Consolidate some duplicate code in the sys modules.
This consolidates some modules which were duplicated throughout the sys module. The intent is to make it easier to update and maintain this code. This mainly affects the wasi, sgx, and "unsupported" targets.
I explicitly skipped hermit, cloudabi, and vxworks. These tier-3 targets have copied large sections of the sys tree. I don't think they should have, but I don't want to put effort into changing them. It also doesn't help that there aren't any scripts or instructions for building them.
There are still sections of duplicate code here and there, but this PR covers the easy parts where entire modules are the same.
deny(unsafe_op_in_unsafe_fn) in libstd/process.rs
The libstd/process.rs part of #73904 . Wraps the two calls to an unsafe fn Initializer::nop() in an unsafe block.
Will have to wait for #73909 to be merged, because of the feature in the libstd/lib.rs
On Fuchsia, spawning a subprocess does not automatically
clone all of the parent process' capabilities. UTC time on
Fuchsia is managed by a top-level userspace clock capability
that is cloned and passed to subprocesses.
This change ensures that any Rust subprocess gets access to the
UTC clock, if the parent had access to it. This is critical for
tests, which on Fuchsia, use panic=abort and spawn subprocesses
per test.
Implementation of peer credentials for Unix sockets
The code in `ucred.rs` is based on the work done in [PR 13](https://github.com/tokio-rs/tokio-uds/pull/13) in the tokio-uds repository on GitHub.
This commit is effectively a port to the stdlib, so credit to Martin Habovštiak (`@Kixunil)` and contributors for the meat of this work. 🥇
Happy to make changes as needed. 🙂
The code in `ucred.rs` is based on the work done in PR 13 in the
tokio-uds repository on GitHub. Link below for reference:
https://github.com/tokio-rs/tokio-uds/pull/13
Credit to Martin Habovštiak (GitHub username Kixunil) and contributors
for this work!
- Move `held` into the boxed part, since the SRW lock implementation
does not use this. This makes the Mutex 50% smaller.
- Use `Cell` instead of `UnsafeCell` for `held`, such that `.replace()`
can be used.
- Add some comments.
Warn for #[unstable] on trait impls when it has no effect.
Earlier today I sent a PR with an `#[unstable]` attribute on a trait `impl`, but was informed that this attribute has no effect there. (comment: https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/76525#issuecomment-689678895, issue: https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/55436)
This PR adds a warning for this situation. Trait `impl` blocks with `#[unstable]` where both the type and the trait are stable will result in a warning:
```
warning: An `#[unstable]` annotation here has no effect. See issue #55436 <https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/55436> for more information.
--> library/std/src/panic.rs:235:1
|
235 | #[unstable(feature = "integer_atomics", issue = "32976")]
| ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
```
---
It detects three problems in the existing code:
1. A few `RefUnwindSafe` implementations for the atomic integer types in `library/std/src/panic.rs`. Example:
d92155bf6a/library/std/src/panic.rs (L235-L236)
2. An implementation of `Error` for `LayoutErr` in `library/std/srd/error.rs`:
d92155bf6a/library/std/src/error.rs (L392-L397)
3. `From` implementations for `Waker` and `RawWaker` in `library/alloc/src/task.rs`. Example:
d92155bf6a/library/alloc/src/task.rs (L36-L37)
Case 3 interesting: It has a bound with an `#[unstable]` trait (`W: Wake`), so appears to have much effect on stable code. It does however break similar blanket implementations. It would also have immediate effect if `Wake` was implemented for any stable type. (Which is not the case right now, but there are no warnings in place to prevent it.) Whether this case is a problem or not is not clear to me. If it isn't, adding a simple `c.visit_generics(..);` to this PR will stop the warning for this case.
Use IOV_MAX and UIO_MAXIOV constants in limit vectored I/O
Also updates the libc dependency to 0.2.77 (from 0.2.74) as the
constants were only recently added.
