Dont segfault if btree range is not in order
This is a first attempt to fix issue #33197. The issue is that the BTree iterator uses next_unchecked for fast iteration, but it can be tricked into running off the end of the tree and segfaulting if range is called with a maximum that is less than the minimum.
Since a user defined Ord should not determine the safety of BTreeMap, and we still want fast iteration, I've implemented the idea of @gereeter and walk the tree simultaneously searching for both keys to make sure that if our keys diverge, the min key is to the left of our max key. I currently panic if that is not the case.
Open questions:
1. Do we want to panic in this error case or do we want to return an empty iterator? The drain API panics if the range is bad, but drain is given a range of index values, while this is a generic key type. Panicking is brittle and returning an empty iterator is probably the most flexible and matches what people would want it to do... but artificially returning a BTreeMap::Range with start==end seems like a pretty weird and unnatural thing to do, although it's doable since those fields are not accessible.
The same question for other weird cases:
2. (Included(101), Excluded(100)) on a map that contains [1,2,3]. Both BTree edges end up on the same part of the map, but comparing the keys shows the range is backwards.
3. (Excluded(5), Excluded(5)). The keys are equal but BTree edges end up backwards if the map contains 5.
4. (Included(5), Excluded(5)). Should naturally produce an empty iterator, right?
Binary prefixes (such as Gi for ‘gibi-’ in GiB) are defined by
International Electrotechnical Commission (IEC) and not in the
International System of Units (SI).
The use of a GNU C extension for bloc expressions is immaterial to the
actual problem with C macros that the section tries to show so don’t
use it and instead use a plain C way of writing the macro.
Conversions between CStr, OsStr, Path and boxes
This closes a bit of the inconsistencies between `CStr`, `OsStr`, `Path`, and `str`, allowing people to create boxed versions of DSTs other than `str` and `[T]`.
Full list of additions:
* `Default` for `Box<str>`, `Box<CStr>`, `Box<OsStr>`, and `Box<Path>` (note: `Default` for `PathBuf` is already implemented)
* `CString::into_boxed_c_str` (feature gated)
* `OsString::into_boxed_os_str` (feature gated)
* `Path::into_boxed_path` (feature gated)
* `From<&CStr> for Box<CStr>`
* `From<&OsStr> for Box<OsStr>`
* `From<&Path> for Box<Path>`
This also includes adding the internal methods:
* `sys::*::os_str::Buf::into_box`
* `sys::*::os_str::Slice::{into_box, empty_box}`
* `sys_common::wtf8::Wtf8Buf::into_box`
* `sys_common::wtf8::Wtf8::{into_box, empty_box}`
Port books to mdbook
Part of https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/39588
blocked on https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/39431
As a first step towards the bookshelf, we ~vendor mdbook in-tree and~ port our books to it. Eventually, both of these books will be moved out-of-tree, but the nightly book will rely on doing the same thing. As such, this intermediate step is useful.
r? @alexcrichton @brson
/cc @azerupi
tidy: exempt URLs from the line length restriction
The length of a URL is usually not under our control, and Markdown
provides no way to split a URL in the middle. Therefore, comment
lines consisting _solely_ of a URL (possibly with a Markdown link
label in front) should be exempt from the line-length restriction.
Inline hyperlink destinations ( `[foo](http://...)` notation ) are
_not_ exempt, because it is my arrogant opinion that long lines of
that type make the source text illegible.
The patch adds dependencies on the `regex` and `lazy_static` crates
to the tidy utility. This _appears_ to Just Work, but if you would
rather not have that dependency I am willing to provide a hand-written
parser instead.
Adding compile fail test for staged_api feature
Issue #39059
r? @est31
@est31 running the tests for this feature fails. Is that expected since this is the `compile-fail`suite?
I copied this test from the run-pass suite: `rust/src/test/run-pass/reachable-unnameable-type-alias.rs`. What are the differences between these suites in operation and why they are used?
travis: Add builders without assertions
This commit adds three new builders, one OSX, one Linux, and one MSVC, which
will produce "nightlies" with LLVM assertions disabled. Currently all nightly
releases have LLVM assertions enabled to catch bugs before they reach the
beta/stable channels. The beta/stable channels, however, do not have LLVM
assertions enabled.
Unfortunately though projects like Servo are stuck on nightlies for the near
future at least and are also suffering very long compile times. The purpose of
this commit is to provide artifacts to these projects which are not distributed
through normal channels (e.g. rustup) but are provided for developers to use
locally if need be.
Logistically these builds will all be uploaded to `rustc-builds-alt` instead of
the `rustc-builds` folder of the `rust-lang-ci` bucket. These builds will stay
there forever (until cleaned out if necessary) and there are no plans to
integrate this with rustup and/or the official release process.
Add equivalents of C's <ctype.h> functions to AsciiExt.
* `is_ascii_alphabetic`
* `is_ascii_uppercase`
* `is_ascii_lowercase`
* `is_ascii_alphanumeric`
* `is_ascii_digit`
* `is_ascii_hexdigit`
* `is_ascii_punctuation`
* `is_ascii_graphic`
* `is_ascii_whitespace`
* `is_ascii_control`
This addresses issue #39658.
Lightly tested on x86-64-linux. tidy complains about the URLs in the documentation making lines too long, I don't know what to do about that.
Automate vendoring by invoking cargo-vendor when building src dist tarballs.
This avoids #39633 bringing the `src/vendor` checked into git by #37524, past 200,000 lines of code.
I believe the strategy of having rustbuild run `cargo vendor` during the `dist src` step is sound.
However, the only way to be sure `cargo-vendor` exists is to run `cargo install --force cargo-vendor`, which will recompile it every time (not passing `--force` means you can't tell between "already exists" and "build error"). ~~This is quite suboptimal and I'd like to somehow do it in each `Dockerfile` that would need it.~~
* [ ] Cache `CARGO_HOME` (i.e. `~/.cargo`) between CI runs
* `bin/cargo-vendor` and the actual caches are the relevant bits
* [x] Do not build `cargo-vendor` all the time
* ~~Maybe detect `~/.cargo/bin/cargo-vendor` already exists?~~
* ~~Could also try to build it in a `Dockerfile` but do we have `cargo`/`rustc` there?~~
* Final solution: check `cargo install --list` for a line starting with `cargo-vendor `
cc @rust-lang/tools
Add PartialOrd, Ord derivations to TypeId
I want to be able to sort a `Vec` of types which contain `TypeId`s, so an `Ord` derivation would be very useful to me. `Hash` and `PartialEq`/`Eq` already exist, so the missing `PartialOrd` and `Ord` derivations feel like an oversight to me.
Add intrinsics & target features for rd{rand,seed}
One question is whether or not we want to map feature name `rdrnd` to `rdrand` instead.
EDIT: as for use case, I would like to port my rdrand crate from inline assembly to these intrinsics.