rustdoc: fix corner case in search keyboard commands
This fixes a bug when that shows up in nightly and in stable where:
* Search something
* Press down: first result is highlighted
* Press down: second result is highlighted
* Press down: third result is highlighted
* Press right: first result of second tab is highlighted
* Press left: third result of first tab is highlighted
* Press up: second result is highlighted
* Press up: first result is highlighted
* Press up: Search box is highlighted
* Press down: **third result** is highlighted, where it ought to highlight the first result
Fix missing minification for static files
It's a fix for https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/101702.
The problem was that `Path::ends_with` doesn't do what we thought it does: it checks if the entire item is the last path part, no just if the "path string" ends with the given argument. So instead, I just used the `extension()` method to get the information we want.
cc `@jsha`
r? `@notriddle`
PS: Is it worth it to add a CI test to ensure that the minification was performed on JS and CSS files or not?
Remove unused symbols and diagnostic items
As the title suggests, this removes unused symbols from `sym::` and `#[rustc_diagnostic_item]` annotations that weren't mentioned anywhere.
Originally I tried to use grep, to find symbols and item names that are never mentioned via `sym::name`, however this produced a lot of false positives (?), for example clippy matching on `Symbol::as_str` or macros "implicitly" adding `sym::`. I ended up fixing all these false positives (?) by hand, but tbh I'm not sure if it was worth it...
Update compiler-builtins
This was originally a part of https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/100316. However, extracting it to a seperate PR should help with any extra testing that might be needed.
Signed-off-by: Ayush Singh <ayushsingh1325@gmail.com>
Wrap bundled static libraries into object files
Fixes#103044 (not sure, couldn't test locally)
Bundled static libraries should be wrapped into object files as it's done for metadata file.
r? `@petrochenkov`
This rule was added in 152e888905 to push the
out-of-band content to the right while allowing it to line wrap when it got
too big. The idea was that the justification rule would fill the space
between the `<h1>` element and the `<div class="out-of-band">` element.
A later commit, 3cb03cb342, flattened the
in-band element into the `<h1>`, copying the `flex-grow` rule. This means
the `<h1>` element now grows to fill the space, so there's no need to
justify-content any more.
This commit also adds a test case for this.
Based on Wojciech Muła's "SIMD-friendly algorithms for substring searching"[0]
The two-way algorithm is Big-O efficient but it needs to preprocess the needle
to find a "criticla factorization" of it. This additional work is significant
for short needles. Additionally it mostly advances needle.len() bytes at a time.
The SIMD-based approach used here on the other hand can advance based on its
vector width, which can exceed the needle length. Except for pathological cases,
but due to being limited to small needles the worst case blowup is also small.
benchmarks taken on a Zen2:
```
16CGU, OLD:
test str::bench_contains_short_short ... bench: 27 ns/iter (+/- 1)
test str::bench_contains_short_long ... bench: 667 ns/iter (+/- 29)
test str::bench_contains_bad_naive ... bench: 131 ns/iter (+/- 2)
test str::bench_contains_bad_simd ... bench: 130 ns/iter (+/- 2)
test str::bench_contains_equal ... bench: 148 ns/iter (+/- 4)
16CGU, NEW:
test str::bench_contains_short_short ... bench: 8 ns/iter (+/- 0)
test str::bench_contains_short_long ... bench: 135 ns/iter (+/- 4)
test str::bench_contains_bad_naive ... bench: 130 ns/iter (+/- 2)
test str::bench_contains_bad_simd ... bench: 292 ns/iter (+/- 1)
test str::bench_contains_equal ... bench: 3 ns/iter (+/- 0)
1CGU, OLD:
test str::bench_contains_short_short ... bench: 30 ns/iter (+/- 0)
test str::bench_contains_short_long ... bench: 713 ns/iter (+/- 17)
test str::bench_contains_bad_naive ... bench: 131 ns/iter (+/- 3)
test str::bench_contains_bad_simd ... bench: 130 ns/iter (+/- 3)
test str::bench_contains_equal ... bench: 148 ns/iter (+/- 6)
1CGU, NEW:
test str::bench_contains_short_short ... bench: 10 ns/iter (+/- 0)
test str::bench_contains_short_long ... bench: 111 ns/iter (+/- 0)
test str::bench_contains_bad_naive ... bench: 135 ns/iter (+/- 3)
test str::bench_contains_bad_simd ... bench: 274 ns/iter (+/- 2)
test str::bench_contains_equal ... bench: 4 ns/iter (+/- 0)
```
[0] http://0x80.pl/articles/simd-strfind.html#sse-avx2
This rule was added in cc4f804829 because the help popover inherited the
font-size from the help button "?" icon.