Related #68042, #75005
r? `@Amanieu` (also reviewed #75005)
Update `std::os` module documentation.
Adds missing descriptions for the modules `std::os::linux::fs` and `std::os::windows::io`.
Also adds punctuation for consistency with other descriptions.
Stabilize core::future::{pending,ready}
This PR stabilizes `core::future::{pending,ready}`, tracking issue https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/70921.
## Motivation
These functions have been on nightly for three months now, and have lived as part of the futures ecosystem for several years. In that time these functions have undergone several iterations, with [the `async-std` impls](https://docs.rs/async-std/1.6.2/async_std/future/index.html) probably diverging the most (using `async fn`, which in hindsight was a mistake).
It seems the space around these functions has been _thoroughly_ explored over the last couple of years, and the ecosystem has settled on the current shape of the functions. It seems highly unlikely we'd want to make any further changes to these functions, so I propose we stabilize.
## Implementation notes
This stabilization PR was fairly straightforward; this feature has already thoroughly been reviewed by the libs team already in https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/70834. So all this PR does is remove the feature gate.
This impl was effectively stable. #[unstable] had no effect here,
since both Error and LayoutErr were already stable.
This effectively became stable as soon as LayoutErr became stable, which
was in 1.28.0.
These impls were effectively stable. #[unstable] had no effect here,
since both RefUnwindSafe and these types were already stable.
These effectively became stable as soon as the types became stable,
which was in 1.34.0.
Add drain_filter method to HashMap and HashSet
Add `HashMap::drain_filter` and `HashSet::drain_filter`, implementing part of rust-lang/rfcs#2140. These new methods are unstable. The tracking issue is #59618.
The added iterators behave the same as `BTreeMap::drain_filter` and `BTreeSet::drain_filter`, except their iteration order is arbitrary. The unit tests are adapted from `alloc::collections::btree`.
This branch rewrites `HashSet` to be a wrapper around `hashbrown::HashSet` rather than `std::collections::HashMap`.
(Both are themselves wrappers around `hashbrown::HashMap`, so the in-memory representation is the same either way.) This lets `std` re-use more iterator code from `hashbrown`. Without this change, we would need to duplicate much more code to implement `HashSet::drain_filter`.
This branch also updates the `hashbrown` crate to version 0.9.0. Aside from changes related to the `DrainFilter` iterators, this version only changes features that are not used in libstd or rustc. And it updates `indexmap` to version 1.6.0, whose only change is compatibility with `hashbrown` 0.9.0.
The calling convention of pthread_getattr_np() is to initialize the
pthread_attr_t, so _destroy() is only necessary on success (and _init()
isn't necessary beforehand). On the other hand, FreeBSD wants the
attr_t to be initialized before pthread_attr_get_np(), and therefore it
should always be destroyed afterwards.
Implement Seek::stream_position() for BufReader
Optimization over `BufReader::seek()` for getting the current position without flushing the internal buffer.
Related to #31100. Based on the code in #70577.
time.rs: Make spelling of "Darwin" consistent
On line 89 of this file, the OS name is written as "Darwin", but on line 162 it is written in all-caps. Darwin is usually spelt as a standard proper noun, i.e. "Darwin", rather than in all-caps.
This change makes that form consistent in both places.
Make `Ipv4Addr` and `Ipv6Addr` const tests unit tests under `library`
These tests are about the standard library, not the compiler itself, thus should live in `library`, see #76268.
Use Arc::clone and Rc::clone in documentation
This PR replaces uses of `x.clone()` by `Rc::clone(&x)` (or `Arc::clone(&x)`) to better match the documentation for those types.
@rustbot modify labels: T-doc
rustdoc: do not use plain summary for trait impls
Fixes#38386.
Fixes#48332.
Fixes#49430.
Fixes#62741.
Fixes#73474.
Unfortunately this is not quite ready to go because the newly-working links trigger a bunch of linkcheck failures. The failures are tough to fix because the links are resolved relative to the implementor, which could be anywhere in the module hierarchy.
