Privatize some of libcore unicode_internals
My understanding is that these API are perma unstable, so it doesn't
make sense to pollute docs & IDE completion[1] with them.
[1]: https://github.com/rust-analyzer/rust-analyzer/issues/6738
We also change the specialization of `SpecFromIterNested::from_iter` for
`TrustedLen` to use `Vec::with_capacity` when the iterator has a proper size
hint, instead of `Vec::new`, avoiding calls to `grow_*` and thus
`finish_grow` in some fully inlinable cases, which would regress with
this change.
Fixes#78471.
BTreeMap: try to enhance various comments
All in internal documentation, propagating the "key-value pair" notation from public documentation.
r? ``@Mark-Simulacrum``
Require allocator to be static for boxed `Pin`-API
Allocators has to retain their validity until the instance and all of its clones are dropped. When pinning a value, it must live forever, thus, the allocator requires a `'static` lifetime for pinning a value. [Example from reddit](https://www.reddit.com/r/rust/comments/jymzdw/the_story_continues_vec_now_supports_custom/gd7qak2?utm_source=share&utm_medium=web2x&context=3):
```rust
let alloc = MyAlloc(/* ... */);
let pinned = Box::pin_in(42, alloc);
mem::forget(pinned); // Now `value` must live forever
// Otherwise `Pin`'s invariants are violated, storage invalidated
// before Drop was called.
// borrow of `memory` can end here, there is no value keeping it.
drop(alloc); // Oh, value doesn't live forever.
```
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)
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>.
Rollup of 10 pull requests
Successful merges:
- #76829 (stabilize const_int_pow)
- #79080 (MIR visitor: Don't treat debuginfo field access as a use of the struct)
- #79236 (const_generics: assert resolve hack causes an error)
- #79287 (Allow using generic trait methods in `const fn`)
- #79324 (Use Option::and_then instead of open-coding it)
- #79325 (Reduce boilerplate with the `?` operator)
- #79330 (Fix typo in comment)
- #79333 (doc typo)
- #79337 (Use Option::map instead of open coding it)
- #79343 (Add my (`@flip1995)` work mail to the mailmap)
Failed merges:
r? `@ghost`
`@rustbot` modify labels: rollup
Change slice::to_vec to not use extend_from_slice
I saw this [Zulip thread](https://rust-lang.zulipchat.com/#narrow/stream/219381-t-libs/topic/String.3A.3Afrom%28.26str%29.20wonky.20codegen/near/216164455), and didn't see any update from it, so I thought I'd try to fix it. This converts `to_vec` to no longer use `extend_from_slice`, but relies on knowing that the allocated capacity is the same size as the input.
[Godbolt new v1](https://rust.godbolt.org/z/1bcWKG)
[Godbolt new v2 w/ drop guard](https://rust.godbolt.org/z/5jn76K)
[Godbolt old version](https://rust.godbolt.org/z/e4ePav)
After some amount of iteration, there are now two specializations for `to_vec`, one for `Copy` types that use memcpy, and one for clone types which is the original from this PR.
This is then used inside of `impl<T: Clone> FromIterator<Iter::Slice<T>> for Vec<T>` which is essentially equivalent to `&[T] -> Vec<T>`, instead of previous specialization of the `extend` function. This is because extend has to reason more about existing capacity by calling `reserve` on an existing vec, and thus produces worse asm.
Downsides: This allocates the exact capacity, so I think if many items are added to this `Vec` after, it might need to allocate whereas extending may not. I also noticed the number of faults went up in the benchmarks, but not sure where from exactly.
This also required adding a loop guard in case clone panics
Add specialization for copy
There is a better version for copy, so I've added specialization for that function
and hopefully that should speed it up even more.
