Add `tidy-alphabetical` to features in `alloc` & `std`
So that people have to keep them sorted in future, rather than just sticking them on the end where they conflict more often.
Follow-up to #110269
cc `@jyn514`
binary_heap: Optimize Extend implementation.
This PR makes the `Extend` implementation for `BinaryHeap` no longer rely on specialization, so that it always use the bulk rebuild optimization that was previously only available for the `Vec` specialization.
Improve documentation for str::replace() and str::replacen()
Currently, to know what the function will return when the pattern doesn't match, the docs require the reader to understand the implementation detail and mentally evaluate or run the example code. It is not immediately clear.
This PR makes it more explicit so the reader can quickly find the information.
Rollup of 7 pull requests
Successful merges:
- #106985 (Enhanced doucmentation of binary search methods for `slice` and `VecDeque` for unsorted instances)
- #109509 (compiletest: Don't allow tests with overlapping prefix names)
- #109719 (RELEASES: Add "Only support Android NDK 25 or newer" to 1.68.0)
- #109748 (Don't ICE on `DiscriminantKind` projection in new solver)
- #109749 (Canonicalize float var as float in new solver)
- #109761 (Drop binutils on powerpc-unknown-freebsd)
- #109766 (Fix title for openharmony.md)
Failed merges:
r? `@ghost`
`@rustbot` modify labels: rollup
Enhanced doucmentation of binary search methods for `slice` and `VecDeque` for unsorted instances
Fixes#106746. Issue #106746 raises the concern that the binary search methods for slices and deques aren't explicit enough about the fact that they are only applicable to sorted slices/deques. I changed the explanation for these methods. I took the relatively harsh description of the behaviour of binary search on unsorted collections ("unspecified and meaningless") from the description of the [`partition_point`](https://doc.rust-lang.org/std/primitive.slice.html#method.partition_point) method:
> If this slice is not partitioned, the returned result is unspecified and meaningless, as this method performs a kind of binary search.
Partial stabilization of `once_cell`
This PR aims to stabilize a portion of the `once_cell` feature:
- `core::cell::OnceCell`
- `std::cell::OnceCell` (re-export of the above)
- `std::sync::OnceLock`
This will leave `LazyCell` and `LazyLock` unstabilized, which have been moved to the `lazy_cell` feature flag.
Tracking issue: https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/74465 (does not fully close, but it may make sense to move to a new issue)
Future steps for separate PRs:
- ~~Add `#[inline]` to many methods~~ #105651
- Update cranelift usage of the `once_cell` crate
- Update rust-analyzer usage of the `once_cell` crate
- Update error messages discussing once_cell
## To be stabilized API summary
```rust
// core::cell (in core/cell/once.rs)
pub struct OnceCell<T> { .. }
impl<T> OnceCell<T> {
pub const fn new() -> OnceCell<T>;
pub fn get(&self) -> Option<&T>;
pub fn get_mut(&mut self) -> Option<&mut T>;
pub fn set(&self, value: T) -> Result<(), T>;
pub fn get_or_init<F>(&self, f: F) -> &T where F: FnOnce() -> T;
pub fn into_inner(self) -> Option<T>;
pub fn take(&mut self) -> Option<T>;
}
impl<T: Clone> Clone for OnceCell<T>;
impl<T: Debug> Debug for OnceCell<T>
impl<T> Default for OnceCell<T>;
impl<T> From<T> for OnceCell<T>;
impl<T: PartialEq> PartialEq for OnceCell<T>;
impl<T: Eq> Eq for OnceCell<T>;
```
```rust
// std::sync (in std/sync/once_lock.rs)
impl<T> OnceLock<T> {
pub const fn new() -> OnceLock<T>;
pub fn get(&self) -> Option<&T>;
pub fn get_mut(&mut self) -> Option<&mut T>;
pub fn set(&self, value: T) -> Result<(), T>;
pub fn get_or_init<F>(&self, f: F) -> &T where F: FnOnce() -> T;
pub fn into_inner(self) -> Option<T>;
pub fn take(&mut self) -> Option<T>;
}
impl<T: Clone> Clone for OnceLock<T>;
impl<T: Debug> Debug for OnceLock<T>;
impl<T> Default for OnceLock<T>;
impl<#[may_dangle] T> Drop for OnceLock<T>;
impl<T> From<T> for OnceLock<T>;
impl<T: PartialEq> PartialEq for OnceLock<T>
impl<T: Eq> Eq for OnceLock<T>;
impl<T: RefUnwindSafe + UnwindSafe> RefUnwindSafe for OnceLock<T>;
unsafe impl<T: Send> Send for OnceLock<T>;
unsafe impl<T: Sync + Send> Sync for OnceLock<T>;
impl<T: UnwindSafe> UnwindSafe for OnceLock<T>;
```
No longer planned as part of this PR, and moved to the `rust_cell_try` feature gate:
```rust
impl<T> OnceCell<T> {
pub fn get_or_try_init<F, E>(&self, f: F) -> Result<&T, E> where F: FnOnce() -> Result<T, E>;
}
impl<T> OnceLock<T> {
pub fn get_or_try_init<F, E>(&self, f: F) -> Result<&T, E> where F: FnOnce() -> Result<T, E>;
}
```
I am new to this process so would appreciate mentorship wherever needed.
Remove ~const from alloc
There is currently an effort underway to stop using `~const Trait`, temporarily, so as to refactor the logic underlying const traits with relative ease. This means it has to go from the standard library, as well.
