Commit Graph

355 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
clubby789
b94a29a25f Implement alloc::vec::IsZero for Option<$NUM> types 2023-01-18 15:15:15 +00:00
David Tolnay
4fe167f83a Add test of leaking a binary_heap PeekMut 2023-01-14 13:28:14 -08:00
Thom Chiovoloni
a4bf36e87b Update rand in the stdlib tests, and remove the getrandom feature from it 2023-01-04 14:52:41 -08:00
Michael Goulet
f6b0f4707b Rollup merge of #106045 - RalfJung:oom-nounwind-panic, r=Amanieu
default OOM handler: use non-unwinding panic, to match std handler

The OOM handler in std will by default abort. This adjusts the default in liballoc to do the same, using the `can_unwind` flag on the panic info to indicate a non-unwinding panic.

In practice this probably makes little difference since the liballoc default will only come into play in no-std situations where people write a custom panic handler, which most likely will not implement unwinding. But still, this seems more consistent.

Cc `@rust-lang/wg-allocators,` https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/66741
2023-01-03 17:19:26 -08:00
Ralf Jung
5974f6f0a5 default OOM handler: use non-unwinding panic (unless -Zoom=panic is set), to match std handler 2023-01-02 16:35:14 +01:00
Michael Goulet
5b74a33b8d Rollup merge of #106248 - dtolnay:revertupcastlint, r=jackh726
Revert "Implement allow-by-default `multiple_supertrait_upcastable` lint"

This is a clean revert of #105484.

I confirmed that reverting that PR fixes the regression reported in #106247. ~~I can't say I understand what this code is doing, but maybe it can be re-landed with a different implementation.~~ **Edit:** https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/106247#issuecomment-1367174384 has an explanation of why #105484 ends up surfacing spurious `where_clause_object_safety` errors. The implementation of `where_clause_object_safety` assumes we only check whether a trait is object safe when somebody actually uses that trait with `dyn`. However the implementation of `multiple_supertrait_upcastable` added in the problematic PR involves checking *every* trait for whether it is object-safe.

FYI `@nbdd0121` `@compiler-errors`
2022-12-30 21:26:34 -08:00
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
David Tolnay
06ec0bf8b0 Revert "Implement allow-by-default multiple_supertrait_upcastable lint"
This reverts commit 5e44a65517.
2022-12-29 00:47:23 -08:00
Lukas Markeffsky
f4ff423d67 fix documenting private items of standard library 2022-12-28 09:18:43 -05:00
Pietro Albini
11191279b7 Update bootstrap cfg 2022-12-28 09:18:43 -05:00
fee1-dead
8b3d0c4cf9 Rollup merge of #105484 - nbdd0121:upcast, r=compiler-errors
Implement allow-by-default `multiple_supertrait_upcastable` lint

The lint detects when an object-safe trait has multiple supertraits.

Enabled in libcore and liballoc as they are low-level enough that many embedded programs will use them.

r? `@nikomatsakis`
2022-12-28 15:51:41 +08:00
fee1-dead
dc98aa681f Rollup merge of #94145 - ssomers:binary_heap_tests, r=jyn514
Test leaking of BinaryHeap Drain iterators

Add test cases about forgetting the `BinaryHeap::Drain` iterator, and slightly fortifies some other test cases.

Consists of separate commits that I don't think are relevant on their own (but I'll happily turn these into more PRs if desired).
2022-12-28 15:51:37 +08:00
Gary Guo
5e44a65517 Implement allow-by-default multiple_supertrait_upcastable lint 2022-12-09 02:29:51 +00:00
Manish Goregaokar
316bda89e4 Rollup merge of #104647 - RalfJung:alloc-strict-provenance, r=thomcc
enable fuzzy_provenance_casts lint in liballoc and libstd

