Commit Graph

117 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Amanieu d'Antras
22951b7f56 Stabilize vec_extend_from_within 2021-04-28 07:27:06 +01:00
Mara Bos
f5d72ab69b Add better test for BinaryHeap::retain. 2021-04-22 14:24:30 +02:00
Vojtech Kral
e68680d30d VecDeque: Add partition_point() #78021 2021-04-15 23:23:23 +02:00
Dylan DPC
b943ea8cdc
Rollup merge of #83827 - the8472:fix-inplace-panic-on-drop, r=RalfJung
cleanup leak after test to make miri happy

Contains changes that were requested in #83629 but didn't make it into the rollup.

r? `````@RalfJung`````
2021-04-04 19:20:06 +02:00
Dylan DPC
869726d335
Rollup merge of #81619 - SkiFire13:resultshunt-inplace, r=the8472
Implement `SourceIterator` and `InPlaceIterable` for `ResultShunt`
2021-04-04 19:19:59 +02:00
the8472
572873fce0
suggestion from review
Co-authored-by: Ralf Jung <post@ralfj.de>
2021-04-04 01:38:58 +02:00
The8472
3bd241f95b cleanup leak after test to make miri happy 2021-04-04 01:37:05 +02:00
Dylan DPC
542f441d44
Rollup merge of #83629 - the8472:fix-inplace-panic-on-drop, r=m-ou-se
Fix double-drop in `Vec::from_iter(vec.into_iter())` specialization when items drop during panic

This fixes the double-drop but it leaves a behavioral difference compared to the default implementation intact: In the default implementation the source and the destination vec are separate objects, so they get dropped separately. Here they share an allocation and the latter only exists as a pointer into the former. So if dropping the former panics then this fix will leak more items than the default implementation would. Is this acceptable or should the specialization also mimic the default implementation's drops-during-panic behavior?

Fixes #83618

`@rustbot` label T-libs-impl
2021-04-02 19:57:31 +02:00
Dylan DPC
2843baaeb6
Rollup merge of #82331 - frol:feat/std-binary-heap-as-slice, r=Amanieu
alloc: Added `as_slice` method to `BinaryHeap` collection

I initially asked about whether it is useful addition on https://internals.rust-lang.org/t/should-i-add-as-slice-method-to-binaryheap/13816, and it seems there were no objections, so went ahead with this PR.

> There is [`BinaryHeap::into_vec`](https://doc.rust-lang.org/std/collections/struct.BinaryHeap.html#method.into_vec), but it consumes the value. I wonder if there is API design limitation that should be taken into account. Implementation-wise, the inner buffer is just a Vec, so it is trivial to expose as_slice from it.

Please, guide me through if I need to add tests or something else.

UPD: Tracking issue #83659
2021-03-30 00:32:18 +02:00
The8472
fa89c0fbcf add testcase for double-drop during Vec in-place collection 2021-03-29 04:39:23 +02:00
bors
5208f63ba8 Auto merge of #81728 - Qwaz:fix-80335, r=joshtriplett
Fixes API soundness issue in join()

Fixes #80335
2021-03-28 06:32:34 +00:00
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
819247f179 Update char::escape_debug_ext to handle different escapes in strings vs. chars
Fixes #83046

The program

    fn main() {
        println!("{:?}", '"');
        println!("{:?}", "'");
    }

would previously print

    '\"'
    "\'"

With this patch it now prints:

    '"'
    "'"
2021-03-26 11:23:51 +03:00
Mara Bos
81932be5e7 Revert "Revert stabilizing integer::BITS." 2021-03-24 22:34:36 +01:00
Jubilee Young
74db93ed2d Preserve signed zero on roundtrip
This commit removes the previous mechanism of differentiating
between "Debug" and "Display" formattings for the sign of -0 so as
to comply with the IEEE 754 standard's requirements on external
character sequences preserving various attributes of a floating
point representation.

In addition, numerous tests are fixed.
2021-03-22 17:02:09 -07:00
bors
eb95acea8a Auto merge of #71780 - jcotton42:string_remove_matches, r=joshtriplett
Implement String::remove_matches

Closes #50206.

I lifted the function help from `@frewsxcv's` original PR (#50015), hope they don't mind.

