Commit Graph

9393 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Eric Huss
b0041b8a05 Disable f64 minimum/maximum tests for arm 32
This disables the f64 minimum/maximum tests for the
arm-unknown-linux-gnueabihf job. The next release will be supporting
cross-compiled doctests, and these tests fail on that platform.

It looks like this was just fixed via
https://github.com/llvm/llvm-project/pull/142170, but I assume that will
not trickle down to our copy of llvm in the next couple of weeks.
Assuming that does get fixed when llvm is updated, then these can be
removed.

cc https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/141087
2025-06-02 09:08:01 -07:00
Jakub Beránek
b2743c7fb1 Rollup merge of #141874 - usamoi:eps, r=tgross35
add f16_epsilon and f128_epsilon diagnostic items

cc https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/116909
r? ``@tgross35``
2025-06-02 15:19:19 +02:00
Jakub Beránek
aeb72a0669 Rollup merge of #141858 - zacryol:spe-docs-typo, r=aDotInTheVoid
Fix typo in `StructuralPartialEq` docs

`equialent` => `equivalent`
2025-06-02 15:19:18 +02:00
usamoi
80e44de2d3 remove f16: From<u16> 2025-06-02 17:51:45 +08:00
usamoi
d948907f80 add f16_epsilon and f128_epsilon 2025-06-02 08:00:15 +08:00
neeko-cat
c5e758d3ad Fixed a typo in ManuallyDrop's doc 2025-06-02 01:55:29 +02:00
Guillaume Gomez
335232d958 Rollup merge of #141224 - RalfJung:no-objects, r=traviscross
terminology: allocated object → allocation

Rust does not have "objects" in memory so "allocated object" is a somewhat odd name. I am not sure where the term comes from. "object" has been used to refer to allocations already [in 1.0 docs](https://doc.rust-lang.org/1.0.0/std/primitive.pointer.html#method.offset); this was apparently later changed to "allocated object".

"Allocation" is already the terminology used in Miri and in the [UCG](https://rust-lang.github.io/unsafe-code-guidelines/glossary.html#allocation). We should properly move to that terminology, and avoid any confusion about whether Rust has an object memory model. (It does not. Memory contains untyped bytes.)

Cc ``@rust-lang/opsem`` ``@rust-lang/lang``
2025-06-01 19:35:42 +02:00
zacryol
33127afef0 Fix typo in StructuralPartialEq docs
`equialent` => `equivalent`
2025-06-01 08:15:00 -06:00
bors
337c11e593 Auto merge of #141842 - jhpratt:rollup-r7ldrl2, r=jhpratt
Rollup of 6 pull requests

Successful merges:

 - rust-lang/rust#141072 (Stabilize feature `result_flattening`)
 - rust-lang/rust#141215 (std: clarify Clone trait documentation about duplication semantics)
 - rust-lang/rust#141277 (Miri CI: test aarch64-apple-darwin in PRs instead of the x86_64 target)
 - rust-lang/rust#141521 (Add `const` support for float rounding methods)
 - rust-lang/rust#141812 (Fix "consider borrowing" for else-if)
 - rust-lang/rust#141832 (library: explain TOCTOU races in `fs::remove_dir_all`)

r? `@ghost`
`@rustbot` modify labels: rollup
2025-06-01 01:02:51 +00:00
Jacob Pratt
ac49339e03 Rollup merge of #141521 - ruancomelli:const-float-rounding, r=RalfJung
Add `const` support for float rounding methods

# Add `const` support for float rounding methods

This PR makes the following float rounding methods `const`:

- `f64::{floor, ceil, trunc, round, round_ties_even}`
- and the corresponding methods for `f16`, `f32` and `f128`

Tracking issue: https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/141555

## Procedure

I followed c09ed3e767 as closely as I could in making float methods `const`, and also received great guidance from https://internals.rust-lang.org/t/const-rounding-methods-in-float-types/22957/3?u=ruancomelli.

