Commit Graph

1294 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Daniel Henry-Mantilla aa863caebe Style nit: replace `for_each` & `return` with `for` & `continue`
Co-Authored-By: Joshua Nelson <jyn514@gmail.com>
2021-01-06 15:13:38 +01:00
Camelid 25a4964191 Use heading for `std::prelude` and not `io::prelude`
The heading style for `std::prelude` is to be consistent with the
headings for `std` and `core`: `# The Rust Standard Library` and
`# The Rust Core Library`, respectively.
2021-01-05 17:52:24 -08:00
Camelid 4274ba40bd Use lowercase for prelude items 2021-01-05 17:51:27 -08:00
Ashley Mannix db4585aa3b use Once instead of Mutex to manage capture resolution
This allows us to return borrows of the captured backtrace frames
that are tied to a borrow of the Backtrace itself, instead of to
some short-lived Mutex guard.

It also makes it semantically clearer what synchronization is needed
on the capture.
2021-01-06 10:44:06 +10:00
Ian Jackson dea6d6c909 BufWriter::into_raw_parts: Add tracking issue number
Signed-off-by: Ian Jackson <ijackson@chiark.greenend.org.uk>
2021-01-04 15:35:28 +00:00
bors bcd6975079 Auto merge of #80590 - camelid:bool-never-docs, r=nagisa
Update `bool` and `!` docs
2021-01-03 12:21:12 +00:00
Camelid 4e767596e2
always demands -> requires 2021-01-01 18:55:01 -08:00
Camelid 4af11126a8
Update `bool` and `!` docs 2021-01-01 10:09:56 -08:00
Camelid 0506789014 Remove many unnecessary manual link resolves from library
Now that #76934 has merged, we can remove a lot of these! E.g, this is
no longer necessary:

    [`Vec<T>`]: Vec
2020-12-31 11:54:32 -08:00
Camelid 588786a788 Add error docs 2020-12-30 11:44:03 -08:00
Camelid 4ee6d1bf54 Add description independent of `Read::read_to_string` 2020-12-30 11:35:17 -08:00
bors e226704685 Auto merge of #80511 - Mark-Simulacrum:bump-stage0, r=pietroalbini
Bump bootstrap compiler to 1.50 beta

r? `@pietroalbini`
2020-12-30 18:32:31 +00:00
Mark Rousskov fe031180d0 Bump bootstrap compiler to 1.50 beta 2020-12-30 09:27:19 -05:00
Yuki Okushi 00741b8810
Rollup merge of #80260 - RalfJung:less-untyped-panics, r=m-ou-se
slightly more typed interface to panic implementation

The panic payload is currently being passed around as a `usize`. However, it actually is a pointer, and the involved types are available on all ends of this API, so I propose we use the proper pointer type to avoid some casts. Avoiding int-to-ptr casts also makes this code work with `miri -Zmiri-track-raw-pointers`.
2020-12-30 22:49:17 +09:00
BlackHoleFox 5449a42a1c Fix small typo in time comment 2020-12-29 02:10:29 -06:00
Konrad Borowski 9e779986aa Add "length" as doc alias to len methods 2020-12-28 09:13:46 +01:00
bors 257becbfe4 Auto merge of #80181 - jyn514:intra-doc-primitives, r=Manishearth
Fix intra-doc links for non-path primitives

This does *not* currently work for associated items that are
auto-implemented by the compiler (e.g. `never::eq`), because they aren't
present in the source code. I plan to fix this in a follow-up PR.

Fixes https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/63351 using the approach mentioned in https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/63351#issuecomment-683352130.

r? `@Manishearth`

cc `@petrochenkov` - this makes `rustc_resolve::Res` public, is that ok? I'd just add an identical type alias in rustdoc if not, which seems a waste.
2020-12-27 18:55:33 +00:00
Ian Jackson 274e2993cb Stablize slice::strip_prefix and strip_suffix, with SlicePattern
We hope later to extend `core::str::Pattern` to slices too, perhaps as
part of stabilising that.  We want to minimise the amount of type
inference breakage when we do that, so we don't want to stabilise
strip_prefix and strip_suffix taking a simple `&[T]`.

@KodrAus suggested the approach of introducing a new perma-unstable
trait, which reduces this future inference break risk.

I found it necessary to make two impls of this trait, as the unsize
coercion don't apply when hunting for trait implementations.

Since SlicePattern's only method returns a reference, and the whole
trait is just a wrapper for slices, I made the trait type be the
non-reference type [T] or [T;N] rather than the reference.  Otherwise
the trait would have a lifetime parameter.

I marked both the no-op conversion functions `#[inline]`.  I'm not
sure if that is necessary but it seemed at the very least harmless.

Signed-off-by: Ian Jackson <ijackson@chiark.greenend.org.uk>
2020-12-27 00:50:46 +00:00
David Adler 7adeb710fb Use the hashbrown::{HashMap,HashSet} `clone_from` impls. 2020-12-26 19:39:38 -05:00
Ralf Jung 1600f7d693 fix another comment, and make __rust_start_panic code a bit more semantically clear 2020-12-25 23:37:27 +01:00
Dylan DPC 21d36e0daf
Rollup merge of #79213 - yoshuawuyts:stabilize-slice-fill, r=m-ou-se
Stabilize `core::slice::fill`

Tracking issue https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/70758

Stabilizes the `core::slice::fill` API in Rust 1.50, adding a `memset` doc alias so people coming from C/C++ looking for this operation can find it in the docs. This API hasn't seen any changes since we changed the signature in https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/71165/, and it seems like the right time to propose stabilization. Thanks!

r? `@m-ou-se`
2020-12-25 03:39:31 +01:00
Joshua Nelson 8842c1ccf3 Fix new ambiguity in the standard library
This caught several bugs where people expected `slice` to link to the
primitive, but it linked to the module instead.

This also uses `cfg_attr(bootstrap)` since the ambiguity only occurs
when compiling with stage 1.
2020-12-22 11:45:23 -05:00
Ralf Jung 7524eb2704 update a seemingly outdated comment 2020-12-22 12:49:59 +01:00
Linus Färnstrand 454f3ed902
Update library/std/src/sys/windows/thread_parker.rs
Co-authored-by: Mara Bos <m-ou.se@m-ou.se>
2020-12-22 12:33:11 +01:00
Linus Färnstrand 865e4797df Fix compare_and_swap in Windows thread_parker 2020-12-22 12:24:17 +01:00
Linus Färnstrand 427996a286 Fix documentation typo 2020-12-22 12:19:46 +01:00
Linus Färnstrand 828d4ace4d Migrate standard library away from compare_and_swap 2020-12-22 12:19:46 +01:00
Yoshua Wuyts c2281cc189 Stabilize `core::slice::fill` 2020-12-22 00:16:04 +01:00
Ralf Jung 29bed26036 slightly more typed interface to panic implementation 2020-12-21 13:37:59 +01:00
Ashley Mannix bbf5001b94
bump stabilization to 1.51.0 2020-12-21 18:40:34 +10:00
bors 15d1f81196 Auto merge of #80253 - Dylan-DPC:rollup-bkmn74z, r=Dylan-DPC
Rollup of 11 pull requests

Successful merges:

 - #80159 (Add array search aliases)
 - #80166 (Edit rustc_middle docs)
 - #80170 (Fix ICE when lookup method in trait for type that have bound vars)
 - #80171 (Edit rustc_middle::ty::TyKind docs)
 - #80199 (also const-check FakeRead)
 - #80211 (Handle desugaring in impl trait bound suggestion)
 - #80236 (Use pointer type in AtomicPtr::swap implementation)
 - #80239 (Update Clippy)
 - #80240 (make sure installer only creates directories in DESTDIR)
 - #80244 (Cleanup markdown span handling)
 - #80250 (Minor cleanups in LateResolver)

Failed merges:

r? `@ghost`
`@rustbot` modify labels: rollup
2020-12-21 04:08:35 +00:00
Dylan DPC 635ea920f1
Rollup merge of #80159 - jyn514:array, r=m-ou-se
Add array search aliases

Missed this in https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/80068. This one will really fix https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/46075.

The last alias especially I'm a little unsure about - maybe fuzzy search should be fixed in rustdoc instead? Happy to make that change although I'd have to figure out how.

r? ``@m-ou-se`` although cc ``@GuillaumeGomez`` for the search issue.
2020-12-21 02:47:33 +01:00
bors c8135455c4 Auto merge of #80088 - operutka:fix-cmsg-len-uclibc, r=dtolnay
Fix failing build of std on armv5te-unknown-linux-uclibceabi due to missing cmsg_len_zero

I'm getting the following error when trying to build `std` on `armv5te-unknown-linux-uclibceabi`:

```
error[E0425]: cannot find value `cmsg_len_zero` in this scope
   --> /home/operutka/.rustup/toolchains/nightly-x86_64-unknown-linux-gnu/lib/rustlib/src/rust/library/std/src/sys/unix/ext/net/ancillary.rs:376:47
    |
376 |             let data_len = (*cmsg).cmsg_len - cmsg_len_zero;
    |                                               ^^^^^^^^^^^^^ not found in this scope
```

Obviously, this branch:
```rust
cfg_if::cfg_if! {
    if #[cfg(any(target_os = "android", all(target_os = "linux", target_env = "gnu")))] {
        let cmsg_len_zero = libc::CMSG_LEN(0) as libc::size_t;
    } else if #[cfg(any(
                  target_os = "dragonfly",
                  target_os = "emscripten",
                  target_os = "freebsd",
                  all(target_os = "linux", target_env = "musl",),
                  target_os = "netbsd",
                  target_os = "openbsd",
              ))] {
        let cmsg_len_zero = libc::CMSG_LEN(0) as libc::socklen_t;
    }
}
```

does not cover the case `all(target_os = "linux", target_env = "uclibc")`.
2020-12-21 01:16:20 +00:00
bors b0e5c7d1fe Auto merge of #74699 - notriddle:fd-non-negative, r=m-ou-se
Mark `-1` as an available niche for file descriptors

Based on discussion from <https://internals.rust-lang.org/t/can-the-standard-library-shrink-option-file/12768>, the file descriptor `-1` is chosen based on the POSIX API designs that use it as a sentinel to report errors. A bigger niche could've been chosen, particularly on Linux, but would not necessarily be portable.

This PR also adds a test case to ensure that the -1 niche (which is kind of hacky and has no obvious test case) works correctly. It requires the "upper" bound, which is actually -1, to be expressed in two's complement.
2020-12-20 16:36:23 +00:00
Mara Bos 094b1da3a1
Check that c_int is i32 in FileDesc::new. 2020-12-20 11:56:51 +00:00
Camelid 1f9a8a1620 Add a `std::io::read_to_string` function
The equivalent of `std::fs::read_to_string`, but generalized to all
`Read` impls.

As the documentation on `std::io::read_to_string` says, the advantage of
this function is that it means you don't have to create a variable first
and it provides more type safety since you can only get the buffer out
if there were no errors. If you use `Read::read_to_string`, you have to
remember to check whether the read succeeded because otherwise your
buffer will be empty.

It's friendlier to newcomers and better in most cases to use an explicit
return value instead of an out parameter.
2020-12-19 21:46:40 -08:00
bors c1d5843661 Auto merge of #79473 - m-ou-se:clamp-in-core, r=m-ou-se
Move {f32,f64}::clamp to core.

`clamp` was recently stabilized (tracking issue: https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/44095). But although `Ord::clamp` was added in `core` (because `Ord` is in `core`), the versions for the `f32` and `f64` primitives were added in `std` (together with `floor`, `sin`, etc.), not in `core` (together with `min`, `max`, `from_bits`, etc.).

This change moves them to `core`, such that `clamp` on floats is available in `no_std` programs as well.
2020-12-19 21:57:38 +00:00
bors bd2f1cb278 Auto merge of #79342 - CDirkx:ipaddr-const, r=oli-obk
Stabilize all stable methods of `Ipv4Addr`, `Ipv6Addr` and `IpAddr` as const

This PR stabilizes all currently stable methods of `Ipv4Addr`, `Ipv6Addr` and `IpAddr` as const.
Tracking issue: #76205

`Ipv4Addr` (`const_ipv4`):
 - `octets`
 - `is_loopback`
 - `is_private`
 - `is_link_local`
 - `is_multicast`
 - `is_broadcast`
 - `is_docmentation`
 - `to_ipv6_compatible`
 - `to_ipv6_mapped`

`Ipv6Addr` (`const_ipv6`):
 - `segments`
 - `is_unspecified`
 - `is_loopback`
 - `is_multicast`
 - `to_ipv4`

`IpAddr` (`const_ip`):
 - `is_unspecified`
 - `is_loopback`
 - `is_multicast`

## Motivation
The ip methods seem like prime candidates to be made const: their behavior is defined by an external spec, and based solely on the byte contents of an address. These methods have been made unstable const in the beginning of September, after the necessary const integer arithmetic was stabilized.

There is currently a PR open (#78802) to change the internal representation of `IpAddr{4,6}` from `libc` types to a byte array. This does not have any impact on the constness of the methods.

## Implementation
Most of the stabilizations are straightforward, with the exception of `Ipv6Addr::segments`, which uses the unstable feature `const_fn_transmute`. The code could be rewritten to equivalent stable code, but this leads to worse code generation (#75085).
This is why `segments` gets marked with `#[rustc_allow_const_fn_unstable(const_fn_transmute)]`, like the already const-stable `Ipv6Addr::new`, the justification being that a const-stable alternative implementation exists https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/76206#issuecomment-685044184.

## Future posibilities
This PR const-stabilizes all currently stable ip methods, however there are also a number of unstable methods under the `ip` feature (#27709). These methods are already unstable const. There is a PR open (#76098) to stabilize those methods, which could include const-stabilization. However, stabilizing those methods as const is dependent on `Ipv4Addr::octets` and `Ipv6Addr::segments` (covered by this PR).
2020-12-19 13:13:41 +00:00
Yuki Okushi dbcf659dce
Rollup merge of #80068 - jyn514:mut-reference, r=m-ou-se
Add `&mut` as an alias for 'reference' primitive

Closes https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/46075.
2020-12-19 15:16:05 +09:00
Yuki Okushi 60aad47c13
Rollup merge of #79211 - yoshuawuyts:future-doc-alias, r=Mark-Simulacrum
Add the "async" and "promise" doc aliases to `core::future::Future`

Adds the "async" and "promise" doc aliases to `core::future::Future`. This enables people who search for "async" or "promise" to find `Future`, which is Rust's core primitive for async programming. Thanks!
2020-12-19 15:16:01 +09:00
Yuki Okushi 0765536c0b
Rollup merge of #78083 - ChaiTRex:master, r=m-ou-se
Stabilize or_insert_with_key

Stabilizes the `or_insert_with_key` feature from https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/71024. This allows inserting key-derived values when a `HashMap`/`BTreeMap` entry is vacant.

