Commit Graph

3088 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Dylan DPC
85056107fa
Rollup merge of #87618 - GuillaumeGomez:std-char-types-doc, r=jyn514,camelid
Add missing documentation for std::char types
2022-03-11 20:29:42 +01:00
Dylan DPC
fb3d126458
Rollup merge of #94842 - tspiteri:there-is-no-try, r=Dylan-DPC
Remove unnecessary try_opt for operations that cannot fail

As indicated in the added comments, some operation cannot overflow, so using `try_opt!` for them is unnecessary.
2022-03-11 13:38:39 +01:00
Dylan DPC
cdd6d39ecc
Rollup merge of #94776 - martingms:optimize-escape-default, r=nnethercote
Optimize ascii::escape_default

`ascii::escape_default` showed up as a hot function when compiling `deunicode-1.3.1` in `@nnethercote's` [analysis](https://hackmd.io/mxdn4U58Su-UQXwzOHpHag) of `@lqd's` [rustc-benchmarking-data](https://github.com/lqd/rustc-benchmarking-data).
After taking a look at the generated assembly it looked like a LUT-based approach could be faster for `hexify()`-ing ascii characters, so that's what this PR implements

The patch looks like it provides about a 1-2% improvement in instructions for that particular crate. This should definitely be verified with a perf run as I'm still getting used to the `rustc-perf` tooling and might easily have made an error!
2022-03-11 13:38:37 +01:00
Trevor Spiteri
ed10356d52 remove unnecessary try_opt for operations that cannot fail 2022-03-11 11:07:45 +01:00
Anton Lazarev
4c17217f99
make float parsing docs more comprehensive 2022-03-10 22:26:30 -08:00
Dylan DPC
6d66020594
Rollup merge of #94765 - m-ou-se:is-some-and, r=Dylan-DPC
Rename is_{some,ok,err}_with to is_{some,ok,err}_and.

This renames `is_{some,ok,err}_with` to `is_{some,ok,err}_and`. This was discussed on the [tracking issue](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/93050).
2022-03-11 03:32:04 +01:00
Dylan DPC
d58c69ae96
Rollup merge of #93293 - nvzqz:nonzero-min-max, r=joshtriplett
Implement `MIN`/`MAX` constants for non-zero integers

This adds the associated [`MIN`](https://doc.rust-lang.org/stable/std/primitive.usize.html#associatedconstant.MIN)/[`MAX`](https://doc.rust-lang.org/stable/std/primitive.usize.html#associatedconstant.MAX) constants to `NonZero{U,I}{8,16,32,64,128,size}`, requested in #89065.

This reimplements #89077 due that PR being stagnant for 4 months. I am fine with closing this in favor of that one if the author revisits it. If so, I'd like to see that PR have the docs link to the `$Int`'s constants.
2022-03-11 03:32:02 +01:00
Nikolai Vazquez
ecb7927050 Move note about 0 gap to signed integers
Was accidentally placed on unsigned integers, where it is not relevant.
2022-03-10 17:52:48 -05:00
Dylan DPC
3979e150cc
Rollup merge of #94790 - RalfJung:portable-simd-miri, r=Dylan-DPC
enable portable-simd doctests in Miri

With https://github.com/rust-lang/miri/pull/2013 we shouldn't need to disable these tests any more. :)
2022-03-10 23:13:01 +01:00
Dylan DPC
5a7f09d9a3
Rollup merge of #93950 - T-O-R-U-S:use-modern-formatting-for-format!-macros, r=Mark-Simulacrum
Use modern formatting for format! macros

This updates the standard library's documentation to use the new format_args syntax.
The documentation is worthwhile to update as it should be more idiomatic
(particularly for features like this, which are nice for users to get acquainted
with). The general codebase is likely more hassle than benefit to update: it'll
hurt git blame, and generally updates can be done by folks updating the code if
(and when) that makes things more readable with the new format.

A few places in the compiler and library code are updated (mostly just due to
already having been done when this commit was first authored).

`eprintln!("{}", e)` becomes `eprintln!("{e}")`, but `eprintln!("{}", e.kind())` remains untouched.
2022-03-10 23:12:57 +01:00
Maybe Waffle
ecf46d1074 Add Atomic*::get_mut_slice
Just as `get_mut` is the inverse of `from_mut`, `get_mut_slice` is the
inverse of `from_mut_slice`.
2022-03-11 00:31:19 +04:00
Yoshua Wuyts
3f2cb6eba1 Rename IntoFuture::Future to IntoFuture::IntoFuture 2022-03-10 20:51:52 +01:00
Matthias Krüger
b5127202b2
Rollup merge of #94587 - JKAnderson409:issue-90107-fix, r=scottmcm
Document new recommended use of `FromIterator::from_iter`

#90107
Most of the added prose was paraphrased from the links provided in the issue. The suggested `VecDeque` example seemed to make the point well enough so I just used that.
2022-03-10 19:00:06 +01:00
T-O-R-U-S
72a25d05bf Use implicit capture syntax in format_args
This updates the standard library's documentation to use the new syntax. The
documentation is worthwhile to update as it should be more idiomatic
(particularly for features like this, which are nice for users to get acquainted
with). The general codebase is likely more hassle than benefit to update: it'll
hurt git blame, and generally updates can be done by folks updating the code if
(and when) that makes things more readable with the new format.