## Note

This is my first code contribution to the Rust project, so please let me know if I missed anything - I'd be more than happy to revise and learn more. Thank you for taking the time to review it!
2025-06-01 00:35:53 +02:00
Jacob Pratt
fa494d652d Rollup merge of #141215 - xizheyin:issue-141138, r=workingjubilee
std: clarify Clone trait documentation about duplication semantics

Closes rust-lang/rust#141138

The change explicitly explains that cloning behavior varies by type and clarifies that smart pointers (`Arc`, `Rc`) share the same underlying data. I've also added an example of cloning to Arc.
2025-06-01 00:35:50 +02:00
Jacob Pratt
241ec137fb Rollup merge of #141072 - Rynibami:stabilize-const-result-flatten, r=jhpratt
Stabilize feature `result_flattening`

Stabilizes the `Result::flatten` method

## Implementations

- [x] Implementation `Result::flatten`: https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/70140
- [x] Implementation `const` `Result::flatten`: https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/130692
- [x] Update stabilization attribute macros (this PR)

## Stabilization process

- [x] Created this PR [suggested](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/70142#issuecomment-2885044548) by ``@RalfJung``
- [x] FCP (haven't found any, is it applicable here?)
- [ ] Close issue rust-lang/rust#70142
2025-06-01 00:35:50 +02:00
bors
f0999ffdc4 Auto merge of #139118 - scottmcm:slice-get-unchecked-intrinsic, r=workingjubilee
`slice.get(i)` should use a slice projection in MIR, like `slice[i]` does

`slice[i]` is built-in magic, so ends up being quite different from `slice.get(i)` in MIR, even though they're both doing nearly identical operations -- checking the length of the slice then getting a ref/ptr to the element if it's in-bounds.

This PR adds a `slice_get_unchecked` intrinsic for `impl SliceIndex for usize` to use to fix that, so it no longer needs to do a bunch of lines of pointer math and instead just gets the obvious single statement.  (This is *not* used for the range versions, since `slice[i..]` and `slice[..k]` can't use the mir Slice projection as they're using fenceposts, not indices.)

I originally tried to do this with some kind of GVN pattern, but realized that I'm pretty sure it's not legal to optimize `BinOp::Offset` to `PlaceElem::Index` without an extremely complicated condition.  Basically, the problem is that the `Index` projection on a dereferenced slice pointer *cares about the metadata*, since it's UB to `PlaceElem::Index` outside the range described by the metadata.  But then you cast the fat pointer to a thin pointer then offset it, that *ignores* the slice length metadata, so it's possible to write things that are legal with `Offset` but would be UB if translated in the obvious way to `Index`.  Checking (or even determining) the necessary conditions for that would be complicated and error-prone, whereas this intrinsic-based approach is quite straight-forward.

Zero backend changes, because it just lowers to MIR, so it's already supported naturally by CTFE/Miri/cg_llvm/cg_clif.
2025-05-31 21:38:21 +00:00
Ralf Jung
f388c987cf terminology: allocated object → allocation 2025-05-31 22:49:14 +02:00
Ruan Comelli
f8e97badb2 Add const support for float rounding methods
Add const support for the float rounding methods floor, ceil, trunc,
fract, round and round_ties_even.
This works by moving the calculation logic from

     src/tools/miri/src/intrinsics/mod.rs

into

     compiler/rustc_const_eval/src/interpret/intrinsics.rs.

All relevant method definitions were adjusted to include the `const`
keyword for all supported float types: f16, f32, f64 and f128.

