Commit Graph

2070 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
bors
3701bdc633 Auto merge of #107329 - joboet:optimize_lazylock, r=m-ou-se
Optimize `LazyLock` size

The initialization function was unnecessarily stored separately from the data to be initialized. Since both cannot exist at the same time, a `union` can be used, with the `Once` acting as discriminant. This unfortunately requires some extra methods on `Once` so that `Drop` can be implemented correctly and efficiently.

`@rustbot` label +T-libs +A-atomic
2023-02-18 09:29:21 +00:00
joboet
9622cdee1a std: replace generic thread parker with explicit no-op parker 2023-02-16 15:06:45 +01:00
Dylan DPC
0c5bbca12d Rollup merge of #106372 - joboet:solid_id_parking, r=m-ou-se
Use id-based thread parking on SOLID

By using the [`slp_tsk`/`wup_tsk`](https://cs.uwaterloo.ca/~brecht/courses/702/Possible-Readings/embedded/uITRON-4.0-specification.pdf) system functions instead of an event-flag structure, `Parker` becomes cheaper to construct and SOLID can share the implementation used by NetBSD and SGX.

ping ``@kawadakk``
r? ``@m-ou-se``
``@rustbot`` label +T-libs
2023-02-16 11:40:19 +05:30
Chris Denton
dfd0afb991 Revert to using RtlGenRandom
This is required due to `BCryptGenRandom` failing to load the necessary dll on some systems.
2023-02-14 19:37:05 +00:00
Matthias Krüger
56193b0e60 Rollup merge of #107985 - alesito85:master, r=ChrisDenton
Added another error to be processed in fallback

This pull request addresses the problem of Rust not being able to read file/directory metadata because the current user doesn't have permission to read the file and are thus inaccessible.

One particular example is `System Volume Information`. But any example can be made by having a file/directory, which the current user can't access even though the system does allow to view the metadata, which is handled by the fallback.

The fallback exists to get the metadata but it was limited to one error type. Having added ERROR_ACCESS_DENIED per Chris Denton's suggestion, file/directory properties are now properly read.

Solution suggested by Chris Denton https://github.com/nushell/nushell/issues/6857#issuecomment-1426847135
2023-02-13 23:25:13 +01:00
alesito85
f72eb4704a Add another error to Windows file open fallback
Added another error to be processed in fallback

Solution suggested by Chris Denton https://github.com/nushell/nushell/issues/6857#issuecomment-1426847135
2023-02-13 11:50:25 +01:00
Martin Kröning
913a566c22 Hermit: Remove floor symbol
This symbol should be provided by Hermit.
2023-02-12 23:37:58 +01:00
bors
adb4bfd25d Auto merge of #105671 - lukas-code:depreciate-char, r=scottmcm
Use associated items of `char` instead of freestanding items in `core::char`

The associated functions and constants on `char` have been stable since 1.52 and the freestanding items have soft-deprecated since 1.62 (https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/95566). This PR ~~marks them as "deprecated in future", similar to the integer and floating point modules (`core::{i32, f32}` etc)~~ replaces all uses of `core::char::*` with `char::*` to prepare for future deprecation of `core::char::*`.
2023-02-12 11:09:06 +00:00
Dylan DPC
a50c379fcd Rollup merge of #107900 - ChrisDenton:zero-header, r=thomcc
Zero the `REPARSE_MOUNTPOINT_DATA_BUFFER` header

Makes sure the full header is correctly initialized.

Fixes #107884
2023-02-11 11:15:58 +05:30
Dylan DPC
0e8f0b03cd Rollup merge of #106001 - sdroege:glibc-skip-over-null-argv, r=ChrisDenton
Stop at the first `NULL` argument when iterating `argv`

Some C commandline parsers (e.g. GLib and Qt) are replacing already handled arguments in `argv` with `NULL` and move them to the end. That means that `argc` might be bigger than the actual number of non-`NULL` pointers in `argv` at this point.

To handle this we simply stop iterating at the first `NULL` argument.

`argv` is also guaranteed to be `NULL`-terminated so any non-`NULL` arguments after the first `NULL` can safely be ignored.

