Commit Graph

8330 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Iago-lito
69e8e7e73b Stabilize NonZero* checked operations constness. 2022-06-09 09:17:06 +02:00
Iago-lito
5823d7b563 Partial stabilization of "nonzero_unchecked_ops". 2022-06-09 09:13:57 +02:00
Michael Howell
9f6dcceef0 Fix bootstrap attr 2022-06-08 20:06:54 -07:00
Michael Howell
85b0c2ffbb rustdoc: fixed messed-up rustdoc auto trait impls
Before:

    impl<T, U> UnwindSafe for (T, ...) where
        T: UnwindSafe,
        U: UnwindSafe,

After:

    impl<T> UnwindSafe for (T, ...) where
        T: UnwindSafe,
2022-06-08 19:51:54 -07:00
Michael Howell
6950f144cf rustdoc: show tuple impls as impl Trait for (T, ...)
This commit adds a new unstable attribute, `#[doc(tuple_varadic)]`, that
shows a 1-tuple as `(T, ...)` instead of just `(T,)`, and links to a section
in the tuple primitive docs that talks about these.
2022-06-08 19:26:51 -07:00
Hood Chatham
46a3f0feb6 Remove __gxx_personality_v0 declaration 2022-06-08 16:31:21 -07:00
Michael Goulet
1577838151
Rollup merge of #97871 - ChayimFriedman2:vec-iterator-unimplemented, r=compiler-errors
Suggest using `iter()` or `into_iter()` for `Vec`

We cannot do that for `&Vec` because `#[rustc_on_unimplemented]` is limited (it does not clean generic instantiation for references, only for ADTs).

`@rustbot` label +A-diagnostics
2022-06-08 13:32:22 -07:00
Michael Goulet
888d72c2bf
Rollup merge of #97830 - LucasDumont:add-example-alloc, r=yaahc
Add std::alloc::set_alloc_error_hook example
2022-06-08 13:32:19 -07:00
Hood Chatham
0ec3174e3e Fix formatter 2022-06-08 10:25:18 -07:00
Hood Chatham
2ecbdc1b32 Don't use __gxx_personality_v0 in panic_unwind on emscripten target
This resolves #85821. See also the discussion here:
https://github.com/emscripten-core/emscripten/issues/17128

The consensus seems to be that rust_eh_personality is never invoked.
I patched __gxx_personality_v0 to log invocations and then ran
various panic tests and it was never called, so this analysis matches
what seems to happen in practice. This replaces the definition with
an abort, modeled on the structured exception handling implementation.
2022-06-08 10:04:02 -07:00
Matthias Krüger
ef56a1e9c9
Rollup merge of #97879 - hermitcore:condvar, r=Dylan-DPC
remove unneeded code

The init function isn't longer part of `Condvar`. Consequently, we removed the implementation for the target os `hermit`.
2022-06-08 18:15:05 +02:00
Dan Gohman
69594414bf Fix trailing whitespace. 2022-06-08 08:40:34 -07:00
Dan Gohman
158ff5cdd4 Reword the question in the section header too.
This adopts the wording suggested in
https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/97837#discussion_r892524129.
2022-06-08 08:28:36 -07:00
Dan Gohman
e89ec68d5d
Update library/std/src/os/unix/io/mod.rs
Co-authored-by: Mara Bos <m-ou.se@m-ou.se>
2022-06-08 08:26:56 -07:00
Dan Gohman
7656e085e3 Reword a question into a statement. 2022-06-08 08:24:28 -07:00
Stefan Lankes
85b5f74043 remove unneeded code 2022-06-08 15:35:49 +02:00
Yoshua Wuyts
a4c455080c update docs for std::future::IntoFuture 2022-06-08 15:21:16 +02:00
Yuki Okushi
2b58e6314a
Stabilize const_intrinsic_copy 2022-06-08 20:17:28 +09:00
Chayim Refael Friedman
456f1ffe12 Suggest using iter() or into_iter() for Vec
We cannot do that for `&Vec` because `#[rustc_on_unimplemented]` is limited (it does not clean generic instantiation for references, only for ADTs).
2022-06-08 11:09:08 +00:00
Stein Somers
49ccb7519f BTreeSet: avoid intermediate sorting when collecting sorted iterators 2022-06-08 12:42:31 +02:00
Stein Somers
6f92f5ab66 BTree: tweak internal comments 2022-06-08 12:22:18 +02:00
Dylan DPC
1660b4b70c
Rollup merge of #97851 - saethlin:use-repr-c, r=thomcc
Use repr(C) when depending on struct layout in ptr tests

The test depends on the layout of this struct `Pair`, so it should use `repr(C)` instead of the default `repr(Rust)`.
2022-06-08 07:37:33 +02:00
Ben Kimock
5dd5244423 Use repr(C) when depending on struct layout in ptr tests 2022-06-07 19:24:09 -04:00
Chris Denton
34fafd363c
Windows: No panic if function not (yet) available
In some situations it is possible for required functions to be called before they've had a chance to be loaded. Therefore, we make it possible to recover from this situation simply by looking at error codes.
2022-06-07 21:22:53 +01:00
Michael Howell
7a93567005 docs: show Clone and Copy on () doc pages 2022-06-07 12:12:49 -07:00
Michael Howell
1e6a85789e rustdoc: show auto/blanket docs for tuple and unit 2022-06-07 11:25:00 -07:00
Michael Howell
9940ed0805 docs: clean up trait docs for tuples 2022-06-07 11:24:57 -07:00
Dan Gohman
f9662f2c18
Update library/std/src/os/unix/io/mod.rs
Co-authored-by: Josh Triplett <josh@joshtriplett.org>
2022-06-07 11:16:32 -07:00
Dan Gohman
27d9ab447b
Update library/std/src/os/unix/io/mod.rs
Co-authored-by: Josh Triplett <josh@joshtriplett.org>
2022-06-07 10:38:31 -07:00
Dan Gohman
52cb18b664
Update library/std/src/os/unix/io/mod.rs
Co-authored-by: Sean Stangl <sean.stangl@gmail.com>
2022-06-07 09:53:34 -07:00
Dan Gohman
fbb59e7062
Update library/std/src/os/unix/io/mod.rs
Co-authored-by: Sean Stangl <sean.stangl@gmail.com>
2022-06-07 09:53:26 -07:00
Dan Gohman
5ae95fa89a Document Rust's stance on /proc/self/mem
Add documentation to `std::os::unix::io` describing Rust's stance on
`/proc/self/mem`, treating it as an external entity which is outside
the scope of Rust's safety guarantees.
2022-06-07 09:38:53 -07:00
Dylan DPC
f12605b9ef
Rollup merge of #97821 - Nilstrieb:mutex-docs, r=Dylan-DPC
Remove confusing sentence from `Mutex` docs

The docs were saying something about "statically initializing" the
mutex, and it's not clear what this means. Remove that part to avoid
confusion.
2022-06-07 17:25:44 +02:00
Dylan DPC
a9c4a7e1aa
Rollup merge of #95948 - Nilstrieb:improve-cstr-safety-docs, r=RalfJung
Improve the safety docs for `CStr`

Namely, the two functions `from_ptr` and `from_bytes_with_nul_unchecked`.
Before, these functions didn't state the requirements clearly enough,
and I was not immediately able to find them like for other functions.

This doesn't change the content of the docs, but simply rewords them for
clarity.

note: I'm not entirely sure about the '`ptr` must be valid for reads of `u8`.', there might be room for improvement for this (and maybe for the other docs as well 😄)
2022-06-07 17:25:42 +02:00
Nilstrieb
0dda42bc14 Improve the safety docs for CStr
Namely, the two functions `from_ptr` and `from_bytes_with_nul_unchecked`.
Before, this functions didn't state the requirements clearly enough,
and I was not immediately able to find them like for other functions.

This doesn't change the content of the docs, but simply rewords them for
clarity.
2022-06-07 16:42:26 +02:00
Dylan DPC
e224185409
Update library/std/src/sync/mutex.rs
Co-authored-by: Weiyi Wang <wwylele@gmail.com>
2022-06-07 15:15:19 +02:00
Lucas Dumont
5adef6c795 Add std::alloc::set_alloc_error_hook example 2022-06-07 15:06:18 +02:00
Dylan DPC
f32a4f06ab
Rollup merge of #97771 - rtzoeller:haiku_no_sigio, r=kennytm
Remove SIGIO reference on Haiku

Haiku doesn't define SIGIO. The nix crate already employs this workaround:
5dedbc7850/src/sys/signal.rs (L92-L94)
2022-06-07 11:41:09 +02:00
Nilstrieb
83af085c77 Remove confusing sentence from Mutex docs
The docs were saying something about "statically initializing" the
mutex, and it's not clear what this means. Remove that part to avoid
confusion.
2022-06-07 09:53:44 +02:00
bors
bb55bd449e Auto merge of #95565 - jackh726:remove-borrowck-mode, r=nikomatsakis
Remove migrate borrowck mode

Closes #58781
Closes #43234

# Stabilization proposal

This PR proposes the stabilization of `#![feature(nll)]` and the removal of `-Z borrowck`. Current borrow checking behavior of item bodies is currently done by first infering regions *lexically* and reporting any errors during HIR type checking. If there *are* any errors, then MIR borrowck (NLL) never occurs. If there *aren't* any errors, then MIR borrowck happens and any errors there would be reported. This PR removes the lexical region check of item bodies entirely and only uses MIR borrowck. Because MIR borrowck could never *not* be run for a compiled program, this should not break any programs. It does, however, change diagnostics significantly and allows a slightly larger set of programs to compile.

Tracking issue: #43234
RFC: https://github.com/rust-lang/rfcs/blob/master/text/2094-nll.md
Version: 1.63 (2022-06-30 => beta, 2022-08-11 => stable).

## Motivation

Over time, the Rust borrow checker has become "smarter" and thus allowed more programs to compile. There have been three different implementations: AST borrowck, MIR borrowck, and polonius (well, in progress). Additionally, there is the "lexical region resolver", which (roughly) solves the constraints generated through HIR typeck. It is not a full borrow checker, but does emit some errors.

The AST borrowck was the original implementation of the borrow checker and was part of the initially stabilized Rust 1.0. In mid 2017, work began to implement the current MIR borrow checker and that effort ompleted by the end of 2017, for the most part. During 2018, efforts were made to migrate away from the AST borrow checker to the MIR borrow checker - eventually culminating into "migrate" mode - where HIR typeck with lexical region resolving following by MIR borrow checking - being active by default in the 2018 edition.

In early 2019, migrate mode was turned on by default in the 2015 edition as well, but with MIR borrowck errors emitted as warnings. By late 2019, these warnings were upgraded to full errors. This was followed by the complete removal of the AST borrow checker.

In the period since, various errors emitted by the MIR borrow checker have been improved to the point that they are mostly the same or better than those emitted by the lexical region resolver.

While there do remain some degradations in errors (tracked under the [NLL-diagnostics tag](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues?q=is%3Aopen+is%3Aissue+label%3ANLL-diagnostics), those are sufficiently small and rare enough that increased flexibility of MIR borrow check-only is now a worthwhile tradeoff.

## What is stabilized

As said previously, this does not fundamentally change the landscape of accepted programs. However, there are a [few](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues?q=is%3Aopen+is%3Aissue+label%3ANLL-fixed-by-NLL) cases where programs can compile under `feature(nll)`, but not otherwise.

There are two notable patterns that are "fixed" by this stabilization. First, the `scoped_threads` feature, which is a continutation of a pre-1.0 API, can sometimes emit a [weird lifetime error](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/95527) without NLL. Second, actually seen in the standard library. In the `Extend` impl for `HashMap`, there is an implied bound of `K: 'a` that is available with NLL on but not without - this is utilized in the impl.

As mentioned before, there are a large number of diagnostic differences. Most of them are better, but some are worse. None are serious or happen often enough to need to block this PR. The biggest change is the loss of error code for a number of lifetime errors in favor of more general "lifetime may not live long enough" error. While this may *seem* bad, the former error codes were just attempts to somewhat-arbitrarily bin together lifetime errors of the same type; however, on paper, they end up being roughly the same with roughly the same kinds of solutions.

## What isn't stabilized

This PR does not completely remove the lexical region resolver. In the future, it may be possible to remove that (while still keeping HIR typeck) or to remove it together with HIR typeck.

