Fix potential UB in align_offset doc examples
Currently it takes a pointer only to the first element in the array, this changes the code to take a pointer to the whole array.
miri can't catch this right now because it later calls `x.len()` which re-tags the pointer for the whole array.
https://github.com/rust-lang/miri/issues/1526#issuecomment-680897144
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
Disable cancel-outdated-builds for auto-fallible
`cancel-outdated-builds` doesn't need to be enabled on fallible jobs, and it's actually making it harder for us to see if https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/71988 is fixed. This adds some temporary code to avoid `auto-fallible` jobs from being cancelled by our tooling.
r? @Mark-Simulacrum
Improve help popup
Fixes#75623.
The second commit is just a slight improvement: the help popup won't be created until someone presses "?" or ESC. Not a big improvement in itself but considering the low amount of code required, I think it was worth the shot.
r? @jyn514
Point to a move-related span when pointing to closure upvars
Fixes#75904
When emitting move/borrow errors, we may point into a closure to
indicate why an upvar is used in the closure. However, we use the
'upvar span', which is just an arbitrary usage of the upvar. If the
upvar is used in multiple places (e.g. a borrow and a move), we may end
up pointing to the borrow. If the overall error is a move error, this
can be confusing.
This PR tracks the span that caused an upvar to become captured by-value
instead of by-ref (assuming that it's not a `move` closure). We use this
span instead of the 'upvar' span when we need to point to an upvar usage
during borrow checking.
[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.
Await on mismatched future types
Closes#61076
This PR suggests to `await` on:
1. `async_fn().bar() => async_fn().await.bar()`
2. `async_fn().field => async_fn().await.field`
3. ` if let x = async() {} => if let x = async().await {}`
r? @tmandry @estebank
Rollup of 10 pull requests
Successful merges:
- #74730 (Hexagon libstd: update type defs)
- #75758 (Fixes for VxWorks)
- #75780 (Unconfuse Unpin docs a bit)
- #75806 (Prevent automatic page change when using history)
- #75818 (Update docs for SystemTime Windows implementation)
- #75837 (Fix font color for help button in ayu and dark themes)
- #75870 (Unify theme choices border color in ayu theme)
- #75875 (Shorten liballoc vec resize intra-doc link)
- #75953 (Fix swapped stability attributes for rustdoc lints)
- #75958 (Avoid function-scoping global variables)
Failed merges:
r? @ghost
Avoid function-scoping global variables
In 2e6f2e885506ee4, we added a main function to the publish_toolstate.py script.
Unfortunately, we missed that the Python program implicitly declares global
variables in that code, which means that adding a function changes variable
scoping and breaks other code.
This commit avoids introducing that function and adds a warning to future
editors of the code.
Update docs for SystemTime Windows implementation
Windows now uses `GetSystemTimePreciseAsFileTime` (since #69858) on versions of Windows that support it.
Unconfuse Unpin docs a bit
* Don't say that Unpin is used to prevent moves, because it is used
to *allow* moves
* Be more precise about kindedness of things, it is
`Pin<Pointer<Data>>`, rather than just `Pin<Pointer>`.
In 2e6f2e885506ee4, we added a main function to the publish_toolstate.py script.
Unfortunately, we missed that the Python program implicitly declares global
variables in that code, which means that adding a function changes variable
scoping and breaks other code.
This commit avoids introducing that function and adds a warning to future
editors of the code.
Warn about unknown or renamed lints in rustdoc
Fixes https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/75884.
This is best reviewed one commit at a time.
r? @GuillaumeGomez
Originally I tried to do a much broader refactoring that got rid of `init_lints` altogether. My reasoning is that now the lints aren't being run anymore (after https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/73566), there's no need to ignore them explicitly. But it seems there are still some lints that aren't affected by setting `lint_mod` to a no-op:
```
deny(pub_use_of_private_extern_crate)
deny(const_err)
warn(unused_imports)
```
(there are possibly more, these are just the ones that failed in the rustdoc test suite).
Some of these seem like we really should be warning about, but that's a much larger change and I don't propose to make it here. So for the time being, this just adds the `unknown_lints` and `renamed_or_removed_lints` passes to the list of lints rustdoc warns about.