Following up on #88564, this adds documentation explaining why
`BorrowedFd::to_owned` returns another `BorrowedFd` rather than an
`OwnedFd`. And similar for `BorrowedHandle` and `BorrowedSocket`.
Fix the unsoundness in the `early_otherwise_branch` mir opt pass
Closes#78496 .
This change is a significant rewrite of much of the pass. Exactly what it does is documented in the source file (with ascii art!), and all the changes that are made to the MIR that are not trivially sound are carefully documented. That being said, this is my first time touching MIR, so there are probably some invariants I did not know about that I broke.
This version of the optimization is also somewhat more flexible than the original; for example, we do not care how or where the value on which the parent is switching is computed. There is no requirement that any types be the same. This could be made even more flexible in the future by allowing a wider range of statements in the bodies of `BBC, BBD` (as long as they are all the same of course). This should be a good first step though.
Probably needs a perf run.
r? `@oli-obk` who reviewed things the last time this was touched
rustdoc: Pre-calculate traits that are in scope for doc links
This eliminates one more late use of resolver (part of #83761).
At early doc link resolution time we go through parent modules of items from the current crate, reexports of items from other crates, trait items, and impl items collected by `collect-intra-doc-links` pass, determine traits that are in scope in each such module, and put those traits into a map used by later rustdoc passes.
r? `@jyn514`
Update cargo
9 commits in 95bb3c92bf516017e812e7f1c14c2dea3845b30e..1c034752de0df744fcd7788fcbca158830b8bf85
2022-01-18 17:39:35 +0000 to 2022-01-25 22:36:53 +0000
- Sync toml_edit versions (rust-lang/cargo#10329)
- Check --config for dotted keys only (rust-lang/cargo#10176)
- Remove deprecated --host arg for search and publish cmds (rust-lang/cargo#10327)
- doc: it's valid to use OUT_DIR for intermediate artifacts (rust-lang/cargo#10326)
- Use local git info for version. (rust-lang/cargo#10323)
- Fix documenting with undocumented dependencies. (rust-lang/cargo#10324)
- do not compile test for bins flagged as `test = false` (rust-lang/cargo#10305)
- Port cargo from toml-rs to toml_edit (rust-lang/cargo#10086)
- Fix new::git_default_branch with different default (rust-lang/cargo#10306)
Rollup of 5 pull requests
Successful merges:
- #93250 (Remove deduplication of early lints)
- #93286 (Add white-space: nowrap to links in the sidebar)
- #93291 (minor fix for #93231)
- #93300 (make Windows abort_internal Miri-compatible)
- #93303 (Fix ICE when parsing bad turbofish with lifetime argument)
Failed merges:
r? `@ghost`
`@rustbot` modify labels: rollup
Fix ICE when parsing bad turbofish with lifetime argument
Generalize conditions where we suggest adding the turbofish operator, so we don't ICE during code like
```rust
fn foo() {
A<'a,>
}
```
but instead suggest adding a turbofish.
Fixes#93282
make Windows abort_internal Miri-compatible
https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/92828 started calling `abort_internal` on double-panics, uncovering that on Windows this function does not work in Miri because of its use of inline assembly.
Cc `@Amanieu`
minor fix for #93231
In #93231 I introduced the new sidebar colours to make the contrast more balanced and easier to read, but it seems I made a copy-paste error in the light theme, resulting in functions appearing green.
This one line change replaces that colour with it's corrected orange/brown colour.
I have double checked the rest of the colours and they seem ok. Sorry for the inconvenience
Remove deduplication of early lints
We already have a general mechanism for deduplicating reported
lints, so there's no need to have an additional one for early lints
specifically. This allows us to remove some `PartialEq` impls.
Store a `Symbol` instead of an `Ident` in `AssocItem`
This is the same idea as #92533, but for `AssocItem` instead
of `VariantDef`/`FieldDef`.
With this change, we no longer have any uses of
`#[stable_hasher(project(...))]`
Rustdoc: remove ListAttributesIter and use impl Iterator instead
This is a continuation of https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/92227.
I found that `ListAttributesIter` did not optimize well and replacing it with a simple `impl Iterator` resulted in 1-3 % instruction count wins locally.
Because I needed to use `impl Iterator` on a slice of AST attributes, I had to implement it using GAT + impl trait. I also have a version without GAT [here](5470e2a65c), if GATs are not welcome in rustdoc :D Locally it resulted in equal performance numbers.
