SmartPointer derive-macro
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Possibly replacing #123472 for continued upkeep of the proposal rust-lang/rfcs#3621 and implementation of the tracking issue #123430.
cc `@Darksonn` `@wedsonaf`
Remove `MaybeUninit::uninit_array()` and replace it with inline const blocks.
\[This PR originally contained the changes in #125995 too. See edit history for the original PR description.]
The documentation of `MaybeUninit::uninit_array()` says:
> Note: in a future Rust version this method may become unnecessary when Rust allows [inline const expressions](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/76001). The example below could then use `let mut buf = [const { MaybeUninit::<u8>::uninit() }; 32];`.
The PR adding it also said: <https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/65580#issuecomment-544200681>
> if it’s stabilized soon enough maybe it’s not worth having a standard library method that will be replaceable with `let buffer = [MaybeUninit::<T>::uninit(); $N];`
That time has come to pass — inline const expressions are stable — so `MaybeUninit::uninit_array()` is now unnecessary. The only remaining question is whether it is an important enough *convenience* to keep it around.
I believe it is net good to remove this function, on the principle that it is better to compose two orthogonal features (`MaybeUninit` and array construction) than to have a specific function for the specific combination, now that that is possible.
This is possible now that inline const blocks are stable; the idea was
even mentioned as an alternative when `uninit_array()` was added:
<https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/65580#issuecomment-544200681>
> if it’s stabilized soon enough maybe it’s not worth having a
> standard library method that will be replaceable with
> `let buffer = [MaybeUninit::<T>::uninit(); $N];`
Const array repetition and inline const blocks are now stable (in the
next release), so that circumstance has come to pass, and we no longer
have reason to want `uninit_array()` other than convenience. Therefore,
let’s evaluate the inconvenience by not using `uninit_array()` in
the standard library, before potentially deleting it entirely.
std: refactor the TLS implementation
As discovered by Mara in #110897, our TLS implementation is a total mess. In the past months, I have simplified the actual macros and their expansions, but the majority of the complexity comes from the platform-specific support code needed to create keys and register destructors. In keeping with #117276, I have therefore moved all of the `thread_local_key`/`thread_local_dtor` modules to the `thread_local` module in `sys` and merged them into a new structure, so that future porters of `std` can simply mix-and-match the existing code instead of having to copy the same (bad) implementation everywhere. The new structure should become obvious when looking at `sys/thread_local/mod.rs`.
Unfortunately, the documentation changes associated with the refactoring have made this PR rather large. That said, this contains no functional changes except for two small ones:
* the key-based destructor fallback now, by virtue of sharing the implementation used by macOS and others, stores its list in a `#[thread_local]` static instead of in the key, eliminating one indirection layer and drastically simplifying its code.
* I've switched over ZKVM (tier 3) to use the same implementation as WebAssembly, as the implementation was just a way worse version of that
Please let me know if I can make this easier to review! I know these large PRs aren't optimal, but I couldn't think of any good intermediate steps.
`@rustbot` label +A-thread-locals
Update docs for AtomicBool/U8/I8 with regard to alignment
Fixes#126084.
Since `AtomicBool`/`AtomicU8`/`AtomicI8` are guaranteed to have size == 1, and Rust guarantees that `size % align == 0`, they also must have alignment equal to 1, so some current docs are contradictory/confusing when describing their alignment requirements.
Specifically:
* Fix `AtomicBool::from_ptr` claiming that `align_of::<AtomicBool>() > align_of::<bool>()` on some platforms. (same for `AtomicU8::from_ptr`/`AtomicI8::from_ptr`)
* Explicitly state that `AtomicU8`/`AtomicI8` have the same alignment as `u8`/`i8` (in addition to size and bit validity)
* (internal) Change the `if_not_8_bit` macro to be `if_8_bit` and to allow an "if-else"-like structure, instead of just "if"-like.
---
I opted to leave the "`ptr` must be aligned" wording in `from_ptr`'s docs and just clarify that it is always satsified, instead of just removing the wording entirely. If that is instead preferred I can do that.
std::unix::fs: copy simplification for apple.
since we do support from macOs Sierra, we avoid the little runtime overhead with the fclonefileat symbol check.
Rollup of 3 pull requests
Successful merges:
- #126140 (Rename `std::fs::try_exists` to `std::fs::exists` and stabilize fs_try_exists)
- #126318 (Add a `x perf` command for integrating bootstrap with `rustc-perf`)
- #126552 (Remove use of const traits (and `feature(effects)`) from stdlib)
r? `@ghost`
`@rustbot` modify labels: rollup
Remove use of const traits (and `feature(effects)`) from stdlib
The current uses are already unsound because they are using non-const impls in const contexts. We can reintroduce them by reverting the commit in this PR, after #120639 lands.
Also, make `effects` an incomplete feature.
cc `@rust-lang/project-const-traits`
r? `@compiler-errors`
Generalize `{Rc,Arc}::make_mut()` to unsized types.
* `{Rc,Arc}::make_mut()` now accept any type implementing the new unstable trait `core::clone::CloneToUninit`.
* `CloneToUninit` is implemented for `T: Clone` and for `[T] where T: Clone`.
* `CloneToUninit` is a generalization of the existing internal trait `alloc::alloc::WriteCloneIntoRaw`.
* New feature gate: `clone_to_uninit`
This allows performing `make_mut()` on `Rc<[T]>` and `Arc<[T]>`, which was not previously possible.
---
Previous PR description, now obsolete:
> Add `{Rc, Arc}::make_mut_slice()`
>
> These functions behave identically to `make_mut()`, but operate on `Arc<[T]>` instead of `Arc<T>`.
>
> This allows performing the operation on slices, which was not previously possible because `make_mut()` requires `T: Clone` (and slices, being `!Sized`, do not and currently cannot implement `Clone`).
