rfc3052 followup: Remove authors field from Cargo manifests
Since RFC 3052 soft deprecated the authors field, hiding it from
crates.io, docs.rs, and making Cargo not add it by default, and it is
not generally up to date/useful information for contributors, we may as well
remove it from crates in this repo.
Add documentation for `Ipv6MulticastScope`
Adds basic documentation to the unstable `Ipv6MulticastScope`, as well as marking it `#[non_exhaustive]` because future IETF RFCs may introduce additional scopes. The documentation mentions this in a section "Stability Guarantees":
> /// Not all possible values for a multicast scope have been assigned.
/// Future RFCs may introduce new scopes, which will be added as variants to this enum;
/// because of this the enum is marked as `#[non_exhaustive]`.
Move `os_str_bytes` to `sys::unix`
Followup to #84967, with `OsStrExt` and `OsStringExt` moved out of `sys_common`, there is no reason anymore for `os_str_bytes` to live in `sys_common` and not in sys. This pr moves it to the location `sys::unix::os_str` and reuses the code on other platforms via `#[path]` (as is common in `sys`) instead of importing.
Remove `Ipv4Addr::is_ietf_protocol_assignment`
This PR removes the unstable method `Ipv4Addr::is_ietf_protocol_assignment`, as I suggested in https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/85612#issuecomment-847863404. The method was added in #60145, as far as I can tell primarily for the implementation of `Ipv4Addr::is_global` (addresses reserved for IETF protocol assignment are not globally reachable unless otherwise specified).
The method was added in 2019, but I haven't been able to find any open-source code using this method so far. I'm also having a hard time coming up with a usecase for specifically this method; knowing that an address is reserved for future protocols doesn't allow you to do much with it, especially since now some of those addresses are indeed assigned to a protocol and have their own behaviour (and might even be defined to be globally reachable, so if that is what you care about it is always more accurate to call `!is_global()`, instead of `is_ietf_protocol_assignment()`).
Because of these reasons, I propose removing the method (or alternatively make it a private helper for `is_global`) and also not introduce `Ipv6Addr::is_ietf_protocol_assignment` and `IpAddr::is_ietf_protocol_assignment` in the future.
Change environment variable getters to error recoverably
This PR changes the standard library environment variable getter functions to error recoverably (i.e. not panic) when given an invalid value.
On some platforms, it is invalid for environment variable names to contain `'\0'` or `'='`, or for their values to contain `'\0'`. Currently, the standard library panics when manipulating environment variables with names or values that violate these invariants. However, this behavior doesn't make a lot of sense, at least in the case of getters. If the environment variable is missing, the standard library just returns an error value, rather than panicking. It doesn't make sense to treat the case where the variable is invalid any differently from that. See the [internals thread](https://internals.rust-lang.org/t/why-should-std-var-panic/14847) for discussion. Thus, this PR changes the functions to error recoverably in this case as well.
If desired, I could change the functions that manipulate environment variables in other ways as well. I didn't do that here because it wasn't entirely clear what to change them to. Should they error silently or do something else? If someone tells me how to change them, I'm happy to implement the changes.
This fixes#86082, an ICE that arises from the current behavior. It also adds a regression test to make sure the ICE does not occur again in the future.
`@rustbot` label +T-libs
r? `@joshtriplett`
Bump bootstrap compiler to 1.55
Changing the cfgs for stdarch is missing, but my understanding is that we don't need to do it as part of this PR?
r? `@Mark-Simulacrum`
Add Linux-specific pidfd process extensions (take 2)
Continuation of #77168.
I addressed the following concerns from the original PR:
- make `CommandExt` and `ChildExt` sealed traits
- wrap file descriptors in `PidFd` struct representing ownership over the fd
- add `take_pidfd` to take the fd out of `Child`
- close fd when dropped
Tracking Issue: #82971
Move UnwindSafe, RefUnwindSafe, AssertUnwindSafe to core
They were previously only available in std::panic, not core::panic.
- https://doc.rust-lang.org/1.51.0/std/panic/trait.UnwindSafe.html
- https://doc.rust-lang.org/1.51.0/std/panic/trait.RefUnwindSafe.html
- https://doc.rust-lang.org/1.51.0/std/panic/struct.AssertUnwindSafe.html
Where this is relevant: trait objects! Inside a `#![no_std]` library it's otherwise impossible to have a struct holding a trait object, and at the same time can be used from downstream std crates in a way that doesn't interfere with catch_unwind.
```rust
// common library
#![no_std]
pub struct Thing {
pub(crate) x: &'static (dyn SomeTrait + Send + Sync),
}
pub(crate) trait SomeTrait {...}
```
```rust
// downstream application
fn main() {
let thing: library::Thing = ...;
let _ = std::panic::catch_unwind(|| { let _ = thing; }); // does not work :(
}
```
See a4131708e2/src/gradient.rs (L7-L15) for a real life example of needing to work around this problem. In particular that workaround would not even be viable if implementors of the trait were provided externally by a caller, as the `feature = "std"` would become non-additive in that case.
What happens without the UnwindSafe constraints:
```rust
fn main() {
let gradient = colorous::VIRIDIS;
let _ = std::panic::catch_unwind(|| { let _ = gradient; });
}
```
```console
error[E0277]: the type `(dyn colorous::gradient::EvalGradient + Send + Sync + 'static)` may contain interior mutability and a reference may not be safely transferrable across a catch_unwind boundary
--> src/main.rs:3:13
|
3 | let _ = std::panic::catch_unwind(|| { let _ = gradient; });
| ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ `(dyn colorous::gradient::EvalGradient + Send + Sync + 'static)` may contain interior mutability and a reference may not be safely transferrable across a catch_unwind boundary
|
::: .rustup/toolchains/nightly-x86_64-unknown-linux-gnu/lib/rustlib/src/rust/library/std/src/panic.rs:430:40
|
430 | pub fn catch_unwind<F: FnOnce() -> R + UnwindSafe, R>(f: F) -> Result<R> {
| ---------- required by this bound in `catch_unwind`
|
= help: within `Gradient`, the trait `RefUnwindSafe` is not implemented for `(dyn colorous::gradient::EvalGradient + Send + Sync + 'static)`
= note: required because it appears within the type `&'static (dyn colorous::gradient::EvalGradient + Send + Sync + 'static)`
= note: required because it appears within the type `Gradient`
= note: required because of the requirements on the impl of `UnwindSafe` for `&Gradient`
= note: required because it appears within the type `[closure@src/main.rs:3:38: 3:62]`
```
Make `SEMICOLON_IN_EXPRESSIONS_FROM_MACROS` warn by default
This PR makes the `SEMICOLON_IN_EXPRESSIONS_FROM_MACROS` lint warn by default.
To avoid showing a large number of un-actionable warnings to users, we only enable the lint for macros defined in the same crate. This ensures that users will be able to fix the warning by simply removing a semicolon.
In the future, I'd like to enable this lint unconditionally, and eventually make it into a hard error in a future edition. This PR is a step towards that goal.
[backtraces]: look for the `begin` symbol only after seeing `end`
On `x86_64-pc-windows-msvc`, we often get backtraces which look like
this:
```
10: 0x7ff77e0e9be5 - std::panicking::rust_panic_with_hook
11: 0x7ff77e0e11b4 - std::sys_common::backtrace::__rust_begin_short_backtrace::h5769736bdb11136c
12: 0x7ff77e0e116f - std::sys_common::backtrace::__rust_end_short_backtrace::h61c7ecb1b55338ae
13: 0x7ff77e0f89dd - std::panicking::begin_panic::h8e60ef9f82a41805
14: 0x7ff77e0e108c - d
15: 0x7ff77e0e1069 - c
16: 0x7ff77e0e1059 - b
17: 0x7ff77e0e1049 - a
18: 0x7ff77e0e1039 - core::ptr::drop_in_place<std::rt::lang_start<()>::{{closure}}>::h1bfcd14d5e15ba81
19: 0x7ff77e0e1186 - std::sys_common::backtrace::__rust_begin_short_backtrace::h5769736bdb11136c
20: 0x7ff77e0e100c - std::rt::lang_start::{{closure}}::ha054184bbf9921e3
```
Notice that `__rust_begin_short_backtrace` appears on frame 11 before
`__rust_end_short_backtrace` on frame 12. This is because in typical
release binaries without debug symbols, dbghelp.dll, which we use to walk
and symbolize the stack, does not know where CGU internal functions
start or end and so the closure invoked by `__rust_end_short_backtrace`
is incorrectly described as `__rust_begin_short_backtrace` because it
happens to be near that symbol.
While that can obviously change, this has been happening quite
consistently since #75048. Since this is a very small change to the std
and the change makes sense by itself, I think this is worth doing.
This doesn't completely resolve the situation for release binaries on
Windows, since without debug symbols, the stack printed can still show
incorrect symbol names (this is why the test uses `#[no_mangle]`) but it
does slightly improve the situation in that you see the same backtrace
you would see with `RUST_BACKTRACE=full` or in a debugger (without the
uninteresting bits at the top and bottom).
Fixes part of #87481
Fix may not to appropriate might not or must not
I went through and changed occurrences of `may not` to be more explicit with `might not` and `must not`.
Since RFC 3052 soft deprecated the authors field anyway, hiding it from
crates.io, docs.rs, and making Cargo not add it by default, and it is
not generally up to date/useful information, we should remove it from
crates in this repo.
