Implement BTreeMap::retain and BTreeSet::retain
Adds new methods `BTreeMap::retain` and `BTreeSet::retain`. These are implemented on top of `drain_filter` (#70530).
The API of these methods is identical to `HashMap::retain` and `HashSet::retain`, which were implemented in #39560 and stabilized in #36648. The docs and tests are also copied from HashMap/HashSet.
The new methods are unstable, behind the `btree_retain` feature gate, with tracking issue #79025. See also rust-lang/rfcs#1338.
astconv: extract closures into a separate trait
Am currently looking into completely removing `check_generic_arg_count` and `create_substs_for_generic_args` was somewhat difficult to understand for me so I moved these closures into a trait.
This should not have changed the behavior of any of these methods
Make `_` an expression, to discard values in destructuring assignments
This is the third and final step towards implementing destructuring assignment (RFC: rust-lang/rfcs#2909, tracking issue: #71126). This PR is the third and final part of #71156, which was split up to allow for easier review.
With this PR, an underscore `_` is parsed as an expression but is allowed *only* on the left-hand side of a destructuring assignment. There it simply discards a value, similarly to the wildcard `_` in patterns. For instance,
```rust
(a, _) = (1, 2)
```
will simply assign 1 to `a` and discard the 2. Note that for consistency,
```
_ = foo
```
is also allowed and equivalent to just `foo`.
Thanks to ````@varkor```` who helped with the implementation, particularly around pre-expansion gating.
r? ````@petrochenkov````
cleanup: Remove `ParseSess::injected_crate_name`
Its only remaining use is in pretty-printing where the necessary information can be easily re-computed.
Allow making `RUSTC_BOOTSTRAP` conditional on the crate name
Motivation: This came up in the [Zulip stream](https://rust-lang.zulipchat.com/#narrow/stream/233931-t-compiler.2Fmajor-changes/topic/Require.20users.20to.20confirm.20they.20know.20RUSTC_.E2.80.A6.20compiler-team.23350/near/208403962) for https://github.com/rust-lang/compiler-team/issues/350.
See also https://github.com/rust-lang/cargo/pull/6608#issuecomment-458546258; this implements https://github.com/rust-lang/cargo/issues/6627.
The goal is for this to eventually allow prohibiting setting `RUSTC_BOOTSTRAP` in build.rs (https://github.com/rust-lang/cargo/issues/7088).
## User-facing changes
- `RUSTC_BOOTSTRAP=1` still works; there is no current plan to remove this.
- Things like `RUSTC_BOOTSTRAP=0` no longer activate nightly features. In practice this shouldn't be a big deal, since `RUSTC_BOOTSTRAP` is the opposite of stable and everyone uses `RUSTC_BOOTSTRAP=1` anyway.
- `RUSTC_BOOTSTRAP=x` will enable nightly features only for crate `x`.
- `RUSTC_BOOTSTRAP=x,y` will enable nightly features only for crates `x` and `y`.
## Implementation changes
The main change is that `UnstableOptions::from_environment` now requires
an (optional) crate name. If the crate name is unknown (`None`), then the new feature is not available and you still have to use `RUSTC_BOOTSTRAP=1`. In practice this means the feature is only available for `--crate-name`, not for `#![crate_name]`; I'm interested in supporting the second but I'm not sure how.
Other major changes:
- Added `Session::is_nightly_build()`, which uses the `crate_name` of
the session
- Added `nightly_options::match_is_nightly_build`, a convenience method
for looking up `--crate-name` from CLI arguments.
`Session::is_nightly_build()`should be preferred where possible, since
it will take into account `#![crate_name]` (I think).
- Added `unstable_features` to `rustdoc::RenderOptions`
I'm not sure whether this counts as T-compiler or T-lang; _technically_ RUSTC_BOOTSTRAP is an implementation detail, but it's been used so much it seems like this counts as a language change too.
r? `@joshtriplett`
cc `@Mark-Simulacrum` `@hsivonen`
Now with LLVM 9 being the minimum supported version, we can
finally remove the hacks in the dockerfile.
This wasn't in the main PR bumping the version as I didn't quite
understand what's going on and needed here.
This is mostly me learning the codebase, so feel free to close the PR.
It does have the small benefit that we statically know rustdoc isn't
generating useless `span`s, though.
Clean up outdated `use_once_payload` pretty printer comment
While reading some parts of the pretty printer code, I noticed this old comment
which seemed out of place. The `use_once_payload` this outdated comment mentions
was removed in 2017 in 40f03a1e0d, so this
completes the work by removing the comment.
Fix an intrinsic invocation on threaded wasm
This looks like it was forgotten to get updated in #74482 and wasm with
threads isn't built on CI so we didn't catch this by accident.
Avoid installing external LLVM dylibs
If the LLVM was externally provided, then we don't currently copy artifacts into
the sysroot. This is not necessarily the right choice (in particular, it will
require the LLVM dylib to be in the linker's load path at runtime), but the
common use case for external LLVMs is distribution provided LLVMs, and in that
case they're usually in the standard search path (e.g., /usr/lib) and copying
them here is going to cause problems as we may end up with the wrong files and
isn't what distributions want.
This behavior may be revisited in the future though.
Fixes#78932.
Fix rustc_ast_pretty print_qpath resulting in invalid macro input
related https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/76874 (third case)
### Issue:
The input for a procedural macro is incorrect, for the rust code:
```rust
mod m {
pub trait Tr {
type Ts: super::Tu;
}
}
trait Tu {
fn dummy() { }
}
#[may_proc_macro]
fn foo() {
<T as m::Tr>::Ts::dummy();
}
```
the macro will get the input:
```rust
fn foo() {
<T as m::Tr>::dummy();
}
```
Thus `Ts` has disappeared.
