir and set_current_dir

Fixes #93598.
2022-02-11 21:48:46 +01:00
Matthias Krüger
ce4df92c8c
Rollup merge of #90955 - JohnTitor:os-error-123-as-invalid-input, r=m-ou-se
Rename `FilenameTooLong` to `InvalidFilename` and also use it for Windows' `ERROR_INVALID_NAME`

Address https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/90940#issuecomment-970157931
`ERROR_INVALID_NAME` (i.e. "The filename, directory name, or volume label syntax is incorrect") happens if we pass an invalid filename, directory name, or label syntax, so mapping as `InvalidInput` is reasonable to me.
2022-02-11 21:48:42 +01:00
bors
e789f3a3a3 Auto merge of #90271 - adamgemmell:dev/feat-detect-stabilise, r=Amanieu
Stabilise `is_aarch64_feature_detected!` under `simd_aarch64` feature

Initial implementation, looking for feedback on the approach here. https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/86941

One point I noticed was that I haven't seen different "since" versions for the same feature - does this mean that other features can't be added to to the `simd_aarch64` feature once this is in stable? If so it might need a more specific name.

r? `@Amanieu`
2022-02-11 20:41:51 +00:00
Guillaume Gomez
22a24c98d3 Add missing platform-specific information on current_dir and set_current_dir 2022-02-11 16:33:02 +01:00
Dan Gohman
1f98ef7793 Implement AsFd for &T and &mut T.
Add implementations of `AsFd` for `&T` and `&mut T`, so that users can
write code like this:

```rust
pub fn fchown<F: AsFd>(fd: F, uid: Option<u32>, gid: Option<u32>) -> io::Result<()> {
```

with `fd: F` rather than `fd: &F`.

And similar for `AsHandle` and `AsSocket` on Windows.

Also, adjust the `fchown` example to pass the file by reference. The
code can work either way now, but passing by reference is more likely
to be what users will want to do.

This is an alternative to #93869, and is a simpler way to achieve the
same goals: users don't need to pass borrowed-`BorrowedFd` arguments,
and it prevents a pitfall in the case where users write `fd: F` instead
of `fd: &F`.
2022-02-10 18:26:12 -08:00
Adam Gemmell
102a0ffd37 Move is_aarch64_feature_detected! to simd_aarch64 feature and stabilise 2022-02-10 15:24:13 +00:00
Yuki Okushi
a898b31662
Rename to InvalidFilename 2022-02-10 23:49:27 +09:00
Josh Triplett
861f3c70a2
Fix description of FilenameInvalid
Co-authored-by: Mara Bos <m-ou.se@m-ou.se>
2022-02-10 23:42:27 +09:00
Yuki Okushi
cc9407924d
Map ERROR_INVALID_NAME to FilenameInvalid 2022-02-10 23:42:27 +09:00
Yuki Okushi
755e475c8b
Rename FilenameTooLong to FilenameInvalid 2022-02-10 23:42:26 +09:00
Yuki Okushi
1115f15e1c
windows: Map ERROR_INVALID_NAME as InvalidInput 2022-02-10 23:42:23 +09:00
Matthias Krüger
8c60f44877
Rollup merge of #93843 - solid-rs:fix-kmc-solid-condvar, r=m-ou-se
kmc-solid: Fix wait queue manipulation errors in the `Condvar` implementation

This PR fixes a number of bugs in the `Condvar` wait queue implementation used by the [`*-kmc-solid_*`](https://doc.rust-lang.org/nightly/rustc/platform-support/kmc-solid.html) Tier 3 targets. These bugs can occur when there are multiple threads waiting on the same `Condvar` and sometimes manifest as an `unwrap` failure.
2022-02-10 12:10:02 +01:00
Tomoaki Kawada
64406c5996 kmc-solid: Use the filesystem thread-safety wrapper
Neither the SOLID filesystem API nor built-in filesystems guarantee
thread safety by default. Although this may suffice in general embedded-
system use cases, and in fact the API can be used from multiple threads
without any problems in many cases, this has been a source of
unsoundness in `std::sys::solid::fs`.

This commit updates the `std` code to leverage the filesystem thread-
safety wrapper to enforce thread safety. This is done by prefixing all
paths passed to the filesystem API with `\TS`. (Note that relative paths
aren't supported in this platform.)
2022-02-10 13:33:35 +09:00
Tomoaki Kawada
1d180caf1a kmc-solid: Wait queue should be sorted in the descending order of task priorities
In ITRON, lower priority values mean higher priorities.
2022-02-10 11:35:37 +09:00
Tomoaki Kawada
bdc9508bb6 kmc-solid: Fix wait queue manipulation errors in the Condvar implementation 2022-02-10 10:21:39 +09:00
Amanieu d'Antras
7b8f6ac5ab Bump compiler-builtins to 0.1.69 2022-02-09 21:03:13 +00:00
Amanieu d'Antras
49d4823112 Stabilize cfg_target_has_atomic
Closes #32976
2022-02-09 18:45:44 +00:00
Yuki Okushi
ec2fd8a35f
Rollup merge of #93445 - yaahc:exitcode-constructor, r=dtolnay
Add From<u8> for ExitCode

This should cover a mostly cross-platform subset of supported exit codes.

We decided to stick with `u8` initially since its the common subset between all platforms that we support (excluding wasm which I think only works with `true` or `false`). Posix is supposed to take i32s, but in practice many unix platforms mask out all but the low 8 bits or in some cases the 8-15th bits. Windows takes a u32 instead of an i32. Bourne-compatible shells also report signals as exitcode 128 + `signal_no`, so there's some ambiguity there when returning exit codes > 127, but it is possible to disambiguate them on the other side so we decided against restricting the possible codes further than to `u8`.

## Related

- Detailed analysis of exit code support on various platforms: https://internals.rust-lang.org/t/mini-pre-rfc-redesigning-process-exitstatus/5426
- https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/48711
- https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/43301
- https://rust-lang.zulipchat.com/#narrow/stream/219381-t-libs/topic/Termination.2FExit.20Status.20Stabilization
2022-02-09 14:12:17 +09:00
Matthias Krüger
9cb39a6083
Rollup merge of #93206 - ChrisDenton:ntopenfile, r=nagisa
Use `NtCreateFile` instead of `NtOpenFile` to open a file

Generally the internal `Nt*` functions should be avoided but when we do need to use one we should stick to the most commonly used for the job. To that end, this PR replaces `NtOpenFile` with `NtCreateFile`.

NOTE: The initial version of this comment hypothesised that this may help with some recent false positives from malware scanners. This hypothesis proved wrong. Sorry for the distraction.
2022-02-08 16:40:49 +01:00
Chris Denton
81cc3afe20
Fix absolute issues 2022-02-08 14:57:35 +00:00
Chris Denton
d59d32c4f1
std::path::absolute 2022-02-08 14:57:34 +00:00
Jane Lusby
4c5a36e2d1 fix exclusive range error 2022-02-07 12:45:36 -08:00
bors
734368a200 Auto merge of #87869 - thomcc:skinny-io-error, r=yaahc
Make io::Error use 64 bits on targets with 64 bit pointers.

I've wanted this for a long time, but didn't see a good way to do it without having extra allocation. When looking at it yesterday, it was more clear what to do for some reason.

This approach avoids any additional allocations, and reduces the size by half (8 bytes, down from 16). AFAICT it doesn't come additional runtime cost, and the compiler seems to do a better job with code using it.

Additionally, this `io::Error` has a niche (still), so `io::Result<()>` is *also* 64 bits (8 bytes, down from 16), and `io::Result<usize>` (used for lots of io trait functions) is 2x64 bits (16 bytes, down from 24 — this means on x86_64 it can use the nice rax/rdx 2-reg struct return). More generally, it shaves a whole 64 bit integer register off of the size of basically any `io::Result<()>`.

(For clarity: Improving `io::Result` (rather than io::Error) was most of the motivation for this)

On 32 bit (or other non-64bit) targets we still use something equivalent the old repr — I don't think think there's improving it, since one of the fields it stores is a `i32`, so we can't get below that, and it's already about as close as we can get to it.

---

### Isn't Pointer Tagging Dodgy?

The details of the layout, and why its implemented the way it is, are explained in the header comment of library/std/src/io/error/repr_bitpacked.rs. There's probably more details than there need to be, but I didn't trim it down that much, since there's a lot of stuff I did deliberately, that might have not seemed that way.

There's actually only one variant holding a pointer which gets tagged. This one is the (holder for the) user-provided error.

I believe the scheme used to tag it is not UB, and that it preserves pointer provenance (even though often pointer tagging does not) because the tagging operation is just `core::ptr::add`, and untagging is `core::ptr::sub`. The result of both operations lands inside the original allocation, so it would follow the safety contract of `core::ptr::{add,sub}`.

The other pointer this had to encode is not tagged — or rather, the tagged repr is equivalent to untagged (it's tagged with 0b00, and has >=4b alignment, so we can reuse the bottom bits). And the other variants we encode are just integers, which (which can be untagged using bitwise operations without worry — they're integers).

CC `@RalfJung` for the stuff in repr_bitpacked.rs, as my comments are informed by a lot of the UCG work, but it's possible I missed something or got it wrong (even if the implementation is okay, there are parts of the header comment that says things like "We can't do $x" which could be false).

---

### Why So Many Changes?

The repr change was mostly internal, but changed one widely used API: I had to switch how `io::Error::new_const` works.

This required switching `io::Error::new_const` to take the full message data (including the kind) as a `&'static`, rather than just the string. This would have been really tedious, but I made a macro that made it much simpler, but it was a wide change since `io::Error::new_const` is used everywhere.

This included changing files for a lot of targets I don't have easy access to (SGX? Haiku? Windows? Who has heard of these things), so I expect there to be spottiness in CI initially, unless luck is on my side.

Anyway this large only tangentially-related change is all in the first commit (although that commit also pulls the previous repr out into its own file), whereas the packing stuff is all in commit 2.

---

P.S. I haven't looked at all of this since writing it, and will do a pass over it again later, sorry for any obvious typos or w/e. I also definitely repeat myself in comments and such.

(It probably could use more tests too. I did some basic testing, and made it so we `debug_assert!` in cases the decode isn't what we encoded, but I don't know the degree which I can assume libstd's testing of IO would exercise this. That is: it wouldn't be surprising to me if libstds IO testing were minimal, especially around error cases, although I have no idea).
2022-02-07 20:32:56 +00:00
Jane Lusby
cf4ac6b1e1
Add From<u8> for ExitCode
This should cover a mostly cross-platform subset of supported exit codes.
2022-02-06 12:43:12 -08:00
Inteon
afb7a502f6
rewrite from_bytes_with_nul to match code style in from_vec_with_nul
Signed-off-by: Inteon <42113979+inteon@users.noreply.github.com>
2022-02-06 20:07:03 +01:00
The 8472
45082b077b Fix hashing for windows paths containing a CurDir component
* the logic only checked for / but not for \
* verbatim paths shouldn't skip items at all since they don't get normalized
* the extra branches get optimized out on unix since is_sep_byte is a trivial comparison and is_verbatim is always-false
* tests lacked windows coverage for these cases

That lead to equal paths not having equal hashes and to unnecessary collisions.
2022-02-06 11:43:50 +01:00
Muhammad Falak R Wani
6706ab8cfb
keyword_docs: document use of in with pub keyword
Signed-off-by: Muhammad Falak R Wani <falakreyaz@gmail.com>
2022-02-06 11:23:02 +05:30
Thom Chiovoloni
9cbe99488b
Add more tests for io::Error packing, and fix some comments that weren't quite accurate anymore 2022-02-04 23:15:02 -08:00
Thom Chiovoloni
a17a896d09
Update documentation somewhat 2022-02-04 18:47:31 -08:00
Thom Chiovoloni
e98c7f7209
Use wrapping pointer arithmetic in the bitpacked io::Error 2022-02-04 18:47:31 -08:00
Thom Chiovoloni
f950edbef7
Elaborate some in the documentation and respond to some review comments 2022-02-04 18:47:31 -08:00
Thom Chiovoloni
06edf082c3
Update library/std/src/io/error/repr_bitpacked.rs
Co-authored-by: the8472 <the8472@users.noreply.github.com>
2022-02-04 18:47:30 -08:00
Thom Chiovoloni
9f7eb7d473
Fix comment typos noticed by code review.
Co-authored-by: Ralf Jung <post@ralfj.de>
2022-02-04 18:47:30 -08:00
Thom Chiovoloni
6b068437cb
Address address comments, improve comments slightly 2022-02-04 18:47:30 -08:00
Thom Chiovoloni
ea211695bf
Optimize io::error::Repr layout on 64 bit targets. 2022-02-04 18:47:30 -08:00
Thom Chiovoloni
554918e311
Hide Repr details from io::Error, and rework io::Error::new_const. 2022-02-04 18:47:29 -08:00
Dan Gohman
7d603dc1b2 x.py fmt 2022-02-04 13:53:58 -08:00
Dan Gohman
4c4e43035f Rename BorrowedFd::borrow_raw_fd to BorrowedFd::borrow_raw.
Also, rename `BorrowedHandle::borrow_raw_handle` and
`BorrowedSocket::borrow_raw_socket` to `BorrowedHandle::borrow_raw` and
`BorrowedSocket::borrow_raw`.

This is just a minor rename to reduce redundancy in the user code calling
these functions, and to eliminate an inessential difference between
`BorrowedFd` code and `BorrowedHandle`/`BorrowedSocket` code.

While here, add a simple test exercising `BorrowedFd::borrow_raw_fd`.
2022-02-04 13:41:00 -08:00
Matthias Krüger
af2886eef9
Rollup merge of #93495 - solid-rs:fix-kmc-solid-rtc-month, r=yaahc
kmc-solid: Fix off-by-one error in `SystemTime::now`

Fixes a miscalculation of `SystemTime`  on the [`*-kmc-solid_*`](https://doc.rust-lang.org/nightly/rustc/platform-support/kmc-solid.html) Tier 3 targets.

Unlike the identically-named libc counterpart `tm::tm_mon`, `SOLID_RTC_TIME::tm_mon` contains a 1-based month number.
2022-02-04 18:42:14 +01:00
Matthias Krüger
f070e0b5a6
Rollup merge of #93555 - ChrisDenton:fs-try-exists-doc, r=Mark-Simulacrum
Link `try_exists` docs to `Path::exists`

Links to the existing `Path::exists` method from both `std::Path::try_exists` and `std::fs:try_exists`.

Tracking issue for `path_try_exists`: #83186
2022-02-04 14:59:02 +01:00
Mara Bos
c05276ae7b Stabilize pin_static_ref. 2022-02-04 12:27:33 +01:00
Charles Lew
18130a21dc Move {core,std}::stream::Stream to {core,std}::async_iter::AsyncIterator. 2022-02-03 21:03:06 +08:00
bors
796bf14f2e Auto merge of #93146 - workingjubilee:use-std-simd, r=Mark-Simulacrum
pub use std::simd::StdFloat;

Syncs portable-simd up to commit rust-lang/portable-simd@03f6fbb21e,
Diff: 533f0fc81a...03f6fbb21e

This sync requires a little bit more legwork because it also introduces a trait into `std::simd`, so that it is no longer simply a reexport of `core::simd`. Out of simple-minded consistency and to allow more options, I replicated the pattern for the way `core::simd` is integrated in the first place, however this is not necessary if it doesn't acquire any interdependencies inside `std`: it could be a simple crate reexport. I just don't know yet if that will happen or not.

To summarize other misc changes:
- Shifts no longer panic, now wrap on too-large shifts (like `Simd` integers usually do!)
- mask16x32 will now be many i16s, not many i32s... 🙃
- `#[must_use]` is spread around generously
- Adjusts division, float min/max, and `Mask::{from,to}_array` internally to be faster
- Adds the much-requested `Simd::cast::<U>` function (equivalent to `simd.to_array().map(|lane| lane as U)`)
2022-02-03 09:15:16 +00:00
Dan Gohman
ba6050f742 Remove the documentation comment for OwnedSocket::from_raw_socket.
This function is documented in more detail in the `FromRawSocket` trait.
2022-02-02 16:23:23 -08:00
bors
b3800860e1 Auto merge of #93101 - Mark-Simulacrum:library-backtrace, r=yaahc
Support configuring whether to capture backtraces at runtime

Tracking issue: https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/93346

This adds a new API to the `std::panic` module which configures whether and how the default panic hook will emit a backtrace when a panic occurs.

After discussion with `@yaahc` on [Zulip](https://rust-lang.zulipchat.com/#narrow/stream/219381-t-libs/topic/backtrace.20lib.20vs.2E.20panic), this PR chooses to avoid adjusting or seeking to provide a similar API for the (currently unstable) std::backtrace API. It seems likely that the users of that API may wish to expose more specific settings rather than just a global one (e.g., emulating the `env_logger`, `tracing` per-module configuration) to avoid the cost of capture in hot code. The API added here could plausibly be copied and/or re-exported directly from std::backtrace relatively easily, but I don't think that's the right call as of now.

```rust
mod panic {
    #[derive(Copy, Clone, Debug, PartialEq, Eq)]
    #[non_exhaustive]
    pub enum BacktraceStyle {
        Short,
        Full,
        Off,
    }
    fn set_backtrace_style(BacktraceStyle);
    fn get_backtrace_style() -> Option<BacktraceStyle>;
}
```

Several unresolved questions:

* Do we need to move to a thread-local or otherwise more customizable strategy for whether to capture backtraces? See [this comment](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/79085#issuecomment-727845826) for some potential use cases for this.
   * Proposed answer: no, leave this for third-party hooks.
* Bikeshed on naming of all the options, as usual.
* Should BacktraceStyle be moved into `std::backtrace`?
   * It's already somewhat annoying to import and/or re-type the `std::panic::` prefix necessary to use these APIs, probably adding a second module to the mix isn't worth it.