A few places in the compiler and library code are updated (mostly just due to
already having been done when this commit was first authored).
2022-03-10 10:23:40 -05:00
Martin Gammelsæter
c62ab422d0 Inline <EscapeDefault as Iterator>::next 2022-03-10 15:35:22 +01:00
Matthias Krüger
e7281d08de
Rollup merge of #94746 - notriddle:notriddle/method-rustc-on-unimplemented, r=davidtwco
diagnostics: use rustc_on_unimplemented to recommend `[].iter()`

To make this work, the `#[rustc_on_unimplemented]` data needs to be used to
report method resolution errors, which is most of what this commit does.

Fixes #94581
2022-03-10 12:20:53 +01:00
Matthias Krüger
fe034cb43b
Rollup merge of #94657 - fee1-dead:const_slice_index, r=oli-obk
Constify `Index{,Mut}` for `[T]`, `str`, and `[T; N]`

Several panic functions were rewired (via `const_eval_select`) to simpler implementations that do not require formatting for compile-time usage.

r? ```@oli-obk```
2022-03-10 12:20:52 +01:00
Matthias Krüger
313a668234
Rollup merge of #94635 - jhpratt:merge-deprecated-attrs, r=davidtwco
Merge `#[deprecated]` and `#[rustc_deprecated]`

The first commit makes "reason" an alias for "note" in `#[rustc_deprecated]`, while still prohibiting it in `#[deprecated]`.

The second commit changes "suggestion" to not just be a feature of `#[rustc_deprecated]`. This is placed behind the new `deprecated_suggestion` feature. This needs a tracking issue; let me know if this PR will be approved and I can create one.

The third commit is what permits `#[deprecated]` to be used when `#![feature(staged_api)]` is enabled. This isn't yet used in stdlib (only tests), as it would require duplicating all deprecation attributes until a bootstrap occurs. I intend to submit a follow-up PR that replaces all uses and removes the remaining `#[rustc_deprecated]` code after the next bootstrap.

`@rustbot` label +T-libs-api +C-feature-request +A-attributes +S-waiting-on-review
2022-03-10 12:20:51 +01:00
Scott McMurray
7ef74bc8b9 Let try_collect take advantage of try_fold overrides
Without this change it's going through `&mut impl Iterator`, which handles `?Sized` and thus currently can't forward generics.

Here's the test added, to see that it fails before this PR (once a new enough nightly is out): https://play.rust-lang.org/?version=nightly&mode=debug&edition=2021&gist=462f2896f2fed2c238ee63ca1a7e7c56
2022-03-10 00:16:06 -08:00
Ralf Jung
29d979fb3c enable portable-simd doctests in Miri 2022-03-09 19:31:25 -05:00
Matthias Krüger
d5c05fcc8a
Rollup merge of #93057 - frengor:iter_collect_into, r=m-ou-se
Add Iterator::collect_into

This PR adds `Iterator::collect_into` as proposed by ``@cormacrelf`` in #48597 (see https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/48597#issuecomment-842083688).
Followup of #92982.

This adds the following method to the Iterator trait:

```rust
fn collect_into<E: Extend<Self::Item>>(self, collection: &mut E) -> &mut E
```
2022-03-09 23:14:11 +01:00
Matthias Krüger
2567d0f883
Rollup merge of #92541 - asquared31415:from-docs, r=m-ou-se
Mention intent of `From` trait in its docs

This pr is a docs modification to add to the documentation of the `From` trait a note about its intent as a perfect conversion.  This is already stated in the `TryFrom` docs so this is simply adding that information in a more visible way.
2022-03-09 23:14:10 +01:00
Matthias Krüger
c0259626b6
Rollup merge of #91804 - woppopo:const_clone, r=oli-obk
Make some `Clone` impls `const`

Tracking issue: #91805
`Clone::clone_from` and some impls (Option, Result) bounded on `~const Drop`.

```rust
// core::clone
impl const Clone for INTEGER
impl const Clone for FLOAT
impl const Clone for bool
impl const Clone for char
impl const Clone for !
impl<T: ?Sized> const Clone for *const T
impl<T: ?Sized> const Clone for *mut T
impl<T: ?Sized> const Clone for &T

// core::option
impl<T> const Clone for Option<T>
where
    T: ~const Clone + ~const Drop

// core::result
impl<T, E> const Clone for Result<T, E>
where
    T: ~const Clone + ~const Drop,
    E: ~const Clone + ~const Drop,

// core::convert
impl const Clone for Infallible

// core::ptr
impl<T: ?Sized> const Clone for NonNull<T>
impl<T: ?Sized> const Clone for Unique<T>
```
2022-03-09 23:14:09 +01:00
Jacob Pratt
5636655d0f
New deprecated_suggestion feature, use in tests 2022-03-09 16:32:47 -05:00
Martin Gammelsæter
7f4f4fc34c Use indexing instead of .get_unchecked() for LUT lookup
Based on @paolobarbolini's tip that the unsafe block was unnecessary in
this case.

Not much left of `hexify()` after this, so seemed clearer to just inline
it.
2022-03-09 22:21:35 +01:00
fren_gor
63eddb3e68
Add tracking issue 2022-03-09 21:12:07 +01:00
Michael Howell
32d7f8145a diagnostics: use rustc_on_unimplemented to recommend [].iter()
To make this work, the `#[rustc_on_unimplemented]` data needs to be used to
report method resolution errors, which is most of what this commit does.

Fixes #94581
2022-03-09 09:52:55 -07:00
Martin Gammelsæter
876142417c Optimize ascii::escape_default by using a digit LUT 2022-03-09 17:10:34 +01:00
Mara Bos
7c7411fb5d Rename is_{some,ok,err}_with to is_{some,ok,err}_and. 2022-03-09 11:20:36 +01:00
Loïc BRANSTETT
e3ea59ada5 Remove unexpected #[cfg(target_pointer_width = "8")] in tests 2022-03-09 00:30:17 +01:00
Dylan DPC
ff54e34463
Rollup merge of #94723 - dtolnay:mustuse, r=Mark-Simulacrum
Add core::hint::must_use

The example code in this documentation is minimized from a real-world situation in the `anyhow` crate where this function would have been valuable.

