Commit Graph

531 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Lucas Kent
08829853d3 eplace usages of vec![].into_iter with [].into_iter 2022-01-09 14:09:25 +11:00
bors
fca4b155a7 Auto merge of #92226 - woppopo:const_black_box, r=joshtriplett
Constify `core::intrinsics::black_box` and `core::hint::black_box`.

`core::intrinsics::black_box` is already constified, but it wasn't marked as const (see: https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/blob/master/compiler/rustc_const_eval/src/interpret/intrinsics.rs#L471).

Tracking issue: None
2021-12-24 10:02:54 +00:00
Matthias Krüger
94b9b5f35f
Rollup merge of #92121 - RalfJung:miri-core-test, r=kennytm
disable test with self-referential generator on Miri

Running the libcore test suite in Miri currently fails due to the known incompatibility of self-referential generators with Miri's aliasing checks (https://github.com/rust-lang/unsafe-code-guidelines/issues/148). So let's disable that test in Miri for now.
2021-12-23 17:48:30 +01:00
woppopo
72f15ea22a Constify core::intrinsics::black_box 2021-12-23 20:07:41 +09:00
Matthias Krüger
60625a6ef0
Rollup merge of #88858 - spektom:to_lower_upper_rev, r=dtolnay
Allow reverse iteration of lowercase'd/uppercase'd chars

The PR implements `DoubleEndedIterator` trait for `ToLowercase` and `ToUppercase`.

This enables reverse iteration of lowercase/uppercase variants of character sequences.
One of use cases:  determining whether a char sequence is a suffix of another one.

Example:

```rust
fn endswith_ignore_case(s1: &str, s2: &str) -> bool {
    for eob in s1
        .chars()
        .flat_map(|c| c.to_lowercase())
        .rev()
        .zip_longest(s2.chars().flat_map(|c| c.to_lowercase()).rev())
    {
        match eob {
            EitherOrBoth::Both(c1, c2) => {
                if c1 != c2 {
                    return false;
                }
            }
            EitherOrBoth::Left(_) => return true,
            EitherOrBoth::Right(_) => return false,
        }
    }
    true
}
```
2021-12-23 00:28:51 +01:00
Ralf Jung
5994990088 disable test with self-referential generator on Miri 2021-12-20 12:33:55 +01:00
Matthias Krüger
6d2689526b
Rollup merge of #91141 - jhpratt:int_roundings, r=joshtriplett
Revert "Temporarily rename int_roundings functions to avoid conflicts"

This reverts commit 3ece63b64e.

This should be okay because #90329 has been merged.

r? `@joshtriplett`
2021-12-19 10:45:50 +01:00
bors
d3f300477b Auto merge of #92062 - matthiaskrgr:rollup-en3p4sb, r=matthiaskrgr
Rollup of 7 pull requests

Successful merges:

 - #91439 (Mark defaulted `PartialEq`/`PartialOrd` methods as const)
 - #91516 (Improve suggestion to change struct field to &mut)
 - #91896 (Remove `in_band_lifetimes` for `rustc_passes`)
 - #91909 (⬆️ rust-analyzer)
 - #91922 (Remove `in_band_lifetimes` from `rustc_mir_dataflow`)
 - #92025 (Revert "socket ancillary data implementation for dragonflybsd.")
 - #92030 (Update stdlib to the 2021 edition)

Failed merges:

r? `@ghost`
`@rustbot` modify labels: rollup
2021-12-18 10:20:24 +00:00
Matthias Krüger
359c88e426
Rollup merge of #91439 - ecstatic-morse:const-cmp-trait-default-methods, r=oli-obk
Mark defaulted `PartialEq`/`PartialOrd` methods as const

WIthout it, `const` impls of these traits are unpleasant to write. I think this kind of change is allowed now. although it looks like it might require some Miri tweaks. Let's find out.

r? ```@fee1-dead```
2021-12-18 10:26:35 +01:00
Matthias Krüger
fcc59794a7
Rollup merge of #91928 - fee1-dead:constification1, r=oli-obk
Constify (most) `Option` methods

r? ``@oli-obk``
2021-12-18 08:16:29 +01:00
bors
7abab1efb2 Auto merge of #91838 - scottmcm:array-slice-eq-via-arrays-not-slices, r=dtolnay
Do array-slice equality via array equality, rather than always via slices

~~Draft because it needs a rebase after #91766 eventually gets through bors.~~

This enables the optimizations from #85828 to be used for array-to-slice comparisons too, not just array-to-array.