Fixes https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/105999
2023-02-11 11:15:54 +05:30
Chris Denton
59b11e8fa3 Zero the REPARSE_MOUNTPOINT_DATA_BUFFER header
Makes sure the full header is correctly initialized, including reserve parameters.
2023-02-10 18:14:53 +00:00
Dan Gohman
4b1157509f Allow wasi-libc to initialize its environment variables lazily.
Use `__wasilibc_get_environ()` to read the environment variable list
from wasi-libc instead of using `environ`. `environ` is a global
variable which effectively requires wasi-libc to initialize the
environment variables eagerly, and `__wasilibc_get_environ()` is
specifically designed to be an alternative that lets wasi-libc
intiailize its environment variables lazily.

This should have the side effect of fixing at least some of the cases
of #107635.
2023-02-09 19:03:42 -08:00
Matthias Krüger
33da3c3df0 Rollup merge of #107154 - glaubitz:m68k-alloc, r=JohnTitor
library/std/sys_common: Define MIN_ALIGN for m68k-unknown-linux-gnu

This PR adds the missing definition of MIN_ALIGN for the m68k-unknown-linux target.
2023-01-29 06:14:17 +01:00
Ayush Singh
c50d3e28ab Replace libc::{type} with crate::ffi::{type}
Replace libc::{type} imports with crate::ffi::{type} outside of
`std::sys` and `std::os`.

Signed-off-by: Ayush Singh <ayushsingh1325@gmail.com>
2023-01-28 11:24:13 +05:30
joboet
c1cced8d04 std: optimize LazyLock size 2023-01-26 16:16:03 +01:00
Matthias Krüger
cc92bdb9c9 Rollup merge of #106779 - RReverser:patch-2, r=Mark-Simulacrum
Avoid __cxa_thread_atexit_impl on Emscripten

 - Fixes https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/91628.
 - Fixes https://github.com/emscripten-core/emscripten/issues/15722.

See discussion in both issues.

The TL;DR is that weak linkage causes LLVM to produce broken Wasm, presumably due to pointer mismatch. The code is casting a void pointer to a function pointer with specific signature, but Wasm is very strict about function pointer compatibility, so the resulting code is invalid.

Ideally LLVM should catch this earlier in the process rather than emit invalid Wasm, but it currently doesn't and this is an easy and valid fix, given that Emcripten doesn't have `__cxa_thread_atexit_impl` these days anyway.

Unfortunately, I can't add a regression test as even after looking into this issue for a long time, I couldn't reproduce it with any minimal Rust example, only with extracted LLVM IR or on a large project involving Rust + C++.
2023-01-26 07:53:22 +01:00
bors
d3322e2773 Auto merge of #106981 - joboet:std_remove_box_syntax, r=thomcc
Do not use box syntax in `std`

See #94970 and #49733. About half of the `box` instances in `std` do not even need to allocate, the other half can simply be replaced with `Box::new`.

`@rustbot` label +T-libs
r? rust-lang/libs
2023-01-23 01:05:56 +00:00
John Paul Adrian Glaubitz
8f70b5ccb7 library/std/sys_common: Define MIN_ALIGN for m68k-unknown-linux-gnu 2023-01-21 12:00:14 +00:00
David Carlier
ae9e66bafb signal update string representation for haiku. 2023-01-18 23:06:59 +00:00
joboet
7f2cf19191 refactor[std]: do not use box syntax 2023-01-17 14:08:35 +01:00
Matthias Krüger
e0eb63a73c Rollup merge of #106860 - anden3:doc-double-spaces, r=Dylan-DPC
Remove various double spaces in the libraries.

I was just pretty bothered by this when reading the source for a function, and was suggested to check if this happened elsewhere.
2023-01-14 18:45:29 +01:00
Matthias Krüger
43134714f5 Rollup merge of #106661 - mjguzik:linux_statx, r=Mark-Simulacrum
Stop probing for statx unless necessary

As is the current toy program:
fn main() -> std::io::Result<()> {
    use std::fs;

    let metadata = fs::metadata("foo.txt")?;

    assert!(!metadata.is_dir());
    Ok(())
}

... observed under strace will issue:
[snip]
statx(0, NULL, AT_STATX_SYNC_AS_STAT, STATX_ALL, NULL) = -1 EFAULT (Bad address) statx(AT_FDCWD, "foo.txt", AT_STATX_SYNC_AS_STAT, STATX_ALL, {stx_mask=STATX_ALL|STATX_MNT_ID, stx_attributes=0, stx_mode=S_IFREG|0644, stx_size=0, ...}) = 0

While statx is not necessarily always present, checking for it can be delayed to the first error condition. Said condition may very well never happen, in which case the check got avoided altogether.