Having this provided by the standard library is especially useful for proc macros, even more than for macro_rules. That's because proc macro crates aren't allowed to export anything other than macros, so they couldn't make their own `must_use` function for their macro-generated code to call.

<br>

## Rendered documentation

> An identity function that causes an `unused_must_use` warning to be triggered if the given value is not used (returned, stored in a variable, etc) by the caller.
>
> This is primarily intended for use in macro-generated code, in which a [`#[must_use]` attribute][must_use] either on a type or a function would not be convenient.
>
> [must_use]: https://doc.rust-lang.org/reference/attributes/diagnostics.html#the-must_use-attribute
>
> ### Example
>
> ```rust
> #![feature(hint_must_use)]
>
> use core::fmt;
>
> pub struct Error(/* ... */);
>
> #[macro_export]
> macro_rules! make_error {
>     ($($args:expr),*) => {
>         core::hint::must_use({
>             let error = $crate::make_error(core::format_args!($($args),*));
>             error
>         })
>     };
> }
>
> // Implementation detail of make_error! macro.
> #[doc(hidden)]
> pub fn make_error(args: fmt::Arguments<'_>) -> Error {
>     Error(/* ... */)
> }
>
> fn demo() -> Option<Error> {
>     if true {
>         // Oops, meant to write `return Some(make_error!("..."));`
>         Some(make_error!("..."));
>     }
>     None
> }
> ```
>
> In the above example, we'd like an `unused_must_use` lint to apply to the value created by `make_error!`. However, neither `#[must_use]` on a struct nor `#[must_use]` on a function is appropriate here, so the macro expands using `core::hint::must_use` instead.
>
> - We wouldn't want `#[must_use]` on the `struct Error` because that would make the following unproblematic code trigger a warning:
>
>   ```rust
>   fn f(arg: &str) -> Result<(), Error>
>
>   #[test]
>   fn t() {
>       // Assert that `f` returns error if passed an empty string.
>       // A value of type `Error` is unused here but that's not a problem.
>       f("").unwrap_err();
>   }
>   ```
>
> - Using `#[must_use]` on `fn make_error` can't help because the return value *is* used, as the right-hand side of a `let` statement. The `let` statement looks useless but is in fact necessary for ensuring that temporaries within the `format_args` expansion are not kept alive past the creation of the `Error`, as keeping them alive past that point can cause autotrait issues in async code:
>
>   ```rust
>   async fn f() {
>       // Using `let` inside the make_error expansion causes temporaries like
>       // `unsync()` to drop at the semicolon of that `let` statement, which
>       // is prior to the await point. They would otherwise stay around until
>       // the semicolon on *this* statement, which is after the await point,
>       // and the enclosing Future would not implement Send.
>       log(make_error!("look: {:p}", unsync())).await;
>   }
>
>   async fn log(error: Error) {/* ... */}
>
>   // Returns something without a Sync impl.
>   fn unsync() -> *const () {
>       0 as *const ()
>   }
>   ```
2022-03-08 22:43:59 +01:00
David Tolnay
b2473e988f
Add core::hint::must_use 2022-03-08 10:58:03 -08:00
Matthias Krüger
aec535f805
Rollup merge of #94559 - m-ou-se:thread-scope-spawn-closure-without-arg, r=Mark-Simulacrum
Remove argument from closure in thread::Scope::spawn.

This implements ```@danielhenrymantilla's``` [suggestion](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/93203#issuecomment-1040798286) for improving the scoped threads interface.

Summary:

The `Scope` type gets an extra lifetime argument, which represents basically its own lifetime that will be used in `&'scope Scope<'scope, 'env>`:

```diff
- pub struct Scope<'env> { .. };
+ pub struct Scope<'scope, 'env: 'scope> { .. }

  pub fn scope<'env, F, T>(f: F) -> T
  where
-     F: FnOnce(&Scope<'env>) -> T;
+     F: for<'scope> FnOnce(&'scope Scope<'scope, 'env>) -> T;
```

This simplifies the `spawn` function, which now no longer passes an argument to the closure you give it, and now uses the `'scope` lifetime for everything:

```diff
-     pub fn spawn<'scope, F, T>(&'scope self, f: F) -> ScopedJoinHandle<'scope, T>
+     pub fn spawn<F, T>(&'scope self, f: F) -> ScopedJoinHandle<'scope, T>
      where
-         F: FnOnce(&Scope<'env>) -> T + Send + 'env,
+         F: FnOnce() -> T + Send + 'scope,
-         T: Send + 'env;
+         T: Send + 'scope;
```

The only difference the user will notice, is that their closure now takes no arguments anymore, even when spawning threads from spawned threads:

```diff
  thread::scope(|s| {
-     s.spawn(|_| {
+     s.spawn(|| {
          ...
      });
-     s.spawn(|s| {
+     s.spawn(|| {
          ...
-         s.spawn(|_| ...);
+         s.spawn(|| ...);
      });
  });
```

<details><summary>And, as a bonus, errors get <em>slightly</em> better because now any lifetime issues point to the outermost <code>s</code> (since there is only one <code>s</code>), rather than the innermost <code>s</code>, making it clear that the lifetime lasts for the entire <code>thread::scope</code>.