## Tests

Many test outputs get updated by this PR. However, there are number of tests specifically geared towards NLL under `src/test/ui/nll`

## History

* On 2017-07-14, [tracking issue opened](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/43234)
* On 2017-07-20, [initial empty MIR pass added](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/43271)
* On 2017-08-29, [RFC opened](https://github.com/rust-lang/rfcs/pull/2094)
* On 2017-11-16, [Integrate MIR type-checker with NLL](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/45825)
* On 2017-12-20, [NLL feature complete](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/46862)
* On 2018-07-07, [Don't run AST borrowck on mir mode](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/52083)
* On 2018-07-27, [Add migrate mode](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/52681)
* On 2019-04-22, [Enable migrate mode on 2015 edition](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/59114)
* On 2019-08-26, [Don't downgrade errors on 2015 edition](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/64221)
* On 2019-08-27, [Remove AST borrowck](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/64790)
2022-06-07 05:04:14 +00:00
Matthias Krüger
c4bfd106e1
Rollup merge of #97700 - nzrq:patch-1, r=dtolnay
Add note to documentation of HashSet::intersection

The functionality of the `std::collections::HashSet::intersection(...)` method was slightly surprising to me so I wanted to take a sec to contribute to the documentation for this method.

I've added a `Note:` section if that is appropriate.
2022-06-07 01:13:46 +02:00
nzrq
7d114c7713
Apply suggestions from code review
Co-authored-by: David Tolnay <dtolnay@gmail.com>
2022-06-06 17:14:58 -04:00
Mara Bos
edae495855 Make {Mutex, Condvar, RwLock}::new() const. 2022-06-06 13:55:43 +02:00
Mara Bos
acc3ab4e65 Make all {Mutex, Condvar, RwLock}::new #[inline]. 2022-06-06 13:49:23 +02:00
Nick Cameron
66290109bb Address reviewer comments
Signed-off-by: Nick Cameron <nrc@ncameron.org>
2022-06-06 12:19:18 +01:00
Nick Cameron
843f90cbb7 Add some more tests
Signed-off-by: Nick Cameron <nrc@ncameron.org>
2022-06-06 12:10:14 +01:00
Nick Cameron
2e0ca2537f Add tracking issue number
Signed-off-by: Nick Cameron <nrc@ncameron.org>
2022-06-06 12:10:14 +01:00
Nick Cameron
e82368d6fc Add examples to docs
Signed-off-by: Nick Cameron <nrc@ncameron.org>
2022-06-06 12:10:13 +01:00
Nick Cameron
17730e66f6 Update docs
Signed-off-by: Nick Cameron <nrc@ncameron.org>
2022-06-06 12:10:13 +01:00
Nick Cameron
57d027d23a Modify the signature of the request_* methods so that trait_upcasting is not required
Signed-off-by: Nick Cameron <nrc@ncameron.org>
2022-06-06 12:10:13 +01:00
Nick Cameron
bb5db85f74 Add the Provider api to core::any
Signed-off-by: Nick Cameron <nrc@ncameron.org>
2022-06-06 12:10:13 +01:00
Matthias Krüger
1bf1932453
Rollup merge of #97764 - RalfJung:strict, r=dtolnay
use strict provenance APIs

The stdlib was adjusted to avoid bare int2ptr casts, but recently some casts of that sort have sneaked back in. Let's fix that. :)
2022-06-06 08:37:04 +02:00
bors
760237ff78 Auto merge of #97710 - RalfJung:ptr-addr, r=thomcc
implement ptr.addr() via transmute

As per the discussion in https://github.com/rust-lang/unsafe-code-guidelines/issues/286, the semantics for ptr-to-int transmutes that we are going with for now is to make them strip provenance without exposing it. That's exactly what `ptr.addr()` does! So we can implement `ptr.addr()` via `transmute`. This also means that once https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/97684 lands, Miri can distinguish `ptr.addr()` from `ptr.expose_addr()`, and the following code will correctly be called out as having UB (if permissive provenance mode is enabled, which will become the default once the [implementation is complete](https://github.com/rust-lang/miri/issues/2133)):

```rust
fn main() {
    let x: i32 = 3;
    let x_ptr = &x as *const i32;

    let x_usize: usize = x_ptr.addr();
    // Cast back an address that did *not* get exposed.
    let ptr = std::ptr::from_exposed_addr::<i32>(x_usize);
    assert_eq!(unsafe { *ptr }, 3); //~ ERROR Undefined Behavior: dereferencing pointer failed
}
```

This completes the Miri implementation of the new distinctions introduced by strict provenance. :)

Cc `@Gankra` -- for now I left in your `FIXME(strict_provenance_magic)` saying these should be intrinsics, but I do not necessarily agree that they should be. Or if we have an intrinsic, I think it should behave exactly like the `transmute` does, which makes one wonder why the intrinsic should be needed.
2022-06-06 01:03:26 +00:00
Ryan Zoeller
fac5cbc2f5 Remove SIGIO reference on Haiku
Haiku doesn't define SIGIO. The nix crate already employs this workaround:
5dedbc7850/src/sys/signal.rs (L92-L94)
2022-06-05 15:14:18 -05:00
Ralf Jung
4a41c35742 use strict provenance APIs 2022-06-05 11:50:48 -04:00
joboet
b9660de664
std: solve priority issue for Parker 2022-06-05 11:45:22 +02:00
nzrq
fc4e8c7f0d
Update library/std/src/collections/hash/set.rs
Co-authored-by: David Tolnay <dtolnay@gmail.com>
2022-06-04 20:03:55 -04:00
bors
43874a2ee7 Auto merge of #97742 - matthiaskrgr:rollup-fr3j0t8, r=matthiaskrgr
Rollup of 6 pull requests

Successful merges:

 - #97609 (Iterate over `maybe_unused_trait_imports` when checking dead trait imports)
 - #97688 (test const_copy to make sure bytewise pointer copies are working)
 - #97707 (Improve soundness of rustc_data_structures)
 - #97731 (Add regresion test for #87142)
 - #97735 (Don't generate "Impls on Foreign Types" for std)
 - #97737 (Fix pretty printing named bound regions under -Zverbose)

Failed merges:

r? `@ghost`
`@rustbot` modify labels: rollup
2022-06-04 23:14:09 +00:00
Matthias Krüger
36a16be35a
Rollup merge of #97688 - RalfJung:test-const-cpy, r=Mark-Simulacrum
test const_copy to make sure bytewise pointer copies are working

This is non-trivial; for `swap_nonoverlapping`, this is [not working](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/83163#issuecomment-1145917372).
2022-06-04 23:42:01 +02:00
bors
4e725bad73 Auto merge of #97191 - wesleywiser:main_thread_name, r=ChrisDenton
Call the OS function to set the main thread's name on program init

Normally, `Thread::spawn` takes care of setting the thread's name, if
one was provided, but since the main thread wasn't created by calling
`Thread::spawn`, we need to call that function in `std::rt::init`.

This is mainly useful for system tools like debuggers and profilers
which might show the thread name to a user. Prior to these changes, gdb
and WinDbg would show all thread names except the main thread's name to
a user. I've validated that this patch resolves the issue for both
debuggers.
2022-06-04 20:27:53 +00:00
The 8472
d3465a8f21 keep using poll as fast path and only use fcntl as fallback
this minimizes the amount of syscalls performed during startup
2022-06-04 11:43:02 +02:00
Dylan DPC
e9ec02267a
Rollup merge of #97647 - m-ou-se:lazy-box-locks, r=Amanieu
Lazily allocate and initialize pthread locks.

Lazily allocate and initialize pthread locks.

This allows {Mutex, Condvar, RwLock}::new() to be const, while still using the platform's native locks for features like priority inheritance and debug tooling. E.g. on macOS, we cannot directly use the (private) APIs that pthread's locks are implemented with, making it impossible for us to use anything other than pthread while still preserving priority inheritance, etc.

This PR doesn't yet make the public APIs const. That's for a separate PR with an FCP.

Tracking issue: https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/93740
2022-06-04 11:06:40 +02:00
Dylan DPC
07f586fe74
Rollup merge of #96642 - thomcc:thinbox-zst-ugh, r=yaahc
Avoid zero-sized allocs in ThinBox if T and H are both ZSTs.

This was surprisingly tricky, and took longer to get right than expected. `ThinBox` is a surprisingly subtle piece of code. That said, in the end, a lot of this was due to overthinking[^overthink] -- ultimately the fix ended up fairly clean and simple.

[^overthink]: Honestly, for a while I was convinced this couldn't be done without allocations or runtime branches in these cases, but that's obviously untrue.

Anyway, as a result of spending all that time debugging, I've extended the tests quite a bit, and also added more debug assertions. Many of these helped for subtle bugs I made in the middle (for example, the alloc/drop tracking is because I ended up double-dropping the value in the case where both were ZSTs), they're arguably a bit of overkill at this point, although I imagine they could help in the future too.

Anyway, these tests cover a wide range of size/align cases, nd fully pass under miri[^1]. They also do some smoke-check asserting that the value has the correct alignment, although in practice it's totally within the compiler's rights to delete these assertions since we'd have already done UB if they get hit. They have more boilerplate than they really need, but it's not *too* bad on a per-test basis.

A notable absence from testing is atypical header types, but at the moment it's impossible to manually implement `Pointee`. It would be really nice to have testing here, since it's not 100% obvious to me that the aligned read/write we use for `H` are correct in the face of arbitrary combinations of `size_of::<H>()`, `align_of::<H>()`, and `align_of::<T>()`. (That said, I spent a while thinking through it and am *pretty* sure it's fine -- I'd just feel... better if we could test some cases for non-ZST headers which have unequal and align).

[^1]: Or at least, they pass under miri if I copy the code and tests into a new crate and run miri on it (after making it less stdlibified).

Fixes #96485.

I'd request review ``@yaahc,`` but I believe you're taking some time away from reviews, so I'll request from the previous PR's reviewer (I think that the context helps, even if the actual change didn't end up being bad here).

r? ``@joshtriplett``
2022-06-04 11:06:39 +02:00
bors
cb0584f86b Auto merge of #97604 - nnethercote:inline-bridge-Buffer-methods, r=eddyb
Inline `bridge::Buffer` methods.

This fixes a performance regression caused by making `Buffer`
non-generic in #97004.

r? `@eddyb`
2022-06-04 04:51:26 +00:00
nzrq
fdd8b6229e
Update set.rs 2022-06-03 17:34:15 -04:00
Jack Huey
410dcc9674 Fully stabilize NLL 2022-06-03 17:16:41 -04:00
Ralf Jung
4291332175 implement ptr.addr() via transmute 2022-06-03 16:45:35 -04:00
bors
a6b8c69548 Auto merge of #95833 - notriddle:notriddle/human-readable-signals, r=yaahc
std: `<ExitStatus as Display>::fmt` name the signal it died from

Related to #95601
2022-06-03 20:18:14 +00:00
nzrq
2ea9e04bf7
Add note to documentation of HashSet::intersection 2022-06-03 13:05:57 -04:00
Mara Bos
6a417d4828 Lazily allocate+initialize locks. 2022-06-03 17:04:14 +02:00
Mara Bos
ac5aa1ded5 Use Drop instead of destroy() for locks. 2022-06-03 16:45:47 +02:00
Ralf Jung
4990021082 test const_copy to make sure bytewise pointer copies are working 2022-06-03 09:20:42 -04:00
Dylan DPC
025cf96615
Rollup merge of #97366 - WaffleLapkin:stabilize_array_slice_from_ref, r=dtolnay
Stabilize `{slice,array}::from_ref`

This PR stabilizes the following APIs as `const` functions in Rust `1.63`:
```rust
// core::array
pub const fn from_ref<T>(s: &T) -> &[T; 1];

// core::slice
pub const fn from_ref<T>(s: &T) -> &[T];
```

Note that the `mut` versions are not stabilized as unique references (`&mut _`) are [unstable in const context].

FCP: https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/90206#issuecomment-1134586665

r? rust-lang/libs-api `@rustbot` label +T-libs-api -T-libs

[unstable in const context]: https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/57349
2022-06-03 11:18:23 +02:00
Nikolai Vazquez
fd38f663cd Make std::mem::needs_drop accept ?Sized 2022-06-03 03:28:19 -04:00
Michael Howell
22791bbccd Fix MIPS-specific signal bug 2022-06-02 15:28:38 -07:00
Matthias Krüger
5b64aab2b6
Rollup merge of #97655 - steffahn:better-pin-box-construction-docs, r=thomcc
Improve documentation for constructors of pinned `Box`es

Adds a cross-references between `Box::pin` and `Box::into_pin` (and other related methods, i.e. the equivalent `From` implementation, and the unstable `pin_in` method), in particular now that `into_pin` [was stabilized](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/97397). The main goal is to further improve visibility of the fact that `Box<T> -> Pin<Box<T>>` conversion exits in the first place, and that `Box::pin(x)` is – essentially – just a convenience function for `Box::into_pin(Box::new(x))`

The motivating context why I think this is important is even experienced Rust users overlooking the existence this kind of conversion, [e.g. in this thread on IRLO](https://internals.rust-lang.org/t/pre-rfc-function-variants/16732/7?u=steffahn); and also the fact that that discussion brought up that there would be a bunch of Box-construction methods "missing" such as e.g. methods with fallible allocation a la "`Box::try_pin`", and similar; while those are in fact *not* necessary, because you can use `Box::into_pin(Box::try_new(x)?)` instead.