Can I ask for a perf. run? Thanks.
r? rust-lang/rustdoc
Remove ordering traits from `OutlivesConstraint`
In two cases where this ordering was used, I've replaced the sorting to use a key that does not rely on `DefId` being `Ord`. This is part of #90317. If I understand correctly, whether this is correct depends on whether the `RegionVid`s are tracked during incremental compilation. But I might be mistaken in this approach. cc `@cjgillot`
Use error-on-mismatch policy for PAuth module flags.
This agrees with Clang, and avoids an error when using LTO with mixed
C/Rust. LLVM considers different behaviour flags to be a mismatch,
even when the flag value itself is the same.
This also makes the flag setting explicit for all uses of
LLVMRustAddModuleFlag.
----
I believe that this fixes#92885, but have only reproduced it locally on Linux hosts so cannot confirm that it fixes the issue as reported.
I have not included a test for this because it is covered by an existing test (`src/test/run-make-fulldeps/cross-lang-lto-clang`). It is not without its problems, though:
* The test requires Clang and `--run-clang-based-tests-with=...` to run, and this is not the case on the CI.
* Any test I add would have a similar requirement.
* With this patch applied, the test gets further, but it still fails (for other reasons). I don't think that affects #92885.
Fix inconsistency of local blanket impls
When a blanket impl is local, go through HIR instead of middle. This fixes inconsistencies with data detected during JSON generation.
Expected this change to take longer. I also tried doing the whole item through existing clean architecture, but it didn't work out trivially, and felt like it would have added more complexity than it removed.
Properly fixes#83718
Work around missing code coverage data causing llvm-cov failures
If we do not add code coverage instrumentation to the `Body` of a
function, then when we go to generate the function record for it, we
won't write any data and this later causes llvm-cov to fail when
processing data for the entire coverage report.
I've identified two main cases where we do not currently add code
coverage instrumentation to the `Body` of a function:
1. If the function has a single `BasicBlock` and it ends with a
`TerminatorKind::Unreachable`.
2. If the function is created using a proc macro of some kind.
For case 1, this is typically not important as this most often occurs as
a result of function definitions that take or return uninhabited
types. These kinds of functions, by definition, cannot even be called so
they logically should not be counted in code coverage statistics.
For case 2, I haven't looked into this very much but I've noticed while
testing this patch that (other than functions which are covered by case
1) the skipped function coverage debug message is occasionally triggered
in large crate graphs by functions generated from a proc macro. This may
have something to do with weird spans being generated by the proc macro
but this is just a guess.
I think it's reasonable to land this change since currently, we fail to
generate *any* results from llvm-cov when a function has no coverage
instrumentation applied to it. With this change, we get coverage data
for all functions other than the two cases discussed above.
Fixes#93054 which occurs because of uncallable functions which shouldn't
have code coverage anyway.
I will open an issue for missing code coverage of proc macro generated
functions and leave a link here once I have a more minimal repro.
r? ``@tmandry``
cc ``@richkadel``
Move param count error emission to end of `check_argument_types`
The error emission here isn't exactly what is done in #92364, but replicating that is hard . The general move should make for a smaller diff.
Also included the `(usize, Ty, Ty)` to -> `Option<(Ty, Ty)>` commit.
r? ``@estebank``
Properly track `DepNode`s in trait evaluation provisional cache
Fixes#92987
During evaluation of an auto trait predicate, we may encounter a cycle.
This causes us to store the evaluation result in a special 'provisional
cache;. If we later end up determining that the type can legitimately
implement the auto trait despite the cycle, we remove the entry from
the provisional cache, and insert it into the evaluation cache.
Additionally, trait evaluation creates a special anonymous `DepNode`.
All queries invoked during the predicate evaluation are added as
outoging dependency edges from the `DepNode`. This `DepNode` is then
store in the evaluation cache - if a different query ends up reading
from the cache entry, it will also perform a read of the stored
`DepNode`. As a result, the cached evaluation will still end up
(transitively) incurring all of the same dependencies that it would
if it actually performed the uncached evaluation (e.g. a call to
`type_of` to determine constituent types).
Previously, we did not correctly handle the interaction between the
provisional cache and the created `DepNode`. Storing an evaluation
result in the provisional cache would cause us to lose the `DepNode`
created during the evaluation. If we later moved the entry from the
provisional cache to the evaluation cache, we would use the `DepNode`
associated with the evaluation that caused us to 'complete' the cycle,
not the evaluatoon where we first discovered the cycle. As a result,
future reads from the evaluation cache would miss some incremental
compilation dependencies that would have otherwise been added if the
evaluation was *not* cached.
Under the right circumstances, this could lead to us trying to force
a query with a no-longer-existing `DefPathHash`, since we were missing
the (red) dependency edge that would have caused us to bail out before
attempting forcing.