On `x86_64-pc-windows-msvc`, we often get backtraces which look like
this:
```
10: 0x7ff77e0e9be5 - std::panicking::rust_panic_with_hook
11: 0x7ff77e0e11b4 - std::sys_common::backtrace::__rust_begin_short_backtrace::h5769736bdb11136c
12: 0x7ff77e0e116f - std::sys_common::backtrace::__rust_end_short_backtrace::h61c7ecb1b55338ae
13: 0x7ff77e0f89dd - std::panicking::begin_panic::h8e60ef9f82a41805
14: 0x7ff77e0e108c - d
15: 0x7ff77e0e1069 - c
16: 0x7ff77e0e1059 - b
17: 0x7ff77e0e1049 - a
18: 0x7ff77e0e1039 - core::ptr::drop_in_place<std::rt::lang_start<()>::{{closure}}>::h1bfcd14d5e15ba81
19: 0x7ff77e0e1186 - std::sys_common::backtrace::__rust_begin_short_backtrace::h5769736bdb11136c
20: 0x7ff77e0e100c - std::rt::lang_start::{{closure}}::ha054184bbf9921e3
```
Notice that `__rust_begin_short_backtrace` appears on frame 11 before
`__rust_end_short_backtrace` on frame 12. This is because in typical
release binaries without debug symbols, dbghelp.dll, which we use to walk
and symbolize the stack, does not know where CGU internal functions
start or end and so the closure invoked by `__rust_end_short_backtrace`
is incorrectly described as `__rust_begin_short_backtrace` because it
happens to be near that symbol.
While that can obviously change, this has been happening quite
consistently since #75048. Since this is a very small change to the std
and the change makes sense by itself, I think this is worth doing.
This doesn't completely resolve the situation for release binaries on
Windows, since without debug symbols, the stack printed can still show
incorrect symbol names (this is why the test uses `#[no_mangle]`) but it
does slightly improve the situation in that you see the same backtrace
you would see with `RUST_BACKTRACE=full` or in a debugger (without the
uninteresting bits at the top and bottom).
I looked in stdlib and as @BurntSushi thought, `raw` is generally
used for raw pointers, or other hazardous kinds of thing. stdlib does
not have `into_parts` apart from the one I added to `IntoInnerError`.
I did an ad-hoc search of the rustdocs for my current game project
Otter, which includes quite a large number of dependencies.
`into_parts` seems heavily used for things quite like this.
So change this name.
Suggested-by: Andrew Gallant <jamslam@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Ian Jackson <ijackson@chiark.greenend.org.uk>
I didn't notice the submodule, which means I failed to re-export this
to make it actually-public.
Reported-by: Andrew Gallant <jamslam@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Ian Jackson <ijackson@chiark.greenend.org.uk>
Make const panic!("..") work in Rust 2021.
During const eval, this replaces calls to core::panicking::panic_fmt and std::panicking::being_panic_fmt with a call to a new const fn: core::panicking::const_panic_fmt. That function uses fmt::Arguments::as_str() to get the str and calls panic_str with that instead.
panic!() invocations with formatting arguments are still not accepted, as the creation of such a fmt::Arguments cannot be done in constant functions right now.
r? `@RalfJung`
Stabilize core::task::ready!
_Tracking issue: https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/70922_
This PR stabilizes the `task::ready!` macro. Similar to https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/80886, this PR was waiting on https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/74355 to be fixed.
The `task::ready!` API has existed in the futures ecosystem for several years, and was added on nightly last year in https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/70817. The motivation for this macro is the same as it was back then: virtually every single manual future implementation makes use of this; so much so that it's one of the few things included in the [futures-core](https://docs.rs/futures-core/0.3.12/futures_core) library.
r? ``@tmandry``
cc/ ``@rust-lang/wg-async-foundations`` ``@rust-lang/libs``
## Example
```rust
use core::task::{Context, Poll};
use core::future::Future;
use core::pin::Pin;
async fn get_num() -> usize {
42
}
pub fn do_poll(cx: &mut Context<'_>) -> Poll<()> {
let mut f = get_num();
let f = unsafe { Pin::new_unchecked(&mut f) };
let num = ready!(f.poll(cx));
// ... use num
Poll::Ready(())
}
```
During const eval, this replaces calls to core::panicking::panic_fmt and
std::panicking::being_panic_fmt with a call to a new const fn:
core::panicking::const_panic_fmt. That function uses
fmt::Arguments::as_str() to get the str and calls panic_str with that
instead.
panic!() invocations with formatting arguments are still not accepted,
as the creation of such a fmt::Arguments cannot be done in constant
functions right now.
Use hashbrown's `extend_reserve()` in `HashMap`
When we added `extend_reserve()` to our implementation of `Extend` for `HashMap`, hashbrown didn't have a version we could use. Now that hashbrown has added it, we should use its version instead of implementing it ourself.
Update VxWork's UNIX support
1. VxWorks does not provide glibc
2. VxWorks does provide `sigemptyset` and `sigaddset`
Note: these changes are concurrent to [this PR](https://github.com/rust-lang/libc/pull/2295) in libc.
Stabilize `impl From<[(K, V); N]> for HashMap` (and friends)
In addition to allowing HashMap to participate in Into/From conversion, this adds the long-requested ability to use constructor-like syntax for initializing a HashMap:
```rust
let map = HashMap::from([
(1, 2),
(3, 4),
(5, 6)
]);
```
This addition is highly motivated by existing precedence, e.g. it is already possible to similarly construct a Vec from a fixed-size array:
```rust
let vec = Vec::from([1, 2, 3]);
```
...and it is already possible to collect a Vec of tuples into a HashMap (and vice-versa):
```rust
let vec = Vec::from([(1, 2)]);
let map: HashMap<_, _> = vec.into_iter().collect();
let vec: Vec<(_, _)> = map.into_iter().collect();
```
...and of course it is likewise possible to collect a fixed-size array of tuples into a HashMap ([but not vice-versa just yet](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/81615)):
```rust
let arr = [(1, 2)];
let map: HashMap<_, _> = std::array::IntoIter::new(arr).collect();
```
Therefore this addition seems like a no-brainer.
As for any impl, this would be insta-stable.
Stabilize `into_parts()` and `into_error()`
This stabilizes `IntoInnerError`'s `into_parts()` and `into_error()` methods, currently gated behind the `io_into_inner_error_parts` feature. The FCP has [already completed.](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/79704#issuecomment-880652967)
Closes#79704.
Document iteration order of `retain` functions
For `HashSet` and `HashMap`, this simply copies the comment from
`BinaryHeap::retain`.
For `BTreeSet` and `BTreeMap`, this adds an additional guarantee that
wasn't previously documented. I think that because these data structures
are inherently ordered and other functions guarantee ordered iteration,
it makes sense to provide this guarantee for `retain` as well.
Add comments explaining the unix command-line argument support.
Following up on #87236, add comments to the unix command-line argument
support explaining that the code doesn't mutate the system-provided
argc/argv, and that this is why the code doesn't need a lock or special
memory ordering.
r? ```@RalfJung```
Background:
Over the last year, pidfd support was added to the Linux kernel. This
allows interacting with other processes. In particular, this allows
waiting on a child process with a timeout in a race-free way, bypassing
all of the awful signal-handler tricks that are usually required.
Pidfds can be obtained for a child process (as well as any other
process) via the `pidfd_open` syscall. Unfortunately, this requires
several conditions to hold in order to be race-free (i.e. the pid is not
reused).
Per `man pidfd_open`:
```
· the disposition of SIGCHLD has not been explicitly set to SIG_IGN
(see sigaction(2));
· the SA_NOCLDWAIT flag was not specified while establishing a han‐
dler for SIGCHLD or while setting the disposition of that signal to
SIG_DFL (see sigaction(2)); and
· the zombie process was not reaped elsewhere in the program (e.g.,
either by an asynchronously executed signal handler or by wait(2)
or similar in another thread).
If any of these conditions does not hold, then the child process
(along with a PID file descriptor that refers to it) should instead
be created using clone(2) with the CLONE_PIDFD flag.
```
Sadly, these conditions are impossible to guarantee once any libraries
are used. For example, C code runnng in a different thread could call
`wait()`, which is impossible to detect from Rust code trying to open a
pidfd.
While pid reuse issues should (hopefully) be rare in practice, we can do
better. By passing the `CLONE_PIDFD` flag to `clone()` or `clone3()`, we
can obtain a pidfd for the child process in a guaranteed race-free
manner.
This PR:
This PR adds Linux-specific process extension methods to allow obtaining
pidfds for processes spawned via the standard `Command` API. Other than
being made available to user code, the standard library does not make
use of these pidfds in any way. In particular, the implementation of
`Child::wait` is completely unchanged.
Two Linux-specific helper methods are added: `CommandExt::create_pidfd`
and `ChildExt::pidfd`. These methods are intended to serve as a building
block for libraries to build higher-level abstractions - in particular,
waiting on a process with a timeout.
I've included a basic test, which verifies that pidfds are created iff
the `create_pidfd` method is used. This test is somewhat special - it
should always succeed on systems with the `clone3` system call
available, and always fail on systems without `clone3` available. I'm
not sure how to best ensure this programatically.
This PR relies on the newer `clone3` system call to pass the `CLONE_FD`,
rather than the older `clone` system call. `clone3` was added to Linux
in the same release as pidfds, so this shouldn't unnecessarily limit the
kernel versions that this code supports.