I have *not* included explicit mention of methods (e.g. `try_new`) in the docs of stable methods (e.g. `into_pin`). (Referring to unstable API in stable API docs would be bad style IMO.) Stable examples I have in mind with the statement "constructing a (pinned) Box in a different way than with `Box::new`" are things like cloning a `Box`, or `Box::from_raw`. If/when `try_new` would get stabilized, it would become a very good concrete example use-case of `Box::into_pin` IMO.
2022-06-02 23:39:07 +02:00
bors
44e9516c85 Auto merge of #97654 - Dylan-DPC:rollup-w6zrzxf, r=Dylan-DPC
Rollup of 5 pull requests

Successful merges:

 - #97420 (Be a little nicer with casts when formatting `fn` pointers)
 - #97450 ([RFC 2011] Basic compiler infrastructure)
 - #97599 (Fix JSON reexport ICE)
 - #97617 (Rustdoc anonymous reexports)
 - #97636 (Revert #96682.)

Failed merges:

r? `@ghost`
`@rustbot` modify labels: rollup
2022-06-02 16:04:42 +00:00
Frank Steffahn
6e2ac5df31 Improve documentation for constructors of pinned Boxes 2022-06-02 15:32:48 +02:00
Dylan DPC
1d71237646
Rollup merge of #97636 - nnethercote:revert-96682, r=dtolnay
Revert #96682.

The change was "Show invisible delimiters (within comments) when pretty
printing". It's useful to show these delimiters, but is a breaking
change for some proc macros.

Fixes #97608.

r? ``@petrochenkov``
2022-06-02 15:27:01 +02:00
Dylan DPC
0b2d48e5af
Rollup merge of #97420 - WaffleLapkin:no_oxford_casts_qqq, r=Mark-Simulacrum
Be a little nicer with casts when formatting `fn` pointers

This removes a `fn(...) -> ...` -> `usize` -> `*const ()` -> `usize` cast. cc #95489.
2022-06-02 15:26:57 +02:00
bors
20976bae5c Auto merge of #97293 - est31:remove_box, r=oli-obk
Add #[rustc_box] and use it inside alloc

This commit adds an alternative content boxing syntax, and uses it inside alloc.

```Rust
#![feature(box_syntax)]

fn foo() {
    let foo = box bar;
}
```

is equivalent to

```Rust
#![feature(rustc_attrs)]

fn foo() {
    let foo = #[rustc_box] Box::new(bar);
}
```

The usage inside the very performance relevant code in
liballoc is the only remaining relevant usage of box syntax
in the compiler (outside of tests, which are comparatively easy to port).

box syntax was originally designed to be used by all Rust
developers. This introduces a replacement syntax more tailored
to only being used inside the Rust compiler, and with it,
lays the groundwork for eventually removing box syntax.

[Earlier work](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/87781#issuecomment-894714878) by `@nbdd0121` to lower `Box::new` to `box` during THIR -> MIR building ran into borrow checker problems, requiring the lowering to be adjusted in a way that led to [performance regressions](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/87781#issuecomment-894872367). The proposed change in this PR lowers `#[rustc_box] Box::new` -> `box` in the AST -> HIR lowering step, which is way earlier in the compiler, and thus should cause less issues both performance wise as well as regarding type inference/borrow checking/etc. Hopefully, future work can move the lowering further back in the compiler, as long as there are no performance regressions.
2022-06-02 13:20:19 +00:00
Dylan DPC
fa79247826
Rollup merge of #97635 - rgwood:patch-1, r=ChrisDenton
Fix file metadata documentation for Windows

I noticed that the documentation for `fs::symlink_metadata()` and `fs::metadata()` is incorrect; [the underlying code](481db40311/library/std/src/sys/windows/fs.rs (L334)) calls [`GetFileInformationByHandle()`](https://docs.microsoft.com/en-us/windows/win32/api/fileapi/nf-fileapi-getfileinformationbyhandle) on Windows, not [`GetFileAttributesEx()`](https://docs.microsoft.com/en-us/windows/win32/api/fileapi/nf-fileapi-getfileattributesexw). There are currently [no uses of `GetFileAttributesEx()` in this repo](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/search?q=GetFileAttributesEx).
2022-06-02 11:13:26 +02:00
Dylan DPC
eb642d48ee
Rollup merge of #97603 - ximon18:arc-make-mut-spelling-correction, r=GuillaumeGomez
Arc make_mut doc comment spelling correction.
2022-06-02 11:13:25 +02:00
Dylan DPC
9225f78b74
Rollup merge of #97397 - JohnTitor:stabilize-box-into-pin, r=Mark-Simulacrum
Stabilize `box_into_pin`

FCP has been completed: https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/62370#issuecomment-1012162279
Also, adds notes as per https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/62370#issuecomment-1004108116
Closes #62370
2022-06-02 11:13:23 +02:00
bors
fb1976011e Auto merge of #97414 - LYF1999:yf/cachealign, r=Mark-Simulacrum
use 128 cache align for aarch64

the cache line size of m1 mac is 128.
so use `align(128)` for m1 mac

here is `sysctl -a hw machdep.cpu` output on m1 mac
```
hw.ncpu: 10
hw.byteorder: 1234
hw.memsize: 68719476736
hw.activecpu: 10
hw.perflevel0.physicalcpu: 8
hw.perflevel0.physicalcpu_max: 8
hw.perflevel0.logicalcpu: 8
hw.perflevel0.logicalcpu_max: 8
hw.perflevel0.l1icachesize: 196608
hw.perflevel0.l1dcachesize: 131072
hw.perflevel0.l2cachesize: 12582912
hw.perflevel0.cpusperl2: 4
hw.perflevel1.physicalcpu: 2
hw.perflevel1.physicalcpu_max: 2
hw.perflevel1.logicalcpu: 2
hw.perflevel1.logicalcpu_max: 2
hw.perflevel1.l1icachesize: 131072
hw.perflevel1.l1dcachesize: 65536
hw.perflevel1.l2cachesize: 4194304
hw.perflevel1.cpusperl2: 2
hw.optional.arm.FEAT_FlagM: 1
hw.optional.arm.FEAT_FlagM2: 1
hw.optional.arm.FEAT_FHM: 1
hw.optional.arm.FEAT_DotProd: 1
hw.optional.arm.FEAT_SHA3: 1
hw.optional.arm.FEAT_RDM: 1
hw.optional.arm.FEAT_LSE: 1
hw.optional.arm.FEAT_SHA256: 1
hw.optional.arm.FEAT_SHA512: 1
hw.optional.arm.FEAT_SHA1: 1
hw.optional.arm.FEAT_AES: 1
hw.optional.arm.FEAT_PMULL: 1
hw.optional.arm.FEAT_SPECRES: 0
hw.optional.arm.FEAT_SB: 1
hw.optional.arm.FEAT_FRINTTS: 1
hw.optional.arm.FEAT_LRCPC: 1
hw.optional.arm.FEAT_LRCPC2: 1
hw.optional.arm.FEAT_FCMA: 1
hw.optional.arm.FEAT_JSCVT: 1
hw.optional.arm.FEAT_PAuth: 1
hw.optional.arm.FEAT_PAuth2: 0
hw.optional.arm.FEAT_FPAC: 0
hw.optional.arm.FEAT_DPB: 1
hw.optional.arm.FEAT_DPB2: 1
hw.optional.arm.FEAT_BF16: 0
hw.optional.arm.FEAT_I8MM: 0
hw.optional.arm.FEAT_ECV: 1
hw.optional.arm.FEAT_LSE2: 1
hw.optional.arm.FEAT_CSV2: 1
hw.optional.arm.FEAT_CSV3: 1
hw.optional.arm.FEAT_FP16: 1
hw.optional.arm.FEAT_SSBS: 1
hw.optional.arm.FEAT_BTI: 0
hw.optional.floatingpoint: 1
hw.optional.neon: 1
hw.optional.neon_hpfp: 1
hw.optional.neon_fp16: 1
hw.optional.armv8_1_atomics: 1
hw.optional.armv8_2_fhm: 1
hw.optional.armv8_2_sha512: 1
hw.optional.armv8_2_sha3: 1
hw.optional.armv8_3_compnum: 1
hw.optional.watchpoint: 4
hw.optional.breakpoint: 6
hw.optional.armv8_crc32: 1
hw.optional.armv8_gpi: 1
hw.optional.AdvSIMD: 1
hw.optional.AdvSIMD_HPFPCvt: 1
hw.optional.ucnormal_mem: 1
hw.optional.arm64: 1
hw.features.allows_security_research: 0
hw.physicalcpu: 10
hw.physicalcpu_max: 10
hw.logicalcpu: 10
hw.logicalcpu_max: 10
hw.cputype: 16777228
hw.cpusubtype: 2
hw.cpu64bit_capable: 1
hw.cpufamily: 458787763
hw.cpusubfamily: 5
hw.cacheconfig: 10 1 2 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
hw.cachesize: 3373957120 65536 4194304 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
hw.pagesize: 16384
hw.pagesize32: 16384
hw.cachelinesize: 128
hw.l1icachesize: 131072
hw.l1dcachesize: 65536
hw.l2cachesize: 4194304
hw.tbfrequency: 24000000
hw.packages: 1
hw.osenvironment:
hw.ephemeral_storage: 0
hw.use_recovery_securityd: 0
hw.use_kernelmanagerd: 1
hw.serialdebugmode: 0
hw.nperflevels: 2
hw.targettype: J316c
machdep.cpu.cores_per_package: 10
machdep.cpu.core_count: 10
machdep.cpu.logical_per_package: 10
machdep.cpu.thread_count: 10
machdep.cpu.brand_string: Apple M1 Max
```
2022-06-02 04:14:02 +00:00
Nicholas Nethercote
77e1069a5d Revert #96682.
The change was "Show invisible delimiters (within comments) when pretty
printing". It's useful to show these delimiters, but is a breaking
change for some proc macros.

Fixes #97608.
2022-06-02 11:22:16 +10:00
Reilly Wood
0835dfe579
Fix Windows file metadata docs
Retrieving file metadata on Windows now uses GetFileInformationByHandle not GetFileAttributesEx
2022-06-01 20:32:33 -04:00
Yuki Okushi
572c39000b
Stabilize box_into_pin 2022-06-02 07:24:14 +09:00
Yuki Okushi
3ed9bbe970
Rollup merge of #95594 - the8472:raw_slice_methods, r=yaahc
Additional `*mut [T]` methods

Split out from #94247

This adds the following methods to raw slices that already exist on regular slices

* `*mut [T]::is_empty`
* `*mut [T]::split_at_mut`
* `*mut [T]::split_at_mut_unchecked`

These methods reduce the amount of unsafe code needed to migrate `ChunksMut` and related iterators
to raw slices (#94247)

r? `@m-ou-se`
2022-06-02 06:44:25 +09:00
Michael Howell
267a6c8156 std: show signal number along with name 2022-06-01 11:20:11 -07:00
Yuki Okushi
2c3a8cf0a4
Rollup merge of #97611 - azdavis:master, r=Dylan-DPC
Tweak insert docs

For `{Hash, BTree}Map::insert`, I always have to take a few extra seconds to think about the slight weirdness about the fact that if we "did not" insert (which "sounds" false), we return true, and if we "did" insert, (which "sounds" true), we return false.

This tweaks the doc comments for the `insert` methods of those types (as well as what looks like a rustc internal data structure that I found just by searching the codebase for "If the set did") to first use the "Returns whether _something_" pattern used in e.g. `remove`, where we say that `remove` "returns whether the value was present".
2022-06-01 23:36:52 +09:00
Yuki Okushi
e1d2e65463
Rollup merge of #97498 - ijchen:master, r=Mark-Simulacrum
Corrected EBNF grammar for from_str

Hello! This is my first time contributing to an open-source project. I'm excited to have the chance to contribute to the rust community 🥳

I noticed an issue with the documentation for `from_str` in `f32` and `f64`. It states that "All strings that adhere to the following [EBNF](https://www.w3.org/TR/REC-xml/#sec-notation) grammar when lowercased will result in an `Ok` being returned. I believe this is incorrect for the string `"."`, which is valid for the given EBNF grammar, but does not result in an `Ok` being returned ([playground](https://play.rust-lang.org/?version=stable&mode=debug&edition=2021&gist=09f891aa87963a56d3b0d715d8cbc2b4)). I have simplified the grammar in a way which fixes that, but is otherwise identical.

