Add truncate note to Vec::resize
A very minor addition to the `Vec::resize` documentation to point out the `truncate` method.
When I was searching for something matching `truncate` I managed to miss it, along with some colleagues. We later found it by chance. We did find `resize` however, so I was hoping to point it out in the documentation.
Remove some feature gates
The first commit removes various feature gates that are unused. The second commit replaces some `Fn` implementations with `Iterator` implementations, which is much cleaner IMO. The third commit replaces an unboxed_closures feature gate with min_specialization. For some reason the unboxed_closures feature gate suppresses the min_specialization feature gate from triggering on an `TrustedStep` impl. The last comment just turns a regular comment into a doc comment as drive by cleanup. I can move it to a separate PR if preferred.
Partially stabilize `array_methods`
This stabilizes `<[T; N]>::as_slice` and `<[T; N]>::as_mut_slice`, which is forms part of the `array_methods` feature: #76118.
This also makes `<[T; N]>::as_slice` const due to its trivial nature.
Manual Debug for Unix ExitCode ExitStatus ExitStatusError
These structs have misleading names. An ExitStatus[Error] is actually a Unix wait status; an ExitCode is actually an exit status. These misleading names appear in the `Debug` output.
The `Display` impls on Unix have been improved, but the `Debug` impls are still misleading, as reported in #74832.
Fix this by pretending that these internal structs are called `unix_exit_status` and `unix_wait_status` as applicable. (We can't actually rename the structs because of the way that the cross-platform machinery works: the names are cross-platform.)
After this change, this program
```
#![feature(exit_status_error)]
fn main(){
let x = std::process::Command::new("false").status().unwrap();
dbg!(x.exit_ok());
eprintln!("x={:?}",x);
}
```
produces this output
```
[src/main.rs:4] x.exit_ok() = Err(
ExitStatusError(
unix_wait_status(
256,
),
),
)
x=ExitStatus(unix_wait_status(256))
```
Closes#74832
Remove unnecessary unsafe block in `process_unix`
Because it's nested under this unsafe fn!
This block isn't detected as unnecessary because of a bug in the compiler: #88260.
Mark unsafe methods NonZero*::unchecked_(add|mul) as const.
Now that https://github.com/rust-lang/rfcs/pull/3016 has landed, these two unstable `std` function can be marked `const`, according to this detail of #84186.
const fn for option copied, take & replace
Tracking issue: [#67441](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/67441)
Adding const fn for the copied, take and replace method of Option. Also adding necessary unit test.
It's my first contribution so I am pretty sure I don't know what I'm doing but there's a first for everything!
Add `Ipv6Addr::is_benchmarking`
This PR adds the unstable method `Ipv6Addr::is_benchmarking`. This method is added for parity with `Ipv4Addr::is_benchmarking`, and I intend to use it in a future rework of `Ipv6Addr::is_global` (edit: #86634) to more accurately follow the [IANA Special Address Registry](https://www.iana.org/assignments/iana-ipv6-special-registry/iana-ipv6-special-registry.xhtml) (like is done in `Ipv4Addr::is_global`).
With `Ipv6Addr::is_benchmarking` and `Ipv4Addr::is_benchmarking` now both existing, `IpAddr::is_benchmarking` is also added.
Fix read_to_end to not grow an exact size buffer
If you know how much data to expect and use `Vec::with_capacity` to pre-allocate a buffer of that capacity, `Read::read_to_end` will still double its capacity. It needs some space to perform a read, even though that read ends up returning `0`.
It's a bummer to carefully pre-allocate 1GB to read a 1GB file into memory and end up using 2GB.
This fixes that behavior by special casing a full buffer and reading into a small "probe" buffer instead. If that read returns `0` then it's confirmed that the buffer was the perfect size. If it doesn't, the probe buffer is appended to the normal buffer and the read loop continues.
Fixing this allows several workarounds in the standard library to be removed:
- `Take` no longer needs to override `Read::read_to_end`.
- The `reservation_size` callback that allowed `Take` to inhibit the previous over-allocation behavior isn't needed.
- `fs::read` doesn't need to reserve an extra byte in `initial_buffer_size`.
Curiously, there was a unit test that specifically checked that `Read::read_to_end` *does* over-allocate. I removed that test, too.
Add expansion to while desugar spans
In the same vein as #88163, this reverts a change in Clippy behavior as a result of #80357 (and reverts some `#[allow]`s): This changes `clippy::blocks_in_if_conditions` to not fire on `while` loops. Though we might actually want Clippy to lint those cases, we should introduce the change purposefully, with tests, and possibly under a different lint name.
The actual change here is to add a desugaring expansion to the spans when lowering a `while` loop.
r? `@Manishearth`
Update Let's Encrypt ROOT CA certificate in dist-(i686|x86_64)-linux docker images
The DST Root CA X3 used by Let's Encrypt has expired ([Let's Encrypt announcement](https://letsencrypt.org/docs/dst-root-ca-x3-expiration-september-2021/)). This patch installs the new root certificate (ISRG Root X1) and disables the old one. Disabling the old one is necessary because otherwise curl still fails to download from servers with Let's Encrypt certs even though they are cross-signed.
Fixes#89484.
Make `<[T]>::split_at_unchecked` and `<[T]>::split_at_mut_unchecked` public
The methods were originally added in https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/75936 (30dc32b10e), but for some reason as private. Nevertheless, the methods have documentation and even a [tracking issue](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/76014).