Switch FromIter<slice::Iter> to use `to_vec`
Test different unrolling version for to_vec
Revert to impl
From benchmarking, it appears this version is faster
BTreeMap: swap the names of NodeRef::new and Root::new_leaf
#78104 preserved the name of Root::new_leaf to minimize changes, but the resulting names are confusing.
r? `@Mark-Simulacrum`
BTreeMap: address namespace conflicts
Fix an annoyance popping up whenever synchronizing the test cases with a version capable of miri-track-raw-pointers.
r? `@Mark-Simulacrum`
More consistently use spaces after commas in lists in docs
This PR changes instances of lists that didn't use spaces after commas, like `vec![1,2,3]`, to `vec![1, 2, 3]` to be more consistent with idiomatic Rust style (the way these were looks strange to me, especially because there are often lists that *do* use spaces after the commas later in the same code block 😬).
I noticed one of these in an example in the stdlib docs and went looking for more, but as far as I can see, I'm only changing those spots in user-facing documentation or rustc output, and the changes make no semantic difference.
clarify rules for ZST Boxes
LLVM's rules around `getelementptr inbounds` with offset 0 are a bit annoying, and as a consequence we have no choice but say that a `Box<()>` pointing to previously allocated memory that has since been freed is UB. Clarify the docs to reflect this.
This is based on conversations on the LLVM mailing list.
* Here's my initial mail: https://lists.llvm.org/pipermail/llvm-dev/2019-February/130452.html
* The first email of the March part of that thread: https://lists.llvm.org/pipermail/llvm-dev/2019-March/130831.html
* First email of the April part: https://lists.llvm.org/pipermail/llvm-dev/2019-April/131693.html
The conclusion for me at least was that `getelementptr inbounds` with offset 0 is *not* the identity function, but can sometimes return `poison` even when the input is a regular pointer -- specifically, it returns `poison` when this pointer points into something that LLVM "knows has been deallocated", i.e., a former LLVM-managed allocation. It is however the identity function on pointers obtained by casting integers.
Note that there [are formal proposals](https://people.mpi-sws.org/~jung/twinsem/twinsem.pdf) for LLVM semantics where `getelementptr inbounds` with offset 0 isn't quite the identity function but never returns `poison` (it affects the provenance of the pointer but in a way that doesn't matter if this pointer is never used for memory accesses), and indeed this is likely necessary to consistently describe LLVM semantics. But with the informal LLVM LangRef that we have right now, and with LLVM devs insisting otherwise, it seems unwise to rely on this.
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` 🥰
BTreeMap: fix pointer provenance rules in underfullness
Continuing on #78480, and for readability, and possibly for performance: avoid aliasing when handling underfull nodes, and consolidate the code doing that. In particular:
- Avoid the rather explicit aliasing for internal nodes in `remove_kv_tracking`.
- Climb down to the root to handle underfull nodes using a reborrowed handle, rather than one copied with `ptr::read`, before resuming on the leaf level.
- Integrate the code tracking leaf edge position into the functions performing changes, rather than bolting it on.
r? `@Mark-Simulacrum`
Implement BTreeMap::retain and BTreeSet::retain
Adds new methods `BTreeMap::retain` and `BTreeSet::retain`. These are implemented on top of `drain_filter` (#70530).
The API of these methods is identical to `HashMap::retain` and `HashSet::retain`, which were implemented in #39560 and stabilized in #36648. The docs and tests are also copied from HashMap/HashSet.
The new methods are unstable, behind the `btree_retain` feature gate, with tracking issue #79025. See also rust-lang/rfcs#1338.