Previously, the `Number` part of the EBNF grammar had an option for `'.' Digit*`, which would include the string `"."`. This is not valid, and does not return an Ok as stated. The corrected version removes this, and still allows for the `'.' Digit+` case with the already existing `Digit* '.' Digit+` case.
2022-06-01 23:36:49 +09:00
Yuki Okushi
9ddae15532
Rollup merge of #94647 - Urgau:hash-map-many-mut, r=Amanieu
Expose `get_many_mut` and `get_many_unchecked_mut` to HashMap

This pull-request expose the function [`get_many_mut`](https://docs.rs/hashbrown/0.12.0/hashbrown/struct.HashMap.html#method.get_many_mut) and [`get_many_unchecked_mut`](https://docs.rs/hashbrown/0.12.0/hashbrown/struct.HashMap.html#method.get_many_unchecked_mut) from `hashbrown` to the standard library `HashMap` type. They obviously keep the same API and are added under the (new) `map_many_mut` feature.

- `get_many_mut`: Attempts to get mutable references to `N` values in the map at once.
- `get_many_unchecked_mut`: Attempts to get mutable references to `N` values in the map at once, without validating that the values are unique.
2022-06-01 23:36:45 +09:00
Dylan DPC
f81269f508
Update sync.rs 2022-06-01 14:12:36 +02:00
Dylan DPC
31ece0c850
Update sync.rs 2022-06-01 13:47:39 +02:00
Ariel Davis
b02146a370 Tweak insert docs 2022-05-31 22:08:14 -07:00
bors
395a09c3da Auto merge of #97553 - nbdd0121:lib, r=Mark-Simulacrum
Add `#[inline]` to `Vec`'s `Deref/DerefMut`

This should help #97552 (although I haven't verified).
2022-06-01 04:52:11 +00:00
yifei
1446bce35e use 128 cache align for m1 mac 2022-06-01 12:07:30 +08:00
bors
02916c4c75 Auto merge of #97435 - Patryk27:bump-compiler-builtins, r=Dylan-DPC
library/std: Bump compiler_builtins

Some neat changes include faster float conversions & fixes for AVR 🙂

(note that's it's my first time upgrading `compiler_builtins`, so I'm not 100% sure if bumping `library/std/Cargo.toml` is enough; certainly seems to be so, though.)
2022-06-01 01:49:04 +00:00
est31
535e28b6c6 Use #[rustc_box] in alloc instead of box syntax 2022-06-01 02:28:34 +02:00
Nicholas Nethercote
dee353da1d Inline bridge::Buffer methods.
This fixes a performance regression caused by making `Buffer`
non-generic in #97004.
2022-06-01 09:21:35 +10:00
Ximon Eighteen
0b54b91496
Spelling correction. 2022-06-01 00:23:23 +02:00
Loïc BRANSTETT
0a6001b5a0 Expose get_many_mut and get_many_unchecked_mut to HashMap 2022-06-01 00:16:23 +02:00
Matthias Krüger
31fccd1a44
Rollup merge of #97596 - WaffleLapkin:fixup_feature_name, r=compiler-errors
Fixup feature name to be more consistent with others

`slice_from_mut_ptr_range_const` -> `const_slice_from_mut_ptr_range`, we usually have `const` in the front.

I've made a typo in  #97419
2022-05-31 23:11:37 +02:00
Matthias Krüger
0d1e5465f3
Rollup merge of #97578 - ojeda:checkpatch, r=JohnTitor
alloc: remove repeated word in comment

Linux's `checkpatch.pl` reports:

```txt
#42544: FILE: rust/alloc/vec/mod.rs:2692:
WARNING: Possible repeated word: 'to'
+            // - Elements are :Copy so it's OK to to copy them, without doing
```

Signed-off-by: Miguel Ojeda <ojeda@kernel.org>
2022-05-31 23:11:35 +02:00
Matthias Krüger
4f4a819fa9
Rollup merge of #97316 - CAD97:bound-misbehavior, r=dtolnay
Put a bound on collection misbehavior

As currently written, when a logic error occurs in a collection's trait parameters, this allows *completely arbitrary* misbehavior, so long as it does not cause undefined behavior in std. However, because the extent of misbehavior is not specified, it is allowed for *any* code in std to start misbehaving in arbitrary ways which are not formally UB; consider the theoretical example of a global which gets set on an observed logic error. Because the misbehavior is only bound by not resulting in UB from safe APIs and the crate-level encapsulation boundary of all of std, this makes writing user unsafe code that utilizes std theoretically impossible, as it now relies on undocumented QOI (quality of implementation) that unrelated parts of std cannot be caused to misbehave by a misuse of std::collections APIs.

In practice, this is a nonconcern, because std has reasonable QOI and an implementation that takes advantage of this freedom is essentially a malicious implementation and only compliant by the most langauage-lawyer reading of the documentation.

To close this hole, we just add a small clause to the existing logic error paragraph that ensures that any misbehavior is limited to the collection which observed the logic error, making it more plausible to prove the soundness of user unsafe code.

This is not meant to be formal; a formal refinement would likely need to mention that values derived from the collection can also misbehave after a logic error is observed, as well as define what it means to "observe" a logic error in the first place. This fix errs on the side of informality in order to close the hole without complicating a normal reading which can assume a reasonable nonmalicious QOI.

See also [discussion on IRLO][1].

[1]: https://internals.rust-lang.org/t/using-std-collections-and-unsafe-anything-can-happen/16640

r? rust-lang/libs-api ```@rustbot``` label +T-libs-api -T-libs

This technically adds a new guarantee to the documentation, though I argue as written it's one already implicitly provided.
2022-05-31 23:11:34 +02:00
Maybe Waffle
2aef6c5436 Fixup feature name to be more consistent with others
`slice_from_mut_ptr_range_const` -> `const_slice_from_mut_ptr_range`,
we usually have `const` in the front.
2022-05-31 23:12:28 +04:00
bors
0a43923a86 Auto merge of #97419 - WaffleLapkin:const_from_ptr_range, r=oli-obk
Make `from{,_mut}_ptr_range` const

This PR makes the following APIs `const`:
```rust
// core::slice

pub const unsafe fn from_ptr_range<'a, T>(range: Range<*const T>) -> &'a [T];
pub const unsafe fn from_mut_ptr_range<'a, T>(range: Range<*mut T>) -> &'a mut [T];
```

Tracking issue: #89792.
Feature for `from_ptr_range` as a `const fn`: `slice_from_ptr_range_const`.
Feature for `from_mut_ptr_range` as a `const fn`: `slice_from_mut_ptr_range_const`.

r? `@oli-obk`
2022-05-31 14:55:33 +00:00
bors
16a0d03698 Auto merge of #97521 - SkiFire13:clarify-vec-as-ptr, r=Dylan-DPC
Clarify the guarantees of Vec::as_ptr and Vec::as_mut_ptr when there's no allocation

Currently the documentation says they return a pointer to the vector's buffer, which has the implied precondition that the vector allocated some memory. However `Vec`'s documentation also specifies that it won't always allocate, so it's unclear whether the pointer returned is valid in that case. Of course you won't be able to read/write actual bytes to/from it since the capacity is 0, but there's an exception: zero sized read/writes. They are still valid as long as the pointer is not null and the memory it points to wasn't deallocated, but `Vec::as_ptr` and `Vec::as_mut_ptr` don't specify that's not the case. This PR thus specifies they are actually valid for zero sized reads since `Vec` is implemented to hold a dangling pointer in those cases, which is neither null nor was deallocated.
2022-05-31 12:14:51 +00:00
Miguel Ojeda
5dae6c1b96 alloc: remove repeated word in comment
Linux's `checkpatch.pl` reports:

```txt
#42544: FILE: rust/alloc/vec/mod.rs:2692:
WARNING: Possible repeated word: 'to'
+            // - Elements are :Copy so it's OK to to copy them, without doing
```

Signed-off-by: Miguel Ojeda <ojeda@kernel.org>
2022-05-31 12:33:31 +02:00
bors
dcbd5f5134 Auto merge of #97526 - Nilstrieb:unicode-is-printable-fastpath, r=joshtriplett
Add unicode fast path to `is_printable`

Before, it would enter the full expensive check even for normal ascii characters. Now, it skips the check for the ascii characters in `32..127`. This range was checked manually from the current behavior.

I ran the `tracing` test suite in miri, and it was really slow. I looked at a profile, and miri spent most of the time in `core::char::methods::escape_debug_ext`, where half of that was dominated by `core::unicode::printable::is_printable`. So I optimized it here.

The tracing profile:
![The tracing profile](https://user-images.githubusercontent.com/48135649/170883650-23876e7b-3fd1-4e8b-9001-47672e06d914.svg)
2022-05-31 09:34:00 +00:00
Nilstrieb
3358a41acb Add unicode fast path to is_printable
Before, it would enter the full expensive check even for normal ascii
characters. Now, it skips the check for the ascii characters in
`32..127`. This range was checked manually from the current behavior.
2022-05-31 10:51:35 +02:00
bors
d35d972e69 Auto merge of #97574 - Dylan-DPC:rollup-jq850l6, r=Dylan-DPC
Rollup of 6 pull requests

Successful merges:

 - #97089 (Improve settings theme display)
 - #97229 (Document the current aliasing rules for `Box<T>`.)
 - #97371 (Suggest adding a semicolon to a closure without block)
 - #97455 (Stabilize `toowned_clone_into`)
 - #97565 (Add doc alias `memset` to `write_bytes`)
 - #97569 (Remove `memset` alias from `fill_with`.)

Failed merges:

r? `@ghost`
`@rustbot` modify labels: rollup
2022-05-31 06:53:02 +00:00
Dylan DPC
efd2519e10
Rollup merge of #97569 - thomcc:fill_with_isnt_memset, r=Amanieu
Remove `memset` alias from `fill_with`.

In https://rust-lang.zulipchat.com/#narrow/stream/219381-t-libs/topic/Unsafe.20and.20Safe.20versions.20of.20APIs.20both.20getting.20the.20same.20alias/near/284413029 `@Amanieu` pointed out that we had this, which is not really right.

In our guidelines we say that we will "not add an alias for a function that's only somewhat similar or related", which applies here. Memset doesn't take a closure, not even conceptually.
2022-05-31 07:57:37 +02:00
Dylan DPC
5885e6d453
Rollup merge of #97565 - lukas-code:patch-1, r=thomcc
Add doc alias `memset` to `write_bytes`

I were looking for `memset` in rust, but the docs only pointed me to `slice::fill`.

With only the old aliases, one might write code like this, which is incorrect if the memory is uninitialized.
``` Rust
core::slice::from_raw_parts(ptr, len).fill(0)
```
2022-05-31 07:57:36 +02:00
Dylan DPC
bf248c82e8
Rollup merge of #97455 - JohnTitor:stabilize-toowned-clone-into, r=dtolnay
Stabilize `toowned_clone_into`

Closes #41263
FCP has been done: https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/41263#issuecomment-1100760750
2022-05-31 07:57:35 +02:00
Dylan DPC
9c72f16b9f
Rollup merge of #97229 - Nilstrieb:doc-box-noalias, r=dtolnay
Document the current aliasing rules for `Box<T>`.

Currently, `Box<T>` gets `noalias`, meaning it has the same rules as `&mut T`. This is sparsely documented, even though it can have quite a big impact on unsafe code using box. Therefore, these rules are documented here, with a big warning that they are not normative and subject to change, since we have not yet committed to an aliasing model and the state of `Box<T>` is especially uncertain.

If you have any suggestions and improvements, make sure to leave them here. This is mostly intended to inform people about what is currently going on (to prevent misunderstandings such as [Jon Gjengset's Box aliasing](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=EY7Wi9fV5bk)).

This is supposed to _only document current UB_ and not add any new guarantees or rules.
2022-05-31 07:57:33 +02:00
bors
989b806f61 Auto merge of #96881 - est31:join_osstr, r=dtolnay
Implement [OsStr]::join

Implements join for `OsStr` and `OsString` slices:

```Rust
    let strings = [OsStr::new("hello"), OsStr::new("dear"), OsStr::new("world")];
    assert_eq!("hello dear world", strings.join(OsStr::new(" ")));
````

This saves one from converting to strings and back, or from implementing it manually.

This PR has been re-filed after #96744 was first accidentally merged and then reverted.