Unresolved questions:
* What should the name of the feature gate be for these newly added
methods?
* Should the `pidfd` method distinguish between an error occurring
and `create_pidfd` not being called?
add `Stdin::lines`, `Stdin::split` forwarder methods
Add forwarder methods `Stdin::lines` and `Stdin::split`, which consume
and lock a `Stdin` handle, and forward on to the corresponding `BufRead`
methods. This should make it easier for beginners to use those iterator
constructors without explicitly dealing with locks or lifetimes.
Replaces #86412.
~~Based on #86846 to get the tracking issue number for the `stdio_locked` feature.~~ Rebased after merge, so it's only one commit now.
r? `@joshtriplett`
`@rustbot` label +A-io +C-enhancement +D-newcomer-roadblock +T-libs-api
Following up on #87236, add comments to the unix command-line argument
support explaining that the code doesn't mutate the system-provided
argc/argv, and that this is why the code doesn't need a lock or special
memory ordering.
Simplify command-line argument initialization on unix
Simplify Rust's command-line argument initialization code on unix:
- The cleanup code isn't needed, because it was just zeroing out non-owning variables at runtime cleanup time. After 91c3eee173, Rust's command-line initialization code on unix no longer allocates `CString`s and a `Vec` at startup time.
- The `Mutex` isn't needed; if there's somehow a call to `args()` before argument initialization has happened, the code returns return an empty list, which we can do with a null check.
With these changes, a simple cdylib that doesn't use threads avoids getting `pthread_mutex_lock`/`pthread_mutex_unlock` in its symbol table.
Move asm! and global_asm! to core::arch
Follow-up to https://github.com/rust-lang/stdarch/pull/1183 .
Implements the libs-api team decision from rust-lang/rust#84019 (comment) .
In order to not break nightly users, this PR also adds the newly-moved items to the prelude. However, a decision will need to be made before stabilization as to whether these items should remain in the prelude. I will file an issue for this separately.
Fixes#84019 .
r? `@Amanieu`
Add diagnostic items for Clippy
This adds a bunch of diagnostic items to `std`/`core`/`alloc` functions, structs and traits used in Clippy. The actual refactorings in Clippy to use these items will be done in a different PR in Clippy after the next sync.
This PR doesn't include all paths Clippy uses, I've only gone through the first 85 lines of Clippy's [`paths.rs`](ecf85f4bdc/clippy_utils/src/paths.rs) (after rust-lang/rust-clippy#7466) to get some feedback early on. I've also decided against adding diagnostic items to methods, as it would be nicer and more scalable to access them in a nicer fashion, like adding a `is_diagnostic_assoc_item(did, sym::Iterator, sym::map)` function or something similar (Suggested by `@camsteffen` [on Zulip](https://rust-lang.zulipchat.com/#narrow/stream/147480-t-compiler.2Fwg-diagnostics/topic/Diagnostic.20Item.20Naming.20Convention.3F/near/225024603))
There seems to be some different naming conventions when it comes to diagnostic items, some use UpperCamelCase (`BinaryHeap`) and some snake_case (`hashmap_type`). This PR uses UpperCamelCase for structs and traits and snake_case with the module name as a prefix for functions. Any feedback on is this welcome.
cc: rust-lang/rust-clippy#5393
r? `@Manishearth`
In the command-line argument initialization code, remove the Mutex
around the `ARGV` and `ARGC` variables, and simply check whether
ARGV is non-null before dereferencing it. This way, if either of
ARGV or ARGC is not initialized, we'll get an empty argument list.
This allows simple cdylibs to avoid having
`pthread_mutex_lock`/`pthread_mutex_unlock` appear in their symbol
tables if they don't otherwise use threads.
Add forwarder methods `Stdin::lines` and `Stdin::split`, which consume
and lock a `Stdin` handle, and forward on to the corresponding `BufRead`
methods. This should make it easier for beginners to use those iterator
constructors without explicitly dealing with locks or lifetimes.
stdio_locked: add tracking issue
Add the tracking issue number #86845 to the stability attributes for the implementation in #86799.
r? `@joshtriplett`
`@rustbot` label +A-io +C-cleanup +T-libs-api
Remove unstable `io::Cursor::remaining`
Adding `io::Cursor::remaining` in #86037 caused a conflict with the implementation of `bytes::Buf` for `io::Cursor`, leading to an error in nightly, see https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/86369#issuecomment-867723485.
This fixes the error by temporarily removing the `remaining` function.
r? `@yaahc`
[docs] Clarify behaviour of f64 and f32::sqrt when argument is negative zero
From IEEE 754 section 6.3:
> Except that squareRoot(−0) shall be −0, every numeric squareRoot result shall have a positive sign.
Fix linker error
Currently, `fs::hard_link` determines whether platforms have `linkat` based on the OS, and uses `link` if they don't. However, this heuristic does not work well if a platform provides `linkat` on newer versions but not on older ones. On old MacOS, this currently causes a linking error.
This commit fixes `fs::hard_link` by telling it to use `weak!` on macOS. This means that, on that operating system, we now check for `linkat` at runtime and use `link` if it is not available.
Fixes#80804.
`@rustbot` label T-libs-impl
On old macos systems, `fs::hard_link()` will follow symlinks.
This changes the test `symlink_hard_link` to exit early on
these systems, so that tests can pass.
`weak!` is needed in a test in another module. With macros
1.0, importing `weak!` would require reordering module
declarations in `std/src/lib.rs`, which is a bit too
evil.
Use diagnostic items instead of lang items for rfc2229 migrations
This PR removes the `Send`, `UnwindSafe` and `RefUnwindSafe` lang items introduced in https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/84730, and uses diagnostic items instead to check for `Send`, `UnwindSafe` and `RefUnwindSafe` traits for RFC2229 migrations.
r? ```@nikomatsakis```
rewrote documentation for thread::yield_now()
The old documentation suggested the use of yield_now for repeated
polling instead of discouraging it; it also made the false claim that
channels are implemented using yield_now. (They are not, except for
a corner case).
Add Integer::log variants
_This is another attempt at landing https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/70835, which was approved by the libs team but failed on Android tests through Bors. The text copied here is from the original issue. The only change made so far is the addition of non-`checked_` variants of the log methods._
_Tracking issue: #70887_
---
This implements `{log,log2,log10}` methods for all integer types. The implementation was provided by `@substack` for use in the stdlib.
_Note: I'm not big on math, so this PR is a best effort written with limited knowledge. It's likely I'll be getting things wrong, but happy to learn and correct. Please bare with me._
## Motivation
Calculating the logarithm of a number is a generally useful operation. Currently the stdlib only provides implementations for floats, which means that if we want to calculate the logarithm for an integer we have to cast it to a float and then back to an int.
> would be nice if there was an integer log2 instead of having to either use the f32 version or leading_zeros() which i have to verify the results of every time to be sure
_— [`@substack,` 2020-03-08](https://twitter.com/substack/status/1236445105197727744)_
At higher numbers converting from an integer to a float we also risk overflows. This means that Rust currently only provides log operations for a limited set of integers.
The process of doing log operations by converting between floats and integers is also prone to rounding errors. In the following example we're trying to calculate `base10` for an integer. We might try and calculate the `base2` for the values, and attempt [a base swap](https://www.rapidtables.com/math/algebra/Logarithm.html#log-rules) to arrive at `base10`. However because we're performing intermediate rounding we arrive at the wrong result:
```rust
// log10(900) = ~2.95 = 2
dbg!(900f32.log10() as u64);
// log base change rule: logb(x) = logc(x) / logc(b)
// log2(900) / log2(10) = 9/3 = 3
dbg!((900f32.log2() as u64) / (10f32.log2() as u64));
```
_[playground](https://play.rust-lang.org/?version=stable&mode=debug&edition=2018&gist=6bd6c68b3539e400f9ca4fdc6fc2eed0)_
This is somewhat nuanced as a lot of the time it'll work well, but in real world code this could lead to some hard to track bugs. By providing correct log implementations directly on integers we can help prevent errors around this.
## Implementation notes
I checked whether LLVM intrinsics existed before implementing this, and none exist yet. ~~Also I couldn't really find a better way to write the `ilog` function. One option would be to make it a private method on the number, but I didn't see any precedent for that. I also didn't know where to best place the tests, so I added them to the bottom of the file. Even though they might seem like quite a lot they take no time to execute.~~
## References
- [Log rules](https://www.rapidtables.com/math/algebra/Logarithm.html#log-rules)
- [Rounding error playground](https://play.rust-lang.org/?version=stable&mode=debug&edition=2018&gist=6bd6c68b3539e400f9ca4fdc6fc2eed0)
- [substack's tweet asking about integer log2 in the stdlib](https://twitter.com/substack/status/1236445105197727744)
- [Integer Logarithm, A. Jaffer 2008](https://people.csail.mit.edu/jaffer/III/ilog.pdf)
The old documentation suggested the use of yield_now for repeated
polling instead of discouraging it; it also made the false claim that
channels are implementing using yield_now. (They are not, except for
a corner case).
Before this, `std`'s env var getter functions would panic on
receiving certain invalid inputs. This commit makes them
return a `None` or `Err` instead.
Remove some doc aliases
As per the new doc alias policy in https://github.com/rust-lang/std-dev-guide/pull/25, this removes some controversial doc aliases:
- `malloc`, `alloc`, `realloc`, etc.
