This allows these test modules to pass on builds/targets without
unwinding support, where `panic = "abort"` - the ignored tests are for
functionality that's not supported on those targets.
Currently, when enabling CFI via -Zsanitizer=cfi and executing e.g.
std::sys::random::getrandom, we can observe a CFI violation. This is
the case for all consumers of the std::sys::pal::weak::weak macro,
as it is defining weak functions which don't show up in LLVM IR
metadata. CFI fails for all these functions.
Similar to other such cases in
https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/115199, this change stops
emitting the CFI typecheck for consumers of the macro via the
\#[no_sanitize(cfi)] attribute.
Eliminate any redundant, unobservable logic from the their default
method implementations.
The observable changes are that `Write::write_fmt` for both types now
ignores the formatting arguments, so a user fmt impl which has side
effects is not invoked, and `Write::write_all_vectored` for both types
does not advance the borrowed buffers. Neither behavior is guaranteed by
the docs and the latter is documented as unspecified.
`Empty` is not marked as vectored, so that `Chain<Empty, _>` and
`Chain<_, Empty>` are not forced to be vectored.
Support `File::seek` for Hermit
`lseek` was added in `hermit-abi` in commit [87dd201](87dd201a14) (add missing interface for lseek, 2024-07-15), which was just released in version 0.5.0.
cc ``@mkroening,`` ``@stlankes``
Fixes https://github.com/hermit-os/hermit-rs/issues/652
- Just the permission and file type.
- FileTimes will need some new conversion functions and thus will come
with a future PR. Trying to keep things simple here.
Signed-off-by: Ayush Singh <ayush@beagleboard.org>
- Similar to FilePermissions, using bool to represent the bitfield.
- FileType cannot be changed, so no need to worry about converting back
to attribute.
Signed-off-by: Ayush Singh <ayush@beagleboard.org>
- UEFI file permissions are indicated using a u64 bitfield used for
readonly/filetype, etc.
- Using normal bool with to and from attribute conversions to
FilePermission from overriding some other bitfields.
Signed-off-by: Ayush Singh <ayush@beagleboard.org>
As per #117276, this moves the platform definitions of `Stdout` and friends into `sys`. This PR also unifies the UNIX and Hermit implementations and moves the `__rust_print_err` function needed by libunwind on SGX into the dedicated module for such helper functions.
Mention `env` and `option_env` macros in `std::env::var` docs
Fixes https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/138159.
Just like there are mentions in `env!` and `option_env!` docs to `std::env::var`, it'd be nice to have a "mention back" as well.
Windows: Fix error in `fs::rename` on Windows 1607
Fixes#137499
There's a bug in our Windows implementation of `fs::rename` that only manifests on a specific version of Windows. Both newer and older versions of Windows work.
I took the safest route to fixing this by using the old `MoveFileExW` function to implement this and only falling back to the new behaviour if that fails. This is similar to what is done in `unlink` (just above this function).
try-job: dist-x86_64-mingw
try-job: dist-x86_64-msvc
add a "future" edition
This idea has been discussed previously [on Zulip](https://rust-lang.zulipchat.com/#narrow/channel/213817-t-lang/topic/Continuous.20edition-like.20changes.3F/near/432559262) (though what I've implemented isn't exactly the "next"/"future" editions proposed in that message, just the "future" edition). I've found myself prototyping changes that involve edition migrations and wanting to target an upcoming edition for those migrations, but none exists. This should be permanently unstable and not removed.
Rollup of 6 pull requests
Successful merges:
- #137674 (Enable `f16` for LoongArch)
- #138034 (library: Use `size_of` from the prelude instead of imported)
- #138060 (Revert #138019 after further discussion about how hir-pretty printing should work)
- #138073 (Break critical edges in inline asm before code generation)
- #138107 (`librustdoc`: clippy fixes)
- #138111 (Use `default_field_values` for `rustc_errors::Context`, `rustc_session::config::NextSolverConfig` and `rustc_session::config::ErrorOutputType`)
r? `@ghost`
`@rustbot` modify labels: rollup
library: Use `size_of` from the prelude instead of imported
Use `std::mem::{size_of, size_of_val, align_of, align_of_val}` from the prelude instead of importing or qualifying them.
These functions were added to all preludes in Rust 1.80.
try-job: test-various
try-job: x86_64-gnu
try-job: x86_64-msvc-1
Fix crash in BufReader::peek()
`bufreader_peek` tracking issue: #128405
This fixes a logic error in `Buffer::read_more()` that would make `BufReader::peek()` expose uninitialized data and/or segfault if `read_more()` was called with a partially-full buffer and a non-empty inner reader.
Specialize `OsString::push` and `OsString as From` for UTF-8
When concatenating two WTF-8 strings, surrogate pairs at the boundaries need to be joined. However, since UTF-8 strings cannot contain surrogate halves, this check can be skipped when one string is UTF-8. Specialize `OsString::push` to use a more efficient concatenation in this case.
The WTF-8 version of `OsString` tracks whether it is known to be valid UTF-8 with its `is_known_utf8` field. Specialize `From<AsRef<OsStr>>` so this can be set for UTF-8 string types.
Unfortunately, a specialization for `T: AsRef<str>` conflicts with `T: AsRef<OsStr>`, so stamp out string types with a macro.
r? ``@ChrisDenton``
Override default `Write` methods for cursor-like types
Override the default `io::Write` methods for cursor-like types to provide more efficient versions.
Writes to resizable containers already write everything, so implement `write_all` and `write_all_vectored` in terms of those. For fixed-sized containers, cut out unnecessary error checking and looping for those same methods.
| `impl Write for T` | `vectored` | `all` | `all_vectored` | `fmt` |
| ------------------------------- | ---------- | ----- | -------------- | ------- |
| `&mut [u8]` | Y | Y | new | |
| `Vec<u8>` | Y | Y | new | #137762 |
| `VecDeque<u8>` | Y | Y | new | #137762 |
| `std::io::Cursor<&mut [u8]>` | Y | new | new | |
| `std::io::Cursor<&mut Vec<u8>>` | Y | new | new | #137762 |
| `std::io::Cursor<Vec<u8>>` | Y | new | new | #137762 |
| `std::io::Cursor<Box<[u8]>>` | Y | new | new | |
| `std::io::Cursor<[u8; N]>` | Y | new | new | |
| `core::io::BorrowedCursor<'_>` | new | new | new | |
Tracked in https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/136756.
# Open questions
Is it guaranteed by `Write::write_all` that the maximal write is performed when not everything can be written? Its documentation describes the behavior of the default implementation, which writes until a 0-length write is encountered, thus implying that a maximal write is expected. In contrast, `Read::read_exact` declares that the contents of the buffer are unspecified for short reads. If it were allowed, these cursor-like types could bail on the write altogether if it has insufficient capacity.
Use `std::mem::{size_of, size_of_val, align_of, align_of_val}` from the
prelude instead of importing or qualifying them.
These functions were added to all preludes in Rust 1.80.