(In the current docs, these links end up rendering as uninterpreted markdown syntax, so I don't think these failures are any worse than the status quo. It might be acceptable to just add them to the linkchecker whitelist.)
Ideally this could be fixed with intra-doc links ~~but it isn't working for me: I am currently investigating if it's possible to solve it this way.~~ Opened #73829.
EDIT: This is now ready!
Convert many files to intra-doc links
Helps with https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/75080
r? @poliorcetics
I recommend reviewing one commit at a time, but the diff is small enough you can do it all at once if you like :)
Applied `#![deny(unsafe_op_in_unsafe_fn)]` in library/std/src/wasi
partial fix for #73904
There are still more that was not applied in [mod.rs]( 38fab2ea92/library/std/src/sys/wasi/mod.rs) and that is due to its using files from `../unsupported`
like:
```
#[path = "../unsupported/cmath.rs"]
pub mod cmath;
```
Make all methods of `std::net::Ipv4Addr` const
Make the following methods of `std::net::Ipv4Addr` unstable const under the `const_ipv4` feature:
- `octets`
- `is_loopback`
- `is_private`
- `is_link_local`
- `is_global` (unstable)
- `is_shared` (unstable)
- `is_ietf_protocol_assignment` (unstable)
- `is_benchmarking` (unstable)
- `is_reserved` (unstable)
- `is_multicast`
- `is_broadcast`
- `is_documentation`
- `to_ipv6_compatible`
- `to_ipv6_mapped`
This would make all methods of `Ipv6Addr` const.
Of these methods, `is_global`, `is_broadcast`, `to_ipv6_compatible`, and `to_ipv6_mapped` require a change in implementation.
Part of #76205
Add a note for Ipv4Addr::to_ipv6_compatible
Previous discussion: #75019
> I think adding a comment saying "This isn't typically the method you want; these addresses don't typically function on modern systems. Use `to_ipv6_mapped` instead." would be a good first step, whether this method gets marked as deprecated or not.
_Originally posted by @joshtriplett in https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/75150#issuecomment-680267745_
- Use intra-doc links for `std::io` in `std::fs`
- Use intra-doc links for File::read in unix/ext/fs.rs
- Remove explicit intra-doc links for `true` in `net/addr.rs`
- Use intra-doc links in alloc/src/sync.rs
- Use intra-doc links in src/ascii.rs
- Switch to intra-doc links in alloc/rc.rs
- Use intra-doc links in core/pin.rs
- Use intra-doc links in std/prelude
- Use shorter links in `std/fs.rs`
`io` is already in scope.
Make all methods of `std::net::Ipv6Addr` const
Make the following methods of `std::net::Ipv6Addr` unstable const under the `const_ipv6` feature:
- `segments`
- `is_unspecified`
- `is_loopback`
- `is_global` (unstable)
- `is_unique_local`
- `is_unicast_link_local_strict`
- `is_documentation`
- `multicast_scope`
- `is_multicast`
- `to_ipv4_mapped`
- `to_ipv4`
This would make all methods of `Ipv6Addr` const.
Changed the implementation of `is_unspecified` and `is_loopback` to use a `match` instead of `==`, all other methods did not require a change.
All these methods are dependent on `segments`, the current implementation of which requires unstable `const_fn_transmute` ([PR#75085](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/75085)).
Part of #76205
Makes the following methods of `std::net::Ipv4Addr` unstable const under the `const_ipv4` feature:
- `is_global`
- `is_reserved`
- `is_broadcast`
- `to_ipv6_compatible`
- `to_ipv6_mapped`
This results in all methods of `Ipv4Addr` being const.
Also adds tests for these methods in a const context.
Make the following methods of `std::net::Ipv6Addr` unstable const under the `const_ipv6` feature:
- `segments`
- `is_unspecified`
- `is_loopback`
- `is_global` (unstable)
- `is_unique_local`
- `is_unicast_link_local_strict`
- `is_documentation`
- `multicast_scope`
- `is_multicast`
- `to_ipv4_mapped`
- `to_ipv4`
Changed the implementation of `is_unspecified` and `is_loopback` to use a `match` instead of `==`.
