removed references to parent/child from std::thread documentation
- also clarifies how thread.join and detaching of threads works
- the previous prose implied that there is a relationship between a
spawning thread and the thread being spawned, and that "child" threads
couldn't outlive their "parents" unless detached, which is incorrect.
Added the `Option::unzip()` method
* Adds the `Option::unzip()` method to turn an `Option<(T, U)>` into `(Option<T>, Option<U>)` under the `unzip_option` feature
* Adds tests for both `Option::unzip()` and `Option::zip()`, I noticed that `.zip()` didn't have any
* Adds `#[inline]` to a few of `Option`'s methods that were missing it
Constify implementations of `(Try)From` for int types
I believe this to be one of the (many?) things blocking const (Range) iterators.
~~If this is to be merged maybe that should wait until `#![feature(const_trait_impl)]` no longer needs `#![allow(incomplete_features)]`?~~ - Done
Replace read_to_string with read_line in Stdin example
The current example results in infinitely reading from stdin, which can confuse newcomers trying to read from stdin.
(`@razmag` encountered this while learning the language from the docs)
Stabilize Vec<T>::shrink_to
This PR stabilizes `shrink_to` feature and closes the corresponding issue. The second point was addressed already, and no `panic!` should occur.
Closes#56431.
Avoid using the `copy_nonoverlapping` wrapper through `mem::replace`.
This is a much simpler way to achieve the pre-#86003 behavior of `mem::replace` not needing dynamically-sized `memcpy`s (at least before inlining), than re-doing #81238 (which needs #86699 or something similar).
I didn't notice it until recently, but `ptr::write` already explicitly avoided using the wrapper, while `ptr::read` just called the wrapper (and was the reason for us observing any behavior change from #86003 in Rust-GPU).
<hr/>
The codegen test I've added fails without the change to `core::ptr::read` like this (ignore the `v0` mangling, I was using a worktree with it turned on by default, for this):
```llvm
13: ; core::intrinsics::copy_nonoverlapping::<u8>
14: ; Function Attrs: inlinehint nonlazybind uwtable
15: define internal void `@_RINvNtCscK5tvALCJol_4core10intrinsics19copy_nonoverlappinghECsaS4X3EinRE8_25mem_replace_direct_memcpy(i8*` %src, i8* %dst, i64 %count) unnamed_addr #0 {
16: start:
17: %0 = mul i64 %count, 1
18: call void `@llvm.memcpy.p0i8.p0i8.i64(i8*` align 1 %dst, i8* align 1 %src, i64 %0, i1 false)
not:17 !~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ error: no match expected
19: ret void
20: }
```
With the `core::ptr::read` change, `core::intrinsics::copy_nonoverlapping` doesn't get instantiated and the test passes.
<hr/>
r? `@m-ou-se` cc `@nagisa` (codegen test) `@oli-obk` / `@RalfJung` (miri diagnostic changes)
Change proc_macro::Diagnostics docs
With Rust 1.54 attributes can invoke function-like macros. This allows functions generated by macros to have non-generic documentation. This pull request changes the documentation of `proc_macro::Diagnostics` to be more specific and include a link to the level.
## Example
Before:
```markdown
Adds a new child diagnostic message to `self` with the level
identified by this method’s name with the given `message`.
```
After:
```markdown
Adds a new child diagnostic message to self with the [`Level::Error`]
level, and the given `message`.
```
impl Default, Copy, Clone for std::io::Sink and Empty
The omission of `Sink: Default` is causing me a slight inconvenience in a test harness. There seems little reason for this and `Empty` not to be `Clone` and `Copy` too.
I have made all three of these insta-stable, because:
AIUI `Copy` can only be derived, and I was not able to find any examples of how to unstably derive it. I think it is probably not possible.
I hunted through the git history for precedent and found
> 79b8ad84c84481a43704213cd0948d2ba0ea63b4
> Implement `Copy` for `IoSlice`
> https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/69403
which was also insta-stable.
Fix intra doc link in hidden doc of Iterator::__iterator_get_unchecked
Recently, I edited the import list of the `core::iter::traits::iterator` module (in #85874). This results in a broken intra doc link in a hidden documentation with the effect that `RUSTDOCFLAGS='--document-private-items --document-hidden-items' x doc library/std` fails. (This can be worked around by adding `-Arustdoc::broken-intra-doc-links`; still, it’s a broken link so let’s fix it.)
``@rustbot`` label C-cleanup, T-libs
Document that fs::read_dir skips . and ..
Hi,
I think this is worth noting in the docs since it differs from POSIX `readdir`. I didn’t put it under platform-specific notes because it seems to be consistent across platforms, and changing this behavior in the future could cause pretty nasty bugs.
Thanks!
- also clarifies how thread.join and detaching of threads works
- the previous prose implied that there is a relationship between a
spawning thread and the thread being spawned, and that "child" threads
couldn't outlive their parents unless detached, which is incorrect.
Hide allocator details from TryReserveError
I think there's [no need for TryReserveError to carry detailed information](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/48043#issuecomment-825139280), but I wouldn't want that issue to delay stabilization of the `try_reserve` feature.
So I'm proposing to stabilize `try_reserve` with a `TryReserveError` as an opaque structure, and if needed, expose error details later.
This PR moves the `enum` to an unstable inner `TryReserveErrorKind` that lives under a separate feature flag. `TryReserveErrorKind` could possibly be left as an implementation detail forever, and the `TryReserveError` get methods such as `allocation_size() -> Option<usize>` or `layout() -> Option<Layout>` instead, or the details could be dropped completely to make try-reserve errors just a unit struct, and thus smaller and cheaper.
Rollup of 9 pull requests
Successful merges:
- #87561 (thread set_name haiku implementation.)
- #87715 (Add long error explanation for E0625)
- #87727 (explicit_generic_args_with_impl_trait: fix min expected number of generics)
- #87742 (Validate FFI-safety warnings on naked functions)
- #87756 (Add back -Zno-profiler-runtime)
- #87759 (Re-use std::sealed::Sealed in os/linux/process.)
- #87760 (Promote `aarch64-apple-ios-sim` to Tier 2)
- #87770 (permit drop impls with generic constants in where clauses)
- #87780 (alloc: Use intra doc links for the reserve function)
Failed merges:
r? `@ghost`
`@rustbot` modify labels: rollup
alloc: Use intra doc links for the reserve function
The sentence exists to highlight the existence of a
performance footgun of repeated calls of the
reserve_exact function.
Re-use std::sealed::Sealed in os/linux/process.
This uses `std::sealed::Sealed` in `std::os::linux::process` instead of defining new `Sealed` traits there.
Currently there is no API that allows fallible zero-allocation of a Vec.
Vec.try_reserve is not appropriate for this job since it doesn't know
whether it should zero or arbitrary uninitialized memory is fine.
Since Box currently holds most of the zeroing/uninit/slice allocation APIs
it's the best place to add yet another entry into this feature matrix.