Commit Graph

141333 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Yuki Okushi
973fb4b77f
Rollup merge of #83348 - osa1:issue83344, r=jackh726
format macro argument parsing fix

When the character next to `{}` is "shifted" (when mapping a byte index
in the format string to span) we should avoid shifting the span end
index, so first map the index of `}` to span, then bump the span,
instead of first mapping the next byte index to a span (which causes
bumping the end span too much).

Regression test added.

Fixes #83344

---

r? ```@estebank```
2021-03-28 01:33:13 +09:00
Yuki Okushi
1f33a6a0da
Rollup merge of #79399 - pickfire:patch-3, r=JohnTitor
Use detailed and shorter fs error explaination

Includes suggestion from `@the8472` https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/79390#issuecomment-733263336
2021-03-28 01:33:11 +09:00
bjorn3
94b51d14e6 Make all compiler-builtins symbols hidden
This matches cg_llvm

Fixes #1152
2021-03-27 17:32:41 +01:00
Ralf Jung
fb4f48e032 make unaligned_refereces future-incompat lint warn-by-default, and remove the safe_packed_borrows lint that it replaces 2021-03-27 16:59:37 +01:00
lcnr
e461dddf58 update tests 2021-03-27 16:38:23 +01:00
Bastian Kauschke
42150fb8a1 combine: stop eagerly evaluating consts 2021-03-27 16:38:23 +01:00
Benoît du Garreau
6327e46d8c Constantify some slice methods 2021-03-27 15:48:26 +01:00
Simon Jakobi
0927580224 Add regression tests for #56445
Closes #56445.
2021-03-27 15:29:14 +01:00
Ralf Jung
5cfc98fb7f update comment at MaybeUninit::uninit_array 2021-03-27 14:58:23 +01:00
Jon Jensen
d5bcdd34e7
Update rustup cross-compilation docs link 2021-03-27 07:51:46 -06:00
bors
1010038814 Auto merge of #83245 - the8472:generalize-slice-fill, r=m-ou-se
Generalize and inline slice::fill specializations

This makes the memset specialization applicable to more types. And since the code now lives in a generic method it is also eligible for cross-crate inlining which  should fix #83235
2021-03-27 13:25:16 +00:00
Ivan Tham
6c6ef7317b Improve fs error open_from unix
Consistency for #79399
Suggested by JohnTitor

Improve fs error invaild input for sys_common

The text was duplicated from unix.
2021-03-27 21:23:48 +08:00
Ralf Jung
84e7ae2842 Run Miri test suite with mir-opt-level=4 2021-03-27 14:03:31 +01:00
Ivan Tham
5495ce0874 Use detailed and shorter fs error explaination
Includes suggestion from the8472 https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/79390#issuecomment-733263336

More detail error explanation in fs doc
2021-03-27 20:55:51 +08:00
Mara Bos
5402abc493 Improve Debug implementations of Mutex and RwLock.
They now show the poison flag and use debug_non_exhaustive.
2021-03-27 13:47:11 +01:00
Mara Bos
7c01e6c38a Derive Debug for io::Chain instead of manually implementing it.
The manual implementation has the same bounds, so I don't think there's
any reason for a manual implementation. The names used in the derive
implementation are even nicer (`first`/`second`) than the manual
implementation (`t`/`u`), and include the `done_first` field too.
2021-03-27 13:37:52 +01:00
Mara Bos
d73015397d Fix Debug implementation for RwLock{Read,Write}Guard.
This would attempt to print the Debug representation of the lock that
the guard has locked, which will try to lock again, fail, and just print
"<locked>" unhelpfully.

After this change, this just prints the contents of the mutex, like the
other smart pointers (and MutexGuard) do.
2021-03-27 13:33:52 +01:00
Mara Bos
2afa4cc958 Use DebugStruct::finish_non_exhaustive() in std. 2021-03-27 13:29:23 +01:00
Mara Bos
ee1b33c7ac Add #[inline] to io::Error methods. 2021-03-27 12:22:17 +01:00
bors
aef11409b4 Auto merge of #78618 - workingjubilee:ieee754-fmt, r=m-ou-se
Add IEEE 754 compliant fmt/parse of -0, infinity, NaN

This pull request improves the Rust float formatting/parsing libraries to comply with IEEE 754's formatting expectations around certain special values, namely signed zero, the infinities, and NaN. It also adds IEEE 754 compliance tests that, while less stringent in certain places than many of the existing flt2dec/dec2flt capability tests, are intended to serve as the beginning of a roadmap to future compliance with the standard. Some relevant documentation is also adjusted with clarifying remarks.

This PR follows from discussion in https://github.com/rust-lang/rfcs/issues/1074, and closes #24623.

