Commit Graph

168 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Martin Pool
cfee2ed8cb Warn that platform-specific behavior may change 2022-03-29 19:49:15 -07:00
Martin Pool
93e9f5e966 Document Linux kernel handoff in std::io::copy and std::fs::copy 2022-03-24 21:44:39 -07:00
Matthias Krüger
acb7ed141b Rollup merge of #94749 - RalfJung:remove-dir-all-miri, r=cuviper
remove_dir_all: use fallback implementation on Miri

Fixes https://github.com/rust-lang/miri/issues/1966

The new implementation requires `openat`, `unlinkat`, and `fdopendir`. These cannot easily be shimmed in Miri since libstd does not expose APIs corresponding to them. So for now it is probably easiest to just use the fallback code in Miri. Nobody should run Miri as root anyway...
2022-03-20 09:14:58 +01:00
T-O-R-U-S
72a25d05bf Use implicit capture syntax in format_args
This updates the standard library's documentation to use the new syntax. The
documentation is worthwhile to update as it should be more idiomatic
(particularly for features like this, which are nice for users to get acquainted
with). The general codebase is likely more hassle than benefit to update: it'll
hurt git blame, and generally updates can be done by folks updating the code if
(and when) that makes things more readable with the new format.

A few places in the compiler and library code are updated (mostly just due to
already having been done when this commit was first authored).
2022-03-10 10:23:40 -05:00
Ralf Jung
28eb06bd98 docs 2022-03-08 20:09:44 -05:00
Matthias Krüger
9cb39a6083 Rollup merge of #93206 - ChrisDenton:ntopenfile, r=nagisa
Use `NtCreateFile` instead of `NtOpenFile` to open a file

Generally the internal `Nt*` functions should be avoided but when we do need to use one we should stick to the most commonly used for the job. To that end, this PR replaces `NtOpenFile` with `NtCreateFile`.

NOTE: The initial version of this comment hypothesised that this may help with some recent false positives from malware scanners. This hypothesis proved wrong. Sorry for the distraction.
2022-02-08 16:40:49 +01:00
Thom Chiovoloni
554918e311 Hide Repr details from io::Error, and rework io::Error::new_const. 2022-02-04 18:47:29 -08:00
Chris Denton
1bc8f0b49f Link try_exists docs to Path::exists 2022-02-01 18:40:29 +00:00
Chris Denton
ac02fcc4d8 Use NtCreateFile instead of NtOpenFile to open a file 2022-01-24 10:00:31 +00:00
Matthias Krüger
dbc97490bb Rollup merge of #93112 - pietroalbini:pa-cve-2022-21658-nightly, r=pietroalbini
Fix CVE-2022-21658

See https://blog.rust-lang.org/2022/01/20/cve-2022-21658.html. Patches reviewed by `@m-ou-se.`

r? `@ghost`
2022-01-20 17:10:43 +01:00
Pietro Albini
32080ad6d0 Update std::fs::remove_dir_all documentation 2022-01-19 15:59:25 +01:00
Maxwase
a7092f91a6 Typos fix 2022-01-14 00:17:11 +03:00
Josh Triplett
c91ad5d0f2 Improve documentation for File::options to give a more likely example
`File::options().read(true).open(...)` is equivalent to just
`File::open`. Change the example to set the `append` flag instead, and
then change the filename to something more likely to be written in
append mode.
2022-01-10 17:35:17 -05:00
Maxwase
8fafb77af9 Correct since attribute for feature 2021-12-11 13:47:20 +03:00
bors
3b263ceb5c Auto merge of #81156 - DrMeepster:read_buf, r=joshtriplett
Implement most of RFC 2930, providing the ReadBuf abstraction

This replaces the `Initializer` abstraction for permitting reading into uninitialized buffers, closing #42788.

This leaves several APIs described in the RFC out of scope for the initial implementation:

* read_buf_vectored
* `ReadBufs`

Closes #42788, by removing the relevant APIs.
2021-12-09 10:11:55 +00:00
Jubilee Young
caf206b820 Stabilize File::options()
Renames File::with_options to File::options, per consensus in
rust-lang/rust#65439, and stabilizes it.
2021-11-09 10:22:28 -08:00
DrMeepster
fc49a29a14 add read_buf for &File 2021-11-02 22:47:27 -07:00
DrMeepster
5a97090b04 more efficent File::read_buf impl for windows and unix 2021-11-02 22:47:26 -07:00
DrMeepster
98c6200b16 read_buf 2021-11-02 22:47:20 -07:00
Matthias Krüger
26f505c433 Rollup merge of #90430 - jkugelman:must-use-std-a-through-n, r=joshtriplett
Add #[must_use] to remaining std functions (A-N)

I've run out of compelling reasons to group functions together across crates so I'm just going to go module-by-module. This is half of the remaining items from the `std` crate, from A-N.