The difference between this and  `.or_insert_with(|| ... )` is that this provides a reference to the key to the closure after it is moved with `.entry(key_being_moved)`, avoiding the need to copy or clone the key.
2020-12-19 15:15:57 +09:00
Camelid 4a6014bc28 Use heading style for 'The I/O Prelude' in `std::io::prelude` 2020-12-18 15:05:15 -08:00
Camelid c78bfbae28 Use consistent punctuation for 'Prelude contents' docs 2020-12-18 15:05:14 -08:00
Corey Farwell 3ea744e2ac Recommend panic::resume_unwind instead of panicking.
Fixes https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/79950.
2020-12-18 17:03:45 -05:00
Joshua Nelson f2743a5db7 Add array search aliases 2020-12-18 11:56:07 -05:00
Yoshua Wuyts 48d5874914 Add the "promise" aliases to the `async` lang feature 2020-12-18 16:27:09 +01:00
Ralf Jung 441a33e81b
Rollup merge of #80147 - pierwill:patch-9, r=lcnr
Add missing punctuation to std::alloc docs

Add a period to first line of module docs to match other modules in std.
2020-12-18 16:22:14 +01:00
Ralf Jung 5bcbd0f5c1
Rollup merge of #80146 - pierwill:pierwill-prelude-mod-docs, r=lcnr
Edit formatting in Rust Prelude docs

Use consistent punctuation and capitalization in the list of things re-exported in the prelude.

Also adds a (possibly missing) word.
2020-12-18 16:22:13 +01:00
bors 6340607aca Auto merge of #79485 - EllenNyan:stabilize_unsafe_cell_get_mut, r=m-ou-se
Stabilize `unsafe_cell_get_mut`

Tracking issue: #76943

r? `@m-ou-se`
2020-12-18 11:39:26 +00:00
pierwill 9cb43bd994
Add missing punctuation to std::alloc docs
Add a period to first line of module docs to match other modules in std.
2020-12-17 21:49:32 -08:00
pierwill ea338f5443 Edit formatting in Rust Prelude docs
Use consistent punctuation and capitalization in the list
of things re-exported in the prelude.

Also adds a (possibly missing) word.
2020-12-17 21:22:58 -08:00
Ondrej Perutka ec078155f1 Fix failing build of std on armv5te-unknown-linux-uclibceabi due to missing cmsg_len_zero 2020-12-16 20:34:21 +01:00
Joshua Nelson 8fb553c7da Add `&mut` as an alias for 'reference' primitive 2020-12-15 20:22:12 -05:00
bors c00a4648a4 Auto merge of #78833 - CDirkx:parse_prefix, r=dtolnay
Refactor and fix `parse_prefix` on Windows

This PR is an extension of #78692 as well as a general refactor of `parse_prefix`:

**Fixes**:
There are two errors in the current implementation of `parse_prefix`:

Firstly, in the current implementation only `\` is recognized as a separator character in device namespace prefixes. This behavior is only correct for verbatim paths; `"\\.\C:/foo"` should be parsed as `"C:"` instead of `"C:/foo"`.

Secondly, the current implementation only handles single separator characters. In non-verbatim paths a series of separator characters should be recognized as a single boundary, e.g. the UNC path `"\\localhost\\\\\\C$\foo"` should be parsed as `"\\localhost\\\\\\C$"` and then `UNC(server: "localhost", share: "C$")`, but currently it is not parsed at all, because it starts being parsed as `\\localhost\` and then has an invalid empty share location.

Paths like `"\\.\C:/foo"` and `"\\localhost\\\\\\C$\foo"` are valid on Windows, they are equivalent to just `"C:\foo"`.

**Refactoring**:
All uses of `&[u8]` within `parse_prefix` are extracted to helper functions and`&OsStr` is used instead. This reduces the number of places unsafe is used:
- `get_first_two_components` is adapted to the more general `parse_next_component` and used in more places
- code for parsing drive prefixes is extracted to `parse_drive`
2020-12-16 00:47:50 +00:00
bors fa41639427 Auto merge of #77618 - fusion-engineering-forks:windows-parker, r=Amanieu
Add fast futex-based thread parker for Windows.

This adds a fast futex-based thread parker for Windows. It either uses WaitOnAddress+WakeByAddressSingle or NT Keyed Events (NtWaitForKeyedEvent+NtReleaseKeyedEvent), depending on which is available. Together, this makes this thread parker work for Windows XP and up. Before this change, park()/unpark() did not work on Windows XP: it needs condition variables, which only exist since Windows Vista.

---

Unfortunately, NT Keyed Events are an undocumented Windows API. However:
- This API is relatively simple with obvious behaviour, and there are several (unofficial) articles documenting the details. [1]
- parking_lot has been using this API for years (on Windows versions before Windows 8). [2] Many big projects extensively use parking_lot, such as servo and the Rust compiler itself.
- It is the underlying API used by Windows SRW locks and Windows critical sections. [3] [4]
- The source code of the implementations of Wine, ReactOs, and Windows XP are available and match the expected behaviour.
- The main risk with an undocumented API is that it might change in the future. But since we only use it for older versions of Windows, that's not a problem.
- Even if these functions do not block or wake as we expect (which is unlikely, see all previous points), this implementation would still be memory safe. The NT Keyed Events API is only used to sleep/block in the right place.

[1]\: http://www.locklessinc.com/articles/keyed_events/
[2]\: https://github.com/Amanieu/parking_lot/commit/43abbc964e
[3]\: https://docs.microsoft.com/en-us/archive/msdn-magazine/2012/november/windows-with-c-the-evolution-of-synchronization-in-windows-and-c
[4]\: Windows Internals, Part 1, ISBN 9780735671300

---

The choice of fallback API is inspired by parking_lot(_core), but the implementation of this thread parker is different. While parking_lot has no use for a fast path (park() directly returning if unpark() was already called), this implementation has a fast path that returns without even checking which waiting/waking API to use, as the same atomic variable with compatible states is used in all cases.
2020-12-14 16:41:14 +00:00
Guillaume Gomez 5d8b2a5bf1
Rollup merge of #79918 - woodruffw-forks:ww/doc-initializer-side-effects, r=dtolnay
doc(array,vec): add notes about side effects when empty-initializing

Copying some context from a conversation in the Rust discord:

* Both `vec![T; 0]` and `[T; 0]` are syntactically valid, and produce empty containers of their respective types

* Both *also* have side effects:

```rust
fn side_effect() -> String {
    println!("side effect!");

    "foo".into()
}

fn main() {
    println!("before!");

    let x = vec![side_effect(); 0];

    let y = [side_effect(); 0];

    println!("{:?}, {:?}", x, y);
}
```

produces:

```
before!
side effect!
side effect!
[], []
```

This PR just adds two small notes to each's documentation, warning users that side effects can occur.

I've also submitted a clippy proposal: https://github.com/rust-lang/rust-clippy/issues/6439
2020-12-14 14:43:44 +01:00
Yuki Okushi d559bb6707
Rollup merge of #79398 - pickfire:keyword, r=Dylan-DPC
Link loop/for keyword

Even though the reference already have all of these, I am just adding related keywords in the see also to let others easily click on the related keyword.
2020-12-13 11:05:30 +09:00
Ian Jackson 79c72f57d5 fixup! WriterPanicked: Use debug_struct 2020-12-12 18:39:30 +00:00
Ian Jackson 5ac431fb08
WriterPanicked: Use debug_struct
Co-authored-by: Ivan Tham <pickfire@riseup.net>
2020-12-12 13:37:29 +00:00
Ian Jackson 7fab9cb8ac bufwriter::WriterPanicked: Provide panicking example
Signed-off-by: Ian Jackson <ijackson@chiark.greenend.org.uk>
2020-12-12 12:34:48 +00:00
William Woodruff d986924eb1
doc: apply suggestions 2020-12-11 10:09:40 -05:00
bors a2e29d67c2 Auto merge of #79893 - RalfJung:forget-windows, r=oli-obk
Windows TLS: ManuallyDrop instead of mem::forget

The Windows TLS implementation still used `mem::forget` instead of `ManuallyDrop`, leading to the usual problem of "using" the `Box` when it should not be used any more.
2020-12-11 07:54:35 +00:00
Tyler Mandry 17ec4b8258
Rollup merge of #79809 - Eric-Arellano:split-once, r=matklad
Dogfood `str_split_once()`

Part of https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/74773.

Beyond increased clarity, this fixes some instances of a common confusion with how `splitn(2)` behaves: the first element will always be `Some()`, regardless of the delimiter, and even if the value is empty.

Given this code:

```rust
fn main() {
    let val = "...";
    let mut iter = val.splitn(2, '=');
    println!("Input: {:?}, first: {:?}, second: {:?}", val, iter.next(), iter.next());
}
```

We get:

```
Input: "no_delimiter", first: Some("no_delimiter"), second: None
Input: "k=v", first: Some("k"), second: Some("v")
Input: "=", first: Some(""), second: Some("")
```

Using `str_split_once()` makes more clear what happens when the delimiter is not found.
2020-12-10 21:33:08 -08:00
Tyler Mandry a8c19e1b48
Rollup merge of #79375 - vext01:kernel-copy-temps, r=bjorn3
Make the kernel_copy tests more robust/concurrent.

These tests write to the same filenames in /tmp and in some cases these files don't get cleaned up properly. This caused issues for us when different users run the tests on the same system, e.g.:

```
---- sys::unix::kernel_copy::tests::bench_file_to_file_copy stdout ----
thread 'sys::unix::kernel_copy::tests::bench_file_to_file_copy' panicked at 'called `Result::unwrap()` on an `Err` value: Os { code: 13, kind: PermissionDenied, message: "Permission denied" }', library/std/src/sys/unix/kernel_copy/tests.rs:71:10
---- sys::unix::kernel_copy::tests::bench_file_to_socket_copy stdout ----
thread 'sys::unix::kernel_copy::tests::bench_file_to_socket_copy' panicked at 'called `Result::unwrap()` on an `Err` value: Os { code: 13, kind: PermissionDenied, message: "Permission denied" }', library/std/src/sys/unix/kernel_copy/tests.rs💯10
```

Use `std::sys_common::io__test::tmpdir()` to solve this.

CC ``@the8472.``
2020-12-10 21:33:02 -08:00
Tyler Mandry 1b4ffe4705
Rollup merge of #77027 - termhn:mul_add_doc_change, r=m-ou-se
Improve documentation for `std::{f32,f64}::mul_add`

Makes it more clear that performance improvement is not guaranteed when using FMA, even when the target architecture supports it natively.
2020-12-10 21:32:59 -08:00
bors 8cef65fde3 Auto merge of #77801 - fusion-engineering-forks:pin-mutex, r=Mark-Simulacrum
Enforce no-move rule of ReentrantMutex using Pin and fix UB in stdio

A `sys_common::ReentrantMutex` may not be moved after initializing it with `.init()`. This was not enforced, but only stated as a requirement in the comments on the unsafe functions. This change enforces this no-moving rule using `Pin`, by changing `&self` to a `Pin` in the `init()` and `lock()` functions.

This uncovered a bug I introduced in #77154: stdio.rs (the only user of ReentrantMutex) called `init()` on its ReentrantMutexes while constructing them in the intializer of `SyncOnceCell::get_or_init`, which would move them afterwards. Interestingly, the ReentrantMutex unit tests already had the same bug, so this invalid usage has been tested on all (CI-tested) platforms for a long time. Apparently this doesn't break badly on any of the major platforms, but it does break the rules.\*

To be able to keep using SyncOnceCell, this adds a `SyncOnceCell::get_or_init_pin` function, which makes it possible to work with pinned values inside a (pinned) SyncOnceCell. Whether this function should be public or not and what its exact behaviour and interface should be if it would be public is something I'd like to leave for a separate issue or PR. In this PR, this function is internal-only and marked with `pub(crate)`.

\* Note: That bug is now included in 1.48, while this patch can only make it to ~~1.49~~ 1.50. We should consider the implications of 1.48 shipping with a wrong usage of `pthread_mutex_t` / `CRITICAL_SECTION` / .. which technically invokes UB according to their specification. The risk is very low, considering the objects are not 'used' (locked) before the move, and the ReentrantMutex unit tests have verified this works fine in practice.

Edit: This has been backported and included in 1.48. And soon 1.49 too.

---

In future changes, I want to push this usage of Pin further inside `sys` instead of only `sys_common`, and apply it to all 'unmovable' objects there (`Mutex`, `Condvar`, `RwLock`). Also, while `sys_common`'s mutexes and condvars are already taken care of by #77147 and #77648, its `RwLock` should still be made movable or get pinned.
2020-12-10 23:43:20 +00:00
William Woodruff 9cf2516251
doc(array,vec): add notes about side effects when empty-initializing 2020-12-10 17:47:28 -05:00
Michael Howell 08b70eda2c Fix fd test case 2020-12-10 15:05:22 -07:00
Michael Howell a50811a214 Add safety note to library/std/src/sys/unix/fd.rs
Co-authored-by: Elichai Turkel <elichai.turkel@gmail.com>
2020-12-10 13:31:52 -07:00
Michael Howell 59abdb6a7e Mark `-1` as an available niche for file descriptors
Based on discussion from https://internals.rust-lang.org/t/can-the-standard-library-shrink-option-file/12768,
the file descriptor -1 is chosen based on the POSIX API designs that use it as a sentinel to report errors.
A bigger niche could've been chosen, particularly on Linux, but would not necessarily be portable.

This PR also adds a test case to ensure that the -1 niche
(which is kind of hacky and has no obvious test case) works correctly.
It requires the "upper" bound, which is actually -1, to be expressed in two's complement.
2020-12-10 13:31:52 -07:00
Ralf Jung 594b451ccc Windows TLS: ManuallyDrop instead of mem::forget 2020-12-10 11:07:39 +01:00
bors e413d89aa7 Auto merge of #79274 - the8472:probe-eperm, r=nagisa
implement better availability probing for copy_file_range

Followup to https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/75428#discussion_r469616547

Previously syscall detection was overly pessimistic. Any attempt to copy to an immutable file (EPERM) would disable copy_file_range support for the whole process.

The change tries to copy_file_range on invalid file descriptors which will never run into the immutable file case and thus we can clearly distinguish syscall availability.
2020-12-10 03:11:27 +00:00
The8472 7647d03c33 Improve comment grammar 2020-12-09 21:31:37 +01:00
The8472 028754a2f7 implement better availability probing for copy_file_range
previously any attempt to copy to an immutable file (EPERM) would disable
copy_file_range support for the whole process.
2020-12-09 21:31:37 +01:00
bors f0f68778f7 Auto merge of #77611 - oli-obk:atomic_miri_leakage, r=nagisa
Directly use raw pointers in `AtomicPtr` store/load

I was unable to find any reason for this limitation in the latest source of LLVM or in the documentation [here](http://llvm.org/docs/Atomics.html#libcalls-atomic).

fixes https://github.com/rust-lang/miri/issues/1574
2020-12-09 19:53:23 +00:00
bors c16d52db77 Auto merge of #79387 - woodruffw-forks:ww/peer-cred-pid-macos, r=Amanieu
ext/ucred: Support PID in peer creds on macOS

This is a follow-up to https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/75148 (RFC: https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/42839).

The original PR used `getpeereid` on macOS and the BSDs, since they don't (generally) support the `SO_PEERCRED` mechanism that Linux supplies.

This PR splits the macOS/iOS implementation of `peer_cred()` from that of the BSDs, since macOS supplies the `LOCAL_PEERPID` sockopt as a source of the missing PID. It also adds a `cfg`-gated tests that ensures that platforms with support for PIDs in `UCred` have the expected data.
2020-12-09 17:27:35 +00:00
bors 2c56ea38b0 Auto merge of #78768 - mzabaluev:optimize-buf-writer, r=cramertj
Use is_write_vectored to optimize the write_vectored implementation for BufWriter

In case when the underlying writer does not have an efficient implementation `write_vectored`, the present implementation of
`write_vectored` for `BufWriter` may still forward vectored writes directly to the writer depending on the total length of the data. This misses the advantage of buffering, as the actually written slice may be small.