The most controversial change here is likely to be that -0 is now printed as -0. Allow me to explain: While there appears to be community support for an opt-in toggle of printing floats as if they exist in the naively expected domain of numbers, i.e. not the extended reals (where floats live), IEEE 754-2019 is clear that a float converted to a string should be capable of being transformed into the original floating point bit-pattern when it satisfies certain conditions (namely, when it is an actual numeric value i.e. not a NaN and the original and destination float width are the same). -0 is given special attention here as a value that should have its sign preserved. In addition, the vast majority of other programming languages not only output `-0` but output `-0.0` here.

While IEEE 754 offers a broad leeway in how to handle producing what it calls a "decimal character sequence", it is clear that the operations a language provides should be capable of round tripping, and it is confusing to advertise the f32 and f64 types as binary32 and binary64 yet have the most basic way of producing a string and then reading it back into a floating point number be non-conformant with the standard. Further, existing documentation suggested that e.g. -0 would be printed with -0 regardless of the presence of the `+` fmt character, but it prints "+0" instead if given such (which was what led to the opening of #24623).

There are other parsing and formatting issues for floating point numbers which prevent Rust from complying with the standard, as well as other well-documented challenges on the arithmetic level, but I hope that this can be the beginning of motion towards solving those challenges.
2021-03-27 10:40:16 +00:00
Ömer Sinan Ağacan
5b9bac2ab6 format macro argument parsing fix
When the character next to `{}` is "shifted" (when mapping a byte index
in the format string to span) we should avoid shifting the span end
index, so first map the index of `}` to span, then bump the span,
instead of first mapping the next byte index to a span (which causes
bumping the end span too much).

Regression test added.

Fixes #83344
2021-03-27 13:06:36 +03:00
bors
feaac19f17 Auto merge of #83547 - JohnTitor:rollup-qh7j6hg, r=JohnTitor
Rollup of 9 pull requests

Successful merges:

 - #83239 (Remove/replace some outdated crates from the dependency tree)
 - #83328 (Fixes to inline assmebly tests)
 - #83343 (Simplify and fix byte skipping in format! string parser)
 - #83388 (Make # pretty print format easier to discover)
 - #83431 (Tell GitHub to highlight `config.toml.example` as TOML)
 - #83508 (Use the direct link to the platform support page)
 - #83511 (compiletest: handle llvm_version with suffix like "12.0.0libcxx")
 - #83524 (Document that the SocketAddr memory representation is not stable)
 - #83525 (fix doc comment for `ty::Dynamic`)

Failed merges:

r? `@ghost`
`@rustbot` modify labels: rollup
2021-03-27 07:59:24 +00:00
klensy
229d199994 lazily calls some fns 2021-03-27 10:20:32 +03:00
Yuki Okushi
1b01e0d36a
Rollup merge of #83525 - rust-lang:lcnr-doc-patch, r=jonas-schievink
fix doc comment for `ty::Dynamic`
2021-03-27 12:37:25 +09:00
Yuki Okushi
d340f63cca
Rollup merge of #83524 - faern:document-socketaddr-mem-layout, r=sfackler
Document that the SocketAddr memory representation is not stable

Intended to help out with #78802. Work has been put into finding and fixing code that assumes the memory layout of `SocketAddrV4` and `SocketAddrV6`. But it turns out there are cases where new code continues to make the same assumption ([example](96927dc2b7 (diff-917db3d8ca6f862ebf42726b23c72a12b35e584e497ebdb24e474348d7c6ffb6R610-R621))).

The memory layout of a type in `std` is never part of the public API. Unless explicitly stated I guess. But since that is invalidly relied upon by a considerable amount of code for these particular types, it might make sense to explicitly document this. This can be temporary. Once #78802 lands it does not make sense to rely on the layout any longer, and this documentation can also be removed.
2021-03-27 12:37:24 +09:00
Yuki Okushi
e675d25506
Rollup merge of #83511 - 12101111:fix-llvm-version-suffix, r=Mark-Simulacrum
compiletest: handle llvm_version with suffix like "12.0.0libcxx"

The previous code only remove the suffix begin with `-`, but Gentoo Linux [define `LLVM_VERSION_SUFFIX="libcxx"`](604d79f327/sys-devel/llvm/llvm-11.1.0.ebuild (L378)) when llvm is linked to libc++ and lead to a panic:

```
thread 'main' panicked at 'Malformed version component: ParseIntError { kind: InvalidDigit }', src/tools/compiletest/src/header.rs:968:28
```