The constness is hidden behind the feature gate

     feature(const_float_round_methods)

which is tracked in

     https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/141555

This commit is a squash of the following commits:
- test: add tests that we expect to pass when float rounding becomes const
- feat: make float rounding methods `const`
- fix: replace `rustc_allow_const_fn_unstable(core_intrinsics)` attribute with `#[rustc_const_unstable(feature = "f128", issue = "116909")]` in `library/core/src/num/f128.rs`
- revert: undo update to `library/stdarch`
- refactor: replace multiple `float_<mode>_intrinsic` rounding methods with a single, parametrized one
- fix: add `#[cfg(not(bootstrap))]` to new const method tests
- test: add extra sign tests to check `+0.0` and `-0.0`
- revert: undo accidental changes to `round` docs
- fix: gate `const` float round method behind `const_float_round_methods`
- fix: remove unnecessary `#![feature(const_float_methods)]`
- fix: remove unnecessary `#![feature(const_float_methods)]` [2]
- revert: undo changes to `tests/ui/consts/const-eval/float_methods.rs`
- fix: adjust after rebase
- test: fix float tests
- test: add tests for `fract`
- chore: add commented-out `const_float_round_methods` feature gates to `f16` and `f128`
- fix: adjust NaN when rounding floats
- chore: add FIXME comment for de-duplicating float tests
- test: remove unnecessary test file `tests/ui/consts/const-eval/float_methods.rs`
- test: fix tests after upstream simplification of how float tests are run
2025-05-31 15:26:57 -03:00
Matthias Krüger
a2bf37e39e Rollup merge of #141112 - xizheyin:issue-141079, r=Mark-Simulacrum
std: note that `std::str::from_utf8*` functions are aliases to `<str>::from_utf8*` methods

Closes #141079

r? libs
2025-05-31 18:51:47 +02:00
xizheyin
3cba746b49 std: note that std::str::from_utf8* functions are aliases to std::<str>::from_utf8* methods
Signed-off-by: xizheyin <xizheyin@smail.nju.edu.cn>
2025-05-31 22:37:59 +08:00
bors
e0d014a3df Auto merge of #141678 - Kobzol:revert-141516, r=workingjubilee
Revert "increase perf of charsearcher for single ascii characters"

This reverts commit 245bf503e2 (PR https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/141516).

It caused a large `doc` perf. regression in https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/141605.
2025-05-31 08:11:06 +00:00
xizheyin
cea87ecad6 std: clarify Clone trait documentation about duplication semantics
This commit improves the Clone trait documentation to address confusion
around what "duplication" means for different types, especially for smart
pointers like Arc<Mutex<T>>.

Signed-off-by: xizheyin <xizheyin@smail.nju.edu.cn>
2025-05-31 12:01:57 +08:00
Jubilee
ad884fa553 Rollup merge of #141609 - lolbinarycat:core-dedup-ptr-docs-139190, r=workingjubilee
core: begin deduplicating pointer docs

this also cleans up two inconsistancies:
1. both doctests on the ::add methods were actually calling the const version.
2. on of the ::offset methods was missing a line of clarification.

part of https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/139190
2025-05-30 13:52:27 -07:00
Jubilee
a1d70ed5b0 Rollup merge of #141237 - Qelxiros:139911-exact-div, r=workingjubilee
Implement ((un)checked_)exact_div methods for integers

tracking issue: #139911

I see that there might still be some bikeshedding to be done, so if people want changes to this implementation, I'm happy to make those. I did also see that there was a previous attempt at this PR (#116632), but I'm not sure why it got closed.
2025-05-30 13:52:25 -07:00
Scott McMurray
4668124cc7 slice.get(i) should use a slice projection in MIR, like slice[i] does 2025-05-30 12:04:41 -07:00
Matthias Krüger
ad2d91ce11 Rollup merge of #141507 - RalfJung:atomic-intrinsics, r=bjorn3
atomic_load intrinsic: use const generic parameter for ordering

We have a gazillion intrinsics for the atomics because we encode the ordering into the intrinsic name rather than making it a parameter. This is particularly bad for those operations that take two orderings. Let's fix that!

This PR only converts `load`, to see if there's any feedback that would fundamentally change the strategy we pursue for the const generic intrinsics.

The first two commits are preparation and could be a separate PR if you prefer.