I'm also wondering whether it would be useful for `remove_matches` to collect up the removed substrings into a `Vec` and return them, right now they're just overwritten by the copy and lost.
2021-03-19 00:47:37 +00:00
Soveu
b0092bc995 Vec::dedup optimization - add benches 2021-03-16 14:41:26 +01:00
Soveu
96d6f22a8e
Merge branch 'master' into dedup 2021-03-15 21:51:38 +01:00
Soveu
2285f11724 Vec::dedup optimization - add test for panic 2021-03-15 21:26:22 +01:00
Soveu
2abab1f688 Vec::dedup optimization - add tests 2021-03-15 20:24:35 +01:00
Josh Cotton
a2571cfc8b Implement String::remove_matches 2021-03-05 11:27:58 -05:00
Waffle
1f031d95de Add regression test for Vec::extend_from_within leak 2021-03-04 17:10:57 +03:00
Yuki Okushi
290117f7d9
Rollup merge of #82564 - WaffleLapkin:revert_spare_mut, r=RalfJung
Revert `Vec::spare_capacity_mut` impl to prevent pointers invalidation

The implementation was changed in #79015.

Later it was [pointed out](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/81944#issuecomment-782849785) that the implementation invalidates pointers to the buffer (initialized elements) by creating a unique reference to the buffer. This PR reverts the implementation.

r? ```@RalfJung```
2021-03-04 20:01:06 +09:00
Waffle
9c4e3af39d Add test that Vec::spare_capacity_mut doesn't invalidate pointers 2021-03-03 01:00:59 +03:00
Guillaume Gomez
0db8349fff
Rollup merge of #81940 - jhpratt:stabilize-str_split_once, r=m-ou-se
Stabilize str_split_once

Closes #74773
2021-02-26 15:52:29 +01:00
Joshua Nelson
3733275854 Update the bootstrap compiler
Note this does not change `core::derive` since it was merged after the
beta bump.
2021-02-20 17:19:30 -05:00
Vlad Frolov
6233f3f4a3 alloc: Added as_slice method to BinaryHeap collection 2021-02-20 20:46:16 +02:00
Hanif Bin Ariffin
fa9af6a9be Added tests to drain an empty vec
Discovered this kind of issue in an unrelated library.
The author copied the tests from here and AFAIK, there are no tests for this particular case.

Signed-off-by: Hanif Bin Ariffin <hanif.ariffin.4326@gmail.com>
2021-02-13 11:18:36 +08:00
bors
1efd804983 Auto merge of #81126 - oxalica:retain-early-drop, r=m-ou-se
Optimize Vec::retain

Use `copy_non_overlapping` instead of `swap` to reduce memory writes, like what we've done in #44355 and `String::retain`.
#48065 already tried to do this optimization but it is reverted in #67300 due to bad codegen of `DrainFilter::drop`.

This PR re-implement the drop-then-move approach. I did a [benchmark](https://gist.github.com/oxalica/3360eec9376f22533fcecff02798b698) on small-no-drop, small-need-drop, large-no-drop elements with different predicate functions. It turns out that the new implementation is >20% faster in average for almost all cases. Only 2/24 cases are slower by 3% and 5%. See the link above for more detail.

I think regression in may-panic cases is due to drop-guard preventing some optimization. If it's permitted to leak elements when predicate function of element's `drop` panic, the new implementation should be almost always faster than current one.
I'm not sure if we should leak on panic, since there is indeed an issue (#52267) complains about it before.
2021-02-11 04:40:57 +00:00
Jacob Pratt
c28f2a8bee
Stabilize str_split_once 2021-02-09 23:17:11 -05:00
Yechan Bae
6d43225bfb Fixes #80335 2021-02-03 16:36:33 -05:00
Mara Bos
89882388d9 Revert stabilizing integer::BITS. 2021-02-03 22:23:58 +01:00
Giacomo Stevanato
2fb56cc123 Update test to collect item with a different type than the original vec 2021-02-03 21:00:07 +01:00
bors
f6cb45ad01 Auto merge of #79015 - WaffleLapkin:vec_append_from_within, r=KodrAus
add `Vec::extend_from_within` method under `vec_extend_from_within` feature gate

Implement <https://github.com/rust-lang/rfcs/pull/2714>

### tl;dr

This PR adds a `extend_from_within` method to `Vec` which allows copying elements from a range to the end:

```rust
#![feature(vec_extend_from_within)]

let mut vec = vec![0, 1, 2, 3, 4];

vec.extend_from_within(2..);
assert_eq!(vec, [0, 1, 2, 3, 4, 2, 3, 4]);

vec.extend_from_within(..2);
assert_eq!(vec, [0, 1, 2, 3, 4, 2, 3, 4, 0, 1]);

vec.extend_from_within(4..8);
assert_eq!(vec, [0, 1, 2, 3, 4, 2, 3, 4, 0, 1, 4, 2, 3, 4]);
```

### Implementation notes

Originally I've copied `@Shnatsel's` [implementation](690742a0de/src/lib.rs (L74)) with some minor changes to support other ranges:
```rust
pub fn append_from_within<R>(&mut self, src: R)
where
    T: Copy,
    R: RangeBounds<usize>,
{
    let len = self.len();
    let Range { start, end } = src.assert_len(len);;

    let count = end - start;
    self.reserve(count);
    unsafe {
        // This is safe because `reserve()` above succeeded,
        // so `self.len() + count` did not overflow usize
        ptr::copy_nonoverlapping(
            self.get_unchecked(src.start),
            self.as_mut_ptr().add(len),
            count,
        );
        self.set_len(len + count);
    }
}
```

But then I've realized that this duplicates most of the code from (private) `Vec::append_elements`, so I've used it instead.