Part of #76205
rename get_{ref, mut} to assume_init_{ref,mut} in Maybeuninit
References #63568
Rework with comments addressed from #66174
Have replaced most of the occurrences I've found, hopefully didn't miss out anything
r? @RalfJung
(thanks @danielhenrymantilla for the initial work on this)
This reverts commit 7e2548fe69.
Now I know why it was redefined: it seems like it's potentially because
of the orphan rule. Here are the error messages:
error[E0119]: conflicting implementations of trait `std::fmt::Debug` for type `!`:
--> src/primitive_docs.rs:236:1
|
6 | impl Debug for ! {
| ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
|
= note: conflicting implementation in crate `core`:
- impl std::fmt::Debug for !;
error[E0117]: only traits defined in the current crate can be implemented for arbitrary types
--> src/primitive_docs.rs:236:1
|
6 | impl Debug for ! {
| ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^-
| | |
| | `!` is not defined in the current crate
| impl doesn't use only types from inside the current crate
|
= note: define and implement a trait or new type instead
Constify the following methods of `std::net::Ipv4Addr`:
- `octets`
- `is_loopback`
- `is_private`
- `is_link_local`
- `is_shared`
- `is_ietf_protocol_assignment`
- `is_benchmarking`
- `is_multicast`
- `is_documentation`
Also insta-stabilizes these methods as const.
Possible because of the stabilization of const integer arithmetic and control flow.
vars() rather than vars function
Co-authored-by: Joshua Nelson <joshua@yottadb.com>
Use [xxx()] rather than the [xxx] function
Co-authored-by: Joshua Nelson <joshua@yottadb.com>
Env text representation of function intra-doc link
Suggested by @jyn514
Link join_paths in env doc for parity
Change xxx to env::xxx for lib env doc
Add link requsted by @jyn514
Fix doc build with same link
Co-authored-by: Joshua Nelson <joshua@yottadb.com>
Fix missing intra-doc link
Fix added whitespace in doc
Co-authored-by: Joshua Nelson <joshua@yottadb.com>
Add brackets for `join_paths`
Co-authored-by: Joshua Nelson <joshua@yottadb.com>
Use unused link join_paths
Removed same link for join_paths
Co-authored-by: Joshua Nelson <joshua@yottadb.com>
Remove unsed link join_paths
Update compiler-builtins
Update the compiler-builtins dependency to include latest changes.
This allows for `aarch64-unknown-linux-musl` to pass all tests.
Fixes#57820 and fixes#46651
Substantial refactor to the design of LineWriter
# Preamble
This is the first in a series of pull requests designed to move forward with https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/60673 (and the related [5 year old FIXME](ea7181b5f7/src/libstd/io/stdio.rs (L459-L461))), which calls for an update to `Stdout` such that it can be block-buffered rather than line-buffered under certain circumstances (such as a `tty`, or a user setting the mode with a function call). This pull request refactors the logic `LineWriter` into a `LineWriterShim`, which operates on a `BufWriter` by mutable reference, such that it is easy to invoke the line-writing logic on an existing `BufWriter` without having to construct a new `LineWriter`.
Additionally, fixes#72721
## A note on flushing
Because the word **flush** tends to be pretty overloaded in this discussion, I'm going to use the word **unbuffered** to refer to a `BufWriter` sending its data to the wrapped writer via `write`, without calling `flush` on it, and I'll be using **flushed** when referring to sending data via flush, which recursively writes the data all the way to the final sink.
For example, given a `T = BufWriter<BufWriter<File>>`, saying that `T` **unbuffers** its data means that it is sent to the inner `BufWriter`, but not necessarily to the `File`, whereas saying that `T` **flushes** its data means that causes it (via `Write::flush`) to be delivered all the way to `File`.