This commit makes the provisional cache store the `DepNode` create
during the provisional evaluation. When we move an entry from the
provisional cache to the evaluation cache, we create a *new* `DepNode`
that has dependencies going to *both* of the evaluation `DepNodes` we
have available. This ensures that cached reads will incur all of
the necessary dependency edges.
Add a `try_clone()` function to `OwnedFd`.
As suggested in #88564. This adds a `try_clone()` to `OwnedFd` by
refactoring the code out of the existing `File`/`Socket` code.
r? ``@joshtriplett``
We already have overflow: hidden on these links, but if there is a
possibility to wrap, they will wrap. This happens in particular for trait
implementations because the punctuation (`<>, `) introduces opportunities
for breaks. That produces inconsistent UI. Fix it by forcing them not to
wrap.
This agrees with Clang, and avoids an error when using LTO with mixed
C/Rust. LLVM considers different behaviour flags to be a mismatch,
even when the flag value itself is the same.
This also makes the flag setting explicit for all uses of
LLVMRustAddModuleFlag.
Rollup of 8 pull requests
Successful merges:
- #92513 (std: Implement try_reserve and try_reserve_exact on PathBuf)
- #93152 (Fix STD compilation for the ESP-IDF target (regression from CVE-2022-21658))
- #93186 (Fix link to CVE-2022-21658)
- #93188 (rustdoc: fix bump down typing search on Safari)
- #93212 (Remove unneeded cursor pointer rule on mobile sidebar)
- #93231 (adjust sidebar link brightness)
- #93241 (Fix brief appearance of rust logo in the sidebar)
- #93253 (Update theme on pageshow event)
Failed merges:
r? `@ghost`
`@rustbot` modify labels: rollup
Update theme on pageshow event
When a user goes forward or back, the page may be rendered from the back/forward cache (https://web.dev/bfcache/) rather than from scratch. If they have changed theme in the meantime, that means seeing an incorrect theme on the page they went forward or back to. The `pageshow` event fires on such navigations, so we can update the theme based on that event.
Demo: https://rustdoc.crud.net/jsha/theme-on-show/std/string/trait.ToString.html
r? `@GuillaumeGomez`
Fix STD compilation for the ESP-IDF target (regression from CVE-2022-21658)
Commit 54e22eb7db broke the compilation of STD for the ESP-IDF embedded "unix-like" Tier 3 target, because the fix for [CVE-2022-21658](https://blog.rust-lang.org/2022/01/20/Rust-1.58.1.html) uses [libc flags](https://github.com/esp-rs/esp-idf-svc/runs/4892221554?check_suite_focus=true) which are not supported on the ESP-IDF platform.
This PR simply redirects the ESP-IDF compilation to the "classic" implementation, similar to REDOX. This should be safe because:
* Neither of the two filesystems supported by ESP-IDF (spiffs and fatfs) support [symlinks](https://github.com/natevw/fatfs/blob/master/README.md) in the first place
* There is no notion of fs permissions at all, as the ESP-IDF is an embedded platform that does not have the notion of users, groups, etc.
* Similarly, ESP-IDF has just one "process" - the firmware itself - which contains the user code and the "OS" fused together and running with all permissions
Revert "Do not hash leading zero bytes of i64 numbers in Sip128 hasher"
Reverts rust-lang/rust#92103. It had a (in retrospect, obvious) correctness problem where changing the order of two adjacent values would produce identical hashes, which is problematic in stable hashing (see [this comment](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/92103#issuecomment-1014625442)).
I'll try to send the PR again with a fix for this issue.
r? `@the8472`
Check `const Drop` impls considering `~const` Bounds
This PR adds logic to trait selection to account for `~const` bounds in custom `impl const Drop` for types, elaborates the `const Drop` check in `rustc_const_eval` to check those bounds, and steals some drop linting fixes from #92922, thanks `@DrMeepster.`
r? `@fee1-dead` `@oli-obk` <sup>(edit: guess I can't request review from two people, lol)</sup>
since each of you wrote and reviewed #88558, respectively.
Since the logic here is more complicated than what existed, it's possible that this is a perf regression. But it works correctly with tests, and that makes me happy.
Fixes#92881
When a user goes forward or back, the page may be rendered from the
back/forward cache (https://web.dev/bfcache/) rather than from scratch. If
they have changed theme in the meantime, that means seeing an incorrect
theme on the page they went forward or back to. The `pageshow` event
fires on such navigations, so we can update the theme based on that event.
This reduces the number of clicks required to change theme.
Also, simplify the UI a bit (remove setting grouping), and add a "Back"
link close to the settings icon.