Then I've applied `@KodrAus` suggestions from https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/79015#issuecomment-727200852.
2021-02-02 09:12:53 +00:00
Giacomo Stevanato
c6c8f3bf12 Move test 2021-02-01 17:16:54 +01:00
Waffle
d5c221107e add Vec::extend_from_within method
Implement <https://github.com/rust-lang/rfcs/pull/2714>, changes from the RFC:
- Rename the method `append_from_within` => `extend_from_within`
- Loose :Copy bound => :Clone
- Specialize in case of :Copy

This commit also adds `Vec::split_at_spare` private method and use it to implement
`Vec::spare_capacity_mut` and `Vec::extend_from_within`. This method returns 2
slices - initialized elements (same as `&mut vec[..]`) and uninitialized but
allocated space (same as `vec.spare_capacity_mut()`).
2021-01-31 22:30:19 +03:00
Ashley Mannix
8940a2652e stabilize int_bits_const 2021-01-31 21:50:47 +10:00
oxalica
969e552355
Simplify and fix tests 2021-01-24 00:11:51 +08:00
dylni
b96063cf47 Fix soundness issue for replace_range and range 2021-01-18 22:14:38 -05:00
oxalica
d6dec1ebe3
Optimize Vec::retain 2021-01-18 01:48:50 +08:00
Ian Jackson
be226e49e4 Stabilize split_inclusive
Closes #72360.

Signed-off-by: Ian Jackson <ijackson@chiark.greenend.org.uk>
2021-01-04 16:20:08 +00:00
bors
b33e234155 Auto merge of #79895 - Kerollmops:slice-group-by, r=m-ou-se
The return of the GroupBy and GroupByMut iterators on slice

According to https://github.com/rust-lang/rfcs/pull/2477#issuecomment-742034372, I am opening this PR again, this time I implemented it in safe Rust only, it is therefore much easier to read and is completely safe.

This PR proposes to add two new methods to the slice, the `group_by` and `group_by_mut`. These two methods provide a way to iterate over non-overlapping sub-slices of a base slice that are separated by the predicate given by the user (e.g. `Partial::eq`, `|a, b| a.abs() < b.abs()`).

```rust
let slice = &[1, 1, 1, 3, 3, 2, 2, 2];

let mut iter = slice.group_by(|a, b| a == b);
assert_eq!(iter.next(), Some(&[1, 1, 1][..]));
assert_eq!(iter.next(), Some(&[3, 3][..]));
assert_eq!(iter.next(), Some(&[2, 2, 2][..]));
assert_eq!(iter.next(), None);
```

[An RFC](https://github.com/rust-lang/rfcs/pull/2477) was open 2 years ago but wasn't necessary.
2020-12-31 12:00:43 +00:00
bors
d30dac2d83 Auto merge of #79022 - SpyrosRoum:stabilize-deque_range, r=m-ou-se
stabilize deque_range

Make #74217 stable, stabilizing `VecDeque::range` and `VecDeque::range_mut`.
Pr: #74099

r? `@m-ou-se`
2020-12-26 03:50:16 +00:00
Justus K
d75618e7a2
replace assert! with assert_eq! 2020-12-13 10:21:24 +01:00
Justus K
0f30b7dd87
fix panic if converting ZST Vec to VecDeque 2020-12-13 10:02:36 +01:00
Clément Renault
9940c47885
Update the slice GroupBy/Mut test 2020-12-10 13:42:31 +01:00
Clément Renault
1c55a73b75
Implement it with only safe code 2020-12-10 11:20:15 +01:00
Clément Renault
a891f6edfe
Introduce the GroupBy and GroupByMut Iterators 2020-12-10 10:16:29 +01:00
Tim Diekmann
9274b37d99 Rename AllocRef to Allocator and (de)alloc to (de)allocate 2020-12-04 14:47:15 +01:00
Ralf Jung
7e74b72d13 break formatting so rustfmt is happy 2020-12-02 14:09:36 +01:00