- `length` (alias for `len`)
- `delete` (alias for `remove` in collections and also file/directory deletion)
r? `@joshtriplett`
Stabilize `Seek::rewind()`
This stabilizes `Seek::rewind`. It seemed to fit into one of the existing tests, so I extended that test rather than adding a new one.
Closes#85149.
aborts: Clarify documentation and comments
In the docs for intrinsics::abort():
* Strengthen the recommendation by to use process::abort instead.
* Document the fact that it sometimes (ab)uses an LLVM debug trap and what the likely consequences are.
* State that the precise behaviour is unstable.
In the docs for process::abort():
* Promise that we have the same behaviour as C `abort()`.
* Document the likely consequences, including, specifically, the consequences on Unix.
In the internal comment for unix::abort_internal:
* Refer to the public docs for the public API functions.
* Correct and expand the description of libc::abort. Specifically:
* Do not claim that abort() unregisters signal handlers. It doesn't; it honours the SIGABRT handler.
* Discuss, extensively, the issue with abort() flushing stdio buffers.
* Describe the glibc behaviour in some detail.
Co-authored-by: Mark Wooding <mdw@distorted.org.uk>
Signed-off-by: Ian Jackson <ijackson@chiark.greenend.org.uk>
Fixes#40230
Add std::os::unix::fs::DirEntryExt2::file_name_ref(&self) -> &OsStr
Greetings!
This is my first PR here, so please forgive me if I've missed an important step or otherwise done something wrong. I'm very open to suggestions/fixes/corrections.
This PR adds a function that allows `std::fs::DirEntry` to vend a borrow of its filename on Unix platforms, which is especially useful for sorting. (Windows has (as I understand it) encoding differences that require an allocation.) This new function sits alongside the cross-platform [`file_name(&self) -> OsString`](https://doc.rust-lang.org/std/fs/struct.DirEntry.html#method.file_name) function.
I pitched this idea in an [internals thread](https://internals.rust-lang.org/t/allow-std-direntry-to-vend-borrows-of-its-filename/14328/4), and no one objected vehemently, so here we are.
I understand features in general, I believe, but I'm not at all confident that my whole-cloth invention of a new feature string (as required by the compiler) was correct (or that the name is appropriate). Further, there doesn't appear to be a test for the sibling `ino` function, so I didn't add one for this similarly trivial function either. If it's desirable that I should do so, I'd be happy to [figure out how to] do that.
The following is a trivial sample of a use-case for this function, in which directory entries are sorted without any additional allocations:
```rust
use std::os::unix::fs::DirEntryExt;
use std::{fs, io};
fn main() -> io::Result<()> {
let mut entries = fs::read_dir(".")?.collect::<Result<Vec<_>, io::Error>>()?;
entries.sort_unstable_by(|a, b| a.file_name_ref().cmp(b.file_name_ref()));
for p in entries {
println!("{:?}", p);
}
Ok(())
}
```
In the docs for intrinsics::abort():
* Strengthen the recommendation by to use process::abort instead.
* Document the fact that it (ab)uses an LLVM debug trap and what the
likely consequences are.
* State that the precise behaviour is unstable.
In the docs for process::abort():
* Promise that we have the same behaviour as C `abort()`.
* Document the likely consequences, including, specifically, the
consequences on Unix.
In the internal comment for unix::abort_internal:
* Refer to the public docs for the public API functions.
* Correct and expand the description of libc::abort. Specifically:
* Do not claim that abort() unregisters signal handlers. It doesn't;
it honours the SIGABRT handler.
* Discuss, extensively, the issue with abort() flushing stdio buffers.
* Describe the glibc behaviour in some detail.
Co-authored-by: Mark Wooding <mdw@distorted.org.uk>
Signed-off-by: Ian Jackson <ijackson@chiark.greenend.org.uk>
Remove the deprecated `core::raw` and `std::raw` module.
A few months has passed since #84207. I think now it's time for the final removal.
Closes#27751.
r? `@m-ou-se`
When using `process::Command` on Windows, environment variable names must be case-preserving but case-insensitive
When using `Command` to set the environment variables, the key should be compared as uppercase Unicode but when set it should preserve the original case.
Fixes#85242
add owned locked stdio handles
Add stderr_locked, stdin_locked, and stdout_locked free functions
to obtain owned locked stdio handles in a single step. Also add
into_lock methods to consume a stdio handle and return an owned
lock. These methods will make it easier to use locked stdio
handles without having to deal with lifetime problems or keeping
bindings to the unlocked handles around.
Fixes#85383; enables #86412.
r? `@joshtriplett`
`@rustbot` label +A-io +C-enhancement +D-newcomer-roadblock +T-libs-api
More ErrorKinds for common errnos
From the commit message of the main commit here (as revised):
```
There are a number of IO error situations which it would be very
useful for Rust code to be able to recognise without having to resort
to OS-specific code. Taking some Unix examples, `ENOTEMPTY` and
`EXDEV` have obvious recovery strategies. Recently I was surprised to
discover that `ENOSPC` came out as `ErrorKind::Other`.
Since I am familiar with Unix I reviwed the list of errno values in
https://pubs.opengroup.org/onlinepubs/9699919799/basedefs/errno.h.html
Here, I add those that most clearly seem to be needed.
`@CraftSpider` provided information about Windows, and references, which
I have tried to take into account.
This has to be insta-stable because we can't sensibly have a different
set of ErrorKinds depending on a std feature flag.
I have *not* added these to the mapping tables for any operating
systems other than Unix and Windows. I hope that it is OK to add them
now for Unix and Windows now, and maybe add them to other OS's mapping
tables as and when someone on that OS is able to consider the
situation.
I adopted the general principle that it was usually a bad idea to map
two distinct error values to the same Rust error code. I notice that
this principle is already violated in the case of `EACCES` and
`EPERM`, which both map to `PermissionDenied`. I think this was
probably a mistake but it would be quite hard to change now, so I
don't propose to do anything about that.
However, for Windows, there are sometimes different error codes for
identical situations. Eg there are WSA* versions of some error
codes as well as ERROR_* ones. Also Windows seems to have a great
many more erorr codes. I don't know precisely what best practice
would be for Windows.
```
<strike>
```
Errno values I wasn't sure about so *haven't* included:
EMFILE ENFILE ENOBUFS ENOLCK:
These are all fairly Unix-specific resource exhaustion situations.
In practice it seemed not very likely to me that anyone would want
to handle these differently to `Other`.
ENOMEM ERANGE EDOM EOVERFLOW
Normally these don't get exposed to the Rust callers I hope. They
don't tend to come out of filesystem APIs.
EILSEQ
Hopefully Rust libraries open files in binary mode and do the
converstion in Rust. So Rust code ought not to be exposed to
EILSEQ.
EIO
The range of things that could cause this is troublesome. I found
it difficult to describe. I do think it would be useful to add this
at some point, because EIO on a filesystem operation is much more
serious than most other errors.
ENETDOWN
I wasn't sure if this was useful or, indeed, if any modern systems
use it.
ENOEXEC
It is not clear to me how a Rust program could respond to this. It
seems rather niche.
EPROTO ENETRESET ENODATA ENOMSG ENOPROTOOPT ENOSR ENOSTR ETIME
ENOTRECOVERABLE EOWNERDEAD EBADMSG EPROTONOSUPPORT EPROTOTYPE EIDRM
These are network or STREAMS related errors which I have never in
my own Unix programming found the need to do anything with. I think
someone who understands these better should be the one to try to
find good Rust names and descriptions for them.
ENOTTY ENXIO ENODEV EOPNOTSUPP ESRCH EALREADY ECANCELED ECHILD
EINPROGRESS
These are very hard to get unless you're already doing something
very Unix-specific, in which case the raw_os_error interface is
probably more suitable than relying on the Rust ErrorKind mapping.
EFAULT EBADF
These would seem to be the result of application UB.
```
</strike>
<i>(omitted errnos are discussed below, especially in https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/79965#issuecomment-810468334)
Fix double import in wasm thread
The `unsupported` type is imported two times, as `super::unsupported` and as `crate::sys::unsupported`, throwing an error. Remove `super::unsupported` in favor of the other.
As reported in #86802.
Fix#86802
Remove & from Command::args calls in documentation
Now that arrays implement `IntoIterator`, using `&` is no longer necessary. This makes examples easier to understand.
Merge `sys_common::bytestring` back into `os_str_bytes`
`bytestring` contains code for correctly debug formatting a byte slice (`[u8]`). This functionality is and has historically only been used to provide the debug formatting of byte-based os-strings (on unix etc.).
Having this functionality in the separate `bytestring` module was useful in the past to reduce duplication, as [when it was added](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/46798) `os_str_bytes` was still split into `sys::{unix, redox, wasi, etc.}::os_str`. However, now that is no longer the case, there is not much reason for the `bytestring` functionality to be separate from `os_str_bytes`; I don't think it is very likely that another part of std will need to handle formatting byte strings that are not os-strings in the future (everything should be `utf8`). This is why this PR merges the functionality of `bytestring` directly into the debug implementation in `os_str_bytes`.
The `unsupported` type is imported two times, as `super::unsupported` and as `crate::sys::unsupported`, throwing an error. Remove `super::unsupported` in favor of the other.
Redefine `ErrorKind::Other` and stop using it in std.