r? ````@thomcc````
2022-11-22 22:54:41 -05:00
Ralf Jung
644a5a34dd enable fuzzy_provenance_casts lint in liballoc 2022-11-20 19:12:18 +01:00
Scott McMurray
d62b903892 VecDeque::resize should re-use the buffer in the passed-in element
Today it always copies it for *every* appended element, but one of those clones is avoidable.
2022-11-15 00:53:26 -08:00
Michael Goulet
2786acce98 Enforce Tuple trait on Fn traits 2022-11-05 17:34:47 +00:00
Dylan DPC
2326f42ce2 stabilise array methods 2022-10-25 18:07:21 +05:30
Alex Saveau
55d71c61b8 Remove all uses of array_assume_init
Signed-off-by: Alex Saveau <saveau.alexandre@gmail.com>
2022-10-17 13:03:54 -07:00
Yuki Okushi
22a456ad47 Stabilize nonnull_slice_from_raw_parts 2022-09-29 17:35:48 +09:00
Pietro Albini
3975d55d98 remove cfg(bootstrap) 2022-09-26 10:14:45 +02:00
fee1-dead
804c2c1ed9 Rollup merge of #102197 - Nilstrieb:const-new-🌲, r=Mark-Simulacrum
Stabilize const `BTree{Map,Set}::new`

The FCP was completed in #71835.

Since `len` and `is_empty` are not const stable yet, this also creates a new feature for them since they previously used the same `const_btree_new` feature.
2022-09-26 13:09:42 +08:00
bors
e58621a4a3 Auto merge of #102169 - scottmcm:constify-some-conditions, r=thomcc
Make ZST checks in core/alloc more readable

There's a bunch of these checks because of special handing for ZSTs in various unsafe implementations of stuff.

This lets them be `T::IS_ZST` instead of `mem::size_of::<T>() == 0` every time, making them both more readable and more terse.

*Not* proposed for stabilization.  Would be `pub(crate)` except `alloc` wants to use it too.

(And while it doesn't matter now, if we ever get something like #85836 making it a const can help codegen be simpler.)
2022-09-25 01:20:11 +00:00
Nilstrieb
aa35ab81ea Stabilize const BTree{Map,Set}::new
Since `len` and `is_empty` are not const stable yet, this also
creates a new feature for them since they previously used the same
`const_btree_new` feature.
2022-09-23 20:55:37 +02:00
Scott McMurray
44b4ce1d61 Make ZST checks in core/alloc more readable
There's a bunch of these checks because of special handing for ZSTs in various unsafe implementations of stuff.

This lets them be `T::IS_ZST` instead of `mem::size_of::<T>() == 0` every time, making them both more readable and more terse.

*Not* proposed for stabilization at this time.  Would be `pub(crate)` except `alloc` wants to use it too.

(And while it doesn't matter now, if we ever get something like 85836 making it a const can help codegen be simpler.)
2022-09-22 23:12:29 -07:00
Dylan DPC
5377c31122 Rollup merge of #89891 - ojeda:modular-alloc, r=Mark-Simulacrum
`alloc`: add unstable cfg features `no_rc` and `no_sync`

In Rust for Linux we are using these to make `alloc` a bit more modular.

See https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/86048 and https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/84266 for similar requests.

Of course, the particular names are not important.
2022-09-21 19:01:06 +05:30
Matthias Krüger
ea076a4f9f Rollup merge of #101798 - y86-dev:const_waker, r=lcnr
Make `from_waker`, `waker` and `from_raw` unstably `const`

Make
- `Context::from_waker`
- `Context::waker`
- `Waker::from_raw`

`const`.

Also added a small test.
2022-09-19 17:55:19 +02:00
est31
173eb6f407 Only enable the let_else feature on bootstrap
On later stages, the feature is already stable.

Result of running:

rg -l "feature.let_else" compiler/ src/librustdoc/ library/ | xargs sed -s -i "s#\\[feature.let_else#\\[cfg_attr\\(bootstrap, feature\\(let_else\\)#"
2022-09-15 21:06:45 +02:00
y86-dev
9a78faba71 Made from_waker, waker, from_raw const 2022-09-14 14:53:16 +02:00
asquared31415
80e035c9e4 implement IsZero for Saturating and Wrapping 2022-09-02 19:55:01 -04:00
Miguel Ojeda
614c2e404a alloc: add unstable cfg features no_rc and no_sync
In Rust for Linux we are using these to make `alloc` a bit
more modular.