Note this is still suboptimal as there still will be programs issuing it, but bulk of the problem is removed.

Tested by forbidding the syscall for the binary and observing it correctly falls back to newfstatat.

While here tidy up the commentary, in particular by denoting some problems with the current approach.
2023-01-14 18:45:26 +01:00
André Vennberg
0b35f448f8 Remove various double spaces in source comments. 2023-01-14 17:22:04 +01:00
Ingvar Stepanyan
a41c5f9c38 Re-add #[allow(unused)] attr 2023-01-14 12:29:41 +00:00
Lukas Markeffsky
76e216f29b Use associated items of char instead of freestanding items in core::char 2023-01-14 11:58:41 +01:00
Ingvar Stepanyan
6155b9a772 Avoid __cxa_thread_atexit_impl on Emscripten
- Fixes https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/91628.
 - Fixes https://github.com/emscripten-core/emscripten/issues/15722.

See discussion in both issues.

The TL;DR is that weak linkage causes LLVM to produce broken Wasm, presumably due to pointer mismatch. The code is casting a void pointer to a function pointer with specific signature, but Wasm is very strict about function pointer compatibility, so the resulting code is invalid.

Ideally LLVM should catch this earlier in the process rather than emit invalid Wasm, but it currently doesn't and this is an easy and valid fix, given that Emcripten doesn't have `__cxa_thread_atexit_impl` these days anyway.

Unfortunately, I can't add a regression test as even after looking into this issue for a long time, I couldn't reproduce it with any minimal Rust example, only with extracted LLVM IR or on a large project involving Rust + C++.

r? @alexcrichton
2023-01-12 18:47:05 +00:00
Mateusz Guzik
b49aa8d53e Stop probing for statx unless necessary
As is the current toy program:
fn main() -> std::io::Result<()> {
    use std::fs;

    let metadata = fs::metadata("foo.txt")?;

    assert!(!metadata.is_dir());
    Ok(())
}

... observed under strace will issue:
[snip]
statx(0, NULL, AT_STATX_SYNC_AS_STAT, STATX_ALL, NULL) = -1 EFAULT (Bad address)
statx(AT_FDCWD, "foo.txt", AT_STATX_SYNC_AS_STAT, STATX_ALL, {stx_mask=STATX_ALL|STATX_MNT_ID, stx_attributes=0, stx_mode=S_IFREG|0644, stx_size=0, ...}) = 0

While statx is not necessarily always present, checking for it can be
delayed to the first error condition. Said condition may very well never
happen, in which case the check got avoided altogether.

Note this is still suboptimal as there still will be programs issuing
it, but bulk of the problem is removed.

Tested by forbidding the syscall for the binary and observing it
correctly falls back to newfstatat.

While here tidy up the commentary, in particular by denoting some
problems with the current approach.
2023-01-11 17:10:08 +00:00
Albert Larsan
40ba0e84d5 Change src/test to tests in source files, fix tidy and tests 2023-01-11 09:32:13 +00:00
Ian Jackson
2d213f757d Make ExitStatus an inhabited type on all platforms
Even where actually running processes is not supported.
Needed for the next commit.

The manual trait implementations now belong on ExitStatusError,
which still can't exist.
2023-01-03 20:58:44 +00:00
joboet
78245286dc std: use id-based thread parking on SOLID 2022-12-31 11:00:54 +01:00
Michael Goulet
ff3326d925 Rollup merge of #105903 - joboet:unify_parking, r=m-ou-se
Unify id-based thread parking implementations

Multiple platforms currently use thread-id-based parking implementations (NetBSD and SGX[^1]). Even though the strategy does not differ, these are duplicated for each platform, as the id is encoded into an atomic thread variable in different ways for each platform.

Since `park` is only called by one thread, it is possible to move the thread id into a separate field. By ensuring that the field is only written to once, before any other threads access it, these accesses can be unsynchronized, removing any restrictions on the size and niches of the thread id.