For example, <https://play.rust-lang.org/?version=nightly&mode=release&edition=2021&gist=5f9ba69b3d5825a782f897c830d3a6aa>
```rust
pub fn demo(x: &[u8], y: [u8; 4]) -> bool {
    *x == y
}
```
Currently writes the array to stack for no reason:
```nasm
	sub	rsp, 4
	mov	dword ptr [rsp], edx
	cmp	rsi, 4
	jne	.LBB0_1
	mov	eax, dword ptr [rdi]
	cmp	eax, dword ptr [rsp]
	sete	al
	add	rsp, 4
	ret

.LBB0_1:
	xor	eax, eax
	add	rsp, 4
	ret
```
Whereas with the change in this PR it just compares it directly:
```nasm
	cmp	rsi, 4
	jne	.LBB1_1
	cmp	dword ptr [rdi], edx
	sete	al
	ret

.LBB1_1:
	xor	eax, eax
	ret
```
2021-12-17 19:17:29 +00:00
Deadbeef
6b5f63c3fc
Constify (most) Option methods 2021-12-17 20:46:47 +08:00
Dylan MacKenzie
2049287030 Disable test on bootstrap compiler 2021-12-16 22:11:17 -08:00
Dylan MacKenzie
1606335a93 Test const impl of cmp traits 2021-12-16 21:35:25 -08:00
oxalica
bae0da8361
Implement data and vtable getters for RawWaker 2021-12-17 04:30:13 +08:00
Matthias Krüger
13fb051074
Rollup merge of #91918 - fee1-dead:constification0-the-great-constification-begins, r=oli-obk
Constify `bool::then{,_some}`

Note on `~const Drop`: it has no effect when called from runtime functions, when called from const contexts, the trait system ensures that the type can be dropped in const contexts.
2021-12-15 10:57:03 +01:00
Scott McMurray
a0b96902e4 Do array-slice equality via arrays, rather than always via slices
This'll still go via slices eventually for large arrays, but this way slice comparisons to short arrays can use the same memcmp-avoidance tricks.

Added some tests for all the combinations to make sure I didn't accidentally infinitely-recurse something.
2021-12-14 13:15:15 -08:00
Deadbeef
4f4b2c7271
Constify bool::then{,_some} 2021-12-15 00:11:23 +08:00
Frank Steffahn
a957cefda6 Fix a bunch of typos 2021-12-14 16:40:43 +01:00
bors
f7fd79ac1d Auto merge of #91841 - matthiaskrgr:rollup-zlhsg5a, r=matthiaskrgr
Rollup of 5 pull requests

Successful merges:

 - #91086 (Implement `TryFrom<&'_ mut [T]>` for `[T; N]`)
 - #91091 (Stabilize `ControlFlow::{is_break, is_continue}`)
 - #91749 (BTree: improve public descriptions and comments)
 - #91819 (rustbot: Add autolabeling for `T-compiler`)
 - #91824 (Make `(*mut T)::write_bytes` `const`)

Failed merges:

r? `@ghost`
`@rustbot` modify labels: rollup
2021-12-13 00:56:18 +00:00
Matthias Krüger
9e662d0c03
Rollup merge of #91824 - woppopo:const_ptr_write_bytes, r=oli-obk
Make `(*mut T)::write_bytes` `const`

Tracking issue: #86302
2021-12-13 00:20:10 +01:00
Matthias Krüger
42f8d4833f
Rollup merge of #91086 - rhysd:issue-91085, r=m-ou-se
Implement `TryFrom<&'_ mut [T]>` for `[T; N]`

Fixes #91085.
2021-12-13 00:20:06 +01:00
woppopo
7f5dc0f609 Make (*mut T)::write_bytes const 2021-12-12 14:02:53 +09:00
Deadbeef
e22fe4008c
Revert "Auto merge of #89450 - usbalbin:const_try_revert, r=oli-obk"
This reverts commit a8387aef8c, reversing
changes made to 6e12110812.
2021-12-12 12:34:59 +08:00
Matthias Krüger
9383a49cd4
Rollup merge of #90081 - woppopo:const_write_bytes, r=oli-obk
Make `intrinsics::write_bytes` const

This is required to constify `MaybeUninit::zeroed` and `(*mut T)::write_bytes`.

