The latest versions of `memchr` experience LTO-related issues when
compiling for windows-gnu [1], so needs to be pinned. The issue is
present in the standard library.
`memchr` has been pinned in `rustc_ast`, but since the workspace was
recently split, this pin no longer has any effect on library crates.
Resolve this by adding `memchr` as an _unused_ dependency in `std`,
pinned to 2.5. Additionally, remove the pin in `rustc_ast` to allow
non-library crates to upgrade to the latest version.
Link: https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/127890 [1]
Add test for `available_parallelism()`
This is a redo of [this PR](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/104095).
I changed the location of the test as per comments in the original thread. Otherwise the test is practically the same.
try-job: test-various
Remove macOS 10.10 dynamic linker bug workaround
Rust's current minimum macOS version is 10.12, so the hack can be removed. This PR also updates the `remove_dir_all` docs to reflect that all supported macOS versions are protected against TOCTOU race conditions (the fallback implementation was already removed in #127683).
try-job: dist-x86_64-apple
try-job: dist-aarch64-apple
try-job: dist-apple-various
try-job: aarch64-apple
try-job: x86_64-apple-1
`pal::unsupported::process::ExitCode`: use an `u8` instead of a `bool`
`ExitCode` should “represents the status code the current process can return to its parent under normal termination”, but is currently represented as a `bool` on unsupported platforms, making the `impl From<u8> for ExitCode` lossy.
Fixes#130532.
History: [IRLO thread](https://internals.rust-lang.org/t/mini-pre-rfc-redesigning-process-exitstatus/5426) (`ExitCode` as a `main` return), #48618 (initial impl), #93445 (`From<u8>` impl).
Win: Open dir for sync access in remove_dir_all
A small follow up to #129800.
We should explicitly open directories for synchronous access. We ultimately use `GetFileInformationByHandleEx` to read directories which should paper over any issues caused by using async directory reads (or else return an error) but it's better to do the right thing in the first place. Note though that `delete` does not read or write any data so it's not necessary there.
In the implementation of `force_mut`, I chose performance over safety.
For `LazyLock` this isn't really a choice; the code has to be unsafe.
But for `LazyCell`, we can have a full-safe implementation, but it will
be a bit less performant, so I went with the unsafe approach.
fix: Remove duplicate `LazyLock` example.
The top-level docs for `LazyLock` included two lines of code, each with an accompanying comment, that were identical and with nearly- identical comments. This looks like an oversight from a past edit which was perhaps trying to rewrite an existing example but ended up duplicating rather than replacing, though I haven't gone back through the Git history to check.
This commit removes what I personally think is the less-clear of the two examples.
[library/std/src/process.rs] `PartialEq` for `ExitCode`
Converting a third-party CLI to a library so started passing around [`std::process::ExitCode`](https://doc.rust-lang.org/std/process/struct.ExitCode.html) in an `Either`. Then I realised the tests can't be modified to compare equality of `ExitCode`s.
This PR fixes this oversight.
The top-level docs for `LazyLock` included two lines of code, each
with an accompanying comment, that were identical and with nearly-
identical comments. This looks like an oversight from a past edit
which was perhaps trying to rewrite an existing example but ended
up duplicating rather than replacing, though I haven't gone back
through the Git history to check.
This commit removes what I personally think is the less-clear of
the two examples.
Signed-off-by: Andrew Lilley Brinker <alilleybrinker@gmail.com>