Note that PR #79085 proposed a much simpler API, but particularly in light of the desire to fully replace setting environment variables via `env::set_var` to control the backtrace API, a more complete API seems preferable. This PR likely subsumes that one.
2022-02-02 22:03:23 +00:00
Mark Rousskov
85930c8f44 Configure panic hook backtrace behavior 2022-02-02 13:46:42 -05:00
Matthias Krüger
b836b281a8
Rollup merge of #93531 - TheColdVoid:patch-1, r=m-ou-se
Fix incorrect panic message in example

The panic message when calling the `connect()` should probably be a  message about connection failure, not a message about binding address failure.
2022-02-02 07:11:07 +01:00
Matthias Krüger
a3deca4675
Rollup merge of #93493 - GKFX:char-docs-2, r=scottmcm
Document valid values of the char type

As discussed at #93392, the current documentation on what constitutes a valid char isn't very detailed and is partly on the MAX constant rather than the type itself.

This PR expands on that information, stating the actual numerical range, giving examples of what won't work, and also mentions how a `char` might be a valid USV but still not be a defined character (terminology checked against [Unicode 14.0, table 2-3](https://www.unicode.org/versions/Unicode14.0.0/ch02.pdf#M9.61673.TableTitle.Table.22.Types.of.Code.Points)).
2022-02-02 07:11:07 +01:00
Dan Gohman
f88fb2a9a5 x.py fmt 2022-02-01 15:10:59 -08:00
Dan Gohman
656d2a3a12 Use From/Into rather than the traits they replaced. 2022-02-01 14:58:11 -08:00
Dan Gohman
89544e9001 Fix errors. 2022-02-01 14:38:23 -08:00
Dan Gohman
6ef7ee36c2 Fix unresolved doc links. 2022-02-01 14:37:15 -08:00
Dan Gohman
8516895170 Fix two copy+pastos. 2022-02-01 14:27:54 -08:00
Dan Gohman
713bb19ca3 Add missing pub keywords. 2022-02-01 14:23:03 -08:00
Dan Gohman
ca42a1bece Update the documentation for {As,Into,From}Raw{Fd,Handle,Socket}.
This change weakens the descriptions of the
`{as,into,from}_raw_{fd,handle,socket}` descriptions from saying that
they *do* express ownership relations to say that they are *typically used*
in ways that express ownership relations. This needed needed since, for
example, std's own [`RawFd`] implements `{As,From,Into}Fd` without any of
the ownership relationships.

This adds proper `# Safety` comments to `from_raw_{fd,handle,socket}`,
adds the requirement that raw handles be not opened with the
`FILE_FLAG_OVERLAPPED` flag, and merges the `OwnedHandle::from_raw_handle`
comment into the main `FromRawHandle::from_raw_handle` comment.

And, this changes `HandleOrNull` and `HandleOrInvalid` to not implement
`FromRawHandle`, since they are intended for limited use in FFI situations,
and not for generic use, and they have constraints that are stronger than
the those of `FromRawHandle`.

[`RawFd`]: https://doc.rust-lang.org/stable/std/os/unix/io/type.RawFd.html
2022-02-01 14:05:43 -08:00
George Bateman
d372baf3f9
Fix annotation of code blocks 2022-02-01 21:44:53 +00:00
bors
2681f253bc Auto merge of #93442 - yaahc:Termination-abstraction, r=Mark-Simulacrum
Change Termination::report return type to ExitCode

Related to https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/43301

The goal of this change is to minimize the forward compatibility risks in stabilizing Termination. By using the opaque type `ExitCode` instead of an `i32` we leave room for us to evolve the API over time to provide what cross-platform consistency we can / minimize footguns when working with exit codes, where as stabilizing on `i32` would limit what changes we could make in the future in how we represent and construct exit codes.
2022-02-01 20:05:46 +00:00
Chris Denton
1bc8f0b49f
Link try_exists docs to Path::exists 2022-02-01 18:40:29 +00:00
Matthias Krüger
019c140244
Rollup merge of #93436 - dcsommer:master, r=Mark-Simulacrum
Update compiler_builtins to fix duplicate symbols in `armv7-linux-androideabi` rlib

I ran `./x.py dist --host= --target=armv7-linux-androideabi` before this diff:
```
$ nm build/x86_64-unknown-linux-gnu/stage2/lib/rustlib/armv7-linux-androideabi/lib/libcompiler_builtins-3d9661a82c59c66a.rlib 2> /dev/null | grep __sync_fetch_and_add_4 | wc -l
2
```
And after:
```
$ nm build/x86_64-unknown-linux-gnu/stage2/lib/rustlib/armv7-linux-androideabi/lib/libcompiler_builtins-ffd2745070943321.rlib 2> /dev/null | grep __sync_fetch_and_add_4 | wc -l
1
```
Fixes #93310

See also https://github.com/rust-lang/compiler-builtins/issues/449 and https://github.com/rust-lang/compiler-builtins/pull/450
2022-02-01 16:08:06 +01:00
Matthias Krüger
741b62af07
Rollup merge of #92584 - lcnr:query-stable-lint, r=estebank
add rustc lint, warning when iterating over hashmaps 2

first introduced in #89558 and reverted in #90380 due to its perf impact

r? ``@estebank``
2022-02-01 16:08:03 +01:00
lcnr
a1a30f7548 add a rustc::query_stability lint 2022-02-01 10:15:59 +01:00
Eric Huss
8a70ea2394
Rollup merge of #93504 - solid-rs:fix-kmc-solid-stack-size, r=nagisa
kmc-solid: Increase the default stack size

This PR increases the default minimum stack size on the [`*-kmc-solid_*`](https://doc.rust-lang.org/nightly/rustc/platform-support/kmc-solid.html) Tier 3 targets to 64KiB (Arm) and 128KiB (AArch64).

This value was chosen as a middle ground between supporting a relatively complex program (e.g., an application using a full-fledged off-the-shelf web server framework) with no additional configuration and minimizing resource consumption for the embedded platform that doesn't support lazily-allocated pages nor over-commitment (i.e., wasted stack spaces are wasted physical memory). If the need arises, the users can always set the `RUST_MIN_STACK` environmental variable to override the default stack size or use the platform API directly.
2022-01-31 20:12:59 -08:00
Eric Huss
8604161d75
Rollup merge of #93090 - jyn514:errorkind-asstr, r=dtolnay
`impl Display for io::ErrorKind`

This avoids having to convert from `ErrorKind` to `Error` just to print the error message.
2022-01-31 20:12:56 -08:00
TheVoid
76aa92906b
Fix incorrect panic message in example 2022-02-01 10:19:08 +08:00
George Bateman
5357ec1473
(#93493) Add items from code review 2022-01-31 23:49:16 +00:00
Ralf Sager
c492355aa5 fix error handling for pthread_sigmask(3)
Errors from pthread_sigmask(3) were handled using cvt(), which expects a
return value of -1 on error and uses errno.
However, pthread_sigmask(3) returns 0 on success and an error number
otherwise.
Fix it by replacing cvt() with cvt_nz().
2022-01-31 23:09:26 +01:00
Jane Lusby
19db85d6cd add inline attribute to new method 2022-01-31 11:57:17 -08:00
Tomoaki Kawada
1a77d6227c kmc-solid: Increase the default stack size 2022-01-31 17:39:38 +09:00
Matthias Krüger
4757a931cd
Rollup merge of #93494 - solid-rs:fix-kmc-solid-spawned-task-priority, r=Mark-Simulacrum
kmc-solid: Inherit the calling task's base priority in `Thread::new`

This PR fixes the initial priority calculation of spawned threads on the [`*-kmc-solid_*`](https://doc.rust-lang.org/nightly/rustc/platform-support/kmc-solid.html) Tier 3 targets.

Fixes a spawned task (an RTOS object on top of which threads are implemented for this target; unrelated to async tasks) getting an unexpectedly higher priority if it's spawned by a task whose priority is temporarily boosted by a priority-protection mutex.
2022-01-31 07:00:47 +01:00
Matthias Krüger
cd27f1b56e
Rollup merge of #93471 - cuviper:direntry-file_type-stat, r=the8472
unix: Use metadata for `DirEntry::file_type` fallback

When `DirEntry::file_type` fails to match a known `d_type`, we should
fall back to `DirEntry::metadata` instead of a bare `lstat`, because
this is faster and more reliable on targets with `fstatat`.
2022-01-31 07:00:44 +01:00
Matthias Krüger
bc2c4feaeb
Rollup merge of #93462 - ChrisDenton:systime-doc, r=joshtriplett
Document `SystemTime` platform precision

Fixes #88822
2022-01-31 07:00:43 +01:00
Tomoaki Kawada
175219ad0c kmc-solid: SOLID_RTC_TIME::tm_mon is 1-based 2022-01-31 11:59:13 +09:00
Tomoaki Kawada
09233ce3c0 kmc-solid: Inherit the calling task's base priority in Thread::new
Fixes a spawned task getting an unexpectedly higher priority if it's
spawned by a task whose priority is temporarily boosted by a priority-
protection mutex.
2022-01-31 11:31:55 +09:00
George Bateman
4d4ec97e0a
Document char validity 2022-01-30 22:16:41 +00:00
Eric Huss
0610d4fa66
Rollup merge of #92887 - pietroalbini:pa-bootstrap-update, r=Mark-Simulacrum
Bootstrap compiler update

r? ``@Mark-Simulacrum``
2022-01-30 08:37:46 -08:00
Josh Stone
d70b9c03ec unix: Use metadata for DirEntry::file_type fallback
When `DirEntry::file_type` fails to match a known `d_type`, we should
fall back to `DirEntry::metadata` instead of a bare `lstat`, because
this is faster and more reliable on targets with `fstatat`.
2022-01-29 16:58:18 -08:00
Matthias Krüger
0d08bbc8c8
Rollup merge of #93459 - tavianator:dirent-copy-only-reclen, r=cuviper
fs: Don't copy d_name from struct dirent

The dirent returned from readdir() is only guaranteed to be valid for
d_reclen bytes on common platforms.  Since we copy the name separately
anyway, we can copy everything except d_name into DirEntry::entry.

Fixes #93384.
2022-01-30 00:04:16 +01:00
Matthias Krüger
329753e248
Rollup merge of #93414 - Amanieu:std_arch_detect, r=m-ou-se
Move unstable is_{arch}_feature_detected! macros to std::arch

These macros are unstable, except for `is_x86_feature_detected` which is still exported from the crate root for backwards-compatibility.

This should unblock the stabilization of `is_aarch64_feature_detected`.

r? ```@m-ou-se```
2022-01-30 00:04:14 +01:00
Tavian Barnes
d0c8b29ec6 fs: Add a regression test for #93384 2022-01-29 16:37:21 -05:00
Tavian Barnes
f8f4c40527 fs: Don't copy d_name from struct dirent
The dirent returned from readdir() is only guaranteed to be valid for
d_reclen bytes on common platforms.  Since we copy the name separately
anyway, we can copy everything except d_name into DirEntry::entry.

Fixes #93384.
2022-01-29 16:37:21 -05:00
Chris Denton
0189a21c19
Document SystemTime platform precision 2022-01-29 20:41:18 +00:00
Daniel Sommermann
746b3d87b3 Update compiler_builtins to fix duplicate symbols in armv7-linux-androideabi rlib
I ran `./x.py dist --host= --target=armv7-linux-androideabi` before this diff:
```
$ nm build/x86_64-unknown-linux-gnu/stage2/lib/rustlib/armv7-linux-androideabi/lib/libcompiler_builtins-3d9661a82c59c66a.rlib 2> /dev/null | grep __sync_fetch_and_add_4 | wc -l
2
```
And after:
```
$ nm build/x86_64-unknown-linux-gnu/stage2/lib/rustlib/armv7-linux-androideabi/lib/libcompiler_builtins-ffd2745070943321.rlib 2> /dev/null | grep __sync_fetch_and_add_4 | wc -l
1
```
Fixes #93310
2022-01-29 08:28:52 -08:00
Matthias Krüger
2836dcd2df
Rollup merge of #93410 - solid-rs:feat-kmc-solid-net-dup, r=dtolnay
kmc-solid: Implement `net::FileDesc::duplicate`

This PR implements `std::sys::solid::net::FileDesc::duplicate`, which was accidentally left out when this target was added by #86191.
2022-01-29 14:46:32 +01:00
bors
ca43894e0e Auto merge of #93351 - anp:fuchsia-remove-dir-all, r=tmandry
Bump libc and fix remove_dir_all on Fuchsia after CVE fix

With the previous `is_dir` impl, we would attempt to unlink
a directory in the None branch, but Fuchsia supports returning
ENOTEMPTY from unlinkat() without the AT_REMOVEDIR flag because
we don't currently differentiate unlinking files and directories
by default.

On the Fuchsia side I've opened https://fxbug.dev/92273 to discuss
whether this is the correct behavior, but it doesn't seem like
addressing the error code is necessary to make our tests happy.

Depends on https://github.com/rust-lang/libc/pull/2654 since we
apparently haven't needed to reference DT_UNKNOWN before this.
2022-01-29 09:01:01 +00:00
Jane Lusby
91ffbc43b1 Change Termination::report return type to ExitCode 2022-01-28 12:53:36 -08:00
Adam Perry
8c9944c50d Fix remove_dir_all on Fuchsia after CVE fix.
With the previous `is_dir` impl, we would attempt to unlink
a directory in the None branch, but Fuchsia supports returning
ENOTEMPTY from unlinkat() without the AT_REMOVEDIR flag because
we don't currently differentiate unlinking files and directories
by default.

On the Fuchsia side I've opened https://fxbug.dev/92273 to discuss
whether this is the correct behavior, but it doesn't seem like
addressing the error code is necessary to make our tests happy.

Updates std's libc crate to include DT_UNKNOWN for Fuchsia.
2022-01-28 20:38:39 +00:00
Matthias Krüger
4f2e2ceeb7
Rollup merge of #93295 - ChrisDenton:tempdir-double-panic, r=dtolnay
Avoid double panics when using `TempDir` in tests

`TempDir` could panic on drop if `remove_dir_all` returns an error. If this happens while already panicking, the test process would abort and therefore not show the test results.

This PR tries to avoid such double panics.
2022-01-28 15:20:25 +01:00
Matthias Krüger
18c8d0da64
Rollup merge of #93239 - Thomasdezeeuw:socketaddr_creation, r=m-ou-se
Add os::unix::net::SocketAddr::from_path

Creates a new SocketAddr from a path, supports both regular paths and
abstract namespaces.

Note that `SocketAddr::from_abstract_namespace` could be removed after this as `SocketAddr::unix` also supports abstract namespaces.

Updates #65275
Unblocks https://github.com/tokio-rs/mio/issues/1527

r? `@m-ou-se`
2022-01-28 15:20:23 +01:00
Pietro Albini
5b3462c556
update cfg(bootstrap)s 2022-01-28 15:01:07 +01:00
Thomas de Zeeuw
35f578fc78 Update tracking issue for unix_socket_creation 2022-01-28 15:00:17 +01:00
Harald Hoyer
d2a13693c2 wasi: enable TcpListener and TcpStream
With the addition of `sock_accept()` to snapshot1, simple networking via
a passed `TcpListener` is possible. This patch implements the basics to
make a simple server work.

Signed-off-by: Harald Hoyer <harald@profian.com>
2022-01-28 13:27:30 +01:00
Harald Hoyer
00cbc8d0c8 wasi: update to wasi 0.11.0
To make use of `sock_accept()`, update the wasi crate to `0.11.0`.

Signed-off-by: Harald Hoyer <harald@profian.com>
2022-01-28 13:27:29 +01:00
Amanieu d'Antras
2188c551cd Move unstable is_{arch}_feature_detected! macros to std::arch 2022-01-28 09:51:46 +00:00
Tomoaki Kawada
da0d506ace kmc-solid: Implement FileDesc::duplicate 2022-01-28 15:02:44 +09:00
Matthias Krüger
4af3930f28
Rollup merge of #91641 - dtolnay:cchar-if, r=Mark-Simulacrum
Define c_char using cfg_if rather than repeating 40-line cfg

Libstd has a 40-line cfg that defines the targets on which `c_char` is unsigned, and then repeats the same cfg with `not(…)` for the targets on which `c_char` is signed.

This PR replaces it with a `cfg_if!` in which an `else` takes care of the signed case.

I confirmed that `x.py doc library/std` inlines the type alias because c_char_definition is not a publicly accessible path:

![Screenshot from 2021-12-07 13-42-07](https://user-images.githubusercontent.com/1940490/145110596-f1058406-9f32-44ff-9a81-1dfd19b4a24f.png)
2022-01-27 22:32:23 +01:00
Jubilee Young
e96159e9af pub use std::simd::StdFloat;
Make available the remaining float intrinsics that require runtime support
from a platform's libm, and thus cannot be included in a no-deps libcore,
by exposing them through a sealed trait, `std::simd::StdFloat`.

We might use the trait approach a bit more in the future, or maybe not.
Ideally, this trait doesn't stick around, even if so.
If we don't need to intermesh it with std, it can be used as a crate,
but currently that is somewhat uncertain.
2022-01-27 11:50:58 -08:00
Thomas de Zeeuw
4acb8ac46c Use sockaddr_un in unix SocketAddr::from_path 2022-01-27 09:54:28 +01:00
Thomas de Zeeuw
ca9a3c9a9f Make sockaddr_un safe and use copy_nonoverlapping
The creation of libc::sockaddr_un is a safe operation, no need for it to
be unsafe.

This also uses the more performant copy_nonoverlapping instead of an
iterator.
2022-01-27 09:52:59 +01:00
Dan Gohman
47aaf79554 Add documentation about BorrowedFd::to_owned.
Following up on #88564, this adds documentation explaining why
`BorrowedFd::to_owned` returns another `BorrowedFd` rather than an
`OwnedFd`. And similar for `BorrowedHandle` and `BorrowedSocket`.
2022-01-26 16:27:46 -08:00
Matthias Krüger
253f64c9c6
Rollup merge of #92778 - tavianator:linux-readdir-no-r, r=joshtriplett
fs: Use readdir() instead of readdir_r() on Linux and Android

See #40021 for more details.  Fixes #86649.  Fixes #34668.
2022-01-26 23:45:23 +01:00
Артём Павлов [Artyom Pavlov]
e0bcf771d6 Improve Duration::try_from_secs_f32/64 accuracy by directly processing exponent and mantissa 2022-01-26 18:14:25 +03:00
Ralf Jung
53d2401f3f make Windows abort_internal Miri-compatible 2022-01-25 12:44:40 -05:00
Chris Denton
84c0c9d20d
Avoid double panics when using TempDir in tests 2022-01-25 10:36:10 +00:00
Matthias Krüger
687bb583c8
Rollup merge of #88794 - sunfishcode:sunfishcode/try-clone, r=joshtriplett
Add a `try_clone()` function to `OwnedFd`.

