More const {} init in thread_local
`const {}` in `thread_local!` gets an optimization just based on the syntax, rather than the expression being const-compatible. This is easy to miss, so I've added more examples to the docs.
I've also added `const {}` in a couple of places in std where this optimization has been missed.
Replace mem::zeroed with mem::MaybeUninit::uninit for large struct in Unix
As discussion in #136737.
- Replace `mem::zeroed()` with `MaybeUninit::uninit()` for `sockaddr_storage` in `accept()` and `recvfrom()` since these functions fill in the address structure
- Replace `mem::zeroed()` with `MaybeUninit::uninit()` for `pthread_attr_t` in thread-related functions since `pthread_attr_init()` initializes the structure
- Add references to man pages to document this behavior
Inject `compiler_builtins` during postprocessing and ensure it is made private
Follow up of https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/135278
Do the following:
* Inject `compiler_builtins` during postprocessing, rather than injecting `extern crate compiler_builtins as _` into the AST
* Do not make dependencies of `std` private by default (this was added in #135278)
* Make sure sysroot crates correctly mark their dependencies private/public
* Ensure that marking a dependency private makes its dependents private by default as well, unless otherwise specified
* Do the `compiler_builtins` update that has been blocked on this
There is more detail in the commit messages. This includes the changes I was working on in https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/136226.
try-job: test-various
try-job: x86_64-msvc-1
try-job: x86_64-msvc-2
try-job: i686-mingw-1
try-job: i686-mingw-2
Fix(lib/fs/tests): Disable rename POSIX semantics FS tests under Windows 7
Would otherwise fail there. The Windows7-specific parts were left pretty much untouched by the changes introduced by
51df98ddb0, so it is expected that these tests fail under Windows 7 as they were probably written to run under Windows 10+ only.
Would otherwise fail there. The Windows7-specific parts were left pretty
much untouched by the changes introduced by
51df98ddb0, so it is expected that these
tests fail under Windows 7 as they were probably written to run under
Windows 10+ only.
Signed-off-by: Paul Mabileau <paul.mabileau@harfanglab.fr>
Optionally add type names to `TypeId`s.
This feature is intended to provide expensive but thorough help for developers who have an unexpected `TypeId` value and need to determine what type it actually is. It causes `impl Debug for TypeId` to print the type name in addition to the opaque ID hash, and in order to do so, adds a name field to `TypeId`. The cost of this is the increased size of `TypeId` and the need to store type names in the binary; therefore, it is an optional feature. It does not expose any new public API, only change the `Debug` implementation.
It may be enabled via `cargo -Zbuild-std -Zbuild-std-features=debug_typeid`. (Note that `-Zbuild-std-features` disables default features which you may wish to reenable in addition; see
<https://doc.rust-lang.org/cargo/reference/unstable.html#build-std-features>.)
Example usage and output:
```
fn main() {
use std::any::{Any, TypeId};
dbg!(TypeId::of::<usize>(), drop::<usize>.type_id());
}
```
```
TypeId::of::<usize>() = TypeId(0x763d199bccd319899208909ed1a860c6 = usize)
drop::<usize>.type_id() = TypeId(0xe6a34bd13f8c92dd47806da07b8cca9a = core::mem::drop<usize>)
```
Also added feature declarations for the existing `debug_refcell` feature so it is usable from the `rust.std-features` option of `config.toml`.
Related issues:
* #68379
* #61533
The recent fixes to private dependencies exposed some cases in the UEFI
module where private dependencies are exposed in a public interface.
These do not need to be crate-public, so change them to `pub(crate)`.
Organize `OsString`/`OsStr` shims
Synchronize the `bytes.rs` and `wtf8.rs` shims for `OsString`/`OsStr` so they're easier to diff between each other. This is mostly ordering items the same between the two. I tried to minimize moves and went for the average locations between the files.
With them in the same order, it is clear that `FromInner<_>` is not implemented for `bytes::Buf` and `Clone::clone_from` is not implemented for `wtf8::Buf`, but they are for the other. Fix that.
I added #[inline] to all inherent methods of the `OsString`/`OsStr` shims, because it seemed that was already the rough pattern. `bytes.rs` has more inlining than `wtf8.rs`, so I added the corresponding ones to `wtf8.rs`. Then, the common missing ones have no discernible pattern to me. They're not divided by non-allocating/allocating. Perhaps the pattern is that UTF-8 validation isn't inlined? Since these types are merely the inner values in `OsStr`/`OsString`, I put inline on all methods and let those public types dictate inlining. I have not inspected codegen or run benchmarks.
Also, touch up some (private) documentation comments.
r? ``````@ChrisDenton``````
Add `MAX_LEN_UTF8` and `MAX_LEN_UTF16` Constants
This pull request adds the `MAX_LEN_UTF8` and `MAX_LEN_UTF16` constants as per #45795, gated behind the `char_max_len` feature.