This new code will handle all suffix not beginning with digit or dot.
2021-03-27 12:37:23 +09:00
Yuki Okushi
60cf7729cc
Rollup merge of #83508 - JohnTitor:platform-support-link, r=joshtriplett
Use the direct link to the platform support page
2021-03-27 12:37:22 +09:00
Yuki Okushi
9df2b5f89c
Rollup merge of #83431 - camelid:config-example-gitattributes, r=Mark-Simulacrum
Tell GitHub to highlight `config.toml.example` as TOML

This should be a nice small quality of life improvement when looking at
`config.toml.example` on GitHub or looking at diffs of it in PRs.
2021-03-27 12:37:21 +09:00
Yuki Okushi
c143267901
Rollup merge of #83388 - alamb:alamb/fmt-dcs, r=Mark-Simulacrum
Make # pretty print format easier to discover

# Rationale:

I use (cargo cult?) three formats in rust:  `{}`, debug `{:?}`, and pretty-print debug `{:#?}`. I discovered `{:#?}` in some blog post or guide when I started working in Rust. While `#` is documented I think it is hard to discover. So taking the good advice of ```@carols10cents```  I am trying to improve the docs with a PR

As a reminder "pretty print" means that where `{:?}` will print something like
```
foo: { b1: 1, b2: 2}
```

`{:#?}` will prints something like
```
foo {
  b1: 1
  b2: 3
}
```

# Changes
Add an example to `fmt` to try and make it easier to discover `#`
2021-03-27 12:37:20 +09:00
Yuki Okushi
d7216bae23
Rollup merge of #83343 - osa1:issue83340, r=jackh726
Simplify and fix byte skipping in format! string parser

Fixes '\\' handling in format strings.

Fixes #83340
2021-03-27 12:37:19 +09:00
Yuki Okushi
14d0d51f6f
Rollup merge of #83328 - tmiasko:asm-test, r=joshtriplett
Fixes to inline assmebly tests

* Join test thread to make assertion effective in sym.rs test case
* Use a single codegen unit to reduce non-determinism in srcloc.rs test #82886
2021-03-27 12:37:19 +09:00
Yuki Okushi
5473b6dcfc
Rollup merge of #83239 - JohnTitor:reduce-deps, r=Mark-Simulacrum
Remove/replace some outdated crates from the dependency tree

- Remove `cloudabi` by updating `parking_lot` to 0.11.1.
- Replace `packed_simd` with `packed_simd2` by updating `bytecount` to 0.6.2.
2021-03-27 12:37:18 +09:00
Aaron Hill
f94360fd83
Always preserve None-delimited groups in a captured TokenStream
Previously, we would silently remove any `None`-delimiters when
capturing a `TokenStream`, 'flattenting' them to their inner tokens.
This was not normally visible, since we usually have
`TokenKind::Interpolated` (which gets converted to a `None`-delimited
group during macro invocation) instead of an actual `None`-delimited
group.

However, there are a couple of cases where this becomes visible to
proc-macros:
1. A cross-crate `macro_rules!` macro has a `None`-delimited group
   stored in its body (as a result of being produced by another
   `macro_rules!` macro). The cross-crate `macro_rules!` invocation
   can then expand to an attribute macro invocation, which needs
   to be able to see the `None`-delimited group.
2. A proc-macro can invoke an attribute proc-macro with its re-collected
   input. If there are any nonterminals present in the input, they will
   get re-collected to `None`-delimited groups, which will then get
   captured as part of the attribute macro invocation.

Both of these cases are incredibly obscure, so there hopefully won't be
any breakage. This change will allow more agressive 'flattenting' of
nonterminals in #82608 without losing `None`-delimited groups.
2021-03-26 23:32:18 -04:00
Camelid
4572e7f903 Lint on unknown intra-doc link disambiguators 2021-03-26 19:50:07 -07:00
bors
f811f14006 Auto merge of #83418 - ehuss:update-cargo, r=ehuss
Update cargo