Tracking issue: #86302
2021-12-11 23:31:48 +01:00
Matthias Krüger
ed81098fcc
Rollup merge of #91721 - danielhenrymantilla:patch-1, r=joshtriplett
Minor improvements to `future::join!`'s implementation

This is a follow-up from #91645, regarding [some remarks I made](https://rust-lang.zulipchat.com/#narrow/stream/187312-wg-async-foundations/topic/join!/near/264293660).

Mainly:
  - it hides the recursive munching through a private `macro`, to avoid leaking such details (a corollary is getting rid of the need to use ``@`` to disambiguate);
  - it uses a `match` binding, _outside_ the `async move` block, to better match the semantics from function-like syntax;
  - it pre-pins the future before calling into `poll_fn`, since `poll_fn`, alone, cannot guarantee that its capture does not move (to clarify: I believe the previous code was sound, thanks to the outer layer of `async`. But I find it clearer / more robust to refactorings this way 🙂).
  - it uses `@ibraheemdev's` very neat `.ready()?`;
  - it renames `Took` to `Taken` for consistency with `Done` (tiny nit 😄).

~~TODO~~Done:

  - [x] Add unit tests to enforce the function-like `:value` semantics are respected.

r? `@nrc`
2021-12-11 17:35:27 +01:00
Jethro Beekman
203cf2d366 Add rsplit_array variants to slices and arrays 2021-12-10 21:34:19 +01:00
Josh Triplett
67ab53daee
Update library/core/tests/future.rs
Co-authored-by: Daniel Henry-Mantilla <daniel.henry.mantilla@gmail.com>
2021-12-10 05:07:52 -08:00
Daniel Henry-Mantilla
f8dc13db43 Add tests asserting the function-like semantics of join!() 2021-12-09 22:57:30 +01:00
Matthias Krüger
90c3e9a2c2
Rollup merge of #91645 - ibraheemdev:future-join, r=joshtriplett
Implement `core::future::join!`

`join!` polls multiple futures concurrently and returns their outputs.

```rust
async fn run() {
    let (a, b) = join!(async { 0 }, async { 1 });
}
```

cc `@rust-lang/wg-async-foundations`
2021-12-09 05:02:22 +01:00
Ibraheem Ahmed
a8c9314100 remove implicit .await from core::future::join 2021-12-08 16:44:48 -05:00
bors
ce0f7baf56 Auto merge of #91512 - scottmcm:array-intoiter-advance, r=Mark-Simulacrum
Override `Iterator::advance(_back)_by` for `array::IntoIter`

Because I happened to notice that `nth` is currently getting codegen'd as a loop even for `Copy` types: <https://rust.godbolt.org/z/fPqv7Gvs7>

<details>
<summary>LLVM before and after</summary>

Rust:

```rust
#[no_mangle]
pub fn array_intoiter_nth(it: &mut std::array::IntoIter<i32, 100>, n: usize) -> Option<i32> {
    it.nth(n)
}
```