This implements the idea I shared yesterday in the libs meeting when we were discussing how to handle adding new `ErrorKind`s to the standard library: This redefines `Other` to be for *user defined errors only*, and changes all uses of `Other` in the standard library to a `#[doc(hidden)]` and permanently `#[unstable]` `ErrorKind` that users can not match on. This ensures that adding `ErrorKind`s at a later point in time is not a breaking change, since the user couldn't match on these errors anyway. This way, we use the `#[non_exhaustive]` property of the enum in a more effective way.
Open questions:
- How do we check this change doesn't cause too much breakage? Will a crate run help and be enough?
- How do we ensure we don't accidentally start using `Other` again in the standard library? We don't have a `pub(not crate)` or `#[deprecated(in this crate only)]`.
cc https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/79965
cc `@rust-lang/libs` `@ijackson`
r? `@dtolnay`
Add stderr_locked, stdin_locked, and stdout_locked free functions
to obtain owned locked stdio handles in a single step. Also add
into_lock methods to consume a stdio handle and return an owned
lock. These methods will make it easier to use locked stdio
handles without having to deal with lifetime problems or keeping
bindings to the unlocked handles around.
For `HashSet` and `HashMap`, this simply copies the comment from
`BinaryHeap::retain`.
For `BTreeSet` and `BTreeMap`, this adds an additional guarantee that
wasn't previously documented. I think that because these data structures
are inherently ordered and other functions guarantee ordered iteration,
it makes sense to provide this guarantee for `retain` as well.
The omission of Sink: Default is causing me a slight inconvenience in
a test harness. There seems little reason for this and Empty not to
be Clone and Copy too.
I have made all three of these insta-stable, because:
AIUI Copycan only be derived, and I was not able to find any
examples of how to unstably derive it. I think it is probably not
possible.
I hunted through the git history for precedent and found
79b8ad84c8
Implement `Copy` for `IoSlice`
https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/69403
which was also insta-stable.
Signed-off-by: Ian Jackson <ijackson@chiark.greenend.org.uk>
Use HTTPS links where possible
While looking at #86583, I wondered how many other (insecure) HTTP links were in `rustc`. This changes most other `http` links to `https`. While most of the links are in comments or documentation, there are a few other HTTP links that are used by CI that are changed to HTTPS.
Notes:
- I didn't change any to or in licences
- Some links don't support HTTPS :(
- Some `http` links were dead, in those cases I upgraded them to their new places (all of which used HTTPS)
Use `#[non_exhaustive]` where appropriate
Due to the std/alloc split, it is not possible to make `alloc::collections::TryReserveError::AllocError` non-exhaustive without having an unstable, doc-hidden method to construct (which negates the benefits from `#[non_exhaustive]`).
`@rustbot` label +C-cleanup +T-libs +S-waiting-on-review
Due to the std/alloc split, it is not possible to make
`alloc::collections::TryReserveError::AllocError` non-exhaustive without
having an unstable, doc-hidden method to construct (which negates the
benefits from `#[non_exhaustive]`.
Rollup of 11 pull requests
Successful merges:
- #85054 (Revert SGX inline asm syntax)
- #85182 (Move `available_concurrency` implementation to `sys`)
- #86037 (Add `io::Cursor::{remaining, remaining_slice, is_empty}`)
- #86114 (Reopen#79692 (Format symbols under shared frames))
- #86297 (Allow to pass arguments to rustdoc-gui tool)
- #86334 (Resolve type aliases to the type they point to in intra-doc links)
- #86367 (Fix comment about rustc_inherit_overflow_checks in abs().)
- #86381 (Add regression test for issue #39161)
- #86387 (Remove `#[allow(unused_lifetimes)]` which is now unnecessary)
- #86398 (Add regression test for issue #54685)
- #86493 (Say "this enum variant takes"/"this struct takes" instead of "this function takes")
Failed merges:
r? `@ghost`
`@rustbot` modify labels: rollup
Add `io::Cursor::{remaining, remaining_slice, is_empty}`
Tracking issue: #86369
I came across an inconvenience when answering the following [Stack Overflow](https://stackoverflow.com/questions/67831170) question.
To get the remaining slice you have to call `buff.fill_buf().unwrap()`. Which in my opinion doesn't really tell you what is returned (in the context of Cursor). To improve readability and convenience when using Cursor i propose adding the method `remaining`.
The next thing i found inconvenient (unnecessary long) was detecting if the cursor reached the end. There are a few ways this can be achieved right now:
- `buff.fill_buf().unwrap().is_empty()`
- `buff.position() >= buff.get_ref().len()`
- `buff.bytes().next().is_none()`
Which all seem a bit unintuitive, hidden in trait documentations or just a bit long for such a simple task.
Therefor i propose another method called `is_empty`, maybe with another name, since this one may leave room for interpretation on what really is empty (the underlying slice, the remaining slice or maybe the position).
Since it seemed easier to create this PR instead of an RFC i did that, if an RFC is wanted, i can close this PR and write an RFC first.
Move `available_concurrency` implementation to `sys`
This splits out the platform-specific implementation of `available_concurrency` to the corresponding platforms under `sys`. No changes are made to the implementation.
Tidy didn't lint against this code being originally added outside of `sys` because of a bug (see #84677), this PR also reverts the exclusion that was introduced in that bugfix.
Tracking issue of `available_concurrency`: #74479
Add MIR pass to lower call to `core::slice::len` into `Len` operand
During some larger experiment with range analysis I've found that code like `let l = slice.len()` produces different MIR then one found in bound checks. This optimization pass replaces terminators that are calls to `core::slice::len` with just a MIR operand and Goto terminator.
It uses some heuristics to remove the outer borrow that is made to call `core::slice::len`, but I assume it can be eliminated, just didn't find how.
Would like to express my gratitude to `@oli-obk` who helped me a lot on Zullip
Move `OsStringExt` and `OsStrExt` to `std::os`
Moves the `OsStringExt` and `OsStrExt` traits and implementations from `sys_common` to `os`. `sys_common` is for abstractions over `sys` and shouldn't really contain publicly exported items.
This does introduce some duplication: the traits and implementations are now duplicated in `unix`, `wasi`, `hermit`, and `sgx`. However, I would argue that this duplication is no different to how something like `MetadataExt` is duplicated in `linux`, `vxworkx`, `redox`, `solaris` etc. The duplication also matches the fact that the traits on different platforms are technically distinct types: any platform is free to add it's own extra methods to the extension trait.
Change entry point to 🛡️ against 💥💥-payloads
Guard against panic payloads panicking within entrypoints, where it is
UB to do so.
Note that there are a number of tradeoffs to consider. For instance, I
considered guarding against accidental panics inside the `rt::init` and
`rt::cleanup` code as well, as it is not all that obvious these may not
panic, but doing so would mean that we initialize certain thread-local
slots unconditionally, which has its own problems.
Fixes#86030
r? `@m-ou-se`
Guard against panic payloads panicking within entrypoints, where it is
UB to do so.
Note that there are a number of implementation approaches to consider.
Some simpler, some more complicated. This particular solution is nice in
that it also guards against accidental implementation issues in
various pieces of runtime code, something we cannot prevent statically
right now.
Fixes#86030
Add has_data_left() to BufRead
This is a continuation of #40747 and also addresses #40745. The problem with the previous PR was that it had "eof" in its method name. This PR uses a more descriptive method name, but I'm open to changing it.
Dump mingw-64's error codes into our source tree.
I have verified with these runes:
$ f=library/std/src/sys/windows/c/errors.rs
$ diff -ub <(git-cat-file blob HEAD~:$f | sort) <(cat $f | perl -pe 's/WSABASEERR \+ (\d+)/10000 + $1/e' |sort) |grep ^- |less
that this does not change any existing values.
Signed-off-by: Ian Jackson <ijackson@chiark.greenend.org.uk>
We're going to add many more of these.
This commit is pure code motion, plus the necessary administrivia, as
I have veried with the following runes:
$ git-diff HEAD~ | grep '^+' |sort >plus
$ git-diff HEAD~ | grep '^-' | perl -pe 's/^-/+/' |sort >min
$ diff -ub min plus |less
The output is precisely the expected `mod` and `use` directives.
Signed-off-by: Ian Jackson <ijackson@chiark.greenend.org.uk>
DWORD is a type alias for u32, so this makes no difference.
But this entry is anomalous and in my forthcoming commits I am going
to import many errors wholesale, and I spotted that my wholesale
import didn't match what was here.
CC: Chris Denton <christophersdenton@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Ian Jackson <ijackson@chiark.greenend.org.uk>
use ErrorKind::*;
I don't feel confident enough about Windows things to reorder this
alphabetically
Signed-off-by: Ian Jackson <ijackson@chiark.greenend.org.uk>
Rely on libc for correct integer types in os/unix/net/ancillary.rs.
This PR is a small maintainability improvement. It simplifies `unix/net/ancillary.rs` in `std` by removing the `cfg_ifs` for casting to the correct integer type, and just rely on libc to define the struct correctly.
Specialize `io::Bytes::size_hint` for more types
Improve the result of `<io::Bytes as Iterator>::size_hint` for some readers. I did not manage to specialize `SizeHint` for `io::Cursor`
Side question: would it be interesting for `io::Read` to have an optional `size_hint` method ?
Linear interpolation
#71016 is a previous attempt at implementation that was closed by the author. I decided to reuse the feature request issue (#71015) as a tracking issue. A member of the rust-lang org will have to edit the original post to be formatted correctly as I am not the issue's original author.