As suggested in #88564. This adds a `try_clone()` to `OwnedFd` by
refactoring the code out of the existing `File`/`Socket` code.

r? ``@joshtriplett``
2022-01-25 05:51:09 +01:00
Thomas de Zeeuw
c1cd200922 Rename SocketAddr::unix to from_path
And change it to disallow NULL bytes.
2022-01-24 18:02:37 +01:00
Matthias Krüger
144aeedcf3
Rollup merge of #93152 - ivmarkov:master, r=m-ou-se
Fix STD compilation for the ESP-IDF target (regression from CVE-2022-21658)

Commit 54e22eb7db broke the compilation of STD for the ESP-IDF embedded "unix-like" Tier 3 target, because the fix for [CVE-2022-21658](https://blog.rust-lang.org/2022/01/20/Rust-1.58.1.html) uses [libc flags](https://github.com/esp-rs/esp-idf-svc/runs/4892221554?check_suite_focus=true) which are not supported on the ESP-IDF platform.

This PR simply redirects the ESP-IDF compilation to the "classic" implementation, similar to REDOX. This should be safe because:
* Neither of the two filesystems supported by ESP-IDF (spiffs and fatfs) support [symlinks](https://github.com/natevw/fatfs/blob/master/README.md) in the first place
* There is no notion of fs permissions at all, as the ESP-IDF is an embedded platform that does not have the notion of users, groups, etc.
* Similarly, ESP-IDF has just one "process" - the firmware itself - which contains the user code and the "OS" fused together and running with all permissions
2022-01-24 12:29:51 +01:00
Matthias Krüger
b92a1e9c20
Rollup merge of #92513 - Xuanwo:path-buf, r=dtolnay
std: Implement try_reserve and try_reserve_exact on PathBuf

Part of https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/91789

Signed-off-by: Xuanwo <github@xuanwo.io>
2022-01-24 12:29:50 +01:00
Chris Denton
ac02fcc4d8
Use NtCreateFile instead of NtOpenFile to open a file 2022-01-24 10:00:31 +00:00
Matthias Krüger
bb260e8950
Rollup merge of #92555 - m-ou-se:scoped-threads, r=Amanieu
Implement RFC 3151: Scoped threads.

This implements https://github.com/rust-lang/rfcs/pull/3151

r? `@Amanieu`
2022-01-23 20:13:02 +01:00
Thomas de Zeeuw
f2cdb57b94 Add os::unix::net::SocketAddr::unix
Creates a new SocketAddr from a path, supports both regular paths and
abstract namespaces.
2022-01-23 17:11:06 +01:00
bors
10c4c4afec Auto merge of #92998 - Amanieu:hashbrown12, r=Mark-Simulacrum
Update hashbrown to 0.12.0

[Changelog](https://github.com/rust-lang/hashbrown/blob/master/CHANGELOG.md#v0120---2022-01-17)
2022-01-22 23:39:21 +00:00
Mara Bos
465c405418 Add test for thread::Scope invariance. 2022-01-22 17:15:08 +01:00
Mara Bos
12cc7d9e15 Add tracking issue number for scoped_threads. 2022-01-22 16:03:23 +01:00
Mara Bos
e572c5a3d5 Simplify Send/Sync of std:🧵:Packet. 2022-01-22 16:02:18 +01:00
Matthias Krüger
9d7c8edd6c
Rollup merge of #92828 - Amanieu:unwind-abort, r=dtolnay
Print a helpful message if unwinding aborts when it reaches a nounwind function

This is implemented by routing `TerminatorKind::Abort` back through the panic handler, but with a special flag in the `PanicInfo` which indicates that the panic handler should *not* attempt to unwind the stack and should instead abort immediately.

This is useful for the planned change in https://github.com/rust-lang/lang-team/issues/97 which would make `Drop` impls `nounwind` by default.

### Code

```rust
#![feature(c_unwind)]

fn panic() {
    panic!()
}

extern "C" fn nounwind() {
    panic();
}

fn main() {
    nounwind();
}
```

### Before

```
$ ./test
thread 'main' panicked at 'explicit panic', test.rs:4:5
note: run with `RUST_BACKTRACE=1` environment variable to display a backtrace
Illegal instruction (core dumped)
```

### After

```
$ ./test
thread 'main' panicked at 'explicit panic', test.rs:4:5
note: run with `RUST_BACKTRACE=1` environment variable to display a backtrace
thread 'main' panicked at 'panic in a function that cannot unwind', test.rs:7:1
stack backtrace:
   0:     0x556f8f86ec9b - <std::sys_common::backtrace::_print::DisplayBacktrace as core::fmt::Display>::fmt::hdccefe11a6ac4396
   1:     0x556f8f88ac6c - core::fmt::write::he152b28c41466ebb
   2:     0x556f8f85d6e2 - std::io::Write::write_fmt::h0c261480ab86f3d3
   3:     0x556f8f8654fa - std::panicking::default_hook::{{closure}}::h5d7346f3ff7f6c1b
   4:     0x556f8f86512b - std::panicking::default_hook::hd85803a1376cac7f
   5:     0x556f8f865a91 - std::panicking::rust_panic_with_hook::h4dc1c5a3036257ac
   6:     0x556f8f86f079 - std::panicking::begin_panic_handler::{{closure}}::hdda1d83c7a9d34d2
   7:     0x556f8f86edc4 - std::sys_common::backtrace::__rust_end_short_backtrace::h5b70ed0cce71e95f
   8:     0x556f8f865592 - rust_begin_unwind
   9:     0x556f8f85a764 - core::panicking::panic_no_unwind::h2606ab3d78c87899
  10:     0x556f8f85b910 - test::nounwind::hade6c7ee65050347
  11:     0x556f8f85b936 - test::main::hdc6e02cb36343525
  12:     0x556f8f85b7e3 - core::ops::function::FnOnce::call_once::h4d02663acfc7597f
  13:     0x556f8f85b739 - std::sys_common::backtrace::__rust_begin_short_backtrace::h071d40135adb0101
  14:     0x556f8f85c149 - std::rt::lang_start::{{closure}}::h70dbfbf38b685e93
  15:     0x556f8f85c791 - std::rt::lang_start_internal::h798f1c0268d525aa
  16:     0x556f8f85c131 - std::rt::lang_start::h476a7ee0a0bb663f
  17:     0x556f8f85b963 - main
  18:     0x7f64c0822b25 - __libc_start_main
  19:     0x556f8f85ae8e - _start
  20:                0x0 - <unknown>
thread panicked while panicking. aborting.
Aborted (core dumped)
```
2022-01-22 15:32:49 +01:00
Amanieu d'Antras
537439c177 Disable test_try_reserve on Android 2022-01-22 13:51:57 +00:00
Matthias Krüger
081d65fa4a
Rollup merge of #93134 - tlyu:delete-stdin-split, r=Amanieu
delete `Stdin::split` forwarder

Part of #87096. Delete the `Stdin::split` forwarder because it's seen as too niche to expose at this level.

`@rustbot` label T-libs-api A-io
2022-01-21 22:03:19 +01:00
Matthias Krüger
9474c74fb6
Rollup merge of #93109 - JakobDegen:arc-docs, r=m-ou-se
Improve `Arc` and `Rc` documentation

This makes two changes (I can split the PR if necessary, but the changes are pretty small):
 1. A bunch of trait implementations claimed to be zero cost; however, they use the `Arc<T>: From<Box<T>>` impl which is definitely not free, especially for large dynamically sized `T`.
 2.  The code in deferred initialization examples unnecessarily used excessive amounts of `unsafe`. This has been reduced.
2022-01-21 22:03:18 +01:00
Matthias Krüger
701a8330e8
Rollup merge of #92586 - esp-rs:bugfix/allocation-alignment-espidf, r=yaahc
Set the allocation MIN_ALIGN for espidf to 4.

Closes https://github.com/esp-rs/rust/issues/99.

cc: `@ivmarkov`
2022-01-21 22:03:13 +01:00
Amanieu d'Antras
361a2f9a83 Update HashMap::try_reserve test to version from hashbrown 2022-01-21 17:20:38 +00:00
Amanieu d'Antras
88149d13e3 Update hashbrown to 0.12.0 2022-01-21 17:20:38 +00:00
Amanieu d'Antras
24588e6b3a Old versions of Android generate SIGSEGV from libc::abort 2022-01-21 15:44:57 +00:00
Tavian Barnes
3eeb3ca407 fs: Use readdir() instead of readdir_r() on Android
Bionic also guarantees that readdir() is thread-safe enough.
2022-01-21 07:59:14 -05:00
Tavian Barnes
bc04a4eac4 fs: Use readdir() instead of readdir_r() on Linux
readdir() is preferred over readdir_r() on Linux and many other
platforms because it more gracefully supports long file names.  Both
glibc and musl (and presumably all other Linux libc implementations)
guarantee that readdir() is thread-safe as long as a single DIR* is not
accessed concurrently, which is enough to make a readdir()-based
implementation of ReadDir safe.  This implementation is already used for
some other OSes including Fuchsia, Redox, and Solaris.

See #40021 for more details.  Fixes #86649.  Fixes #34668.
2022-01-21 07:59:14 -05:00
Tavian Barnes
c3e92fec94 fs: Implement more ReadDir methods in terms of name_cstr() 2022-01-21 07:59:14 -05:00
ivmarkov
495c7b31aa Fix STD compilation for the ESP-IDF target 2022-01-21 09:41:13 +02:00
Taylor Yu
fdf930ce01 delete Stdin::split forwarder 2022-01-20 15:37:44 -06:00
Matthias Krüger
dbc97490bb
Rollup merge of #93112 - pietroalbini:pa-cve-2022-21658-nightly, r=pietroalbini
Fix CVE-2022-21658

See https://blog.rust-lang.org/2022/01/20/cve-2022-21658.html. Patches reviewed by `@m-ou-se.`

r? `@ghost`
2022-01-20 17:10:43 +01:00
Matthias Krüger
1cb57e2d2b
Rollup merge of #92992 - kornelski:backtraceopt, r=Mark-Simulacrum
Help optimize out backtraces when disabled

The comment in `rust_backtrace_env` says:

>    // If the `backtrace` feature of this crate isn't enabled quickly return
>   // `None` so this can be constant propagated all over the place to turn
>  // optimize away callers.

but this optimization has regressed, because the only caller of this function had an alternative path that unconditionally (and pointlessly) asked for a full backtrace, so the disabled state couldn't propagate.

I've added a getter for the full format that respects the feature flag, so that the caller will now be able to really optimize out the disabled backtrace path. I've also made `rust_backtrace_env` trivially inlineable when backtraces are disabled.
2022-01-20 17:10:40 +01:00
Hans Kratz
0a6c9adc4a
Fix compilation for a few tier 2 targets 2022-01-20 16:35:16 +01:00
Jakob Degen
7bc47cfd92 Correct docs in Arc and Rc.
A number of trait implementations incorrectly claimed to be zero cost.
2022-01-20 04:54:03 -05:00
Josh Stone
38cef656d8 Write for Cursor with a custom Allocator 2022-01-19 16:07:14 -08:00
Josh Stone
a04d553e88 impl Write for Cursor<[u8; N]> 2022-01-19 15:57:40 -08:00
Josh Stone
4038ca0965 Refactor tests of Write for Cursor<_> 2022-01-19 15:55:29 -08:00
Joshua Nelson
f8ee57be2c impl Display for io::ErrorKind
This avoids having to convert from `ErrorKind` to `Error` just to print the error message.
2022-01-19 13:47:44 -06:00
Pietro Albini
32080ad6d0
Update std::fs::remove_dir_all documentation 2022-01-19 15:59:25 +01:00
Alex Crichton
cb748a27d2
Fix CVE-2022-21658 for WASI 2022-01-19 15:59:23 +01:00
Hans Kratz
54e22eb7db
Fix CVE-2022-21658 for UNIX-like 2022-01-19 15:59:22 +01:00
Chris Denton
5ab67bff1e
Fix CVE-2022-21658 for Windows 2022-01-19 15:59:21 +01:00
Matthias Krüger
3148a322d8
Rollup merge of #92124 - AngelicosPhosphoros:remove_extra_alloc_in_cstring_new_35838, r=Mark-Simulacrum
Little improves in CString `new` when creating from slice

Old code already contain optimization for cases with `&str` and `&[u8]` args. This commit adds a specialization for `&mut[u8]` too.

Also, I added usage of old slice in search for zero bytes instead of new buffer because it produce better code for constant inputs on Windows LTO builds. For other platforms, this wouldn't cause any difference because it calls `libc` anyway.

Inlined `_new` method into spec trait to reduce amount of code generated to `CString::new` callers.
2022-01-19 10:42:15 +01:00
Matthias Krüger
83b1a9452a
Rollup merge of #93016 - Amanieu:vec_spare_capacity, r=Mark-Simulacrum
Stabilize vec_spare_capacity

Closes #75017
2022-01-18 04:42:11 +01:00
Matthias Krüger
ae8f39e4d4
Rollup merge of #92866 - maxwase:does_exist_typo, r=Mark-Simulacrum
"Does exists" typos fix

Fixed some typos
2022-01-18 04:42:03 +01:00
Amanieu d'Antras
e012b9a78d Stabilize vec_spare_capacity
Closes #75017
2022-01-17 21:07:02 +00:00
bors
a34c079752 Auto merge of #92816 - tmiasko:rm-llvm-asm, r=Amanieu
Remove deprecated LLVM-style inline assembly

The `llvm_asm!` was deprecated back in #87590 1.56.0, with intention to remove
it once `asm!` was stabilized, which already happened in #91728 1.59.0. Now it
is time to remove `llvm_asm!` to avoid continued maintenance cost.

Closes #70173.
Closes #92794.
Closes #87612.
Closes #82065.

cc `@rust-lang/wg-inline-asm`

r? `@Amanieu`
2022-01-17 09:40:29 +00:00
Kornel
c2807525a5 Help optimize out backtraces when disabled 2022-01-17 02:21:24 +00:00
Amanieu d'Antras
528c4f9158 Add PanicInfo::can_unwind which indicates whether a panic handler is
allowed to trigger unwinding.
2022-01-17 00:39:28 +00:00
Matthias Krüger
cf4549c920
Rollup merge of #92619 - Alexendoo:macro-diagnostic-items, r=matthewjasper
Add diagnostic items for macros

For use in Clippy, it adds diagnostic items to all the stable public macros

Clippy has lints that look for almost all of these (currently by name or path), but there are a few that aren't currently part of any lint, I could remove those if it's preferred to add them as needed rather than ahead of time
2022-01-16 16:58:14 +01:00
bors
a0984b4e4c Auto merge of #92598 - Badel2:panic-update-hook, r=yaahc
Implement `panic::update_hook`

Add a new function `panic::update_hook` to allow creating panic hooks that forward the call to the previously set panic hook, without race conditions. It works by taking a closure that transforms the old panic hook into a new one, while ensuring that during the execution of the closure no other thread can modify the panic hook. This is a small function so I hope it can be discussed here without a formal RFC, however if you prefer I can write one.

Consider the following example:

```rust
let prev = panic::take_hook();
panic::set_hook(Box::new(move |info| {
    println!("panic handler A");
    prev(info);
}));
```

This is a common pattern in libraries that need to do something in case of panic: log panic to a file, record code coverage, send panic message to a monitoring service, print custom message with link to github to open a new issue, etc. However it is impossible to avoid race conditions with the current API, because two threads can execute in this order:

* Thread A calls `panic::take_hook()`
* Thread B calls `panic::take_hook()`
* Thread A calls `panic::set_hook()`
* Thread B calls `panic::set_hook()`

And the result is that the original panic hook has been lost, as well as the panic hook set by thread A. The resulting panic hook will be the one set by thread B, which forwards to the default panic hook. This is not considered a big issue because the panic handler setup is usually run during initialization code, probably before spawning any other threads.

Using the new `panic::update_hook` function, this race condition is impossible, and the result will be either `A, B, original` or `B, A, original`.

```rust
panic::update_hook(|prev| {
    Box::new(move |info| {
        println!("panic handler A");
        prev(info);
    })
});
```

I found one real world use case here: 988cf403e7/src/detection.rs (L32) the workaround is to detect the race condition and panic in that case.

The pattern of `take_hook` + `set_hook` is very common, you can see some examples in this pull request, so I think it's natural to have a function that combines them both. Also using `update_hook` instead of `take_hook` + `set_hook` reduces the number of calls to `HOOK_LOCK.write()` from 2 to 1, but I don't expect this to make any difference in performance.

### Unresolved questions:

* `panic::update_hook` takes a closure, if that closure panics the error message is "panicked while processing panic" which is not nice. This is a consequence of holding the `HOOK_LOCK` while executing the closure. Could be avoided using `catch_unwind`?

* Reimplement `panic::set_hook` as `panic::update_hook(|_prev| hook)`?
2022-01-16 02:18:42 +00:00
Jacob Kiesel
c821b71632 stabilize windows_process_extensions_raw_arg 2022-01-15 12:48:24 -07:00
Matthias Krüger
d878ad0559
Rollup merge of #92863 - camelid:read_to_string-rm-mut, r=m-ou-se
Remove `&mut` from `io::read_to_string` signature

``@m-ou-se`` [realized][1] that because `Read` is implemented for `&mut impl
Read`, there's no need to take `&mut` in `io::read_to_string`.