commit c547d5fabcd756515afa7263ee5304965bb4c497
Author: C <DeveloperC@protonmail.com>
Date: Sat Oct 31 11:22:23 2020 +0000
test: updating ui/hygiene/panic-location.rs expected
commit 2af03769c4ffdbbbad75197a1ad0df8c599186be
Author: C <DeveloperC@protonmail.com>
Date: Sat Oct 31 10:43:30 2020 +0000
fix: documentation unresolved link
commit c4b0df361ce27d7392d8016229f2e0265af32086
Author: C <DeveloperC@protonmail.com>
Date: Sat Oct 31 02:58:31 2020 +0000
style: compiling with Rust's style guidelines
commit bdd2de5f3c09b49a18e3293f2457fcab25557c96
Author: C <DeveloperC@protonmail.com>
Date: Sat Oct 31 02:56:31 2020 +0000
refactor: removing ignore-tidy-filelength
commit fcc4b3bc41f57244c65ebb8e4efe4cbc9460b5a9
Author: C <DeveloperC@protonmail.com>
Date: Sat Oct 31 02:51:35 2020 +0000
refactor: moving trait RingSlices to ring_slices.rs
commit 2f0cc539c06d8841baf7f675168f68ca7c21e68e
Author: C <DeveloperC@protonmail.com>
Date: Sat Oct 31 02:46:09 2020 +0000
refactor: moving struct PairSlices to pair_slices.rs
commit a55d3ef1dab4c3d85962b3a601ff8d1f7497faf2
Author: C <DeveloperC@protonmail.com>
Date: Sat Oct 31 02:31:45 2020 +0000
refactor: moving struct Iter to iter.rs
commit 76ab33a12442a03726f36f606b4e0fe70f8f246b
Author: C <DeveloperC@protonmail.com>
Date: Sat Oct 31 02:24:32 2020 +0000
refactor: moving struct IntoIter into into_iter.rs
commit abe0d9eea2933881858c3b1bc09df67cedc5ada5
Author: C <DeveloperC@protonmail.com>
Date: Sat Oct 31 02:19:07 2020 +0000
refactor: moving struct IterMut into iter_mut.rs
commit 70ebd6420335e1895e2afa2763a0148897963e24
Author: C <DeveloperC@protonmail.com>
Date: Sat Oct 31 01:49:15 2020 +0000
refactor: moved macros into macros.rs
commit b08dd2add994b04ae851aa065800bd8bd6326134
Author: C <DeveloperC@protonmail.com>
Date: Sat Oct 31 01:05:36 2020 +0000
refactor: moving vec_deque.rs to vec_deque/mod.rs
Improve BinaryHeap performance
By changing the condition in the loops from `child < end` to `child < end - 1` we're guaranteed that `right = child + 1 < end` and since finding the index of the biggest sibling can be done with an arithmetic operation we can remove a branch from the loop body. The case where there's no right child, i.e. `child == end - 1` is instead handled outside the loop, after it ends; note that if the loops ends early we can use `return` instead of `break` since the check `child == end - 1` will surely fail.
I've also removed a call to `<[T]>::swap` that was hiding a bound check that [wasn't being optimized by LLVM](https://godbolt.org/z/zrhdGM).
A quick benchmarks on my pc shows that the gains are pretty significant:
|name |before ns/iter |after ns/iter |diff ns/iter |diff % |speedup |
|---------------------|----------------|---------------|--------------|----------|--------|
|find_smallest_1000 | 352,565 | 260,098 | -92,467 | -26.23% | x 1.36 |
|from_vec | 676,795 | 473,934 | -202,861 | -29.97% | x 1.43 |
|into_sorted_vec | 469,511 | 304,275 | -165,236 | -35.19% | x 1.54 |
|pop | 483,198 | 373,778 | -109,420 | -22.64% | x 1.29 |
The other 2 benchmarks for `BinaryHeap` (`peek_mut_deref_mut` and `push`) weren't impacted and as such didn't show any significant change.
BTreeMap: split off most code of append
To complete #78056, move the last single-purpose pieces of code out of map.rs into a separate module. Also, tweaked documentation and safeness - I doubt think this code would be safe if the iterators passed in wouldn't be as sorted as the method says they should be - and bounds on MergeIterInner.
r? ```@Mark-Simulacrum```
Workaround for "could not fully normalize" ICE
Workaround for "could not fully normalize" ICE (#78139) by removing the `needs_drop::<T>()` calls triggering it.
Corresponding beta PR: #78845Fixes#78139 -- the underlying bug is likely not fixed but we don't have another test case isolated for now, so closing.
fix some incorrect aliasing in the BTree
This line is wrong:
```
ptr::copy(slice.as_ptr().add(idx), slice.as_mut_ptr().add(idx + 1), slice.len() - idx);
```
When `slice.as_mut_ptr()` is called, that creates a mutable reference to the entire slice, which invalidates the raw pointer previously returned by `slice.as_ptr()`. (Miri currently misses this because raw pointers are not tracked properly.)
