Change the way libunwind is linked for *-windows-gnullvm targets
I have no idea why previous way works for `x86_64-fortanix-unknown-sgx` (assuming it actually works...) but not for `gnullvm`. It fails when linking libtest during Rust build (unless somebody adds `RUSTFLAGS='-Clinkarg=-lunwind'`).
Also fixes exception handling on AArch64.
Rollup of 5 pull requests
Successful merges:
- #103996 (Add small clarification around using pointers derived from references)
- #104315 (Improve spans with `use crate::{self}`)
- #104320 (Use `derive_const` and rm manual StructuralEq impl)
- #104357 (add is_sized method on Abi and Layout, and use it)
- #104365 (Add x tool to triagebot)
Failed merges:
r? `@ghost`
`@rustbot` modify labels: rollup
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>
Use `derive_const` and rm manual StructuralEq impl
This does not change any semantics of the impl except for the const stability. It should be fine because trait methods and const bounds can never be used in stable without enabling `const_trait_impl`.
cc `@oli-obk`
Add small clarification around using pointers derived from references
r? `@RalfJung`
One question about your example from https://github.com/rust-lang/libs-team/issues/122: at what point does UB arise? If writing 0 does not cause UB and the reference `x` is never read or written to (explicitly or implicitly by being wrapped in another data structure) after the call to `foo`, does UB only arise when dropping the value? I don't really get that since I thought references were always supposed to point to valid data?
```rust
fn foo(x: &mut NonZeroI32) {
let ptr = x as *mut NonZeroI32;
unsafe { ptr.cast::<i32>().write(0); } // no UB here
// What now? x is considered garbage when?
}
```
Fix missing reexports' doc comments
Fixes#81893.
The issue was that an import directly "links" to the target without the intermediate imports. Unfortunately, to fix this bug we need to go through them one by one. To do so, I take the import path direct parent (so `b` in `a:🅱️:c`) and then look for `c` into it.
r? `@notriddle`
implement binding_shadows
migrate till self-in-generic-param-default
use braces in fluent message as suggested by @compiler-errors.
to fix lock file issue reported by CI
migrate 'unreachable label' error
run formatter
name the variables correctly in fluent file
SessionDiagnostic -> Diagnostic
test "pattern/pat-tuple-field-count-cross.rs" passed
test "resolve/bad-env-capture2.rs" passed
test "enum/enum-in-scope.rs" and other depended on "resolve_binding_shadows_something_unacceptable" should be passed now.
fix crash errors while running test-suite. there might be more.
then_some(..) suits better here.
all tests passed
convert TraitImpl and InvalidAsm. TraitImpl is buggy yet. will fix after receiving help from Zulip
migrate "Ralative-2018"
migrate "ancestor only"
migrate "expected found"
migrate "Indeterminate"
migrate "module only"
revert to the older implementation for now. since this is failing at the moment.
follow the convension for fluent variable
order the diag attribute as suggested in review comment
fix merge error. migrate trait-impl-duplicate
make the changes compatible with "Flatten diagnostic slug modules #103345"
fix merge
remove commented code
merge issues
fix review comments
fix tests
Add miri_alloc, miri_dealloc
`miri_alloc` and `miri_dealloc` are basically the same as `__rust_alloc` and `__rust_dealloc` respectively, but without the check for a global allocator.
This should allow bootstrapping an allocator in environments, where no fundamental way of allocating memory is available (`no_std` + `alloc` in Miri).
Merge crossbeam-channel into `std::sync::mpsc`
This PR imports the [`crossbeam-channel`](https://github.com/crossbeam-rs/crossbeam/tree/master/crossbeam-channel#crossbeam-channel) crate into the standard library as a private module, `sync::mpmc`. `sync::mpsc` is now implemented as a thin wrapper around `sync::mpmc`. The primary purpose of this PR is to resolve https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/39364. The public API intentionally remains the same.
The reason https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/39364 has not been fixed in over 5 years is that the current channel is *incredibly* complex. It was written many years ago and has sat mostly untouched since. `crossbeam-channel` has become the most popular alternative on crates.io, amassing over 30 million downloads. While crossbeam's channel is also complex, like all fast concurrent data structures, it avoids some of the major issues with the current implementation around dynamic flavor upgrades. The new implementation decides on the datastructure to be used when the channel is created, and the channel retains that structure until it is dropped.
Replacing `sync::mpsc` with a simpler, less performant implementation has been discussed as an alternative. However, Rust touts itself as enabling *fearless concurrency*, and having the standard library feature a subpar implementation of a core concurrency primitive doesn't feel right. The argument is that slower is better than broken, but this PR shows that we can do better.
As mentioned before, the primary purpose of this PR is to fix https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/39364, and so the public API intentionally remains the same. *After* that problem is fixed, the fact that `sync::mpmc` now exists makes it easier to fix the primary limitation of `mpsc`, the fact that it only supports a single consumer. spmc and mpmc are two other common concurrency patterns, and this change enables a path to deprecating `mpsc` and exposing a general `sync::channel` module that supports multiple consumers. It also implements other useful methods such as `send_timeout`. That said, exposing MPMC and other new functionality is mostly out of scope for this PR, and it would be helpful if discussion stays on topic :)
For what it's worth, the new implementation has also been shown to be more performant in [some basic benchmarks](https://github.com/crossbeam-rs/crossbeam/tree/master/crossbeam-channel/benchmarks#results).
cc `@taiki-e`
r? rust-lang/libs
Fix up a Fluent message
Fix up a Fluent message which contained arrows `->` after [selectors](https://projectfluent.org/fluent/guide/selectors.html). The original author probably thought that they were required as part of the selector syntax but in reality they were interpreted as literal text and actually showed up in the emitted diagnostic.
This wasn't caught during the diagnostic migration since the branch constructing the diagnostic in question (`rustc_infer::errors::LifetimeMismatchLabels::Normal`) was not exercised by the UI test suite. I've added two more test cases to do so (one testing `LifetimeMismatchLabels::Normal` where `hir_equal == true` and one where `hir_equal == false`).
Diff visualizing the `->` bug (`master` vs `fix-up-a-fluent-message`):
```diff
error[E0623]: lifetime mismatch
--> src/test/ui/implied-bounds/hrlt-implied-trait-bounds-guard.rs:39:30
|
39 | fn badboi3<'in_, 'out, T>(a: Foo<'in_, 'out, (&'in_ T, &'out T)>, sadness: &'in_ T) {
| ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^-------^^-------^^
| | |
| | these two types are declared with different lifetimes...
- | ...but data-> from `a` flows-> into `a` here
+ | ...but data from `a` flows into `a` here
```