>
> Feature gate: `make_mut_slice`
try-job: test-various
This requires introducing a new internal type `RcUninit` (and
`ArcUninit`), which can own an `RcBox<T>` without requiring it to be
initialized, sized, or a slice. This is similar to `UniqueRc`, but
`UniqueRc` doesn't support the allocator parameter, and there is no
`UniqueArc`.
This trait allows cloning DSTs, but is unsafe to implement and use
because it writes to possibly-uninitialized memory which must be of the
correct size, and must initialize that memory.
It is only implemented for `T: Clone` and `[T] where T: Clone`, but
additional implementations could be provided for specific `dyn Trait`
or custom-DST types.
Stop using `unlikely` in `strict_*` methods
The `strict_*` methods don't need (un)likely, because the `overflow_panic` calls are all `#[cold]`, [meaning](https://llvm.org/docs/LangRef.html#function-attributes) that LLVM knows any branch to them is unlikely without us needing to say so.
r? libs
Add PidFd::{kill, wait, try_wait}
#117957 changed `Child` kill/wait/try_wait to use its pidfd instead of the pid, when one is available.
This PR extracts those implementations and makes them available on `PidFd` directly.
The `PidFd` implementations differ significantly from the corresponding `Child` methods:
* the methods can be called after the child has been reaped, which will result in an error but will be safe. This state is not observable in `Child` unless something stole the zombie child
* the `ExitStatus` is not kept, meaning that only the first time a wait succeeds it will be returned
* `wait` does not close stdin
* `wait` only requires `&self` instead of `&mut self` since there is no state to maintain and subsequent calls are safe
Tracking issue: #82971
As long as a pidfd is on a child it can be safely reaped. Taking it
would mean the child would now have to be awaited through its pid, but could also
be awaited through the pidfd. This could then suffer from a recycling race.
Rollup of 8 pull requests
Successful merges:
- #126125 (Improve conflict marker recovery)
- #126481 (Add `powerpc-unknown-openbsd` maintenance status)
- #126613 (Print the tested value in int_log tests)
- #126617 (Expand `avx512_target_feature` to include VEX variants)
- #126700 (Make edition dependent `:expr` macro fragment act like the edition-dependent `:pat` fragment does)
- #126707 (Pass target to inaccessible-temp-dir rmake test)
- #126767 (`StaticForeignItem` and `StaticItem` are the same)
- #126774 (Fix another assertion failure for some Expect diagnostics.)
r? `@ghost`
`@rustbot` modify labels: rollup
Print the tested value in int_log tests
Tiny change - from the failures in https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/125016, it would have been nice to see what the tested values were. Update the assertion messages.
It's unnecessary when that arm leads to a `#[cold]` panic anyway, since controlling branch likihood is what `#[cold]` is all about.
(And, well, it's unclear whether `unlikely!` even works these days anyway.)
Account for things that optimize out in inlining costs
This updates the MIR inlining `CostChecker` to have both bonuses and penalties, rather than just penalties.
That lets us add bonuses for some things where we want to encourage inlining without risking wrapping into a gigantic cost. For example, `switchInt(const …)` we give an inlining bonus because codegen will actually eliminate the branch (and associated dead blocks) once it's monomorphized, so measuring both sides of the branch gives an unrealistically-high cost to it. Similarly, an `unreachable` terminator gets a small bonus, because whatever branch leads there doesn't actually exist post-codegen.
Replace sort implementations
This PR replaces the sort implementations with tailor-made ones that strike a balance of run-time, compile-time and binary-size, yielding run-time and compile-time improvements. Regressing binary-size for `slice::sort` while improving it for `slice::sort_unstable`. All while upholding the existing soft and hard safety guarantees, and even extending the soft guarantees, detecting strict weak ordering violations with a high chance and reporting it to users via a panic.
* `slice::sort` -> driftsort [design document](https://github.com/Voultapher/sort-research-rs/blob/main/writeup/driftsort_introduction/text.md), includes detailed benchmarks and analysis.
* `slice::sort_unstable` -> ipnsort [design document](https://github.com/Voultapher/sort-research-rs/blob/main/writeup/ipnsort_introduction/text.md), includes detailed benchmarks and analysis.
#### Why should we change the sort implementations?
In the [2023 Rust survey](https://blog.rust-lang.org/2024/02/19/2023-Rust-Annual-Survey-2023-results.html#challenges), one of the questions was: "In your opinion, how should work on the following aspects of Rust be prioritized?". The second place was "Runtime performance" and the third one "Compile Times". This PR aims to improve both.
#### Why is this one big PR and not multiple?
* The current documentation gives performance recommendations for `slice::sort` and `slice::sort_unstable`. If for example only one of them were to be changed, this advice would be misleading for some Rust versions. By replacing them atomically, the advice remains largely unchanged, and users don't have to change their code.
* driftsort and ipnsort share a substantial part of their implementations.
* The implementation of `select_nth_unstable` uses internals of `slice::sort_unstable`, which makes it impractical to split changes.
---
This PR is a collaboration with `@orlp.`
Remove `feature(const_closures)` from libcore
This is an incomplete feature and apparently it has no uses in `core`. Incomplete features should generally not be used in our standard library.
Clean up some comments near `use` declarations
#125443 will reformat all `use` declarations in the repository. There are a few edge cases involving comments on `use` declarations that require care. This PR cleans up some clumsy comment cases, taking us a step closer to #125443 being able to merge.
r? ``@lqd``
Make Option::as_[mut_]slice const
These two functions can both be made `const`. I have added them to the `const_option_ext` feature, #91930. I don't believe there is anything blocking stabilization of `as_slice`, but `as_mut_slice` contains mutable references so depends on `const_mut_refs`.