</summary>

```diff
  error[E0373]: closure may outlive the current function, but it borrows `a`, which is owned by the current function
   --> src/main.rs:9:21
    |
- 7 |         s.spawn(|s| {
-   |                  - has type `&Scope<'1>`
+ 6 |     thread::scope(|s| {
+   |                    - lifetime `'1` appears in the type of `s`
  9 |             s.spawn(|| println!("{:?}", a)); // might run after `a` is dropped
    |                     ^^                  - `a` is borrowed here
    |                     |
    |                     may outlive borrowed value `a`
    |
  note: function requires argument type to outlive `'1`
   --> src/main.rs:9:13
    |
  9 |             s.spawn(|| println!("{:?}", a)); // might run after `a` is dropped
    |             ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
  help: to force the closure to take ownership of `a` (and any other referenced variables), use the `move` keyword
    |
  9 |             s.spawn(move || println!("{:?}", a)); // might run after `a` is dropped
    |                     ++++
"
```
</details>

The downside is that the signature of `scope` and `Scope` gets slightly more complex, but in most cases the user wouldn't need to write those, as they just use the argument provided by `thread::scope` without having to name its type.

Another downside is that this does not work nicely in Rust 2015 and Rust 2018, since in those editions, `s` would be captured by reference and not by copy. In those editions, the user would need to use `move ||` to capture `s` by copy. (Which is what the compiler suggests in the error.)
2022-03-08 11:04:51 +01:00
Matthias Krüger
e22331ce02
Rollup merge of #92385 - clarfonthey:const_option, r=fee1-dead
Add Result::{ok, err, and, or, unwrap_or} as const

Already opened tracking issue #92384.

I don't think that this should actually cause any issues as long as the constness is unstable, but we may want to double-check that this doesn't get interpreted as a weird `Drop` bound even for non-const usages.
2022-03-08 11:04:50 +01:00
Eric Holk
8700b45b67 Stabilize const_impl_trait as well 2022-03-07 08:47:18 -08:00
Eric Holk
7723506d13 Stabilize const_fn_fn_ptr_basics and const_fn_trait_bound 2022-03-07 08:47:15 -08:00
Guillaume Gomez
5b5649fd73 Add missing documentation for std::char types 2022-03-07 13:59:10 +01:00
Matthias Krüger
e8f38a03b5
Rollup merge of #94671 - csmoe:pin-typo, r=m-ou-se
fix pin doc typo

r? `@m-ou-se`
2022-03-06 19:08:38 +01:00
csmoe
bf089331b4 fix pin doc typo 2022-03-06 21:40:30 +08:00
Deadbeef
4654a91001
Constify slice index for strings 2022-03-06 17:28:50 +11:00
Gentoli
62a65945b7
doc: Iterator::partition use partial type hints 2022-03-05 19:40:40 -05:00
Dylan DPC
a3fe63e9fe
Rollup merge of #94620 - pierwill:partialord-constistency, r=yaahc
Edit docs on consistency of `PartialOrd` and `PartialEq`

Use ordered list to make the information about implementations more readable.
2022-03-05 04:46:38 +01:00
bors
69f11fff33 Auto merge of #94628 - Dylan-DPC:rollup-v2slupe, r=Dylan-DPC
Rollup of 5 pull requests

Successful merges:

 - #94362 (Add well known values to `--check-cfg` implementation)
 - #94577 (only disable SIMD for doctests in Miri (not for the stdlib build itself))
 - #94595 (Fix invalid `unresolved imports` errors for a single-segment import)
 - #94596 (Delay bug in expr adjustment when check_expr is called multiple times)
 - #94618 (Don't round stack size up for created threads in Windows)

Failed merges:

r? `@ghost`
`@rustbot` modify labels: rollup
2022-03-05 00:15:54 +00:00
Dylan DPC
18a07a78a5
Rollup merge of #94577 - RalfJung:simd-miri, r=scottmcm
only disable SIMD for doctests in Miri (not for the stdlib build itself)

Also we can enable library/core/tests/simd.rs now, Miri supports enough SIMD for that.
2022-03-04 22:58:34 +01:00
pierwill
f0257b1b4c Edit docs on consistency of PartialOrd and PartialEq
Use ordered list to make the information about implementations more readable.
2022-03-04 13:31:32 -06:00
Jeff
b363f13069 Add suggested changes to the docs 2022-03-04 09:48:51 -05:00
Jeff
5f34c04de6 Make use statement visible 2022-03-04 09:45:18 -05:00
Loïc BRANSTETT
a93c7abc69 Add #![allow(unexpected_cfgs)] in preparation of global --check-cfg 2022-03-04 11:34:51 +01:00
Jeff
c956fe5cea Document new recommended use of method 2022-03-03 19:45:53 -05:00
Ralf Jung
50e7450bac only disable SIMD for doctests in Miri (not for the stdlib build itself) 2022-03-03 15:11:06 -05:00
Ralf Jung
e9149b6773 Miri can run this test now 2022-03-03 14:54:18 -05:00
Ralf Jung
d233570fab fix a warning when building core tests with cfg(miri) 2022-03-03 14:54:18 -05:00
Matthias Krüger
40c146cebd
Rollup merge of #94551 - darnuria:doc-map-backstick, r=dtolnay
Doc: Fix use of quote instead of backstick in Adapter::map.

A little commit to fix documentation rendering and semantics in https://doc.rust-lang.org/std/iter/struct.Map.html#notes-about-side-effects `"` where used around an expression instead \`.