Current nightly:
```llvmir
define { i32, i32 } `@array_intoiter_nth(%"core::array::iter::IntoIter<i32,` 100_usize>"* noalias nocapture align 8 dereferenceable(416) %it, i64 %n) unnamed_addr #0 personality i32 (i32, i32, i64, %"unwind::libunwind::_Unwind_Exception"*, %"unwind::libunwind::_Unwind_Context"*)* `@rust_eh_personality` !dbg !6 {
start:
  %_3.i.i.i4.i.i = getelementptr inbounds %"core::array::iter::IntoIter<i32, 100_usize>", %"core::array::iter::IntoIter<i32, 100_usize>"* %it, i64 0, i32 0, i32 0
  %_4.i.i.i5.i.i = getelementptr inbounds %"core::array::iter::IntoIter<i32, 100_usize>", %"core::array::iter::IntoIter<i32, 100_usize>"* %it, i64 0, i32 0, i32 1
  %_4.i.i.i.i.i.i = load i64, i64* %_4.i.i.i5.i.i, align 8, !alias.scope !10
  %.not.i.i = icmp eq i64 %n, 0, !dbg !15
  %_3.i.i.i.i.pre.i = load i64, i64* %_3.i.i.i4.i.i, align 8, !dbg !40, !alias.scope !41
  br i1 %.not.i.i, label %bb4.i, label %bb4.preheader.i.i, !dbg !42

bb4.preheader.i.i:                                ; preds = %start
  %umax.i = tail call i64 `@llvm.umax.i64(i64` %_3.i.i.i.i.pre.i, i64 %_4.i.i.i.i.i.i) #3, !dbg !43
  %0 = sub i64 %umax.i, %_3.i.i.i.i.pre.i, !dbg !43
  br label %bb4.i.i, !dbg !43

bb4.i.i:                                          ; preds = %bb3.i.i.i.i, %bb4.preheader.i.i
  %_3.i.i.i.i.i.i = phi i64 [ %2, %bb3.i.i.i.i ], [ %_3.i.i.i.i.pre.i, %bb4.preheader.i.i ], !dbg !52
  %iter.sroa.0.016.i.i = phi i64 [ %1, %bb3.i.i.i.i ], [ 0, %bb4.preheader.i.i ]
  %1 = add nuw i64 %iter.sroa.0.016.i.i, 1, !dbg !54
  %exitcond.not.i = icmp eq i64 %iter.sroa.0.016.i.i, %0, !dbg !52
  br i1 %exitcond.not.i, label %core::iter::traits::iterator::Iterator::nth.exit, label %bb3.i.i.i.i, !dbg !43

bb3.i.i.i.i:                                      ; preds = %bb4.i.i
  %2 = add nuw i64 %_3.i.i.i.i.i.i, 1, !dbg !63
  store i64 %2, i64* %_3.i.i.i4.i.i, align 8, !dbg !66, !alias.scope !75
  %exitcond.not.i.i = icmp eq i64 %1, %n, !dbg !15
  br i1 %exitcond.not.i.i, label %bb4.i, label %bb4.i.i, !dbg !42

bb4.i:                                            ; preds = %bb3.i.i.i.i, %start
  %_3.i.i.i.i.i = phi i64 [ %_3.i.i.i.i.pre.i, %start ], [ %2, %bb3.i.i.i.i ], !dbg !84
  %3 = icmp ult i64 %_3.i.i.i.i.i, %_4.i.i.i.i.i.i, !dbg !84
  br i1 %3, label %bb3.i.i.i, label %core::iter::traits::iterator::Iterator::nth.exit, !dbg !89

bb3.i.i.i:                                        ; preds = %bb4.i
  %4 = add nuw i64 %_3.i.i.i.i.i, 1, !dbg !90
  store i64 %4, i64* %_3.i.i.i4.i.i, align 8, !dbg !93, !alias.scope !96
  %5 = getelementptr inbounds %"core::array::iter::IntoIter<i32, 100_usize>", %"core::array::iter::IntoIter<i32, 100_usize>"* %it, i64 0, i32 1, i64 %_3.i.i.i.i.i, !dbg !105
  %6 = load i32, i32* %5, align 4, !dbg !131, !alias.scope !141, !noalias !144
  br label %core::iter::traits::iterator::Iterator::nth.exit, !dbg !149

core::iter::traits::iterator::Iterator::nth.exit: ; preds = %bb4.i.i, %bb4.i, %bb3.i.i.i
  %.sroa.3.0.i = phi i32 [ %6, %bb3.i.i.i ], [ undef, %bb4.i ], [ undef, %bb4.i.i ], !dbg !40
  %.sroa.0.0.i = phi i32 [ 1, %bb3.i.i.i ], [ 0, %bb4.i ], [ 0, %bb4.i.i ], !dbg !40
  %7 = insertvalue { i32, i32 } undef, i32 %.sroa.0.0.i, 0, !dbg !150
  %8 = insertvalue { i32, i32 } %7, i32 %.sroa.3.0.i, 1, !dbg !150
  ret { i32, i32 } %8, !dbg !151
}
```