It doesn't inherit this any more, because it was moved from being nested
inside the link to sharing a wrapper DIV with it.
Fix x finding Python on Windows
`x` searches through the path for `{dir}/python{2|3}?`, but this fails on Windows because the appropriate path is `{dir}/python.exe`.
This PR adds the expected `.exe` extension on Windows while searching.
Fixed some `_i32` notation in `maybe_uninit`’s doc
This PR just changed two lines in the documentation for `MaybeUninit`:
```rs
let val = 0x12345678i32;
```
was changed to:
```rs
let val = 0x12345678_i32;
```
in two doctests, making the values a tad easier to read.
It does not seem like there are other literals needing this change in the file.
Don't print full paths in overlap errors
We don't print the full path in other diagnostics -- I don't think it particularly helps with the error message. I also delayed the printing until actually needing to render the error message.
r? diagnostics
Recover from function pointer types with generic parameter list
Give a more helpful error when encountering function pointer types with a generic parameter list like `fn<'a>(&'a str) -> bool` or `fn<T>(T) -> T` and suggest moving lifetime parameters to a `for<>` parameter list.
I've added a bunch of extra code to properly handle (unlikely?) corner cases like `for<'a> fn<'b>()` (where there already exists a `for<>` parameter list) correctly suggesting `for<'a, 'b> fn()` (merging the lists). If you deem this useless, I can simplify the code by suggesting nothing at all in this case.
I am quite open to suggestions regarding the wording of the diagnostic messages.
Fixes#103487.
``@rustbot`` label A-diagnostics
r? diagnostics
Stabilize const char convert
Split out `const_char_from_u32_unchecked` from `const_char_convert` and stabilize the rest, i.e. stabilize the following functions:
```Rust
impl char {
pub const fn from_u32(self, i: u32) -> Option<char>;
pub const fn from_digit(self, num: u32, radix: u32) -> Option<char>;
pub const fn to_digit(self, radix: u32) -> Option<u32>;
}
// Available through core::char and std::char
mod char {
pub const fn from_u32(i: u32) -> Option<char>;
pub const fn from_digit(num: u32, radix: u32) -> Option<char>;
}
```
And put the following under the `from_u32_unchecked` const stability gate as it needs `Option::unwrap` which isn't const-stable (yet):
```Rust
impl char {
pub const unsafe fn from_u32_unchecked(i: u32) -> char;
}
// Available through core::char and std::char
mod char {
pub const unsafe fn from_u32_unchecked(i: u32) -> char;
}
```
cc the tracking issue #89259 (which I'd like to keep open for `const_char_from_u32_unchecked`).
Move `unix_socket_abstract` feature API to `SocketAddrExt`.
The pre-stabilized API for abstract socket addresses exposes methods on `SocketAddr` that are only enabled for `cfg(any(target_os = "android", target_os = "linux"))`. Per discussion in <https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/85410>, moving these methods to an OS-specific extension trait is required before stabilization can be considered.
This PR makes four changes:
1. The internal module `std::os::net` contains logic for the unstable feature `tcp_quickack` (https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/96256). I moved that code into `linux_ext/tcp.rs` and tried to adjust the module tree so it could accommodate a second unstable feature there.
2. Moves the public API out of `impl SocketAddr`, into `impl SocketAddrExt for SocketAddr` (the headline change).
3. The existing function names and docs for `unix_socket_abstract` refer to addresses as being created from abstract namespaces, but a more accurate description is that they create sockets in *the* abstract namespace. I adjusted the function signatures correspondingly and tried to update the docs to be clearer.
4. I also tweaked `from_abstract_name` so it takes an `AsRef<[u8]>` instead of `&[u8]`, allowing `b""` literals to be passed directly.
Issues:
1. The public module `std::os::linux::net` is marked as part of `tcp_quickack`. I couldn't figure out how to mark a module as being part of two unstable features, so I just left the existing attributes in place. My hope is that this will be fixed as a side-effect of stabilizing either feature.
Since the empty main is used for `not(unix)`, all the targets that will
use this empty main will also need `allow(unused_imports)`.
Originally part of https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/100316
Signed-off-by: Ayush Singh <ayushsingh1325@gmail.com>
Only the android libunwind detection remains in the build script
* Reduces dependence on build scripts for building the standard library
* Reduces dependence on exact target names in favor of using semantic
cfg(target_*) usage.
* Keeps almost all code related to linking of the unwinder in one file