This PR also renames the internal `thread_parker` modules to `thread_parking`, as that name now better reflects their contents. I hope this does not add too much reviewing noise.

r? `@m-ou-se`

`@rustbot` label +T-libs

[^1]: SOLID supports this as well, I will switch it over in a follow-up PR.
2022-12-30 21:26:33 -08:00
joboet
898302e685 std: remove unnecessary #[cfg] on NetBSD 2022-12-30 15:50:31 +01:00
joboet
9abda03da6 std: rename Parker::new to Parker::new_in_place, add safe Parker::new constructor for SGX 2022-12-30 15:49:47 +01:00
jonathanCogan
db47071df2 Replace libstd, libcore, liballoc in line comments. 2022-12-30 14:00:42 +01:00
jonathanCogan
72067c77bd Replace libstd, libcore, liballoc in docs. 2022-12-30 14:00:40 +01:00
joboet
3076f4ec30 std: pass hint to id-based parking functions 2022-12-29 17:54:09 +01:00
joboet
a9e5c1a309 std: unify id-based thread parking implementations 2022-12-29 17:45:07 +01:00
bors
6ad8383451 Auto merge of #105590 - solid-rs:patch/kmc-solid/thread-lifecycle-ordering, r=m-ou-se
kmc-solid: Fix memory ordering in thread operations

Fixes two memory ordering issues in the thread state machine (`ThreadInner::lifecycle`) of the [`*-kmc-solid_*`](https://doc.rust-lang.org/nightly/rustc/platform-support/kmc-solid.html) Tier 3 targets.

1. When detaching a thread that is still running (i.e., the owner updates `lifecycle` first, and the child updates it next), the first update did not synchronize-with the second update, resulting in a data race between the first update and the deallocation of `ThreadInner` by the child thread.
2. When joining on a thread, the joiner has to pass its own task ID to the joinee in order to be woken up later, but in doing so, it did not synchronize-with the read operation, creating possible sequences of execution where the joinee wakes up an incorrect or non-existent task.

Both issue are theoretical and most likely have never manifested in practice because of the stronger guarantees provided by the Arm memory model (particularly due to its barrier-based definition). Compiler optimizations could have subverted this, but the inspection of compiled code did not reveal such optimizations taking place.
2022-12-29 04:22:25 +00:00
bors
b15ca6635f Auto merge of #105741 - pietroalbini:pa-1.68-nightly, r=Mark-Simulacrum
Bump master bootstrap compiler

This PR bumps the bootstrap compiler to the beta created earlier this week, cherry-picks the stabilization version number updates, and updates the `cfg(bootstrap)`s.

r? `@Mark-Simulacrum`
2022-12-29 01:24:26 +00:00
Matthias Krüger
2dd2fb728e Rollup merge of #104493 - adamncasey:cgroupzeroperiod, r=m-ou-se
available_parallelism: Gracefully handle zero value cfs_period_us

There seem to be some scenarios where the cgroup cpu quota field `cpu.cfs_period_us` can contain `0`. This field is used to determine the "amount" of parallelism suggested by the function `std:🧵:available_parallelism`

A zero value of this field cause a panic when `available_parallelism()` is invoked. This issue was detected by the call from binaries built by `cargo test`. I really don't feel like `0` is a good value for `cpu.cfs_period_us`, but I also don't think applications should panic if this value is seen.

This panic started happening with rust 1.64.0.

This case is gracefully handled by other projects which read this information: [num_cpus](e437b9d908/src/linux.rs (L207-L210)), [ninja](https://github.com/ninja-build/ninja/pull/2174/files), [dotnet](c4341d45ac/src/coreclr/pal/src/misc/cgroup.cpp (L481-L483))

Before this change, running `cargo test` in environments configured as described above would trigger this panic:
```
$ RUST_BACKTRACE=1 cargo test
    Finished test [unoptimized + debuginfo] target(s) in 3.55s
     Running unittests src/main.rs (target/debug/deps/x-9a42e145aca2934d)
thread 'main' panicked at 'attempt to divide by zero', library/std/src/sys/unix/thread.rs:546:70
stack backtrace:
   0: rust_begin_unwind
   1: core::panicking::panic_fmt
   2: core::panicking::panic
   3: std::sys::unix:🧵:cgroups::quota
   4: std::sys::unix:🧵:available_parallelism
   5: std:🧵:available_parallelism
   6: test::helpers::concurrency::get_concurrency
   7: test::console::run_tests_console
   8: test::test_main
   9: test::test_main_static
  10: x::main
             at ./src/main.rs:1:1
  11: core::ops::function::FnOnce::call_once
             at /tmp/rust-1.64-1.64.0-1/library/core/src/ops/function.rs:248:5
note: Some details are omitted, run with `RUST_BACKTRACE=full` for a verbose backtrace.
error: test failed, to rerun pass '--bin x'
```