Stabilise `c_unwind`
Fix#74990Fix#115285 (that's also where FCP is happening)
Marking as draft PR for now due to `compiler_builtins` issues
r? `@Amanieu`
reword the hint::blackbox non-guarantees
People were tripped up by the "precludes", interpreting it that this function must not ever be used in cryptographic contexts rather than the std lib merely making zero promises about it being fit-for-purpose.
What remains unchanged is that if someone does try to use it *despite the warnings* then it is on them to pin their compiler versions and verify the assembly of every single binary build they do.
Most modules have such a blank line, but some don't. Inserting the blank
line makes it clearer that the `//!` comments are describing the entire
module, rather than the `use` declaration(s) that immediately follows.
This makes their intent and expected location clearer. We see some
examples where these comments were not clearly separate from `use`
declarations, which made it hard to understand what the comment is
describing.
People were tripped up by the "precludes", interpreting it that this function
must not ever be used in cryptographic contexts rather than the std lib merely
making zero promises about it being fit-for-purpose.
What remains unchanged is that if someone does try to use it *despite the warnings*
then it is on them to pin their compiler versions and verify the assembly of every
single binary build they do.
Return opaque type from PanicInfo::message()
This changes the return type of the (unstable) PanicInfo::message() method to an opaque type (that implements Display). This allows for a bit more flexibility in the future.
See https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/66745
Due to refactoring the const_trait usage, the CopyMarker impl was
accidentally deleted, which had the consequence that the Copy
specialization for the small-sort was never picked.
The changes made only a limited improvement for the current small
miri coverage and in general test coverage of the sort implementations.
But they exploded test times from ~13s to ~240s, which is not deemed
worth it.
Freeze + Copy types should be allowed to choose between all three
small-sort variants. With the recent changes to small-sort selection,
a regression was added that only let such types choose between network
and fallback. It can now also choose general where appropriate.
Rollup of 8 pull requests
Successful merges:
- #125258 (Resolve elided lifetimes in assoc const to static if no other lifetimes are in scope)
- #126250 (docs(change): Don't mention a Cargo 2024 edition change for 1.79)
- #126288 (doc: Added commas where needed)
- #126346 (export std::os::fd module on HermitOS)
- #126468 (div_euclid, rem_euclid: clarify/extend documentation)
- #126531 (Add codegen test for `Request::provide_*`)
- #126535 (coverage: Arrange span extraction/refinement as a series of passes)
- #126538 (coverage: Several small improvements to graph code)
r? `@ghost`
`@rustbot` modify labels: rollup
Add codegen test for `Request::provide_*`
Codegen before & after https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/126242: https://gist.github.com/slanterns/3789ee36f59ed834e1a6bd4677b68ed4.
Also adjust an outdated comment since `tag_id` is no longer attached to `TaggedOption` via `Erased`, but stored next to it in `Tagged` under the new implementation.
My first time writing FileCheck xD. Correct me if there is anything that should be amended.
r? libs
export std::os::fd module on HermitOS
The HermitOS' IO interface is similiar to Unix. Consequently, this PR synchronize the FD implementation between both.
closes#126198
doc: Added commas where needed
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const_trait in conjunction with specialization was
deemed not ready for usage in this scenario. So
instead a two-stage trait specialization approach
is used. This approach is likely worse for
compile-times. Future work that enables
const_trait can revert back to the previous
version as outlined in the comment marked
FIXME(effects).
Update `Arc::try_unwrap()` docs
Clarify the language wrt "race condition" not meaning "memory unsafety".
The docs make an important point about a 'logical' race condition that can occur if the `Err`-case in `Arc::try_unwrap()` is not handled properly. The language as is uses the term "race condition", which the reader may associate with "memory unsafety". This PR tries to clarify the scenario and qualify "race condition without memory unsafety".
Document behavior of `create_dir_all` wrt. empty path
The behavior makes sense because `Path::new("one_component").parent() == Some(Path::new(""))`, so if one naively wants to create the parent directory for a file to be written, it simply works.
Closes#105108 by documenting the current behavior.
Remove superfluous UbChecks from `SliceIndex` methods
The current implementation calls the unsafe ones from the safe ones, but that means they end up emitting UbChecks that are impossible to hit, since we just checked those things.
This PR adds some new module-local helpers for the code shared between them, so the safe methods can be small enough to inline by avoiding those extra checks, while the unsafe methods still help catch length mistakes.
r? `@saethlin`
Bump windows-bindgen to 0.57
This PR updates our generated Windows API bindings using the latest version of `windows-bindgen`.
The only change to the generated code is that `derive` is used for `Copy` and `Clone` instead of `impl`.
As discovered by Mara in #110897, our TLS implementation is a total mess. In the past months, I have simplified the actual macros and their expansions, but the majority of the complexity comes from the platform-specific support code needed to create keys and register destructors. In keeping with #117276, I have therefore moved all of the `thread_local_key`/`thread_local_dtor` modules to the `thread_local` module in `sys` and merged them into a new structure, so that future porters of `std` can simply mix-and-match the existing code instead of having to copy the same (bad) implementation everywhere. The new structure should become obvious when looking at `sys/thread_local/mod.rs`.
Unfortunately, the documentation changes associated with the refactoring have made this PR rather large. That said, this contains no functional changes except for two small ones:
* the key-based destructor fallback now, by virtue of sharing the implementation used by macOS and others, stores its list in a `#[thread_local]` static instead of in the key, eliminating one indirection layer and drastically simplifying its code.
* I've switched over ZKVM (tier 3) to use the same implementation as WebAssembly, as the implementation was just a way worse version of that
Please let me know if I can make this easier to review! I know these large PRs aren't optimal, but I couldn't think of any good intermediate steps.