Screenshot on doc.rust-lang.org:
![2022-03-03 11-21-43_backstick](https://user-images.githubusercontent.com/2827553/156546536-569b7692-7ac4-4388-8e93-c1628ddc6a0f.png)

Looking forward: Maybe reworking the doc to use assert_eq like the upper paragraph:
```
let v: Vec<i32> = vec![1, 2, 3].into_iter().map(|x| x + 1).rev().collect();

assert_eq!(v, [4, 3, 2]);
```
2022-03-03 20:01:47 +01:00
Mara Bos
6b46a52577 Fix doctests. 2022-03-03 15:23:12 +01:00
bors
4566094913 Auto merge of #94512 - RalfJung:sdiv-ub, r=oli-obk
Miri/CTFE: properly treat overflow in (signed) division/rem as UB

To my surprise, it looks like LLVM treats overflow of signed div/rem as UB. From what I can tell, MIR `Div`/`Rem` directly lowers to the corresponding LLVM operation, so to make that correct we also have to consider these overflows UB in the CTFE/Miri interpreter engine.

r? `@oli-obk`
2022-03-03 12:56:24 +00:00
Axel Viala
37c1eb0a47 Doc: Fix use of quote instead of backstick in Adapter::map. 2022-03-03 11:25:01 +01:00
Sébastien Marie
fa8e1bedd3 merge the char signess list of archs with freebsd as it is the same 2022-03-02 12:12:28 +00:00
Sébastien Marie
3768f0b813 update char signess for openbsd
adds more archs for openbsd: arm, mips64, powerpc, powerpc64, and riscv64.
2022-03-02 10:33:50 +00:00
Nixon Enraght-Moony
3f04c85e24 Mark uint::wrapping_next_power_of_two as #[inline]
This brings it in line with `next_power_of_two` and
`checked_next_power_of_two`
2022-03-02 09:15:14 +00:00
Ralf Jung
6739299d18 Miri/CTFE: properly treat overflow in (signed) division/rem as UB 2022-03-01 20:39:51 -05:00
Josh Triplett
75c3e9c23f Temporarily make CStr not a link in the c_char docs
When CStr moves to core with an alias in std, this can link to
`crate::ffi::CStr`. However, linking in the reverse direction (from core
to std) requires a relative path, and that path can't work from both
core::ffi and std::os::raw (different number of `../` traversals
required).
2022-03-01 17:36:40 -08:00
Josh Triplett
335c9609c6 Provide C FFI types via core::ffi, not just in std
The ability to interoperate with C code via FFI is not limited to crates
using std; this allows using these types without std.

The existing types in `std::os::raw` become type aliases for the ones in
`core::ffi`. This uses type aliases rather than re-exports, to allow the
std types to remain stable while the core types are unstable.

This also moves the currently unstable `NonZero_` variants and
`c_size_t`/`c_ssize_t`/`c_ptrdiff_t` types to `core::ffi`, while leaving
them unstable.
2022-03-01 17:16:05 -08:00
Josh Triplett
0f505c6377 Add a copy of cfg_if to core's internal_macros.rs
core can't depend on external crates the way std can. Rather than revert
usage of cfg_if, add a copy of it to core. This does not export our
copy, even unstably; such a change could occur in a later commit.
2022-03-01 16:24:10 -08:00
Dylan DPC
5bd119da84
Rollup merge of #94384 - cuviper:atomic-slice, r=dtolnay
Add Atomic*::from_mut_slice

Tracking issue #76314 for `from_mut` has a question about the possibility of `from_mut_slice`, and I found a real case for it. A user in the forum had a parallelism problem that could be solved by open-indexing updates to a vector of atomics, but they didn't want to affect the other code using that vector. Using `from_mut_slice`, they could borrow that data as atomics just long enough for their parallel loop.

ref: https://users.rust-lang.org/t/sharing-vector-with-rayon-par-iter-correctly/72022
2022-03-01 03:41:51 +01:00
Matthias Krüger
770ee32b34
Rollup merge of #89793 - ibraheemdev:from_ptr_range, r=m-ou-se
Add `slice::{from_ptr_range, from_mut_ptr_range} `

Adds `slice::{from_ptr_range, from_mut_ptr_range}` as counterparts to `slice::{as_ptr_range, as_mut_ptr_range}`.
2022-02-28 12:57:44 +01:00
Ibraheem Ahmed
aac0281d30 add slice::{from_ptr_range, from_mut_ptr_range} 2022-02-27 16:53:26 -05:00
Scott McMurray
b582bd388f For MIRI, cfg out the swap logic from 94212 2022-02-26 18:57:15 -08:00
bors
12b71ed4c5 Auto merge of #94385 - matthiaskrgr:rollup-4pwegqk, r=matthiaskrgr
Rollup of 5 pull requests

Successful merges:

 - #93603 (Populate liveness facts when calling `get_body_with_borrowck_facts` without `-Z polonius`)
 - #93870 (Fix switch on discriminant detection in a presence of coverage counters)
 - #94355 (Add one more case to avoid ICE)
 - #94363 (Remove needless borrows from core::fmt)
 - #94377 (`check_used` should only look at actual `used` attributes)

Failed merges:

r? `@ghost`
`@rustbot` modify labels: rollup
2022-02-26 02:09:29 +00:00
Matthias Krüger
0c9d5e3c77
Rollup merge of #94363 - aDotInTheVoid:fmt-needless-borrows, r=scottmcm
Remove needless borrows from core::fmt
2022-02-26 00:49:23 +01:00
bors
d973b358c6 Auto merge of #94342 - ibraheemdev:swap-regression, r=Dylan-DPC
Revert implementation of `slice::swap`