Provide an alternative code path for the non-vectored case, where the slices passed to `BufWriter` are coalesced in the buffer before being flushed to the underlying writer with plain `write` calls. The buffer is only bypassed if an individual slice's length is at least as large as the buffer.

Remove a FIXME comment referring to #72919 as the issue has been closed with an explanation provided.
2020-12-09 01:54:08 +00:00
Mara Bos 67c18fdec5 Use Pin for the 'don't move' requirement of ReentrantMutex.
The code in io::stdio before this change misused the ReentrantMutexes,
by calling init() on them and moving them afterwards. Now that
ReentrantMutex requires Pin for init(), this mistake is no longer easy
to make.
2020-12-08 22:57:57 +01:00
Mara Bos 8fe90966e1 Add (internal-only) SyncOnceCell::get_or_init_pin. 2020-12-08 22:57:50 +01:00
Mara Bos 9dc7f13c39 Remove unnecessary import of `crate::marker` in std::sys_common::remutex.
It was used for marker::Send, but Send is already in scope.
2020-12-08 22:57:49 +01:00
Mara Bos 2bc5d44ca9 Fix outdated comment about not needing to flush stderr. 2020-12-08 22:57:49 +01:00
Chai T. Rex f1b930d57c Improved documentation for HashMap/BTreeMap Entry's .or_insert_with_key method 2020-12-07 21:36:01 -05:00
Eric Arellano a3174de9ff Fix net.rs - rsplitn() returns a reverse iterator 2020-12-07 18:47:10 -07:00
Eric Arellano d2de69da2e Dogfood 'str_split_once()` in the std lib 2020-12-07 14:24:05 -07:00
Jethro Beekman 9703bb8192 Fix SGX CI, take 3
Broken in #79038
2020-12-07 15:22:34 +01:00
bors ddafcc0b66 Auto merge of #79650 - the8472:fix-take, r=dtolnay
Fix incorrect io::Take's limit resulting from io::copy specialization

The specialization introduced in #75272 fails to update `io::Take` wrappers after performing the copy syscalls which bypass those wrappers. The buffer flushing before the copy does update them correctly, but the bytes copied after the initial flush weren't subtracted.

The fix is to subtract the bytes copied from each `Take` in the chain of wrappers, even when an error occurs during the syscall loop. To do so the `CopyResult` enum now has to carry the bytes copied so far in the error case.
2020-12-06 01:15:37 +00:00
bors a5fbaed6c3 Auto merge of #79673 - ijackson:intoinnerintoinnererror, r=m-ou-se
Provide IntoInnerError::into_parts

Hi.  This is an updated version of the IntoInnerError bits of my previous portmanteau MR #78689.  Thanks to `@jyn514` and `@m-ou-se` for helpful comments there.

I have made this insta-stable since it seems like it will probably be uncontroversial, but that is definitely something that someone from the libs API team should be aware of and explicitly consider.

I included a tangentially-related commit providing documentation of the buffer full behaviiour of `&mut [u8] as Write`; the behaviour I am documenting is relied on by the doctest for `into_parts`.
2020-12-04 22:30:19 +00:00
Ian Jackson b777552167 IntoInnerError: Provide into_error
Signed-off-by: Ian Jackson <ijackson@chiark.greenend.org.uk>
2020-12-04 18:43:02 +00:00
Ian Jackson 19c7619dcd IntoInnerError: Provide into_parts
In particular, IntoIneerError only currently provides .error() which
returns a reference, not an owned value.  This is not helpful and
means that a caller of BufWriter::into_inner cannot acquire an owned
io::Error which seems quite wrong.

Signed-off-by: Ian Jackson <ijackson@chiark.greenend.org.uk>
2020-12-04 18:43:02 +00:00
Ian Jackson db5d697004 std: impl of `Write` for `&mut [u8]`: document the buffer full error
Signed-off-by: Ian Jackson <ijackson@chiark.greenend.org.uk>
2020-12-04 18:38:44 +00:00
Ian Jackson 381763185e BufWriter: Provide into_raw_parts
If something goes wrong, one might want to unpeel the layers of nested
Writers to perform recovery actions on the underlying writer, or reuse
its resources.

`into_inner` can be used for this when the inner writer is still
working.  But when the inner writer is broken, and returning errors,
`into_inner` simply gives you the error from flush, and the same
`Bufwriter` back again.

Here I provide the necessary function, which I have chosen to call
`into_raw_parts`.

I had to do something with `panicked`.  Returning it to the caller as
a boolean seemed rather bare.  Throwing the buffered data away in this
situation also seems unfriendly: maybe the programmer knows something
about the underlying writer and can recover somehow.

So I went for a custom Error.  This may be overkill, but it does have
the nice property that a caller who actually wants to look at the
buffered data, rather than simply extracting the inner writer, will be
told by the type system if they forget to handle the panicked case.

If a caller doesn't need the buffer, it can just be discarded.  That
WriterPanicked is a newtype around Vec<u8> means that hopefully the
layouts of the Ok and Err variants can be very similar, with just a
boolean discriminant.  So this custom error type should compile down
to nearly no code.

Signed-off-by: Ian Jackson <ijackson@chiark.greenend.org.uk>
2020-12-04 18:28:02 +00:00
Tim Diekmann 9274b37d99 Rename `AllocRef` to `Allocator` and `(de)alloc` to `(de)allocate` 2020-12-04 14:47:15 +01:00
Dylan DPC 88f0c72dc6
Rollup merge of #79611 - poliorcetics:use-std-in-docs, r=jyn514
Use more std:: instead of core:: in docs for consistency

``@rustbot`` label T-doc

Some cleanup work to use `std::` instead of `core::` in docs as much as possible. This helps with terminology and consistency, especially for newcomers from other languages that have often heard of `std` to describe the standard library but not of `core`.

Edit: I also added more intra doc links when I saw the opportunity.
2020-12-04 03:30:27 +01:00
Dylan DPC 6b42900e40
Rollup merge of #79602 - jethrogb:sgx-fix-79038, r=Mark-Simulacrum
Fix SGX CI

Broken in #79038
2020-12-04 03:30:25 +01:00
Guillaume Gomez 50eb3a89f8 Only deny doc_keyword in std and set it as "allow" by default 2020-12-03 16:48:17 +01:00
Edd Barrett 87c1fdbcfb Make the kernel_copy tests more robust/concurrent.
These tests write to the same filenames in /tmp and in some cases these
files don't get cleaned up properly. This caused issues for us when
different users run the tests on the same system, e.g.:

```
---- sys::unix::kernel_copy::tests::bench_file_to_file_copy stdout ----
thread 'sys::unix::kernel_copy::tests::bench_file_to_file_copy' panicked at 'called `Result::unwrap()` on an `Err` value: Os { code: 13, kind: PermissionDenied, message: "Permission denied" }', library/std/src/sys/unix/kernel_copy/tests.rs:71:10
---- sys::unix::kernel_copy::tests::bench_file_to_socket_copy stdout ----
thread 'sys::unix::kernel_copy::tests::bench_file_to_socket_copy' panicked at 'called `Result::unwrap()` on an `Err` value: Os { code: 13, kind: PermissionDenied, message: "Permission denied" }', library/std/src/sys/unix/kernel_copy/tests.rs💯10
```

Use `std::sys_common::io__test::tmpdir()` to solve this.
2020-12-03 13:49:24 +00:00
The8472 a9b1381b8d fix copy specialization not updating Take wrappers 2020-12-03 00:02:01 +01:00
The8472 9b390e73db update test to check Take limits after copying 2020-12-02 23:34:59 +01:00
bors af69066aa6 Auto merge of #69864 - LinkTed:master, r=Amanieu
unix: Extend UnixStream and UnixDatagram to send and receive file descriptors

Add the functions `recv_vectored_fds` and `send_vectored_fds` to `UnixDatagram` and `UnixStream`. With this functions `UnixDatagram` and `UnixStream` can send and receive file descriptors, by using `recvmsg` and `sendmsg` system call.
2020-12-02 17:36:29 +00:00
Alexis Bourget 4eb76fcc8e Use more std:: instead of core:: in docs for consistency, add more intra doc links 2020-12-02 00:41:53 +01:00
Guillaume Gomez 9e26fc60b1
Rollup merge of #79600 - nicokoch:kernel_copy_unixstream, r=m-ou-se
std::io: Use sendfile for UnixStream

`UnixStream` was forgotten in #75272 .

Benchmark yields the following results.
Before:
`running 1 test
test sys::unix::kernel_copy::tests::bench_file_to_uds_copy        ... bench:      54,399 ns/iter (+/- 6,817) = 2409 MB/s`

After:
`running 1 test
test sys::unix::kernel_copy::tests::bench_file_to_uds_copy        ... bench:      18,627 ns/iter (+/- 6,007) = 7036 MB/s`
2020-12-01 23:46:13 +01:00
Jethro Beekman b787d723fc Fix SGX CI
Broken in #79038
2020-12-01 18:15:00 +01:00
Nicolas Koch 59874516fa Leverage kernel copy for UnixStream
UDS can be a sendfile destination, just like TCP sockets.
2020-12-01 14:45:36 +01:00
Nicolas Koch eda4c63fdc Add benchmark for File to UnixStream copy 2020-12-01 14:44:40 +01:00
Mara Bos 2404409c6c
Rollup merge of #79444 - sasurau4:test/move-const-ip, r=matklad
Move const ip in ui test to unit test

Helps with #76268

r? ``@matklad``
2020-12-01 10:50:15 +00:00
Chai T. Rex 866ef87d3f Update rustc version that or_insert_with_key landed 2020-12-01 01:06:40 -05:00
Christiaan Dirkx be554c4101 Make ui test that are run-pass and do not test the compiler itself library tests 2020-11-30 02:47:32 +01:00
oli 79fb037cc5 Remove now-unnecessary `miri_static_root` invocation 2020-11-28 17:13:47 +00:00
Jonas Schievink 13375864ed
Rollup merge of #79383 - abdnh:patch-1, r=shepmaster
Fix bold code formatting in keyword docs
2020-11-28 15:58:21 +01:00
Jonas Schievink 772b1a6d79
Rollup merge of #78086 - poliorcetics:as-placeholder, r=Mark-Simulacrum
Improve doc for 'as _'

Fix #78042.

`@rustbot` modify labels: A-coercions T-doc
2020-11-28 15:58:13 +01:00
Ellen 9db1f42fa2 Stabilize unsafe_cell_get_mut 2020-11-28 00:30:26 +00:00
Christiaan Dirkx 4fcef4b157 Stabilize all stable methods of `Ipv4Addr`, `Ipv6Addr` and `IpAddr` as const
`Ipv4Addr`
 - `octets`
 - `is_loopback`
 - `is_private`
 - `is_link_local`
 - `is_multicast`
 - `is_broadcast`
 - `is_docmentation`
 - `to_ipv6_compatible`
 - `to_ipv6_mapped`

`Ipv6Addr`
 - `segments`
 - `is_unspecified`
 - `is_loopback`
 - `is_multicast`
 - `to_ipv4`

`IpAddr`
 - `is_unspecified`
 - `is_loopback`
 - `is_multicast`
2020-11-27 20:36:47 +01:00
Mara Bos 0523eeb8a3 Move {f32,f64}::clamp to core. 2020-11-27 19:15:51 +01:00
LinkTed 8983752c12 Add comment for the previous android bug fix 2020-11-26 18:54:13 +01:00
Daiki Ihara d4ee2f6dc5 Move const ip in ui test to unit test 2020-11-26 23:15:32 +09:00
Ivan Tham 2d4cfd0779 Add while loop keyword to see also
Suggested by withoutboats
2020-11-26 01:05:20 +08:00
bors ec039bd075 Auto merge of #79336 - camelid:rename-feature-oibit-to-auto, r=oli-obk
Rename `optin_builtin_traits` to `auto_traits`

They were originally called "opt-in, built-in traits" (OIBITs), but
people realized that the name was too confusing and a mouthful, and so
they were renamed to just "auto traits". The feature flag's name wasn't
updated, though, so that's what this PR does.

There are some other spots in the compiler that still refer to OIBITs,
but I don't think changing those now is worth it since they are internal
and not particularly relevant to this PR.

Also see <https://rust-lang.zulipchat.com/#narrow/stream/131828-t-compiler/topic/opt-in.2C.20built-in.20traits.20(auto.20traits).20feature.20name>.

r? `@oli-obk` (feel free to re-assign if you're not the right reviewer for this)
2020-11-25 07:25:19 +00:00
Ivan Tham 6b272e0231
Fix typo in keyword link
Co-authored-by: Camelid <camelidcamel@gmail.com>
2020-11-25 11:11:25 +08:00
Ivan Tham 872b5cd80a Link loop/for keyword 2020-11-25 11:00:40 +08:00
abdo 38cc998da0 Fix bold code formatting in keyword docs 2020-11-25 01:05:46 +03:00
LinkTed 9b9dd4aeea Bug fix for android platform, because of the wrong behavior of CMSG_NXTHDR 2020-11-24 22:15:04 +01:00
William Woodruff 3d8329f6fc
ext/ucred: fmt check 2020-11-24 14:55:35 -05:00
William Woodruff fe0bea2cc1
ext/ucred: Support PID in peer creds on macOS 2020-11-24 13:46:51 -05:00
Jonas Schievink ed5d539c62
Rollup merge of #79351 - Takashiidobe:keyword-docs-typo, r=m-ou-se
Fix typo in `keyword` docs for traits

This PR fixes a small typo in the `keyword_docs.rs` file, describing the differences between the 2015 and 2018 editions of traits.
2020-11-24 13:17:43 +01:00
bors 4167d731dc Auto merge of #78953 - mzohreva:mz/from_raw_fd, r=Mark-Simulacrum
Add Metadata in std::os::fortanix_sgx::io::FromRawFd

Needed for https://github.com/fortanix/rust-sgx/pull/291

cc `@jethrogb`
2020-11-24 03:12:20 +00:00
Camelid 810324d1f3 Rename `optin_builtin_traits` to `auto_traits`
They were originally called "opt-in, built-in traits" (OIBITs), but
people realized that the name was too confusing and a mouthful, and so
they were renamed to just "auto traits". The feature flag's name wasn't
updated, though, so that's what this PR does.

There are some other spots in the compiler that still refer to OIBITs,
but I don't think changing those now is worth it since they are internal
and not particularly relevant to this PR.

Also see <https://rust-lang.zulipchat.com/#narrow/stream/131828-t-compiler/topic/opt-in.2C.20built-in.20traits.20(auto.20traits).20feature.20name>.
2020-11-23 14:14:06 -08:00
bors d9a105fdd4 Auto merge of #78439 - lzutao:rm-clouldabi, r=Mark-Simulacrum
Drop support for all cloudabi targets

`cloudabi` is a tier-3 target, and [it is no longer being maintained upstream][no].

This PR drops supports for cloudabi targets. Those targets are:
* aarch64-unknown-cloudabi
* armv7-unknown-cloudabi
* i686-unknown-cloudabi
* x86_64-unknown-cloudabi

Since this drops supports for a target, I'd like somebody to tag `relnotes` label to this PR.

Some other issues:
* The tidy exception for `cloudabi` crate is still remained because
  * `parking_lot v0.9.0` and `parking_lot v0.10.2` depends on `cloudabi v0.0.3`.
  * `parking_lot v0.11.0` depends on `cloudabi v0.1.0`.