I have taken the initial step of just removing these impls from alloc, as removing them from core is a much more tangled task. In addition, all of these implementations are one more-or-less logically-connected group, so reverting their deconstification as a group seems like it will also be sensible.
r? `@fee1-dead`
Change advance(_back)_by to return the remainder instead of the number of processed elements
When advance_by can't advance the iterator by the number of requested elements it now returns the amount by which it couldn't be advanced instead of the amount by which it did.
This simplifies adapters like chain, flatten or cycle because the remainder doesn't have to be calculated as the difference between requested steps and completed steps anymore.
Additionally switching from `Result<(), usize>` to `Result<(), NonZeroUsize>` reduces the size of the result and makes converting from/to a usize representing the number of remaining steps cheap.
A successful advance is now signalled by returning `0` and other values now represent the remaining number
of steps that couldn't be advanced as opposed to the amount of steps that have been advanced during a partial advance_by.
This simplifies adapters a bit, replacing some `match`/`if` with arithmetic. Whether this is beneficial overall depends
on whether `advance_by` is mostly used as a building-block for other iterator methods and adapters or whether
we also see uses by users where `Result` might be more useful.
Stabilize `nonnull_slice_from_raw_parts`
FCP is done: https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/71941#issuecomment-1100910416
Note that this doesn't const-stabilize `NonNull::slice_from_raw_parts` as `slice_from_raw_parts_mut` isn't const-stabilized yet. Given #67456 and #57349, it's not likely available soon, meanwhile, stabilizing only the feature makes some sense, I think.
Closes#71941
Currently, to know what the function will return when the pattern
doesn't match, the docs require the reader to understand the
implementation detail and mentally evaluate or run the example
code. It is not immediately clear.
This PR makes it more explicit so the reader can quickly find the
information.
Implement Default for some alloc/core iterators
Add `Default` impls to the following collection iterators:
* slice::{Iter, IterMut}
* binary_heap::IntoIter
* btree::map::{Iter, IterMut, Keys, Values, Range, IntoIter, IntoKeys, IntoValues}
* btree::set::{Iter, IntoIter, Range}
* linked_list::IntoIter
* vec::IntoIter
and these adapters:
* adapters::{Chain, Cloned, Copied, Rev, Enumerate, Flatten, Fuse, Rev}
For iterators which are generic over allocators it only implements it for the global allocator because we can't conjure an allocator from nothing or would have to turn the allocator field into an `Option` just for this change.
These changes will be insta-stable.
ACP: https://github.com/rust-lang/libs-team/issues/77
Remove the assume(!is_null) from Vec::as_ptr
At a guess, this code is leftover from LLVM was worse at keeping track of the niche information here. In any case, we don't need this anymore: Removing this `assume` doesn't get rid of the `nonnull` attribute on the return type.
Introduce `Rc::into_inner`, as a parallel to `Arc::into_inner`
Unlike `Arc`, `Rc` doesn't have the same race condition to avoid, but
maintaining an equivalent API still makes it easier to work with both
`Rc` and `Arc`.
Unlike `Arc`, `Rc` doesn't have the same race condition to avoid, but
maintaining an equivalent API still makes it easier to work with both
`Rc` and `Arc`.
Rollup of 9 pull requests
Successful merges:
- #104363 (Make `unused_allocation` lint against `Box::new` too)
- #106633 (Stabilize `nonzero_min_max`)
- #106844 (allow negative numeric literals in `concat!`)
- #108071 (Implement goal caching with the new solver)
- #108542 (Force parentheses around `match` expression in binary expression)
- #108690 (Place size limits on query keys and values)
- #108708 (Prevent overflow through Arc::downgrade)
- #108739 (Prevent the `start_bx` basic block in codegen from having two `Builder`s at the same time)
- #108806 (Querify register_tools and post-expansion early lints)
Failed merges:
r? `@ghost`
`@rustbot` modify labels: rollup
Make `unused_allocation` lint against `Box::new` too
Previously it only linted against `box` syntax, which likely won't ever be stabilized, which is pretty useless. Even now I'm not sure if it's a meaningful lint, but it's at least something 🤷
This means that code like the following will be linted against:
```rust
Box::new([1, 2, 3]).len();
f(&Box::new(1)); // where f : &i32 -> ()
```
The lint works by checking if a `Box::new` (or `box`) expression has an a borrow adjustment, meaning that the code that first stores the box in a variable won't be linted against:
```rust
let boxed = Box::new([1, 2, 3]); // no lint
boxed.len();
```
Fix `vec_deque::Drain` FIXME
In my original `VecDeque` rewrite, I didn't use `VecDeque::slice_ranges` in `Drain::as_slices`, even though that's basically the exact use case for `slice_ranges`. The reason for this was that a `VecDeque` wrapped in a `Drain` actually has its length set to `drain_start`, so that there's no potential use after free if you `mem::forget` the `Drain`. I modified `slice_ranges` to accept an explicit `len` parameter instead, which it now uses to bounds check the given range. This way, `Drain::as_slices` can use `slice_ranges` internally instead of having to basically just copy paste the `slice_ranges` code. Since `slice_ranges` is just an internal helper function, this shouldn't change the user facing behavior in any way.
Remove or document uses of #[rustc_box] in library
r? `@thomcc`
Only one of these uses is tested for in the rustc-perf benchmark suite. The impact there on compile time is somewhat dramatic, but I am inclined to make this change as a simplification to the library and wait for people to complain if it explodes their compilation time. I think in the absence of data or reports from users about what code paths really matter, if we are optimizing for compilation time, it's hard to argue against using `#[rustc_box]` everywhere we currently call `Box::new`.