`@BoxyUwU` -- I hope this is a use of const generics that is unlikely to explode? All we need is a const generic of enum type. We could funnel it through an integer if we had to but an enum is obviously nicer...

`@bjorn3` it seems like the cranelift backend entirely ignores the ordering?
2025-05-30 07:01:30 +02:00
Pavel Grigorenko
964eb82b63 Stabilize ip_from 2025-05-29 22:10:40 +03:00
Guillaume Gomez
8c708a473d Rollup merge of #141715 - heiher:loong64-f32-midpoint, r=the8472
Add `loongarch64` with `d` feature to `f32::midpoint` fast path

This patch enables the optimized implementation of `f32::midpoint` for `loongarch64` targets that support the `d`feature. Targets with reliable 64-bit float support can safely use the faster and more accurate computation via `f64`, avoiding the fallback branchy version.
2025-05-29 17:03:01 +02:00
Trevor Gross
0cba7fb6f6 Remove i128 and u128 from improper_ctypes_definitions
Rust's 128-bit integers have historically been incompatible with C [1].
However, there have been a number of changes in Rust and LLVM that
mean this is no longer the case:

* Incorrect alignment of `i128` on x86 [1]: adjusting Rust's alignment
  proposed at https://github.com/rust-lang/compiler-team/issues/683,
  implemented at https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/116672.
* LLVM version of the above: resolved in LLVM, including ABI fix.
  Present in LLVM18 (our minimum supported version).
* Incorrect alignment of `i128` on 64-bit PowerPC, SPARC, and MIPS [2]:
  Rust's data layouts adjusted at
  https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/132422,
  https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/132741,
  https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/134115.
* LLVM version of the above: done in LLVM 20
  https://github.com/llvm/llvm-project/issues/102783.
* Incorrect return convention of `i128` on Windows: adjusted to match
  GCC and Clang at https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/134290.

At [3], the lang team considered it acceptable to remove `i128` from
`improper_ctypes_definitions` if the LLVM version is known to be
compatible. Time has elapsed since then and we have dropped support for
LLVM versions that do not have the x86 fixes, meaning a per-llvm-version
lint should no longer be necessary. The PowerPC, SPARC, and MIPS changes
only came in LLVM 20 but since Rust's datalayouts have also been updated
to match, we will be using the correct alignment regardless of LLVM
version.

`repr(i128)` was added to this lint in [4], but is also removed here.

Part of the decision is that `i128` should match `__int128` in C on
platforms that provide it, which documentation is updated to indicate.
We will not guarantee that `i128` matches `_BitInt(128)` since that can
be different from `__int128`. Some platforms (usually 32-bit) do not
provide `__int128`; if any ABIs are extended in the future to define it,
we will need to make sure that our ABI matches.

Closes: https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/134288
Closes: https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/128950

[1]: https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/54341
[2]: https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/128950
[3]: https://github.com/rust-lang/lang-team/issues/255#issuecomment-2088855084
[4]: https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/138282
2025-05-29 12:55:26 +00:00
bors
8afd71079a Auto merge of #141717 - jhpratt:rollup-neu8nzl, r=jhpratt
Rollup of 4 pull requests

Successful merges:

 - rust-lang/rust#138285 (Stabilize `repr128`)
 - rust-lang/rust#139994 (add `CStr::display`)
 - rust-lang/rust#141571 (coretests: extend and simplify float tests)
 - rust-lang/rust#141656 (CI: Add cargo tests to aarch64-apple-darwin)

Failed merges:

 - rust-lang/rust#141430 (remove `visit_clobber` and move `DummyAstNode` to `rustc_expand`)
 - rust-lang/rust#141636 (avoid some usages of `&mut P<T>` in AST visitors)

r? `@ghost`
`@rustbot` modify labels: rollup
2025-05-29 08:53:27 +00:00
Jacob Pratt
ba042d7cb1 Rollup merge of #139994 - tamird:cstr-display, r=Amanieu
add `CStr::display`

The implementation delegates to `<ByteStr as Display>::fmt`.