A `run-make-fulldeps` test is added for each of them, so that
enabling each of them independently is kept in a compilable state.

Signed-off-by: Miguel Ojeda <ojeda@kernel.org>
2022-08-26 16:44:32 +02:00
Jane Losare-Lusby
bf7611d55e Move error trait into core 2022-08-22 13:28:25 -07:00
bors
878aef79dc Auto merge of #100810 - matthiaskrgr:rollup-xep778s, r=matthiaskrgr
Rollup of 9 pull requests

Successful merges:

 - #97963 (net listen backlog set to negative on Linux.)
 - #99935 (Reenable disabled early syntax gates as future-incompatibility lints)
 - #100129 (add miri-test-libstd support to libstd)
 - #100500 (Ban references to `Self` in trait object substs for projection predicates too.)
 - #100636 (Revert "Revert "Allow dynamic linking for iOS/tvOS targets."")
 - #100718 ([rustdoc] Fix item info display)
 - #100769 (Suggest adding a reference to a trait assoc item)
 - #100777 (elaborate how revisions work with FileCheck stuff in src/test/codegen)
 - #100796 (Refactor: remove unnecessary string searchings)

Failed merges:

r? `@ghost`
`@rustbot` modify labels: rollup
2022-08-20 20:08:26 +00:00
Matthias Krüger
d49906519b Rollup merge of #99544 - dylni:expose-utf8lossy, r=Mark-Simulacrum
Expose `Utf8Lossy` as `Utf8Chunks`

This PR changes the feature for `Utf8Lossy` from `str_internals` to `utf8_lossy` and improves the API. This is done to eventually expose the API as stable.

Proposal: rust-lang/libs-team#54
Tracking Issue: #99543
2022-08-20 19:32:07 +02:00
dylni
e8ee0b7b2b Expose Utf8Lossy as Utf8Chunks 2022-08-20 12:49:20 -04:00
Ralf Jung
fbcdf2a383 clarify lib.rs attribute structure 2022-08-18 18:07:39 -04:00
Ralf Jung
ac66baad1a add miri-test-libstd support to libstd 2022-08-18 18:07:39 -04:00
bors
b573e10d21 Auto merge of #98553 - the8472:next_chunk_opt, r=Mark-Simulacrum
Optimized vec::IntoIter::next_chunk impl

```
x86_64v1, default
test vec::bench_next_chunk                               ... bench:         696 ns/iter (+/- 22)
x86_64v1, pr
test vec::bench_next_chunk                               ... bench:         309 ns/iter (+/- 4)

znver2, default
test vec::bench_next_chunk                               ... bench:      17,272 ns/iter (+/- 117)
znver2, pr
test vec::bench_next_chunk                               ... bench:         211 ns/iter (+/- 3)
```

On znver2 the default impl seems to be slow due to different inlining decisions. It goes through `core::array::iter_next_chunk`
which has a deep call tree.
2022-07-27 01:12:30 +00:00
The 8472
2f9f2e507e Optimized vec::IntoIter::next_chunk impl
```
test vec::bench_next_chunk                               ... bench:         696 ns/iter (+/- 22)
x86_64v1, pr
test vec::bench_next_chunk                               ... bench:         309 ns/iter (+/- 4)

znver2, default
test vec::bench_next_chunk                               ... bench:      17,272 ns/iter (+/- 117)
znver2, pr
test vec::bench_next_chunk                               ... bench:         211 ns/iter (+/- 3)
```

The znver2 default impl seems to be slow due to inlining decisions. It goes through `core::array::iter_next_chunk`
which has a deeper call tree.
2022-07-26 20:31:43 +02:00
Josh Triplett
d6b7480c2a Stabilize core::ffi::CStr, alloc::ffi::CString, and friends
Stabilize the `core_c_str` and `alloc_c_string` feature gates.