@rustbot label +A-thread-locals
Rollup of 9 pull requests
Successful merges:
- #125829 (rustc_span: Add conveniences for working with span formats)
- #126361 (Unify intrinsics body handling in StableMIR)
- #126417 (Add `f16` and `f128` inline ASM support for `x86` and `x86-64`)
- #126424 ( Also sort `crt-static` in `--print target-features` output)
- #126428 (Polish `std::path::absolute` documentation.)
- #126429 (Add `f16` and `f128` const eval for binary and unary operationations)
- #126448 (End support for Python 3.8 in tidy)
- #126488 (Use `std::path::absolute` in bootstrap)
- #126511 (.mailmap: Associate both my work and my private email with me)
r? `@ghost`
`@rustbot` modify labels: rollup
These changes bring it closer to other standard library documentation
and, in particular, `std::fs::canonicalize`, which it will often be
compared with.
* Add `# Platform-specific behavior` section, with content moved from
Examples section.
* Create `# Errors` section.
* Phrase error description to allow future platforms to have new
syntactic errors, rather than only emptiness.
* Add missing commas.
* Indent example code 4 spaces.
Rollup of 7 pull requests
Successful merges:
- #123769 (Improve escaping of byte, byte str, and c str proc-macro literals)
- #126054 (`E0229`: Suggest Moving Type Constraints to Type Parameter Declaration)
- #126135 (add HermitOS support for vectored read/write operations)
- #126266 (Unify guarantees about the default allocator)
- #126285 (`UniqueRc`: support allocators and `T: ?Sized`.)
- #126399 (extend the check for LLVM build)
- #126426 (const validation: fix ICE on dangling ZST reference)
r? `@ghost`
`@rustbot` modify labels: rollup
`UniqueRc`: support allocators and `T: ?Sized`.
Added the following (all unstable):
* Defaulted type pararameter `A: Allocator`.
* `UniqueRc::new_in()`.
* `T: ?Sized` where possible.
* `impl CoerceUnsized for UniqueRc`.
These changes are motivated by supporting the implementation of unsized `Rc::make_mut()` (PR #116113), but are also intended to be obvious generalizations of `UniqueRc` to support the things `Rc` does.
r? ``````@the8472``````
Unify guarantees about the default allocator
`std::alloc` said that the default allocator is unspecified for all crrate types except `cdylib` and `staticlib`. Adjust `std::alloc::System` documentation to say the same.
Fixes#125870.
add HermitOS support for vectored read/write operations
In general, the I/O interface of hermit-abi is revised and now a more POSIX-like interface. Consequently, platform abstraction layer for HermitOS has slightly adjusted and some inaccuracies remove.
Hermit is a tier 3 platform and this PR changes only files, wich are related to the tier 3 platform.
Improve escaping of byte, byte str, and c str proc-macro literals
This PR changes the behavior of `proc_macro::Literal::byte_character` (https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/115268), `byte_string`, and `c_string` (https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/119750) to improve their choice of escape sequences. 3 categories of changes are made:
1. Never use `\x00`. Always prefer `\0`, which is supported in all the same places.
2. Never escape `\'` inside double quotes and `\"` inside single quotes.
3. Never use `\x` for valid UTF-8 in literals that permit `\u`.
The second commit adds tests covering these cases, asserting the **old** behavior.
The third commit implements the behavior change and simultaneously updates the tests to assert the **new** behavior.
std::unix::fs::link using direct linkat call for Solaris.
Since we support solaris 11 as minimum, we can get rid of the runtime overhead.
try-job: dist-various-2
Fix wrong `assert_unsafe_precondition` message for `core::ptr::copy`
A small fix in the `assert_unsafe_precondition` message for `core::ptr::copy` as described by https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/126400 .
fixes#126400
Clarify `Command::new` behavior for programs with arguments
I mistakenly passed program path along arguments as the same string into `Command::new` a couple of times now. It might be useful to explicitly highlight that `Command::new` intends to accept path to a program, not path to a program plus arguments. Also nudge the user to use `Command::arg` or `Command::args` if they wish to pass arguments.
Rollup of 16 pull requests
Successful merges:
- #123374 (DOC: Add FFI example for slice::from_raw_parts())
- #124514 (Recommend to never display zero disambiguators when demangling v0 symbols)
- #125978 (Cleanup: HIR ty lowering: Consolidate the places that do assoc item probing & access checking)
- #125980 (Nvptx remove direct passmode)
- #126187 (For E0277 suggest adding `Result` return type for function when using QuestionMark `?` in the body.)
- #126210 (docs(core): make more const_ptr doctests assert instead of printing)
- #126249 (Simplify `[T; N]::try_map` signature)
- #126256 (Add {{target}} substitution to compiletest)
- #126263 (Make issue-122805.rs big endian compatible)
- #126281 (set_env: State the conclusion upfront)
- #126286 (Make `storage-live.rs` robust against rustc internal changes.)
- #126287 (Update a cranelift patch file for formatting changes.)
- #126301 (Use `tidy` to sort crate attributes for all compiler crates.)
- #126305 (Make PathBuf less Ok with adding UTF-16 then `into_string`)
- #126310 (Migrate run make prefer rlib)
- #126314 (fix RELEASES: we do not support upcasting to auto traits)
r? `@ghost`
`@rustbot` modify labels: rollup
Make PathBuf less Ok with adding UTF-16 then `into_string`
Fixes#126291 which is, as far as I can tell, a regression introduced by #96869.
try-job: x86_64-msvc
Update a cranelift patch file for formatting changes.
PR #125443 will reformat all the use declarations in the repo. This would break a patch kept in `rustc_codegen_cranelift` that gets applied to `library/std/src/sys/pal/windows/rand.rs`.
So this commit formats the use declarations in `library/std/src/sys/pal/windows/rand.rs` in advance of #125443 and updates the patch file accordingly.