I added these functions myself. Clippy predictably ignored the `mut` ones, but I don't know why the rest weren't flagged. Check them closely, please? Maybe I overlooked good reasons.

```rust
std::backtrace::Backtrace                                   const fn disabled() -> Backtrace;
std::backtrace::Backtrace<'a>                               fn frames(&'a self) -> &'a [BacktraceFrame];
std::collections::hash_map::RawOccupiedEntryMut<'a, K, V>   fn key_mut(&mut self) -> &mut K;
std::collections::hash_map::RawOccupiedEntryMut<'a, K, V>   fn get_mut(&mut self) -> &mut V;
std::collections::hash_map::RawOccupiedEntryMut<'a, K, V>   fn get_key_value(&mut self) -> (&K, &V);
std::collections::hash_map::RawOccupiedEntryMut<'a, K, V>   fn get_key_value_mut(&mut self) -> (&mut K, &mut V);
std::env                                                    fn var_os<K: AsRef<OsStr>>(key: K) -> Option<OsString>;
std::env                                                    fn split_paths<T: AsRef<OsStr> + ?Sized>(unparsed: &T) -> SplitPaths<'_>;
std::io::Error                                              fn get_mut(&mut self) -> Option<&mut (dyn error::Error + Send + Sync + 'static)>;
```

Parent issue: #89692

r? `@joshtriplett`
2021-10-31 13:20:06 +01:00
Matthias Krüger
88e5ae2dd3 Rollup merge of #89786 - jkugelman:must-use-len-and-is_empty, r=joshtriplett
Add #[must_use] to len and is_empty

Parent issue: #89692

r? `@joshtriplett`
2021-10-31 13:20:05 +01:00
John Kugelman
e129d49f88 Add #[must_use] to remaining std functions (A-N) 2021-10-30 23:44:02 -04:00
John Kugelman
6745e8da06 Add #[must_use] to len and is_empty 2021-10-30 19:25:12 -04:00
Max Wase
3e0360f3d4 Merge branch 'master' into is-symlink-stabilization 2021-10-13 01:33:12 +03:00
John Kugelman
01b439e764 Add #[must_use] to is_condition tests
A continuation of #89718.
2021-10-11 21:15:57 -04:00
John Kugelman
5b5c12be1c Add #[must_use] to core and std constructors 2021-10-10 02:44:26 -04:00
Maxwase
55663a76f4 Stabilize is_symlink() for Metadata and Path 2021-10-08 22:17:33 +03:00
John Kugelman
a990c76d84 Optimize File::read_to_end and read_to_string
Reading a file into an empty vector or string buffer can incur
unnecessary `read` syscalls and memory re-allocations as the buffer
"warms up" and grows to its final size. This is perhaps a necessary evil
with generic readers, but files can be read in smarter by checking the
file size and reserving that much capacity.

`std::fs::read` and `read_to_string` already perform this optimization:
they open the file, reads its metadata, and call `with_capacity` with
the file size. This ensures that the buffer does not need to be resized
and an initial string of small `read` syscalls.

However, if a user opens the `File` themselves and calls
`file.read_to_end` or `file.read_to_string` they do not get this
optimization.

```rust
let mut buf = Vec::new();
file.read_to_end(&mut buf)?;
```

I searched through this project's codebase and even here are a *lot* of
examples of this. They're found all over in unit tests, which isn't a
big deal, but there are also several real instances in the compiler and
in Cargo. I've documented the ones I found in a comment here:

https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/89516#issuecomment-934423999

Most telling, the `Read` trait and the `read_to_end` method both show
this exact pattern as examples of how to use readers. What this says to
me is that this shouldn't be solved by simply fixing the instances of it
in this codebase. If it's here it's certain to be prevalent in the wider
Rust ecosystem.

To that end, this commit adds specializations of `read_to_end` and
`read_to_string` directly on `File`. This way it's no longer a minor
footgun to start with an empty buffer when reading a file in.

A nice side effect of this change is that code that accesses a `File` as
a bare `Read` constraint or via a `dyn Read` trait object will benefit.
For example, this code from `compiler/rustc_serialize/src/json.rs`:

```rust
pub fn from_reader(rdr: &mut dyn Read) -> Result<Json, BuilderError> {
    let mut contents = Vec::new();
    match rdr.read_to_end(&mut contents) {
```

Related changes:

- I also added specializations to `BufReader` to delegate to
  `self.inner`'s methods. That way it can call `File`'s optimized
  implementations if the inner reader is a file.

- The private `std::io::append_to_string` function is now marked
  `unsafe`.