Removing the `&mut` from the signature allows users to remove the `&mut`
from their calls (and thus pass an owned reader) if they don't use the
reader later.

r? `@m-ou-se`

[1]: https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/80218#issuecomment-874322129
2022-01-15 11:28:24 +01:00
Matthias Krüger
1b241bb703
Rollup merge of #92775 - xfix:osstringext-inline, r=m-ou-se
Inline std::os::unix::ffi::OsStringExt methods

Those methods essentially do nothing at assembly level. On Unix systems, `OsString` is represented as a `Vec` without performing any transformations.
2022-01-15 11:28:23 +01:00
Matthias Krüger
d7e512c5c7
Rollup merge of #92684 - ibraheemdev:patch-10, r=m-ou-se
Export `tcp::IntoIncoming`

Added in #88339 but not publicly exported.
2022-01-15 02:25:16 +01:00
Matthias Krüger
558da934c1
Rollup merge of #92768 - ojeda:stabilize-maybe_uninit_extra, r=Mark-Simulacrum
Partially stabilize `maybe_uninit_extra`

This covers:

```rust
impl<T> MaybeUninit<T> {
    pub unsafe fn assume_init_read(&self) -> T { ... }
    pub unsafe fn assume_init_drop(&mut self) { ... }
}
```

It does not cover the const-ness of `write` under `const_maybe_uninit_write` nor the const-ness of `assume_init_read` (this commit adds `const_maybe_uninit_assume_init_read` for that).

FCP: https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/63567#issuecomment-958590287.

Signed-off-by: Miguel Ojeda <ojeda@kernel.org>
2022-01-14 07:47:33 +01:00
Maxwase
a7092f91a6 Typos fix 2022-01-14 00:17:11 +03:00
Scott Mabin
5296baeab1 Set the allocation MIN_ALIGN for espidf to 4. 2022-01-13 21:09:20 +00:00
Ibraheem Ahmed
f88b501914
fix stability attribute for tcp::IntoIncoming 2022-01-13 16:04:02 -05:00
Noah Lev
aa0ce4a20e Remove &mut from io::read_to_string signature
`@m-ou-se` [realized][1] that because `Read` is implemented for `&mut impl
Read`, there's no need to take `&mut` in `io::read_to_string`.

Removing the `&mut` from the signature allows users to remove the `&mut`
from their calls (and thus pass an owned reader) if they don't use the
reader later.

[1]: https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/80218#issuecomment-874322129
2022-01-13 10:57:45 -08:00
Matthias Krüger
e045c79c2d
Rollup merge of #91938 - yaahc:error-reporter, r=m-ou-se
Add `std::error::Report` type

This is a continuation of https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/90174, split into a separate PR since I cannot push to ```````@seanchen1991``````` 's fork
2022-01-13 08:11:18 +01:00
bors
256721ee51 Auto merge of #92553 - m-ou-se:thread-join-simplify, r=Mark-Simulacrum
Simpilfy thread::JoinInner.

`JoinInner`'s `native` field was an `Option`, but that's unnecessary.

Also, thanks to `Arc::get_mut`, there's no unsafety needed in `JoinInner::join()`.
2022-01-13 03:46:19 +00:00
Dan Gohman
83aebf8f7b Use the correct cvt for converting socket errors on Windows.
`WSADuplicateSocketW` returns 0 on success, which differs from
handle-oriented functions which return 0 on error. Use `sys::net::cvt`
to handle its return value, which handles the socket convention of
returning 0 on success, rather than `sys::cvt`, which handles the
handle-oriented convention of returning 0 on failure.
2022-01-12 11:41:48 -08:00
Tomasz Miąsko
000b36c505 Remove deprecated LLVM-style inline assembly 2022-01-12 18:51:31 +01:00
Matthias Krüger
286bb18a9b
Rollup merge of #92748 - david-perez:eliminate-boxed-wording-std-error, r=Mark-Simulacrum
Eliminate "boxed" wording in `std::error::Error` documentation

In commit 29403ee, documentation for the methods on `std::any::Any` was
modified so that they referred to the concrete value behind the trait
object as the "inner" value. This is a more accurate wording than
"boxed": while putting trait objects inside boxes is arguably the most
common use, they can also be placed behind other pointer types like
`&mut` or `std::sync::Arc`.

This commit does the same documentation changes for `std::error::Error`.
2022-01-12 07:12:15 +01:00
Matthias Krüger
37f061a2f8
Rollup merge of #92720 - rosik:patch-1, r=m-ou-se
Fix doc formatting for time.rs

The doc states that instants are not steady, but the word "not" wasn't highlighted in bold.
2022-01-12 07:12:13 +01:00
Matthias Krüger
5d904c17f6
Rollup merge of #92709 - joshtriplett:file-options-docs, r=Mark-Simulacrum
Improve documentation for File::options to give a more likely example

`File::options().read(true).open(...)` is equivalent to just
`File::open`. Change the example to set the `append` flag instead, and
then change the filename to something more likely to be written in
append mode.
2022-01-12 07:12:12 +01:00
Konrad Borowski
7e6d97bc39 Inline std::os::unix::ffi::OsStringExt methods 2022-01-11 19:33:46 +01:00
Miguel Ojeda
8680a44c0f Partially stabilize maybe_uninit_extra
This covers:

    impl<T> MaybeUninit<T> {
        pub unsafe fn assume_init_read(&self) -> T { ... }
        pub unsafe fn assume_init_drop(&mut self) { ... }
    }

It does not cover the const-ness of `write` under
`const_maybe_uninit_write` nor the const-ness of
`assume_init_read` (this commit adds
`const_maybe_uninit_assume_init_read` for that).

FCP: https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/63567#issuecomment-958590287.

Signed-off-by: Miguel Ojeda <ojeda@kernel.org>
2022-01-11 17:01:13 +01:00
bors
2e2c86eba2 Auto merge of #92070 - rukai:replace_vec_into_iter_with_array_into_iter, r=Mark-Simulacrum
Replace usages of vec![].into_iter with [].into_iter

`[].into_iter` is idiomatic over `vec![].into_iter` because its simpler and faster (unless the vec is optimized away in which case it would be the same)

So we should change all the implementation, documentation and tests to use it.

I skipped:
* `src/tools` - Those are copied in from upstream
* `src/test/ui` - Hard to tell if `vec![].into_iter` was used intentionally or not here and not much benefit to changing it.
*  any case where `vec![].into_iter` was used because we specifically needed a `Vec::IntoIter<T>`
*  any case where it looked like we were intentionally using `vec![].into_iter` to test it.
2022-01-11 14:23:24 +00:00
Josh Triplett
c91ad5d0f2 Improve documentation for File::options to give a more likely example
`File::options().read(true).open(...)` is equivalent to just
`File::open`. Change the example to set the `append` flag instead, and
then change the filename to something more likely to be written in
append mode.
2022-01-10 17:35:17 -05:00
david-perez
5786bbddc6 Eliminate "boxed" wording in std::error::Error documentation
In commit 29403ee, documentation for the methods on `std::any::Any` was
modified so that they referred to the concrete value behind the trait
object as the "inner" value. This is a more accurate wording than
"boxed": while putting trait objects inside boxes is arguably the most
common use, they can also be placed behind other pointer types like
`&mut` or `std::sync::Arc`.

This commit does the same documentation changes for `std::error::Error`.
2022-01-10 23:18:34 +01:00
bors
89b9f7b284 Auto merge of #92719 - matthiaskrgr:rollup-tc7oqys, r=matthiaskrgr
Rollup of 7 pull requests

Successful merges:

 - #92248 (Normalize struct tail type when checking Pointee trait)
 - #92357 (Fix invalid removal of newlines from doc comments)
 - #92602 (Make source links look cleaner)
 - #92636 (Normalize generator-local types with unevaluated constants)
 - #92693 (Release notes: add `Result::unwrap_{,err_}unchecked`)
 - #92702 (Clean up lang_items::extract)
 - #92717 (update miri)

Failed merges:

r? `@ghost`
`@rustbot` modify labels: rollup
2022-01-10 11:53:15 +00:00
Yaroslav Dynnikov
2ae616af30
Fix doc formatting for time.rs
The doc states that instants are not steady, but the word "not" wasn't highlighted in bold.
2022-01-10 14:22:45 +03:00
Matthias Krüger
a4ac4fae41
Rollup merge of #92602 - jsha:source-link-2, r=GuillaumeGomez
Make source links look cleaner

Change from syntaxy-looking [src] to the plain word "source".

Change the syntaxy-looking `[-]` at the top of the page to say "collapse".

Reduce opacity of rightside content.

Part of #59851

r? `@GuillaumeGomez`

Demo: https://rustdoc.crud.net/jsha/source-link-2/std/string/struct.String.html

[Discussed on Zulip](https://rust-lang.zulipchat.com/#narrow/stream/266220-rustdoc/topic/display.20of.20source.20link).
2022-01-10 11:03:06 +01:00
Lamb
3a77bb86ff Compute most of Public/Exported access level in rustc_resolve
Mak DefId to AccessLevel map in resolve for export

hir_id to accesslevel in resolve and applied in privacy
using local def id
removing tracing probes
making function not recursive and adding comments

Move most of Exported/Public res to rustc_resolve

moving public/export res to resolve

fix missing stability attributes in core, std and alloc

move code to access_levels.rs

return for some kinds instead of going through them

Export correctness, macro changes, comments

add comment for import binding

add comment for import binding

renmae to access level visitor, remove comments, move fn as closure, remove new_key

fmt

fix rebase

fix rebase

fmt

fmt

fix: move macro def to rustc_resolve

fix: reachable AccessLevel for enum variants

fmt

fix: missing stability attributes for other architectures

allow unreachable pub in rustfmt

fix: missing impl access level + renaming export to reexport

Missing impl access level was found thanks to a test in clippy
2022-01-09 21:33:14 +00:00
Ibraheem Ahmed
1e53a905ba
export tcp::IntoIncoming 2022-01-08 23:48:50 -05:00
Lucas Kent
08829853d3 eplace usages of vec![].into_iter with [].into_iter 2022-01-09 14:09:25 +11:00
Jacob Hoffman-Andrews
962c0a4ee5 Make source links look cleaner
Change from syntaxy-looking [src] to the plain word "source".
2022-01-08 09:49:41 -05:00
Eric Huss
10010685a9
Rollup merge of #92632 - yoshuawuyts:stabilize-available-parallelism, r=joshtriplett
Implement stabilization of `#[feature(available_parallelism)]`

Stabilized in https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/74479#issuecomment-984379800. Closes https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/74479. Thanks!

cc/ ``@rust-lang/libs-api``
2022-01-07 20:21:01 -08:00
Badel2
0c58586c9c Add safety comments to panic::(set/take/update)_hook 2022-01-08 00:57:59 +01:00
Badel2
8ef3ce866e Change panic::update_hook to simplify usage
And to remove possibility of panics while changing the panic handler,
because that resulted in a double panic.
2022-01-08 00:57:59 +01:00
Jane Lusby
72cb1bd06d silence tidy errors 2022-01-07 13:59:27 -08:00
Ian Douglas Scott
a02639dc09 Implement TryFrom<char> for u8
Previously suggested in https://github.com/rust-lang/rfcs/issues/2854.

It makes sense to have this since `char` implements `From<u8>`. Likewise
`u32`, `u64`, and `u128` (since #79502) implement `From<char>`.
2022-01-07 12:28:47 -08:00
Badel2
8bdf5c3de6 Implement panic::update_hook 2022-01-07 17:28:20 +01:00
Yoshua Wuyts
3632f41c78 Stabilize #[feature(available_parallelism)] 2022-01-07 01:07:10 +01:00
Alex Macleod
7ea03db04a Add diagnostic items for macros 2022-01-06 14:59:33 +00:00
Matthias Krüger
2647ce2165
Rollup merge of #92288 - yescallop:patch-1, r=m-ou-se
Fix a pair of mistyped test cases in `std::net::ip`

These two test cases are not consistent with their comments, which I believe is unintended.
2022-01-06 12:01:00 +01:00
bors
f1ce0e6a00 Auto merge of #92587 - matthiaskrgr:rollup-qnwa8qx, r=matthiaskrgr
Rollup of 7 pull requests

Successful merges:

 - #92092 (Drop guards in slice sorting derive src pointers from &mut T, which is invalidated by interior mutation in comparison)
 - #92388 (Fix a minor mistake in `String::try_reserve_exact` examples)
 - #92442 (Add negative `impl` for `Ord`, `PartialOrd` on `LocalDefId`)
 - #92483 (Stabilize `result_cloned` and `result_copied`)
 - #92574 (Add RISC-V detection macro and more architecture instructions)
 - #92575 (ast: Always keep a `NodeId` in `ast::Crate`)
 - #92583 (⬆️ rust-analyzer)

Failed merges:

r? `@ghost`
`@rustbot` modify labels: rollup
2022-01-05 15:28:36 +00:00
Mara Bos
4cb73704e2
Mention *scoped* thread in panic message.
Co-authored-by: Amanieu d'Antras <amanieu@gmail.com>
2022-01-05 11:17:11 +00:00
Mara Bos
aa9c0881ef Note the invariance over 'env in Scope<'env>. 2022-01-05 12:14:32 +01:00
Mara Bos
5bd5781823 Fix missing .load() in Scope's Debug impl. 2022-01-05 12:14:32 +01:00
Mara Bos
a9efbaf3a5 Rename n_running_threads to num_running_threads. 2022-01-05 12:14:32 +01:00
Matthias Krüger
42a3acfdb1
Rollup merge of #92517 - ChrisDenton:explicit-path, r=dtolnay
Explicitly pass `PATH` to the Windows exe resolver

This allows for testing different `PATH`s without using the actual environment.
2022-01-05 11:26:07 +01:00
luojia65
06f4453027 Add is_riscv_feature_detected!; modify impl of hint::spin_loop
Update library/core/src/hint.rs

Co-authored-by: Amanieu d'Antras <amanieu@gmail.com>

Remove redundant config gate
2022-01-05 15:44:52 +08:00
Mara Bos
5b5746f081
Fix typo in Scope::spawn docs.
Co-authored-by: deltragon <m@dafert.at>
2022-01-04 18:43:23 +00:00
Mara Bos
c429ade760 Fix typo in is_running() docs.
Co-authored-by: Mattias Buelens <649348+MattiasBuelens@users.noreply.github.com>
2022-01-04 18:40:00 +01:00
Mara Bos
09e6665aba Fix typo in documentation. 2022-01-04 17:05:26 +01:00
Mara Bos
2c8cc70ea0
Use > rather than == for overflow check in scoped threads.
Co-authored-by: Jacob Lifshay <programmerjake@gmail.com>
2022-01-04 15:58:29 +00:00
Mara Bos
c5cb2def06 Fix variance of thread::Scope. 2022-01-04 16:57:16 +01:00
Matthias Krüger
b2d6ff4b6e
Rollup merge of #92525 - zohnannor:patch-1, r=camelid
intra-doc: Make `Receiver::into_iter` into a clickable link

The documentation on `std::sync::mpsc::Iter` and `std::sync::mpsc::TryIter` provides links to the corresponding `Receiver` methods, unlike `std::sync::mpsc::IntoIter` does.

This was left out in c59b188aae
Related to #29377
2022-01-04 16:34:19 +01:00
Matthias Krüger
4e4e1ec931
Rollup merge of #92456 - danielhenrymantilla:patch-1, r=petrochenkov
Make the documentation of builtin macro attributes accessible

`use ::std::prelude::v1::derive;` compiles on stable, so, AFAIK, there is no reason to have it be `#[doc(hidden)]`.

  - What it currently looks like for things such as `#[test]`, `#[derive]`, `#[global_allocator]`: https://doc.rust-lang.org/1.57.0/core/prelude/v1/index.html#:~:text=Experimental-,pub,-use%20crate%3A%3Amacros%3A%3Abuiltin%3A%3Aglobal_allocator

    <img width="767" alt="Screen Shot 2021-12-31 at 17 49 46" src="https://user-images.githubusercontent.com/9920355/147832999-cbd747a6-4607-4df6-8e57-c1675dcbc1c3.png">

    and in `::std` they're just straight `hidden`.

    <img width="452" alt="Screen Shot 2021-12-31 at 17 53 18" src="https://user-images.githubusercontent.com/9920355/147833105-c5ff8cd1-9e4d-4d2b-9621-b36aa3cfcb28.png">

  - Here is how it looks like with this PR (assuming the `Rustc{De,En}codable` ones are not reverted):

    <img width="778" alt="Screen Shot 2021-12-31 at 17 50 55" src="https://user-images.githubusercontent.com/9920355/147833034-84286342-dbf7-4e6e-9062-f39cd6c286a4.png">

    <img width="291" alt="Screen Shot 2021-12-31 at 17 52 54" src="https://user-images.githubusercontent.com/9920355/147833109-c92ed55c-51c6-40a2-9205-f834d1e349c0.png">

 Since this involves doc people to chime in, and since `jyn` is on vacation, I'll cc `@GuillaumeGomez` and tag the `rustdoc` team as well
2022-01-04 16:34:16 +01:00
Matthias Krüger
50a66b75dc
Rollup merge of #91754 - Patrick-Poitras:rm-4byte-minimum-stdio-windows, r=Mark-Simulacrum
Modifications to `std::io::Stdin` on Windows so that there is no longer a 4-byte buffer minimum in read().

This is an attempted fix of issue #91722, where a too-small buffer was passed to the read function of stdio on Windows. This caused an error to be returned when `read_to_end` or `read_to_string` were called. Both delegate to `std::io::default_read_to_end`, which creates a buffer that is of length >0, and forwards it to `std::io::Stdin::read()`. The latter method returns an error if the length of the buffer is less than 4, as there might not be enough space to allocate a UTF-16 character. This creates a problem when the buffer length is in `0 < N < 4`, causing the bug.

The current modification creates an internal buffer, much like the one used for the write functions

I'd also like to acknowledge the help of ``@agausmann`` and ``@hkratz`` in detecting and isolating the bug, and for suggestions that made the fix possible.

Couple disclaimers:

- Firstly, I didn't know where to put code to replicate the bug found in the issue. It would probably be wise to add that case to the testing suite, but I'm afraid that I don't know _where_ that test should be added.
- Secondly, the code is fairly fundamental to IO operations, so my fears are that this may cause some undesired side effects ~or performance loss in benchmarks.~ The testing suite runs on my computer, and it does fix the issue noted in #91722.
- Thirdly, I left the "surrogate" field in the Stdin struct, but from a cursory glance, it seems to be serving the same purpose for other functions. Perhaps merging the two would be appropriate.