[no]: https://github.com/NuxiNL/cloudabi#note-this-project-is-unmaintained
2020-11-23 19:01:19 +00:00
takashiidobe c5c3d7bdf4 Fix typo in keyword docs for traits 2020-11-23 10:51:30 -05:00
Alexis Bourget e31e627238 Add doc for 'as _' about '_' and its possibilities and problems 2020-11-23 09:18:13 +01:00
bors 1823a87986 Auto merge of #76226 - CDirkx:const-ipaddr, r=dtolnay
Stabilize `IpAddr::is_ipv4` and `is_ipv6` as const

Insta-stabilize the methods `is_ipv4` and `is_ipv6` of `std::net::IpAddr` as const, in the same way as [PR#76198](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/76198).

Possible because of the recent stabilization of const control flow.

Part of #76225 and #76205.
2020-11-23 04:47:25 +00:00
bors f32459c7ba Auto merge of #79172 - a1phyr:cold_abort, r=Mark-Simulacrum
Add #[cold] attribute to `std::process::abort` and `alloc::alloc::handle_alloc_error`
2020-11-23 02:25:13 +00:00
Christiaan Dirkx 4613bc96a4 Bump version to 1.50.0 2020-11-23 01:40:26 +01:00
Christiaan Dirkx 3f8fdf83ff Stabilize `IpAddr::is_ipv4` and `is_ipv6` as const
Insta-stabilize the methods `is_ipv4` and `is_ipv6` of `IpAddr`.

Possible because of the recent stabilization of const control flow.

Also adds a test for these methods in a const context.
2020-11-23 01:33:46 +01:00
bors 32da90b431 Auto merge of #79319 - m-ou-se:rollup-d9n5viq, r=m-ou-se
Rollup of 10 pull requests

Successful merges:

 - #76941 (Add f{32,64}::is_subnormal)
 - #77697 (Split each iterator adapter and source into individual modules)
 - #78305 (Stabilize alloc::Layout const functions)
 - #78608 (Stabilize refcell_take)
 - #78793 (Clean up `StructuralEq` docs)
 - #79267 (BTreeMap: address namespace conflicts)
 - #79293 (Add test for eval order for a+=b)
 - #79295 (BTreeMap: fix minor testing mistakes in #78903)
 - #79297 (BTreeMap: swap the names of NodeRef::new and Root::new_leaf)
 - #79299 (Stabilise `then`)

Failed merges:

r? `@ghost`
`@rustbot` modify labels: rollup
2020-11-22 23:59:48 +00:00
Lzu Tao 6bfe27a3e0 Drop support for cloudabi targets 2020-11-22 17:11:41 -05:00
Mara Bos 41c033b2f7
Rollup merge of #79299 - varkor:stabilise-then, r=m-ou-se
Stabilise `then`

Stabilises the lazy variant of https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/64260 now that the FCP [has ended](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/64260#issuecomment-731636203).

I've kept the original feature gate `bool_to_option` for the strict variant (`then_some`), and created a new insta-stable feature gate `lazy_bool_to_option` for `then`.
2020-11-22 23:01:08 +01:00
bors a0d664bae6 Auto merge of #79219 - shepmaster:beta-bump, r=Mark-Simulacrum
Bump bootstrap compiler version

r? `@Mark-Simulacrum`

/cc `@pietroalbini`
2020-11-22 21:38:03 +00:00
ThinkChaos 5c6689baff Stabilize refcell_take 2020-11-22 20:13:31 +01:00
Mikhail Zabaluev 674dd623ee Reduce branching in write_vectored for BufWriter
Do what write does and optimize for the most likely case:
slices are much smaller than the buffer. If a slice does not fit
completely in the remaining capacity of the buffer, it is left out
rather than buffered partially. Special treatment is only left for
oversized slices that are written directly to the underlying writer.
2020-11-22 17:05:14 +02:00
Mikhail Zabaluev 00deeb35c8 Fix is_write_vectored in LineWriterShim
Now that BufWriter always claims to support vectored writes,
look through it at the wrapped writer to decide whether to
use vectored writes for LineWriter.
2020-11-22 17:05:14 +02:00
Mikhail Zabaluev 9fc44239ec Make is_write_vectored return true for BufWriter
BufWriter provides an efficient implementation of
write_vectored also when the underlying writer does not
support vectored writes.
2020-11-22 17:05:13 +02:00
Mikhail Zabaluev 53196a8bcf Optimize write_vectored for BufWriter
If the underlying writer does not support efficient vectored output,
do it differently: always try to coalesce the slices in the buffer
until one comes that does not fit entirely. Flush the buffer before
the first slice if needed.
2020-11-22 17:05:13 +02:00
varkor cf32afcf48 Stabilise `then` 2020-11-22 13:45:14 +00:00
bors 5d5ff84130 Auto merge of #77872 - Xaeroxe:stabilize-clamp, r=scottmcm
Stabilize clamp

Tracking issue: https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/44095

Clamp has been merged and unstable for about a year and a half now. How do we feel about stabilizing this?
2020-11-22 10:50:04 +00:00
bors 3adedb8f4c Auto merge of #79237 - alexcrichton:update-backtrace, r=Mark-Simulacrum
std: Update the bactrace crate submodule

This commit updates the `library/backtrace` submodule which primarily
pulls in support for split-debuginfo on macOS, avoiding the need for
`dsymutil` to get run to get line numbers and filenames in backtraces.
2020-11-21 18:05:07 +00:00
bors 502c477b34 Auto merge of #79003 - petrochenkov:innertest, r=estebank
rustc_expand: Mark inner `#![test]` attributes as soft-unstable

Custom inner attributes are feature gated (https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/54726) except for attributes having name `test` literally, which are not gated for historical reasons.

`#![test]` is an inner proc macro attribute, so it has all the issues described in https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/54726 too.
This PR gates it with the `soft_unstable` lint.
2020-11-21 05:52:16 +00:00
Alex Crichton f99410bb4b std: Update the backtrace crate submodule
This commit updates the `library/backtrace` submodule which primarily
pulls in support for split-debuginfo on macOS, avoiding the need for
`dsymutil` to get run to get line numbers and filenames in backtraces.
2020-11-20 11:56:07 -08:00
Jacob Kiesel fb6ceac46b We missed 1.49.0, so bump version to 1.50.0 2020-11-20 10:37:22 -07:00
Vadim Petrochenkov 993bb072ff rustc_expand: Mark inner `#![test]` attributes as soft-unstable 2020-11-20 19:35:03 +03:00
bors c9c57fadc4 Auto merge of #79205 - rust-lang:jdm-patch-1, r=m-ou-se
Extend meta parameters to all generated code in compat_fn.

Fixes https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/79203. This addresses a regression from 7e2032390c for UWP targets.
2020-11-20 13:42:44 +00:00
bors 172acf8f61 Auto merge of #79196 - RalfJung:syscall, r=m-ou-se
unix/weak: pass arguments to syscall at the given type

Given that we know the type the argument should have, it seems a bit strange not to use that information.

r? `@m-ou-se` `@cuviper`
2020-11-20 08:46:42 +00:00
bors 74285eb3a8 Auto merge of #78088 - fusion-engineering-forks:panic-fmt-lint, r=estebank
Add lint for panic!("{}")

This adds a lint that warns about `panic!("{}")`.

`panic!(msg)` invocations with a single argument use their argument as panic payload literally, without using it as a format string. The same holds for `assert!(expr, msg)`.

This lints checks if `msg` is a string literal (after expansion), and warns in case it contained braces. It suggests to insert `"{}", ` to use the message literally, or to add arguments to use it as a format string.

![image](https://user-images.githubusercontent.com/783247/96643867-79eb1080-1328-11eb-8d4e-a5586837c70a.png)

This lint is also a good starting point for adding warnings about `panic!(not_a_string)` later, once [`panic_any()`](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/74622) becomes a stable alternative.
2020-11-20 03:40:20 +00:00
Jake Goulding dcef5ff372 Bump bootstrap compiler version 2020-11-19 19:23:36 -05:00
Ralf Jung d8d763da86 unix/weak: pass arguments to syscall at the given type 2020-11-20 00:23:05 +01:00
bors 09c9c9f7da Auto merge of #79060 - dtolnay:symlinkarg, r=Mark-Simulacrum
Disambiguate symlink argument names

The current argument naming in the following standard library functions is horribly ambiguous.

- std::os::unix::fs::symlink: https://doc.rust-lang.org/1.47.0/std/os/unix/fs/fn.symlink.html
- std::os::windows::fs::symlink_file: https://doc.rust-lang.org/1.47.0/std/os/windows/fs/fn.symlink_file.html
- std::os::windows::fs::symlink_dir: https://doc.rust-lang.org/1.47.0/std/os/windows/fs/fn.symlink_dir.html

**Notice that Swift uses one of the same names we do (`dst`) to refer to the opposite thing.**

<br>

| | the&nbsp;one&nbsp;that&nbsp;exists | the&nbsp;one&nbsp;that&nbsp;is<br>being&nbsp;created | reference |
| --- | --- | --- | --- |
| Rust | `src` | `dst` | |
| Swift | `withDestinationPath`<br>`destPath` | `atPath`<br>`path` | <sub>https://developer.apple.com/documentation/foundation/filemanager/1411007-createsymboliclink</sub> |
| D | `original` | `link` | <sub>https://dlang.org/library/std/file/symlink.html</sub> |
| Go | `oldname` | `newname` | <sub>https://golang.org/pkg/os/#Symlink</sub> |
| C++| `target` | `link` | <sub>https://en.cppreference.com/w/cpp/filesystem/create_symlink</sub> |
| POSIX | `path1` | `path2` | <sub>https://pubs.opengroup.org/onlinepubs/9699919799/functions/symlink.html</sub> |
| Linux | `target` | `linkpath` | <sub>https://man7.org/linux/man-pages/man2/symlink.2.html</sub> |

Out of these I happen to like D's argument names and am proposing that we adopt them.
2020-11-19 22:26:32 +00:00
Josh Matthews 24bbca4917
Extend meta parameters to all generated code in compat_fn. 2020-11-19 11:43:50 -05:00
bors bf469eb6c2 Auto merge of #79002 - est31:backtrace_colno, r=dtolnay
Add column number support to Backtrace

Backtrace frames might include column numbers.
Print them if they are included.
2020-11-19 06:00:49 +00:00
Taiki Endo 517d462e40 Make std::future a re-export of core::future 2020-11-19 03:39:16 +09:00
Benoît du Garreau b4c91f9a52 Add #[cold] to `abort` and `handle_alloc_error` 2020-11-18 18:15:03 +01:00
Mara Bos 5a9104fcdd
Rollup merge of #79151 - wchargin:wchargin-io-write-docs, r=jyn514
Fix typo in `std::io::Write` docs

These referred to a “`Write`er”—extra *e*. Presumably a copy-paste
holdover from “`Read`er”.

Test Plan:
Running ``git grep '`\?[Ww]rite`\?er'`` no longer finds any results.

wchargin-branch: io-write-docs
2020-11-18 15:46:38 +01:00
Mara Bos ad6fd9b037
Rollup merge of #79039 - thomcc:weakly-relaxing, r=Amanieu
Tighten the bounds on atomic Ordering in std::sys::unix::weak::Weak

This moves reading this from multiple SeqCst reads to Relaxed read + Acquire fence if we are actually going to use the data.

Would love to avoid the Acquire fence, but doing so would need Ordering::Consume, which neither Rust, nor LLVM supports (a shame, since this fence is hardly free on ARM, which is what I was hoping to improve).

r? ``@Amanieu`` (Sorry for always picking you, but I know a lot of people wouldn't feel comfortable reviewing atomic ordering changes)
2020-11-18 15:46:27 +01:00
Mara Bos 61134aa54c
Rollup merge of #78785 - cuviper:weak-getrandom, r=m-ou-se
linux: try to use libc getrandom to allow interposition

We'll try to use a weak `getrandom` symbol first, because that allows
things like `LD_PRELOAD` interposition. For example, perf measurements
might want to disable randomness to get reproducible results. If the
weak symbol is not found, we fall back to a raw `SYS_getrandom` call.
2020-11-18 15:46:23 +01:00
Mara Bos c7e9029b80
Rollup merge of #78361 - DevJPM:master, r=workingjubilee
Updated the list of white-listed target features for x86

This PR both adds in-source documentation on what to look out for when adding a new (X86) feature set and [adds all that are detectable at run-time in Rust stable as of 1.27.0](https://github.com/rust-lang/stdarch/blob/master/crates/std_detect/src/detect/arch/x86.rs).

This should only enable the use of the corresponding LLVM intrinsics.
Actual intrinsics need to be added separately in rust-lang/stdarch.

It also re-orders the run-time-detect test statements to be more consistent
with the actual list of intrinsics whitelisted and removes underscores not present
in the actual names (which might be mistaken as being part of the name)

The reference for LLVM's feature names used is [this file](https://github.com/llvm/llvm-project/blob/master/llvm/include/llvm/Support/X86TargetParser.def).

This PR was motivated as the compiler end's part for allowing #67329 to be adressed over on rust-lang/stdarch
2020-11-18 15:46:19 +01:00
William Chargin bdaa76cfde Fix typo in `std::io::Write` docs
These referred to a “`Write`er”—extra *e*. Presumably a copy-paste
holdover from “`Read`er”.

Test Plan:
Running ``git grep '`\?[Ww]rite`\?er'`` no longer finds any results.

wchargin-branch: io-write-docs
2020-11-17 15:32:23 -08:00
bors efcb3b3920 Auto merge of #79128 - m-ou-se:rollup-lzz1dym, r=m-ou-se
Rollup of 9 pull requests

Successful merges:

 - #77939 (Ensure that the source code display is working with DOS backline)
 - #78138 (Upgrade dlmalloc to version 0.2)
 - #78967 (Make codegen tests compatible with extra inlining)
 - #79027 (Limit storage duration of inlined always live locals)
 - #79077 (document that __rust_alloc is also magic to our LLVM fork)
 - #79088 (clarify `span_label` documentation)
 - #79097 (Code block invalid html tag lint)
 - #79105 (std: Fix test `symlink_hard_link` on Windows)
 - #79107 (build-manifest: strip newline from rustc version)

Failed merges:

r? `@ghost`
`@rustbot` modify labels: rollup
2020-11-17 09:19:55 +00:00
Mara Bos a207801551
Rollup merge of #79105 - petrochenkov:winlink, r=shepmaster
std: Fix test `symlink_hard_link` on Windows

The test was introduced in https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/78026 and fails depending on Windows version and admin rights.
Other similar tests check for symlink creation permissions before doing anything, this PR performs the same check for `symlink_hard_link` as well.
2020-11-17 10:06:29 +01:00
Mara Bos d6da5254a0
Rollup merge of #78138 - fortanix:raoul/dlmalloc0.2, r=Mark-Simulacrum
Upgrade dlmalloc to version 0.2

In preparation of adding dynamic memory management support for SGXv2-enabled platforms, the dlmalloc crate has been refactored. More specifically, support has been added to implement platform specification outside of the dlmalloc crate. (see https://github.com/alexcrichton/dlmalloc-rs/pull/15)

This PR upgrades dlmalloc to version 0.2 for the `wasm` and `sgx` targets.