12 commits in 90691f2bfe9a50291a98983b1ed2feab51d5ca55..1e8703890f285befb5e32627ad4e0a0454dde1fb
2021-03-16 21:36:55 +0000 to 2021-03-26 16:59:39 +0000
- tests: Tolerate "exit status" in error messages (rust-lang/cargo#9307)
- Default macOS targets to `unpacked` debuginfo (rust-lang/cargo#9298)
- Fix publication of packages with metadata and resolver (rust-lang/cargo#9300)
- Fix config includes not working. (rust-lang/cargo#9299)
- Emit note when `--future-incompat-report` had nothing to report (rust-lang/cargo#9263)
- RFC 3052: Stop including authors field in manifests made by cargo new (rust-lang/cargo#9282)
- Refactor feature handling, and improve error messages. (rust-lang/cargo#9290)
- Split out cargo-util package for cargo-test-support. (rust-lang/cargo#9292)
- Fix redundant_semicolons warning in resolver-tests. (rust-lang/cargo#9293)
- Use serde's error message option to avoid implementing `Deserialize`. (rust-lang/cargo#9237)
- Allow `cargo update` to operate with the --offline flag (rust-lang/cargo#9279)
- Fix typo in faq.md (rust-lang/cargo#9285)
2021-03-26 23:01:18 +00:00
Midas Lambrichts
5676bd51ae Break when there is a mismatch in the type count
When other errors are generated, there can be a mismatch between the
amount of input types in MIR, and the amount in the function itself.
Break from the comparative loop if this is the case to prevent
out-of-bounds.
2021-03-26 23:16:22 +01:00
lcnr
5ac917dbb2 fix rustc_on_implemented _Self paths 2021-03-26 21:22:03 +01:00
Reyk Floeter
3d6bd87b24 unix: Fix feature(unix_socket_ancillary_data) on macos and other BSDs
This adds support for CMSG handling on macOS and fixes it on OpenBSD
and other BSDs.

When traversing the CMSG list, the previous code had an exception for
Android where the next element after the last pointer could point to
the first pointer instead of NULL.  This is actually not specific to
Android: the `libc::CMSG_NXTHDR` implementation for Linux and
emscripten have a special case to return NULL when the length of the
previous element is zero; most other implementations simply return the
previous element plus a zero offset in this case.

This MR additionally adds `SocketAncillary::is_empty` because clippy
is right that it should be added.
2021-03-26 21:12:22 +01:00
lcnr
addc51a85f update array missing IntoIterator msg 2021-03-26 21:09:13 +01:00
Eric Huss
ea194b8b33 Update cargo 2021-03-26 12:29:08 -07:00
lcnr
7ca2c981b2
fix doc comment for `ty::Dynamic 2021-03-26 19:52:09 +01:00
Linus Färnstrand
147316a094 Document that the SocketAddr memory representation is not stable 2021-03-26 19:44:06 +01:00
bors
5e65467eff Auto merge of #83488 - Aaron1011:ban-expr-inner-attrs, r=petrochenkov
Ban custom inner attributes in expressions and statements

Split out from https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/82608

Custom inner attributes are unstable, so this won't break any stable users.
This allows us to speed up token collection, and avoid a redundant call to `collect_tokens_no_attrs` when parsing an `Expr` that has outer attributes.

r? `@petrochenkov`
2021-03-26 17:26:18 +00:00
Josh Stone
e82e8129e7 Use iter::zip in src/tools/clippy/ 2021-03-26 09:33:38 -07:00
Josh Stone
72ebebe474 Use iter::zip in compiler/ 2021-03-26 09:32:31 -07:00
Josh Stone
3b1f5e3462 Use iter::zip in library/ 2021-03-26 09:32:29 -07:00
Josh Stone
b362958453 Add function core::iter::zip
This makes it a little easier to `zip` iterators:

```rust
for (x, y) in zip(xs, ys) {}
// vs.
for (x, y) in xs.into_iter().zip(ys) {}
```

You can `zip(&mut xs, &ys)` for the conventional `iter_mut()` and
`iter()`, respectively. This can also support arbitrary nesting, where
it's easier to see the item layout than with arbitrary `zip` chains:

```rust
for ((x, y), z) in zip(zip(xs, ys), zs) {}
for (x, (y, z)) in zip(xs, zip(ys, zs)) {}
// vs.
for ((x, y), z) in xs.into_iter().zip(ys).zip(xz) {}
for (x, (y, z)) in xs.into_iter().zip((ys.into_iter().zip(xz)) {}
```

It may also format more nicely, especially when the first iterator is a
longer chain of methods -- for example:

```rust
    iter::zip(
        trait_ref.substs.types().skip(1),
        impl_trait_ref.substs.types().skip(1),
    )
    // vs.
    trait_ref
        .substs
        .types()
        .skip(1)
        .zip(impl_trait_ref.substs.types().skip(1))
```

This replaces the tuple-pair `IntoIterator` in rust-lang/rust#78204.
There is prior art for the utility of this in [`itertools::zip`].

[`itertools::zip`]: https://docs.rs/itertools/0.10.0/itertools/fn.zip.html
2021-03-26 09:32:10 -07:00
bors
b8719c51e0 Auto merge of #83404 - michaelwoerister:issue83045, r=eddyb
Fix #83045 by moving some crate loading verification code to a better place

r? `@eddyb`
2021-03-26 14:39:02 +00:00
Christiaan Dirkx
4cce9e3db2 Cache GetProcessHeap 2021-03-26 14:47:25 +01:00
bjorn3
f3e8f6dc08 Rustfmt 2021-03-26 14:35:51 +01:00