Due to the perf regressions noticed here, possible due to inlining? https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/88540#issuecomment-944344343

r? `@kennytm`
2022-02-25 23:47:00 +00:00
Josh Stone
d3d2a279fe Add Atomic*::from_mut_slice 2022-02-25 15:30:29 -08:00
Erik Desjardins
4194d7537e Add #[inline] to trivial AsRef impls
These appeared uninlined in some perf runs, but they're trivial.
2022-02-25 15:18:16 -05:00
Nixon Enraght-Moony
6b68882e45 Remove needless borrows from core::fmt 2022-02-25 16:06:23 +00:00
Mark Rousskov
3c62f2f635 Re-add track_caller to panic_no_unwind in bootstrap
This function was updated in a recent PR (92911) to be called without the caller
information passed in, but the function signature itself was not altered with
cfg_attr at the time.
2022-02-25 08:00:53 -05:00
Mark Rousskov
22c3a71de1 Switch bootstrap cfgs 2022-02-25 08:00:52 -05:00
Ibraheem Ahmed
072d35dc2d revert implementation of slice::swap 2022-02-24 19:32:54 -05:00
Dylan DPC
7fb55b4c3a
Rollup merge of #94212 - scottmcm:swapper, r=dtolnay
Stop manually SIMDing in `swap_nonoverlapping`

Like I previously did for `reverse` (#90821), this leaves it to LLVM to pick how to vectorize it, since it can know better the chunk size to use, compared to the "32 bytes always" approach we currently have.

A variety of codegen tests are included to confirm that the various cases are still being vectorized.

It does still need logic to type-erase in some cases, though, as while LLVM is now smart enough to vectorize over slices of things like `[u8; 4]`, it fails to do so over slices of `[u8; 3]`.

As a bonus, this change also means one no longer gets the spurious `memcpy`(s?) at the end up swapping a slice of `__m256`s: <https://rust.godbolt.org/z/joofr4v8Y>

<details>

<summary>ASM for this example</summary>

## Before (from godbolt)

note the `push`/`pop`s and `memcpy`

```x86
swap_m256_slice:
        push    r15
        push    r14
        push    r13
        push    r12
        push    rbx
        sub     rsp, 32
        cmp     rsi, rcx
        jne     .LBB0_6
        mov     r14, rsi
        shl     r14, 5
        je      .LBB0_6
        mov     r15, rdx
        mov     rbx, rdi
        xor     eax, eax
.LBB0_3:
        mov     rcx, rax
        vmovaps ymm0, ymmword ptr [rbx + rax]
        vmovaps ymm1, ymmword ptr [r15 + rax]
        vmovaps ymmword ptr [rbx + rax], ymm1
        vmovaps ymmword ptr [r15 + rax], ymm0
        add     rax, 32
        add     rcx, 64
        cmp     rcx, r14
        jbe     .LBB0_3
        sub     r14, rax
        jbe     .LBB0_6
        add     rbx, rax
        add     r15, rax
        mov     r12, rsp
        mov     r13, qword ptr [rip + memcpy@GOTPCREL]
        mov     rdi, r12
        mov     rsi, rbx
        mov     rdx, r14
        vzeroupper
        call    r13
        mov     rdi, rbx
        mov     rsi, r15
        mov     rdx, r14
        call    r13
        mov     rdi, r15
        mov     rsi, r12
        mov     rdx, r14
        call    r13
.LBB0_6:
        add     rsp, 32
        pop     rbx
        pop     r12
        pop     r13
        pop     r14
        pop     r15
        vzeroupper
        ret
```

## After (from my machine)

Note no `rsp` manipulation, sorry for different ASM syntax

```x86
swap_m256_slice:
	cmpq	%r9, %rdx
	jne	.LBB1_6
	testq	%rdx, %rdx
	je	.LBB1_6
	cmpq	$1, %rdx
	jne	.LBB1_7
	xorl	%r10d, %r10d
	jmp	.LBB1_4
.LBB1_7:
	movq	%rdx, %r9
	andq	$-2, %r9
	movl	$32, %eax
	xorl	%r10d, %r10d
	.p2align	4, 0x90
.LBB1_8:
	vmovaps	-32(%rcx,%rax), %ymm0
	vmovaps	-32(%r8,%rax), %ymm1
	vmovaps	%ymm1, -32(%rcx,%rax)
	vmovaps	%ymm0, -32(%r8,%rax)
	vmovaps	(%rcx,%rax), %ymm0
	vmovaps	(%r8,%rax), %ymm1
	vmovaps	%ymm1, (%rcx,%rax)
	vmovaps	%ymm0, (%r8,%rax)
	addq	$2, %r10
	addq	$64, %rax
	cmpq	%r10, %r9
	jne	.LBB1_8
.LBB1_4:
	testb	$1, %dl
	je	.LBB1_6
	shlq	$5, %r10
	vmovaps	(%rcx,%r10), %ymm0
	vmovaps	(%r8,%r10), %ymm1
	vmovaps	%ymm1, (%rcx,%r10)
	vmovaps	%ymm0, (%r8,%r10)
.LBB1_6:
	vzeroupper
	retq
```

</details>

This does all its copying operations as either the original type or as `MaybeUninit`s, so as far as I know there should be no potential abstract machine issues with reading padding bytes as integers.