The common name `lerp` is used because it is the term used by most code in a wide variety of contexts; it also happens to be the recently chosen name of the function that was added to C++20.
To ensure symmetry as a method, this breaks the usual ordering of the method from `lerp(a, b, t)` to `t.lerp(a, b)`. This makes the most sense to me personally, and there will definitely be discussion before stabilisation anyway.
Implementing lerp "correctly" is very dififcult even though it's a very common building-block used in all sorts of applications. A good prior reading is [this proposal](http://www.open-std.org/jtc1/sc22/wg21/docs/papers/2018/p0811r2.html#linear-interpolation) for the C++20 lerp which talks about the various guarantees, which I've simplified down to:
1. Exactness: `(0.0).lerp(start, end) == start` and `(1.0).lerp(start, end) == end`
2. Consistency: `anything.lerp(x, x) == x`
3. Monotonicity: once you go up don't go down
Fun story: the version provided in that proposal, from what I understand, isn't actually monotonic.
I messed around with a *lot* of different lerp implementations because I kind of got a bit obsessed and I ultimately landed on one that uses the fused `mul_add` instruction. Floating-point lerp lore is hard to come by, so, just trust me when I say that this ticks all the boxes. I'm only 90% certain that it's monotonic, but I'm sure that people who care deeply about this will be there to discuss before stabilisation.
The main reason for using `mul_add` is that, in general, it ticks more boxes with fewer branches to be "correct." Although it will be slower on architectures without the fused `mul_add`, that's becoming more and more rare and I have a feeling that most people who will find themselves needing `lerp` will also have an efficient `mul_add` instruction available.
Rename IoSlice(Mut)::advance to advance_slice and add IoSlice(Mut)::advance
Also changes the signature of `advance_slice` to accept a `&mut &mut [IoSlice]`, not returning anything. This will better match the `IoSlice::advance` function.
Updates https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/62726.
Link reference in `dyn` keyword documentation
The "read more" sentence formatted "object safety" as inline code
instead of providing a link to more information. This PR adds a link
to the Reference about this matter, as well as the page regarding trait
objects.
---
We could also put these links in the very first line (instead of the link to the
Book) and in the first paragraph which mentions the "object safe" requirement.
Personally, I think it's good to keep the link to the Book up-front as it's more
accessible than the Reference.
optimize Eq implementation for paths
Filesystems generally have a tree-ish structure which means paths are more likely to share a prefix than a suffix. Absolute paths are especially prone to share long prefixes.
quick benchmark consisting of a search through through a vec containing the absolute paths of all (1850) files in `compiler/`:
```
# old
test path::tests::bench_path_cmp ... bench: 227,407 ns/iter (+/- 2,162)
# new
test path::tests::bench_path_cmp ... bench: 64,976 ns/iter (+/- 1,142)
```
Remove `Ipv6Addr::is_unicast_site_local`
Removes the unstable method `Ipv6Addr::is_unicast_site_local`, see also #85604 where I have tried to summarize related discussion so far.
Unicast site-local addresses (`fec0::/10`) were deprecated in [IETF RFC #3879](https://datatracker.ietf.org/doc/html/rfc3879), see also [RFC #4291 Section 2.5.7](https://datatracker.ietf.org/doc/html/rfc4291#section-2.5.7). Any new implementation must no longer support the special behaviour of site-local addresses. This is mentioned in the docs of `is_unicast_site_local` and already implemented in `is_unicast_global`, which considers addresses in `fec0::/10` to have global scope, thus overlapping with `is_unicast_site_local`.
Given that RFC #3879 was published in 2004, long before Rust existed, and it is specified that any new implementation must no longer support the special behaviour of site-local addresses, I don't see how a user would ever have a need for `is_unicast_site_local`. It is also confusing that currently both `is_unicast_site_local` and `is_unicast_global` can be `true` for an address, but an address can actually only have a single scope. The deprecating RFC mentions that Site-Local scope was confusing to work with and that the classification of an address as either Link-Local or Global better matches the mental model of users.
There has been earlier discussion of removing `is_unicast_site_local` (https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/60145#issuecomment-485970669) which decided against it, but that had the incorrect assumption that the method was already stable; it is not. (This confusion arose from the placement of the unstable attribute on the entire module, instead of on individual methods, resolved in #85672)
r? `@joshtriplett` as reviewer of all the related PRs
Stabilize {std, core}::prelude::rust_*.
This stabilizes the `{core, std}::prelude::{rust_2015, rust_2018, rust_2021}` modules.
The usage of these modules as the prelude in those editions was already stabilized. This just stabilizes the modules themselves, making it possible for a user to explicitly refer to them.
Tracking issue: https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/85684
FCP on the RFC that included this finished here: https://github.com/rust-lang/rfcs/pull/3114#issuecomment-840577395
Add functions `Duration::try_from_secs_{f32, f64}`
These functions allow constructing a Duration from a floating point value that could be out of range without panicking.
Tracking issue: #83400
Explain non-dropped sender recv in docs
Original senders that are still hanging around could cause
Receiver::recv to not block since this is a potential footgun
for beginners, clarify more on this in the docs for readers to
be aware about it.
Maybe it would be better to show an example of the pattern where `drop(tx)` is used when it is being cloned multiple times? Although I have seen it in quite a few articles but I am surprised that this part is not very clear with the current words without careful reading.
> If the corresponding Sender has disconnected, or it disconnects while this call is blocking, this call will wake up and return Err to indicate that no more messages can ever be received on this channel. However, since channels are buffered, messages sent before the disconnect will still be properly received.
Some words there may seemed similar if I carefully read and relate it but if I am new, I probably does not know "drop" makes it "disconnected". So I mention the words "drop" and "alive" to make it more relatable to lifetime.
Original senders that are still hanging around could cause
Receiver::recv to not block since this is a potential footgun
for beginners, clarify more on this in the docs for readers to
be aware about it.
Fix minor tidbits in sender recv doc
Co-authored-by: Dylan DPC <dylan.dpc@gmail.com>
Add example for unbounded receive loops in doc
Show the drop(tx) pattern, based on tokio docs
https://tokio-rs.github.io/tokio/doc/tokio/sync/index.html
Fix example code for drop sender recv
Fix wording in sender docs
Co-authored-by: Josh Triplett <josh@joshtriplett.org>
Updated code examples and wording in move keyword documentation
Had a conversation with someone on the Rust Discord who was confused by the move keyword documentation. Some of the wording is odd sounding ("owned by value" - what else can something be owned by?). Also, some of the examples used Copy types when demonstrating move, leading to variables still being accessible in the outer scope after the move, contradicting the examples' comments.
I changed the move keyword documentation a bit, removing that odd wording and changing all the examples to use non-Copy types
Multiple improvements to RwLocks
This PR replicates #77147, #77380 and #84650 on RWLocks :
- Split `sys_common::RWLock` in `StaticRWLock` and `MovableRWLock`
- Unbox rwlocks on some platforms (Windows, Wasm and unsupported)
- Simplify `RwLock::into_inner`
Notes to reviewers :
- For each target, I copied `MovableMutex` to guess if `MovableRWLock` should be boxed.
- ~A comment says that `StaticMutex` is not re-entrant, I don't understand why and I don't know whether it applies to `StaticRWLock`.~
r? `@m-ou-se`
Filesystems generally have a tree-ish structure which means
paths are more likely to share a prefix than a suffix. Absolute paths
are especially prone to share long prefixes.
Forwarding implementation for Seek trait's stream_position method
Forwarding implementations for `Seek` trait's `stream_position` were missed when it was stabilized in `1.51.0`
Add `Ipv6Addr::is_unicast`
Adds an unstable utility method `Ipv6Addr::is_unicast` under the feature flag `ip` (tracking issue: #27709).
Added for completeness with the other unicast methods (see also https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/85604#issuecomment-848220455) and opposite of `is_multicast`.
Fix documentation style inconsistencies for IP addresses
Pulled out of #85655 as it is unrelated. Fixes some inconsistencies in the docs for IP addresses:
- Currently some addresses are backticked, some are not, this PR backticks everything consistently. (looks better imo)
- Lowercase hex-literals are used when writing addresses.
The "read more" sentence formatted "object safety" as inline code
instead of providing a link to more information. This PR adds a link
to the Reference about this matter, as well as the page regarding trait
objects.
Prior to this patch, the default panic message (resulting from calling
`panic_any(42);` for example), would print the following error message:
```
thread 'main' panicked at 'Box<Any>', ...
```
However, this should be `Box<dyn Any>` instead.
Possible errors when accessing file metadata are platform specific
In particular the `is_dir`, `is_file` and `exists` functions suggests that querying a file requires querying the directory. On Windows this is not normally true.
r? `@m-ou-se`
rustdoc: link to stable/beta docs consistently in documentation
This is an alternative to https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/84941 which fixes the problem consistently by linking to stable/beta for *all* items, not just for primitives.
## User-facing changes
- Intra-doc links to primitives that currently go to rust-lang.org/nightly/std/primitive.x.html will start going to channel that rustdoc was built with. Nightly will continue going to /nightly; Beta will link to /beta; stable compilers will link to /1.52.1 (or whatever version they were built as).
- Cross-crate links from std to core currently go to /nightly unconditionally. They will start going to /1.52.0 on stable channels (but remain the same on nightly channels).
- Intra-crate links from std to std (or core to core) currently go to the same URL they are hosted at; they will continue to do so. Notably, this is different from everything else because it can preserve the distinction between /stable and /1.52.0 by using relative links.