I've tested this change in an environment which has the bad (questionable?) setup and rebuilding the test executable against a fixed std library fixes the panic.
2022-12-28 22:22:18 +01:00
Lukas Markeffsky
fdf6cc34b2 delete more cfg(bootstrap) 2022-12-28 09:18:43 -05:00
Pietro Albini
11191279b7 Update bootstrap cfg 2022-12-28 09:18:43 -05:00
bors
6a4624d73b Auto merge of #100539 - joboet:horizon_timeout_clock, r=thomcc
Use correct clock in `park_timeout` on Horizon

Horizon does not support using `CLOCK_MONOTONIC` with condition variables, so use the system time instead.
2022-12-28 03:56:46 +00:00
bors
92c1937a90 Auto merge of #97176 - kraktus:cmd_debug, r=the8472
More verbose `Debug` implementation of `std::process:Command`

Mainly based on commit: ccc019aabf from https://github.com/zackmdavis

close https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/42200
2022-12-27 18:13:23 +00:00
kraktus
eb63dea57f More verbose Debug implementation of std::process:Command
based on commit: ccc019aabf from https://github.com/zackmdavis

close https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/42200

Add env variables and cwd to the shell-like debug output.

Also use the alternate syntax to display a more verbose display, while not showing internal fields and hiding fields when they have their default value.
2022-12-27 09:50:01 +01:00
Sebastian Dröge
e97203c3f8 Stop at the first NULL argument when iterating argv
Some C commandline parsers (e.g. GLib and Qt) are replacing already
handled arguments in `argv` with `NULL` and move them to the end. That
means that `argc` might be bigger than the actual number of non-`NULL`
pointers in `argv` at this point.

To handle this we simply stop iterating at the first `NULL` argument.

`argv` is also guaranteed to be `NULL`-terminated so any non-`NULL`
arguments after the first `NULL` can safely be ignored.

Fixes https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/105999
2022-12-23 09:34:22 +02:00
mochaaP
3e35b39d9d std: only use LFS function on glibc
see #94173 and commit 27011b4185.
2022-12-22 16:01:27 +08:00
bors
7ab803891d Auto merge of #105698 - joboet:unsupported_threads_once, r=thomcc
Use a more efficient `Once` on platforms without threads

The current implementation uses an atomic queue and spins rather than panicking when calling `call_once` recursively. Since concurrency is not supported on platforms like WASM, `Once` can be implemented much more efficiently using just a single non-atomic state variable.
2022-12-19 16:46:57 +00:00
bors
48b3c46126 Auto merge of #105638 - tavianator:fix-50619-again, r=Mark-Simulacrum
fs: Fix #50619 (again) and add a regression test

Bug #50619 was fixed by adding an end_of_stream flag in #50630.
Unfortunately, that fix only applied to the readdir_r() path.  When I
switched Linux to use readdir() in #92778, I inadvertently reintroduced
the bug on that platform.  Other platforms that had always used
readdir() were presumably never fixed.

This patch enables end_of_stream for all platforms, and adds a
Linux-specific regression test that should hopefully prevent the bug
from being reintroduced again.
2022-12-18 05:04:04 +00:00
Matthias Krüger
6d1cdcaee5 Rollup merge of #105458 - Ayush1325:blocking_spawn, r=Mark-Simulacrum
Allow blocking `Command::output`

### Problem
Currently, `Command::output` is internally implemented using `Command::spawn`. This is problematic because some targets (like UEFI) do not actually support multitasking and thus block while the program is executing. This coupling does not make much sense as `Command::output` is supposed to block until the execution is complete anyway and thus does not need to rely on a non-blocking `Child` or any other intermediate.

### Solution
This PR moves the implementation of `Command::output` to `std::sys`. This means targets can choose to implement only `Command::output` without having to implement `Command::spawn`.

### Additional Information

This was originally conceived when working on https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/100316. Currently, the only target I know about that will benefit from this change is UEFI.

This PR can also be used to implement more efficient `Command::output` since the intermediate `Process` is not actually needed anymore, but that is outside the scope of this PR.

Since this is not a public API change, I'm not sure if an RFC is needed or not.
2022-12-17 23:44:26 +01:00