As the dlmalloc changes have received a positive review, but have not been merged yet, this PR contains a commit to prevent tidy from aborting CI prematurely.

cc: `@jethrogb`
2020-11-17 10:06:16 +01:00
bors 54508a26eb Auto merge of #78924 - bjorn3:less_sysroot_build_scripts, r=Mark-Simulacrum
Make the libstd build script smaller

Of all sysroot crates currently only compiler_builtins, miniz_oxide and std require a build script. compiler_builtins uses to conditionally enable certain features and possibly compile a C version ([source](63ccaf11f0/build.rs)), miniz_oxide only uses it to detect if liballoc is supported as the MSRV is 1.34.0 instead of the 1.36.0 which stabilized liballoc ([source](28514ec09f/miniz_oxide/build.rs)). std now only uses it to enable `freebsd12` when the `RUST_STD_FREEBSD_12_ABI` env var is set, to determine if `restricted-std` should be set, to set the `STD_ENV_ARCH` env var identical to `CARGO_CFG_TARGET_ARCH`, and to unconditionally enable `backtrace_in_libstd`.

If all build scripts were to be removed, it would be possible for rustc to completely compile it's own sysroot. It currently requires a rustc version that already has an available libstd to compile the build scripts. If rustc can completely compile it's own sysroot, rustbuild could be simplified to not forcefully use the bootstrap compiler for build scripts.

`@rustbot` modify labels: +T-compiler +libs-impl
2020-11-17 06:37:59 +00:00
Josh Stone cd22381daa Use syscall! for copy_file_range too 2020-11-16 11:31:12 -08:00
Josh Stone a035626eb5 Try weak symbols for all linux syscall! wrappers 2020-11-16 11:26:49 -08:00
Josh Stone 7a15f026f2 linux: try to use libc getrandom to allow interposition
We'll try to use a weak `getrandom` symbol first, because that allows
things like `LD_PRELOAD` interposition. For example, perf measurements
might want to disable randomness to get reproducible results. If the
weak symbol is not found, we fall back to a raw `SYS_getrandom` call.
2020-11-16 11:26:49 -08:00
Vadim Petrochenkov a5bc780b50 std: Fix test `got_symlink_permission` on Windows 2020-11-16 21:09:26 +03:00
Mara Bos 11ce918c75
Rollup merge of #78714 - m-ou-se:simplify-local-streams, r=KodrAus
Simplify output capturing

This is a sequence of incremental improvements to the unstable/internal `set_panic` and `set_print` mechanism used by the `test` crate:

1. Remove the `LocalOutput` trait and use `Arc<Mutex<dyn Write>>` instead of `Box<dyn LocalOutput>`. In practice, all implementations of `LocalOutput` were just `Arc<Mutex<..>>`. This simplifies some logic and removes all custom `Sink` implementations such as `library/test/src/helpers/sink.rs`. Also removes a layer of indirection, as the outermost `Box` is now gone. It also means that locking now happens per `write_fmt`, not per individual `write` within. (So `"{} {}\n"` now results in one `lock()`, not four or more.)

2. Since in all cases the `dyn Write`s were just `Vec<u8>`s, replace the type with `Arc<Mutex<Vec<u8>>>`. This simplifies things more, as error handling and flushing can be removed now. This also removes the hack needed in the default panic handler to make this work with `::realstd`, as (unlike `Write`) `Vec<u8>` is from `alloc`, not `std`.

3. Replace the `RefCell`s by regular `Cell`s. The `RefCell`s were mostly used as `mem::replace(&mut *cell.borrow_mut(), something)`, which is just `Cell::replace`. This removes an unecessary bookkeeping and makes the code a bit easier to read.

4. Merge `set_panic` and `set_print` into a single `set_output_capture`. Neither the test crate nor rustc (the only users of this feature) have a use for using these separately. Merging them simplifies things even more. This uses a new function name and feature name, to make it clearer this is internal and not supposed to be used by other crates.

Might be easier to review per commit.
2020-11-16 17:26:27 +01:00
Mara Bos 5bbf75da78
Rollup merge of #77691 - exrook:rename-layouterr, r=KodrAus
Rename/Deprecate LayoutErr in favor of LayoutError

Implements rust-lang/wg-allocators#73.

This patch renames LayoutErr to LayoutError, and uses a type alias to support users using the old name.

The new name will be instantly stable in release 1.49 (current nightly), the type alias will become deprecated in release 1.51 (so that when the current nightly is 1.51, 1.49 will be stable).

This is the only error type in `std` that ends in `Err` rather than `Error`, if this PR lands all stdlib error types will end in `Error` 🥰
2020-11-16 17:26:17 +01:00
bjorn3 6f3872a14c Make the libstd build script smaller
Remove all rustc-link-lib from the std build script. Also remove use of
feature = "restricted-std" where not necessary.
2020-11-15 16:17:21 +01:00
est31 43bfbb10bf Add column number support to Backtrace
Backtrace frames might include column numbers.
Print them if they are included.
2020-11-15 13:09:56 +01:00
bors 0468845924 Auto merge of #78472 - hermitcore:builtins, r=Mark-Simulacrum
add options to use optimized and mangled compiler builtins

In principle the compiler builtin features are also offered to alloc and std.
2020-11-15 10:37:11 +00:00
Stefan Lankes 6de51252e0
add options to use optimized and mangled compiler builtins 2020-11-15 08:23:31 +01:00
Dylan DPC d57212d49e
Rollup merge of #78988 - alexcrichton:one-more-intrinsic, r=sfackler
Fix an intrinsic invocation on threaded wasm

This looks like it was forgotten to get updated in #74482 and wasm with
threads isn't built on CI so we didn't catch this by accident.
2020-11-15 03:02:57 +01:00
David Tolnay 29128a5aa2
Disambiguate symlink argument names 2020-11-14 14:46:14 -08:00
bors 30e49a9ead Auto merge of #75272 - the8472:spec-copy, r=KodrAus
specialize io::copy to use copy_file_range, splice or sendfile

Fixes #74426.
Also covers #60689 but only as an optimization instead of an official API.

The specialization only covers std-owned structs so it should avoid the problems with #71091

Currently linux-only but it should be generalizable to other unix systems that have sendfile/sosplice and similar.

There is a bit of optimization potential around the syscall count. Right now it may end up doing more syscalls than the naive copy loop when doing short (<8KiB) copies between file descriptors.

The test case executes the following:

```
[pid 103776] statx(3, "", AT_STATX_SYNC_AS_STAT|AT_EMPTY_PATH, STATX_ALL, {stx_mask=STATX_ALL|STATX_MNT_ID, stx_attributes=0, stx_mode=S_IFREG|0644, stx_size=17, ...}) = 0
[pid 103776] write(4, "wxyz", 4)        = 4
[pid 103776] write(4, "iklmn", 5)       = 5
[pid 103776] copy_file_range(3, NULL, 4, NULL, 5, 0) = 5

```

0-1 `stat` calls to identify the source file type. 0 if the type can be inferred from the struct from which the FD was extracted
𝖬 `write` to drain the `BufReader`/`BufWriter` wrappers. only happen when buffers are present. 𝖬 ≾ number of wrappers present. If there is a write buffer it may absorb the read buffer contents first so only result in a single write. Vectored writes would also be an option but that would require more invasive changes to `BufWriter`.
𝖭 `copy_file_range`/`splice`/`sendfile` until file size, EOF or the byte limit from `Take` is reached. This should generally be *much* more efficient than the read-write loop and also have other benefits such as DMA offload or extent sharing.

## Benchmarks

```

OLD

test io::tests::bench_file_to_file_copy         ... bench:      21,002 ns/iter (+/- 750) = 6240 MB/s    [ext4]
test io::tests::bench_file_to_file_copy         ... bench:      35,704 ns/iter (+/- 1,108) = 3671 MB/s  [btrfs]
test io::tests::bench_file_to_socket_copy       ... bench:      57,002 ns/iter (+/- 4,205) = 2299 MB/s
test io::tests::bench_socket_pipe_socket_copy   ... bench:     142,640 ns/iter (+/- 77,851) = 918 MB/s

NEW

test io::tests::bench_file_to_file_copy         ... bench:      14,745 ns/iter (+/- 519) = 8889 MB/s    [ext4]
test io::tests::bench_file_to_file_copy         ... bench:       6,128 ns/iter (+/- 227) = 21389 MB/s   [btrfs]
test io::tests::bench_file_to_socket_copy       ... bench:      13,767 ns/iter (+/- 3,767) = 9520 MB/s
test io::tests::bench_socket_pipe_socket_copy   ... bench:      26,471 ns/iter (+/- 6,412) = 4951 MB/s
```
2020-11-14 12:01:55 +00:00
Thom Chiovoloni 55d7f736d8 Tighten the bounds on atomic Ordering in std::sys::unix::weak 2020-11-13 19:15:51 -08:00
The8472 bbfa92c82d Always handle EOVERFLOW by falling back to the generic copy loop
Previously EOVERFLOW handling was only applied for io::copy specialization
but not for fs::copy sharing the same code.

Additionally we lower the chunk size to 1GB since we have a user report
that older kernels may return EINVAL when passing 0x8000_0000
but smaller values succeed.
2020-11-13 22:38:27 +01:00
The8472 4854d418a5 do direct splice syscall and probe availability to get android builds to work
Android builds use feature level 14, the libc wrapper for splice is gated
on feature level 21+ so we have to invoke the syscall directly.
Additionally the emulator doesn't seem to support it so we also have to
add ENOSYS checks.
2020-11-13 22:38:27 +01:00
The8472 3dfc377aa1 move sendfile/splice/copy_file_range into kernel_copy module 2020-11-13 22:38:27 +01:00
The8472 888b1031bc limit visibility of copy offload helpers to sys::unix module 2020-11-13 22:38:27 +01:00
The8472 18bfe2a66b move copy specialization tests to their own module 2020-11-13 22:38:27 +01:00
The8472 7f5d2722af move copy specialization into sys::unix module 2020-11-13 22:38:23 +01:00
The8472 ad9b07c7e5 add benchmarks 2020-11-13 19:46:37 +01:00
The8472 46e7fbe60b reduce syscalls by inferring FD types based on source struct instead of calling stat()
also adds handling for edge-cases involving large sparse files where sendfile could fail with EOVERFLOW
2020-11-13 19:46:35 +01:00
The8472 0624730d9e add forwarding specializations for &mut variants
`impl Write for &mut T where T: Write`, thus the same should
apply to the specialization traits
2020-11-13 19:45:38 +01:00
The8472 cd3bddc044 prioritize sendfile over splice since it results in fewer context switches when sending to pipes
splice returns to userspace when the pipe is full, sendfile
just blocks until it's done, this can achieve much higher throughput
2020-11-13 19:45:38 +01:00
The8472 67a6059aa5 move tests module into separate file 2020-11-13 19:45:38 +01:00
The8472 5eb88fa5c7 hide unused exports on other platforms 2020-11-13 19:45:38 +01:00
The8472 16236470c1 specialize io::copy to use copy_file_range, splice or sendfile
Currently it only applies to linux systems. It can be extended to make use
of similar syscalls on other unix systems.
2020-11-13 19:45:27 +01:00
Guillaume Gomez ef32ef7baf
Rollup merge of #77996 - tkaitchuck:master, r=m-ou-se
Doc change: Remove mention of `fnv` in HashMap

Disclaimer: I am the author of [aHash](https://github.com/tkaitchuck/aHash).

This changes the Rustdoc in `HashMap` from mentioning the `fnv` crate to mentioning the `aHash` crate, as an alternative `Hasher` implementation.

### Why

Fnv [has poor hash quality](https://github.com/rurban/smhasher), is [slow for larger keys](https://github.com/tkaitchuck/aHash/blob/master/compare/readme.md#speed), and does not provide dos resistance, because it is unkeyed (this can also cause [other problems](https://accidentallyquadratic.tumblr.com/post/153545455987/rust-hash-iteration-reinsertion)).

Fnv has acceptable performance for integers and has very poor performance with keys >32 bytes. This is the reason it was removed from the standard library in https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/37229 .

Because regardless of which dimension you value, there are better alternatives, it does not make sense for anyone to consider using `fnv`.

The text mentioning `fnv` in the standard library continues to create confusion: https://github.com/rust-lang/hashbrown/issues/153  https://github.com/rust-lang/hashbrown/issues/9 . There are also a number of [crates using it](https://crates.io/crates/fnv/reverse_dependencies) a great many of which are hashing strings (Which is when Fnv is the [worst](https://github.com/cbreeden/fxhash#benchmarks), [possible](https://github.com/tkaitchuck/aHash#speed), [choice](http://cglab.ca/~abeinges/blah/hash-rs/).)

I think aHash makes the most sense to mention as an alternative because it is the most credible option (in my obviously biased opinion). It offers [good performance on numbers and strings](https://github.com/tkaitchuck/aHash/blob/master/compare/readme.md#speed), is [of high quality](https://github.com/tkaitchuck/aHash#hash-quality), and [provides dos resistance](https://github.com/tkaitchuck/aHash/wiki/How-aHash-is-resists-DOS-attacks). It is popular (see [stats](https://crates.io/crates/ahash)) and is the default hasher for [hashbrown](https://crates.io/crates/hashbrown) and [dashmap](https://crates.io/crates/dashmap) which are the most popular alternative hashmaps. Finally it does not have any of the [`gotcha` cases](https://github.com/tkaitchuck/aHash#fxhash) that `FxHash` suffers from. (Which is the other popular hashing option when DOS attacks are not a concern)

Signed-off-by: Tom Kaitchuck <tom.kaitchuck@emc.com>
2020-11-13 15:26:10 +01:00
Tom Kaitchuck 4e5848349c
Update library/std/src/collections/hash/map.rs
Co-authored-by: Mara Bos <m-ou.se@m-ou.se>
2020-11-12 20:14:57 -08:00
Raoul Strackx 292f15ce87 Upgrading dlmalloc to 0.2.1 2020-11-12 21:40:52 +01:00
Mohsen Zohrevandi 084b0da933 Add missing stability attribute 2020-11-12 09:11:05 -08:00
Alex Crichton 010265a439 Fix an intrinsic invocation on threaded wasm
This looks like it was forgotten to get updated in #74482 and wasm with
threads isn't built on CI so we didn't catch this by accident.
2020-11-12 07:23:00 -08:00
bors 55794e4396 Auto merge of #78965 - jryans:emscripten-threads-libc, r=kennytm
Update thread and futex APIs to work with Emscripten

This updates the thread and futex APIs in `std` to match the APIs exposed by
Emscripten. This allows threads to run on `wasm32-unknown-emscripten` and the
thread parker to compile without errors related to the missing `futex` module.

To make use of this, Rust code must be compiled with `-C target-feature=atomics`
and Emscripten must link with `-pthread`.

I have confirmed this works well locally when building multithreaded crates.
Attempting to enable `std` thread tests currently fails for seemingly obscure
reasons and Emscripten is currently disabled in CI, so further work is needed to
have proper test coverage here.
2020-11-12 05:52:17 +00:00
J. Ryan Stinnett bf3be09ee8 Fix timeout conversion 2020-11-12 03:40:15 +00:00
J. Ryan Stinnett 951576051b Update thread and futex APIs to work with Emscripten
This updates the thread and futex APIs in `std` to match the APIs exposed by
Emscripten. This allows threads to run on `wasm32-unknown-emscripten` and the
thread parker to compile without errors related to the missing `futex` module.

To make use of this, Rust code must be compiled with `-C target-feature=atomics`
and Emscripten must link with `-pthread`.