Note that "links" includes both intra-doc links and rustdoc's own
automatically generated hyperlinks.
## Implementation changes
- Update the testsuite to allow linking to /beta and /1.52.1 in docs
- Use an html_root_url for the standard library that's dependent on the channel
This avoids linking to nightly docs on stable.
- Update rustdoc to use channel-dependent links for primitives from an
unknown crate
- Set DOC_RUST_LANG_ORG_CHANNEL from bootstrap to ensure it's in sync
- Include doc.rust-lang.org in the channel
cc Mark-Simulacrum - I know [you were dubious about this in the past](https://rust-lang.zulipchat.com/#narrow/stream/122651-general/topic/Rustdoc.20unconditionally.20links.20to.20nightly.20libstd.20docs/near/231223124), but I'm not quite sure why? I see this as "just a bugfix", I don't know why rustdoc should unconditionally link to nightly.
cc dtolnay who commented in https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/30693:
> I would welcome a PR to solve this permanently if anyone has ideas for how. I don't believe we need an RFC.
Fixes https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/30693 (note that issue is marked as feature-accepted, although I don't see where it was discussed).
## User-facing changes
- Intra-doc links to primitives that currently go to rust-lang.org/nightly/std/primitive.x.html will start going to channel that rustdoc was built with. Nightly will continue going to /nightly; Beta will link to /beta; stable compilers will link to /1.52.1 (or whatever version they were built as).
- Cross-crate links from std to core currently go to /nightly unconditionally. They will start going to /1.52.0 on stable channels (but remain the same on nightly channels).
- Intra-crate links from std to std (or core to core) currently go to the same URL they are hosted at; they will continue to do so. Notably, this is different from everything else because it can preserve the distinction between /stable and /1.52.0 by using relative links.
Note that "links" includes both intra-doc links and rustdoc's own
automatically generated hyperlinks.
## Implementation changes
- Update the testsuite to allow linking to /beta and /1.52.1 in docs
- Use an html_root_url for the standard library that's dependent on the channel
This avoids linking to nightly docs on stable.
- Update rustdoc to use channel-dependent links for primitives from an
unknown crate
- Set DOC_RUST_LANG_ORG_CHANNEL from bootstrap to ensure it's in sync
- Include doc.rust-lang.org in the channel
Support Android ndk versions `r23-beta3` and up
Since android ndk version `r23-beta3`, `libgcc` has been replaced with `libunwind`. This moves the linking of `libgcc`/`libunwind` into the `unwind` crate where we check if the system compiler can find `libunwind` and fall back to `libgcc` if needed.
Since android ndk version `r23-beta3`, `libgcc` has been replaced with
`libunwind`. This moves the linking of `libgcc`/`libunwind` into the
`unwind` crate where we check if the system compiler can find
`libunwind` and fall back to `libgcc` if needed.
- Split `sys_common::RWLock` between `StaticRWLock` and `MovableRWLock`
- Unbox `RwLock` on some platforms (Windows, Wasm and unsupported)
- Simplify `RwLock::into_inner`
To make way for a new IoSlice(Mut)::advance function that advances a
single slice.
Also changes the signature to accept a `&mut &mut [IoSlice]`, not
returning anything. This will better match the future IoSlice::advance
function.
Add #[track_caller] to panic_any
Report the panic location from the user code.
```rust
use std::panic;
use std::panic::panic_any;
fn main() {
panic::set_hook(Box::new(|panic_info| {
if let Some(location) = panic_info.location() {
println!(
"panic occurred in file '{}' at line {}",
location.file(),
location.line(),
);
} else {
println!("panic occurred but can't get location information...");
}
}));
panic_any(42);
}
````
Before:
`panic occurred in file '/rustc/ff2c947c00f867b9f012e28ba88cecfbe556f904/library/std/src/panic.rs' at line 59`
After:
`panic occurred in file 'src/main.rs' at line 17`
In particular the `is_dir`, `is_file` and `exists` functions says that querying a file requires querying the directory. On Windows this is not normally true.
Add inline attr to CString::into_inner so it can optimize out NonNull checks
It seems that currently if you convert any of the standard library's container to a pointer and then to a NonNull pointer, all will optimize out the NULL check except `CString`(https://godbolt.org/z/YPKW9G5xn),
because for some reason `CString::into_inner` isn't inlined even though it's a private function that should compile into a simple `mov` instruction.
Adding a simple `#[inline]` attribute solves this, code example:
```rust
use std::ffi::CString;
use std::ptr::NonNull;
pub fn cstring_nonull(mut n: CString) -> NonNull<i8> {
NonNull::new(CString::into_raw(n)).unwrap()
}
```
assembly before:
```asm
__ZN3wat14cstring_nonull17h371c755bcad76294E:
.cfi_startproc
pushq %rbp
.cfi_def_cfa_offset 16
.cfi_offset %rbp, -16
movq %rsp, %rbp
.cfi_def_cfa_register %rbp
callq __ZN3std3ffi5c_str7CString10into_inner17h28ece07b276e2878E
testq %rax, %rax
je LBB0_2
popq %rbp
retq
LBB0_2:
leaq l___unnamed_1(%rip), %rdi
leaq l___unnamed_2(%rip), %rdx
movl $43, %esi
callq __ZN4core9panicking5panic17h92a83fa9085a8f73E
.cfi_endproc
.section __TEXT,__const
l___unnamed_1:
.ascii "called `Option::unwrap()` on a `None` value"
l___unnamed_3:
.ascii "wat.rs"
.section __DATA,__const
.p2align 3
l___unnamed_2:
.quad l___unnamed_3
.asciz "\006\000\000\000\000\000\000\000\006\000\000\000(\000\000"
```
Assembly after:
```asm
__ZN3wat14cstring_nonull17h9645eb9341fb25d7E:
.cfi_startproc
pushq %rbp
.cfi_def_cfa_offset 16
.cfi_offset %rbp, -16
movq %rsp, %rbp
.cfi_def_cfa_register %rbp
movq %rdi, %rax
popq %rbp
retq
.cfi_endproc
```
(Related discussion on zulip: https://rust-lang.zulipchat.com/#narrow/stream/219381-t-libs/topic/NonNull.20From.3CBox.3CT.3E.3E)
doc: clarify Mutex::try_lock, etc. errors
Clarify error returns from Mutex::try_lock, RwLock::try_read,
RwLock::try_write to make it more obvious that both poisoning
and the lock being already locked are possible errors.
Bump bootstrap compiler to beta 1.53.0
This PR bumps the bootstrap compiler to version 1.53.0 beta, as part of our usual release process (this was supposed to be Wednesday's step, but creating the beta release took longer than expected).
The PR also includes the "Bootstrap: skip rustdoc fingerprint for building docs" commit, see the reasoning [on Zulip](https://zulip-archive.rust-lang.org/241545trelease/88450153betabootstrap.html).
r? `@Mark-Simulacrum`
Fix `vxworks`
Some PRs made the `vxworks` target not build anymore. This PR fixes that:
- #82973: copy `ExitStatusError` implementation from `unix`.
- #84716: no `libc::chroot` available on `vxworks`, so for now don't implement `os::unix::fs::chroot`.
add an example to explain std::io::Read::read returning 0 in some cases
I have always found the explanation about `Read::read` returning 0 to indicate EOF but not indefinitely, so here's more info using Linux as example. I can also add example code if necessary
MSVC: Avoid using jmp stubs for dll function imports
Windows import libraries contain two symbols for every function: `__imp_FunctionName` and `FunctionName` (where `FunctionName` is the name of the function to be imported).
`__imp_FunctionName` contains the address of the imported function. This will be filled in by the Windows executable loader at runtime. `FunctionName` contains a jmp stub that simply jumps to the address given by `__imp_FunctionName`. E.g. it's a function that solely contains a single jmp instruction:
```asm
jmp __imp_FunctionName
```
When using an external DLL function in Rust, by default the linker will link to FunctionName, causing a bit of indirection at runtime. In Microsoft's C++ it's possible to instead tell it to insert calls to the address in `__imp_FunctionName` by using the `__declspec(dllimport)` attribute. In Rust it's possible to get effectively the same behaviour using the `#[link]` attribute on `extern` blocks.
----
The second commit also merges multiple `extern` blocks into one block. This is because otherwise Rust will currently create duplicate linker arguments for each block. In this case having duplicates shouldn't matter much other than the noise when displaying the linker command.
Windows implementation of feature `path_try_exists`
Draft of a Windows implementation of `try_exists` (#83186).
The first commit reorganizes the code so I would be interested to get some feedback on if this is a good idea or not. It moves the `Path::try_exists` function to `fs::exists`. leaving the former as a wrapper for the latter. This makes it easier to provide platform specific implementations and matches the `fs::metadata` function.
The other commit implements a Windows specific variant of `exists`. I'm still figuring out my approach so this is very much a first draft. Eventually this will need some more eyes from knowledgable Windows people.
Clarify error returns from Mutex::try_lock, RwLock::try_read,
RwLock::try_write to make it more obvious that both poisoning
and the lock being already locked are possible errors.
std: Don't inline TLS accessor on MinGW
This is causing [issues] on Cargo's own CI for MinGW and given the
original investigation there's no reason that MinGW should work when
MSVC doesn't, this this tweaks the MSVC exception to being a Windows exception.