The motivation is that #125443 is a huge change and we want to get fiddly little changes like this out of the way so it can be nothing more than an `x fmt --all`.
r? ``@bjorn3``
set_env: State the conclusion upfront
People tend to skim or skip over long explanations so we should be very upfront that `set_var` and `remove_var` are being made unsafe for a very good reason.
This is just the conclusion restated almost verbatim but earlier in the docs and separated from the explanation:
0c960618b5/library/std/src/env.rs (L338-L339)
I think this may help with people who may not be entirely comfortable with #125937 being rejected.
Simplify `[T; N]::try_map` signature
People keep making fun of this signature for being so gnarly.
Associated type bounds admit a much simpler scribbling.
r? ````@scottmcm````
PR #125443 will reformat all the use declarations in the repo. This
would break a patch kept in `rustc_codegen_cranelift` that gets applied
to `library/std/src/sys/pal/windows/rand.rs`.
So this commit formats the use declarations in
`library/std/src/sys/pal/windows/rand.rs` in advance of #125443 and
updates the patch file accordingly.
The motivation is that #125443 is a huge change and we want to get
fiddly little changes like this out of the way so it can be nothing more
than an `x fmt --all`.
Added the following (all unstable):
* Defaulted type pararameter `A: Allocator`.
* `UniqueRc::new_in()`.
* `T: ?Sized` where possible.
* `impl CoerceUnsized for UniqueRc`.
* Drive-by doc polish: links and periods at the end of sentences.
These changes are motivated by supporting the implementation of unsized
`Rc::make_mut()` (PR #116113), but are also intended to be obvious
generalizations of `UniqueRc` to support the things `Rc` does.
`std::alloc` said that the default allocator is unspecified for all
crrate types except `cdylib` and `staticlib`. Adjust
`std::alloc::System` documentation to say the same.
Fixes#125870.
People keep making fun of this signature for being so gnarly.
Associated type bounds lend it a much simpler scribbling.
ChangeOutputType can also come along for the ride.
fix: build on haiku
## What does this PR do
The std is broken on haiku, this PR fixes it.
## To reproduce the issue
```sh
$ cargo +nightly --version
cargo 1.81.0-nightly (b1feb75d0 2024-06-07)
$ cargo new hello
$ cd hello
$ cargo +nightly check -Zbuild-std --target x86_64-unknown-haiku -q
error[E0433]: failed to resolve: use of undeclared crate or module `std`
--> ~/.rustup/toolchains/nightly-x86_64-unknown-linux-gnu/lib/rustlib/src/rust/library/std/src/sys/pal/unix/os.rs:468:13
|
468 | std::ptr::null_mut(),
| ^^^ use of undeclared crate or module `std`
|
help: consider importing one of these items
|
8 + use core::ptr;
|
8 + use crate::ptr;
|
help: if you import `ptr`, refer to it directly
|
468 - std::ptr::null_mut(),
468 + ptr::null_mut(),
|
error[E0433]: failed to resolve: use of undeclared crate or module `std`
--> ~/.rustup/toolchains/nightly-x86_64-unknown-linux-gnu/lib/rustlib/src/rust/library/std/src/sys/pal/unix/os.rs:470:13
|
470 | std::ptr::null_mut(),
| ^^^ use of undeclared crate or module `std`
|
help: consider importing one of these items
|
8 + use core::ptr;
```
Fix `NonZero` doctest inconsistencies
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`NonZero`'s doctests contain both `?` and `.unwrap()` with no obvious reason for the difference, so this changes all of them to `?`. Also removes an explicit `std::num::NonZero`.
Clarify that they always have the same alignment as u8/i8, (unlike other atomic types).
Clarify in from_ptr that alignment is never an issue because of this.
Rollup of 4 pull requests
Successful merges:
- #126172 (Weekly `cargo update`)
- #126176 (rustdoc-search: use lowercase, non-normalized name for type search)
- #126190 (Autolabel run-make tests, remind to update tracking issue)
- #126194 (Migrate more things to `WinError`)
r? `@ghost`
`@rustbot` modify labels: rollup
Add `FRAC_1_SQRT_2PI` constant to f16/f32/f64/f128
This adds the `FRAC_1_SQRT_2PI` to the `f16`, `f32`, `f64` and `f128` as [`1/√(2π)`](https://www.wolframalpha.com/input?i=1%2Fsqrt%282*pi%29). The rationale is that while `FRAC_1_SQRT_PI` already exists, [Gaussian calculations](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gaussian_function) for random normal distributions require a `1/(σ√(2π))` term, which could then be directly expressed e.g. as `f32::FRAC_1_SQRT_2PI / sigma`.
The actual value is approximately `1/√(2π) = 0.3989422804014326779399460599343818684758586311649346576659258296…`. Truncated/rounded forms were used for the individual types.
---
~~I did not any of the `#[unstable]` attributes since I am not aware of their implications.~~
**Edit:** I applied the stability attributes from the surrounding types according to what seemed most likely correct. I believe the `more_float_constants` feature marker is incorrectly applied, but I wasn't sure how to proceed.
std::unix::os current_exe implementation simplification for haiku.
_get_net_image_info is a bit overkill as it allows to get broader informations about the process.
std::unix::fs::get_mode implementation for illumos/solaris.
they both support the F_GETFL fctnl flag/O_ACCMODE mask to get the file descriptor access modes.
In general, the I/O interface of hermit-abi is more POSIX-like
interface. Consequently, platform abstraction layer for HermitOS
has slightly adjusted and some inaccuracies remove.
Size optimize int formatting
Let's use the new feature flag!
This uses a simpler algorithm to format integers.
It is slower, but also smaller.
It also saves having to import the 200 byte rodata lookup table.
In a test of mine this saves ~300 bytes total of a cortex-m binary that does integer formatting.
