Use monotonic time in condition variables.
Configure condition variables to use monotonic time using
pthread_condattr_setclock on systems where this is possible.
This fixes the issue when thread waiting on condition variable is
woken up too late when system time is moved backwards.
Use arc4rand(9) on FreeBSD
From rust-lang-nursery/rand#112:
>After reading through #30691 it seems that there's general agreement that using OS-provided facilities for seeding rust userland processes is fine as long as it doesn't use too much from libc. FreeBSD's `arc4random_buf(3)` is not only a whole lot of libc code, but also not even currently exposed in the libc crate. Fortunately, the mechanism `arc4random_buf(3)` et al. use for getting entropy from the kernel ([`arc4rand(9)`](https://www.freebsd.org/cgi/man.cgi?query=arc4random&apropos=0&sektion=9&manpath=FreeBSD+10.3-RELEASE&arch=default&format=html)) is exposed via `sysctl(3)` with constants that are already in the libc crate.
>I haven't found too much documentation on `KERN_ARND`—it's missing or only briefly described in most of the places that cover sysctl mibs. But, from digging through the kernel source, it appears that the sysctl used in this PR is very close to just calling `arc4rand(9)` directly (with `reseed` set to 0 and no way to change it).
I expected [rand](/rust-lang-nursery/rand) to reply quicker, so I tried submitting it there first. It's been a few weeks with no comment, so I don't know the state of it, but maybe someone will see it here and have an opinion. This is basically the same patch. It pains me to duplicate the code but I guess it hasn't been factored out into just one place yet.
Emscripten test fixes
This picks up parts of #31623 to disable certain tests that emscripten can't run, as threads/processes are not supported.
I re-applied @tomaka's changes manually, I can rebase those commits with his credentials if he wants.
It also disables jemalloc for emscripten (at least in Rustbuild, I have to check if there is another setting for the same thing in the old makefile approach).
This should not impact anything for normal builds.
Fix build on DragonFly (unused function errno_location)
Function errno_location() is not used on DragonFly. As warnings are
errors, this breaks the build.
Handle RwLock reader count overflow
`pthread_rwlock_rdlock` may return `EAGAIN` if the maximum reader count overflows. We shouldn't return a successful lock in that case.
Configure condition variables to use monotonic time using
pthread_condattr_setclock on systems where this is possible.
This fixes the issue when thread waiting on condition variable is
woken up too late when system time is moved backwards.
rustbuild: make backtraces (RUST_BACKTRACE) optional
but keep them enabled by default to maintain the status quo.
When disabled shaves ~56KB off every x86_64-unknown-linux-gnu
binary.
To disable backtraces you have to use a config.toml (see
src/bootstrap/config.toml.example for details) when building rustc/std:
$ python bootstrap.py --config=config.toml
---
r? @alexcrichton
cc rust-lang/rfcs#1417
std: Fix usage of SOCK_CLOEXEC
This code path was intended to only get executed on Linux, but unfortunately the
`cfg!` was malformed so it actually never got executed.
DoubleEndedIterator for Args
This PR implements the DoubleEndedIterator trait for the `std::env::Args[Os]` structure, as well
as the internal implementations.
It is primarily motivated by me, as I happened to implement a simple `reversor` program many times
now, which so far had to use code like this:
```Rust
for arg in std::env::args().skip(1).collect::<Vec<_>>().iter().rev() {}
```
... even though I would have loved to do this instead:
```Rust
for arg in std::env::args().skip(1).rev() {}
```
The latter is more natural, and I did not find a reason for not implementing it.
After all, on every system, the number of arguments passed to the program are known
at runtime.
To my mind, it follows KISS, and does not try to be smart at all. Also, there are no unit-tests,
primarily as I did not find any existing tests for the `Args` struct either.
The windows implementation is basically a copy-pasted variant of the `next()` method implementation,
and I could imagine sharing most of the code instead. Actually I would be happy if the reviewer would
ask for it.
but keep them enabled by default to maintain the status quo.
When disabled shaves ~56KB off every x86_64-unknown-linux-gnu
binary.
