Add `type_ascribe!` macro as placeholder syntax for type ascription
This makes it still possible to test the internal semantics of type ascription even once the `:`-syntax is removed from the parser. The macro now gets used in a bunch of UI tests that test the semantics and not syntax of type ascription.
I might have forgotten a few tests but this should hopefully be most of them. The remaining ones will certainly be found once type ascription is removed from the parser altogether.
Part of #101728
Pointer-integer casts are required for conversion between `EXINF` (ITRON
task entry point parameter) and `*const ThreadInner`. Addresses the
deny-level lint `fuzzy_provenance_casts`.
Extract WStrUnits to sys_common::wstr
This commit extracts WStrUnits from sys::windows::args to sys_common::wstr. This allows using the same structure for other targets which use wtf8 (example UEFI).
This was originally a part of https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/100316
Signed-off-by: Ayush Singh <ayushsingh1325@gmail.com>
This commit extracts WStrUnits from sys::windows::args to sys_common::wstr. This
allows using the same structure for other targets which use wtf8 (example UEFI).
This was originally a part of https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/100316
Signed-off-by: Ayush Singh <ayushsingh1325@gmail.com>
Forbid inlining `thread_local!`'s `__getit` function on Windows
Sadly, this will make things slower to avoid UB in an edge case, but it seems hard to avoid... and really whenever I look at this code I can't help but think we're asking for trouble.
It's pretty dodgy for us to leave this as a normal function rather than `#[inline(never)]`, given that if it *does* get inlined into a dynamically linked component, it's extremely unsafe (you get some other thread local, or if you're lucky, crash). Given that it's pretty rare for people to use dylibs on Windows, the fact that we haven't gotten bug reports about it isn't really that convincing. Ideally we'd come up with some kind of compiler solution (that avoids paying for this cost when static linking, or *at least* for use within the same crate...), but it's not clear what that looks like.
Oh, and because all this is only needed when we're implementing `thread_local!` with `#[thread_local]`, this patch adjusts the `cfg_attr` to be `all(windows, target_thread_local)` as well.
r? ``@ChrisDenton``
See also #84933, which is about improving the situation.
Add slice methods for indexing via an array of indices.
Disclaimer: It's been a while since I contributed to the main Rust repo, apologies in advance if this is large enough already that it should've been an RFC.
---
# Update:
- Based on feedback, removed the `&[T]` variant of this API, and removed the requirements for the indices to be sorted.
# Description
This adds the following slice methods to `core`:
```rust
impl<T> [T] {
pub unsafe fn get_many_unchecked_mut<const N: usize>(&mut self, indices: [usize; N]) -> [&mut T; N];
pub fn get_many_mut<const N: usize>(&mut self, indices: [usize; N]) -> Option<[&mut T; N]>;
}
```
This allows creating multiple mutable references to disjunct positions in a slice, which previously required writing some awkward code with `split_at_mut()` or `iter_mut()`. For the bound-checked variant, the indices are checked against each other and against the bounds of the slice, which requires `N * (N + 1) / 2` comparison operations.
This has a proof-of-concept standalone implementation here: https://crates.io/crates/index_many
Care has been taken that the implementation passes miri borrow checks, and generates straight-forward assembly (though this was only checked on x86_64).
# Example
```rust
let v = &mut [1, 2, 3, 4];
let [a, b] = v.get_many_mut([0, 2]).unwrap();
std::mem::swap(a, b);
*v += 100;
assert_eq!(v, &[3, 2, 101, 4]);
```
# Codegen Examples
<details>
<summary>Click to expand!</summary>
Disclaimer: Taken from local tests with the standalone implementation.
## Unchecked Indexing:
```rust
pub unsafe fn example_unchecked(slice: &mut [usize], indices: [usize; 3]) -> [&mut usize; 3] {
slice.get_many_unchecked_mut(indices)
}
```
```nasm
example_unchecked:
mov rcx, qword, ptr, [r9]
mov r8, qword, ptr, [r9, +, 8]
mov r9, qword, ptr, [r9, +, 16]
lea rcx, [rdx, +, 8*rcx]
lea r8, [rdx, +, 8*r8]
lea rdx, [rdx, +, 8*r9]
mov qword, ptr, [rax], rcx
mov qword, ptr, [rax, +, 8], r8
mov qword, ptr, [rax, +, 16], rdx
ret
```
## Checked Indexing (Option):
```rust
pub unsafe fn example_option(slice: &mut [usize], indices: [usize; 3]) -> Option<[&mut usize; 3]> {
slice.get_many_mut(indices)
}
```
```nasm
mov r10, qword, ptr, [r9, +, 8]
mov rcx, qword, ptr, [r9, +, 16]
cmp rcx, r10
je .LBB0_7
mov r9, qword, ptr, [r9]
cmp rcx, r9
je .LBB0_7