For a 16KB device, that's almost 2%.
Note though that for opt-level 3 the text size actually grows by 116 bytes.
Still a win in total. I'm not sure why the generated code is bigger than the more fancy algo. Maybe the smaller algo lends itself more to inlining and duplicating?
Prevent copy-paste errors from producing new starved-for-resources
threaded platforms by raising `DEFAULT_MIN_STACK_SIZE` from 4096 bytes
to at least 64KiB.
Two platforms "affected" by this have no actual threads:
- UEFI
- "unsupported"
Platforms that this actually affects:
- wasm32-wasi with "atomics" enabled
- wasm32-wasi-p1-threads
Two exceptions:
- SGX: a "secure code execution" platform, stays at 4096B
- TEEOS: also a "secure code execution" platform, stays at 8192B
I believe either of these may have sufficiently "interesting" semantics
around threads, or significant external library support. Either would
mean making any choices here for them is suspect.
Rollup of 9 pull requests
Successful merges:
- #124840 (resolve: mark it undetermined if single import is not has any bindings)
- #125622 (Winnow private method candidates instead of assuming any candidate of the right name will apply)
- #125648 (Remove unused(?) `~/rustsrc` folder from docker script)
- #125672 (Add more ABI test cases to miri (RFC 3391))
- #125800 (Fix `mut` static task queue in SGX target)
- #125871 (Orphanck[old solver]: Consider opaque types to never cover type parameters)
- #125893 (Handle all GVN binops in a single place.)
- #126008 (Port `tests/run-make-fulldeps/issue-19371` to ui-fulldeps)
- #126032 (Update description of the `IsTerminal` example)
r? `@ghost`
`@rustbot` modify labels: rollup
Fix `mut` static task queue in SGX target
[PR 125046](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/125046) prevents mutable references to statics with `#[linkage]`. Such a construct was used with the tests for the `x86_64-fortanix-unknown-sgx` target. This PR fixes this and cleans up code a bit in 5 steps. Each step passes CI:
- The `mut` static is removed, and `Task` explicitly implements `Send`
- Renaming of the `task_queue::lock` function
- Pass function for `Thread` as `Send` to `Thread::imp` and update when `Packet<'scope, T>` implements `Sync`
- Storing `Task::p` as a type that implements `Send`
- Letting the compiler auto implement `Send` for `Task`
cc: ``@jethrogb``
std::unix::fs::get_path: using fcntl codepath for netbsd instead.
on netbsd, procfs is not as central as on linux/solaris thus can be perfectly not mounted.
Thus using fcntl with F_GETPATH, the kernel deals with MAXPATHLEN internally too.
Use inline const blocks to create arrays of `MaybeUninit`.
This PR contains 2 changes enabled by the fact that [`inline_const` is now stable](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/104087), and was split out of #125082.
1. Use inline const instead of `unsafe` to construct arrays in `MaybeUninit` examples.
Rationale: Demonstrate good practice of avoiding `unsafe` code where it is not strictly necessary.
4. Use inline const instead of `unsafe` to implement `MaybeUninit::uninit_array()`.
This is arguably giving the compiler more work to do, in exchange for eliminating just one single internal unsafe block, so it's less certain that this is good on net.
r? `@Nilstrieb`
Add `size_of` and `size_of_val` and `align_of` and `align_of_val` to the prelude
(Note: need to update the PR to add `align_of` and `align_of_val`, and remove the second commit with the myriad changes to appease the lint.)
Many, many projects use `size_of` to get the size of a type. However,
it's also often equally easy to hardcode a size (e.g. `8` instead of
`size_of::<u64>()`). Minimizing friction in the use of `size_of` helps
ensure that people use it and make code more self-documenting.
The name `size_of` is unambiguous: the name alone, without any prefix or
path, is self-explanatory and unmistakeable for any other functionality.
Adding it to the prelude cannot produce any name conflicts, as any local
definition will silently shadow the one from the prelude. Thus, we don't
need to wait for a new edition prelude to add it.
Fix typo in the docs of `HashMap::raw_entry_mut`
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Ignore `vec_deque_alloc_error::test_shrink_to_unwind` test on non-unwind targets
https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/123803 added this test which requires unwinding to succeed. This conditionally ignores the test on non-unwind targets (as is the case with other tests using `catch_unwind`).
Explain differences between `{Once,Lazy}{Cell,Lock}` types
The question of "which once-ish cell-ish type should I use?" has been raised multiple times, and is especially important now that we have stabilized the `LazyCell` and `LazyLock` types. The answer for the `Lazy*` types is that you would be better off using them if you want to use what is by far the most common pattern: initialize it with a single nullary function that you would call at every `get_or_init` site. For everything else there's the `Once*` types.
"For everything else" is a somewhat weak motivation, as it only describes by negation. While contrasting them is inevitable, I feel positive motivations are more understandable. For this, I now offer a distinct example that helps explain why `OnceLock` can be useful, despite `LazyLock` existing: you can do some cool stuff with it that `LazyLock` simply can't support due to its mere definition.
The pair of `std::sync::*Lock`s are usable inside a `static`, and can serve roles in async or multithreaded (or asynchronously multithreaded) programs that `*Cell`s cannot. Because of this, they received most of my attention.
Fixes#124696Fixes#125615
Add function `core::iter::chain`
The addition of `core::iter::zip` (#82917) set a precedent for adding plain functions for iterator adaptors. Adding `chain` makes it a little easier to `chain` two iterators.
```rust
for (x, y) in chain(xs, ys) {}
// vs.
for (x, y) in xs.into_iter().chain(ys) {}
```
There is prior art for the utility of this in [`itertools::chain`](https://docs.rs/itertools/latest/itertools/fn.chain.html).