- `File::read_to_string` being more efficient means that the performance
  note for `io::read_to_string` can be softened. I've added @camelid's
  suggested wording from:

  https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/80218#issuecomment-936806502
2021-10-07 18:42:02 -04:00
bors
d25de31a0e Auto merge of #89165 - jkugelman:read-to-end-overallocation, r=joshtriplett
Fix read_to_end to not grow an exact size buffer

If you know how much data to expect and use `Vec::with_capacity` to pre-allocate a buffer of that capacity, `Read::read_to_end` will still double its capacity. It needs some space to perform a read, even though that read ends up returning `0`.

It's a bummer to carefully pre-allocate 1GB to read a 1GB file into memory and end up using 2GB.

This fixes that behavior by special casing a full buffer and reading into a small "probe" buffer instead. If that read returns `0` then it's confirmed that the buffer was the perfect size. If it doesn't, the probe buffer is appended to the normal buffer and the read loop continues.

Fixing this allows several workarounds in the standard library to be removed:

- `Take` no longer needs to override `Read::read_to_end`.
- The `reservation_size` callback that allowed `Take` to inhibit the previous over-allocation behavior isn't needed.
- `fs::read` doesn't need to reserve an extra byte in `initial_buffer_size`.

Curiously, there was a unit test that specifically checked that `Read::read_to_end` *does* over-allocate. I removed that test, too.
2021-10-04 04:44:56 +00:00
Frank Steffahn
67065fe933 Apply 16 commits (squashed)
----------

Fix spacing for links inside code blocks, and improve link tooltips in alloc::fmt

----------

Fix spacing for links inside code blocks, and improve link tooltips in alloc::{rc, sync}

----------

Fix spacing for links inside code blocks, and improve link tooltips in alloc::string

----------

Fix spacing for links inside code blocks in alloc::vec

----------

Fix spacing for links inside code blocks in core::option

----------

Fix spacing for links inside code blocks, and improve a few link tooltips in core::result

----------

Fix spacing for links inside code blocks in core::{iter::{self, iterator}, stream::stream, poll}

----------

Fix spacing for links inside code blocks, and improve a few link tooltips in std::{fs, path}

----------

Fix spacing for links inside code blocks in std::{collections, time}

----------

Fix spacing for links inside code blocks in and make formatting of `&str`-like types consistent in std::ffi::{c_str, os_str}

----------

Fix spacing for links inside code blocks, and improve link tooltips in std::ffi

----------

Fix spacing for links inside code blocks, and improve a few link tooltips
in std::{io::{self, buffered::{bufreader, bufwriter}, cursor, util}, net::{self, addr}}

----------

Fix typo in link to `into` for `OsString` docs

----------

Remove tooltips that will probably become redundant in the future

----------

Apply suggestions from code review

Replacing `…std/primitive.reference.html` paths with just `reference`

Co-authored-by: Joshua Nelson <github@jyn.dev>

----------

Also replace `…std/primitive.reference.html` paths with just `reference` in `core::pin`
2021-09-25 20:04:35 +02:00
John Kugelman
9b9c24ec7f Fix read_to_end to not grow an exact size buffer
If you know how much data to expect and use `Vec::with_capacity` to
pre-allocate a buffer of that capacity, `Read::read_to_end` will still
double its capacity. It needs some space to perform a read, even though
that read ends up returning `0`.

It's a bummer to carefully pre-allocate 1GB to read a 1GB file into
memory and end up using 2GB.

This fixes that behavior by special casing a full buffer and reading
into a small "probe" buffer instead. If that read returns `0` then it's
confirmed that the buffer was the perfect size. If it doesn't, the probe
buffer is appended to the normal buffer and the read loop continues.

Fixing this allows several workarounds in the standard library to be
removed:

- `Take` no longer needs to override `Read::read_to_end`.
- The `reservation_size` callback that allowed `Take` to inhibit the
  previous over-allocation behavior isn't needed.
- `fs::read` doesn't need to reserve an extra byte in
  `initial_buffer_size`.

Curiously, there was a unit test that specifically checked that
`Read::read_to_end` *does* over-allocate. I removed that test, too.
2021-09-22 00:54:27 -04:00
Dan Gohman
ab08639e59 Add comments about impls for File, TcpStream, ChildStdin, etc. 2021-08-19 12:02:40 -07:00
Timotej Lazar
c32e4ba60a Document that fs::read_dir skips . and .. 2021-08-07 10:14:41 +02:00
Ali Malik
e43254aad1 Fix may not to appropriate might not or must not 2021-07-29 01:15:20 -04:00
D1mon
387cd6dbf6 Add some doc aliases
Add `mkdir` to `create_dir`, `rmdir` to `remove_dir`.
2021-07-29 04:23:01 +09:00
Yuki Okushi
07faa2e32c Rollup merge of #87170 - xFrednet:clippy-5393-add-diagnostic-items, r=Manishearth,oli-obk
Add diagnostic items for Clippy

This adds a bunch of diagnostic items to `std`/`core`/`alloc` functions, structs and traits used in Clippy. The actual refactorings in Clippy to use these items will be done in a different PR in Clippy after the next sync.