<details>

<summary>Perf is essentially unchanged</summary>

Though perhaps with more target features this would help more, if it could pick bigger chunks

## Before

```
running 10 tests
test slice::swap_with_slice_4x_usize_30                            ... bench:         894 ns/iter (+/- 11)
test slice::swap_with_slice_4x_usize_3000                          ... bench:      99,476 ns/iter (+/- 2,784)
test slice::swap_with_slice_5x_usize_30                            ... bench:       1,257 ns/iter (+/- 7)
test slice::swap_with_slice_5x_usize_3000                          ... bench:     139,922 ns/iter (+/- 959)
test slice::swap_with_slice_rgb_30                                 ... bench:         328 ns/iter (+/- 27)
test slice::swap_with_slice_rgb_3000                               ... bench:      16,215 ns/iter (+/- 176)
test slice::swap_with_slice_u8_30                                  ... bench:         312 ns/iter (+/- 9)
test slice::swap_with_slice_u8_3000                                ... bench:       5,401 ns/iter (+/- 123)
test slice::swap_with_slice_usize_30                               ... bench:         368 ns/iter (+/- 3)
test slice::swap_with_slice_usize_3000                             ... bench:      28,472 ns/iter (+/- 3,913)
```

## After

```
running 10 tests
test slice::swap_with_slice_4x_usize_30                            ... bench:         868 ns/iter (+/- 36)
test slice::swap_with_slice_4x_usize_3000                          ... bench:      99,642 ns/iter (+/- 1,507)
test slice::swap_with_slice_5x_usize_30                            ... bench:       1,194 ns/iter (+/- 11)
test slice::swap_with_slice_5x_usize_3000                          ... bench:     139,761 ns/iter (+/- 5,018)
test slice::swap_with_slice_rgb_30                                 ... bench:         324 ns/iter (+/- 6)
test slice::swap_with_slice_rgb_3000                               ... bench:      15,962 ns/iter (+/- 287)
test slice::swap_with_slice_u8_30                                  ... bench:         281 ns/iter (+/- 5)
test slice::swap_with_slice_u8_3000                                ... bench:       5,324 ns/iter (+/- 40)
test slice::swap_with_slice_usize_30                               ... bench:         275 ns/iter (+/- 5)
test slice::swap_with_slice_usize_3000                             ... bench:      28,277 ns/iter (+/- 277)
```

</detail>
2022-02-24 21:42:14 +01:00
Matthias Krüger
bdcdd1b122
Rollup merge of #94300 - WaffleLapkin:patch-4, r=scottmcm
Fix a typo in documentation of `array::IntoIter::new_unchecked`

🌸
2022-02-24 07:48:12 +01:00
Matthias Krüger
f3433d1b59
Rollup merge of #94283 - hellow554:stable_flow_control, r=Dylan-DPC
remove feature gate in control_flow examples

Stabilization was done in https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/91091, but the two examples weren't updated accordingly.

Probably too late to put it into stable, but it should be in the next release :)
2022-02-24 07:48:08 +01:00
Waffle Maybe
715262f151
Fix a typo in documentation of array::IntoIter::new_unchecked 2022-02-23 21:10:04 +03:00
Matthias Krüger
40afbdd148
Rollup merge of #94240 - compiler-errors:pathbuf-display, r=lcnr
Suggest calling .display() on `PathBuf` too

Fixes #94210
2022-02-23 12:26:42 +01:00
Matthias Krüger
0c676a8a84
Rollup merge of #94128 - mqy:master, r=Dylan-DPC
rustdoc: several minor fixes

``@rustbot`` label A-docs
2022-02-23 12:26:40 +01:00
Marcel Hellwig
c403424203 remove feature gate in control_flow examples 2022-02-23 10:42:46 +01:00
Deadbeef
5941fef292
Constify slice indexing 2022-02-22 12:39:36 +11:00
Michael Goulet
a08809ff7b Suggest calling .display() on PathBuf too 2022-02-21 16:58:12 -08:00
Matthias Krüger
74cb6b77a0
Rollup merge of #94186 - ehuss:pin-stable-1.61, r=m-ou-se
Update pin_static_ref stabilization version.

#93580 slipped into 1.61

cc `@m-ou-se`
2022-02-21 19:36:49 +01:00
Matthias Krüger
12705b4700
Rollup merge of #91192 - r00ster91:futuredocs, r=GuillaumeGomez
Some improvements to the async docs

The goal here is to make the docs overall a little bit more comprehensive and add more links between the things.

One thing that's not working yet is the links to the keywords. Somehow I couldn't get them to work.

r? ````@GuillaumeGomez```` do you know how I could get the keyword links to work?
2022-02-21 19:36:46 +01:00
Scott McMurray
8ca47d7ae4 Stop manually SIMDing in swap_nonoverlapping
Like I previously did for `reverse`, this leaves it to LLVM to pick how to vectorize it, since it can know better the chunk size to use, compared to the "32 bytes always" approach we currently have.

It does still need logic to type-erase where appropriate, though, as while LLVM is now smart enough to vectorize over slices of things like `[u8; 4]`, it fails to do so over slices of `[u8; 3]`.

As a bonus, this also means one no longer gets the spurious `memcpy`(s?) at the end up swapping a slice of `__m256`s: <https://rust.godbolt.org/z/joofr4v8Y>
2022-02-21 00:54:02 -08:00
Eric Huss
72a7e731e1 Update pin_static_ref stabilization version. 2022-02-20 06:42:20 -08:00
bors
25ad89e47b Auto merge of #94174 - matthiaskrgr:rollup-snyrlhy, r=matthiaskrgr
Rollup of 14 pull requests

Successful merges:

 - #93580 (Stabilize pin_static_ref.)
 - #93639 (Release notes for 1.59)
 - #93686 (core: Implement ASCII trim functions on byte slices)
 - #94002 (rustdoc: Avoid duplicating macros in sidebar)
 - #94019 (removing architecture requirements for RustyHermit)
 - #94023 (adapt static-nobundle test to use llvm-nm)
 - #94091 (Fix rustdoc const computed value)
 - #94093 (Fix pretty printing of enums without variants)
 - #94097 (Add module-level docs for `rustc_middle::query`)
 - #94112 (Optimize char_try_from_u32)
 - #94113 (document rustc_middle::mir::Field)
 - #94122 (Fix miniz_oxide types showing up in std docs)
 - #94142 (rustc_typeck: adopt let else in more places)
 - #94146 (Adopt let else in more places)