# Goals
Once it became clear (for reasons described below) that the best way to approach this would involve refactoring `LineWriter` to work more directly on `BufWriter`'s internals, I established the following design goals for the refactor:
- Do not duplicate logic with `BufWriter`. It's great at buffering and then unbuffering data, so use the existing logic as much as possible.
- Minimize superfluous copying of data into `BufWriter`'s buffer.
- Eliminate calls to `BufWriter::flush` and instead do the same thing as `BufWriter::write`, which is to only write to the wrapped writer (rather than flushing all the way down to the final data sink).
- Uphold the "at-most 1 write of new data" convention of `Write::write`
- Minimize or eliminate dropping errors (that is, eliminate the parts of the old design that threw away errors because `write` *must* report if any bytes were written)
- As much as possible, attempt to fully flush completed lines, and *not* flush partial lines. One of the advantages of this design is that, so long as we don't encounter lines larger than the `BufWriter`'s capacity, partial lines will never be unbuffered, while completed lines will *always* be unbuffered (with subsequent calls to `LineWriter::write` retrying failed writes before processing new data.
# Design
There are two major & related parts of the design.
First, a new internal stuct, `LineWriterShim`, is added. This struct implements all of the actual logic of line-writing in a `Write` implementation, but it only operates on an `&mut BufWriter`. This means that this shim can be constructed on-the-fly to apply line writing logic to an existing `BufWriter`. This is in fact how `LineWriter` has been updated to operate, and it is also how `Stdout` is being updated in my [development branch](https://github.com/Lucretiel/rust/tree/stdout-block-buffer) to switch which mode it wants to use at runtime.
[An example of how this looks in practice](f24f272df6/src/libstd/io/stdio.rs (L479-L484)
)
The second major part of the design that the line-buffering logic, implemented in `LineWriterShim`, has been updated to work slightly more directly on the internals of `BufWriter`. Mostly it makes us of the public interface—particularly `buffer()` and `get_mut()`—but it also controls the flushing of the buffer with `flush_buf` rather than `flush`, and it writes to the buffer infallibly with a new `write_to_buffer` method. This has several advantages:
- Data no longer has to round trip through the `BufWriter`'s buffer. If the user provides a complete line, that line is written directly to the inner writer (after ensuring the existing buffer is flushed).
- The conventional contract of `write`—that at-most 1 attempt to write new data is made—is much more cleanly upheld, because we don't have to perform fallible flushes and perform semi-complicated logic of trying to pretend errors at different stages didn't happen. Instead, after attempting to write lines directly to the buffer, we can infallibly add trailing data to the buffer without allowing any attempts to continue writing it to the `inner` writer.
- Perhaps most importantly, `LineWriter` *no longer performs a full flush on every line.* This makes its behavior much more consistent with `BufWriter`, which unbuffers data to its inner writer, without trying to flush it all the way to the final device. Previously, `LineWriter` had no choice but to use `flush` to ensure that the lines were unbuffered, but by writing directly to `inner` via `get_mut()` (when appropriate), we can use a more correct behavior.
## New(ish) line buffering logic
The logic for line writing has been cleaned up, as described above. It now follows this algorithm for `write`, with minor adjustments for `write_all` and `write_vectored`:
- Does our input data contain a newline?
- If no:
- simply use the regular `BufWriter::write` to write it; this will append it to the buffer and/or flush it as necessary based on how full the buffer is and how much input data there is.
- additionally, if the current buffer ends with `'\n'`, attempt to immediately flush it with `flush_buf` before calling `BufWriter::write` This reproduces the old `needs_flush` behavior and ensures completed lines are flushed as soon as possible. The reason we only check if the buffer *ends* with `'\n'` is discussed later.
- If yes:
- First, `flush_buf`
- Then use `bufwriter.get_mut().write()` to write the input data directly to the underlying writer, up to the last newline. Make at most one attempt at this.