It's very weird to have a tracking issue for private methods and these methods may be useful outside of the standard library. As such, this PR makes the methods public.
Use bitand when checking for signed integer division overflow
For `self == Self::MIN && rhs == -1`, LLVM does not realize that this is the same check made by `self / rhs`, so the code generated may have some unnecessary duplication. For `(self == Self::MIN) & (rhs == -1)`, LLVM realizes it is the same check.
Optimize unnecessary check in Vec::retain
The function `vec::Vec::retain` only have two stages:
1. Nothing was deleted.
2. Some elements were deleted.
Here is an unnecessary check `if g.deleted_cnt > 0` in the loop, and it's difficult for compiler to optimize it. I split the loop into two stages manully and keep the code clean using const generics.
I write a special but common bench case for this optimization. I call retain on vec but keep all elements.
Before and after this optimization:
```
test vec::bench_retain_whole_100000 ... bench: 84,803 ns/iter (+/- 17,314)
```
```
test vec::bench_retain_whole_100000 ... bench: 42,638 ns/iter (+/- 16,910)
```
The result is expected, there are two `if`s before the optimization and one `if` after.
Make diangostic item naming consistent
Right now there is about a 50/50 split of naming diagnostic items as `vec_type` vs `Vec`. So it is hard to guess a diagnostic item name with confidence. I know it's not great to change these retroactively, but I think it will be much easier to maintain consistency after consistency is established.
Make *const (), *mut () okay for FFI
Pointer-to-() is used occasionally in the standard library to mean "pointer to none-of-your-business". Examples:
- `RawWakerVTable::new` https://doc.rust-lang.org/1.51.0/std/task/struct.RawWakerVTable.html#method.new
- `<*const T>::to_raw_parts` https://doc.rust-lang.org/nightly/std/primitive.pointer.html#method.to_raw_parts
I believe it's useful for the same purpose in FFI signatures, even while `()` itself is not FFI safe. The following should be allowed:
```rust
extern "C" {
fn demo(pc: *const (), pm: *mut ());
}
```
Prior to this PR, those pointers were not considered okay for an extern signature.
```console
warning: `extern` block uses type `()`, which is not FFI-safe
--> src/main.rs:2:17
|
2 | fn demo(pc: *const (), pm: *mut ());
| ^^^^^^^^^ not FFI-safe
|
= note: `#[warn(improper_ctypes)]` on by default
= help: consider using a struct instead
= note: tuples have unspecified layout
warning: `extern` block uses type `()`, which is not FFI-safe
--> src/main.rs:2:32
|
2 | fn demo(pc: *const (), pm: *mut ());
| ^^^^^^^ not FFI-safe
|
= help: consider using a struct instead
= note: tuples have unspecified layout
```
On MinGW toolchains the various features (such as function sections)
necessary to eliminate dead function references are disabled due to
various bugs. This means that the windows sockets library will most
likely remain linked to any mingw toolchain built program that also
utilizes libstd.
That said, I made an attempt to also enable `function-sections` and
`--gc-sections` during my experiments, but the symbol references
remained, sadly.
Deriving: Include bound generic params in type parameters for where clause
Fixes#89188.
The `derive` macro ignored the `for<'s>` needed with the `Fn` trait in that code example.
edit: I'm unsure if this might cause regressions. I'm not an experienced compiler developer so I'm not used to thinking about unwanted side effects code changes like this might have.
For some reason unboxed_closures supresses the feature gate for
min_specialization when implementing TrustedStep. min_specialization is
the true feature that is used.
resolve: Cache module loading for all foreign modules
It was previously cached for modules loaded from `fn get_module`, but not for modules loaded from `fn build_reduced_graph_for_external_crate_res`.
This also makes all foreign modules use their real parent, span and expansion instead of possibly a parent/span/expansion of their reexport.
Modules are also often compared using referential equality (`ptr::eq`), this change makes such comparisons correct in all cases.
An ICE happening on attempt to decode expansions for foreign enums and traits is avoided.
Also local enums and traits are now added to the module map.
Follow up to https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/88872.
r? `@cjgillot`
It was previously cached for modules loaded from `fn get_module`, but not for modules loaded from `fn build_reduced_graph_for_external_crate_res`.
This also makes all foreign modules use their real parent, span and expansion instead of possibly a parent/span/expansion of their reexport.
An ICE happening on attempt to decode expansions for foreign enums and traits is avoided.
Also local enums and traits are now added to the module map.
Avoid nondeterminism in trimmed_def_paths
Previously this query depended on the global interning order of Symbols, which
meant that irrelevant changes could influence the query and cause
recompilations. This commit ensures that the return set is stable and will not
be affected by the global order by deterministically (in lexicographic order)
choosing a name to use if there are multiple names for a single DefId.
This should fix the cause of the [regressions] in #83343.
[regressions]: https://perf.rust-lang.org/compare.html?start=9620f3a84b079decfdc2e557be007580b097fe43&end=addb4da686a97da46159f0123cb6cdc2ce3d7fdb
Fix clippy lints
I'm currently working on allowing clippy to run on librustdoc after a discussion I had with `@Mark-Simulacrum.` So in the meantime, I fixed a few lints on the compiler crates.
For `self == Self::MIN && rhs == -1`, LLVM does not realize that this is the
same check made by `self / rhs`, so the code generated may have some unnecessary
duplication. For `(self == Self::MIN) & (rhs == -1)`, LLVM realizes it is the
same check.