The change is instantly stable and thus:

r? rust-lang/libs-api `@rustbot` label +T-libs-api -T-libs

cc `@thomcc` `@m-ou-se` `@faptc`
2022-05-31 04:28:29 +00:00
David Tolnay
e6b1003c95
BTreeSet->BTreeMap (fix copy/paste mistake in documentation)
Co-authored-by: lcnr <rust@lcnr.de>
2022-05-30 17:56:35 -07:00
David Tolnay
ffd7f5873e
Fix typo uniqeness -> uniqueness 2022-05-30 16:49:28 -07:00
Thom Chiovoloni
de3ac3c3f8
Remove memset alias from fill_with. 2022-05-30 16:26:00 -07:00
Michael Goulet
3c0b9d50ae
Rollup merge of #89685 - DeveloperC286:iter_fields_to_private, r=oli-obk
refactor: VecDeques Iter fields to private

Made the fields of VecDeque's Iter private by creating a Iter::new(...) function to create a new instance of Iter and migrating usage to use Iter::new(...).
2022-05-30 15:57:27 -07:00
Lukas
e565bb0326 Update mut_ptr.rs 2022-05-31 00:41:39 +02:00
Lukas
7a9c13985e
Update intrinsics.rs 2022-05-30 22:38:29 +00:00
bors
4a8d2e3856 Auto merge of #97480 - conradludgate:faster-format-literals, r=joshtriplett
improve format impl for literals

The basic idea of this change can be seen here https://godbolt.org/z/MT37cWoe1.

Updates the format impl to have a fast path for string literals and the default path for regular format args.

This change will allow `format!("string literal")` to be used interchangably with `"string literal".to_owned()`.

This would be relevant in the case of `f!"string literal"` being legal (https://github.com/rust-lang/rfcs/pull/3267) in which case it would be the easiest way to create owned strings from literals, while also being just as efficient as any other impl
2022-05-30 17:39:58 +00:00
Gary Guo
0a7a0ff4d9 Add #[inline] to Vec's Deref/DerefMut 2022-05-30 15:11:53 +01:00
Dylan DPC
a352ad500d
Rollup merge of #97545 - thomcc:sip-comment-safety, r=Dylan-DPC
Reword safety comments in core/hash/sip.rs

In https://rust-lang.zulipchat.com/#narrow/stream/136281-t-lang.2Fwg-unsafe-code-guidelines/topic/Is.20there.20any.20way.20to.20soundly.20do.20a.20masked.20out-of-bounds.20read.3F/near/284329248 it came up that this is using an atypical (and somewhat vague) phrasing of the safety requirement, so this slightly rewords it.
2022-05-30 14:33:53 +02:00
Dylan DPC
8fd9e24b9a
Rollup merge of #97499 - est31:master, r=Dylan-DPC
Remove "sys isn't exported yet" phrase

The oldest occurence is from 9e224c2bf1,
which is from the pre-1.0 days. In the years since then, std::sys still
hasn't been exported, and the last attempt was met with strong criticism:
https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/97151

Thus, removing the "yet" part makes a lot of sense.
2022-05-30 14:33:49 +02:00
Dylan DPC
0ed320bdb9
Rollup merge of #97494 - est31:remove_box_alloc_tests, r=Dylan-DPC
Use Box::new() instead of box syntax in library tests

The tests inside `library/*` have no reason to use `box` syntax as they have 0 performance relevance. Therefore, we can safely remove them (instead of having to use alternatives like the one in #97293).
2022-05-30 14:33:48 +02:00
Maybe Waffle
10ee6f8e06 Rename slice_from_ptr_range_const -> const_slice_from_ptr_range
This is in line with other `const fn` features.
2022-05-30 15:44:56 +04:00
Maybe Waffle
ff9efd8a55 Add reexport of slice::from{,_mut}_ptr_range to alloc & std
At first I was confused why `std::slice::from_ptr_range` didn't work :D
2022-05-30 15:44:56 +04:00
Maybe Waffle
19caa8c89b Make from{,_mut}_ptr_range const
- `from_ptr_range` uses `#![feature(slice_from_ptr_range_const)]`
- `from_mut_ptr_range` uses `#![feature(slice_from_mut_ptr_range_const)]`
2022-05-30 15:44:55 +04:00
est31
6d63d3b888 Remove "sys isn't exported yet" phrase
The oldest occurence is from 9e224c2bf1,
which is from the pre-1.0 days. In the years since then, std::sys still
hasn't been exported, and the last attempt was met with strong criticism:
https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/97151

Thus, removing the "yet" part makes a lot of sense.
2022-05-30 12:07:43 +02:00
bors
5c780b98d1 Auto merge of #96964 - oli-obk:const_trait_mvp, r=compiler-errors
Replace `#[default_method_body_is_const]` with `#[const_trait]`

pulled out of #96077

related issues:  #67792 and #92158

cc `@fee1-dead`

This is groundwork to only allowing `impl const Trait` for traits that are marked with `#[const_trait]`. This is necessary to prevent adding a new default method from becoming a breaking change (as it could be a non-const fn).
2022-05-30 09:19:03 +00:00
Deadbeef
257f06587c Remove #[default..] and add #[const_trait] 2022-05-30 08:52:24 +00:00
Thom Chiovoloni
eeacb4403c
Reword safety comments in core/hash/sip.rs 2022-05-30 01:06:08 -07:00
bors
28b891916d Auto merge of #97514 - WaffleLapkin:panick, r=Dylan-DPC
Fix typo (panick -> panic)

Fix typo (panick -> panic) in `std::error` module docs.
2022-05-29 19:42:39 +00:00
Conrad Ludgate
5dd0fe301a remove useless cold 2022-05-29 20:40:56 +01:00
Conrad Ludgate
3f404bfa86 improve format impl for literals 2022-05-29 20:40:56 +01:00
bors
bef2b7cd1c Auto merge of #97214 - Mark-Simulacrum:stage0-bump, r=pietroalbini
Finish bumping stage0

It looks like the last time had left some remaining cfg's -- which made me think
that the stage0 bump was actually successful. This brings us to a released 1.62
beta though.

This now brings us to cfg-clean, with the exception of check-cfg-features in bootstrap;
I'd prefer to leave that for a separate PR at this time since it's likely to be more tricky.

cc https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/97147#issuecomment-1132845061

r? `@pietroalbini`
2022-05-29 16:28:21 +00:00
Giacomo Stevanato
8ef2dd70e6 Clarify the guarantees of Vec::as_ptr and Vec::as_mut_ptr when there's no allocation 2022-05-29 17:43:35 +02:00
Ralf Jung
f020fc08a5 clarify how Rust atomics correspond to C++ atomics 2022-05-29 13:29:36 +02:00
Maybe Waffle
f344d569b4 Fix typo (panick -> panic) 2022-05-29 13:14:59 +04:00
Maybe Waffle
ac5c15d6be Remove (fn(...) -> ...) -> usize -> *const () -> usize cast 2022-05-29 13:11:51 +04:00
est31
cdb8e64bc7 Use Box::new() instead of box syntax in core tests 2022-05-29 01:44:11 +02:00
est31
d75c60f9a3 Use Box::new() instead of box syntax in std tests 2022-05-29 01:44:11 +02:00
Guillaume Gomez
774d7ced10
Rollup merge of #97482 - RalfJung:ptr-invalid, r=thomcc
ptr::invalid is not equivalent to a int2ptr cast

I just realized I forgot to update these docs when adding `from_exposed_addr`.
Right now the docs say `invalid` and `from_exposed_addr` are both equivalent to a cast, and that is clearly not what we want.

Cc ``@Gankra``
2022-05-29 01:12:33 +02:00
est31
7230a15c32 Use Box::new() instead of box syntax in alloc tests 2022-05-29 00:41:14 +02:00
Isaac Chen
0484cfb6a9
Corrected EBNF grammar for from_str
Previously, the `Number` part of the EBNF grammar had an option for `'.' Digit*`, which would include the string "." (a single decimal point). This is not valid, and does not return an Ok as stated. The corrected version removes this, and still allows for the `'.' Digit+` case with the already existing `Digit* '.' Digit+` case.
2022-05-28 18:24:34 -04:00
bors
1fede1753c Auto merge of #97207 - RalfJung:backtrace, r=Mark-Simulacrum
update libbacktrace

It seems like previously we were on a tag of the backtrace repo; not sure if there is a policy that it should always be a tag?

Cc https://github.com/rust-lang/backtrace-rs/pull/462 `@alexcrichton` `@DrMeepster`
2022-05-28 19:30:58 +00:00
bors
116201eefe Auto merge of #97461 - eddyb:proc-macro-less-payload, r=bjorn3
proc_macro: don't pass a client-side function pointer through the server.

Before this PR, `proc_macro::bridge::Client<F>` contained both:
* the C ABI entry-point `run`, that the server can call to start the client
* some "payload" `f: F` passed to that entry-point
  * in practice, this was always a (client-side Rust ABI) `fn` pointer to the actual function the proc macro author wrote, i.e. `#[proc_macro] fn foo(input: TokenStream) -> TokenStream`

In other words, the client was passing one of its (Rust) `fn` pointers to the server, which was passing it back to the client, for the client to call (see later below for why that was ever needed).

I was inspired by `@nnethercote's` attempt to remove the `get_handle_counters` field from `Client` (see https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/97004#issuecomment-1139273301), which combined with removing the `f` ("payload") field, could theoretically allow for a `#[repr(transparent)]` `Client` that mostly just newtypes the C ABI entry-point `fn` pointer <sub>(and in the context of e.g. wasm isolation, that's *all* you want, since you can reason about it from outside the wasm VM, as just a 32-bit "function table index", that you can pass to the wasm VM to call that function)</sub>.

<hr/>

So this PR removes that "payload". But it's not a simple refactor: the reason the field existed in the first place is because monomorphizing over a function type doesn't let you call the function without having a value of that type, because function types don't implement anything like `Default`, i.e.:
```rust
extern "C" fn ffi_wrapper<A, R, F: Fn(A) -> R>(arg: A) -> R {
    let f: F = ???; // no way to get a value of `F`
    f(arg)
}
```
That could be solved with something like this, if it was allowed:
```rust
extern "C" fn ffi_wrapper<
    A, R,
    F: Fn(A) -> R,
    const f: F // not allowed because the type is a generic param
>(arg: A) -> R {
    f(arg)
}
```

Instead, this PR contains a workaround in `proc_macro::bridge::selfless_reify` (see its module-level comment for more details) that can provide something similar to the `ffi_wrapper` example above, but limited to `F` being `Copy` and ZST (and requiring an `F` value to prove the caller actually can create values of `F` and it's not uninhabited or some other unsound situation).

<hr/>

Hopefully this time we don't have a performance regression, and this has a chance to land.

cc `@mystor` `@bjorn3`
2022-05-28 16:49:52 +00:00
Ralf Jung
852777eff1 note to future self 2022-05-28 18:15:04 +02:00
Ralf Jung
ad33519455 ptr::invalid is not equivalent to a int2ptr cast 2022-05-28 12:39:36 +02:00
Dylan DPC
529fcb579b
Rollup merge of #97448 - Xiretza:os-str-unix-doc, r=joshtriplett
docs: Don't imply that OsStr on Unix is always UTF-8

The methods in `OsStrExt` consume and return `&[u8]` and don't perform any UTF-8 checks.
2022-05-28 08:45:53 +02:00
Dylan DPC
880d3ea3c2
Rollup merge of #97034 - fee1-dead-contrib:layout-hash, r=dtolnay
Implement `Hash` for `core::alloc::Layout`

This was brought up on [reddit](https://www.reddit.com/r/rust/comments/uoypui/the_standard_library_types_are_good_except_when/), and I don't see why Layout shouldn't implement `Hash`. Feel free to comment if I am wrong though :)
2022-05-28 08:45:51 +02:00
Dylan DPC
837cd9e26c
Rollup merge of #94640 - Pointerbender:issue-71146-partial-stabilization, r=yaahc
Partially stabilize `(const_)slice_ptr_len` feature by stabilizing `NonNull::len`

This PR partially stabilizes features `const_slice_ptr_len` and `slice_ptr_len` by only stabilizing `NonNull::len`. This partial stabilization is tracked under features `slice_ptr_len_nonnull` and `const_slice_ptr_len_nonnull`, for which this PR can serve as the tracking issue.

To summarize the discussion from #71146 leading up to this partial stabilization request:

It's currently a bit footgunny to obtain the length of a raw slice pointer, stabilization of `NonNull:len` will help with removing these footguns. Some example footguns are:

```rust
/// # Safety
/// The caller must ensure that `ptr`:
/// 1. does not point to memory that was previously allocated but is now deallocated;
/// 2. is within the bounds of a single allocated object;
/// 3. does not to point to a slice for which the length exceeds `isize::MAX` bytes;
/// 4. points to a properly aligned address;
/// 5. does not point to uninitialized memory;
/// 6. does not point to a mutably borrowed memory location.
pub unsafe fn ptr_len<T>(ptr: core::ptr::NonNull<[T]>) -> usize {
   (&*ptr.as_ptr()).len()
}
```

A slightly less complicated version (but still more complicated than it needs to be):

```rust
/// # Safety
/// The caller must ensure that the start of `ptr`:
/// 1. does not point to memory that was previously allocated but is now deallocated;
/// 2. must be within the bounds of a single allocated object.
pub unsafe fn ptr_len<T>(ptr: NonNull<[T]>) -> usize {
   (&*(ptr.as_ptr() as *const [()])).len()
}
```

This PR does not stabilize `<*const [T]>::len` and  `<*mut [T]>::len` because the tracking issue #71146 list a potential blocker for these methods, but this blocker [does not apply](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/71146#issuecomment-808735714) to `NonNull::len`.