Link: https://github.com/rust-lang/libs-team/issues/550
Link: https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/139984.

r? ```@BurntSushi```
cc ```@Darksonn``` ```@tgross35``` ```@ojeda``` ```@joshtriplett```
2025-05-29 04:50:47 +02:00
Jacob Pratt
f4dcb7fad0 Rollup merge of #141687 - RalfJung:atomic_compare_exchange, r=bjorn3
core: unstably expose atomic_compare_exchange so stdarch can use it

Due to https://github.com/rust-lang/stdarch/issues/1655, cleaning up the atomic intrinsics will be a bunch of extra work: stdarch directly calls them [here](8764244589/crates/core_arch/src/x86_64/cmpxchg16b.rs (L58-L74)).

Instead of duplicating that match, stdarch should use what we have in libcore, so let's expose that.

r? `@bjorn3`
2025-05-29 04:49:46 +02:00
Jacob Pratt
1c46b4a4a9 Rollup merge of #141612 - jhpratt:phantom-docs, r=tgross35
Call out possibility of invariant result in variance markers

ref https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/135806#issuecomment-2766191535
2025-05-29 04:49:42 +02:00
Jacob Pratt
6bf4224f68 Rollup merge of #141533 - RalfJung:rintf, r=bjorn3
clean up old rintf leftovers

As usual stdarch needed special treatment due to https://github.com/rust-lang/stdarch/issues/1655, and apparently I forgot to clean up these leftovers here. They can be removed now.
2025-05-29 04:49:41 +02:00
WANG Rui
b2858f3132 Add loongarch64 with d feature to f32::midpoint fast path
This patch enables the optimized implementation of `f32::midpoint` for
`loongarch64` targets that support the `d`feature. Targets with reliable
64-bit float support can safely use the faster and more accurate computation
via `f64`, avoiding the fallback branchy version.
2025-05-29 09:30:25 +08:00
Ralf Jung
4794ea176b atomic_load intrinsic: use const generic parameter for ordering 2025-05-28 22:57:55 +02:00
Trevor Gross
7f5f29b663 Rollup merge of #140697 - Sa4dUs:split-autodiff, r=ZuseZ4
Split `autodiff` into `autodiff_forward` and `autodiff_reverse`

This PR splits `#[autodiff]` macro so `#[autodiff(df, Reverse, args)]` would become `#[autodiff_reverse(df, args)]` and `#[autodiff(df, Forward, args)]` would become `#[autodiff_forwad(df, args)]`.
2025-05-28 10:28:08 -04:00
Ralf Jung
2593df8837 core: unstably expose atomic_compare_exchange so stdarch can use it 2025-05-28 15:20:29 +02:00
Ralf Jung
2b0797aef5 UnsafePinned: also include the effects of UnsafeCell 2025-05-28 10:56:09 +02:00
Jakub Beránek
cd4f199db2 Revert "increase perf of charsearcher for single ascii characters"
This reverts commit 245bf503e2.
2025-05-28 09:29:12 +02:00
bors
04a67d5a05 Auto merge of #141668 - tgross35:rollup-03gg6lf, r=tgross35
Rollup of 8 pull requests

Successful merges:

 - rust-lang/rust#140367 (add `asm_cfg`: `#[cfg(...)]` within `asm!`)
 - rust-lang/rust#140894 (Make check-cfg diagnostics work in `#[doc(cfg(..))]`)
 - rust-lang/rust#141252 (gvn: bail out unavoidable non-ssa locals in repeat)
 - rust-lang/rust#141517 (rustdoc: use descriptive tooltip if doctest is conditionally ignored)
 - rust-lang/rust#141551 (Make two transmute-related MIR lints into HIR lint)
 - rust-lang/rust#141591 (ci: fix llvm test coverage)
 - rust-lang/rust#141647 (Bump master `stage0` compiler)
 - rust-lang/rust#141659 (Add `Result::map_or_default` and `Option::map_or_default`)

r? `@ghost`
`@rustbot` modify labels: rollup
2025-05-28 01:20:50 +00:00
Trevor Gross
da61494400 Rollup merge of #141659 - tkr-sh:map-or-default, r=Amanieu
Add `Result::map_or_default` and `Option::map_or_default`