- If it errors, return the error
- If it succeeds with a full write, add the remaining data (between the last newline and the end of the input) to the buffer. In order to uphold the "at-most 1 attempt to write new data" convention, no attempts are made to write this data to the inner writer (though obviously a subsequent write may immediately flush it, e.g., if it totally filled the buffer's capacity.
- If it only partially succeeds, buffer the data only up to the last newline. We do this to try to avoid writing partial lines to the inner writer where possible (that is, whenever the lines are shorter than the total buffer capacity).
While it was not my intention for this behavior to diverge from this existing `LineWriter` algorithm, this updated design emerged very naturally once `LineWriter` wasn't burdened with having to only operate via `BufWriter::flush`. There essentially two main changes to observable behavior:
- `flush` is no longer used to unbuffer lines. The are only written to the writer wrapped by `LineWriter`; this inner writer might do its own buffering. This change makes `LineWriter` consistent with the behavior of `BufWriter`. This is probably the most obvious user-visible change; it's the one I most expect to provoke issue reports, if any are provoked.
- Unless a line exceeds the capacity of the buffer, partial lines are not unbuffered (without the user manually calling flush). This is a less surprising behavior, and is enabled because `LineWriter` now has more precise control of what data is buffered and when it is unbuffered. I'd be surprised if anyone is relying on `LineWriter` unbuffering or flushing *partial* lines that are shorter than the capacity, so I'm not worried about this one.
None of these changes are inconsistent with any published documentation of `LineWriter`. Nonetheless, like all changes with user-facing behavior changes, this design will obviously have to be very carefully scrutinized.
# Alternative designs and design rationalle
The initial goal of this project was to provide a way for the `LineWriter` logic to be operable directly on a `BufWriter`, so that the updated `Stdout` doesn't need to do something convoluted like `enum { BufWriter, LineWriter }` (which ends up being ~~impossible~~ difficult to transition between states after being constructed). The design went through several iterations before arriving at the current draft.
The major first version simply involved adding methods like `write_line_buffered` to `BufWriter`; these would contain the actual logic of line-buffered writing, and would additionally have the advantages (described above) of operating directly on the internals of `BufWriter`. The idea was that `LineWriter` would simply call these methods, and the updated `Stdout` would use either `BufWriter::write` or `BufWriter::write_line_buffered`, depending on what mode it was in.
The major issue with this design is that it loses the ability to take advantage of the `io::Write` trait, which provides several useful default implementations of the various io methods, such as `write_fmt` and `write_all`, just using the core methods. For this reason, the `write_line_buffered` design was retained, but moved into a separate struct called `LineWriterShim` which operates on an `&mut LineWriter`. As part of this move, the logic was lightly retooled to not touch the innards of `BufWriter` directly, but instead to make use of the unexported helper methods like `flush_buf`.
The other design evolutions were mostly related to answering questions like "how much data should be buffered", "how should partial line writes be handled", etc. As much as possible I tried to answer these by emulating the current `LineWriter` logic (which, for example, retries partial line writes on subsequent calls to `write`) while still meeting the refactor design goals.
# Next steps
~Currently, this design fails a few `LineWriter` tests, mostly because they expect `LineWriter` to *fully* flush its content. There are also some changes to the way that `LineWriter` buffers data *after* writing completed lines, aimed at ensuring that partial lines are not unbuffered prematurely. I want to make sure I fully understand the intent behind these tests before I either update the test or update this design so that they pass.~
However, in the meantime I wanted to get this published so that feedback could start to accumulate on it. There's a lot of errata around how I arrived at this design that didn't really fit in this overlong document, so please ask questions about anything that confusing or unclear and hopefully I can explain more of the rationale that led to it.
# Test updates
This design required some tests to be updated; I've research the intent behind these tests (mostly via `git blame`) and updated them appropriately. Those changes are cataloged here.