Finally, this is my first pull request to the rust language, and as such some things may be weird/unidiomatic/plain out bad. If there are any obvious improvements I could do to the code, or any other suggestions, I would appreciate them.

Edit: Closes #91722
2022-01-04 16:34:14 +01:00
Mara Bos
4300bea0c2 Formatting. 2022-01-04 16:32:39 +01:00
Mara Bos
f5217792ed Simplify panicking mechanism of thread::scope.
It now panic!()s on its own, rather than resume_unwind'ing the panic
payload from the thread. Using resume_unwind skips the panic_handler,
meaning that the main thread would never have a panic handler run, which
can get confusing.
2022-01-04 16:10:14 +01:00
Mara Bos
da33da161b Add documentation for scoped threads. 2022-01-04 16:09:53 +01:00
Mara Bos
cc699e1b62 Add ScopedJoinHandle::is_running(). 2022-01-04 15:15:41 +01:00
Mara Bos
0e24ad537b Implement RFC 3151: Scoped threads. 2022-01-04 14:51:39 +01:00
Mara Bos
a45b3ac183 Simpilfy thread::JoinInner. 2022-01-04 14:08:44 +01:00
Daniel Henry-Mantilla
f20ccc0748 Make the documentation of builtin macro attributes accessible
- Do not `#[doc(hidden)]` the `#[derive]` macro attribute

  - Add a link to the reference section to `derive`'s inherent docs

  - Do the same for `#[test]` and `#[global_allocator]`

  - Fix `GlobalAlloc` link (why is it on `core` and not `alloc`?)

  - Try `no_inline`-ing the `std` reexports from `core`

  - Revert "Try `no_inline`-ing the `std` reexports from `core`"

  - Address PR review

  - Also document the unstable macros
2022-01-03 20:43:16 +01:00
zohnannor
ca3f9048a1
Make Receiver::into_iter into a clickable link
The documentation on `std::sync::mpsc::Iter` and `std::sync::mpsc::TryIter` provides links to the corresponding `Receiver` methods, unlike `std::sync::mpsc::IntoIter` does.

This was left out in c59b188aae
Related to #29377
2022-01-03 20:17:57 +03:00
Chris Denton
4145877731
Explicitly pass PATH to the Windows exe resolver 2022-01-03 12:55:42 +00:00
Xuanwo
edae82e5e4
std: Implement try_reserve and try_reserve_exact on PathBuf
Signed-off-by: Xuanwo <github@xuanwo.io>
2022-01-03 17:35:38 +08:00
bors
7b13c628a2 Auto merge of #92482 - matthiaskrgr:rollup-uso1zi0, r=matthiaskrgr
Rollup of 7 pull requests

Successful merges:

 - #84083 (Clarify the guarantees that ThreadId does and doesn't make.)
 - #91593 (Remove unnecessary bounds for some Hash{Map,Set} methods)
 - #92297 (Reduce compile time of rustbuild)
 - #92332 (Add test for where clause order)
 - #92438 (Enforce formatting for rustc_codegen_cranelift)
 - #92463 (Remove pronunciation guide from Vec<T>)
 - #92468 (Emit an error for `--cfg=)`)

Failed merges:

r? `@ghost`
`@rustbot` modify labels: rollup
2022-01-02 00:20:04 +00:00
Matthias Krüger
5137f7c9db
Rollup merge of #91593 - upsuper-forks:hashmap-set-methods-bound, r=dtolnay
Remove unnecessary bounds for some Hash{Map,Set} methods

This PR moves `HashMap::{into_keys,into_values,retain}` and `HashSet::retain` from `impl` blocks with `K: Eq + Hash, S: BuildHasher` into the blocks without them. It doesn't seem to me there is any reason these methods need to be bounded by that. This change brings `HashMap::{into_keys,into_values}` on par with `HashMap::{keys,values,values_mut}` which are not bounded either.
2022-01-01 22:49:48 +01:00
Matthias Krüger
30ec1f0384
Rollup merge of #84083 - ltratt:threadid_doc_tweak, r=dtolnay
Clarify the guarantees that ThreadId does and doesn't make.

The existing documentation does not spell out whether `ThreadId`s are unique during the lifetime of a thread or of a process. I had to examine the source code to realise (pleasingly!) that they're unique for the lifetime of a process. That seems worth documenting clearly, as it's a strong guarantee.

Examining the way `ThreadId`s are created also made me realise that the `as_u64` method on `ThreadId` could be a trap for the unwary on those platforms where the platform's notion of a thread identifier is also a 64 bit integer (particularly if they happen to use a similar identifier scheme to `ThreadId`). I therefore think it's worth being even clearer that there's no relationship between the two.
2022-01-01 22:49:47 +01:00
bors
dd3ac41495 Auto merge of #92396 - xfix:remove-commandenv-apply, r=Mark-Simulacrum
Remove CommandEnv::apply

It's not being used and uses unsound set_var and remove_var functions. This is an internal function that isn't exported (even with `process_internals` feature), so this shouldn't break anything.

Also see #92365. Note that this isn't the only use of those methods in standard library, so that particular pull request will need more changes than just this to work (in particular, `test_capture_env_at_spawn` is using `set_var` and `remove_var`).
2022-01-01 20:45:37 +00:00
Josh Triplett
0d55bd1100 Make tidy check for magic numbers that spell things
Remove existing problematic cases.
2021-12-31 21:13:07 -08:00
David Tolnay
d29941e724
Remove needless allocation from example code of OsString 2021-12-30 12:45:02 -08:00
David Tolnay
1f62c24d5a
Fix some copy/paste hysteresis in OsString try_reserve docs
It appears `find_max_slow` comes from the BinaryHeap docs, where the
try_reserve example is a slow implementation of find_max. It has no
relevance to this code in OsString though.
2021-12-30 12:41:26 -08:00
Konrad Borowski
14fc9dcbba Remove CommandEnv::apply
It's not being used and uses unsound set_var and remove_var
functions.
2021-12-29 10:07:44 +01:00
Xuanwo
b07ae1c4d5
Address comments
Signed-off-by: Xuanwo <github@xuanwo.io>
2021-12-29 14:02:20 +08:00
Xuanwo
9166428be1
Update library/std/src/ffi/os_str.rs
Co-authored-by: David Tolnay <dtolnay@gmail.com>
2021-12-29 13:49:39 +08:00
Xuanwo
27b92c9f98
Implement support in wtf8
Signed-off-by: Xuanwo <github@xuanwo.io>
2021-12-28 11:53:14 +08:00
Xuanwo
013fbc6187
Fix windows build
Signed-off-by: Xuanwo <github@xuanwo.io>
2021-12-28 11:40:58 +08:00
Xuanwo
c40ac57efb
Add try_reserve for OsString
Signed-off-by: Xuanwo <github@xuanwo.io>
2021-12-28 11:28:05 +08:00
AngelicosPhosphoros
4b62a77e4d Little improves in CString new when creating from slice
Old code already contain optimization for cases with `&str` and `&[u8]` args. This commit adds a specialization for `&mut[u8]` too.

Also, I added usage of old slice in search for zero bytes instead of new buffer because it produce better code for Windows on LTO builds. For other platforms, this wouldn't cause any difference because it calls `libc` anyway.

Inlined `_new` method into spec trait to reduce amount of code generated to `CString::new` callers.
2021-12-27 12:26:30 +03:00
Hiroshi Kori
7a3a668bc9 fix typo: intialized -> initialized 2021-12-26 18:37:11 -08:00
Hiroshi Kori
7ddad349b1 fix typo: the use f.pad -> then use f.pad 2021-12-26 17:44:53 -08:00
Scallop Ye
e3ad30962e
Fix a pair of mistyped test cases in std::net::ip 2021-12-26 16:41:32 +08:00
Laurence Tratt
d66a9e16ba Language tweak. 2021-12-25 15:18:55 +00:00
Matthias Krüger
40c6720620
Rollup merge of #90625 - Milo123459:ref-unwind-safe, r=dtolnay
Add `UnwindSafe` to `Once`

Fixes #43469
2021-12-23 17:48:29 +01:00
Matthias Krüger
3afed8fc70
Rollup merge of #92208 - ChrisDenton:win-bat-cmd, r=dtolnay
Quote bat script command line

Fixes #91991

[`CreateProcessW`](https://docs.microsoft.com/en-us/windows/win32/api/processthreadsapi/nf-processthreadsapi-createprocessw#parameters) should only be used to run exe files but it does have some (undocumented) special handling for files with `.bat` and `.cmd` extensions. Essentially those magic extensions will cause the parameters to be automatically rewritten. Example pseudo Rust code (note that `CreateProcess` starts with an optional application name followed by the application arguments):
```rust
// These arguments...
CreateProcess(None, `@"foo.bat` "hello world""`@,` ...);
// ...are rewritten as
CreateProcess(Some(r"C:\Windows\System32\cmd.exe"), `@""foo.bat` "hello world"""`@,` ...);
```

However, when setting the first parameter (the application name) as we now do, it will omit the extra level of quotes around the arguments:

```rust
// These arguments...
CreateProcess(Some("foo.bat"), `@"foo.bat` "hello world""`@,` ...);
// ...are rewritten as
CreateProcess(Some(r"C:\Windows\System32\cmd.exe"), `@"foo.bat` "hello world""`@,` ...);
```

This means the arguments won't be passed to the script as intended.

Note that running batch files this way is undocumented but people have relied on this so we probably shouldn't break it.
2021-12-23 00:28:56 +01:00
Matthias Krüger
12e4907728
Rollup merge of #92139 - dtolnay:backtrace, r=m-ou-se
Change Backtrace::enabled atomic from SeqCst to Relaxed

This atomic is not synchronizing anything outside of its own value, so we don't need the `Acquire`/`Release` guarantee that all memory operations prior to the store are visible after the subsequent load, nor the `SeqCst` guarantee of all threads seeing all of the sequentially consistent operations in the same order.

Using `Relaxed` reduces the overhead of `Backtrace::capture()` in the case that backtraces are not enabled.

## Benchmark

```rust
#![feature(backtrace)]

use std::backtrace::Backtrace;
use std::sync::atomic::{AtomicUsize, Ordering};
use std::thread;
use std::time::Instant;

fn main() {
    let begin = Instant::now();
    let mut threads = Vec::new();
    for _ in 0..64 {
        threads.push(thread::spawn(|| {
            for _ in 0..10_000_000 {
                let _ = Backtrace::capture();
                static LOL: AtomicUsize = AtomicUsize::new(0);
                LOL.store(1, Ordering::Release);
            }
        }));
    }
    for thread in threads {
        let _ = thread.join();
    }
    println!("{:?}", begin.elapsed());
}
```

**Before:**&ensp;6.73 seconds
**After:**&ensp;5.18 seconds
2021-12-23 00:28:54 +01:00
Matthias Krüger
554ad50fa2
Rollup merge of #92117 - solid-rs:fix-kmc-solid-read-buf, r=yaahc
kmc-solid: Add `std::sys::solid::fs::File::read_buf`

This PR adds `std::sys::solid::fs::File::read_buf` to catch up with the changes introduced by #81156 and fix the [`*-kmc-solid_*`](https://doc.rust-lang.org/nightly/rustc/platform-support/kmc-solid.html) Tier 3 targets..
2021-12-23 00:28:53 +01:00
Chris Denton
615604f0c7
Fix tests 2021-12-22 18:31:36 +00:00
Matthias Krüger
55b494445a
Rollup merge of #92129 - RalfJung:join-handle-docs, r=jyn514
JoinHandle docs: add missing 'the'
2021-12-21 08:33:42 +01:00
Matthias Krüger
3009dd7c5a
Rollup merge of #90345 - passcod:entry-insert, r=dtolnay
Stabilise entry_insert

This stabilises `HashMap:Entry::insert_entry` etc. Tracking issue #65225. It will need an FCP.

This was implemented in #64656 two years ago.

This PR includes the rename and change discussed in https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/65225#issuecomment-910652430, happy to split if needed.
2021-12-21 08:33:37 +01:00
Tomoaki Kawada
874514c7b4 kmc-solid: Add std::sys::solid::fs::File::read_buf
Catching up with commit 3b263ceb5c
2021-12-21 11:18:35 +09:00
David Tolnay
a2fd84a125
Bump insert_entry stabilization to Rust 1.59 2021-12-20 13:14:06 -08:00
David Tolnay
984b10da16
Change Backtrace::enabled atomic from SeqCst to Relaxed 2021-12-20 12:34:10 -08:00
David Tolnay
91161ed110
impl RefUnwindSafe for Once 2021-12-20 11:49:47 -08:00
Ralf Jung
fbceb7ac3b JoinHandle docs: add missing 'the' 2021-12-20 18:30:29 +01:00
Matthias Krüger
efbefb673d
Rollup merge of #92030 - rukai:stdlib2021, r=m-ou-se
Update stdlib to the 2021 edition

progress towards https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/88638

I couldnt find a way to run the 2018 style panic tests against 2018 so I just deleted them, maybe theres a way to do it that I missed though?
2021-12-18 10:26:40 +01:00
Matthias Krüger
e69acdaae4
Rollup merge of #92025 - devnexen:revert-91553-anc_data_dfbsd, r=kennytm
Revert "socket ancillary data implementation for dragonflybsd."

Reverts rust-lang/rust#91553
2021-12-18 10:26:39 +01:00
Lucas Kent
b656384d83 Update stdlib to the 2021 edition 2021-12-18 00:21:53 +11:00
Jane Lusby
5b3902fc65 attempt to make Report usable with Box dyn Error and fn main 2021-12-16 16:08:30 -08:00
Jane Lusby
9be1cc9b61 more docs improvements 2021-12-16 15:34:12 -08:00
Jane Lusby
078b112d94 add a panicking example 2021-12-16 14:22:35 -08:00
Jane Lusby
4420cc33d6 Update report output and fix examples 2021-12-16 14:06:28 -08:00
David CARLIER
78a3078c3f
Revert "socket ancillary data implementation for dragonflybsd." 2021-12-16 21:32:53 +00:00
Chris Denton
de764a7ccb
Quote bat script command line 2021-12-16 17:22:32 +00:00
Matthias Krüger
b742594f4a
Rollup merge of #91947 - ibraheemdev:io-error-other, r=joshtriplett
Add `io::Error::other`

This PR adds a small utility constructor, `io::Error::other`, a shorthand for `io::Error::new(io::ErrorKind::Other, err)`, something I find myself writing often.

For some concrete stats, a quick search on [grep.app](https://grep.app) shows that more than half of the uses of `io::Error::new` use `ErrorKind::Other`:
```
Error::new\((?:std::)?(?:io::)?ErrorKind:: => 3,898 results
Error::new\((?:std::)?(?:io::)?ErrorKind::Other => 2,186 results
```
2021-12-16 17:23:10 +01:00
Ayrton
c12f7efd01 Bump compiler-builtins to 0.1.66
Adds intrinsics for truncdfsf2 and truncdfsf2vsp on ARM.
2021-12-15 21:00:06 -05:00
PFPoitras
d49d1d4499 Modifications to buffer UTF-16 internally so that there is no longer a 4-byte buffer minimum. Include suggestions from @agausmann and @Mark-Simulacrum. 2021-12-15 18:35:29 -04:00
Matthias Krüger
99f4458a8c
Rollup merge of #91916 - steffahn:fix-typos, r=dtolnay
Fix a bunch of typos

I hope that none of these files is not supposed to be modified.

FYI, I opened separate PRs for typos in submodules, in the respective repositories
* https://github.com/rust-lang/stdarch/pull/1267
* https://github.com/rust-lang/backtrace-rs/pull/455
2021-12-15 10:57:02 +01:00
Ibraheem Ahmed
85f786cc9c add io::Error::other constructor 2021-12-14 20:00:59 -05:00
Matthias Krüger
4e7497bda0
Rollup merge of #91881 - Patrick-Poitras:stabilize-iter-zip, r=scottmcm
Stabilize `iter::zip`

Hello all!

As the tracking issue (#83574) for `iter::zip` completed the final commenting period without any concerns being raised, I hereby submit this stabilization PR on the issue.

As the pull request that introduced the feature (#82917) states, the `iter::zip` function is a shorter way to zip two iterators. As it's generally a quality-of-life/ergonomic improvement, it has been integrated into the codebase without any trouble, and has been
used in many places across the rust compiler and standard library since March without any issues.

For more details, I would refer to `@cuviper's` original PR, or the [function's documentation](https://doc.rust-lang.org/std/iter/fn.zip.html).
2021-12-15 01:28:08 +01:00
PFPoitras
304ede6bcc Stabilize iter::zip. 2021-12-14 18:50:31 -04:00
Jane Lusby
1386a15529 Update std::error::Report based on feedback 2021-12-14 13:56:49 -08:00
bors
2f4da6243f Auto merge of #91728 - Amanieu:stable_asm, r=joshtriplett
Stabilize asm! and global_asm!

Tracking issue: #72016

It's been almost 2 years since the original [RFC](https://github.com/rust-lang/rfcs/pull/2850) was posted and we're finally ready to stabilize this feature!