The constants are currently applied in the `alloc`, `core` and `std` libraries.
Add a bullet point to `std::fs::copy`
I needed to copy a file but I got the following error:
```
Os { code: 2, kind: NotFound, message: "No such file or directory" }
```
After read the documentation, I though the error was generated by the `from` parameter, forgetting the `to` part. Anyway, I got the error because the parent folder of `to` didn't exist.
Even if the documentation explicitly saying `but is not limited to just these cases`, I would like to add this case because I spent 3 hours around it.
This PR just wants to put a mention about it.
Locking documentation updates
- Reword file lock documentation to clarify advisory vs mandatory. Remove the
word "advisory", and make it more explicit that the lock may be advisory or
mandatory depending on platform.
- Document that locking a file fails on Windows if the file is opened only for append
Remove `std::os::wasi::fs::FileExt::tell`
Following #137165 (Use `tell` for `<File as Seek>::stream_position`), `tell` is now directly exposed via `stream_position`, making `<File as FileExt>::tell` redundant. Remove it.
`std::os::wasi::fs::FileExt::tell` is currently unstable and tracked in https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/71213.
``@rustbot`` ping wasi
tests: Also gate `f16::erfc()` doctest with `reliable_f16_math` cfg
In #136324 the doctest for `f16::erf()` was gated with `reliable_f16_math`. Add the same gate on `f16::erfc()` to avoid:
rust_out.71e2e529d20ea47d-cgu.0:\
(.text._ZN8rust_out4main43_doctest_main_library_std_src_f16_rs_1321_017h485f3ffe6bf2a981E+0x38): \
undefined reference to `__gnu_h2f_ieee'
on MIPS (and maybe other architectures).
r? tgross35
Following #137165 (Use `tell` for `<File as Seek>::stream_position`),
`tell` is now directly exposed via `stream_position`, making
`<File as FileExt>::tell` redundant. Remove it.
Use `tell` for `<File as Seek>::stream_position`
Some platforms have a more efficient way to get the current offset of the file than by seeking. For example, Wasi has `fd_tell` and SOLID has `SOLID_FS_Ftell`. Implement `<File as Seek>::stream_position()` in terms of those.
I do not use any APIs that were not already used in `std`. Although, the `libc` crate has [`ftell`](https://docs.rs/libc/latest/libc/fn.ftell.html), [`ftello`](https://docs.rs/libc/latest/libc/fn.ftello.html), and [`ftello64`](https://docs.rs/libc/latest/libc/fn.ftello64.html), I do not know platform coverage. It appears that Windows has no `tell`-like API.
I have checked that it builds on each relevant platform.
In 136324 the doctest for `f16::erf()` was gated with
`reliable_f16_math`. Add the same gate on `f16::erfc()` to
avoid:
rust_out.71e2e529d20ea47d-cgu.0:\
(.text._ZN8rust_out4main43_doctest_main_library_std_src_f16_rs_1321_017h485f3ffe6bf2a981E+0x38): \
undefined reference to `__gnu_h2f_ieee'
on MIPS (and maybe other architectures).
Use `const_error!` when possible
Replace usages of `io::Error::new(io::ErrorKind::Variant, "constant string")` with `io::const_error!(io::ErrorKind::Variant, "constant string")` to avoid allocations when possible. Additionally, fix `&&str` error messages in SGX and missing/misplaced trailing commas in `const_error!`.
* Order items as the average of the two adaptors. Enables easier diffs.
* Consistently apply #[inline].
* Implement FromInner<Vec<u8>> for bytes::Buf.
* Implement Clone::clone_from for wtf8::Buf.
Apply unsafe_op_in_unsafe_fn to the standard library
This applies unsafe_op_in_unsafe_fn to the standard library in preparation for updating to Rust 2024.
Closes https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/127747 (I think?) cc ``@workingjubilee``
I have been testing a variety of targets, and I feel like they are all pretty much covered. I'll continue doing some testing async, but I don't expect to catch any more.
Forward all default methods for I/O impls
Forward all default methods for `&mut T` and `Box<T>` to the inner `io::Read`, `io::Write`, `io::Seek`, and `io::BufRead` types.
Windows: Update generated bindings
Update to windows-bindgen 0.59.
This update is aimed at reducing churn in the future, but means a bit more churn now:
- `bindings.txt` no longer needs us to write the namespace for each item. This is good because it means in the future we won't need to change them if the namespace changes. However, there are a few where we still need to disambiguate due to duplicate items (this is a bug in the upstream metadata).
- The output in `windows-sys.rs` is now sorted. It was mostly sorted before but not intentionally. This should mean future changes are less noisy.
The actual code changes are minimal here. A few types are now `bool` instead of `BOOLEAN`, which is more convenient.