Cc ````````@ssomers````````
BTreeMap: stop mistaking node for an orderly place
A second mistake in #77612 was to ignore the node module's rightful comment "this module doesn't care whether the entries are sorted". And there's a much simpler way to visit the keys in order, if you check this separately from a single pass checking everything.
r? ````````@Mark-Simulacrum````````
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
Move Vec UI tests to unit tests when possible
Helps with #76268.
I'm moving the tests using `Vec` or `VecDeque`.
````@rustbot```` modify labels: A-testsuite C-cleanup T-libs
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.
Fix doc links to std::fmt
`std::format` and `core::write` macros' docs linked to `core::fmt` for format string reference, even though only `std::fmt` has format string documentation (and the link titles were `std::fmt`)
std::format and core::write macros' docs linked to core::fmt for format string reference, even though only std::fmt has format string documentation and the link titles were std::fmt.
Prevent String::retain from creating non-utf8 strings when abusing panic
Fixes#78498
The idea is the same as `Vec::drain`, set the len to 0 so that nobody can observe the broken invariant if it escapes the function (in this case if `f` panics)
BTreeMap: move generic support functions out of navigate.rs
A preparatory step chipped off #78104, useful in general (if at all).
r? `@Mark-Simulacrum`
BTreeMap: stop mistaking node::MIN_LEN for a node level constraint
Correcting #77612 that fell into the trap of assuming that node::MIN_LEN is an imposed minimum everywhere, and trying to make it much more clear it is an offered minimum at the node level.
r? @Mark-Simulacrum
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'.
Closesrust-lang/rust#69399
r? @oli-obk
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.
Check for exhaustion in RangeInclusive::contains and slicing
When a range has finished iteration, `is_empty` returns true, so it
should also be the case that `contains` returns false.
Fixes#77941.
Doc formating consistency between slice sort and sort_unstable, and big O notation consistency
Updated documentation for slice sorting methods to be consistent between stable and unstable versions, which just ended up being minor formatting differences.
I also went through and updated any doc comments with big O notation to be consistent with #74010 by italicizing them rather than having them in a code block.
Move `slice::check_range` to `RangeBounds`
Since this method doesn't take a slice anymore (#76662), it makes more sense to define it on `RangeBounds`.
Questions:
- Should the new method be `assert_len` or `assert_length`?
BTreeMap: refactor Entry out of map.rs into its own file
btree/map.rs is approaching the 3000 line mark, splitting out the entry
code buys about 500 lines of headroom.
I've created this PR because the changes I've made in #77438 will push `map.rs` over the 3000 line limit and cause tidy to complain.
I picked `Entry` to factor out because it feels less tightly coupled to the rest of `BTreeMap` than the various iterator implementations.
Related: #60302
BTreeMap: improve gdb introspection of BTreeMap with ZST keys or values
I accidentally pushed an earlier revision in #77788: it changes the index of tuples for BTreeSet from ""[{}]".format(i) to "key{}".format(i). Which doesn't seem to make the slightest difference on my linux box nor on CI. In fact, gdb doesn't make any distinction between "key{}" and "val{}" for a BTreeMap either, leading to confusing output if you test more. But easy to improve.
r? @Mark-Simulacrum
liballoc: VecDeque: Add binary search functions
I am submitting rust-lang/rfcs#2997 as a PR as suggested by @scottmcm
I haven't yet created a tracking issue - if there's a favorable feedback I'll create one and update the issue links in the unstable attribs.
Remove shrink_to_fit from default ToString::to_string implementation.
As suggested by `@scottmcm` on Zulip. shrink_to_fit() seems like the wrong thing to do here in most use cases of to_string(). Would be intereseting to see if it makes any difference in a timer run.
r? `@joshtriplett`