Change `std::ffi` to re-export these types rather than creating type
aliases, since they now have matching stability.
2022-07-15 03:10:35 -07:00
Dylan DPC
99f3132cd7 Rollup merge of #99113 - WaffleLapkin:arc_simplify, r=Mark-Simulacrum
Simplify [a]rc code a little

Nothing interesting, just make [a]rc code a little nicer by using `byte_sub` and `let`-`else`.
2022-07-15 10:39:41 +05:30
Dylan DPC
103b8602b7 Rollup merge of #98315 - joshtriplett:stabilize-core-ffi-c, r=Mark-Simulacrum
Stabilize `core::ffi:c_*` and rexport in `std::ffi`

This only stabilizes the base types, not the non-zero variants, since
those have their own separate tracking issue and have not gone through
FCP to stabilize.
2022-07-14 14:14:20 +05:30
Josh Triplett
d431338b25 Stabilize core::ffi:c_* and rexport in std::ffi
This only stabilizes the base types, not the non-zero variants, since
those have their own separate tracking issue and have not gone through
FCP to stabilize.
2022-07-13 19:28:20 -07:00
Maybe Waffle
69f8eb17c6 Use byte_sub in [a]rc impl 2022-07-10 15:16:51 +04:00
Pietro Albini
6b2d3d5f3c update cfg(bootstrap)s 2022-07-01 15:48:23 +02:00
Paolo Barbolini
ce3b6f505e Expose iter::ByRefSized as unstable feature and use it 2022-06-18 00:03:54 +02:00
bors
bb55bd449e Auto merge of #95565 - jackh726:remove-borrowck-mode, r=nikomatsakis
Remove migrate borrowck mode

Closes #58781
Closes #43234

# Stabilization proposal

This PR proposes the stabilization of `#![feature(nll)]` and the removal of `-Z borrowck`. Current borrow checking behavior of item bodies is currently done by first infering regions *lexically* and reporting any errors during HIR type checking. If there *are* any errors, then MIR borrowck (NLL) never occurs. If there *aren't* any errors, then MIR borrowck happens and any errors there would be reported. This PR removes the lexical region check of item bodies entirely and only uses MIR borrowck. Because MIR borrowck could never *not* be run for a compiled program, this should not break any programs. It does, however, change diagnostics significantly and allows a slightly larger set of programs to compile.

Tracking issue: #43234
RFC: https://github.com/rust-lang/rfcs/blob/master/text/2094-nll.md
Version: 1.63 (2022-06-30 => beta, 2022-08-11 => stable).

## Motivation

Over time, the Rust borrow checker has become "smarter" and thus allowed more programs to compile. There have been three different implementations: AST borrowck, MIR borrowck, and polonius (well, in progress). Additionally, there is the "lexical region resolver", which (roughly) solves the constraints generated through HIR typeck. It is not a full borrow checker, but does emit some errors.

The AST borrowck was the original implementation of the borrow checker and was part of the initially stabilized Rust 1.0. In mid 2017, work began to implement the current MIR borrow checker and that effort ompleted by the end of 2017, for the most part. During 2018, efforts were made to migrate away from the AST borrow checker to the MIR borrow checker - eventually culminating into "migrate" mode - where HIR typeck with lexical region resolving following by MIR borrow checking - being active by default in the 2018 edition.

In early 2019, migrate mode was turned on by default in the 2015 edition as well, but with MIR borrowck errors emitted as warnings. By late 2019, these warnings were upgraded to full errors. This was followed by the complete removal of the AST borrow checker.

In the period since, various errors emitted by the MIR borrow checker have been improved to the point that they are mostly the same or better than those emitted by the lexical region resolver.

While there do remain some degradations in errors (tracked under the [NLL-diagnostics tag](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues?q=is%3Aopen+is%3Aissue+label%3ANLL-diagnostics), those are sufficiently small and rare enough that increased flexibility of MIR borrow check-only is now a worthwhile tradeoff.

## What is stabilized

As said previously, this does not fundamentally change the landscape of accepted programs. However, there are a [few](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues?q=is%3Aopen+is%3Aissue+label%3ANLL-fixed-by-NLL) cases where programs can compile under `feature(nll)`, but not otherwise.