### Fix:
This is due to invalid pretty print of qpath. This PR fix it.
Normalize function type during validation
During inlining, the callee body is normalized and has types revealed,
but some of locals corresponding to the arguments might come from the
caller body which is not. As a result the caller body does not pass
validation without additional normalization.
Closes#78442.
Include llvm-as in llvm-tools-preview component
Including `llvm-as` adds the ability to include assembly language fragments that can be inlined using LTO while making sure the correct version of LLVM is always used.
Add a test for r# identifiers
I'm not entirely sure I properly ran the test locally (I think so though), waiting for CI to confirm. :)
```````@rustbot``````` modify labels: T-rustdoc
r? ```````@jyn514```````
refactor: removing alloc::collections::vec_deque ignore-tidy-filelength
This PR removes the need for ignore-tidy-filelength for alloc::collections::vec_deque which is part of the issue https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/60302
It is probably easiest to review this PR by looking at it commit by commit rather than looking at the overall diff.
Do not call `unwrap` with `signatures` option enabled
Fixes#75229
Didn't add a test since I couldn't set `RUST_SAVE_ANALYSIS_CONFIG` even with `rustc-env`.
Lower intrinsics calls: forget, size_of, unreachable, wrapping_*
This allows constant propagation to evaluate `size_of` and `wrapping_*`,
and unreachable propagation to propagate a call to `unreachable`.
The lowering is performed as a MIR optimization, rather than during MIR
building to preserve the special status of intrinsics with respect to
unsafety checks and promotion.
Currently enabled by default to determine the performance impact (no
significant impact expected). In practice only useful when combined with
inlining since intrinsics are rarely used directly (with exception of
`unreachable` and `discriminant_value` used by built-in derive macros).
Closes#32716.
The previous `likely!`/`unlikely!` macros were unsound because it
permits the caller's expr to contain arbitrary unsafe code.
pub fn huh() -> bool {
likely!(std::ptr::read(&() as *const () as *const bool))
}
Before: compiles cleanly.
After:
error[E0133]: call to unsafe function is unsafe and requires unsafe function or block
|
70 | likely!(std::ptr::read(&() as *const () as *const bool))
| ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ call to unsafe function
|
= note: consult the function's documentation for information on how to avoid undefined behavior
add error_occured field to ConstQualifs,
fix#76064
I wasn't sure what `in_return_place` actually did and not sure why it returns `ConstQualifs` while it's sibling functions return `bool`. So I tried to make as minimal changes to the structure as possible. Please point out whether I have to refactor it or not.
r? `@oli-obk`
cc `@RalfJung`
specialize io::copy to use copy_file_range, splice or sendfile
Fixes#74426.
Also covers #60689 but only as an optimization instead of an official API.
The specialization only covers std-owned structs so it should avoid the problems with #71091
Currently linux-only but it should be generalizable to other unix systems that have sendfile/sosplice and similar.
There is a bit of optimization potential around the syscall count. Right now it may end up doing more syscalls than the naive copy loop when doing short (<8KiB) copies between file descriptors.
The test case executes the following:
```
[pid 103776] statx(3, "", AT_STATX_SYNC_AS_STAT|AT_EMPTY_PATH, STATX_ALL, {stx_mask=STATX_ALL|STATX_MNT_ID, stx_attributes=0, stx_mode=S_IFREG|0644, stx_size=17, ...}) = 0
[pid 103776] write(4, "wxyz", 4) = 4
[pid 103776] write(4, "iklmn", 5) = 5
[pid 103776] copy_file_range(3, NULL, 4, NULL, 5, 0) = 5
```
0-1 `stat` calls to identify the source file type. 0 if the type can be inferred from the struct from which the FD was extracted
𝖬 `write` to drain the `BufReader`/`BufWriter` wrappers. only happen when buffers are present. 𝖬 ≾ number of wrappers present. If there is a write buffer it may absorb the read buffer contents first so only result in a single write. Vectored writes would also be an option but that would require more invasive changes to `BufWriter`.
𝖭 `copy_file_range`/`splice`/`sendfile` until file size, EOF or the byte limit from `Take` is reached. This should generally be *much* more efficient than the read-write loop and also have other benefits such as DMA offload or extent sharing.
## Benchmarks
```
OLD
test io::tests::bench_file_to_file_copy ... bench: 21,002 ns/iter (+/- 750) = 6240 MB/s [ext4]
test io::tests::bench_file_to_file_copy ... bench: 35,704 ns/iter (+/- 1,108) = 3671 MB/s [btrfs]
test io::tests::bench_file_to_socket_copy ... bench: 57,002 ns/iter (+/- 4,205) = 2299 MB/s
test io::tests::bench_socket_pipe_socket_copy ... bench: 142,640 ns/iter (+/- 77,851) = 918 MB/s
NEW
test io::tests::bench_file_to_file_copy ... bench: 14,745 ns/iter (+/- 519) = 8889 MB/s [ext4]
test io::tests::bench_file_to_file_copy ... bench: 6,128 ns/iter (+/- 227) = 21389 MB/s [btrfs]
test io::tests::bench_file_to_socket_copy ... bench: 13,767 ns/iter (+/- 3,767) = 9520 MB/s
test io::tests::bench_socket_pipe_socket_copy ... bench: 26,471 ns/iter (+/- 6,412) = 4951 MB/s
```