Remove redundant check in `symlink_hard_link` test
We support macOS 10.12 and above, so it now always uses `linkat`, and so the check is redundant.
This was missed in #126351.
``@rustbot`` label O-macos
in this commit, `naked_asm!` is an alias for `asm!` with one difference: `options(noreturn)` is always enabled by `naked_asm!`. That makes it future-compatible for when `naked_asm!` starts disallowing `options(noreturn)` later.
const: make ptr.is_null() stop execution on ambiguity
This seems better than saying `false` -- saying `false` is in fact actively unsound if `NonNull` then uses this to permit putting this pointer inside of it, but at runtime it turns out to be null.
Part of https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/74939
Cc ```@rust-lang/wg-const-eval```
remove 'const' from 'Option::iter'
This is kind of pointless to be a `const fn` since you can't do anything with the iterator. It is also the only `const fn iter*` in the entire standard library. It probably got constified when `~const` traits got added everywhere, and then was forgotten to be de-constified when that was undone.
The rest of the const_option feature seems like it can reasonably be stabilized, but this one IMO should not be stabilized, and it's not worth creating a new tracking issue.
Cc https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/67441
Use the same code as Solaris. I couldn't find any tests regarding this, but I
did test a stage0 build against my stack-exhaust-test binary [1]. Before:
```
running with use_stacker = No, new_thread = false, make_large_local = false
zsh: segmentation fault (core dumped) cargo run
```
After:
```
running with use_stacker = No, new_thread = false, make_large_local = false
thread 'main' has overflowed its stack
fatal runtime error: stack overflow
zsh: IOT instruction (core dumped) cargo +stage0 run
```
Fixes#128568.
[1] https://github.com/sunshowers/stack-exhaust-test/
Break into the debugger (if attached) on panics (Windows, Linux, macOS, FreeBSD)
The developer experience for panics is to provide the backtrace and
exit the program. When running under debugger, that might be improved
by breaking into the debugger once the code panics thus enabling
the developer to examine the program state at the exact time when
the code panicked.
Let the developer catch the panic in the debugger if it is attached.
If the debugger is not attached, nothing changes. Providing this feature
inside the standard library facilitates better debugging experience.
Validated under Windows, Linux, macOS 14.6, and FreeBSD 13.3..14.1.
In https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/124748, I mistakenly conflated
"not SjLj" to mean "ARM EHABI", which isn't true, watchOS armv7k
(specifically only that architecture) uses a third unwinding method
called "DWARF CFI".
Rollup of 10 pull requests
Successful merges:
- #126452 (Implement raw lifetimes and labels (`'r#ident`))
- #129555 (stabilize const_float_bits_conv)
- #129594 (explain the options bootstrap passes to curl)
- #129677 (Don't build by-move body when async closure is tainted)
- #129847 (Do not call query to compute coroutine layout for synthetic body of async closure)
- #129869 (add a few more crashtests)
- #130009 (rustdoc-search: allow trailing `Foo ->` arg search)
- #130046 (str: make as_mut_ptr and as_bytes_mut unstably const)
- #130047 (Win: Add dbghelp to the list of import libraries)
- #130059 (Remove the unused `llvm-skip-rebuild` option from x.py)
r? `@ghost`
`@rustbot` modify labels: rollup
Win: Add dbghelp to the list of import libraries
This is used by the backtrace crate. But we use a submodule to include backtrace in std (rather than being a real crate) so we need to add the dependency here.
str: make as_mut_ptr and as_bytes_mut unstably const
`@rust-lang/libs-api` the corresponding non-mutable methods are already const fn, so this seems pretty trivial. I hope this is small enough that it does not need an ACP? :)
I would like to get these stabilized ASAP because I want to avoid people doing `s.as_ptr().cast_mut()`, which is UB if they ever write to it, but is already const-stable.
TODO: create a tracking issue.
Inaccurate `{Path,OsStr}::to_string_lossy()` documentation
The documentation of `Path::to_string_lossy()` and `OsStr::to_string_lossy()` says the following:
> Any non-Unicode sequences are replaced with `U+FFFD REPLACEMENT CHARACTER`
which didn't immediately make sense to me. ("non-Unicode sequences"?)
Since both `to_string_lossy` functions eventually become just a call to `String::from_utf8_lossy`, I believe the documentation meant to say:
> Any *non-UTF-8* sequences are replaced with `U+FFFD REPLACEMENT CHARACTER`
This PR corrects this mistake in the documentation.
For the record, a similar quote can be found in the documentation of `String::from_utf8_lossy`:
> ... During this conversion, `from_utf8_lossy()` will replace any invalid UTF-8 sequences with `U+FFFD REPLACEMENT CHARACTER`, ...
The developer experience for panics is to provide the backtrace and
exit the program. When running under debugger, that might be improved
by breaking into the debugger once the code panics thus enabling
the developer to examine the program state at the exact time when
the code panicked.
Let the developer catch the panic in the debugger if it is attached.
If the debugger is not attached, nothing changes. Providing this feature
inside the standard library facilitates better debugging experience.
Validated under Windows, Linux, macOS 14.6, and FreeBSD 13.3..14.1.