We should probably also ping the [Constant Evaluation WG](https://github.com/rust-lang/const-eval) since this PR includes a `#[rustc_allow_const_fn_unstable(const_slice_ptr_len)]`. My instinct here is that this will probably be okay because the pointer is not actually dereferenced and `len()` does not touch the address component of the pointer, but would be best to double check :)

One potential down-side was raised that stabilizing `NonNull::len` could lead to encouragement of coding patterns like:

```
pub fn ptr_len<T>(ptr: *mut [T]) -> usize {
   NonNull::new(ptr).unwrap().len()
}
```

which unnecessarily assert non-nullness. However, these are much less of a footgun than the above examples and this should be resolved when `slice_ptr_len` fully stabilizes eventually.
2022-05-28 08:45:50 +02:00
Thom Chiovoloni
25164b4e51
Use pointer::is_aligned in ThinBox debug assert 2022-05-27 22:19:43 -07:00
Thom Chiovoloni
fc109bb6c6
Avoid zero-sized allocs in ThinBox if T and H are both ZSTs. 2022-05-27 22:12:20 -07:00
Matthias Krüger
4254f922db
Rollup merge of #95214 - tbu-:pr_vec_append_doc, r=Mark-Simulacrum
Remove impossible panic note from `Vec::append`

Neither the number of elements in a vector can overflow a `usize`, nor
can the amount of elements in two vectors.
2022-05-28 01:11:46 +02:00
Eduard-Mihai Burtescu
78a83b0d5f proc_macro: don't pass a client-side function pointer through the server. 2022-05-27 19:29:21 +00:00
Yuki Okushi
846f134cd3
Stabilize toowned_clone_into 2022-05-28 01:07:45 +09:00
Wesley Wiser
820ffc8d7a Call the OS function to set the main thread's name on program init
Normally, `Thread::spawn` takes care of setting the thread's name, if
one was provided, but since the main thread wasn't created by calling
`Thread::spawn`, we need to call that function in `std::rt::init`.

This is mainly useful for system tools like debuggers and profilers
which might show the thread name to a user. Prior to these changes, gdb
and WinDbg would show all thread names except the main thread's name to
a user. I've validated that this patch resolves the issue for both
debuggers.
2022-05-27 10:39:54 -04:00
Mark Rousskov
b454991ac4 Finish bumping stage0
It looks like the last time had left some remaining cfg's -- which made me think
that the stage0 bump was actually successful. This brings us to a released 1.62
beta though.
2022-05-27 07:36:17 -04:00
Xiretza
202026441b docs: Don't imply that OsStr on Unix is always UTF-8
The methods in `OsStrExt` consume and return `&[u8]` and don't perform
any UTF-8 checks.
2022-05-27 12:14:26 +02:00
bors
f558990814 Auto merge of #97004 - nnethercote:proc-macro-tweaks, r=eddyb
Proc macro tweaks

Various improvements I spotted while looking through the proc macro code.

r? `@eddyb`
2022-05-27 06:09:45 +00:00
Nicholas Nethercote
41c10dde95 Cut down associated_item.
The part of it dealing with types obfuscates and makes the code less
concise. This commit removes that part.
2022-05-27 16:02:24 +10:00
Nicholas Nethercote
e6fa19a3ce Remove unnecessary blank line. 2022-05-27 16:02:24 +10:00
Nicholas Nethercote
f5c9c1215c Rename b as buf in several places.
Because it's easy to confuse with `bridge`.
2022-05-27 15:58:35 +10:00
Nicholas Nethercote
c2c505737f Add some comments about _marker fields.
There is some non-obvious information required to understand them.
2022-05-27 15:58:35 +10:00
Nicholas Nethercote
9a785e0aa5 Clarify a comment.
`reverse_encode` isn't necessary to please the borrow checker, it's to
match the ordering done by `reverse_decode`.
2022-05-27 15:58:35 +10:00
Nicholas Nethercote
2ece157e17 Make Buffer<T> non-generic.
`u8` is the only type that makes sense for `T`, as demonstrated by the
fact that several impls and functions are hardwired to `Buffer<u8>`.
2022-05-27 15:58:35 +10:00
Nicholas Nethercote
e02789c9f8 Improve formatting in associated_item! definition. 2022-05-27 15:58:35 +10:00
Nicholas Nethercote
a61a85eb24 Add some comments. 2022-05-27 15:58:35 +10:00
Nicholas Nethercote
2469ed0142 Fix a typo in a comment. 2022-05-27 15:58:35 +10:00
bors
9a42c6509d Auto merge of #97444 - compiler-errors:rollup-2gvdav6, r=compiler-errors
Rollup of 3 pull requests

Successful merges:

 - #96051 (Use rounding in float to Duration conversion methods)
 - #97066 (rustdoc: Remove `ItemFragment(Kind)`)
 - #97436 (Update `triagebot.toml` for macos ping group)

Failed merges:

r? `@ghost`
`@rustbot` modify labels: rollup
2022-05-27 03:27:04 +00:00
Michael Goulet
e3813e46a2
Rollup merge of #96051 - newpavlov:duration_rounding, r=nagisa,joshtriplett
Use rounding in float to Duration conversion methods

Closes #96045
2022-05-26 20:15:07 -07:00
Артём Павлов [Artyom Pavlov]
6495963d5a fmt 2022-05-27 05:15:22 +03:00
Артём Павлов [Artyom Pavlov]
38609cd8a9 fix nanos overflow for f64 2022-05-27 04:59:01 +03:00
Artyom Pavlov
06af3a63a5
add debug asserts 2022-05-27 00:22:56 +00:00
Vadim Petrochenkov
5bf23f64cc libcore: Add iter::from_generator which is like iter::from_fn, but for coroutines instead of functions 2022-05-27 01:51:31 +03:00
Nilstrieb
e7c468dc59 Document the current aliasing rules for Box<T>.
Currently, `Box<T>` gets `noalias`, meaning it has
the same rules as `&mut T`. This is
sparsely documented, even though it can have quite
a big impact on unsafe code using box. Therefore,
these rules are documented here, with a big warning
that they are not normative and subject to change,
since we have not yet committed to an aliasing model
and the state of `Box<T>` is especially uncertain.
2022-05-26 21:28:07 +02:00
Patryk Wychowaniec
7005f24d17
library/std: Bump compiler_builtins 2022-05-26 21:11:16 +02:00
Matthias Krüger
82beeabf54
Rollup merge of #96033 - yaahc:expect-elaboration, r=scottmcm
Add section on common message styles for Result::expect

Based on a question from https://github.com/rust-lang/project-error-handling/issues/50#issuecomment-1092339937

~~One thing I haven't decided on yet, should I duplicate this section on `Option::expect`, link to this section, or move it somewhere else and link to that location from both docs?~~: I ended up moving the section to `std::error` and referencing it from both `Result::expect` and `Option::expect`'s docs.

I think this section, when combined with the similar update I made on [`std::panic!`](https://doc.rust-lang.org/nightly/std/macro.panic.html#when-to-use-panic-vs-result) implies that we should possibly more aggressively encourage and support the "expect as precondition" style described in this section. The consensus among the libs team seems to be that panic should be used for bugs, not expected potential failure modes. The "expect as error message" style seems to align better with the panic for unrecoverable errors style where they're seen as normal errors where the only difference is a desire to kill the current execution unit (aka erlang style error handling). I'm wondering if we should be providing a panic hook similar to `human-panic` or more strongly recommending the "expect as precondition" style of expect message.
2022-05-26 20:59:40 +02:00
bors
1851f0802e Auto merge of #97046 - conradludgate:faster-ascii-case-conv-path, r=thomcc
improve case conversion happy path

Someone shared the source code for [Go's string case conversion](19156a5474/src/strings/strings.go (L558-L616)).

It features a hot path for ascii-only strings (although I assume for reasons specific to go, they've opted for a read safe hot loop).

I've borrowed these ideas and also kept our existing code to provide a fast path + seamless utf-8 correct path fallback.

(Naive) Benchmarks can be found here https://github.com/conradludgate/case-conv

For the cases where non-ascii is found near the start, the performance of this algorithm does fall back to original speeds and has not had any measurable speed loss
2022-05-26 15:29:01 +00:00
Conrad Ludgate
d0f9930709 improve case conversion happy path 2022-05-26 13:18:57 +01:00
Maybe Waffle
89295352ee Allow some internal instability 2022-05-26 13:00:14 +04:00
bors
9e26dc71fd Auto merge of #96742 - m-ou-se:bsd-no-ancillary, r=joshtriplett
Disable unix::net::ancillary on BSD.

See https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/76915#issuecomment-1118954474
2022-05-26 08:50:33 +00:00
Mara Bos
8b9f8e25ba Disable unix::net::ancillary on BSD. 2022-05-25 20:09:59 -07:00
Jane Lusby
ef879c680e fix broken doctest 2022-05-25 12:20:48 -07:00
Jane Lusby
720e987ac0 update option and result references to expect message docs 2022-05-25 11:37:39 -07:00
Jane Lusby
b6b621ec85 fix links 2022-05-25 10:46:56 -07:00
bors
9fed13030c Auto merge of #94954 - SimonSapin:null-thin3, r=yaahc
Extend ptr::null and null_mut to all thin (including extern) types

Fixes https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/93959

This change was accepted in https://rust-lang.github.io/rfcs/2580-ptr-meta.html

Note that this changes the signature of **stable** functions. The change should be backward-compatible, but it is **insta-stable** since it cannot (easily, at all?) be made available only through a `#![feature(…)]` opt-in.

The RFC also proposed the same change for `NonNull::dangling`, which makes sense it terms of its signature but not in terms of its implementation. `dangling` uses `align_of()` as an address. But what `align_of()` should be for extern types or whether it should be allowed at all remains an open question.

This commit depends on https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/93977, which is not yet part of the bootstrap compiler. So `#[cfg]` is used to only apply the change in stage 1+. As far a I know bounds cannot be made conditional with `#[cfg]`, so the entire functions are duplicated. This is unfortunate but temporary.

Since this duplication makes it less obvious in the diff, the new definitions differ in:

* More permissive bounds (`Thin` instead of implied `Sized`)
* Different implementation
* Having `rustc_allow_const_fn_unstable(const_fn_trait_bound)`
* Having `rustc_allow_const_fn_unstable(ptr_metadata)`
2022-05-25 13:58:51 +00:00
Dylan DPC
ca269b1e79
Rollup merge of #97233 - c410-f3r:assert-lib, r=scottmcm
[RFC 2011] Library code

CC https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/96496

Based on https://github.com/dtolnay/case-studies/tree/master/autoref-specialization.

Basically creates two traits with the same method name. One trait is generic over any `T` and the other is specialized to any `T: Printable`.

The compiler will then call the corresponding trait method through auto reference.

```rust
fn main() {
    let mut a = Capture::new();
    let mut b = Capture::new();

    (&Wrapper(&1i32)).try_capture(&mut a); // `try_capture` from `TryCapturePrintable`
    (&Wrapper(&vec![1i32])).try_capture(&mut b); // `try_capture` from `TryCaptureGeneric`

    assert_eq!(format!("{:?}", a), "1");
    assert_eq!(format!("{:?}", b), "N/A");
}
```

r? `@scottmcm`
2022-05-25 10:48:29 +02:00
Dylan DPC
70bdfc1d79
Rollup merge of #97379 - ear7h:master, r=thomcc
Add aliases for `current_dir`

Aliases were added for the equivalent C/C++ APIs for POSIX and Windows. Also, I added one for `pwd` which users may be more familiar with, from the command line.
2022-05-25 07:31:45 +02:00
Dylan DPC
fbb17777fe
Rollup merge of #97026 - Nilstrieb:make-atomic-debug-relaxed, r=scottmcm
Change orderings of `Debug` for the Atomic types to `Relaxed`.

This reduces synchronization between threads when debugging the atomic types.  Reducing the synchronization means that executions with and without the debug calls will be more consistent, making it easier to debug.