I have confirmed this works well locally when building multithreaded crates.
Attempting to enable `std` thread tests currently fails for seemingly obscure
reasons and Emscripten is currently disabled in CI, so further work is needed to
have proper test coverage here.
2020-11-12 01:41:49 +00:00
Jonas Schievink 62f0a78056
Rollup merge of #78216 - workingjubilee:duration-zero, r=m-ou-se
Duration::zero() -> Duration::ZERO

In review for #72790, whether or not a constant or a function should be favored for `#![feature(duration_zero)]` was seen as an open question. In https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/73544#issuecomment-691701670 an invitation was opened to either stabilize the methods or propose a switch to the constant value, supplemented with reasoning. Followup comments suggested community preference leans towards the const ZERO, which would be reason enough.

ZERO also "makes sense" beside existing associated consts for Duration. It is ever so slightly awkward to have a series of constants specifying 1 of various units but leave 0 as a method, especially when they are side-by-side in code. It seems unintuitive for the one non-dynamic value (that isn't from Default) to be not-a-const, which could hurt discoverability of the associated constants overall. Elsewhere in `std`, methods for obtaining a constant value were even deprecated, as seen with [std::u32::min_value](https://doc.rust-lang.org/std/primitive.u32.html#method.min_value).

Most importantly, ZERO costs less to use. A match supports a const pattern, but const fn can only be used if evaluated through a const context such as an inline `const { const_fn() }` or a `const NAME: T = const_fn()` declaration elsewhere. Likewise, while https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/73544#issuecomment-691949373 notes `Duration::zero()` can optimize to a constant value, "can" is not "will". Only const contexts have a strong promise of such. Even without that in mind, the comment in question still leans in favor of the constant for simplicity. As it costs less for a developer to use, may cost less to optimize, and seems to have more of a community consensus for it, the associated const seems best.

r? ```@LukasKalbertodt```
2020-11-11 20:58:52 +01:00
Mohsen Zohrevandi d56969656e Add Metadata in std::os::fortanix_sgx::io::FromRawFd 2020-11-11 11:00:59 -08:00
Nicholas-Baron 261ca04c92 Changed unwrap_or to unwrap_or_else in some places.
The discussion seems to have resolved that this lint is a bit "noisy" in
that applying it in all places would result in a reduction in
readability.

A few of the trivial functions (like `Path::new`) are fine to leave
outside of closures.

The general rule seems to be that anything that is obviously an
allocation (`Box`, `Vec`, `vec![]`) should be in a closure, even if it
is a 0-sized allocation.
2020-11-10 20:07:47 -08:00
Mara Bos aff7bd66e8 Merge set_panic and set_print into set_output_capture.
There were no use cases for setting them separately.
Merging them simplifies some things.
2020-11-10 21:58:13 +01:00
Mara Bos 08b7cb79e0 Use Cell instead of RefCell for LOCAL_{STDOUT,STDERR}. 2020-11-10 21:58:13 +01:00
Mara Bos f534b75f05 Use Vec<u8> for LOCAL_STD{OUT,ERR} instead of dyn Write.
It was only ever used with Vec<u8> anyway. This simplifies some things.

- It no longer needs to be flushed, because that's a no-op anyway for
  a Vec<u8>.

- Writing to a Vec<u8> never fails.

- No #[cfg(test)] code is needed anymore to use `realstd` instead of
  `std`, because Vec comes from alloc, not std (like Write).
2020-11-10 21:58:09 +01:00
Mara Bos 72e96604c0 Remove io::LocalOutput and use Arc<Mutex<dyn>> for local streams. 2020-11-10 21:57:05 +01:00
hyd-dev 70e175b551
Add missing newline to error message of the default OOM hook 2020-11-10 00:15:07 +08:00
Dylan DPC a8beaa3b3c
Rollup merge of #78878 - shepmaster:intersecting-ignores, r=Mark-Simulacrum
Avoid overlapping cfg attributes when both macOS and aarch64

r? ``@Mark-Simulacrum``
2020-11-09 01:13:48 +01:00
Dylan DPC 41134be153
Rollup merge of #78026 - sunfishcode:symlink-hard-link, r=dtolnay
Define `fs::hard_link` to not follow symlinks.

POSIX leaves it [implementation-defined] whether `link` follows symlinks.
In practice, for example, on Linux it does not and on FreeBSD it does.
So, switch to `linkat`, so that we can pick a behavior rather than
depending on OS defaults.

Pick the option to not follow symlinks. This is somewhat arbitrary, but
seems the less surprising choice because hard linking is a very
low-level feature which requires the source and destination to be on
the same mounted filesystem, and following a symbolic link could end
up in a different mounted filesystem.

[implementation-defined]: https://pubs.opengroup.org/onlinepubs/9699919799/functions/link.html
2020-11-09 01:13:28 +01:00
Jake Goulding b13817a795 Avoid overlapping cfg attributes when both macOS and aarch64 2020-11-08 09:43:51 -05:00
Mara Bos 96975e515a
Rollup merge of #78852 - camelid:intra-doc-bonanza, r=jyn514
Convert a bunch of intra-doc links

An intra-doc link bonanza!

This was accomplished using a bunch of trial-and-error with sed.
2020-11-08 13:36:28 +01:00
Mara Bos 77f333b304
Rollup merge of #78811 - a1phyr:const_io_structs, r=dtolnay
Make some std::io functions `const`

Tracking issue: #78812

Make the following functions `const`:
- `io::Cursor::new`
- `io::Cursor::get_ref`
- `io::Cursor::position`
- `io::empty`
- `io::repeat`
- `io::sink`

r? `````@dtolnay`````
2020-11-08 13:36:19 +01:00
Mara Bos eef9951e44
Rollup merge of #78572 - de-vri-es:bsd-cloexec, r=m-ou-se
Use SOCK_CLOEXEC and accept4() on more platforms.

This PR enables the use of `SOCK_CLOEXEC` and `accept4` on more platforms.

-----

Android uses the linux kernel, so it should also support it.

DragonflyBSD introduced them in 4.4 (December 2015):
https://www.dragonflybsd.org/release44/

FreeBSD introduced them in 10.0 (January 2014):
https://wiki.freebsd.org/AtomicCloseOnExec

Illumos introduced them in a commit in April 2013, not sure when it was released. It is quite possible that is has always been in Illumos:
5dbfd19ad5
https://illumos.org/man/3socket/socket
https://illumos.org/man/3socket/accept4

NetBSD introduced them in 6.0 (Oktober 2012) and 8.0 (July 2018):
https://man.netbsd.org/NetBSD-6.0/socket.2
https://man.netbsd.org/NetBSD-8.0/accept.2

OpenBSD introduced them in 5.7 (May 2015):
https://man.openbsd.org/socket https://man.openbsd.org/accept
2020-11-08 13:36:07 +01:00
Mara Bos 1f034f77bc
Rollup merge of #76097 - pickfire:stabilize-spin-loop, r=KodrAus
Stabilize hint::spin_loop

Partially fix #55002, deprecate in another release

r? ``````@KodrAus``````
2020-11-08 13:35:54 +01:00
Camelid 8258cf285f Convert a bunch of intra-doc links 2020-11-07 12:50:57 -08:00
Christiaan Dirkx 94d73d4403 Refactor `parse_prefix` on Windows
Refactor `get_first_two_components` to `get_next_component`.

Fixes the following behaviour of `parse_prefix`:
 - series of separator bytes in a prefix are correctly parsed as a single separator
 - device namespace prefixes correctly recognize both `\\` and `/` as separators
2020-11-07 16:15:48 +01:00
Benoît du Garreau 001dd7e6a5 Add tracking issue 2020-11-06 18:04:52 +01:00
Benoît du Garreau ae059b532f Make some std::io functions `const`
Includes:
- io::Cursor::new
- io::Cursor::get_ref
- io::Cursor::position
- io::empty
- io::repeat
- io::sink
2020-11-06 17:48:26 +01:00
Yuki Okushi 0e71fc75cc
Rollup merge of #78006 - pitaj:master, r=jyn514
Use Intra-doc links for std::io::buffered

Helps with #75080. I used the implicit link style for intrinsics, as that was what `minnumf32` and others already had.

``@rustbot`` modify labels: T-doc, A-intra-doc-links

r? ``@jyn514``
2020-11-07 01:02:03 +09:00
Yuki Okushi 4136ed26a1
Rollup merge of #74979 - maekawatoshiki:fix, r=Mark-Simulacrum
`#![deny(unsafe_op_in_unsafe_fn)]` in sys/hermit

Partial fix of #73904.

This encloses ``unsafe`` operations in ``unsafe fn`` in ``sys/hermit``.
Some unsafe blocks are not well documented because some system-based functions lack documents.
2020-11-07 01:01:59 +09:00
Ivan Tham e8b5be5dff Stabilize hint::spin_loop
Partially fix #55002, deprecate in another release

Co-authored-by: Ashley Mannix <kodraus@hey.com>

Update stable version for stabilize_spin_loop

Co-authored-by: Joshua Nelson <joshua@yottadb.com>

Use better example for spinlock

As suggested by KodrAus

Remove renamed_spin_loop already available in master

Fix spin loop example
2020-11-06 23:41:55 +08:00
Maarten de Vries 3bee37c290 Disable accept4 on Android. 2020-11-06 14:17:48 +01:00
Peter Jaszkowiak 8d48e3bbb2 document HACKs 2020-11-05 19:26:08 -07:00
Peter Jaszkowiak fe6dfcd28a Intra-doc links for std::io::buffered 2020-11-05 19:09:42 -07:00
Mara Bos f383e4f1d9
Rollup merge of #78757 - camelid:crate-link-text, r=jyn514
Improve and clean up some intra-doc links
2020-11-05 10:30:02 +01:00
Mara Bos 43e1b58bcc
Rollup merge of #78716 - est31:array_traits, r=Dylan-DPC
Array trait impl comment/doc fixes

Two small doc/comment fixes regarding trait implementations on arrays.
2020-11-05 10:29:46 +01:00
Mara Bos 10d2843604
Rollup merge of #78093 - camelid:as-cleanup, r=jyn514
Clean up docs for 'as' keyword
2020-11-05 10:29:38 +01:00
Camelid 677b2acb48 Add missing comma
'Note however,' -> 'Note, however,'
2020-11-04 18:57:54 -08:00
Camelid bbdb1f0f66 Clean up some intra-doc links 2020-11-04 18:57:52 -08:00
Camelid d8afe98eba Clean up docs for 'as' keyword 2020-11-04 16:05:55 -08:00
LinkTed ead7185db6 Fix docs for MacOs (again) 2020-11-04 19:45:48 +01:00
est31 5801109ba9 Move Copy and Clone into the list of traits implemented for all sizes 2020-11-04 01:28:37 +01:00
LinkTed c779405686 Fix docs for MacOs (correction) 2020-11-03 18:28:04 +01:00
Mara Bos 8ed31d2782
Rollup merge of #78602 - RalfJung:raw-ptr-aliasing-issues, r=m-ou-se
fix various aliasing issues in the standard library

This fixes various cases where the standard library either used raw pointers after they were already invalidated by using the original reference again, or created raw pointers for one element of a slice and used it to access neighboring elements.
2020-11-01 11:53:36 +01:00
Mara Bos f281a76f83
Rollup merge of #78599 - panstromek:master, r=m-ou-se
Add note to process::arg[s] that args shouldn't be escaped or quoted

This came out of discussion on [forum](https://users.rust-lang.org/t/how-to-get-full-output-from-command/50626), where I recently asked a question and it turned out that the problem was redundant quotation:

```rust
 Command::new("rg")
        .arg("\"pattern\"") // this will look for "pattern" with quotes included
```

This is something that has bitten me few times already (in multiple languages actually), so It'd be grateful to have it in the docs, even though it's not sctrictly Rust specific problem. Other users also agreed.

This can be really annoying to debug, because in many cases (inluding mine), quotes can be legal part of the argument, so the command doesn't fail, it just behaves unexpectedly. Not everybody (including me) knows that quotes around arguments are part of the shell and not part of the called program. Coincidentally, somoene had the same problem [yesterday](https://www.reddit.com/r/rust/comments/jkxelc/going_crazy_over_running_a_curl_process_from_rust/) on reddit.

I am not a native speaker, so I welcome any corrections or better formulation, I don't expect this to be merged as is. I was also reminded that this is platform/shell specific behaviour, but I didn't find a good way to formulate that briefly, any ideas welcome.

 It's also my first PR here, so I am not sure I did everything correctly, I did this just from Github UI.
2020-11-01 11:53:34 +01:00
Matyáš Racek db416b232c
Apply suggestions from code review
Co-authored-by: Mara Bos <m-ou.se@m-ou.se>
2020-10-31 17:28:44 +01:00
Ralf Jung 9f630af930 fix aliasing issue in unix sleep function 2020-10-31 16:26:06 +01:00
Matyáš Racek d417bbef95
Add note to process::arg[s] that args shouldn't be escaped or quoted 2020-10-31 14:40:36 +01:00
Ashley Mannix 573ec314b6
update stabilization to 1.49.0 2020-10-31 20:16:15 +10:00
Mara Bos 4ebd5536b4
Rollup merge of #77099 - tspiteri:exp_m1-examples, r=m-ou-se
make exp_m1 and ln_1p examples more representative of use

With this PR, the examples for `exp_m1` would fail if `x.exp() - 1.0` is used instead of `x.exp_m1()`, and the examples for `ln_1p` would fail if `(x + 1.0).ln()` is used instead of `x.ln_1p()`.
2020-10-31 09:49:32 +01:00
Mara Bos 76b8b00b4f
Rollup merge of #74622 - fusion-engineering-forks:panic-box, r=KodrAus
Add std::panic::panic_any.

The discussion of #67984 lead to the conclusion that there should be a macro or function separate from `std::panic!()` for throwing arbitrary payloads, to make it possible to deprecate or disallow (in edition 2021) `std::panic!(arbitrary_payload)`.

Alternative names:

- `panic_with!(..)`
- ~~`start_unwind(..)`~~ (panicking doesn't always unwind)
- `throw!(..)`
- `panic_throwing!(..)`
- `panic_with_value(..)`
- `panic_value(..)`
- `panic_with(..)`
- `panic_box(..)`
- `panic(..)`

The equivalent (private, unstable) function in `libstd` is called `std::panicking::begin_panic`.

I suggest `panic_any`, because it allows for any (`Any + Send`) type.

_Tracking issue: #78500_
2020-10-31 09:49:28 +01:00
Maarten de Vries 59c6ae615e Use SOCK_CLOEXEC and accept4() on more platforms. 2020-10-30 14:20:10 +01:00
Yuki Okushi 73d0340fd5
Rollup merge of #78554 - camelid:improve-drop_in_place-docs-wording, r=jyn514
Improve wording of `core::ptr::drop_in_place` docs

And two small intra-doc link conversions in `std::{f32, f64}`.
2020-10-30 18:00:58 +09:00
Yuki Okushi 02a4b58a3f
Rollup merge of #77921 - wcampbell0x2a:f64-collapsible-if, r=jyn514
f64: Refactor collapsible_if
2020-10-30 18:00:49 +09:00
Camelid fee4f8feb0 Improve wording of `core::ptr::drop_in_place` docs
And two small intra-doc link conversions in `std::{f32, f64}`.
2020-10-29 20:09:29 -07:00
Mara Bos b48fee010c Add tracking issue number for panic_any. 2020-10-28 21:23:45 +01:00
Mara Bos a9d334d386
Update panic_any feature name.
Co-authored-by: Camelid <camelidcamel@gmail.com>
2020-10-28 21:21:41 +01:00
LinkTed ea5e012ba7 Fix test cases for MacOs 2020-10-28 18:22:16 +01:00
Camelid 0217edbd29
Clean up intra-doc links in `std::path` 2020-10-27 20:54:30 -07:00
Tom Kaitchuck 5b3d98d9f8 Change link to point to crates.io keyword "hasher"
Signed-off-by: Tom Kaitchuck <Tom.Kaitchuck@gmail.com>
2020-10-27 20:49:52 -07:00
bors 90e6d0d46b Auto merge of #75671 - nathanwhit:cstring-temp-lint, r=oli-obk
Uplift `temporary-cstring-as-ptr` lint from `clippy` into rustc

The general consensus seems to be that this lint covers a common enough mistake to warrant inclusion in rustc.
The diagnostic message might need some tweaking, as I'm not sure the use of second-person perspective matches the rest of rustc, but I'd like to hear others' thoughts on that.

