Sync portable-simd to remove autosplats
This PR syncs portable-simd in up to a8385522ad in order to address the type inference breakages documented on nightly in https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/90904 by removing the vector + scalar binary operations (called "autosplats", "broadcasting", or "rank promotion", depending on who you ask) that allow `{scalar} + &'_ {scalar}` to fail in some cases, because it becomes possible the programmer may have meant `{scalar} + &'_ {vector}`.
A few quality-of-life improvements make their way in as well:
- Lane counts can now go to 64, as LLVM seems to have fixed their miscompilation for those.
- `{i,u}8x64` to `__m512i` is now available.
- a bunch of `#[must_use]` notes appear throughout the module.
- Some implementations, mostly instances of `impl core::ops::{Op}<Simd> for Simd` that aren't `{vector} + {vector}` (e.g. `{vector} + &'_ {vector}`), leverage some generics and `where` bounds now to make them easier to understand by reducing a dozen implementations into one (and make it possible for people to open the docs on less burly devices).
- And some internal-only improvements.
None of these changes should affect a beta backport, only actual users of `core::simd` (and most aren't even visible in the programmatic sense), though I can extract an even more minimal changeset for beta if necessary. It seemed simpler to just keep moving forward.
`array::IntoIter` has a bunch of really handy logic for dealing with partial arrays, but it's currently hamstrung by only being creatable from a fully-initialized array.
This PR adds two new constructors:
- a safe & const `empty`, since `[].into_iter()` gives `<T, 0>`, not `<T, N>`.
- an unsafe `from_raw_parts`, to allow experimentation with new uses.
(Slice & vec iterators don't need `from_raw_parts` because you `from_raw_parts` the slice or vec instead, but there's no useful way to made a `<[T; N]>::from_raw_parts`, so I think this is a reasonable place to have one.)
Reintroduce `into_future` in `.await` desugaring
This is a reintroduction of the remaining parts from https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/65244 that have not been relanded yet.
This isn't quite ready to merge yet. The last attempt was reverting due to performance regressions, so we need to make sure this does not introduce those issues again.
Issues #67644, #67982
/cc `@yoshuawuyts`
Make `array::{try_from_fn, try_map}` and `Iterator::try_find` generic over `Try`
Fixes#85115
This only updates unstable functions.
`array::try_map` didn't actually exist before; this adds it under the still-open tracking issue #79711 from the old PR #79713.
Tracking issue for the new trait: #91285
This would also solve the return type question in for the proposed `Iterator::try_reduce` in #87054
disable tests in Miri that take too long
Comparing slices of length `usize::MAX` diverges in Miri. In fact these tests even diverge in rustc unless `-O` is passed. I tried this code to check that:
```rust
#![feature(slice_take)]
const EMPTY_MAX: &'static [()] = &[(); usize::MAX];
fn main() {
let mut slice: &[_] = &[(); usize::MAX];
println!("1");
assert_eq!(Some(&[] as _), slice.take(usize::MAX..));
println!("2");
let remaining: &[_] = EMPTY_MAX;
println!("3");
assert_eq!(remaining, slice);
println!("4");
}
```
So, disable these tests in Miri for now.
Fixes 85115
This only updates unstable functions.
`array::try_map` didn't actually exist before, despite the tracking issue 79711 still being open from the old PR 79713.
CTFE: support assert_zero_valid and assert_uninit_valid
This ensures the implementation of all three type-based assert_ intrinsics remains consistent in Miri.
`assert_inhabited` recently got stabilized in https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/90896 (meaning stable `const fn` can call it), so do the same with these other intrinsics.
Cc ```@rust-lang/wg-const-eval```
Eliminate bunch of copies of error codepath from Utf8LossyChunksIter
Using a macro to stamp out 7 identical copies of the nontrivial slicing logic to exit this loop didn't seem like a necessary use of a macro. The early return case can be handled by `break` without practically any changes to the logic inside the loop.
All this code is from early 2014 (#12062—nearly 8 years ago; pre-1.0) so it's possible there were compiler limitations that forced the macro way at the time.
Confirmed that `x.py bench library/alloc --stage 0 --test-args from_utf8_lossy` is unaffected on my machine.
Stabilize some `MaybeUninit` behavior as const
This stabilizes the `MaybeUninit::as_ptr`, `MaybeUninit::assume_init`, and `MaybeUninit::assume_init_ref` as `const fn`. `MaybeUninit::as_mut_ptr` has been moved to a new flag: `const_maybe_uninit_as_mut_ptr`, which is blocked on #57349. `MaybeUninit::slice_assume_init_ref` can be `const fn` when the method is stabilized in general.
The relevant intrinsic has been stabilized as `const` as well, though this isn't user-visible. Due to the seemingly unrelated feature name I performed `rg const_assert_type` and found no other instances of it being used.
r? `@oli-obk`
`@rustbot` label: +A-const-fn +S-waiting-on-review +T-libs-api
Fix Iterator::advance_by contract inconsistency
The `advance_by(n)` docs state that in the error case `Err(k)` that k is always less than n.
It also states that `advance_by(0)` may return `Err(0)` to indicate an exhausted iterator.
These statements are inconsistent.
Since only one implementation (Skip) actually made use of that I changed it to return Ok(()) in that case too.
While adding some tests I also found a bug in `Take::advance_back_by`.
Document non-guarantees for Hash
Dependence on endianness and type sizes was reported for enum discriminants in #74215 but it is a more general
issue since for example the default implementation of `Hasher::write_usize` uses native endianness.
Additionally the implementations of library types are occasionally changed as their internal fields
change or hashing gets optimized.
## Question
Should this go on the module level documentation instead since it also concerns `Hasher` to some extent and not just `Hash`?
resolves#74215
Weaken guarantee around advancing underlying iterators in zip
The current guarantee (introduced in #52279) is too strong as it prevents adapters from exploiting knowledge about the iterator length and using counted loops for example because they would stop calling `next()` before it ever returned `None`. Additionally several nested zip iterators already fail to uphold this.
This does not yet remove any of the specialization code that tries (and sometimes fails) to uphold the guarantee for `next()`
because removing it would also affect `next_back()` in more surprising ways.
The intent is to be able to remove for example this branch
36bcf40697/library/core/src/iter/adapters/zip.rs (L234-L243)
or this test
36bcf40697/library/core/tests/iter/adapters/zip.rs (L177-L188)
Solves #82303 by declaring it a non-issue.
Faster `Layout::array`
`Layout::array` is called (indirectly) by `Vec::push()`, which is typically instantiated many times, and so making it smaller can help with compile times because less LLVM IR is generated.
r? `@ghost`
The current implementation is much more conservative than it needs to
be, because it's dealing with the size and alignment of a given `T`,
which are more restricted than an arbitrary `Layout`.
For example, imagine a struct with a `u32` and a `u4`. You can safely
create a `Layout { size_: 5, align_: 4 }` by hand, but
`Layout:🆕:<T>` will give `Layout { size_: 8, align_: 4}`, where the
size already has padding that accounts for the alignment. (And the
existing `debug_assert_eq!` in `Layout::array` already demonstrates that
no additional padding is required.)
Using a macro to stamp out 7 identical copies of the nontrivial slicing
logic to exit this loop didn't seem like a necessary use of a macro. The
early return case can be handled by `break` without practically any
changes to the logic inside the loop.
All this code is from early 2014 (7.5 years old, pre-1.0) so it's
possible there were compiler limitations that forced the macro way at
the time.
Confirmed that `x.py bench library/alloc --stage 0 --test-args from_utf8_lossy`
is unaffected on my machine.