We discussed this on the Rust Community Discord with `@ibraheemdev` before.
2022-05-25 07:31:42 +02:00
julio
84c80e7348 add aliases for current_dir 2022-05-24 19:41:40 -07:00
Артём Павлов [Artyom Pavlov]
26f859463e tweak doctests 2022-05-25 05:14:30 +03:00
Артём Павлов [Artyom Pavlov]
c2d8445cde implement tie to even 2022-05-25 05:01:11 +03:00
Jane Losare-Lusby
9a9dafcca4 explained unwrap vs expect 2022-05-24 22:52:30 +00:00
Yuki Okushi
c3fea09208
Rollup merge of #97364 - notriddle:continue-keyword, r=JohnTitor
Fix weird indentation in continue_keyword docs

This format was causing every line in the code examples to have a space at the start.
2022-05-25 07:08:45 +09:00
Yuki Okushi
7ed7f65bac
Rollup merge of #97363 - wackbyte:sliceindex-doc-typo, r=JohnTitor
Fix a small mistake in `SliceIndex`'s documentation

Originally, it said "`get_(mut_)unchecked`," but the method's actual name is `get_unchecked_mut`.
2022-05-25 07:08:44 +09:00
Yuki Okushi
33f45b167e
Rollup merge of #93966 - rkuhn:patch-1, r=tmandry
document expectations for Waker::wake

fixes #93961

Opened PR for a discussion on the precise wording.
2022-05-25 07:08:41 +09:00
Maybe Waffle
138aa99503 Stabilize checked slice->str conversion functions 2022-05-24 22:58:28 +04:00
Maybe Waffle
7a09b8a7b5 Stabilize {slice,array}::from_ref 2022-05-24 22:33:31 +04:00
Michael Howell
1d19462a45 Fix weird indentation in continue_keyword docs
This format was causing every line in the code examples to have a space
at the start.
2022-05-24 11:10:56 -07:00
wackbyte
ce947735c0
Fix a mistake in SliceIndex's documentation 2022-05-24 13:22:41 -04:00
Dylan DPC
4bd40186db
Rollup merge of #97321 - RalfJung:int-to-fnptr, r=Dylan-DPC
explain how to turn integers into fn ptrs

(with an intermediate raw ptr, not a direct transmute)
Direct int2ptr transmute, under the semantics I am imagining, will produce a ptr with "invalid" provenance that is invalid to deref or call. We cannot give it the same semantics as int2ptr casts since those do [something complicated](https://www.ralfj.de/blog/2022/04/11/provenance-exposed.html).

To my great surprise, that is already what the example in the `transmute` docs does. :)  I still added a comment to say that that part is important, and I added a section explicitly talking about this to the `fn()` type docs.

With https://github.com/rust-lang/miri/pull/2151, Miri will start complaining about direct int-to-fnptr transmutes (in the sense that it is UB to call the resulting pointer).
2022-05-24 15:58:26 +02:00
Dylan DPC
af15e45e28
Rollup merge of #97308 - JohnTitor:stabilize-cell-filter-map, r=Mark-Simulacrum
Stabilize `cell_filter_map`

FCP has been completed: https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/81061#issuecomment-1081806326
Closes #81061
2022-05-24 15:58:25 +02:00
Tobias Bucher
328c84327b Fix stabilization version of Ipv6Addr::to_ipv4_mapped 2022-05-24 01:05:06 +02:00
Ralf Jung
5137d15f91 sync primitive_docs 2022-05-23 19:09:23 +02:00
Ralf Jung
cec6dfcd67 explain how to turn integers into fn ptrs
(with an intermediate raw ptr, not a direct transmute)
2022-05-23 18:47:08 +02:00
bors
7f997f589f Auto merge of #97315 - Dylan-DPC:rollup-2wee2oz, r=Dylan-DPC
Rollup of 4 pull requests

Successful merges:

 - #96129 (Document rounding for floating-point primitive operations and string parsing)
 - #97286 (Add new eslint rule to prevent whitespace before function call paren)
 - #97292 (Lifetime variance fixes for rustc)
 - #97309 (Add some regression tests for #90400)

Failed merges:

r? `@ghost`
`@rustbot` modify labels: rollup
2022-05-23 15:45:44 +00:00
Christopher Durham
67aca498c6 Put a bound on collection misbehavior
As currently written, when a logic error occurs in a collection's trait
parameters, this allows *completely arbitrary* misbehavior, so long as
it does not cause undefined behavior in std. However, because the extent
of misbehavior is not specified, it is allowed for *any* code in std to
start misbehaving in arbitrary ways which are not formally UB; consider
the theoretical example of a global which gets set on an observed logic
error. Because the misbehavior is only bound by not resulting in UB from
safe APIs and the crate-level encapsulation boundary of all of std, this
makes writing user unsafe code that utilizes std theoretically
impossible, as it now relies on undocumented QOI that unrelated parts of
std cannot be caused to misbehave by a misuse of std::collections APIs.

In practice, this is a nonconcern, because std has reasonable QOI and an
implementation that takes advantage of this freedom is essentially a
malicious implementation and only compliant by the most langauage-lawyer
reading of the documentation.

To close this hole, we just add a small clause to the existing logic
error paragraph that ensures that any misbehavior is limited to the
collection which observed the logic error, making it more plausible to
prove the soundness of user unsafe code.

This is not meant to be formal; a formal refinement would likely need to
mention that values derived from the collection can also misbehave after a
logic error is observed, as well as define what it means to "observe" a
logic error in the first place. This fix errs on the side of informality
in order to close the hole without complicating a normal reading which
can assume a reasonable nonmalicious QOI.

See also [discussion on IRLO][1].

[1]: https://internals.rust-lang.org/t/using-std-collections-and-unsafe-anything-can-happen/16640
2022-05-23 09:20:57 -05:00
Dylan DPC
98a8035bed
Rollup merge of #96129 - mattheww:2022-04_float_rounding, r=Dylan-DPC
Document rounding for floating-point primitive operations and string parsing

The docs for floating point don't have much to say at present about either the precision of their results or rounding behaviour.

As I understand it[^1][^2], Rust doesn't support operating with non-default rounding directions, so we need only describe roundTiesToEven.

[^1]: https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/41753#issuecomment-299322887
[^2]: https://github.com/llvm/llvm-project/issues/8472#issuecomment-980888781

This PR makes a start by documenting that for primitive operations and `from_str()`.
2022-05-23 15:11:02 +02:00
bors
ef9b49881b Auto merge of #92461 - rust-lang:const_tls_local_panic_count, r=Mark-Simulacrum
Use const initializer for LOCAL_PANIC_COUNT

This reduces the size of the __getit function for LOCAL_PANIC_COUNT and should speed up accesses of LOCAL_PANIC_COUNT a bit.
2022-05-23 13:04:59 +00:00
Yuki Okushi
65242592c9
Stabilize cell_filter_map 2022-05-23 18:04:53 +09:00
bors
9e2f655863 Auto merge of #97304 - Dylan-DPC:rollup-qxrfddc, r=Dylan-DPC
Rollup of 5 pull requests

Successful merges:

 - #97087 (Clarify slice and Vec iteration order)
 - #97254 (Remove feature: `crate` visibility modifier)
 - #97271 (Add regression test for #91949)
 - #97294 (std::time : fix variable name in the doc)
 - #97303 (Fix some typos in arg checking algorithm)

Failed merges:

r? `@ghost`
`@rustbot` modify labels: rollup
2022-05-23 07:57:15 +00:00
Dylan DPC
06e89fdcfd
Rollup merge of #97294 - jersou:patch-1, r=Dylan-DPC
std::time : fix variable name in the doc
2022-05-23 07:43:51 +02:00
Dylan DPC
e5cf3cb97d
Rollup merge of #97087 - Nilstrieb:clarify-slice-iteration-order, r=dtolnay
Clarify slice and Vec iteration order

While already being inferable from the doc examples, it wasn't fully specified. This is the only logical way to do a slice iterator, so I think this should be uncontroversial. It also improves the `Vec::into_iter` example to better show the order and that the iterator returns owned values.
2022-05-23 07:43:49 +02:00
bors
03c8b0b6ed Auto merge of #96100 - Raekye:master, r=dtolnay
Change `NonNull::as_uninit_*` to take self by value (as opposed to reference), matching primitive pointers.

Copied from my comment on [#75402](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/75402#issuecomment-1100496823):

> I noticed that `as_uninit_*` on pointers take `self` by value (and pointers are `Copy`), e.g. see [`as_uninit_mut`](https://doc.rust-lang.org/core/primitive.pointer.html#method.as_uninit_mut).
>
> However, on `NonNull`, these functions take `self` by reference, e.g. see the function with the same name by for `NonNull`: [`as_uninit_mut`](https://doc.rust-lang.org/std/ptr/struct.NonNull.html#method.as_uninit_mut) takes `self` by mutable reference. Even more inconsistent, [`as_uninit_slice_mut`](https://doc.rust-lang.org/std/ptr/struct.NonNull.html#method.as_uninit_slice_mut) returns a mutable reference, but takes `self` by immutable reference.
>
> I think these methods should take `self` by value for consistency. The returned lifetime is unbounded anyways and not tied to the pointer/NonNull value anyways

I realized the change is trivial (if desired) so here I am creating my first PR. I think it's not a breaking change since (it's on nightly and) `NonNull` is `Copy`; all previous usages of these methods taking `self` by reference should continue to compile. However, it might cause warnings to appear on usages of `NonNull::as_uninit_mut`, which used to require the the `NonNull` variable be declared `mut`, but now it's not necessary.
2022-05-23 05:32:04 +00:00
bors
c186f7c079 Auto merge of #96455 - dtolnay:writetmp, r=m-ou-se
Make write/print macros eagerly drop temporaries

This PR fixes the 2 regressions in #96434 (`println` and `eprintln`) and changes all the other similar macros (`write`, `writeln`, `print`, `eprint`) to match the old pre-#94868 behavior of `println` and `eprintln`.

argument position | before #94868 | after #94868 | after this PR
--- |:---:|:---:|:---:
`write!($tmp, "…", …)` | 😡 | 😡 | 😺
`write!(…, "…", $tmp)` | 😡 | 😡 | 😺
`writeln!($tmp, "…", …)` | 😡 | 😡 | 😺
`writeln!(…, "…", $tmp)` | 😡 | 😡 | 😺
`print!("…", $tmp)` | 😡 | 😡 | 😺
`println!("…", $tmp)` | 😺 | 😡 | 😺
`eprint!("…", $tmp)` | 😡 | 😡 | 😺
`eprintln!("…", $tmp)` | 😺 | 😡 | 😺
`panic!("…", $tmp)` | 😺 | 😺 | 😺

Example of code that is affected by this change:

```rust
use std::sync::Mutex;

fn main() {
    let mutex = Mutex::new(0);
    print!("{}", mutex.lock().unwrap()) /* no semicolon */
}
```

You can see several real-world examples like this in the Crater links at the top of #96434. This code failed to compile prior to this PR as follows, but works after this PR.

```console
error[E0597]: `mutex` does not live long enough
 --> src/main.rs:5:18
  |
5 |     print!("{}", mutex.lock().unwrap()) /* no semicolon */
  |                  ^^^^^^^^^^^^---------
  |                  |
  |                  borrowed value does not live long enough
  |                  a temporary with access to the borrow is created here ...
6 | }
  | -
  | |
  | `mutex` dropped here while still borrowed
  | ... and the borrow might be used here, when that temporary is dropped and runs the `Drop` code for type `MutexGuard`
```
2022-05-23 02:50:50 +00:00
bors
d12557407c Auto merge of #96906 - tbu-:pr_stabilize_to_ipv4_mapped, r=dtolnay
Stabilize `Ipv6Addr::to_ipv4_mapped`

CC https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/27709 (tracking issue for the `ip` feature which contains more
functions)

The function `Ipv6Addr::to_ipv4` is bad because it also returns an IPv4
address for the IPv6 loopback address `::1`. Stabilize
`Ipv6Addr::to_ipv4_mapped` so we can recommend that function instead.
2022-05-23 00:10:07 +00:00
David Tolnay
0502496b1e
Make write/print macros eagerly drop temporaries 2022-05-22 16:11:08 -07:00
jersou
526a665e96
std::time : fix doc variable name 2022-05-23 00:02:09 +02:00
Proloy Mishra
2e2836ad14
small change 2022-05-22 17:52:04 +05:30
Caio
664e8a9ce5 [RFC 2011] Library code 2022-05-22 07:18:32 -03:00
Ralf Jung
4505579713 adjust transmute const stabilization version 2022-05-22 08:10:53 +02:00
bors
bb5e6c984d Auto merge of #97265 - JohnTitor:rollup-kgthnjt, r=JohnTitor
Rollup of 6 pull requests

Successful merges:

 - #97144 (Fix rusty grammar in `std::error::Reporter` docs)
 - #97225 (Fix `Display` for `cell::{Ref,RefMut}`)
 - #97228 (Omit stdarch workspace from rust-src)
 - #97236 (Recover when resolution did not resolve lifetimes.)
 - #97245 (Fix typo in futex RwLock::write_contended.)
 - #97259 (Fix typo in Mir phase docs)

Failed merges:

r? `@ghost`
`@rustbot` modify labels: rollup
2022-05-22 04:27:10 +00:00
Yuki Okushi
76725e081d
Rollup merge of #97245 - m-ou-se:rwlock-state-typo, r=JohnTitor
Fix typo in futex RwLock::write_contended.