With this PR:
```llvmir
define { i32, i32 } `@array_intoiter_nth(%"core::array::iter::IntoIter<i32,` 100_usize>"* noalias nocapture align 8 dereferenceable(416) %it, i64 %n) unnamed_addr #0 personality i32 (...)* `@__CxxFrameHandler3` {
start:
  %0 = getelementptr inbounds %"core::array::iter::IntoIter<i32, 100_usize>", %"core::array::iter::IntoIter<i32, 100_usize>"* %it, i64 0, i32 0, i32 1
  %_2.i.i.i.i = load i64, i64* %0, align 8, !alias.scope !6, !noalias !13
  %1 = getelementptr inbounds %"core::array::iter::IntoIter<i32, 100_usize>", %"core::array::iter::IntoIter<i32, 100_usize>"* %it, i64 0, i32 0, i32 0
  %_3.i.i.i.i = load i64, i64* %1, align 8, !alias.scope !16
  %2 = sub i64 %_2.i.i.i.i, %_3.i.i.i.i
  %3 = icmp ult i64 %2, %n
  %.0.sroa.speculated.i.i.i.i.i = select i1 %3, i64 %2, i64 %n
  %_10.i.i = add i64 %.0.sroa.speculated.i.i.i.i.i, %_3.i.i.i.i
  store i64 %_10.i.i, i64* %1, align 8, !alias.scope !16
  %.not.i = xor i1 %3, true
  %4 = icmp ult i64 %_10.i.i, %_2.i.i.i.i
  %or.cond.i = select i1 %.not.i, i1 %4, i1 false
  br i1 %or.cond.i, label %bb3.i.i.i, label %_ZN4core4iter6traits8iterator8Iterator3nth17hcbc727011e9e2a3bE.exit

bb3.i.i.i:                                        ; preds = %start
  %5 = add nuw i64 %_10.i.i, 1
  store i64 %5, i64* %1, align 8, !alias.scope !17
  %6 = getelementptr inbounds %"core::array::iter::IntoIter<i32, 100_usize>", %"core::array::iter::IntoIter<i32, 100_usize>"* %it, i64 0, i32 1, i64 %_10.i.i
  %7 = load i32, i32* %6, align 4, !alias.scope !26, !noalias !29
  br label %_ZN4core4iter6traits8iterator8Iterator3nth17hcbc727011e9e2a3bE.exit

_ZN4core4iter6traits8iterator8Iterator3nth17hcbc727011e9e2a3bE.exit: ; preds = %start, %bb3.i.i.i
  %.sroa.3.0.i = phi i32 [ undef, %start ], [ %7, %bb3.i.i.i ]
  %.sroa.0.0.i = phi i32 [ 0, %start ], [ 1, %bb3.i.i.i ]
  %8 = insertvalue { i32, i32 } undef, i32 %.sroa.0.0.i, 0
  %9 = insertvalue { i32, i32 } %8, i32 %.sroa.3.0.i, 1
  ret { i32, i32 } %9
}
```
</details>
2021-12-08 07:54:30 +00:00
Ibraheem Ahmed
d07cef22b0 add tests for core::future::join 2021-12-07 21:20:58 -05:00
bors
11fb21fd0e Auto merge of #91484 - workingjubilee:simd-remove-autosplats, r=Mark-Simulacrum
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.
2021-12-08 01:37:59 +00:00
Mara Bos
1acb44f03c Use IntoIterator for array impl everywhere. 2021-12-04 19:40:33 +01:00
Scott McMurray
eb846dbaca Override Iterator::advance(_back)_by for array::IntoIter
Because I happened to notice that `nth` is currently getting codegen'd as a loop even for `Copy` types: <https://rust.godbolt.org/z/fPqv7Gvs7>
2021-12-03 21:36:51 -08:00
kit
aef59e4fb8 Add a try_reduce method to the Iterator trait 2021-12-04 15:17:14 +11:00
bors
d47a6cc3f2 Auto merge of #91286 - scottmcm:residual-trait, r=joshtriplett
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
2021-12-03 10:15:11 +00:00
Jubilee Young
eef4371a98 Force splatting in SIMD test 2021-12-02 19:22:00 -08:00
Matthias Krüger
fbfa003016
Rollup merge of #91444 - RalfJung:miri-tests, r=dtolnay
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.
2021-12-02 22:16:14 +01:00
Scott McMurray
b96b9b4093 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, despite the tracking issue 79711 still being open from the old PR 79713.
2021-12-02 11:23:50 -08:00
Matthias Krüger
d96ce3ea8e
Rollup merge of #91394 - Mark-Simulacrum:bump-stage0, r=pietroalbini
Bump stage0 compiler

r? `@pietroalbini` (or anyone else)
2021-12-02 15:52:03 +01:00
Ralf Jung
b11d88006c disable tests in Miri that take too long 2021-12-01 22:48:59 -05:00
Matthias Krüger
9f1f42897d
Rollup merge of #88502 - ibraheemdev:slice-take, r=dtolnay
Add slice take methods

Revival of #62282

This PR adds the following slice methods:

- `take`
- `take_mut`
- `take_first`
- `take_first_mut`
- `take_last`
- `take_last_mut`

r? `@LukasKalbertodt`
2021-12-01 20:57:42 +01:00
Mark Rousskov
b221c877e8 Apply cfg-bootstrap switch 2021-11-30 10:51:42 -05:00
Jacob Pratt
44b5b838d2
Add test for const MaybeUninit 2021-11-28 01:31:25 -05:00
bors
5fd3a5c7c1 Auto merge of #89916 - the8472:advance_by-avoid-err-0, r=dtolnay
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`.
2021-11-27 11:31:26 +00:00
woppopo
89b2e0c9d5 Make intrinsics::write_bytes const 2021-11-24 13:05:26 +09:00
Jacob Pratt
41f70f3491
Revert "Temporarily rename int_roundings functions to avoid conflicts"
This reverts commit 3ece63b64e.
2021-11-22 15:49:04 -05:00
Jacob Pratt
88b0d7cfc5
Partially stabilize duration_consts_2
Methods that were only blocked on `const_panic` have been stabilized.
The remaining methods of `duration_consts_2` are all related to floats,
and as such have been placed behind the `duration_consts_float` feature
gate.
2021-11-22 13:09:08 -05:00
David Tolnay
a4bff741d0
Test not never
Currently fails to build:

    error[E0600]: cannot apply unary operator `!` to type `!`
       --> library/core/tests/ops.rs:239:8
        |
    239 |     if !return () {}
        |        ^^^^^^^^^^ cannot apply unary operator `!`
2021-11-21 19:10:39 -08:00
rhysd
72b411fd89 Implement TryFrom<&'_ mut [T]> for [T; N] 2021-11-20 23:05:08 +09:00
Loïc BRANSTETT
a8ee0e9c2c Implement IEEE 754-2019 minimun and maximum functions for f32/f64 2021-11-20 10:14:03 +01:00
The8472
3f9b26dc64 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`.
2021-11-19 13:00:23 +01:00
Yuki Okushi
35dd1f65e9
Rollup merge of #90909 - RalfJung:miri-no-portable-simd, r=workingjubilee
disable portable SIMD tests in Miri

Until https://github.com/rust-lang/miri/issues/1912 is resolved, we'll have to skip these tests in Miri.
2021-11-16 09:14:23 +09:00
Ralf Jung
60595f7bde disable portable SIMD tests in Miri 2021-11-14 12:26:35 -05:00
bors
d212d902ae Auto merge of #89551 - jhpratt:stabilize-const_raw_ptr_deref, r=oli-obk
Stabilize `const_raw_ptr_deref` for `*const T`

This stabilizes dereferencing immutable raw pointers in const contexts.
It does not stabilize `*mut T` dereferencing. This is behind the
same feature gate as mutable references.

closes https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/51911
2021-11-13 17:10:15 +00:00
Ibraheem Ahmed
8db85a3c78 add slice take methods 2021-11-12 23:08:27 -05:00
bors
032dfe4360 Auto merge of #89167 - workingjubilee:use-simd, r=MarkSimulacrum
pub use core::simd;

A portable abstraction over SIMD has been a major pursuit in recent years for several programming languages. In Rust, `std::arch` offers explicit SIMD acceleration via compiler intrinsics, but it does so at the cost of having to individually maintain each and every single such API, and is almost completely `unsafe` to use.  `core::simd` offers safe abstractions that are resolved to the appropriate SIMD instructions by LLVM during compilation, including scalar instructions if that is all that is available.

`core::simd` is enabled by the `#![portable_simd]` nightly feature tracked in https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/86656 and is introduced here by pulling in the https://github.com/rust-lang/portable-simd repository as a subtree. We built the repository out-of-tree to allow faster compilation and a stochastic test suite backed by the proptest crate to verify that different targets, features, and optimizations produce the same result, so that using this library does not introduce any surprises. As these tests are technically non-deterministic, and thus can introduce overly interesting Heisenbugs if included in the rustc CI, they are visible in the commit history of the subtree but do nothing here. Some tests **are** introduced via the documentation, but these use deterministic asserts.

There are multiple unsolved problems with the library at the current moment, including a want for better documentation, technical issues with LLVM scalarizing and lowering to libm, room for improvement for the APIs, and so far I have not added the necessary plumbing for allowing the more experimental or libm-dependent APIs to be used. However, I thought it would be prudent to open this for review in its current condition, as it is both usable and it is likely I am going to learn something else needs to be fixed when bors tries this out.