The main changes in this PR are:
- Removing `asm!` and `global_asm!` from the prelude as per the decision in #87228.
- Stabilizing the `asm` and `global_asm` features.
- Removing the unstable book pages for `asm` and `global_asm`. The contents are moved to the [reference](https://github.com/rust-lang/reference/pull/1105) and [rust by example](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust-by-example/pull/1483).
  - All links to these pages have been removed to satisfy the link checker. In a later PR these will be replaced with links to the reference or rust by example.
- Removing the automatic suggestion for using `llvm_asm!` instead of `asm!` if you're still using the old syntax, since it doesn't work anymore with `asm!` no longer being in the prelude. This only affects code that predates the old LLVM-style `asm!` being renamed to `llvm_asm!`.
- Updating `stdarch` and `compiler-builtins`.
- Updating all the tests.

r? `@joshtriplett`
2021-12-14 21:15:22 +00:00
Frank Steffahn
a957cefda6 Fix a bunch of typos 2021-12-14 16:40:43 +01:00
Konrad Borowski
23e4aeb140 Stabilize const_cstr_unchecked 2021-12-13 08:43:19 +01:00
Amanieu d'Antras
1c48025685 Address review feedback 2021-12-12 11:26:59 +00:00
Amanieu d'Antras
44a3a66ee8 Stabilize asm! and global_asm!
They are also removed from the prelude as per the decision in
https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/87228.

stdarch and compiler-builtins are updated to work with the new, stable
asm! and global_asm! macros.
2021-12-12 11:20:03 +00:00
Matthias Krüger
bb23d82e6f
Rollup merge of #91782 - maxwase:is_symlink_since_attribute, r=jyn514
Correct since attribute for `is_symlink` feature

Follow-up from [89677](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/89677)
2021-12-11 16:02:50 +01:00
Maxwase
8fafb77af9 Correct since attribute for feature 2021-12-11 13:47:20 +03:00
Xidorn Quan
fb1e031685 Remove unnecessary bounds for some Hash{Map,Set} methods 2021-12-11 21:07:41 +11:00
Matthias Krüger
5da73311be
Rollup merge of #91553 - devnexen:anc_data_dfbsd, r=yaahc
socket ancillary data implementation for dragonflybsd.
2021-12-11 08:22:33 +01:00
bors
c185610ebc Auto merge of #91761 - matthiaskrgr:rollup-bjowmvz, r=matthiaskrgr
Rollup of 11 pull requests

Successful merges:

 - #91668 (Remove the match on `ErrorKind::Other`)
 - #91678 (Add tests fixed by #90023)
 - #91679 (Move core/stream/stream/mod.rs to core/stream/stream.rs)
 - #91681 (fix typo in `intrinsics::raw_eq` docs)
 - #91686 (Fix `Vec::reserve_exact` documentation)
 - #91697 (Delete Utf8Lossy::from_str)
 - #91706 (Add unstable book entries for parts of asm that are not being stabilized)
 - #91709 (Replace iterator-based set construction by *Set::From<[T; N]>)
 - #91716 (Improve x.py logging and defaults a bit more)
 - #91747 (Add pierwill to .mailmap)
 - #91755 (Fix since attribute for const_linked_list_new feature)

Failed merges:

r? `@ghost`
`@rustbot` modify labels: rollup
2021-12-11 03:52:12 +00:00
Matthias Krüger
5510803fe9
Rollup merge of #91482 - JosephTLyons:update-HashMap-and-BTreeMap-documentation, r=yaahc
Update documentation to use `from()` to initialize `HashMap`s and `BTreeMap`s

As of Rust 1.56, `HashMap` and `BTreeMap` both have associated `from()` functions.  I think using these in the documentation cleans things up a bit.  It allows us to remove some of the `mut`s and avoids the Initialize-Then-Modify anti-pattern.
2021-12-10 22:40:33 +01:00
Júnior Bassani
cebd9494bd
Replace iterator-based set construction by *Set::From<[T; N]> 2021-12-09 11:56:19 -03:00
bors
3b263ceb5c Auto merge of #81156 - DrMeepster:read_buf, r=joshtriplett
Implement most of RFC 2930, providing the ReadBuf abstraction

This replaces the `Initializer` abstraction for permitting reading into uninitialized buffers, closing #42788.

This leaves several APIs described in the RFC out of scope for the initial implementation:

* read_buf_vectored
* `ReadBufs`

Closes #42788, by removing the relevant APIs.
2021-12-09 10:11:55 +00:00
Matthias Krüger
856eefece9
Rollup merge of #89999 - talagrand:GetTempPath2, r=m-ou-se
Update std::env::temp_dir to use GetTempPath2 on Windows when available.

As a security measure, Windows 11 introduces a new temporary directory API, GetTempPath2.
When the calling process is running as SYSTEM, a separate temporary directory
will be returned inaccessible to non-SYSTEM processes. For non-SYSTEM processes
the behavior will be the same as before.

This can help mitigate against attacks such as this one:
https://medium.com/csis-techblog/cve-2020-1088-yet-another-arbitrary-delete-eop-a00b97d8c3e2

Compatibility risk: Software which relies on temporary files to communicate between SYSTEM and non-SYSTEM
processes may be affected by this change. In many cases, such patterns may be vulnerable to the very
attacks the new API was introduced to harden against.
I'm unclear on the Rust project's tolerance for such change-of-behavior in the standard library. If anything,
this PR is meant to raise awareness of the issue and hopefully start the conversation.

How tested: Taking the example code from the documentation and running it through psexec (from SysInternals) on
Win10 and Win11.
On Win10:
C:\test>psexec -s C:\test\main.exe
<...>
Temporary directory: C:\WINDOWS\TEMP\

On Win11:
C:\test>psexec -s C:\test\main.exe
<...>
Temporary directory: C:\Windows\SystemTemp\
2021-12-09 05:08:31 +01:00
Matthias Krüger
3fc5bd7abc
Rollup merge of #87599 - Smittyvb:concat_bytes, r=Mark-Simulacrum
Implement concat_bytes!

This implements the unstable `concat_bytes!` macro, which has tracking issue #87555. It can be used like:
```rust
#![feature(concat_bytes)]

fn main() {
    assert_eq!(concat_bytes!(), &[]);
    assert_eq!(concat_bytes!(b'A', b"BC", [68, b'E', 70]), b"ABCDEF");
}
```
If strings or characters are used where byte strings or byte characters are required, it suggests adding a `b` prefix. If a number is used outside of an array it suggests arrayifying it. If a boolean is used it suggests replacing it with the numeric value of that number. Doubly nested arrays of bytes are disallowed.
2021-12-09 05:08:30 +01:00
Matthias Krüger
bb8a4ab6ae
Rollup merge of #91467 - ChrisDenton:confusing-os-string, r=Mark-Simulacrum
Emphasise that an OsStr[ing] is not necessarily a platform string

Fixes #53261

Since that issue was filed, #56141 added a further clarification to the `OsString` docs. However the ffi docs may still leave the impression that an `OsStr` is in the platform native form. This PR aims to further emphasise that an `OsStr` is not necessarily a platform string.
2021-12-08 11:08:58 +01:00
David Tolnay
4e8b91a920
Work around Clippy false positive on as c_char 2021-12-07 22:33:31 -08:00
DrMeepster
cd23799ba5
correct typo
Co-authored-by: Josh Triplett <josh@joshtriplett.org>
2021-12-07 22:09:14 -08:00
David Tolnay
db5a2ae6a4
Define c_char using cfg_if rather than repeating 40-line cfg 2021-12-07 13:40:25 -08:00
Smitty
eb56693a37 Implement concat_bytes!
The tracking issue for this is #87555.
2021-12-06 21:05:13 -05:00
bors
87dce6e8df Auto merge of #91284 - t6:freebsd-riscv64, r=Amanieu
Add support for riscv64gc-unknown-freebsd

For https://doc.rust-lang.org/nightly/rustc/target-tier-policy.html#tier-3-target-policy:

* A tier 3 target must have a designated developer or developers (the "target maintainers") on record to be CCed when issues arise regarding the target. (The mechanism to track and CC such developers may evolve over time.)

For all Rust targets on FreeBSD, it's [rust@FreeBSD.org](mailto:rust@FreeBSD.org).

* Targets must use naming consistent with any existing targets; for instance, a target for the same CPU or OS as an existing Rust target should use the same name for that CPU or OS. Targets should normally use the same names and naming conventions as used elsewhere in the broader ecosystem beyond Rust (such as in other toolchains), unless they have a very good reason to diverge. Changing the name of a target can be highly disruptive, especially once the target reaches a higher tier, so getting the name right is important even for a tier 3 target.

Done.

* Target names should not introduce undue confusion or ambiguity unless absolutely necessary to maintain ecosystem compatibility. For example, if the name of the target makes people extremely likely to form incorrect beliefs about what it targets, the name should be changed or augmented to disambiguate it.

Done

* Tier 3 targets may have unusual requirements to build or use, but must not create legal issues or impose onerous legal terms for the Rust project or for Rust developers or users.

Done.

* The target must not introduce license incompatibilities.

Done.

* Anything added to the Rust repository must be under the standard Rust license (MIT OR Apache-2.0).

Fine with me.

* The target must not cause the Rust tools or libraries built for any other host (even when supporting cross-compilation to the target) to depend on any new dependency less permissive than the Rust licensing policy. This applies whether the dependency is a Rust crate that would require adding new license exceptions (as specified by the tidy tool in the rust-lang/rust repository), or whether the dependency is a native library or binary. In other words, the introduction of the target must not cause a user installing or running a version of Rust or the Rust tools to be subject to any new license requirements.

Done.

* If the target supports building host tools (such as rustc or cargo), those host tools must not depend on proprietary (non-FOSS) libraries, other than ordinary runtime libraries supplied by the platform and commonly used by other binaries built for the target. For instance, rustc built for the target may depend on a common proprietary C runtime library or console output library, but must not depend on a proprietary code generation library or code optimization library. Rust's license permits such combinations, but the Rust project has no interest in maintaining such combinations within the scope of Rust itself, even at tier 3.

Done.

* Targets should not require proprietary (non-FOSS) components to link a functional binary or library.

Done.

* "onerous" here is an intentionally subjective term. At a minimum, "onerous" legal/licensing terms include but are not limited to: non-disclosure requirements, non-compete requirements, contributor license agreements (CLAs) or equivalent, "non-commercial"/"research-only"/etc terms, requirements conditional on the employer or employment of any particular Rust developers, revocable terms, any requirements that create liability for the Rust project or its developers or users, or any requirements that adversely affect the livelihood or prospects of the Rust project or its developers or users.

Fine with me.

* Neither this policy nor any decisions made regarding targets shall create any binding agreement or estoppel by any party. If any member of an approving Rust team serves as one of the maintainers of a target, or has any legal or employment requirement (explicit or implicit) that might affect their decisions regarding a target, they must recuse themselves from any approval decisions regarding the target's tier status, though they may otherwise participate in discussions.

Ok.

* This requirement does not prevent part or all of this policy from being cited in an explicit contract or work agreement (e.g. to implement or maintain support for a target). This requirement exists to ensure that a developer or team responsible for reviewing and approving a target does not face any legal threats or obligations that would prevent them from freely exercising their judgment in such approval, even if such judgment involves subjective matters or goes beyond the letter of these requirements.

Ok.

* Tier 3 targets should attempt to implement as much of the standard libraries as possible and appropriate (core for most targets, alloc for targets that can support dynamic memory allocation, std for targets with an operating system or equivalent layer of system-provided functionality), but may leave some code unimplemented (either unavailable or stubbed out as appropriate), whether because the target makes it impossible to implement or challenging to implement. The authors of pull requests are not obligated to avoid calling any portions of the standard library on the basis of a tier 3 target not implementing those portions.

std is implemented.

* The target must provide documentation for the Rust community explaining how to build for the target, using cross-compilation if possible. If the target supports running tests (even if they do not pass), the documentation must explain how to run tests for the target, using emulation if possible or dedicated hardware if necessary.

Building is possible the same way as other Rust on FreeBSD targets.

* Tier 3 targets must not impose burden on the authors of pull requests, or other developers in the community, to maintain the target. In particular, do not post comments (automated or manual) on a PR that derail or suggest a block on the PR based on a tier 3 target. Do not send automated messages or notifications (via any medium, including via `@)` to a PR author or others involved with a PR regarding a tier 3 target, unless they have opted into such messages.

Ok.

* Backlinks such as those generated by the issue/PR tracker when linking to an issue or PR are not considered a violation of this policy, within reason. However, such messages (even on a separate repository) must not generate notifications to anyone involved with a PR who has not requested such notifications.

Ok.

* Patches adding or updating tier 3 targets must not break any existing tier 2 or tier 1 target, and must not knowingly break another tier 3 target without approval of either the compiler team or the maintainers of the other tier 3 target.

Ok.

* In particular, this may come up when working on closely related targets, such as variations of the same architecture with different features. Avoid introducing unconditional uses of features that another variation of the target may not have; use conditional compilation or runtime detection, as appropriate, to let each target run code supported by that target.

Ok.
2021-12-06 03:51:05 +00:00
David Carlier
e68887e67c socket ancillary data implementation for dragonflybsd. 2021-12-05 13:36:06 +00:00
bors
1597728ef5 Auto merge of #88611 - m-ou-se:array-into-iter-new-deprecate, r=joshtriplett
Deprecate array::IntoIter::new.
2021-12-05 12:53:01 +00:00
Matthias Krüger
23012b5200
Rollup merge of #91355 - alexcrichton:stabilize-thread-local-const, r=m-ou-se
std: Stabilize the `thread_local_const_init` feature

This commit is intended to follow the stabilization disposition of the
FCP that has now finished in #84223. This stabilizes the ability to flag
thread local initializers as `const` expressions which enables the macro
to generate more efficient code for accessing it, notably removing
runtime checks for initialization.

More information can also be found in #84223 as well as the tests where
the feature usage was removed in this PR.

Closes #84223
2021-12-05 00:38:00 +01:00
Matthias Krüger
b97f375ea2
Rollup merge of #89642 - devnexen:macos_getenv_chng, r=m-ou-se
environ on macos uses directly libc which has the correct signature.
2021-12-05 00:37:55 +01:00
Mara Bos
eb3fc45c87 Update docs. 2021-12-04 19:40:33 +01:00
Mara Bos
1acb44f03c Use IntoIterator for array impl everywhere. 2021-12-04 19:40:33 +01:00
Kevin Reid
6fd5cf51c1 Add documentation to more From::from implementations.
For users looking at documentation through IDE popups, this gives them
relevant information rather than the generic trait documentation wording
“Performs the conversion”. For users reading the documentation for a
specific type for any reason, this informs them when the conversion may
allocate or copy significant memory versus when it is always a move or
cheap copy.

Notes on specific cases:
* The new documentation for `From<T> for T` explains that it is not a
  conversion at all.
* Also documented `impl<T, U> Into<U> for T where U: From<T>`, the other
  central blanket implementation of conversion.
* I did not add documentation to conversions of a specific error type to
  a more general error type.
* I did not add documentation to unstable code.

This change was prepared by searching for the text "From<... for" and so
may have missed some cases that for whatever reason did not match. I
also looked for `Into` impls but did not find any worth documenting by
the above criteria.
2021-12-04 07:46:36 -08:00
Matthias Krüger
aa6f2d9a79
Rollup merge of #91474 - rtzoeller:dfly_set_errno, r=cuviper
suppress warning about set_errno being unused on DragonFly

Other targets allow this function to be unused, DragonFly just misses out due to providing a specialization.

This fixes a build error for DragonFly.
2021-12-03 06:24:18 +01:00
Matthias Krüger
25474ed731
Rollup merge of #91453 - ChrisDenton:doc-win-tls-dtors, r=dtolnay
Document Windows TLS drop behaviour

The way Windows TLS destructors are run has some "interesting" properties. They should be documented.

Fixes #74875
2021-12-03 06:24:16 +01:00
Joseph T Lyons
72a6974e45 Make HashMaps mutable again 2021-12-03 00:14:55 -05:00
Ryan Zoeller
0fdb109795 suppress warning about set_errno being unused on DragonFly
Other targets allow this function to be unused, DragonFly just
misses out due to providing a specialization.
2021-12-02 16:16:27 -06:00
Matthias Krüger
6e5f4c2f1b
Rollup merge of #91464 - ChrisDenton:doc-path-case-sensitivity, r=joshtriplett
Document file path case sensitivity

This describes the current behaviour of the standard library's pure path methods.

Fixes #66260.
2021-12-02 22:16:18 +01:00
Matthias Krüger
2ec0f841b4
Rollup merge of #91460 - ChrisDenton:doc-last-os-error, r=joshtriplett
Document how `last_os_error` should be used

It should be made clear that the state of the last OS error could change if another function call is made before the call to `Error::last_os_error()`.

Fixes: #53155
2021-12-02 22:16:16 +01:00
Chris Denton
49aa5baf36
Emphasise that an OsStr[ing] is not necessarily a platform string 2021-12-02 21:02:56 +00:00
Chris Denton
d8832425fc
Document file path case sensitivity 2021-12-02 19:48:10 +00:00
Chris Denton
6df44a389c
Document how last_os_error should be used 2021-12-02 17:53:57 +00:00
Joseph T Lyons
80a308df32 Use HashMap::from() instead of using HashMap::new() with HashMap::insert() 2021-12-02 12:26:47 -05:00
Matthias Krüger
d96ce3ea8e
Rollup merge of #91394 - Mark-Simulacrum:bump-stage0, r=pietroalbini
Bump stage0 compiler

r? `@pietroalbini` (or anyone else)
2021-12-02 15:52:03 +01:00
Chris Denton
7a145250c6
Document Windows TLS drop behaviour 2021-12-02 14:17:58 +00:00
Matthias Krüger
bc929f9404
Rollup merge of #91340 - cr1901:no-atomic, r=Mark-Simulacrum
Bump compiler_builtins to 0.1.55 to bring in fixes for targets lackin…

…g atomic support.

This fixes a "Cannot select" LLVM error when compiling `compiler_builtins` for targets lacking atomics, like MSP430. Se https://github.com/rust-lang/compiler-builtins/issues/441 for more info. This PR is a more general version of #91248.
2021-11-30 23:43:31 +01:00
Mark Rousskov
b221c877e8 Apply cfg-bootstrap switch 2021-11-30 10:51:42 -05:00
Alex Crichton
a0c959750a std: Stabilize the thread_local_const_init feature
This commit is intended to follow the stabilization disposition of the
FCP that has now finished in #84223. This stabilizes the ability to flag
thread local initializers as `const` expressions which enables the macro
to generate more efficient code for accessing it, notably removing
runtime checks for initialization.

More information can also be found in #84223 as well as the tests where
the feature usage was removed in this PR.