This PR doesn't include all paths Clippy uses, I've only gone through the first 85 lines of Clippy's [`paths.rs`](ecf85f4bdc/clippy_utils/src/paths.rs) (after rust-lang/rust-clippy#7466) to get some feedback early on. I've also decided against adding diagnostic items to methods, as it would be nicer and more scalable to access them in a nicer fashion, like adding a `is_diagnostic_assoc_item(did, sym::Iterator, sym::map)` function or something similar (Suggested by `@camsteffen` [on Zulip](https://rust-lang.zulipchat.com/#narrow/stream/147480-t-compiler.2Fwg-diagnostics/topic/Diagnostic.20Item.20Naming.20Convention.3F/near/225024603))

There seems to be some different naming conventions when it comes to diagnostic items, some use UpperCamelCase (`BinaryHeap`) and some snake_case (`hashmap_type`). This PR uses UpperCamelCase for structs and traits and snake_case with the module name as a prefix for functions. Any feedback on is this welcome.

cc: rust-lang/rust-clippy#5393

r? `@Manishearth`
2021-07-18 14:21:57 +09:00
xFrednet
d38f2b0cc1 Added diagnostic items to structs and traits for Clippy 2021-07-15 23:57:02 +02:00
Aris Merchant
5022c0638d Update docs for fs::hard_link 2021-07-09 23:24:36 -07:00
Yuki Okushi
470ed70a86 Rollup merge of #86852 - Amanieu:remove_doc_aliases, r=joshtriplett
Remove some doc aliases

As per the new doc alias policy in https://github.com/rust-lang/std-dev-guide/pull/25, this removes some controversial doc aliases:
- `malloc`, `alloc`, `realloc`, etc.
- `length` (alias for `len`)
- `delete` (alias for `remove` in collections and also file/directory deletion)

r? `@joshtriplett`
2021-07-06 02:33:16 +09:00
bors
f9fa13f705 Auto merge of #85746 - m-ou-se:io-error-other, r=joshtriplett
Redefine `ErrorKind::Other` and stop using it in std.

This implements the idea I shared yesterday in the libs meeting when we were discussing how to handle adding new `ErrorKind`s to the standard library: This redefines `Other` to be for *user defined errors only*, and changes all uses of `Other` in the standard library to a `#[doc(hidden)]` and permanently `#[unstable]` `ErrorKind` that users can not match on. This ensures that adding `ErrorKind`s at a later point in time is not a breaking change, since the user couldn't match on these errors anyway. This way, we use the `#[non_exhaustive]` property of the enum in a more effective way.

Open questions:
- How do we check this change doesn't cause too much breakage? Will a crate run help and be enough?
- How do we ensure we don't accidentally start using `Other` again in the standard library? We don't have a `pub(not crate)` or `#[deprecated(in this crate only)]`.

cc https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/79965

cc `@rust-lang/libs` `@ijackson`

r? `@dtolnay`
2021-07-02 09:01:42 +00:00
Amanieu d'Antras
fc2705d707 Remove "delete" doc aliases 2021-06-30 20:28:51 +01:00
Max Wase
01435fc83a no_run and ignore doc attributes 2021-06-18 14:17:21 +03:00
Mara Bos
a0d11a4fab Rename ErrorKind::Unknown to Uncategorized. 2021-06-15 14:30:13 +02:00
Mara Bos
0b37bb2bc2 Redefine ErrorKind::Other and stop using it in std. 2021-06-15 14:22:49 +02:00
Max Wase
a0958df56f Review fixes + doc-features 2021-05-27 18:02:21 +03:00
Max Wase
2d88c52ab7 Tracking issue add. 2021-05-27 16:11:54 +03:00
Max Wase
89c0f50b09 Fix is_symlink() method for Path using added is_symlink() method for Metadata 2021-05-27 16:04:08 +03:00
Chris Denton
2c2c1593ac Move the implementation of Path::exists to sys_common::fs so platforms can specialize it
Windows implementation of `fs::try_exists`
2021-05-19 23:54:56 +01:00
Steve Klabnik
c2f4a5b9f9 clean up example on read_to_string
This is the same thing, but simpler.
2021-04-10 12:50:04 -05:00
Yuki Okushi
53cc8065a0 Rollup merge of #83558 - m-ou-se:use-finish-non-exhaustive, r=jackh726
Use DebugStruct::finish_non_exhaustive() in std.

See https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/67364
2021-03-28 01:33:17 +09:00