I wrote `state` where I should've used `s`.

This was spotted by `@Warrenren.`

This change removes the unnecessary `s` variable to prevent that mistake.

Fortunately, this typo didn't affect the correctness of the lock, as the
second half of the condition (!has_writers_waiting) is enough for
correctness, which explains why this mistake didn't show up during
testing.

Fixes https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/97162
2022-05-22 11:53:08 +09:00
Yuki Okushi
d22ebf0d13
Rollup merge of #97225 - cuviper:ref-display, r=scottmcm
Fix `Display` for `cell::{Ref,RefMut}`

These guards changed to pointers in #97027, but their `Display` was
formatting that field directly, which made it show the raw pointer
value. Now we go through `Deref` to display the real value again.

Miri noticed this change, #97204, so hopefully that will be fixed.
2022-05-22 11:53:05 +09:00
Yuki Okushi
e1340f2d3c
Rollup merge of #97144 - samziz:patch-1, r=Dylan-DPC
Fix rusty grammar in `std::error::Reporter` docs

### Commit

I initially saw "print's" instead of "prints" at the start of the doc comment for `std::error::Reporter`, while reading the docs for that type. Then I figured 'probably more where that came from', so, as well as correcting the foregoing to "prints", I've patched up these three minor solecisms (well, two [types](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Type%E2%80%93token_distinction), three [tokens](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Type%E2%80%93token_distinction)):

- One use of the indicative which should be subjunctive - indeed the sentence immediately following it, which mirrors its structure, _does_ use the subjunctive ([L871](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/blob/master/library/std/src/error.rs?plain=1#L871)). Replaced with the subjunctive.
- Two separate clauses joined with commas ([L975](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/blob/master/library/std/src/error.rs?plain=1#L975), [L1023](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/blob/master/library/std/src/error.rs?plain=1#L1023)). Replaced the first with a semicolon and the second with a period. Admittedly those judgements are pretty much 100% subjective, based on my sense of how the sentences flowed into each other (though ofc the _replacement of the comma itself_ is not subjective or opinion-based).

I know this is silly and finicky, but I hope it helps tidy up the docs a bit for future readers!

### PR notes

**This is very much non-urgent (and, honestly, non-important).** I just figured it might be a nice quality-of-life improvement and bit of tidying up for the core contributors themselves not to have to do. 🙂

I'm tagging Steve, per the [contributing guidelines](https://rustc-dev-guide.rust-lang.org/contributing.html#r) ("Steve usually reviews documentation changes. So if you were to make a documentation change, add `r? `@steveklabnik`"):`

r? `@steveklabnik`
2022-05-22 11:53:04 +09:00
bors
09ea21343a Auto merge of #94119 - c410-f3r:array-again-and-again, r=scottmcm
Stabilize `array_from_fn`

## Overall

Stabilizes `core::array::from_fn` ~~and `core::array::try_from_fn`~~ to allow the creation of custom infallible ~~and fallible~~ arrays.

Signature proposed for stabilization here, tweaked as requested in the meeting:

```rust
// in core::array

pub fn from_fn<T, const N: usize, F>(_: F) -> [T; N];
```

Examples in https://doc.rust-lang.org/nightly/std/array/fn.from_fn.html

## History

* On 2020-08-17, implementation was [proposed](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/75644).
* On 2021-09-29, tracking issue was [created](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/89379).
* On 2021-10-09, the proposed implementation was [merged](bc8ad24020).
* On 2021-12-03, the return type of `try_from_fn` was [changed](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/91286#issuecomment-985513407).

## Considerations

* It is being assumed that indices are useful and shouldn't be removed from the callbacks
* The fact that `try_from_fn` returns an unstable type `R: Try` does not prevent stabilization. Although I'm honestly not sure about it.
* The addition or not of repeat-like variants is orthogonal to this PR.

These considerations are not ways of saying what is better or what is worse. In reality, they are an attempt to move things forward, anything really.

cc https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/89379
2022-05-22 01:56:50 +00:00
Josh Triplett
45582079bc Expand the explanation of OsString capacity 2022-05-21 13:42:47 -07:00
bors
9257f5aad0 Auto merge of #94530 - tmiasko:alignment-impls, r=dtolnay
Implement Copy, Clone, PartialEq and Eq for core::fmt::Alignment

Alignment is a fieldless exhaustive enum, so it is already possible to
clone and compare it by matching, but it is inconvenient to do so. For
example, if one would like to create a struct describing a formatter
configuration and provide a clone implementation:

```rust
pub struct Format {
    fill: char,
    width: Option<usize>,
    align: fmt::Alignment,
}

impl Clone for Format {
    fn clone(&self) -> Self {
        Format {
            align: match self.align {
                fmt::Alignment::Left => fmt::Alignment::Left,
                fmt::Alignment::Right => fmt::Alignment::Right,
                fmt::Alignment::Center => fmt::Alignment::Center,
            },
            .. *self
        }
    }
}
```

Derive Copy, Clone, PartialEq, and Eq for Alignment for convenience.
2022-05-21 19:49:51 +00:00
Guillaume Gomez
6fef5f1e24
Rollup merge of #97219 - RalfJung:ptr-invalid, r=thomcc
make ptr::invalid not the same as a regular int2ptr cast

In Miri, we would like to distinguish `ptr::invalid` from `ptr::from_exposed_provenance`, so that we can provide better diagnostics issues like https://github.com/rust-lang/miri/issues/2134, and so that we can detect the UB in programs like
```rust
fn main() {
    let x = 0u8;
    let original_ptr = &x as *const u8;
    let addr = original_ptr.expose_addr();
    let new_ptr: *const u8 = core::ptr::invalid(addr);
    unsafe {
        dbg!(*new_ptr);
    }
}
```

To achieve that, the two functions need to have different implementations. Currently, both are just `as` casts. We *could* add an intrinsic for this, but it turns out `transmute` already has the right behavior, at least as far as Miri is concerned. So I propose we just use that.

Cc `@Gankra`
2022-05-21 11:39:50 +02:00
Guillaume Gomez
1210b50dbb
Rollup merge of #97190 - SylvainDe:master, r=Dylan-DPC
Add implicit call to from_str via parse in documentation

The documentation mentions "FromStr’s from_str method is often used implicitly,
through str’s parse method. See parse’s documentation for examples.".

It may be nicer to show that in the code example as well.
2022-05-21 11:39:48 +02:00
Mara Bos
3b70c29103 Fix typo in futex RwLock::write_contended.
I wrote `state` where I should've used `s`.

This removes the unnecessary `s` variable to prevent that mistake.

Fortunately, this typo didn't affect the correctness of the lock, as the
second half of the condition (!has_writers_waiting) is enough for
correctness, which explains why this mistake didn't show up during
testing.
2022-05-21 11:15:28 +02:00
bors
4a86c7907b Auto merge of #96605 - Urgau:string-retain-codegen, r=thomcc
Improve codegen of String::retain method

This pull-request improve the codegen of the `String::retain` method.

Using `unwrap_unchecked` helps the optimizer to not generate a panicking path that will never be taken for valid UTF-8 like string.

Using `encode_utf8` saves us from an expensive call to `memcpy`, as the optimizer is unable to realize that `ch_len <= 4` and so can generate much better assembly code.

https://rust.godbolt.org/z/z73ohenfc
2022-05-21 01:56:51 +00:00
Jason A. Donenfeld
18a9d58266 Use GRND_INSECURE instead of /dev/urandom when possible
From reading the source code, it appears like the desired semantic of
std::unix::rand is to always provide some bytes and never block. For
that reason GRND_NONBLOCK is checked before calling getrandom(0), so
that getrandom(0) won't block. If it would block, then the function
falls back to using /dev/urandom, which for the time being doesn't
block. There are some drawbacks to using /dev/urandom, however, and so
getrandom(GRND_INSECURE) was created as a replacement for this exact
circumstance.

getrandom(GRND_INSECURE) is the same as /dev/urandom, except:

- It won't leave a warning in dmesg if used at early boot time, which is
  a common occurance (and the reason why I found this issue);

- It won't introduce a tiny delay at early boot on newer kernels when
  /dev/urandom tries to opportunistically create jitter entropy;

- It only requires 1 syscall, rather than 3.

Other than that, it returns the same "quality" of randomness as
/dev/urandom, and never blocks.

It's only available on kernels ≥5.6, so we try to use it, cache the
result of that attempt, and fall back to to the previous code if it
didn't work.
2022-05-21 00:02:20 +02:00
Jason A. Donenfeld
204da52c34 Update libc dependency of std to 0.2.126
This is required for the next commit, which uses libc::GRND_INSECURE.
2022-05-21 00:02:20 +02:00
Josh Stone
83abb7c18f Fix Display for cell::{Ref,RefMut}
These guards changed to pointers in #97027, but their `Display` was
formatting that field directly, which made it show the raw pointer
value. Now we go through `Deref` to display the real value again.
2022-05-20 11:16:30 -07:00
Matthias Krüger
ac634bc811
Rollup merge of #97215 - AngelicosPhosphoros:add_hashtable_iteration_complexity_note, r=thomcc
Add complexity estimation of iterating over HashSet and HashMap

It is not obvious (at least for me) that complexity of iteration over hash tables depends on capacity and not length. Especially comparing with other containers like Vec or String. I think, this behaviour is worth mentioning.

I run benchmark which tests iteration time for maps with length 50 and different capacities and get this results:
```
capacity - time
64       - 203.87 ns
256      - 351.78 ns
1024     - 607.87 ns
4096     - 965.82 ns
16384    - 3.1188 us
```

If you want to dig why it behaves such way, you can look current implementation in [hashbrown code](f3a9f211d0/src/raw/mod.rs (L1933)).

Benchmarks code would be presented in PR related to this commit.
2022-05-20 19:54:44 +02:00
Matthias Krüger
daf4f34fe3
Rollup merge of #97187 - ajtribick:patch-1, r=thomcc
Reverse condition in Vec::retain_mut doctest

I find that the doctest for `Vec::retain_mut` is easier to read and understand when the `if` block corresponds to the path that returns `true` and the `else` block returns `false`. Having the `if` block be the `false` path led me to stare at the example for somewhat longer than I probably had to.
2022-05-20 19:54:40 +02:00
AngelicosPhosphoros
de97d7393f Add complexity estimation of iterating over HashSet and HashMap
It is not obvious (at least for me) that complexity of iteration over hash tables depends on capacity and not length. Especially comparing with other containers like Vec or String. I think, this behaviour is worth mentioning.

I run benchmark which tests iteration time for maps with length 50 and different capacities and get this results:
```
capacity - time
64       - 203.87 ns
256      - 351.78 ns
1024     - 607.87 ns
4096     - 965.82 ns
16384    - 3.1188 us
```

If you want to dig why it behaves such way, you can look current implementation in [hashbrown code](f3a9f211d0/src/raw/mod.rs (L1933)).

Benchmarks code would be presented in PR related to this commit.
2022-05-20 18:46:24 +03:00
Ralf Jung
31c3c04498 make ptr::invalid not the same as a regular int2ptr cast 2022-05-20 17:16:41 +02:00
Caio
d917112606 Stabilize core::array::from_fn 2022-05-20 11:04:13 -03:00
Guillaume Gomez
9b25cc0543
Rollup merge of #97192 - sunfishcode:sunfishcode/rightmost, r=thomcc
Say "last" instead of "rightmost" in the documentation for `std::str:rfind`

In the documentation comment for `std::str::rfind`, say "last" instead
of "rightmost" to describe the match that `rfind` finds. This follows the
spirit of #30459, for which `trim_left` and `trim_right` were replaced by
`trim_start` and `trim_end` to be more clear about how they work on
text which is displayed right-to-left.
2022-05-20 14:03:06 +02:00
bors
cd73afadae Auto merge of #96422 - tmccombs:mutex-unpoison, r=m-ou-se
Add functions to un-poison Mutex and RwLock

See discussion at https://internals.rust-lang.org/t/unpoisoning-a-mutex/16521/3
2022-05-20 08:06:56 +00:00
Ralf Jung
b8e04d6b0f update libbacktrace 2022-05-20 09:30:26 +02:00
Thayne McCombs
a65afd82d1 Remove references to guards in documentation for clear_poison 2022-05-20 00:15:26 -06:00