Closes #84223
2021-11-29 07:23:46 -08:00
Matthias Krüger
80277dcc4f
Rollup merge of #91049 - dimo414:patch-1, r=kennytm
Add a caveat to std::os::windows::fs::symlink_file

This is similar to the note on [Python's `os.symlink()`](https://docs.python.org/3/library/os.html#os.symlink). Some additional notes in https://github.com/dimo414/bkt/issues/3.
2021-11-29 10:41:33 +01:00
William D. Jones
e500eb6950 Bump compiler_builtins to 0.1.55 to bring in fixes for targets lacking atomic support. 2021-11-28 23:01:03 -05:00
Jubilee Young
9a04ae4997 Update libc to 0.2.108
Changelog:
https://github.com/rust-lang/libc/releases/tag/0.2.107
https://github.com/rust-lang/libc/releases/tag/0.2.108
Primarily intended to pull in fd331f65f214ea75b6210b415b5fd8650be15c73
This should help with https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/90044
2021-11-27 16:13:04 -08:00
bors
686e313a9a Auto merge of #91288 - matthiaskrgr:rollup-yp5h41r, r=matthiaskrgr
Rollup of 6 pull requests

Successful merges:

 - #83791 (Weaken guarantee around advancing underlying iterators in zip)
 - #90995 (Document non-guarantees for Hash)
 - #91057 (Expand `available_parallelism` docs in anticipation of cgroup quota support)
 - #91062 (rustdoc: Consolidate static-file replacement mechanism)
 - #91208 (Account for incorrect `where T::Assoc = Ty` bound)
 - #91266 (Use non-generic inner function for pointer formatting)

Failed merges:

r? `@ghost`
`@rustbot` modify labels: rollup
2021-11-27 14:29:12 +00:00
Matthias Krüger
8fb58e5ece
Rollup merge of #91057 - the8472:clarify-parallelism-steady-state, r=dtolnay
Expand `available_parallelism` docs in anticipation of cgroup quota support

The "fixed" in "fixed steady state limits" means to exclude load-dependent resource prioritization
that would calculate to 100% of capacity on an idle system and less capacity on a loaded system.

Additionally I also exclude "system load" since it would be silly to try to identify
other, perhaps higher priority, processes hogging some CPU cores that aren't explicitly excluded
by masks/quotas/whatever.
2021-11-27 11:46:42 +01:00
bors
0881b3abe4 Auto merge of #90846 - cuviper:weak, r=dtolnay
Refactor weak symbols in std::sys::unix

This makes a few changes to the weak symbol macros in `sys::unix`:

- `dlsym!` is added to keep the functionality for runtime `dlsym`
  lookups, like for `__pthread_get_minstack@GLIBC_PRIVATE` that we don't
  want to show up in ELF symbol tables.
- `weak!` now uses `#[linkage = "extern_weak"]` symbols, so its runtime
  behavior is just a simple null check. This is also used by `syscall!`.
  - On non-ELF targets (macos/ios) where that linkage is not known to
    behave, `weak!` is just an alias to `dlsym!` for the old behavior.
- `raw_syscall!` is added to always call `libc::syscall` on linux and
  android, for cases like `clone3` that have no known libc wrapper.

The new `weak!` linkage does mean that you'll get versioned symbols if
you build with a newer glibc, like `WEAK DEFAULT UND statx@GLIBC_2.28`.
This might seem problematic, but old non-weak symbols can tie the build
to new versions too, like `dlsym@GLIBC_2.34` from their recent library
unification. If you build with an old glibc like `dist-x86_64-linux`
does, you'll still get unversioned `WEAK DEFAULT UND statx`, which may
be resolved based on the runtime glibc.

I also found a few functions that don't need to be weak anymore:

- Android can directly use `ftruncate64`, `pread64`, and `pwrite64`, as
  these were added in API 12, and our baseline is API 14.
- Linux can directly use `splice`, added way back in glibc 2.5 and
  similarly old musl. Android only added it in API 21 though.
2021-11-27 07:58:00 +00:00
Tobias Kortkamp
47474f1055
Add riscv64gc-unknown-freebsd 2021-11-27 07:24:18 +01:00
Matthias Krüger
a92f867bf1
Rollup merge of #91248 - alessandrod:compiler-builtins-bump-bpf, r=Mark-Simulacrum
Bump compiler-builtins to 0.1.53

Fixes a LLVM crash with the bpf targets, see https://github.com/rust-lang/compiler-builtins/pull/440
2021-11-26 22:41:42 +01:00
Matthias Krüger
fdc305d58d
Rollup merge of #91176 - hermitcore:spin, r=kennytm
If the thread does not get the lock in the short term, yield the CPU

Reduces on [RustyHermit](https://github.com/hermitcore/rusty-hermit) the amount of wasted processor cycles
2021-11-26 16:02:24 +01:00
Alessandro Decina
1cf37189bc Bump compiler-builtins to 0.1.53
Fixes a LLVM crash with the bpf targets
2021-11-26 10:33:32 +00:00
Guillaume Gomez
a81f3610ea
Rollup merge of #91151 - name1e5s:chore/process_test, r=m-ou-se
Fix test in std::process on android

closes #10380
2021-11-24 22:56:38 +01:00
Guillaume Gomez
a6a1d7ca29
Rollup merge of #90420 - GuillaumeGomez:rustdoc-internals-feature, r=camelid
Create rustdoc_internals feature gate

As suggested by ``@camelid`` [here](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/90398#issuecomment-955093851), since `doc_keyword` and `doc_primitive` aren't meant to be stabilized, we could put them behind a same feature flag.

This is pretty much what it would look like (needs to update the tests too).

The tracking issue is https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/90418.

What do you think ``@rust-lang/rustdoc`` ?
2021-11-24 22:56:37 +01:00
Guillaume Gomez
1e6ced3532 Create rustdoc_internals feature gate 2021-11-24 21:57:18 +01:00
Stefan Lankes
6911af9d06
Improving the readability
Co-authored-by: kennytm <kennytm@gmail.com>
2021-11-24 21:12:56 +01:00
Stefan Lankes
644b445428 If the thread does not get the lock in the short term, yield the CPU
Reduces the amount of wasted processor cycles
2021-11-24 15:59:28 +01:00
Georg Brandl
b490ccc227 kernel_copy: avoid panic on unexpected OS error
According to documentation, the listed errnos should only occur
if the `copy_file_range` call cannot be made at all, so the
assert be correct.  However, since in practice file system
drivers (incl. FUSE etc.) can return any errno they want, we
should not panic here.

Fixes #91152
2021-11-23 11:10:49 +01:00
name1e5s
08a500ffc9 fix test in std::process on android 2021-11-23 13:57:22 +08:00
bors
883a241c08 Auto merge of #91101 - birkenfeld:io_error_docs, r=Mark-Simulacrum
Mention std::io::Error::from(ErrorKind) in Error::new() docs

This conversion is not very discoverable for the cases
where an error is required without extra payload.
2021-11-22 13:56:51 +00:00
bors
cebd2dda1d Auto merge of #90352 - camsteffen:for-loop-desugar, r=oli-obk
Simplify `for` loop desugar

Basically two intermediate bindings are inlined. I could have left one intermediate binding in place as this would simplify some diagnostic logic, but I think the difference in that regard would be negligible, so it is better to have a minimal HIR.

For checking that the pattern is irrefutable, I added a special case when the `match` is found to be non-exhaustive.

The reordering of the arms is purely stylistic. I don't *think* there are any perf implications.

```diff
  match IntoIterator::into_iter($head) {
      mut iter => {
          $label: loop {
-             let mut __next;
              match Iterator::next(&mut iter) {
-                 Some(val) => __next = val,
                  None => break,
+                 Some($pat) => $block,
              }
-             let $pat = __next;
-             $block
          }
      }
  }
```
2021-11-21 21:20:20 +00:00
Eduardo Sánchez Muñoz
23637e20cd libcore: assume the input of next_code_point and next_code_point_reverse is UTF-8-like
The functions are now `unsafe` and they use `Option::unwrap_unchecked` instead of `unwrap_or_0`

`unwrap_or_0` was added in 42357d772b. I guess `unwrap_unchecked` was not available back then.

Given this example:

```rust
pub fn first_char(s: &str) -> Option<char> {
    s.chars().next()
}
```

Previously, the following assembly was produced:

```asm
_ZN7example10first_char17ha056ddea6bafad1cE:
	.cfi_startproc
	test	rsi, rsi
	je	.LBB0_1
	movzx	edx, byte ptr [rdi]
	test	dl, dl
	js	.LBB0_3
	mov	eax, edx
	ret
.LBB0_1:
	mov	eax, 1114112
	ret
.LBB0_3:
	lea	r8, [rdi + rsi]
	xor	eax, eax
	mov	r9, r8
	cmp	rsi, 1
	je	.LBB0_5
	movzx	eax, byte ptr [rdi + 1]
	add	rdi, 2
	and	eax, 63
	mov	r9, rdi
.LBB0_5:
	mov	ecx, edx
	and	ecx, 31
	cmp	dl, -33
	jbe	.LBB0_6
	cmp	r9, r8
	je	.LBB0_9
	movzx	esi, byte ptr [r9]
	add	r9, 1
	and	esi, 63
	shl	eax, 6
	or	eax, esi
	cmp	dl, -16
	jb	.LBB0_12
.LBB0_13:
	cmp	r9, r8
	je	.LBB0_14
	movzx	edx, byte ptr [r9]
	and	edx, 63
	jmp	.LBB0_16
.LBB0_6:
	shl	ecx, 6
	or	eax, ecx
	ret
.LBB0_9:
	xor	esi, esi
	mov	r9, r8
	shl	eax, 6
	or	eax, esi
	cmp	dl, -16
	jae	.LBB0_13
.LBB0_12:
	shl	ecx, 12
	or	eax, ecx
	ret
.LBB0_14:
	xor	edx, edx
.LBB0_16:
	and	ecx, 7
	shl	ecx, 18
	shl	eax, 6
	or	eax, ecx
	or	eax, edx
	ret
```

After this change, the assembly is reduced to:

```asm
_ZN7example10first_char17h4318683472f884ccE:
	.cfi_startproc
	test	rsi, rsi
	je	.LBB0_1
	movzx	ecx, byte ptr [rdi]
	test	cl, cl
	js	.LBB0_3
	mov	eax, ecx
	ret
.LBB0_1:
	mov	eax, 1114112
	ret
.LBB0_3:
	mov	eax, ecx
	and	eax, 31
	movzx	esi, byte ptr [rdi + 1]
	and	esi, 63
	cmp	cl, -33
	jbe	.LBB0_4
	movzx	edx, byte ptr [rdi + 2]
	shl	esi, 6
	and	edx, 63
	or	edx, esi
	cmp	cl, -16
	jb	.LBB0_7
	movzx	ecx, byte ptr [rdi + 3]
	and	eax, 7
	shl	eax, 18
	shl	edx, 6
	and	ecx, 63
	or	ecx, edx
	or	eax, ecx
	ret
.LBB0_4:
	shl	eax, 6
	or	eax, esi
	ret
.LBB0_7:
	shl	eax, 12
	or	eax, edx
	ret
```
2021-11-21 17:05:55 +01:00
Cameron Steffen
9c83f8c4d1 Simplify for loop desugar 2021-11-21 08:15:21 -06:00
Matthias Krüger
789d168e13
Rollup merge of #91008 - Urgau:float-minimum-maximum, r=scottmcm
Adds IEEE 754-2019 minimun and maximum functions for f32/f64

IEEE 754-2019 removed the `minNum` (`min` in Rust) and `maxNum` (`max` in Rust) operations in favor of the newly created `minimum` and `maximum` operations due to their [non-associativity](https://grouper.ieee.org/groups/msc/ANSI_IEEE-Std-754-2019/background/minNum_maxNum_Removal_Demotion_v3.pdf) that cannot be fix in a backwards compatible manner. This PR adds `fN::{minimun,maximum}` functions following the new rules.

### IEEE 754-2019 Rules

> **minimum(x, y)** is x if x < y, y if y < x, and a quiet NaN if either operand is a NaN, according to 6.2.
For this operation, −0 compares less than +0. Otherwise (i.e., when x = y and signs are the same)
it is either x or y.

> **maximum(x, y)** is x if x > y, y if y > x, and a quiet NaN if either operand is a NaN, according to 6.2.
For this operation, +0 compares greater than −0. Otherwise (i.e., when x = y and signs are the
same) it is either x or y.

"IEEE Standard for Floating-Point Arithmetic," in IEEE Std 754-2019 (Revision of IEEE 754-2008) , vol., no., pp.1-84, 22 July 2019, doi: 10.1109/IEEESTD.2019.8766229.

### Implementation

This implementation is inspired by the one in [`glibc` ](90f0ac10a7/math/s_fminimum_template.c) (it self derived from the C2X draft) expect that:
 - it doesn't use `copysign` because it's not available in `core` and also because `copysign` is unnecessary (we only want to check the sign, no need to create a new float)
 - it also prefer `other > self` instead of `self < other` like IEEE 754-2019 does

I originally tried to implement them [using intrinsics](1d8aa13bc3) but LLVM [error out](https://godbolt.org/z/7sMrxW49a) when trying to lower them to machine intructions, GCC doesn't yet have built-ins for them, only cranelift support them nativelly (as it doesn't support the nativelly the old sementics).

Helps with https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/83984
2021-11-21 09:55:13 +01:00
Georg Brandl
289eb786d4 Mention std::io::Error::from(ErrorKind) in Error::new() docs
This conversion is not very discoverable for the cases
where an error is required without extra payload.
2021-11-21 09:00:13 +01:00
Michael Diamond
9c3b0d81ef Add a caveat to std::os::windows::fs::symlink_file
This is similar to the note on [Python's `os.symlink()`](https://docs.python.org/3/library/os.html#os.symlink). Some additional notes in https://github.com/dimo414/bkt/issues/3.
2021-11-20 12:28:43 -08:00
bors
2885c47482 Auto merge of #87704 - ChrisDenton:win-resolve-exe, r=yaahc
Windows: Resolve `process::Command` program without using the current directory

Currently `std::process::Command` searches many directories for the executable to run, including the current directory. This has lead to a [CVE for `ripgrep`](https://cve.circl.lu/cve/CVE-2021-3013) but presumably other command line utilities could be similarly vulnerable if they run commands. This was [discussed on the internals forum](https://internals.rust-lang.org/t/std-command-resolve-to-avoid-security-issues-on-windows/14800). Also discussed was [which directories should be searched](https://internals.rust-lang.org/t/windows-where-should-command-new-look-for-executables/15015).

EDIT: This PR originally removed all implicit paths. They've now been added back as laid out in the rest of this comment.

## Old Search Strategy

The old search strategy is [documented here][1]. Additionally Rust adds searching the child's paths (see also #37519). So the full list of paths that were searched was:

1. The directories that are listed in the child's `PATH` environment variable.
2. The directory from which the application loaded.
3. The current directory for the parent process.
4. The 32-bit Windows system directory.
5. The 16-bit Windows system directory.
6. The Windows directory.
7. The directories that are listed in the PATH environment variable.

## New Search Strategy

The new strategy removes the current directory from the searched paths.

1. The directories that are listed in the child's PATH environment variable.
2. The directory from which the application loaded.
3. The 32-bit Windows system directory.
4. The Windows directory.
5. The directories that are listed in the parent's PATH environment variable.

Note that it also removes the 16-bit system directory, mostly because there isn't a function to get it. I do not anticipate this being an issue in modern Windows.

## Impact

Removing the current directory should fix CVE's like the one linked above. However, it's possible some Windows users of affected Rust CLI applications have come to expect the old behaviour.

This change could also affect small Windows-only script-like programs that assumed the current directory would be used. The user would need to use `.\file.exe` instead of the bare application name.

This PR could break tests, especially those that test the exact output of error messages (e.g. Cargo) as this does change the error messages is some cases.

[1]: https://docs.microsoft.com/en-us/windows/win32/api/processthreadsapi/nf-processthreadsapi-createprocessa#parameters
2021-11-20 18:23:11 +00:00
Loïc BRANSTETT
a8ee0e9c2c Implement IEEE 754-2019 minimun and maximum functions for f32/f64 2021-11-20 10:14:03 +01:00
Matthias Krüger
97bd45b373
Rollup merge of #88361 - WaffleLapkin:patch-2, r=jyn514
Makes docs for references a little less confusing

- Make clear that the `Pointer` trait is related to formatting
- Make clear that the `Pointer` trait is implemented for references (previously it was confusing to first see that it's implemented and then see it in "expect")
- Make clear that `&T` (shared reference) implements `Send` (if `T: Send + Sync`)
2021-11-20 01:09:37 +01:00
The8472
39b98e8c1a Expand available_parallelism docs in anticipation of cgroup quotas
The "fixed" in "fixed steady state limits" means to exclude load-dependent resource prioritization
that would calculate to 100% of capacity on an idle system and less capacity on a loaded system.

Additionally I also exclude "system load" since it would be silly to try to identify
other, perhaps higher priority, processes hogging some CPU cores that aren't explicitly excluded
by masks/quotas/whatever.
2021-11-19 22:52:09 +01:00
Maybe Waffle
cdb0c29a9c Remove unnecessary doc links 2021-11-19 19:13:53 +03:00
Yuki Okushi
f62984fca9
Rollup merge of #90942 - JohnTitor:should-os-error-3, r=m-ou-se
windows: Return the "Not Found" error when a path is empty

Fixes #90940
2021-11-19 13:06:35 +09:00
bors
548c1088ef Auto merge of #90774 - alexcrichton:tweak-const, r=m-ou-se
std: Tweak expansion of thread-local const

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
2021-11-18 23:54:14 +00:00
bors
b6f580acc0 Auto merge of #90382 - alexcrichton:wasm64-libstd, r=joshtriplett
std: Get the standard library compiling for wasm64

This commit goes through and updates various `#[cfg]` as appropriate to
get the wasm64-unknown-unknown target behaving similarly to the
wasm32-unknown-unknown target. Most of this is just updating various
conditions for `target_arch = "wasm32"` to also account for `target_arch
= "wasm64"` where appropriate. This commit also lists `wasm64` as an
allow-listed architecture to not have the `restricted_std` feature
enabled, enabling experimentation with `-Z build-std` externally.