(cc #53224).

r? `@oli-obk`
2020-10-27 22:59:13 +00:00
bors 56d288fa46 Auto merge of #78227 - SergioBenitez:test-stdout-threading, r=m-ou-se
Capture output from threads spawned in tests

This is revival of #75172.

Original text:
> Fixes #42474.
>
> r? `@​dtolnay` since you expressed interest in this, but feel free to redirect if you aren't the right person anymore.

---

Closes #75172.
2020-10-27 11:43:18 +00:00
Nathan Whitaker 39941e6281 Fix bootstrap doctest failure 2020-10-26 22:09:47 -04:00
Yuki Okushi 4236d27c9b
Rollup merge of #78412 - camelid:cleanup-hash-docs, r=jonas-schievink
Improve formatting of hash collections docs
2020-10-27 08:45:30 +09:00
Yuki Okushi f6f8764b25
Rollup merge of #78394 - rubik:master, r=m-ou-se
fix(docs): typo in BufWriter documentation

This PR fixes a small typo in the BufWriter documentation. The current documentation looks like this:

![2020-10-26-111501_438x83_scrot](https://user-images.githubusercontent.com/238549/97160357-83d3a000-177c-11eb-8a35-3cdd3a7d89de.png)

The `<u8>` at the end is mangled by Markdown. This PR makes the `BufWriter` documentation like the `BufReader` one:

https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/blob/master/library/std/src/io/buffered/bufreader.rs#L16

I'm tagging Steve as per the Rustc dev guide.

r? @steveklabnik
2020-10-27 08:45:20 +09:00
Yuki Okushi 5a33fa5179
Rollup merge of #78375 - taiki-e:question-in-macros, r=kennytm
Use ? in core/std macros
2020-10-27 08:45:10 +09:00
Yuki Okushi 2c307fab49
Rollup merge of #77703 - Keruspe:system-libunwind, r=Mark-Simulacrum
add system-llvm-libunwind config option

allows using the system-wide llvm-libunwind as the unwinder

Workaround for #76020
2020-10-27 08:44:44 +09:00
Nathan Whitaker cb8b9012db Address review comments 2020-10-26 19:19:06 -04:00
Nathan Whitaker 1bcd2452fe Address review comments 2020-10-26 18:19:48 -04:00
Nathan Whitaker 737bfeffd2 Change to warn by default / fix typo 2020-10-26 18:19:48 -04:00
Nathan Whitaker ce95122e95 Update doctest 2020-10-26 18:19:47 -04:00
Camelid 59f108885e Improve formatting of hash collections docs 2020-10-26 14:05:06 -07:00
Michele Lacchia a4ba179bdd
fix(docs): typo in BufWriter documentation 2020-10-26 11:13:47 +01:00
DevJPM 3daa93f555 Updated documentation, x86 feature detection testing, and removed LLVM 9 exclusive features
Updated the added documentation in llvm_util.rs to note which copies of LLVM need to be inspected.
Removed avx512bf16 and avx512vp2intersect because they are unsupported before LLVM 9 with the build with external LLVM 8 being supported
Re-introduced detection testing previously removed for un-requestable features tsc and mmx
2020-10-26 08:36:14 +01:00
Dylan DPC e0c08ae4e1
Rollup merge of #74477 - chansuke:sys-wasm-unsafe-op-in-unsafe-fn, r=Mark-Simulacrum
`#[deny(unsafe_op_in_unsafe_fn)]` in sys/wasm

This is part of #73904.

This encloses unsafe operations in unsafe fn in `libstd/sys/wasm`.

@rustbot modify labels: F-unsafe-block-in-unsafe-fn
2020-10-26 03:08:56 +01:00
Taiki Endo 04c0018d1b Use ? in core/std macros 2020-10-26 07:15:37 +09:00
DevJPM cd95e939bb Removed movbe from run-time-detect
`movbe` seems to not be a run-time detectable feature on x86.
It has thus been removed from the list.
It was only commented out to ease comparison against the full list.
2020-10-25 17:27:22 +01:00
DevJPM 9feb567399 Updated the list of white-listed target features for x86
This PR both adds in-source documentation on what to look out for
when adding a new (X86) feature set and adds all that are detectable at run-time in Rust stable
as of 1.27.0.

This should only enable the use of the corresponding LLVM intrinsics.
Actual intrinsics need to be added separately in rust-lang/stdarch.

It also re-orders the run-time-detect test statements to be more consistent
with the actual list of intrinsics whitelisted and removes underscores not present
in the actual names (which might be mistaken as being part of the name)
2020-10-25 17:06:40 +01:00
Yuki Okushi 72e02b015e
Rollup merge of #78208 - liketechnik:issue-69399, r=oli-obk
replace `#[allow_internal_unstable]` with `#[rustc_allow_const_fn_unstable]` for `const fn`s

`#[allow_internal_unstable]` is currently used to side-step feature gate and stability checks.
While it was originally only meant to be used only on macros, its use was expanded to `const fn`s.

This pr adds stricter checks for the usage of `#[allow_internal_unstable]` (only on macros) and introduces the `#[rustc_allow_const_fn_unstable]` attribute for usage on `const fn`s.

This pr does not change any of the functionality associated with the use of `#[allow_internal_unstable]` on macros or the usage of `#[rustc_allow_const_fn_unstable]` (instead of `#[allow_internal_unstable]`) on `const fn`s (see https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/69399#issuecomment-712911540).

Note: The check for `#[rustc_allow_const_fn_unstable]` currently only validates that the attribute is used on a function, because I don't know how I would check if the function is a `const fn` at the place of the check. I therefore openend this as a 'draft pull request'.

Closes rust-lang/rust#69399

r? @oli-obk
2020-10-25 18:43:40 +09:00
Jonas Schievink e3808edeee
Rollup merge of #78119 - fusion-engineering-forks:panic-use-as-str, r=Amanieu
Throw core::panic!("message") as &str instead of String.

This makes `core::panic!("message")` consistent with `std::panic!("message")`, which throws a `&str` and not a `String`.

This also makes any other panics from `core::panicking::panic` result in a `&str` rather than a `String`, which includes compiler-generated panics such as the panics generated for `mem::zeroed()`.

---

Demonstration:

```rust
use std::panic;
use std::any::Any;

fn main() {
    panic::set_hook(Box::new(|panic_info| check(panic_info.payload())));

    check(&*panic::catch_unwind(|| core::panic!("core")).unwrap_err());
    check(&*panic::catch_unwind(|| std::panic!("std")).unwrap_err());
}

fn check(msg: &(dyn Any + Send)) {
    if let Some(s) = msg.downcast_ref::<String>() {
        println!("Got a String: {:?}", s);
    } else if let Some(s) = msg.downcast_ref::<&str>() {
        println!("Got a &str: {:?}", s);
    }
}
```

Before:
```
Got a String: "core"
Got a String: "core"
Got a &str: "std"
Got a &str: "std"
```

After:
```
Got a &str: "core"
Got a &str: "core"
Got a &str: "std"
Got a &str: "std"
```
2020-10-24 22:39:53 +02:00
Jonas Schievink e34263d86a
Rollup merge of #77610 - hermitcore:dtors, r=m-ou-se
revise Hermit's mutex interface to support the behaviour of StaticMutex

rust-lang/rust#77147 simplifies things by splitting this Mutex type into two types matching the two use cases: StaticMutex and MovableMutex. To support the new behavior of StaticMutex, we move part of the mutex implementation into libstd.

The interface to the OS changed. Consequently, I removed a few functions, which aren't longer needed.
2020-10-24 22:39:44 +02:00
Jonas Schievink 01a38f0d9a
Rollup merge of #75115 - chansuke:sys-cloudabi-unsafe, r=KodrAus
`#[deny(unsafe_op_in_unsafe_fn)]` in sys/cloudabi

Partial fix of #73904.

This encloses unsafe operations in unsafe fn in sys/cloudabi.
2020-10-24 22:39:35 +02:00
Dan Gohman 6249cda78f Disable use of `linkat` on Android as well.
According to [the bionic status page], `linkat` has only been available
since API level 21. Since Android is based on Linux and Linux's `link`
doesn't follow symlinks, just use `link` on Android.

[the bionic status page]: https://android.googlesource.com/platform/bionic/+/master/docs/status.md
2020-10-24 09:43:31 -07:00
Jonas Schievink eaa982305d
Rollup merge of #78274 - Enet4:patch-1, r=jonas-schievink
Update description of Empty Enum for accuracy

An empty enum is similar to the never type `!`, rather than the unit type `()`.
2020-10-24 14:12:11 +02:00
chansuke d37b8cf729 Remove unnecessary unsafe block from condvar_atomics & mutex_atomics 2020-10-24 18:22:18 +09:00
chansuke d147f78e36 Fix unsafe operation of wasm32::memory_atomic_notify 2020-10-24 18:14:17 +09:00
chansuke de87ae7961 Add documents for DLMALLOC 2020-10-24 17:59:58 +09:00
chansuke eed45107da Add some description for (malloc/calloc/free/realloc) 2020-10-24 11:50:09 +09:00
chansuke d413bb6f57 `#[deny(unsafe_op_in_unsafe_fn)]` in sys/wasm 2020-10-24 11:50:09 +09:00
Eduardo Pinho efedcb2344
Update description of Empty Enum for accuracy
An empty enum is similar to the never type `!`, rather than the unit type `()`.
2020-10-23 12:13:07 +01:00
Yuki Okushi b968738348
Rollup merge of #77918 - wcampbell0x2a:cleanup-network-tests, r=m-ou-se
Cleanup network tests

Some cleanup for network related tests
2020-10-23 18:26:22 +09:00
Sergio Benitez db15596c57 Only load LOCAL_STREAMS if they are being used 2020-10-22 18:15:48 -07:00
Tyler Mandry d0d0e78208 Capture output from threads spawned in tests
Fixes #42474.
2020-10-22 18:15:44 -07:00
Jubilee Young ef027a1eed Duration::zero() -> Duration::ZERO
Duration::ZERO composes better with match and various other things,
at the cost of an occasional parens, and results in less work for the
optimizer, so let's use that instead.
2020-10-21 20:44:03 -07:00
Jubilee Young d72d5f48c2 Dogfood Duration API in std::time tests
This expands time's test suite to use more and in more places the
range of methods and constants added to Duration in recent
proposals for the sake of testing more API surface area and
improving legibility.
2020-10-21 20:03:56 -07:00
varkor 878c97e70c Update to rustc-demangle 0.1.18 2020-10-21 21:11:11 +01:00
varkor 2b9d22d3a9 Update rustc-demangle 2020-10-21 21:05:38 +01:00
Florian Warzecha 05f4a9a42a
switch allow_internal_unstable const fns to rustc_allow_const_fn_unstable 2020-10-21 20:54:20 +02:00
Marc-Antoine Perennou 66fa42a946 allow using the system-wide llvm-libunwind as the unwinder
Signed-off-by: Marc-Antoine Perennou <Marc-Antoine@Perennou.com>
2020-10-21 14:45:58 +02:00
Dan Gohman d0178b4f99 Make it platform-specific whether `hard_link` follows symlinks.
Also mention that where possible, `hard_link` does not follow symlinks.
2020-10-21 01:46:27 -07:00
Yuki Okushi 6df79bf8a8
Rollup merge of #77923 - wcampbell0x2a:cleanup-net-module, r=scottmcm
[net] apply clippy lints

Applied helpful clippy lints to the network std library module.
2020-10-20 12:11:04 +09:00
Yuki Okushi f9db00839e
Rollup merge of #77838 - RalfJung:const-fn, r=kennytm
const keyword: brief paragraph on 'const fn'

`const fn` were mentioned in the title, but called "deterministic functions" which is not their main property (though at least currently it is a consequence of being const-evaluable). This adds a brief paragraph discussing them, also in the hopes of clarifying that they do *not* have any effect on run-time uses.
2020-10-20 12:11:02 +09:00
Tomasz Miąsko 21c29b1e95 Check that pthread mutex initialization succeeded
If pthread mutex initialization fails, the failure will go unnoticed unless
debug assertions are enabled. Any subsequent use of mutex will also silently
fail, since return values from lock & unlock operations are similarly checked
only through debug assertions.

In some implementations the mutex initialization requires a memory
allocation and so it does fail in practice.

Check that initialization succeeds to ensure that mutex guarantees
mutual exclusion.
2020-10-20 00:00:00 +00:00
Mara Bos 2780e35246 Throw core::panic!("message") as &str instead of String.
This makes it consistent with std::panic!("message"), which also throws
a &str, not a String.
2020-10-19 22:31:11 +02:00
wcampbell 736c27ec0b Revert "[net] clippy: needless_update"
This reverts commit 058699d0a2.
2020-10-19 07:22:45 -04:00
Mara Bos ff8df0bbe3 Add cfg(not(test)) to std_panic_macro rustc_diagnostic_item. 2020-10-19 10:57:44 +02:00
pierwill 67dc9b7581
Add missing punctuation 2020-10-18 23:03:16 -07:00
Mara Bos dd262e3856 Add cfg(not(bootstrap)) on the new rustc_diagnostic_item attributes.
The beta compiler doesn't accept rustc_diagnostic_items on macros yet.
2020-10-18 23:45:20 +02:00
Mara Bos 462ee9c1b5 Mark the panic macros as diagnostic items. 2020-10-18 22:20:19 +02:00
Chai T. Rex c2de8fe294 Stabilize or_insert_with_key 2020-10-18 15:45:09 -04:00
est31 a687420d17 Remove redundant 'static from library crates 2020-10-18 17:25:51 +02:00
Dan Gohman ce00b3e2e0 Use `link` on platforms which lack `linkat`. 2020-10-18 07:47:32 -07:00
Dan Gohman 23a5c21415 Fix a typo in a comment. 2020-10-18 07:21:41 -07:00
Mara Bos 16201da6a4 Rename panic_box to panic_any. 2020-10-18 12:29:13 +02:00
Mara Bos 01b0aff1df Add std::panic::panic_box. 2020-10-18 12:25:26 +02:00
chansuke d3467fe520 `#[deny(unsafe_op_in_unsafe_fn)]` in sys/cloudabi 2020-10-18 17:59:54 +09:00
bors c38ddb8040 Auto merge of #74480 - yoshuawuyts:hardware_threads, r=dtolnay
Add std:🧵:available_concurrency

This PR adds a counterpart to [C++'s `std:🧵:hardware_concurrency`](https://en.cppreference.com/w/cpp/thread/thread/hardware_concurrency) to Rust, tracking issue https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/74479.

cc/ `@rust-lang/libs`

## Motivation

Being able to know how many hardware threads a platform supports is a core part of building multi-threaded code. In C++ 11 this has become available through the [`std:🧵:hardware_concurrency`](https://en.cppreference.com/w/cpp/thread/thread/hardware_concurrency) API. Currently in Rust most of the ecosystem depends on the [`num_cpus` crate](https://docs.rs/num_cpus/1.13.0/num_cpus/) ([no.35 in top 500 crates](https://docs.google.com/spreadsheets/d/1wwahRMHG3buvnfHjmPQFU4Kyfq15oTwbfsuZpwHUKc4/edit#gid=1253069234)) to provide this functionality. This PR proposes an API to provide access to the number of hardware threads available on a given platform.