Closes: https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/138068

_This PR has been recreated because of the inactivity of the author (Cf. https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/138068#issuecomment-2912412288)_
2025-05-27 20:28:34 -04:00
bors
be42293944 Auto merge of #129658 - saethlin:spare-a-crumb, r=jhpratt
Add some track_caller info to precondition panics

Currently, when you encounter a precondition check, you'll always get the caller location of the implementation of the precondition checks. But with this PR, you'll be told the location of the invalid call. Which is useful.

I thought of this while looking at https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/129642#issuecomment-2311703898.

The changes to `tests/ui/const*` happen because the const-eval interpreter skips `#[track_caller]` frames in its backtraces.

The perf implications of this are:
* Increased debug binary sizes. The caller_location implementation requires that the additional data we want to display here be stored in const allocations, which are deduplicated but not across crates. There is no impact on optimized build sizes. The panic path and the caller location data get optimized out.
* The compile time hit to opt-incr-patched bitmaps happens because the patch changes the line number of some function calls with precondition checks, causing us to go from 0 dirty CGUs to 1 dirty CGU.
* The other compile time hits are marginal but real, and due to doing a handful of new queries. Adding more useful data isn't completely free.
2025-05-27 22:11:53 +00:00
tk
eed065958b feat: map_or_default for result and option 2025-05-27 19:47:14 +02:00
Michael Goulet
fb4cc991c0 Rollup merge of #141582 - RalfJung:cleanup, r=bjorn3
intrinsics, ScalarInt: minor cleanup

Taken out of https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/141507 while we resolve technical disagreements in that PR.

r? ``@bjorn3``
2025-05-27 13:01:39 +02:00
Marcelo Domínguez
c6c2fde737 Minor macro docs fixes 2025-05-26 19:47:42 +00:00
binarycat
e7683f1055 core: begin deduplicating pointer docs
this also cleans up two inconsistancies:
1. both doctests on the ::add methods were
   actually calling the const version.
2. on of the ::offset methods was missing
   a line of clarification.

part of https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/139190
2025-05-26 14:29:23 -05:00
Jacob Pratt
7aef56d9b9 Call out possibility of invariant result 2025-05-26 15:06:36 -04:00
许杰友 Jieyou Xu (Joe)
408dc51f97 Rollup merge of #141516 - bend-n:okay, r=workingjubilee
speed up charsearcher for ascii chars

attempt at fixing rust-lang/rust#82471

this implementation should be valid because ascii characters are always one byte and there are no continuation bytes that overlap with ascii characters

im not completely sure that this is _always_ an improvement but it seems to be an improvement for this case and i dont think it can significantly regress any cases
2025-05-27 01:29:20 +08:00
Deadbeef
62435f922a impl Default for array::IntoIter 2025-05-26 15:21:03 +08:00
Jacob Pratt
8624f9c62f Rollup merge of #140952 - SimonSapin:ascii_whitespace_definition, r=dtolnay
Specify that split_ascii_whitespace uses the same definition as is_ascii_whitespace
2025-05-26 03:38:17 +02:00
bendn
245bf503e2 increase perf of charsearcher for single ascii characters 2025-05-26 01:50:13 +07:00
bors
88b3b520e8 Auto merge of #141086 - a1phyr:spec_advance_by, r=jhpratt
Implement `advance_by` via `try_fold` for `Sized` iterators

When `try_fold` is overriden, it is usually easier for compilers to optimize.

Example difference: https://iter.godbolt.org/z/z8cEfnKro
2025-05-25 11:34:43 +00:00