Failed merges:

r? `@ghost`
`@rustbot` modify labels: rollup
2022-02-20 02:19:41 +00:00
fren_gor
04b3162764
Add collect_into 2022-02-20 01:57:32 +01:00
Matthias Krüger
7cd857dc34
Rollup merge of #94112 - digama0:patch-3, r=scottmcm
Optimize char_try_from_u32

The optimization was proposed by ```````@falk-hueffner``````` in https://rust-lang.zulipchat.com/#narrow/stream/219381-t-libs/topic/Micro-optimizing.20char.3A.3Afrom_u32/near/272146171,  and I simplified it a bit and added an explanation of why the optimization is correct. The generated code is 2 instructions shorter and uses 2 registers instead of 4 on x86.
2022-02-20 00:37:30 +01:00
Matthias Krüger
575f6c5cc1
Rollup merge of #93686 - dbrgn:trim-on-byte-slices, r=joshtriplett
core: Implement ASCII trim functions on byte slices

Hi ````````@rust-lang/libs!```````` This is a feature that I wished for when implementing serial protocols with microcontrollers. Often these protocols may contain leading or trailing whitespace, which needs to be removed. Because oftentimes drivers will operate on the byte level, decoding to unicode and checking for unicode whitespace is unnecessary overhead.

This PR adds three new methods to byte slices:

- `trim_ascii_start`
- `trim_ascii_end`
- `trim_ascii`

I did not find any pre-existing discussions about this, which surprises me a bit. Maybe I'm missing something, and this functionality is already possible through other means? There's https://github.com/rust-lang/rfcs/issues/2547 ("Trim methods on slices"), but that has a different purpose.

As per the [std dev guide](https://std-dev-guide.rust-lang.org/feature-lifecycle/new-unstable-features.html), this is a proposed implementation without any issue / RFC. If this is the wrong process, please let me know. However, I thought discussing code is easier than discussing a mere idea, and hacking on the stdlib was fun.

Tracking issue: https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/94035
2022-02-20 00:37:23 +01:00
Matthias Krüger
7977af5975
Rollup merge of #93580 - m-ou-se:stabilize-pin-static-ref, r=scottmcm
Stabilize pin_static_ref.

FCP finished here: https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/78186#issuecomment-1024987221

Closes #78186
2022-02-20 00:37:21 +01:00
bors
2690468727 Auto merge of #92911 - nbdd0121:unwind, r=Amanieu
Guard against unwinding in cleanup code

Currently the only safe guard we have against double unwind is the panic count (which is local to Rust). When double unwinds indeed happen (e.g. C++ exception + Rust panic, or two C++ exceptions), then the second unwind actually goes through and the first unwind is leaked. This can cause UB. cc rust-lang/project-ffi-unwind#6

E.g. given the following C++ code:
```c++
extern "C" void foo() {
    throw "A";
}

extern "C" void execute(void (*fn)()) {
    try {
        fn();
    } catch(...) {
    }
}
```

This program is well-defined to terminate:
```c++
struct dtor {
    ~dtor() noexcept(false) {
        foo();
    }
};

void a() {
    dtor a;
    dtor b;
}

int main() {
    execute(a);
    return 0;
}
```

But this Rust code doesn't catch the double unwind:
```rust
extern "C-unwind" {
    fn foo();
    fn execute(f: unsafe extern "C-unwind" fn());
}

struct Dtor;

impl Drop for Dtor {
    fn drop(&mut self) {
        unsafe { foo(); }
    }
}

extern "C-unwind" fn a() {
    let _a = Dtor;
    let _b = Dtor;
}

fn main() {
    unsafe { execute(a) };
}
```

To address this issue, this PR adds an unwind edge to an abort block, so that the Rust example aborts. This is similar to how clang guards against double unwind (except clang calls terminate per C++ spec and we abort).

The cost should be very small; it's an additional trap instruction (well, two for now, since we use TrapUnreachable, but that's a different issue) for each function with landing pads; if LLVM gains support to encode "abort/terminate" info directly in LSDA like GCC does, then it'll be free. It's an additional basic block though so compile time may be worse, so I'd like a perf run.

r? `@ghost`
`@rustbot` label: F-c_unwind
2022-02-19 23:25:06 +00:00
r00ster91
297364eb07 Some improvements to the async docs 2022-02-19 17:17:40 +01:00
Matthias Krüger
f19adc7acc
Rollup merge of #93658 - cchiw:issue-77443-fix, r=joshtriplett
Stabilize `#[cfg(panic = "...")]`

[Stabilization PR](https://rustc-dev-guide.rust-lang.org/stabilization_guide.html#stabilization-pr) for #77443
2022-02-19 06:45:29 +01:00
mqy
997492538b rustdoc: several minor fixes 2022-02-19 03:47:41 +08:00
Matthias Krüger
f1c918f1f3
Rollup merge of #93613 - crlf0710:rename_to_async_iter, r=yaahc
Move `{core,std}::stream::Stream` to `{core,std}::async_iter::AsyncIterator`

Following amendments in https://github.com/rust-lang/rfcs/pull/3208/.

cc #79024
cc ``@yoshuawuyts`` ``@joshtriplett``
2022-02-18 16:23:32 +01:00
Mario Carneiro
7c3ebec0ca
fix 2022-02-17 22:14:54 -08:00