[issues]: https://github.com/rust-lang/cargo/runs/2626676503?check_suite_focus=true#step:9:2453
Move `std::memchr` to `sys_common`
`std::memchr` is a thin abstraction over the different `memchr` implementations in `sys`, along with documentation and tests. The module is only used internally by `std`, nothing is exported externally. Code like this is exactly what the `sys_common` module is for, so this PR moves it there.
Update list of allowed aarch64 features
I recently added these features to std_detect for aarch64 linux, pending [review](https://github.com/rust-lang/stdarch/pull/1146).
I have commented any features not supported by LLVM 9, the current minimum version for Rust. Some (PAuth at least) were renamed between 9 & 12 and I've left them disabled. TME, however, is not in LLVM 9 but I've left it enabled.
See https://github.com/rust-lang/stdarch/issues/993
Rollup of 8 pull requests
Successful merges:
- #84717 (impl FromStr for proc_macro::Literal)
- #85169 (Add method-toggle to <details> for methods)
- #85287 (Expose `Concurrent` (private type in public i'face))
- #85315 (adding time complexity for partition_in_place iter method)
- #85439 (Add diagnostic item to `CStr`)
- #85464 (Fix UB in documented example for `ptr::swap`)
- #85470 (Fix invalid CSS rules for a:hover)
- #85472 (CTFE Machine: do not expose Allocation)
Failed merges:
r? `@ghost`
`@rustbot` modify labels: rollup
Introduce `sys_common::rt::rtprintpanic!` to replace `sys_common::util` functionality
This PR introduces a new macro `rtprintpanic!`, similar to `sys_common::util::dumb_print` and uses that macro to replace all `sys_common::util` functionality.
std: Attempt again to inline thread-local-init across crates
Issue #25088 has been part of `thread_local!` for quite some time now.
Historical attempts have been made to add `#[inline]` to `__getit`
in #43931, #50252, and #59720, but these attempts ended up not landing
at the time due to segfaults on Windows.
In the interim though with `const`-initialized thread locals AFAIK this
is the only remaining bug which is why you might want to use
`#[thread_local]` over `thread_local!`. As a result I figured it was
time to resubmit this and see how it fares on CI and if I can help
debugging any issues that crop up.
Closes#25088
Override `clone_from` for some types
Override `clone_from` method of the `Clone` trait for:
- `cell::RefCell`
- `cmp::Reverse`
- `io::Cursor`
- `mem::ManuallyDrop`
This can bring performance improvements.
Issue #25088 has been part of `thread_local!` for quite some time now.
Historical attempts have been made to add `#[inline]` to `__getit`
in #43931, #50252, and #59720, but these attempts ended up not landing
at the time due to segfaults on Windows.
In the interim though with `const`-initialized thread locals AFAIK this
is the only remaining bug which is why you might want to use
`#[thread_local]` over `thread_local!`. As a result I figured it was
time to resubmit this and see how it fares on CI and if I can help
debugging any issues that crop up.
Closes#25088
Provide ExitStatusError
Closes#73125
In MR #81452 "Add #[must_use] to [...] process::ExitStatus" we concluded that the existing arrangements in are too awkward so adding that `#[must_use]` is blocked on improving the ergonomics.
I wrote a mini-RFC-style discusion of the approach in https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/73125#issuecomment-771092741
# Stabilization report
## Summary
This stabilizes using macro expansion in key-value attributes, like so:
```rust
#[doc = include_str!("my_doc.md")]
struct S;
#[path = concat!(env!("OUT_DIR"), "/generated.rs")]
mod m;
```
See the changes to the reference for details on what macros are allowed;
see Petrochenkov's excellent blog post [on internals](https://internals.rust-lang.org/t/macro-expansion-points-in-attributes/11455)
for alternatives that were considered and rejected ("why accept no more
and no less?")
This has been available on nightly since 1.50 with no major issues.
## Notes
### Accepted syntax
The parser accepts arbitrary Rust expressions in this position, but any expression other than a macro invocation will ultimately lead to an error because it is not expected by the built-in expression forms (e.g., `#[doc]`). Note that decorators and the like may be able to observe other expression forms.
### Expansion ordering
Expansion of macro expressions in "inert" attributes occurs after decorators have executed, analogously to macro expressions appearing in the function body or other parts of decorator input.
There is currently no way for decorators to accept macros in key-value position if macro expansion must be performed before the decorator executes (if the macro can simply be copied into the output for later expansion, that can work).
## Test cases
- https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/blob/master/src/test/ui/attributes/key-value-expansion-on-mac.rs
- https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/blob/master/src/test/rustdoc/external-doc.rs
The feature has also been dogfooded extensively in the compiler and
standard library:
- https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/83329
- https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/83230
- https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/82641
- https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/80534
## Implementation history
- Initial proposal: https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/55414#issuecomment-554005412
- Experiment to see how much code it would break: https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/67121
- Preliminary work to restrict expansion that would conflict with this
feature: https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/77271
- Initial implementation: https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/78837
- Fix for an ICE: https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/80563
## Unresolved Questions
~~https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/83366#issuecomment-805180738 listed some concerns, but they have been resolved as of this final report.~~
## Additional Information
There are two workarounds that have a similar effect for `#[doc]`
attributes on nightly. One is to emulate this behavior by using a limited version of this feature that was stabilized for historical reasons:
```rust
macro_rules! forward_inner_docs {
($e:expr => $i:item) => {
#[doc = $e]
$i
};
}
forward_inner_docs!(include_str!("lib.rs") => struct S {});
```
This also works for other attributes (like `#[path = concat!(...)]`).
The other is to use `doc(include)`:
```rust
#![feature(external_doc)]
#[doc(include = "lib.rs")]
struct S {}
```
The first works, but is non-trivial for people to discover, and
difficult to read and maintain. The second is a strange special-case for
a particular use of the macro. This generalizes it to work for any use
case, not just including files.
I plan to remove `doc(include)` when this is stabilized. The
`forward_inner_docs` workaround will still compile without warnings, but
I expect it to be used less once it's no longer necessary.
Simplify `cfg(any(unix, target_os="redox"))` in example to just `cfg(unix)`
Update example for `OsString` that handled `redox` seperately from `unix`: Redox has been completely integrated under `target_family="unix"`, so `cfg(unix)` implies `target_os="redox"`
35dbef2350/compiler/rustc_target/src/spec/redox_base.rs (L26)
Expand WASI abbreviation in docs
I was pretty sure this was related to something for WebAssembly but wasn't 100% sure so I checked but even on these top-level docs I couldn't find the abbreviation expanded. I'm normally used to Rust docs being detailed and explanatory and writing abbreviations like this out in full at least once so I thought it was worth the change. Feel free to close this if it's too much.
Do not allocate or unwind after fork
### Objective scenarios
* Make (simple) panics safe in `Command::pre_exec_hook`, including most `panic!` calls, `Option::unwrap`, and array bounds check failures.
* Make it possible to `libc::fork` and then safely panic in the child (needed for the above, but this requirement means exposing the new raw hook API which the `Command` implementation needs).
* In singlethreaded programs, where panic in `pre_exec_hook` is already memory-safe, prevent the double-unwinding malfunction #79740.
I think we want to make panic after fork safe even though the post-fork child environment is only experienced by users of `unsafe`, beause the subset of Rust in which any panic is UB is really far too hazardous and unnatural.
#### Approach
* Provide a way for a program to, at runtime, switch to having panics abort. This makes it possible to panic without making *any* heap allocations, which is needed because on some platforms malloc is UB in a child forked from a multithreaded program (see https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/80263#issuecomment-774272370, and maybe also the SuS [spec](https://pubs.opengroup.org/onlinepubs/9699919799/functions/fork.html)).
* Make that change in the child spawned by `Command`.
* Document the rules comprehensively enough that a programmer has a fighting chance of writing correct code.
* Test that this all works as expected (and in particular, that there aren't any heap allocations we missed)
Fixes#79740
#### Rejected (or previously attempted) approaches
* Change the panic machinery to be able to unwind without allocating, at least when the payload and message are both `'static`. This seems like it would be even more subtle. Also that is a potentially-hot path which I don't want to mess with.
* Change the existing panic hook mechanism to not convert the message to a `String` before calling the hook. This would be a surprising change for existing code and would not be detected by the type system.
* Provide a `raw_panic_hook` function to intercept panics in a way that doesn't allocate. (That was an earlier version of this MR.)
### History
This MR could be considered a v2 of #80263. Thanks to everyone who commented there. In particular, thanks to `@m-ou-se,` `@Mark-Simulacrum` and `@hyd-dev.` (Tagging you since I think you might be interested in this new MR.) Compared to #80263, this MR has very substantial changes and additions.
Additionally, I have recently (2021-04-20) completely revised this series following very helpful comments from `@m-ou-se.`
r? `@m-ou-se`
Some platforma (eg ARM64) apparently generate SIGTRAP for panic abort!
See eg
https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/81858#issuecomment-840702765
This is probably a bug, but we don't want to entangle this MR with it.
When it's fixed, this commit should be reverted.
Signed-off-by: Ian Jackson <ijackson@chiark.greenend.org.uk>
Add auto traits and clone trait migrations for RFC2229
This PR
- renames the existent RFC2229 migration `disjoint_capture_drop_reorder` to `disjoint_capture_migration`
- add additional migrations for auto traits and clone trait
Closesrust-lang/project-rfc-2229#29Closesrust-lang/project-rfc-2229#28
r? `@nikomatsakis`