- `test_line_buffer_fail_flush`: This test was added as a regression test for #32085, and is intended to assure that an errors from `flush` aren't propagated when preceded by a successful `write`. Because type of issue is no longer possible, because `write` calls `buffer.get_mut().write()` instead of `buffer.write(); buffer.flush();`, I'm simply removing this test entirely. Other, similar error invariants related to errors during write-retrying are handled in other test cases.
- `erroneous_flush_retried`: This test was added as a regression test for #37807, and was intended to ensure that flush-retrying (via `needs_flush`) and error-ignoring were being handled correctly (ironically, this issue was caused by the flush-error-ignoring, above). Half of that issue is not possible by design with this refactor, because we no longer make fallible i/o calls that might produce errors we have to ignore after unbuffering lines. The `should_flush` behavior is captured by checking for a trailing newline in the `LineWriter` buffer; this test now checks that behavior.
- `line_vectored`: changes here were pretty minor, mostly related to when partial lines are or aren't written. The old implementation of `write_vectored` used very complicated logic to precisely determine the location of the last newline and precisely write up to that point; this required doing several consecutive fallible writes, with all the complex error handling or ignoring issues that come with it. The updated design does at-most one write of a subset of total buffers (that is, it doesn't split in the middle of a buffer), even if that means writing partial lines. One of the major advantages of the new design is that the underlying vectored write operation on the device can be taken advantage of, even with small writes, so long as they include a newline; previously these were unconditionally buffered then written.
- `line_vectored_partial_and_errors`: Pretty similiar to `line_vectored`, above; this test is for basic error recovery in `write_vectored` for vectored writes. As previously discussed, the mocked behavior being tested for (errors ignored under certain circumstances) no occurs, so I've simplified the test while doing my best to retain its spirit.
Abort when foreign exceptions are caught by catch_unwind
Prior to this PR, foreign exceptions were not caught by catch_unwind, and instead passed through invisibly. This represented a painful soundness hole in some libraries ([take_mut](https://github.com/Sgeo/take_mut/blob/master/src/lib.rs#L37)), which relied on `catch_unwind` to handle all possible exit paths from a closure.
With this PR, foreign exceptions are now caught by `catch_unwind` and will trigger an abort since catching foreign exceptions is currently UB according to the latest proposals by the FFI unwind project group.
cc @rust-lang/wg-ffi-unwind
[AVR] Replace broken 'avr-unknown-unknown' target with 'avr-unknown-gnu-atmega328' target
The `avr-unknown-unknown` target has never worked correctly, always trying to invoke
the host linker and failing. It aimed to be a mirror of AVR-GCC's
default handling of the `avr-unknown-unknown' triple (assume bare
minimum chip features, silently skip linking runtime libraries, etc).
This behaviour is broken-by-default as it will cause a miscompiled executable
when flashed.
This patch improves the AVR builtin target specifications to instead
expose only a 'avr-unknown-gnu-atmega328' target. This target system is
`gnu`, as it uses the AVR-GCC frontend along with avr-binutils. The
target triple ABI is 'atmega328'.
In the future, it should be possible to replace the dependency on
AVR-GCC and binutils by using the in-progress AVR LLD and compiler-rt support.
Perhaps at that point it would make sense to add an
'avr-unknown-unknown-atmega328' target as a better default when
implemented.
There is no current intention to add in-tree AVR target specifications for other
AVR microcontrollers - this one can serve as a reference implementation
for other devices via `rustc --print target-spec-json
avr-unknown-gnu-atmega328p`.
There should be no users of the existing 'avr-unknown-unknown' Rust
target as a custom target specification JSON has always been
recommended, and the avr-unknown-unknown target could never pass the
linking step anyway.
Update docs for SystemTime Windows implementation
Windows now uses `GetSystemTimePreciseAsFileTime` (since #69858) on versions of Windows that support it.
Call into fastfail on abort in libpanic_abort on Windows x86(_64)
This partially resolves#73215 though this is only for x86 targets. This code is directly lifted from [libstd](13290e83a6/library/std/src/sys/windows/mod.rs (L315)). `__fastfail` is the preferred way to abort a process on Windows as it will hook into debugger toolchains.