Approved ACP https://github.com/rust-lang/libs-team/issues/154
The addition of `core::iter::zip` (#82917) set a precedent for adding
plain functions for iterator adaptors. Adding `chain` makes it a little
easier to `chain` two iterators.
```
for (x, y) in chain(xs, ys) {}
// vs.
for (x, y) in xs.into_iter().chain(ys) {}
```
Change pedantically incorrect OnceCell/OnceLock wording
While the semantic intent of a OnceCell/OnceLock is that it can only be written to once (upon init), the fact of the matter is that both these types offer a `take(&mut self) -> Option<T>` mechanism that, when successful, resets the cell to its initial state, thereby [technically allowing it to be written to again](https://play.rust-lang.org/?version=stable&mode=debug&edition=2021&gist=415c023a6ae1ef35f371a2d3bb1aa735)
Despite the fact that this can only happen with a mutable reference (generally only used during the construction of the OnceCell/OnceLock), it would be incorrect to say that the type itself as a whole *categorically* prevents being initialized or written to more than once (since it is possible to imagine an identical type only without the `take()` method that actually fulfills that contract).
To clarify, change "that cannot be.." to "that nominally cannot.." and add a note to OnceCell about what can be done with an `&mut Self` reference.
```@rustbot``` label +A-rustdocs
Make TLS accessors closures that return pointers
The current TLS macros generate a function that returns an `Option<&'static T>`. This is both risky as we lie about lifetimes, and necessitates that those functions are `unsafe`. By returning a `*const T` instead, the accessor function do not have safety requirements any longer and can be made closures without hassle. This PR does exactly that!
For native TLS, the closure approach makes it trivial to select the right accessor function at compile-time, which could result in a slight speed-up (I have the hope that the accessors are now simple enough for the MIR-inliner to kick in).
on netbsd, procfs is not as central as on linux/solaris thus
can be perfectly not mounted.
Thus using fcntl with F_GETPATH, the kernel deals with MAXPATHLEN
internally too.
While slightly verbose, it helps explain "why bother with OnceLock?"
This is a point of confusion that has been raised multiple times
shortly before and after the stabilization of LazyLock.
This example is spiritually an example of LazyLock, as it computes a
variable at runtime but accepts no inputs into that process.
It is also slightly simpler and thus easier to understand.
Change it to an even-more concise version and move it to LazyLock.
The example now editorializes slightly more. This may be unnecessary,
but it can be educational for the reader.
The `mir!` macro has multiple parts:
- An optional return type annotation.
- A sequence of zero or more local declarations.
- A mandatory starting anonymous basic block, which is brace-delimited.
- A sequence of zero of more additional named basic blocks.
Some `mir!` invocations use braces with a "block" style, like so:
```
mir! {
let _unit: ();
{
let non_copy = S(42);
let ptr = std::ptr::addr_of_mut!(non_copy);
// Inside `callee`, the first argument and `*ptr` are basically
// aliasing places!
Call(_unit = callee(Move(*ptr), ptr), ReturnTo(after_call), UnwindContinue())
}
after_call = {
Return()
}
}
```
Some invocations use parens with a "block" style, like so:
```
mir!(
let x: [i32; 2];
let one: i32;
{
x = [42, 43];
one = 1;
x = [one, 2];
RET = Move(x);
Return()
}
)
```
And some invocations uses parens with a "tighter" style, like so:
```
mir!({
SetDiscriminant(*b, 0);
Return()
})
```
This last style is generally used for cases where just the mandatory
starting basic block is present. Its braces are placed next to the
parens.
This commit changes all `mir!` invocations to use braces with a "block"
style. Why?
- Consistency is good.
- The contents of the invocation is a block of code, so it's odd to use
parens. They are more normally used for function-like macros.
- Most importantly, the next commit will enable rustfmt for
`tests/mir-opt/`. rustfmt is more aggressive about formatting macros
that use parens than macros that use braces. Without this commit's
changes, rustfmt would break a couple of `mir!` macro invocations that
use braces within `tests/mir-opt` by inserting an extraneous comma.
E.g.:
```
mir!(type RET = (i32, bool);, { // extraneous comma after ';'
RET.0 = 1;
RET.1 = true;
Return()
})
```
Switching those `mir!` invocations to use braces avoids that problem,
resulting in this, which is nicer to read as well as being valid
syntax:
```
mir! {
type RET = (i32, bool);
{
RET.0 = 1;
RET.1 = true;
Return()
}
}
```
Implement feature `integer_sign_cast`
Tracking issue: https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/125882
Since this is my first time making a library addition I wasn't sure where to place the new code relative to existing code. I decided to place it near the top where there are already some other basic bitwise manipulation functions. If there is an official guideline for the ordering of functions, please let me know.
Change f32::midpoint to upcast to f64
This has been verified by kani as a correct optimization
see: https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/110840#issuecomment-1942587398
The new implementation is branchless and only differs in which NaN values are produced (if any are produced at all), which is fine to change. Aside from NaN handling, this implementation produces bitwise identical results to the original implementation.
Question: do we need a codegen test for this? I didn't add one, since the original PR #92048 didn't have any codegen tests.
std::pal::unix::thread fetching min stack size on netbsd.
PTHREAD_STACK_MIN is not defined however sysconf/_SC_THREAD_STACK_MIN returns it as it can vary from arch to another.
This has been verified by kani as a correct optimization
see: https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/110840#issuecomment-1942587398
The new implementation is branchless, and only differs in which NaN
values are produced (if any are produced at all). Which is fine to change.
Aside from NaN handling, this implementation produces bitwise identical
results to the original implementation.
The new implementation is gated on targets that have a fast 64-bit
floating point implementation in hardware, and on WASM.