To disable backtraces you have to use a config.toml (see
src/bootstrap/config.toml.example for details) when building rustc/std:
$ python bootstrap.py --config=config.toml
The number of arguments given to a process is always known, which
makes implementing DoubleEndedIterator possible.
That way, the Iterator::rev() method becomes usable, among others.
Signed-off-by: Sebastian Thiel <byronimo@gmail.com>
Tidy for DoubleEndedIterator
I chose to not create a new feature for it, even though
technically, this makes me lie about the original availability
of the implementation.
Verify with @alexchrichton
Setup feature flag for new std::env::Args iterators
Add test for Args reverse iterator
It's somewhat depending on the input of the test program,
but made in such a way that should be somewhat flexible to changes
to the way it is called.
Deduplicate windows ArgsOS code for DEI
DEI = DoubleEndedIterator
Move env::args().rev() test to run-pass
It must be controlling it's arguments for full isolation.
Remove superfluous feature name
Assert all arguments returned by env::args().rev()
Let's be very sure it works as we expect, why take chances.
Fix rval of os_string_from_ptr
A trait cannot be returned, but only the corresponding object.
Deref pointers to actually operate on the argument
Put unsafe to correct location
std: fix `readdir` errors for solaris
A `NULL` from `readdir` could be the end of stream or an error. The only
way to know is to check `errno`, so it must be set to a known value first,
like a 0 that POSIX will never use.
This currently only matters for solaris targets, as the other unix platforms
are using `readdir_r` with a direct error return indication. However, this is
getting deprecated (#34668) so they should all eventually switch to `readdir`.
This PR adds `set_errno`, uses it to clear the value before calling `readdir`,
then checks it again after to see the reason for a `NULL`. A few other small
fixes are included just to get solaris compiling at all.
I couldn't get cross-compilation completely going, so I don't have a good way
to test this beyond a smoke-test cargo build of std. I'd appreciate input from
someone more familiar with solaris -- cc @nbaksalyar?
A `NULL` from `readdir` could be the end of stream or an error. The
only way to know is to check `errno`, so it must be set to a known value
first, like a 0 that POSIX will never use.
This patch adds `set_errno`, uses it to clear the value before calling
`readdir`, then checks it again after to see the reason for a `NULL`.
The `use ffi::CStr` in `unix/thread.rs` was previously guarded, but now
all platforms need it for `Thread::set_name()`. Newlib and Solaris do
nothing here, as they have no way to set a thread name, but they still
define the same method signature.
Although the set of APIs being stabilized this release is relatively small, the
trains keep going! Listed below are the APIs in the standard library which have
either transitioned from unstable to stable or those from unstable to
deprecated.
Stable
* `BTreeMap::{append, split_off}`
* `BTreeSet::{append, split_off}`
* `Cell::get_mut`
* `RefCell::get_mut`
* `BinaryHeap::append`
* `{f32, f64}::{to_degrees, to_radians}` - libcore stabilizations mirroring past
libstd stabilizations
* `Iterator::sum`
* `Iterator::product`
Deprecated
* `{f32, f64}::next_after`
* `{f32, f64}::integer_decode`
* `{f32, f64}::ldexp`
* `{f32, f64}::frexp`
* `num::One`
* `num::Zero`
Added APIs (all unstable)
* `iter::Sum`
* `iter::Product`
* `iter::Step` - a few methods were added to accomodate deprecation of One/Zero
Removed APIs
* `From<Range<T>> for RangeInclusive<T>` - everything about `RangeInclusive` is
unstable
Closes#27739Closes#27752Closes#32526Closes#33444Closes#34152
cc #34529 (new tracking issue)
Don't ignore errors of syscalls in std::sys::unix::fd
If any of these syscalls fail, it indicates a programmer error that
should not be silently ignored.
std: Fix up stabilization discrepancies
* Remove the deprecated `CharRange` type which was forgotten to be removed
awhile back.
* Stabilize the `os::$platform::raw::pthread_t` type which was intended to be
stabilized as part of #32804
* Remove the deprecated `CharRange` type which was forgotten to be removed
awhile back.
* Stabilize the `os::$platform::raw::pthread_t` type which was intended to be
stabilized as part of #32804