Previously vec's len was updated only after full copy, making the method
leak if T::clone panic!s.
This commit makes `Vec::extend_from_within` (or, more accurately, it's
`T: Clone` specialization) update vec's len on every iteration, fixing
the issue.
`T: Copy` specialization was not affected by the issue b/c it doesn't
call user specified code (as, e.g. `T::clone`), and instead calls
`ptr::copy_nonoverlapping`.
Revert `Vec::spare_capacity_mut` impl to prevent pointers invalidation
The implementation was changed in #79015.
Later it was [pointed out](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/81944#issuecomment-782849785) that the implementation invalidates pointers to the buffer (initialized elements) by creating a unique reference to the buffer. This PR reverts the implementation.
r? ```@RalfJung```
Turn may_have_side_effect into an associated constant
The `may_have_side_effect` is an implementation detail of `TrustedRandomAccess`
trait. It describes if obtaining an iterator element may have side effects. It
is currently implemented as an associated function.
Turn `may_have_side_effect` into an associated constant. This makes the
value immediately available to the optimizer.
Convert primitives in the standard library to intra-doc links
Blocked on https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/80181. I forgot that this needs to wait for the beta bump so the standard library can be documented with `doc --stage 0`.
Notably I didn't convert `core::slice` because it's like 50 links and I got scared 😨
BTree: no longer define impossible casts
Casts to leaf to internal only make sense when the original has a chance of being the thing it's cast to.
r? `@Mark-Simulacrum`
BTreeMap: split up range_search into two stages
`range_search` expects the caller to pass the same root twice and starts searching a node for both bounds of a range. It's not very clear that in the early iterations, it searches twice in the same node. This PR splits that search up in an initial `find_leaf_edges_spanning_range` that postpones aliasing until the last second, and a second phase for continuing the search for the range in the each subtree independently (`find_lower_bound_edge` & `find_upper_bound_edge`), which greatly helps for use in #81075. It also moves those functions over to the search module.
r? `@Mark-Simulacrum`
Almost all safety comments are of the form `// SAFETY:`,
so normalize the rest and fix a few of them that should
have been a `/// # Safety` section instead.
Furthermore, make `tidy` only allow the uppercase form. While
currently `tidy` only checks `core`, it is a good idea to prevent
`core` from drifting to non-uppercase comments, so that later
we can start checking `alloc` etc. too.
Signed-off-by: Miguel Ojeda <ojeda@kernel.org>
Improve non_fmt_panic lint.
This change:
- fixes the span used by this lint in the case the panic argument is a single macro expansion (e.g. `panic!(a!())`);
- adds a suggestion for `panic!(format!(..))` to remove `format!()` instead of adding `"{}", ` or using `panic_any` like it does now; and
- fixes the incorrect suggestion to replace `panic![123]` by `panic_any(123]`.
Fixes#82109.
Fixes#82110.
Fixes#82111.
Example output:
```
warning: panic message is not a string literal
--> src/main.rs:8:12
|
8 | panic!(format!("error: {}", "oh no"));
| ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
|
= note: `#[warn(non_fmt_panic)]` on by default
= note: this is no longer accepted in Rust 2021
= note: the panic!() macro supports formatting, so there's no need for the format!() macro here
help: remove the `format!(..)` macro call
|
8 | panic!("error: {}", "oh no");
| -- --
```
r? `@estebank`
Update the bootstrap compiler
This updates the bootstrap compiler, notably leaving out a change to enable semicolon in macro expressions lint, because stdarch still depends on the old behavior.
- Link from `core::hash` to `HashMap` and `HashSet`
- Link from HashMap and HashSet to the module-level documentation on
when to use the collection
- Link from several collections to Wikipedia articles on the general
concept
add diagnostic items for OsString/PathBuf/Owned as well as to_vec on slice
This is adding diagnostic items to be used by rust-lang/rust-clippy#6730, but my understanding is the clippy-side change does need to be done over there since I am adding a new clippy feature.
Add diagnostic items to the following types:
OsString (os_string_type)
PathBuf (path_buf_type)
Owned (to_owned_trait)
As well as the to_vec method on slice/[T]
Improve design of `assert_len`
It was discussed in the [tracking issue](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/76393#issuecomment-761765448) that `assert_len`'s name and usage are confusing. This PR improves them based on a suggestion by ``@scottmcm`` in that issue.
I also improved the documentation to make it clearer when you might want to use this method.
Old example:
```rust
let range = range.assert_len(slice.len());
```
New example:
```rust
let range = range.ensure_subset_of(..slice.len());
```
Fixes#81157
BTree: move more shared iterator code into navigate.rs
The functions in navigate.rs only exist to support iterators, and these look easier on my eyes if there is a shared `struct` with the recurring pair of handles.
r? `@Mark-Simulacrum`
BTreeMap: gather and decompose reusable tree fixing functions
This is kind of pushing it as a standalone refactor, probably only useful for #81075 (or similar).
r? `@Mark-Simulacrum`
Because child > 0, the two statements are equivalent, but using
saturating_sub and <= yields in faster code. This is most notable in the
binary_heap::bench_into_sorted_vec benchmark, which shows a speedup of
1.26x, which uses sift_down_range internally. The speedup of pop (that
uses sift_down_to_bottom internally) is much less significant as the
sifting method is not called in a loop.
Document BinaryHeap unsafe functions
`BinaryHeap` contains some private safe functions but that are actually unsafe to call. This PR marks them `unsafe` and documents all the `unsafe` function calls inside them.
While doing this I might also have found a bug: some "SAFETY" comments in `sift_down_range` and `sift_down_to_bottom` are valid only if you assume that `child` doesn't overflow. However it may overflow if `end > isize::MAX` which can be true for ZSTs (but I think only for them). I guess the easiest fix would be to skip any sifting if `mem::size_of::<T> == 0`.
Probably conflicts with #81127 but solving the eventual merge conflict should be pretty easy.
BTree: share panicky test code & test panic during clear, clone
Bases almost all tests of panic on the same, richer definition, and extends it to cloning to test panic during clone.
r? ```@Mark-Simulacrum```
The `may_have_side_effect` is an implementation detail of `TrustedRandomAccess`
trait. It describes if obtaining an iterator element may have side effects. It
is currently implemented as an associated function.
Turn `may_have_side_effect` into an associated constant. This makes the
value immediately available to the optimizer.