Unroll first iteration of checked_ilog loop
This follows the optimization of #115913. As shown in https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/115913#issuecomment-2066788006, the performance was improved in all important cases, but some regressions were introduced for the benchmarks `u32_log_random_small`, `u8_log_random` and `u8_log_random_small`.
Basically, #115913 changed the implementation from one division per iteration to one multiplication per iteration plus one division. When there are zero iterations, this is a regression from zero divisions to one division.
This PR avoids this by avoiding the division if we need zero iterations by returning `Some(0)` early. It also reduces the number of multiplications by one in all other cases.
Apply `x clippy --fix` and `x fmt` on Rustc
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Just run `x clippy --fix` and `x fmt`, and remove some changes like `impl Default`.
Implement `needs_async_drop` in rustc and optimize async drop glue
This PR expands on #121801 and implements `Ty::needs_async_drop` which works almost exactly the same as `Ty::needs_drop`, which is needed for #123948.
Also made compiler's async drop code to look more like compiler's regular drop code, which enabled me to write an optimization where types which do not use `AsyncDrop` can simply forward async drop glue to `drop_in_place`. This made size of the async block from the [async_drop test](67980dd6fb/tests/ui/async-await/async-drop.rs) to decrease by 12%.
Make `std::env::{set_var, remove_var}` unsafe in edition 2024
Allow calling these functions without `unsafe` blocks in editions up until 2021, but don't trigger the `unused_unsafe` lint for `unsafe` blocks containing these functions.
Fixes#27970.
Fixes#90308.
CC #124866.
drop_in_place: weaken the claim of equivalence with drop(ptr.read())
The two are *not* semantically equivalent in all cases, so let's not be so definite about this.
Fixes https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/112015
Add lang items for `AsyncFn*`, `Future`, `AsyncFnKindHelper`'s associated types
Adds lang items for `AsyncFnOnce::Output`, `AsyncFnOnce::CallOnceFuture`, `AsyncFnMut::CallRefFuture`, and uses them in the new solver. I'm mostly interested in doing this to help accelerate uplifting the new trait solver into a separate crate.
The old solver is kind of spaghetti, so I haven't moved that to use these lang items (i.e. it still uses `item_name`-based comparisons).
update: Also adds lang items for `Future::Output` and `AsyncFnKindHelper::Upvars`.
cc ``@lcnr``
Allow calling these functions without `unsafe` blocks in editions up
until 2021, but don't trigger the `unused_unsafe` lint for `unsafe`
blocks containing these functions.
Fixes#27970.
Fixes#90308.
CC #124866.
This is create symmetry between the already existing TAU constant (2pi)
and the newly-introduced FRAC_1_SQRT_2PI, keeping the more common
name while increasing visibility.
Make more of the test suite run on Mac Catalyst
Combined with https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/125225, the only failing parts of the test suite are in `tests/rustdoc-js`, `tests/rustdoc-js-std` and `tests/debuginfo`. Tested with:
```console
./x test --target=aarch64-apple-ios-macabi library/std
./x test --target=aarch64-apple-ios-macabi --skip=tests/rustdoc-js --skip=tests/rustdoc-js-std --skip=tests/debuginfo tests
```
Will probably put up a PR later to enable _running_ on (not just compiling for) Mac Catalyst in CI, though not sure where exactly I should do so? `src/ci/github-actions/jobs.yml`?
Note that I've deliberately _not_ enabled stack overflow handlers on iOS/tvOS/watchOS/visionOS (see https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/25872), but rather just skipped those tests, as it uses quite a few APIs that I'd be weary about getting rejected by the App Store (note that Swift doesn't do it on those platforms either).
r? ``@workingjubilee``
CC ``@thomcc``
``@rustbot`` label O-ios O-apple
rustfmt fixes
The `rmake.rs` entries in `rustfmt.toml` are causing major problems for `x fmt`. This PR removes them and does some minor related cleanups.
r? ``@GuillaumeGomez``
This adds the `only-apple`/`ignore-apple` compiletest directive, and
uses that basically everywhere instead of `only-macos`/`ignore-macos`.
Some of the updates in `run-make` are a bit redundant, as they use
`ignore-cross-compile` and won't run on iOS - but using Apple in these
is still more correct, so I've made that change anyhow.
It's reasonable to want to, but in the current implementation this
causes multiple problems.
- All the `rmake.rs` files are formatted every time even when they
haven't changed. This is because they get whitelisted unconditionally
in the `OverrideBuilder`, before the changed files get added.
- The way `OverrideBuilder` works, if any files gets whitelisted then no
unmentioned files will get traversed. This is surprising, and means
that the `rmake.rs` entries broke the use of explicit paths to `x
fmt`, and also broke `GITHUB_ACTIONS=true git check --fmt`.
The commit removes the `rmake.rs` entries, fixes the formatting of a
couple of files that were misformatted (not previously caught due to the
`GITHUB_ACTIONS` breakage), and bans `!`-prefixed entries in
`rustfmt.toml` because they cause all these problems.
update tracking issue for lazy_cell_consume
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Bump backtrace to 0.3.72
This removes a bunch of dead code, contains critical aarch64-windows fixes, some less-critical windows-in-general improvements, adds visionOS support (and probably improves support for a bunch of Apple platforms...), and harmonizes backtrace's dependencies with rustc/std's.
See https://github.com/rust-lang/backtrace-rs/compare/0.3.71...0.3.72
r? `@ghost`
Always use the general case char count with `optimize_for_size`
The faster algo is really expensive, over a kilobyte if the full algo is present in a binary.
With this PR the general case algo is picked always instead of only for small strings.
In a test of mine this change makes the total binary go from 3116 bytes to 2032 bytes in opt-level 3 and from 1652 bytes to 1428 bytes in opt-level z. I've seen it much worse in real application, so the savings (especially on 'z') will be higher in many cases.
This is the second pr of this kind after #125606