The main goal of this commit is to enable playing around with
`wasm64-unknown-unknown` externally via `-Z build-std` in a way that's
similar to the `wasm32-unknown-unknown` target. These targets are
effectively the same and only differ in their pointer size, but wasm64
is much newer and has much less ecosystem/library support so it'll still
take time to get wasm64 fully-fledged.
2021-11-18 17:19:27 +00:00
Yuki Okushi
ddc1d58ca8
windows: Return the "Not Found" error when a path is empty 2021-11-17 03:11:14 +09:00
Yuki Okushi
96cfc9e73a
Rollup merge of #90835 - sunfishcode:sunfishcode/wasi-char-device, r=alexcrichton
Rename WASI's `is_character_device` to `is_char_device`.

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.

r? `@alexcrichton`
2021-11-16 09:14:19 +09:00
Yuki Okushi
aaac528b80
Rollup merge of #90790 - tamaroning:fix-lib-std-test, r=Mark-Simulacrum
Fix standard library test with read_link

closes #90669
resolve this issue by comparing between Paths instead of strs
2021-11-16 09:14:17 +09:00
Yuki Okushi
c44455af1d
Rollup merge of #88601 - ibraheemdev:termination-result-infallible, r=yaahc
Implement `Termination` for `Result<Infallible, E>`

As noted in #43301, `Result<!, E>` is not usable on stable.
2021-11-16 09:14:15 +09:00
Yuki Okushi
73ec27d359
Rollup merge of #85766 - workingjubilee:file-options, r=yaahc
Stabilize File::options()

Renames File::with_options to File::options, per consensus in
rust-lang/rust#65439, and stabilizes it.
2021-11-16 09:14:14 +09:00
bors
c8e94975a6 Auto merge of #90596 - the8472:path-hash-opt, r=Mark-Simulacrum
Optimize Eq and Hash for Path/PathBuf

```
# new

test path::tests::bench_hash_path_long                            ... bench:          86 ns/iter (+/- 1)
test path::tests::bench_hash_path_short                           ... bench:          13 ns/iter (+/- 1)
test path::tests::bench_path_hashset                              ... bench:         197 ns/iter (+/- 6)
test path::tests::bench_path_hashset_miss                         ... bench:          94 ns/iter (+/- 4)

# old

test path::tests::bench_hash_path_long                            ... bench:         192 ns/iter (+/- 2)
test path::tests::bench_hash_path_short                           ... bench:          33 ns/iter (+/- 1)
test path::tests::bench_path_hashset                              ... bench:       1,121 ns/iter (+/- 24)
test path::tests::bench_path_hashset_miss                         ... bench:         273 ns/iter (+/- 6)
```
2021-11-14 15:18:26 +00:00
bors
d212d902ae Auto merge of #89551 - jhpratt:stabilize-const_raw_ptr_deref, r=oli-obk
Stabilize `const_raw_ptr_deref` for `*const T`

This stabilizes dereferencing immutable raw pointers in const contexts.
It does not stabilize `*mut T` dereferencing. This is behind the
same feature gate as mutable references.

closes https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/51911
2021-11-13 17:10:15 +00:00
bors
032dfe4360 Auto merge of #89167 - workingjubilee:use-simd, r=MarkSimulacrum
pub use core::simd;

A portable abstraction over SIMD has been a major pursuit in recent years for several programming languages. In Rust, `std::arch` offers explicit SIMD acceleration via compiler intrinsics, but it does so at the cost of having to individually maintain each and every single such API, and is almost completely `unsafe` to use.  `core::simd` offers safe abstractions that are resolved to the appropriate SIMD instructions by LLVM during compilation, including scalar instructions if that is all that is available.

`core::simd` is enabled by the `#![portable_simd]` nightly feature tracked in https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/86656 and is introduced here by pulling in the https://github.com/rust-lang/portable-simd repository as a subtree. We built the repository out-of-tree to allow faster compilation and a stochastic test suite backed by the proptest crate to verify that different targets, features, and optimizations produce the same result, so that using this library does not introduce any surprises. As these tests are technically non-deterministic, and thus can introduce overly interesting Heisenbugs if included in the rustc CI, they are visible in the commit history of the subtree but do nothing here. Some tests **are** introduced via the documentation, but these use deterministic asserts.

There are multiple unsolved problems with the library at the current moment, including a want for better documentation, technical issues with LLVM scalarizing and lowering to libm, room for improvement for the APIs, and so far I have not added the necessary plumbing for allowing the more experimental or libm-dependent APIs to be used. However, I thought it would be prudent to open this for review in its current condition, as it is both usable and it is likely I am going to learn something else needs to be fixed when bors tries this out.

The major types are
- `core::simd::Simd<T, N>`
- `core::simd::Mask<T, N>`

There is also the `LaneCount` struct, which, together with the SimdElement and SupportedLaneCount traits, limit the implementation's maximum support to vectors we know will actually compile and provide supporting logic for bitmasks. I'm hoping to simplify at least some of these out of the way as the compiler and library evolve.
2021-11-13 02:17:20 +00:00
Jubilee Young
39cb863253 Expose portable-simd as core::simd
This enables programmers to use a safe alternative to the current
`extern "platform-intrinsics"` API for writing portable SIMD code.
This is `#![feature(portable_simd)]` as tracked in #86656
2021-11-12 16:58:39 -08:00
Josh Stone
5ff6ac4287 Refactor weak symbols in std::sys::unix
This makes a few changes to the weak symbol macros in `sys::unix`:

- `dlsym!` is added to keep the functionality for runtime `dlsym`
  lookups, like for `__pthread_get_minstack@GLIBC_PRIVATE` that we don't
  want to show up in ELF symbol tables.
- `weak!` now uses `#[linkage = "extern_weak"]` symbols, so its runtime
  behavior is just a simple null check. This is also used by `syscall!`.
  - On non-ELF targets (macos/ios) where that linkage is not known to
    behave, `weak!` is just an alias to `dlsym!` for the old behavior.
- `raw_syscall!` is added to always call `libc::syscall` on linux and
  android, for cases like `clone3` that have no known libc wrapper.

The new `weak!` linkage does mean that you'll get versioned symbols if
you build with a newer glibc, like `WEAK DEFAULT UND statx@GLIBC_2.28`.
This might seem problematic, but old non-weak symbols can tie the build
to new versions too, like `dlsym@GLIBC_2.34` from their recent library
unification. If you build with an old glibc like `dist-x86_64-linux`
does, you'll still get unversioned `WEAK DEFAULT UND statx`, which may
be resolved based on the runtime glibc.

I also found a few functions that don't need to be weak anymore:

- Android can directly use `ftruncate64`, `pread64`, and `pwrite64`, as
  these were added in API 12, and our baseline is API 14.
- Linux can directly use `splice`, added way back in glibc 2.5 and
  similarly old musl. Android only added it in API 21 though.
2021-11-12 15:25:16 -08:00
Matthias Krüger
160602b485
Rollup merge of #90704 - ijackson:exitstatus-comments, r=joshtriplett
Unix ExitStatus comments and a tiny docs fix

Some nits left over from #88300
2021-11-12 19:17:31 +01:00
Dan Gohman
2d46d1bec9 Rename WASI's is_character_device to is_char_device.
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.
2021-11-12 09:25:32 -08:00
The8472
c1ea7bdc87 Prefix can be case-insensitive, delegate to its Hash impl instead of trying to hash the raw bytes
This should have 0 performance overhead on unix since Prefix is always None.
2021-11-11 21:44:12 +01:00
Ian Jackson
fe39fb3149 process::ExitStatus: Discuss exit vs _exit in a comment.
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>
2021-11-11 17:48:51 +00:00
Ian Jackson
d1df4715ec unix::ExitStatus: Add comment saying that it's a wait status
With cross-reference.

Signed-off-by: Ian Jackson <ijackson@chiark.greenend.org.uk>
2021-11-11 17:48:51 +00:00
Ian Jackson
79e52b3f1e unix::ExitStatusExt: Correct reference to _exit system call
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>
2021-11-11 17:48:03 +00:00
bors
d71ba74f0d Auto merge of #88798 - sunfishcode:sunfishcode/windows-null-handles, r=joshtriplett
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`
2021-11-11 12:07:53 +00:00
tamaron
181716a16c compare between Path instead of str 2021-11-11 11:40:34 +09:00
bors
8e0293137f Auto merge of #90784 - matthiaskrgr:rollup-car8g12, r=matthiaskrgr
Rollup of 3 pull requests

Successful merges:

 - #89930 (Only use `clone3` when needed for pidfd)
 - #90736 (adjust documented inline-asm register constraints)
 - #90783 (Update Miri)

Failed merges:

r? `@ghost`
`@rustbot` modify labels: rollup
2021-11-10 23:13:06 +00:00
Matthias Krüger
a09115f3b4
Rollup merge of #89930 - cuviper:avoid-clone3, r=joshtriplett
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`
2021-11-10 23:04:25 +01:00
Alex Crichton
1ac5d7dcde std: Tweak expansion of thread-local const
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
2021-11-10 11:07:43 -08:00
Alex Crichton
e4b3496618 Update stdarch/dlmalloc
Ensure that they compile with the now-a-feature-is-required logic.
2021-11-10 08:35:43 -08:00
Alex Crichton
b5c3f4c5d8 Update dlmalloc for libstd
This pulls in a fix for wasm64 to work correctly with this dlmalloc
2021-11-10 08:35:43 -08:00
Alex Crichton
88f1bf73ee Update stdarch/compiler_builtins
Brings in some fixes and better support for the wasm64 target.
2021-11-10 08:35:42 -08:00
Alex Crichton
caa9e4a2d0 Review comments 2021-11-10 08:35:42 -08:00
Alex Crichton
971638824f Use target_family = "wasm" 2021-11-10 08:35:42 -08:00
Alex Crichton
7f3ffbc8c2 std: Get the standard library compiling for wasm64
This commit goes through and updates various `#[cfg]` as appropriate to
get the wasm64-unknown-unknown target behaving similarly to the
wasm32-unknown-unknown target. Most of this is just updating various
conditions for `target_arch = "wasm32"` to also account for `target_arch
= "wasm64"` where appropriate. This commit also lists `wasm64` as an
allow-listed architecture to not have the `restricted_std` feature
enabled, enabling experimentation with `-Z build-std` externally.

The main goal of this commit is to enable playing around with
`wasm64-unknown-unknown` externally via `-Z build-std` in a way that's
similar to the `wasm32-unknown-unknown` target. These targets are
effectively the same and only differ in their pointer size, but wasm64
is much newer and has much less ecosystem/library support so it'll still
take time to get wasm64 fully-fledged.
2021-11-10 08:35:42 -08:00
Joseph Roitman
7b40448a6f Fix collection entry API documentation. 2021-11-10 12:37:18 +02:00
Matthias Krüger
e7375016eb
Rollup merge of #90751 - ehuss:update-books, r=ehuss
Update books

## nomicon

1 commits in 358e6a61d5f4f0496d0a81e70cdcd25d05307342..c6b4bf831e9a40aec34f53067d20634839a6778b
2021-10-20 11:23:12 -0700 to 2021-11-09 02:30:56 +0900
- Replace some use of variant with covariant (rust-lang/nomicon#322)

## book

11 commits in fd9299792852c9a368cb236748781852f75cdac6..5c5dbc5b196c9564422b3193264f3288d2a051ce
2021-10-22 21:59:46 -0400 to 2021-11-09 19:30:43 -0500
- Fix constants link.
- Fix updated anchor
- Propagate edits to chapter 2 back
- Edits to nostarch's chapter 3 edits
- ch 3 from nostarch
- Fix Cargo.toml snippet about custom derive macros
- Snapshot of chapter 9 for nostarch
- Create tmp/src for converting quotes, not sure why this broke but ok
- Update question mark to better explain where it can be used
- Clarify sentence about Results in functions that don't return Result. Fixes rust-lang/book#2912.
- Merge pull request rust-lang/book#2913 from covariant/patch-1

## rust-by-example

2 commits in 27f1ff5e440ef78828b68ab882b98e1b10d9af32..e9d45342d7a6c1def4731f1782d87ea317ba30c3
2021-10-13 08:04:40 -0300 to 2021-11-02 13:33:03 -0500
- Enums: Linked-List Needs Re-Wording (rust-lang/rust-by-example#1469)
- fix: Use the point as top left corner for `square` (rust-lang/rust-by-example#1471)

## rustc-dev-guide

13 commits in b06008731af0f7d07cd0614e820c8276dfed1c18..196ef69aa68f2cef44f37566ee7db37daf00301b
2021-10-21 15:13:09 -0500 to 2021-11-07 07:48:47 -0600
- Fix typo: [upv.rs_mentioned] -&gt; [upvars_mentioned]
- Add note to emphasize replacing TARGET_TRIPLE (rust-lang/rustc-dev-guide#1250)
- Remove some legacy test suites.
- tiny capitalization fix
- Fix date
- Update some date-check comments
- Ensure date-check cron job is using latest stable Rust
- enhance subtree docs, link to clippy docs
- Edit introduction to bootstrapping
- Some minor adjustments to the diagnostic documentation
- Edit "About this guide" for semantic line feeds
- Fix `rustc_mir` related links (rust-lang/rustc-dev-guide#1228)
- Add documentation for LLVM CFI support

## edition-guide

3 commits in 7c0088ca744d293a5f4b1e2ac378e7c23d30fe55..27f4a84d3852e9416cae5861254fa53a825c56bd
2021-10-05 13:28:05 +0200 to 2021-11-08 10:13:20 -0500
- Add a missing period (rust-lang/edition-guide#271)
- Fix syntax error in code example (rust-lang/edition-guide#270)
- Fixed an example error of prelude.md (rust-lang/edition-guide#269)
2021-11-10 06:02:56 +01:00
Matthias Krüger
ebd15290a2
Rollup merge of #90748 - cuviper:track-setgroups, r=dtolnay
Add a real tracking issue for `CommandExt::groups`

The `unstable` attribute referenced the closed RFE #38527, so I filed tracking issue #90747.
2021-11-10 06:02:55 +01:00
Eric Huss
9be22db5e1 Update books 2021-11-09 19:11:01 -08:00
Josh Stone
c0fbadaba3 Add a real tracking issue for CommandExt::groups 2021-11-09 17:28:56 -08:00
The8472
a6e0aa20d9 remove redundant .iter() call since zip() takes an IntoIterator argument 2021-11-09 20:54:42 +01:00
The8472
7f6e080120 add fast path on Path::eq for exact equality 2021-11-09 20:54:42 +01:00
The8472
a083dd653a optimize Hash for Path
Hashing does not have to use the whole Components parsing machinery because we only need it to match the
normalizations that Components does.

* stripping redundant separators -> skipping separators
* stripping redundant '.' directories -> skipping '.' following after a separator

That's all it takes.

And instead of hashing individual slices for each component we feed the bytes directly into the hasher which avoids
hashing the length of each component in addition to its contents.
2021-11-09 20:54:42 +01:00
The8472
82b4544ddc add benchmarks and tests for Hash and Eq impls on Path
The tests check for consistency between Ord, Eq and Hash
2021-11-09 20:54:00 +01:00
Jubilee Young
caf206b820 Stabilize File::options()
Renames File::with_options to File::options, per consensus in
rust-lang/rust#65439, and stabilizes it.
2021-11-09 10:22:28 -08:00
Tomoaki Kawada
f17077002b kmc-solid: Avoid the use of asm_const 2021-11-08 19:13:31 +09:00
bors
fecfc0e6cc Auto merge of #89310 - joshtriplett:available-concurrency-affinity, r=m-ou-se
Make `std:🧵:available_concurrency` support process-limited number of CPUs

Use `libc::sched_getaffinity` and count the number of CPUs in the returned mask. This handles cases where the process doesn't have access to all CPUs, such as when limited via `taskset` or similar.

This also covers cgroup cpusets.
2021-11-07 11:53:25 +00:00
Jacob Pratt
0cdbeaa2a3
Stabilize const_raw_ptr_deref for *const T
This stabilizes dereferencing immutable raw pointers in const contexts.
It does not stabilize `*mut T` dereferencing. This is placed behind the
`const_raw_mut_ptr_deref` feature gate.
2021-11-06 17:05:15 -04:00
Matthias Krüger
0a5640b55f use matches!() macro in more places 2021-11-06 16:13:14 +01:00
Josh Stone
6edaaa6db8 Also note tool expectations of fork vs clone3
Co-authored-by: Josh Triplett <josh@joshtriplett.org>
2021-11-05 14:49:24 -07:00
Josh Stone
fa2eee7bf2 Update another comment on fork vs. clone3 2021-11-05 14:48:52 -07:00
Josh Stone
85b55ce00d 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`.
2021-11-05 14:48:41 -07:00
Milo
8ad6e5fb67
Add UnwindSafe to Once 2021-11-05 18:27:54 +00:00
bors
0b4ac62dda Auto merge of #90392 - solid-rs:fix-solid-support, r=Mark-Simulacrum
kmc-solid: Fix SOLID target

This PR is a follow-up for #86191 and necessary to make the [`*-kmc-solid_*`](https://doc.rust-lang.org/nightly/rustc/platform-support/kmc-solid.html) Tier 3 targets actually usable.

 - Bumps `libc` to 0.2.106, which includes <https://github.com/rust-lang/libc/pull/2227>.
 - Applies the change made by #89324 to this target's target-specific code.
2021-11-04 03:48:43 +00:00
DrMeepster
ac82056dad formatting 2021-11-02 22:47:28 -07:00
DrMeepster
ff725f325e fix change clobbered by rebase 2021-11-02 22:47:28 -07:00
DrMeepster
0d8fd23a31 implement review suggestions 2021-11-02 22:47:28 -07:00
DrMeepster
bd8e088bd8 Update library/std/src/sys/unsupported/fs.rs
Co-authored-by: Josh Triplett <josh@joshtriplett.org>
2021-11-02 22:47:27 -07:00
DrMeepster
fc49a29a14 add read_buf for &File 2021-11-02 22:47:27 -07:00
DrMeepster
7c5a895a89 fix test failure from trying to assume_init too much 2021-11-02 22:47:27 -07:00
DrMeepster
9562c01879 add safety comments 2021-11-02 22:47:26 -07:00
DrMeepster
f92241d251 Don't reinitialize here 2021-11-02 22:47:26 -07:00
DrMeepster
5a97090b04 more efficent File::read_buf impl for windows and unix 2021-11-02 22:47:26 -07:00