cmp rcx, r8
jae .LBB0_7
cmp r10, r9
je .LBB0_7
cmp r9, r8
jae .LBB0_7
cmp r10, r8
jae .LBB0_7
lea r8, [rdx, +, 8*r9]
lea r9, [rdx, +, 8*r10]
lea rcx, [rdx, +, 8*rcx]
mov qword, ptr, [rax], r8
mov qword, ptr, [rax, +, 8], r9
mov qword, ptr, [rax, +, 16], rcx
ret
.LBB0_7:
mov qword, ptr, [rax], 0
ret
```
## Checked Indexing (Panic):
```rust
pub fn example_panic(slice: &mut [usize], indices: [usize; 3]) -> [&mut usize; 3] {
let len = slice.len();
match slice.get_many_mut(indices) {
Some(s) => s,
None => {
let tmp = indices;
index_many::sorted_bound_check_failed(&tmp, len)
}
}
}
```
```nasm
example_panic:
sub rsp, 56
mov rax, qword, ptr, [r9]
mov r10, qword, ptr, [r9, +, 8]
mov r9, qword, ptr, [r9, +, 16]
cmp r9, r10
je .LBB0_6
cmp r9, rax
je .LBB0_6
cmp r9, r8
jae .LBB0_6
cmp r10, rax
je .LBB0_6
cmp rax, r8
jae .LBB0_6
cmp r10, r8
jae .LBB0_6
lea rax, [rdx, +, 8*rax]
lea r8, [rdx, +, 8*r10]
lea rdx, [rdx, +, 8*r9]
mov qword, ptr, [rcx], rax
mov qword, ptr, [rcx, +, 8], r8
mov qword, ptr, [rcx, +, 16], rdx
mov rax, rcx
add rsp, 56
ret
.LBB0_6:
mov qword, ptr, [rsp, +, 32], rax
mov qword, ptr, [rsp, +, 40], r10
mov qword, ptr, [rsp, +, 48], r9
lea rcx, [rsp, +, 32]
mov edx, 3
call index_many::bound_check_failed
ud2
```
</details>
# Extensions
There are multiple optional extensions to this.
## Indexing With Ranges
This could easily be expanded to allow indexing with `[I; N]` where `I: SliceIndex<Self>`. I wanted to keep the initial implementation simple, so I didn't include it yet.
## Panicking Variant
We could also add this method:
```rust
impl<T> [T] {
fn index_many_mut<const N: usize>(&mut self, indices: [usize; N]) -> [&mut T; N];
}
```
This would work similar to the regular index operator and panic with out-of-bound indices. The advantage would be that we could more easily ensure good codegen with a useful panic message, which is non-trivial with the `Option` variant.
This is implemented in the standalone implementation, and used as basis for the codegen examples here and there.
Improve accuracy of asinh and acosh
This PR addresses the inaccuracy of `asinh` and `acosh` identified by the [Herbie](http://herbie.uwplse.org/) tool, `@pavpanchekha,` `@finnbear` in #104548. It also adds a couple tests that failed in the existing implementations and now pass.
Closes#104548
r? rust-lang/libs
Fix non-associativity of `Instant` math on `aarch64-apple-darwin` targets
This is a duplicate of #94100 (since the original author is unresponsive), which resolves#91417.
On `aarch64-apple-darwin` targets, the internal resolution of `Instant` is lower than that of `Duration`, so math between them becomes non-associative with small-enough durations.
This PR makes this target use the standard Unix implementation (where `Instant` has 1ns resolution), but with `CLOCK_UPTIME_RAW` so it still returns the same values as `mach_absolute_time`[^1].
(Edit: I need someone to confirm that this still works, I do not have access to an M1 device.)
[^1]: https://www.manpagez.com/man/3/clock_gettime/
There seem to be some scenarios where `cpu.cfs_period_us` can contain `0`
This causes a panic when calling `std:🧵:available_parallelism()` as is done so
from binaries built by `cargo test`, which was how the issue was
discovered. I don't feel like `0` is a good value for `cpu.cfs_period_us`, but I
also don't think applications should panic if this value is seen.
This case is handled by other projects which read this information:
- num_cpus: e437b9d908/src/linux.rs (L207-L210)
- ninja: https://github.com/ninja-build/ninja/pull/2174/files
- dotnet: c4341d45ac/src/coreclr/pal/src/misc/cgroup.cpp (L481-L483)
Before this change, this panic could be seen in environments setup as described
above:
```
$ RUST_BACKTRACE=1 cargo test
Finished test [unoptimized + debuginfo] target(s) in 3.55s
Running unittests src/main.rs (target/debug/deps/x-9a42e145aca2934d)
thread 'main' panicked at 'attempt to divide by zero', library/std/src/sys/unix/thread.rs:546:70
stack backtrace:
0: rust_begin_unwind
1: core::panicking::panic_fmt
2: core::panicking::panic
3: std::sys::unix:🧵:cgroups::quota
4: std::sys::unix:🧵:available_parallelism
5: std:🧵:available_parallelism
6: test::helpers::concurrency::get_concurrency
7: test::console::run_tests_console
8: test::test_main
9: test::test_main_static
10: x::main
at ./src/main.rs:1:1
11: core::ops::function::FnOnce::call_once
at /tmp/rust-1.64-1.64.0-1/library/core/src/ops/function.rs:248:5
note: Some details are omitted, run with `RUST_BACKTRACE=full` for a verbose backtrace.
error: test failed, to rerun pass '--bin local-rabmq-amqpprox'
```
I've tested this change in an environment which has the bad setup and
rebuilding the test executable against a fixed std library fixes the
panic.