__edit (2020-07-24):__ The purpose of this PR is to provide a hint for how many threads to spawn to saturate the processor. There's value in introducing APIs for NUMA and Windows processor groups, but those are intentionally out of scope for this PR. See: https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/74480#issuecomment-662116186.

## Naming

Discussing the naming of the API on Zulip surfaced two options:

- `std:🧵:hardware_concurrency`
- `std:🧵:hardware_threads`

Both options seemed acceptable, but overall people seem to gravitate the most towards `hardware_threads`. Additionally `@jonas-schievink` pointed out that the "hardware threads" terminology is well-established and is used in among other the [RISC-V specification](https://riscv.org/specifications/isa-spec-pdf/) (page 20):

> A component is termed a core if it contains an independent instruction fetch unit. A RISC-V-compatible core might support multiple RISC-V-compatible __hardware threads__, or harts, through multithreading.

It's also worth noting that [the original paper introducing C++'s `std::thread` submodule](http://www.open-std.org/jtc1/sc22/wg21/docs/papers/2007/n2320.html) unfortunately doesn't feature any discussion on the naming of `hardware_concurrency`, so we can't use that to help inform our decision here.

## Return type

An important consideration `@joshtriplett` brought up is that we don't want to default to `1` for platforms where the number of available threads cannot be retrieved. Instead we want to inform the users of the fact that we don't know and allow them to handle that case. Which is why this PR uses `Option<NonZeroUsize>` as its return type, where `None` is returned on platforms where we don't know the number of hardware threads available.

The reasoning for `NonZeroUsize` vs `usize` is that if the number of threads for a platform are known, they'll always be at least 1. As evidenced by the example the `NonZero*` family of APIs may currently not be the most ergonomic to use, but improving the ergonomics of them is something that I think we can address separately.

## Implementation

`@Mark-Simulacrum` pointed out that most of the code we wanted to expose here was already available under `libtest`. So this PR mostly moves the internal code of libtest into a public API.
2020-10-18 02:28:21 +00:00
LinkTed 79273fa30c Fix cannot find type `ucred` for MacOs by using fake definitions 2020-10-17 19:36:11 +02:00
bors 4cb7ef0f94 Auto merge of #77455 - asm89:faster-spawn, r=kennytm
Use posix_spawn() on unix if program is a path

Previously `Command::spawn` would fall back to the non-posix_spawn based
implementation if the `PATH` environment variable was possibly changed.
On systems with a modern (g)libc `posix_spawn()` can be significantly
faster. If program is a path itself the `PATH` environment variable is
not used for the lookup and it should be safe to use the
`posix_spawnp()` method. [1]

We found this, because we have a cli application that effectively runs a
lot of subprocesses. It would sometimes noticeably hang while printing
output. Profiling showed that the process was spending the majority of
time in the kernel's `copy_page_range` function while spawning
subprocesses. During this time the process is completely blocked from
running, explaining why users were reporting the cli app hanging.

Through this we discovered that `std::process::Command` has a fast and
slow path for process execution. The fast path is backed by
`posix_spawnp()` and the slow path by fork/exec syscalls being called
explicitly. Using fork for process creation is supposed to be fast, but
it slows down as your process uses more memory.  It's not because the
kernel copies the actual memory from the parent, but it does need to
copy the references to it (see `copy_page_range` above!).  We ended up
using the slow path, because the command spawn implementation in falls
back to the slow path if it suspects the PATH environment variable was
changed.

Here is a smallish program demonstrating the slowdown before this code
change:

```
use std::process::Command;
use std::time::Instant;

fn main() {
    let mut args = std::env::args().skip(1);
    if let Some(size) = args.next() {
        // Allocate some memory
        let _xs: Vec<_> = std::iter::repeat(0)
            .take(size.parse().expect("valid number"))
            .collect();

        let mut command = Command::new("/bin/sh");
        command
            .arg("-c")
            .arg("echo hello");

        if args.next().is_some() {
            println!("Overriding PATH");
            command.env("PATH", std::env::var("PATH").expect("PATH env var"));
        }

        let now = Instant::now();
        let child = command
            .spawn()
            .expect("failed to execute process");

        println!("Spawn took: {:?}", now.elapsed());

        let output = child.wait_with_output().expect("failed to wait on process");
        println!("Output: {:?}", output);
    } else {
        eprintln!("Usage: prog [size]");
        std::process::exit(1);
    }
    ()
}
```

Running it and passing different amounts of elements to use to allocate
memory shows that the time taken for `spawn()` can differ quite
significantly. In latter case the `posix_spawnp()` implementation is 30x
faster:

```
$ cargo run --release 10000000
...
Spawn took: 324.275µs
hello
$ cargo run --release 10000000 changepath
...
Overriding PATH
Spawn took: 2.346809ms
hello
$ cargo run --release 100000000
...
Spawn took: 387.842µs
hello
$ cargo run --release 100000000 changepath
...
Overriding PATH
Spawn took: 13.434677ms
hello
```

[1]: 5f72f9800b/posix/execvpe.c (L81)
2020-10-17 06:16:00 +00:00
Yoshua Wuyts 3717646366 Add std:🧵:available_concurrency 2020-10-16 23:36:15 +02:00
Yuki Okushi 050eb4d7e4
Rollup merge of #77971 - jyn514:broken-intra-doc-links, r=mark-simulacrum
Deny broken intra-doc links in linkchecker

Since rustdoc isn't warning about these links, check for them manually.

This also fixes the broken links that popped up from the lint.
2020-10-17 05:36:49 +09:00
Yuki Okushi 9abf81afa8
Rollup merge of #77900 - Thomasdezeeuw:fdatasync, r=dtolnay
Use fdatasync for File::sync_data on more OSes

Add support for the following OSes:
 * Android
 * FreeBSD: https://www.freebsd.org/cgi/man.cgi?query=fdatasync&sektion=2
 * OpenBSD: https://man.openbsd.org/OpenBSD-5.8/fsync.2
 * NetBSD: https://man.netbsd.org/fdatasync.2
 * illumos: https://illumos.org/man/3c/fdatasync
2020-10-17 05:36:45 +09:00
Yuki Okushi 3356ad7c26
Rollup merge of #77547 - RalfJung:stable-union-drop, r=matthewjasper
stabilize union with 'ManuallyDrop' fields and 'impl Drop for Union'

As [discussed by @SimonSapin and @withoutboats](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/55149#issuecomment-634692020), this PR proposes to stabilize parts of the `untagged_union` feature gate:

* It will be possible to have a union with field type `ManuallyDrop<T>` for any `T`.
* While at it I propose we also stabilize `impl Drop for Union`; to my knowledge, there are no open concerns around this feature.

In the RFC discussion, we also talked about allowing `&mut T` as another non-`Copy` non-dropping type, but that felt to me like an overly specific exception so I figured we'd wait if there is actually any use for such a special case.

Some things remain unstable and still require the `untagged_union` feature gate:
* Union with fields that do not drop, are not `Copy`, and are not `ManuallyDrop<_>`. The reason to not stabilize this is to avoid semver concerns around libraries adding `Drop` implementations later. (This is already not fully semver compatible as, to my knowledge, the borrow checker will exploit the non-dropping nature of any type, but it seems prudent to avoid further increasing the amount of trouble adding an `impl Drop` can cause.)

Due to this, quite a few tests still need the `untagged_union` feature, but I think the ones where I could remove the feature flag provide good test coverage for the stable part.

Cc @rust-lang/lang
2020-10-17 05:36:38 +09:00
Dan Gohman 91a9f83dd1 Define `fs::hard_link` to not follow symlinks.
POSIX leaves it implementation-defined whether `link` follows symlinks.
In practice, for example, on Linux it does not and on FreeBSD it does.
So, switch to `linkat`, so that we can pick a behavior rather than
depending on OS defaults.

Pick the option to not follow symlinks. This is somewhat arbitrary, but
seems the less surprising choice because hard linking is a very
low-level feature which requires the source and destination to be on
the same mounted filesystem, and following a symbolic link could end
up in a different mounted filesystem.
2020-10-16 12:05:49 -07:00
Ralf Jung defcd7ff47 stop relying on feature(untagged_unions) in stdlib 2020-10-16 11:33:35 +02:00
Mara Bos 0f0257be10 Take some of sys/vxworks/process/* from sys/unix instead. 2020-10-16 06:22:05 +02:00
Mara Bos 408db0da85 Take sys/vxworks/{os,path,pipe} from sys/unix instead. 2020-10-16 06:22:00 +02:00
Mara Bos 71bb1dc2a0 Take sys/vxworks/{fd,fs,io} from sys/unix instead. 2020-10-16 06:19:00 +02:00
Mara Bos 3f196dc137 Take sys/vxworks/cmath from sys/unix instead. 2020-10-16 06:19:00 +02:00
Mara Bos ba483c51df Take sys/vxworks/args from sys/unix instead. 2020-10-16 06:19:00 +02:00
Mara Bos 08bcaac091 Take sys/vxworks/memchar from sys/unix instead. 2020-10-16 06:19:00 +02:00
Mara Bos dce405ae3d Take sys/vxworks/net from sys/unix instead. 2020-10-16 06:19:00 +02:00
Mara Bos a489c33beb Take sys/vxworks/ext/* from sys/unix instead. 2020-10-16 06:19:00 +02:00
Mara Bos c909ff9577 Add weak macro to vxworks. 2020-10-16 06:19:00 +02:00
Mara Bos 66c9b04e94 Take sys/vxworks/alloc from sys/unix instead. 2020-10-16 06:19:00 +02:00
Mara Bos 678d078950 Take sys/vxworks/thread_local_key from sys/unix instead. 2020-10-16 06:19:00 +02:00
Mara Bos 4853a6e78e Take sys/vxworks/stdio from sys/unix instead. 2020-10-16 06:19:00 +02:00
Mara Bos 5d526f6eee Take sys/vxworks/thread from sys/unix instead. 2020-10-16 06:19:00 +02:00
Mara Bos c8628f43bf Take sys/vxworks/stack_overflow from sys/unix instead. 2020-10-16 06:18:59 +02:00
Mara Bos d1947628b5 Take sys/vxworks/time from sys/unix instead. 2020-10-16 06:18:59 +02:00
Mara Bos f875c8be5d Take sys/vxworks/rwlock from sys/unix instead. 2020-10-16 06:18:59 +02:00
Mara Bos f3f30c7132 Take sys/vxworks/condvar from sys/unix instead. 2020-10-16 06:18:59 +02:00
Mara Bos b8dcd2fbce Take sys/vxworks/mutex from sys/unix instead. 2020-10-16 06:18:59 +02:00
Joshua Nelson 65835d1059 Deny broken intra-doc links in linkchecker
Since rustdoc isn't warning about these links, check for them manually.
2020-10-15 20:22:16 -04:00
Dylan DPC 9b8c0eb107
Rollup merge of #77657 - fusion-engineering-forks:cleanup-cloudabi-sync, r=dtolnay
Cleanup cloudabi mutexes and condvars

This gets rid of lots of unnecessary unsafety.

All the AtomicU32s were wrapped in UnsafeCell or UnsafeCell<MaybeUninit>, and raw pointers were used to get to the AtomicU32 inside. This change cleans that up by using AtomicU32 directly.

Also replaces a UnsafeCell<u32> by a safer Cell<u32>.

@rustbot modify labels: +C-cleanup
2020-10-16 02:10:17 +02:00
Dylan DPC b183ef2068
Rollup merge of #77648 - fusion-engineering-forks:static-mutex, r=dtolnay
Static mutex is static

StaticMutex is only ever used with as a static (as the name already suggests). So it doesn't have to be generic over a lifetime, but can simply assume 'static.

This 'static lifetime guarantees the object is never moved, so this is no longer a manually checked requirement for unsafe calls to lock().

@rustbot modify labels: +T-libs +A-concurrency +C-cleanup
2020-10-16 02:10:15 +02:00
Dylan DPC 085399f481
Rollup merge of #77646 - fusion-engineering-forks:use-static-mutex, r=dtolnay
For backtrace, use StaticMutex instead of a raw sys Mutex.

The code used the very unsafe `sys::mutex::Mutex` directly, and built its own unlock-on-drop wrapper around it. The StaticMutex wrapper already provides that and is easier to use safely.

@rustbot modify labels: +T-libs +C-cleanup
2020-10-16 02:10:13 +02:00
Dylan DPC dcf972a2be
Rollup merge of #77619 - fusion-engineering-forks:wasm-parker, r=dtolnay
Use futex-based thread-parker for Wasm32.

This uses the existing `sys_common/thread_parker/futex.rs` futex-based thread parker (that was already used for Linux) for wasm32 as well (if the wasm32 atomics target feature is enabled, which is not the case by default).

Wasm32 provides the basic futex operations as instructions: https://webassembly.github.io/threads/syntax/instructions.html

These are now exposed from `sys::futex::{futex_wait, futex_wake}`, just like on Linux. So, `thread_parker/futex.rs` stays completely unmodified.
2020-10-16 02:10:11 +02:00
Dylan DPC 5acb7f198f
Rollup merge of #76084 - Lucretiel:split-buffered, r=dtolnay
Refactor io/buffered.rs into submodules

This pull request splits `BufWriter`, `BufReader`, `LineWriter`, and `LineWriterShim` (along with their associated tests) into separate submodules. It contains no functional changes. This change is being made in anticipation of adding another type of buffered writer which can be switched between line- and block-buffering mode.

Part of a series of pull requests resolving #60673.
2020-10-16 02:10:04 +02:00
Tom Kaitchuck 1d287255f5 Change mention of `fnv` in HashMap to mention `aHash` as an alternitive hasher.
Signed-off-by: Tom Kaitchuck <tom.kaitchuck@emc.com>
2020-10-15 14:03:39 -07:00
Matthew Kraai f2a237a935 Fix link to foreign calling conventions 2020-10-15 00:57:22 -07:00
Mara Bos 44a2af32cc Remove lifetime from StaticMutex and assume 'static.
StaticMutex is only ever used with as a static (as the name already
suggests). So it doesn't have to be generic over a lifetime, but can
simply assume 'static.

This 'static lifetime guarantees the object is never moved, so this is
no longer a manually checked requirement for unsafe calls to lock().
2020-10-14 09:52:03 +02:00
Mara Bos 58756573fc Fix comment about non-reentrant StaticMutex::lock().
The comment said it's UB to call lock() while it is locked. That'd be
quite a useless Mutex. :) It was supposed to say 'locked by the same
thread', not just 'locked'.
2020-10-14 09:50:47 +02:00
Dylan DPC ed34f82cbc
Rollup merge of #77870 - camelid:intra-doc-super, r=jyn514
Use intra-doc links for links to module-level docs

r? @jyn514
2020-10-14 02:30:46 +02:00
wcampbell ce04836327
fmt
Signed-off-by: wcampbell <wcampbell1995@gmail.com>
2020-10-13 20:11:29 -04:00
wcampbell 7da0e58da4
use matches! in library/std/src/net/ip.rs
Apply suggestion from review

Co-authored-by: LingMan <LingMan@users.noreply.github.com>
2020-10-13 19:33:39 -04:00