Add missing "allocated object" doc link to `<*mut T>::add`
The portion of the documentation expecting the link was already there, but it was rendered as "[allocated object]". The added reference is just copied from the documentation for `<*const T>::add`.
Implement a `explicit_generic_args_with_impl_trait` feature gate
Implements #83701
When this gate is enabled, explicit generic arguments can be specified even if `impl Trait` is used in argument position. Generic arguments can only be specified for explicit generic parameters but not for the synthetic type parameters from `impl Trait`
So code like this will be accepted:
```rust
#![feature(explicit_generic_args_with_impl_trait)]
fn foo<T: ?Sized>(_f: impl AsRef<T>) {}
fn main() {
foo::<str>("".to_string());
}
```
CTFE: throw unsupported error when partially overwriting a pointer
Currently, during CTFE, when a write to memory would overwrite parts of a pointer, we make the remaining parts of that pointer "uninitialized". This is probably not what users expect, so if this ever happens they will be quite confused about why some of the data just vanishes for seemingly no good reason.
So I propose we change this to abort CTFE when that happens, to at last avoid silently doing the wrong thing.
Cc https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/87184
Our CTFE test suite still seems to pass. However, we should probably crater this, and I want to do some tests with Miri as well.
rfc3052 followup: Remove authors field from Cargo manifests
Since RFC 3052 soft deprecated the authors field, hiding it from
crates.io, docs.rs, and making Cargo not add it by default, and it is
not generally up to date/useful information for contributors, we may as well
remove it from crates in this repo.
When this gate is enabled, explicit generic arguments can be specified even
if `impl Trait` is used in argument position. Generic arguments can only be
specified for explicit generic parameters but not for the synthetic type
parameters from `impl Trait`
Recommend `swap_remove` in `Vec::remove` docs
I was able to increase the performance (by 20%!) of my project by changing a `Vec::remove` call to `Vec::swap_remove` in a hot function. I think we should explicitly put a note in the Vec::remove docs to guide people in the right direction so they don't make a similar oversight.
Update rustfmt
Believe this gets everything back in order as both push and pull are working fine again. May do another small sync in the near future for my own sanity, but going forward will try to get on the same recurring cadence that clippy follows
Ensure `./x.py dist` adheres to `build.tools`
According to `config.toml.example`, the way to produce dist artifacts for both the compiler and a *subset* of tools would be to enable the extended build and manually specify the list of tools to build:
```toml
[build]
extended = true
tools = ["cargo", "rustfmt"]
```
This works as expected for `./x.py build` and `./x.py install`, but *not* for `./x.py dist`. Before this PR `./x.py dist` simply ignored the contents of `build.tools`, building just rustc/rustdoc if `build.extended = false` and all of the tools otherwise. This PR does two things:
* Changes `./x.py dist extended` to only build the tools defined in `build.tools`, if `build.tools` is not empty. The rest of the extended step was refactored to simplify the code.
* Changes how dist jobs for tools are gated: instead of `assert!(builder.config.extended)` to prevent tools from being built with `build.extended = false`, tools are simply built by default depending on `build.extended` and `build.tools`. This also enables to **explicitly** dist tools even with `build.extended = false`.
This PR is best reviewed commit-by-commit.
Fixes#86436
Add documentation for `Ipv6MulticastScope`
Adds basic documentation to the unstable `Ipv6MulticastScope`, as well as marking it `#[non_exhaustive]` because future IETF RFCs may introduce additional scopes. The documentation mentions this in a section "Stability Guarantees":
> /// Not all possible values for a multicast scope have been assigned.
/// Future RFCs may introduce new scopes, which will be added as variants to this enum;
/// because of this the enum is marked as `#[non_exhaustive]`.
Partially stabilize `const_slice_first_last`
This stabilizes the non-`mut` methods of `const_slice_first_last` as `const`. These methods are trivial to implement and have no blockers that I am aware of.
`@rustbot` label +A-const-fn +S-waiting-on-review +T-libs-api
Move `os_str_bytes` to `sys::unix`
Followup to #84967, with `OsStrExt` and `OsStringExt` moved out of `sys_common`, there is no reason anymore for `os_str_bytes` to live in `sys_common` and not in sys. This pr moves it to the location `sys::unix::os_str` and reuses the code on other platforms via `#[path]` (as is common in `sys`) instead of importing.
Remove `Ipv4Addr::is_ietf_protocol_assignment`
This PR removes the unstable method `Ipv4Addr::is_ietf_protocol_assignment`, as I suggested in https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/85612#issuecomment-847863404. The method was added in #60145, as far as I can tell primarily for the implementation of `Ipv4Addr::is_global` (addresses reserved for IETF protocol assignment are not globally reachable unless otherwise specified).
The method was added in 2019, but I haven't been able to find any open-source code using this method so far. I'm also having a hard time coming up with a usecase for specifically this method; knowing that an address is reserved for future protocols doesn't allow you to do much with it, especially since now some of those addresses are indeed assigned to a protocol and have their own behaviour (and might even be defined to be globally reachable, so if that is what you care about it is always more accurate to call `!is_global()`, instead of `is_ietf_protocol_assignment()`).
Because of these reasons, I propose removing the method (or alternatively make it a private helper for `is_global`) and also not introduce `Ipv6Addr::is_ietf_protocol_assignment` and `IpAddr::is_ietf_protocol_assignment` in the future.
Change environment variable getters to error recoverably
This PR changes the standard library environment variable getter functions to error recoverably (i.e. not panic) when given an invalid value.