There are two notable patterns that are "fixed" by this stabilization. First, the `scoped_threads` feature, which is a continutation of a pre-1.0 API, can sometimes emit a [weird lifetime error](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/95527) without NLL. Second, actually seen in the standard library. In the `Extend` impl for `HashMap`, there is an implied bound of `K: 'a` that is available with NLL on but not without - this is utilized in the impl.

As mentioned before, there are a large number of diagnostic differences. Most of them are better, but some are worse. None are serious or happen often enough to need to block this PR. The biggest change is the loss of error code for a number of lifetime errors in favor of more general "lifetime may not live long enough" error. While this may *seem* bad, the former error codes were just attempts to somewhat-arbitrarily bin together lifetime errors of the same type; however, on paper, they end up being roughly the same with roughly the same kinds of solutions.

## What isn't stabilized

This PR does not completely remove the lexical region resolver. In the future, it may be possible to remove that (while still keeping HIR typeck) or to remove it together with HIR typeck.

## Tests

Many test outputs get updated by this PR. However, there are number of tests specifically geared towards NLL under `src/test/ui/nll`

## History

* On 2017-07-14, [tracking issue opened](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/43234)
* On 2017-07-20, [initial empty MIR pass added](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/43271)
* On 2017-08-29, [RFC opened](https://github.com/rust-lang/rfcs/pull/2094)
* On 2017-11-16, [Integrate MIR type-checker with NLL](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/45825)
* On 2017-12-20, [NLL feature complete](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/46862)
* On 2018-07-07, [Don't run AST borrowck on mir mode](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/52083)
* On 2018-07-27, [Add migrate mode](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/52681)
* On 2019-04-22, [Enable migrate mode on 2015 edition](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/59114)
* On 2019-08-26, [Don't downgrade errors on 2015 edition](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/64221)
* On 2019-08-27, [Remove AST borrowck](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/64790)
2022-06-07 05:04:14 +00:00
Dylan DPC
07f586fe74 Rollup merge of #96642 - thomcc:thinbox-zst-ugh, r=yaahc
Avoid zero-sized allocs in ThinBox if T and H are both ZSTs.

This was surprisingly tricky, and took longer to get right than expected. `ThinBox` is a surprisingly subtle piece of code. That said, in the end, a lot of this was due to overthinking[^overthink] -- ultimately the fix ended up fairly clean and simple.

[^overthink]: Honestly, for a while I was convinced this couldn't be done without allocations or runtime branches in these cases, but that's obviously untrue.

Anyway, as a result of spending all that time debugging, I've extended the tests quite a bit, and also added more debug assertions. Many of these helped for subtle bugs I made in the middle (for example, the alloc/drop tracking is because I ended up double-dropping the value in the case where both were ZSTs), they're arguably a bit of overkill at this point, although I imagine they could help in the future too.

Anyway, these tests cover a wide range of size/align cases, nd fully pass under miri[^1]. They also do some smoke-check asserting that the value has the correct alignment, although in practice it's totally within the compiler's rights to delete these assertions since we'd have already done UB if they get hit. They have more boilerplate than they really need, but it's not *too* bad on a per-test basis.

A notable absence from testing is atypical header types, but at the moment it's impossible to manually implement `Pointee`. It would be really nice to have testing here, since it's not 100% obvious to me that the aligned read/write we use for `H` are correct in the face of arbitrary combinations of `size_of::<H>()`, `align_of::<H>()`, and `align_of::<T>()`. (That said, I spent a while thinking through it and am *pretty* sure it's fine -- I'd just feel... better if we could test some cases for non-ZST headers which have unequal and align).

[^1]: Or at least, they pass under miri if I copy the code and tests into a new crate and run miri on it (after making it less stdlibified).

Fixes #96485.

I'd request review ``@yaahc,`` but I believe you're taking some time away from reviews, so I'll request from the previous PR's reviewer (I think that the context helps, even if the actual change didn't end up being bad here).

r? ``@joshtriplett``
2022-06-04 11:06:39 +02:00
Jack Huey
410dcc9674 Fully stabilize NLL 2022-06-03 17:16:41 -04:00