Other platforms expose a `_rust_abort` symbol which wraps `std::sys::abort_internal`. This would also work on Windows, but is a slightly largely change as we'd need to make sure that the symbol is properly exposed to the linker. I'm inlining the call to the `__fastfail`, but the indirection through `rust_abort` might be a cleaner approach.
A different instruction must be used on ARM architectures. I'd like to verify this works first before tackling ARM.
Minor changes to Ipv4Addr
Minor changes to Ipv4Addr
* Impl IntoInner rather than AsInner for Ipv4Addr
* Add some comments
* Add test to show endiannes of Ipv4Addr display
Report an ambiguity if both modules and primitives are in scope for intra-doc links
Closes https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/75381
- Add a new `prim@` disambiguator, since both modules and primitives are in the same namespace
- Refactor `report_ambiguity` into a closure
Additionally, I noticed that rustdoc would previously allow `[struct@char]` if `char` resolved to a primitive (not if it had a DefId). I fixed that and added a test case.
I also need to update libstd to use `prim@char` instead of `type@char`. If possible I would also like to refactor `ambiguity_error` to use `Disambiguator` instead of its own hand-rolled match - that ran into issues with `prim@` (I updated one and not the other) and it would be better for them to be in sync.
Switch to intra-doc links in `std::macros`
Part of #75080.
---
* Switch to intra-doc links in `std::macros`
* Fix typo in module docs
* Link to `std::io::stderr` instead of `std::io::Stderr` to match the
link text
* Link to `std::io::stdout`
---
@rustbot modify labels: A-intra-doc-links T-doc T-rustdoc
Document that slice refers to any pointer type to a sequence
I was recently confused about the way slices are represented in memory. The necessary information was not available in the std-docs directly, but was a mix of different material from the reference and book.
This PR should clear up the definition of slices a bit more in the documentation. Especially the fact that the term slice refers to the pointer/reference type, e.g. `&[T]`, and not `[T]`.
It also documents that slice pointers are twice the size of pointers to `Sized` types, as this concept may be unfamiliar to users coming from other languages that do not have the concept of "fat pointers" (especially C/C++).
I've documented why this was important to me and my findings in [this blog post](https://codecrash.me/understanding-rust-slices).
r? @lcnr
clarify documentation of remove_dir errors
remove_dir will error if the path doesn't exist or isn't a directory.
It's useful to clarify that this is "remove dir or fail" not "remove dir
if it exists".
I don't think this belongs in the title. "Removes an existing, empty
directory" is strangely worded-- there's no such thing as a non-existing
directory. Better to just say explicitly it will return an error.
Remove `#[cfg(miri)]` from OnceCell tests
They were carried over from once_cell crate, but they are not entirely
correct (as miri now supports more things), and we don't run miri
tests for std, so let's just remove them.
Maybe one day we'll run miri in std, but then we can just re-install
these attributes.
Move to intra doc links for std::io
Helps with #75080.
@rustbot modify labels: T-doc, A-intra-doc-links, T-rustdoc
r? @jyn514
I had no problems with those files so I added some small links here and there.
They were carried over from once_cell crate, but they are not entirely
correct (as miri now supports more things), and we don't run miri
tests for std, so let's just remove them.
Maybe one day we'll run miri in std, but then we can just re-install
these attributes.
Switch to intra-doc links in /src/sys/unix/ext/*.rs
Partial fix for #75080
@rustbot modify labels: T-doc, A-intra-doc-links, T-rustdoc
r? @jyn514
These two links are not resolving to either `crate::fs::File...` or `fs::File...`
```
# unix/ext/fs.rs
27: /// [`File::read`]: ../../../../std/fs/struct.File.html#method.read
130: /// [`File::write`]: ../../../../std/fs/struct.File.html#method.write
```