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.
Eliminate mut reference UB in Drop impl for Rc<T>
This changes `self.ptr.as_mut()` with `get_mut_unchecked` which
does not use an intermediate reference. Arc<T> already handled this
case properly.
Fixes#76509
Add MaybeUninit::assume_init_drop.
`ManuallyDrop`'s documentation tells the user to use `MaybeUninit` instead when handling uninitialized data. However, the main functionality of `ManuallyDrop` (`drop`) is not available directly on `MaybeUninit`. Adding it makes it easier to switch from one to the other.
I re-used the `maybe_uninit_extra` feature and tracking issue number (#63567), since it seems very related. (And to avoid creating too many features tracking issues for `MaybeUninit`.)
Add saturating methods for `Duration`
In some project, I needed a `saturating_add` method for `Duration`. I implemented it myself but i thought it would be a nice addition to the standard library as it matches closely with the integers types.
3 new methods have been introduced and are gated by the new `duration_saturating_ops` unstable feature:
* `Duration::saturating_add`
* `Duration::saturating_sub`
* `Duration::saturating_mul`
If have left the tracking issue to `none` for now as I want first to understand if those methods would be acceptable at all. If agreed, I'll update the PR with the tracking issue.
Further more, to match the behavior of integers types, I introduced 2 associated constants:
* `Duration::MIN`: this one is somehow a duplicate from `Duration::zero()` method, but at the time this method was added, `MIN` was rejected as it was considered a different semantic (see https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/72790#issuecomment-636511743).
* `Duration::MAX`
Both have been gated by the already existing unstable feature `duration_constants`, I can introduce a new unstable feature if needed or just re-use the `duration_saturating_ops`.
We might have to decide whether:
* `MIN` should be replaced by `ZERO`?
* associated constants over methods?
Add `slice::array_chunks_mut`
This follows `array_chunks` from #74373 with a mutable version, `array_chunks_mut`. The implementation is identical apart from mutability. The new tests are adaptations of the `chunks_exact_mut` tests, plus an inference test like the one for `array_chunks`.
I reused the unstable feature `array_chunks` and tracking issue #74985, but I can separate that if desired.
r? `@withoutboats`
cc `@lcnr`
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.
Fixes#73268
When a deref coercion occurs, we may end up with a move error if the
base value has been partially moved out of. However, we do not indicate
anywhere that a deref coercion is occuring, resulting in an error
message with a confusing span.
This PR adds an explicit note to move errors when a deref coercion is
involved. We mention the name of the type that the deref-coercion
resolved to, as well as the `Deref::Target` associated type being used.
BTreeMap: move up reference to map's root from NodeRef
Since the introduction of `NodeRef` years ago, it also contained a mutable reference to the owner of the root node of the tree (somewhat disguised as *const). Its intent is to be used only when the rest of the `NodeRef` is no longer needed. Moving this to where it's actually used, thought me 2 things:
- Some sort of "postponed mutable reference" is required in most places that it is/was used, and that's exactly where we also need to store a reference to the length (number of elements) of the tree, for the same reason. The length reference can be a normal reference, because the tree code does not care about tree length (just length per node).
- It's downright obfuscation in `from_sorted_iter` (transplanted to #75329)
- It's one of the reasons for the scary notice on `reborrow_mut`, the other one being addressed in #73971.
This does repeat the raw pointer code in a few places, but it could be bundled up with the length reference.
r? `@Mark-Simulacrum`
Use intra-doc links in `core::ptr`
Part of #75080.
The only link that I did not change is a link to a function on the
`pointer` primitive because intra-doc links for the `pointer` primitive
don't work yet (see #63351).
---
@rustbot modify labels: A-intra-doc-links T-doc
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.
This avoids overlapping a reference covering the data field,
which may be changed due in concurrent conditions. This fully
fixed the UB mainfested with `new_cyclic`.
Since trait implementations cannot be unstable, we should only add them
when the as_str feature gets stabilized. Until then, only `.as_str()` is
available (behind a feature gate).
BTreeMap mutable iterators should not take any reference to visited nodes during iteration
Fixes#73915, overlapping mutable references during BTreeMap iteration
r? `@RalfJung`
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.