On some platforms, it is invalid for environment variable names to contain `'\0'` or `'='`, or for their values to contain `'\0'`. Currently, the standard library panics when manipulating environment variables with names or values that violate these invariants. However, this behavior doesn't make a lot of sense, at least in the case of getters. If the environment variable is missing, the standard library just returns an error value, rather than panicking. It doesn't make sense to treat the case where the variable is invalid any differently from that. See the [internals thread](https://internals.rust-lang.org/t/why-should-std-var-panic/14847) for discussion. Thus, this PR changes the functions to error recoverably in this case as well.
If desired, I could change the functions that manipulate environment variables in other ways as well. I didn't do that here because it wasn't entirely clear what to change them to. Should they error silently or do something else? If someone tells me how to change them, I'm happy to implement the changes.
This fixes#86082, an ICE that arises from the current behavior. It also adds a regression test to make sure the ICE does not occur again in the future.
`@rustbot` label +T-libs
r? `@joshtriplett`
BTree: lazily locate leaves in rangeless iterators
BTree iterators always locate both the first and last leaf edge and often only need either one, i.e., whenever they are traversed in a single direction, like in for-loops and in the common use of `iter().next()` or `iter().next_back()` to retrieve the first or last key/value-pair (#62924). It's fairly easy to avoid because the iterators with this disadvantage already are quite separate from other iterators.
r? `@Mark-Simulacrum`
Bump bootstrap compiler to 1.55
Changing the cfgs for stdarch is missing, but my understanding is that we don't need to do it as part of this PR?
r? `@Mark-Simulacrum`
Add Linux-specific pidfd process extensions (take 2)
Continuation of #77168.
I addressed the following concerns from the original PR:
- make `CommandExt` and `ChildExt` sealed traits
- wrap file descriptors in `PidFd` struct representing ownership over the fd
- add `take_pidfd` to take the fd out of `Child`
- close fd when dropped
Tracking Issue: #82971
Bail on any found recursion when expanding opaque types
Fixes#87450. More of a bandaid because it does not fix the exponential complexity of the type folding used for opaque type expansion.
The test calls libc::getpid() in the pre_exec hook and asserts that the returned value is different from the PID of the parent.
However, libc::getpid() returns the wrong value.
Before version 2.25, glibc caches the PID of the current process with the goal of avoiding additional syscalls.
The cached value is only updated when the wrapper functions for fork or clone are called.
In PR #81825 we switch to directly using the clone3 syscall.
Thus, the cache is not updated and getpid returns the PID of the parent.
source: https://man7.org/linux/man-pages/man2/getpid.2.html#NOTES
Move UnwindSafe, RefUnwindSafe, AssertUnwindSafe to core
They were previously only available in std::panic, not core::panic.
- https://doc.rust-lang.org/1.51.0/std/panic/trait.UnwindSafe.html
- https://doc.rust-lang.org/1.51.0/std/panic/trait.RefUnwindSafe.html
- https://doc.rust-lang.org/1.51.0/std/panic/struct.AssertUnwindSafe.html
Where this is relevant: trait objects! Inside a `#![no_std]` library it's otherwise impossible to have a struct holding a trait object, and at the same time can be used from downstream std crates in a way that doesn't interfere with catch_unwind.
```rust
// common library
#![no_std]
pub struct Thing {
pub(crate) x: &'static (dyn SomeTrait + Send + Sync),
}
pub(crate) trait SomeTrait {...}
```
```rust
// downstream application
fn main() {
let thing: library::Thing = ...;
let _ = std::panic::catch_unwind(|| { let _ = thing; }); // does not work :(
}
```
See a4131708e2/src/gradient.rs (L7-L15) for a real life example of needing to work around this problem. In particular that workaround would not even be viable if implementors of the trait were provided externally by a caller, as the `feature = "std"` would become non-additive in that case.
What happens without the UnwindSafe constraints:
```rust
fn main() {
let gradient = colorous::VIRIDIS;
let _ = std::panic::catch_unwind(|| { let _ = gradient; });
}
```
```console
error[E0277]: the type `(dyn colorous::gradient::EvalGradient + Send + Sync + 'static)` may contain interior mutability and a reference may not be safely transferrable across a catch_unwind boundary
--> src/main.rs:3:13
|
3 | let _ = std::panic::catch_unwind(|| { let _ = gradient; });
| ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ `(dyn colorous::gradient::EvalGradient + Send + Sync + 'static)` may contain interior mutability and a reference may not be safely transferrable across a catch_unwind boundary
|
::: .rustup/toolchains/nightly-x86_64-unknown-linux-gnu/lib/rustlib/src/rust/library/std/src/panic.rs:430:40
|
430 | pub fn catch_unwind<F: FnOnce() -> R + UnwindSafe, R>(f: F) -> Result<R> {
| ---------- required by this bound in `catch_unwind`
|
= help: within `Gradient`, the trait `RefUnwindSafe` is not implemented for `(dyn colorous::gradient::EvalGradient + Send + Sync + 'static)`
= note: required because it appears within the type `&'static (dyn colorous::gradient::EvalGradient + Send + Sync + 'static)`
= note: required because it appears within the type `Gradient`
= note: required because of the requirements on the impl of `UnwindSafe` for `&Gradient`
= note: required because it appears within the type `[closure@src/main.rs:3:38: 3:62]`
```
Build aarch64-apple-ios-sim as part of the full macOS build
Part of the [MCP 428](https://github.com/rust-lang/compiler-team/issues/428) to promote this target to Tier 2.
This adds the aarch64-apple-ios-sim target as a tier 2 target, currently cross-compiled from our x86_64 apple builders. The compiler team has approved the addition per the MCP noted above, and the infrastructure team has not raised concerns with this addition at this time (as the CI time impact is expected to be minimal; this is only building std).