Use posix_spawn for absolute paths on macOS
Currently, on macOS, Rust never uses the fast posix_spawn path if a
directory change is requested, due to a bug in Apple's libc. However, the
bug is only triggered if the program is a relative path.
This PR makes it so that the fast path continues to work if the program
is an absolute path or a lone filename.
This was an alternative proposed in https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/80537#issue-776674009, and it makes a measurable performance difference in some of my code that spawns thousands of processes.
5 commits in 6da726708a4406f31f996d813790818dce837161..4ed54cecce3ce9ab6ff058781f4c8a500ee6b8b5
2022-08-23 21:39:56 +0000 to 2022-08-27 18:41:39 +0000
- doc: pause, for readability (rust-lang/cargo#11027)
- Bump git2 to 0.15 and libgit2-sys to 0.14 (rust-lang/cargo#11004)
- Fix typo (rust-lang/cargo#11025)
- Update cargo-toml-vs-cargo-lock.md (rust-lang/cargo#11021)
- Apply GitHub fast path even for partial hashes (rust-lang/cargo#10807)
`rustc_data_structures::thin_vec::ThinVec` looks like this:
```
pub struct ThinVec<T>(Option<Box<Vec<T>>>);
```
It's just a zero word if the vector is empty, but requires two
allocations if it is non-empty. So it's only usable in cases where the
vector is empty most of the time.
This commit removes it in favour of `thin_vec::ThinVec`, which is also
word-sized, but stores the length and capacity in the same allocation as
the elements. It's good in a wider variety of situation, e.g. in enum
variants where the vector is usually/always non-empty.
The commit also:
- Sorts some `Cargo.toml` dependency lists, to make additions easier.
- Sorts some `use` item lists, to make additions easier.
- Changes `clean_trait_ref_with_bindings` to take a
`ThinVec<TypeBinding>` rather than a `&[TypeBinding]`, because this
avoid some unnecessary allocations.
[rustdoc] Remove Attrs type alias
When working on https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/101006, I was quite confused because of this type alias as I'm used to having rustdoc types into `clean/types.rs`. Anyway, considering how few uses of it we have, I simply removed it.
r? `````@notriddle`````
Use the declaration's SourceInfo for FnEntry retags, not the outermost
This addresses a long-standing `// FIXME` in the pass that adds retags.
The changes to Miri's UI tests will look like this:
```
--> $DIR/aliasing_mut1.rs:LL:CC
|
LL | pub fn safe(_x: &mut i32, _y: &mut i32) {}
< | ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ not granting access to tag <TAG> because incompatible item [Unique for <TAG>] is protected by call ID
> | ^^ not granting access to tag <TAG> because incompatible item [Unique for <TAG>] is protected by call ID
|
```
r? ````@RalfJung````
translations: rename warn_ to warning
## Description
This MR renames the the macro `warn_` to `warning`.
To give a little bit of context, as [explained](https://rust-lang.zulipchat.com/#narrow/stream/336883-i18n/topic/.23100717.20diag.20translation/near/295074146) by ```````@davidtwco``````` in the Zulip channel, `warn_` was named like that because the keyword `warn` is a built-in attribute and at the time this macro was created the word `warning` was also
taken.
However, it is no longer the case and we can rename `warn_` to `warning`.
extra sanity check against consts pointing to mutable memory
This should be both unreachable and redundant (since we already ensure that validation only reads from read-only memory, when validating consts), but I feel like we cannot be paranoid enough here, and also if this ever fails it'll be a nicer error than the "cannot read from mutable memory" error.
Replace `Body::basic_blocks()` with field access
Since the refactoring in #98930, it is possible to borrow the basic blocks
independently from other parts of MIR by accessing the `basic_blocks` field
directly.
Replace unnecessary `Body::basic_blocks()` method with a direct field access,
which has an additional benefit of borrowing the basic blocks only.
Support parsing IP addresses from a byte string
Fixes#94821
The goal is to be able to parse addresses from a byte string without requiring to do any utf8 validation. Since internally the parser already works on byte strings, this should be possible and I personally already needed this in the past too.
~~I used the proposed approach from the issue by implementing `TryFrom<&'a [u8]>` for all 6 address types (3 ip address types and 3 socket address types). I believe implementing stable traits for stable types is insta-stable so this will probably need an FCP?~~
Switched to an unstable inherent method approach called `parse_ascii` as requested.
cc ``````@jyn514``````
Adds and removes some `visit_*` methods accordingly, improving
coverage, and avoiding some double counting. Brings it in line with the
AST stats collector.
Currently, on macOS, Rust never uses the fast posix_spawn path if a
directory change is requested due to a bug in Apple's libc. However, the
bug is only triggered if the program is a relative path.
This PR makes it so that the fast path continues to work if the program
is an absolute path or a lone filename.
This was an alternative proposed in
https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/80537#issue-776674009, and it
makes a measurable performance difference in some of my code that spawns
thousands of processes.
Add next_up and next_down for f32/f64 - take 2
This is a revival of https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/88728 which staled due to inactivity of the original author. I've address the last review comment.
---
This is a pull request implementing the features described at https://github.com/rust-lang/rfcs/pull/3173.
`@rustbot` label +T-libs-api -T-libs
r? `@scottmcm`
cc `@orlp`
This is based on `-Zprint-type-sizes` which does the same thing. It
makes the output provenance clearer, and helps with post-processing.
E.g. if you have `-Zhir-stats` output from numerous compiler invocations
you can now easily extract the pre-expansion stats separately from the
post-expansion stats.
This makes it possible to instruct libstd to never touch the signal
handler for `SIGPIPE`, which makes programs pipeable by default (e.g.
with `./your-program | head -n 1`) without `ErrorKind::BrokenPipe`
errors.
std: use realstd fast key when building tests
Under `cfg(test)`, the `std` crate is not the actual standard library, just any old crate we are testing. It imports the real standard library as `realstd`, and then does some careful `cfg` magic so that the crate built for testing uses the `realstd` global state rather than having its own copy of that.
However, this was not done for all global state hidden in std: the 'fast' version of thread-local keys, at least on some platforms, also involves some global state. Specifically its macOS version has this [`static REGISTERED`](bc63d5a26a/library/std/src/sys/unix/thread_local_dtor.rs (L62)) that would get duplicated. So this PR imports the 'fast' key type from `realstd` rather than using the local copy, to ensure its internal state (and that of the functions it calls) does not get duplicated.
I also noticed that the `__OsLocalKeyInner` is unused under `cfg(target_thread_local)`, so I removed it for that configuration. There was a comment saying macOS picks between `__OsLocalKeyInner` and `__FastLocalKeyInner` at runtime, but I think that comment is outdated -- I found no trace of such a runtime switching mechanism, and the library still check-builds on apple targets with this PR. (I don't have a Mac so I cannot actually run it.)
Don't lint literal `None` from expansion
This addresses https://github.com/rust-lang/rust-clippy/pull/9288#issuecomment-1229398524: If the literal `None` is from expansion, we never lint. This is correct because e.g. replacing the call to `option_env!` with whatever that macro expanded to at the time of linting is certainly wrong.
changelog: Don't lint [`partialeq_to_none`] for macro-expansions