The major types are
- `core::simd::Simd<T, N>`
- `core::simd::Mask<T, N>`

There is also the `LaneCount` struct, which, together with the SimdElement and SupportedLaneCount traits, limit the implementation's maximum support to vectors we know will actually compile and provide supporting logic for bitmasks. I'm hoping to simplify at least some of these out of the way as the compiler and library evolve.
2021-11-13 02:17:20 +00:00
Jubilee Young
7c3d72d069 Test core::simd works
These tests just verify some basic APIs of core::simd function, and
guarantees that attempting to access the wrong things doesn't work.
The majority of tests are stochastic, and so remain upstream, but
a few deterministic tests arrive in the subtree as doc tests.
2021-11-12 16:58:47 -08:00
Jacob Pratt
0cdbeaa2a3
Stabilize const_raw_ptr_deref for *const T
This stabilizes dereferencing immutable raw pointers in const contexts.
It does not stabilize `*mut T` dereferencing. This is placed behind the
`const_raw_mut_ptr_deref` feature gate.
2021-11-06 17:05:15 -04:00
Matthias Krüger
d4bdcdb1ec
Rollup merge of #89951 - ojeda:stable-unwrap_unchecked, r=dtolnay
Stabilize `option_result_unwrap_unchecked`

Closes https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/81383.

Stabilization report: https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/81383#issuecomment-944498212.

```@rustbot``` label +A-option-result +T-libs-api
2021-10-31 09:20:27 +01:00
Matthias Krüger
a26b1d2259
Rollup merge of #89835 - jkugelman:must-use-expensive-computations, r=joshtriplett
Add #[must_use] to expensive computations

The unifying theme for this commit is weak, admittedly. I put together a list of "expensive" functions when I originally proposed this whole effort, but nobody's cared about that criterion. Still, it's a decent way to bite off a not-too-big chunk of work.

Given the grab bag nature of this commit, the messages I used vary quite a bit. I'm open to wording changes.

For some reason clippy flagged four `BTreeSet` methods but didn't say boo about equivalent ones on `HashSet`. I stared at them for a while but I can't figure out the difference so I added the `HashSet` ones in.

```rust
// Flagged by clippy.
alloc::collections::btree_set::BTreeSet<T>   fn difference<'a>(&'a self, other: &'a BTreeSet<T>) -> Difference<'a, T>;
alloc::collections::btree_set::BTreeSet<T>   fn symmetric_difference<'a>(&'a self, other: &'a BTreeSet<T>) -> SymmetricDifference<'a, T>
alloc::collections::btree_set::BTreeSet<T>   fn intersection<'a>(&'a self, other: &'a BTreeSet<T>) -> Intersection<'a, T>;
alloc::collections::btree_set::BTreeSet<T>   fn union<'a>(&'a self, other: &'a BTreeSet<T>) -> Union<'a, T>;

// Ignored by clippy, but not by me.
std::collections::HashSet<T, S>              fn difference<'a>(&'a self, other: &'a HashSet<T, S>) -> Difference<'a, T, S>;
std::collections::HashSet<T, S>              fn symmetric_difference<'a>(&'a self, other: &'a HashSet<T, S>) -> SymmetricDifference<'a, T, S>
std::collections::HashSet<T, S>              fn intersection<'a>(&'a self, other: &'a HashSet<T, S>) -> Intersection<'a, T, S>;
std::collections::HashSet<T, S>              fn union<'a>(&'a self, other: &'a HashSet<T, S>) -> Union<'a, T, S>;
```

Parent issue: #89692

r? ```@joshtriplett```
2021-10-31 09:20:24 +01:00
bors
235d9853d8 Auto merge of #90042 - pietroalbini:1.56-master, r=Mark-Simulacrum
Bump bootstrap compiler to 1.57

Fixes https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/90152

r? `@Mark-Simulacrum`
2021-10-25 11:31:47 +00:00
Matthias Krüger
c16ee19dd4
Rollup merge of #90162 - WaffleLapkin:const_array_slice_from_ref_mut, r=oli-obk
Mark `{array, slice}::{from_ref, from_mut}` as const fn

This PR marks the following APIs as `const`:
```rust
// core::array
pub const fn from_ref<T>(s: &T) -> &[T; 1];
pub const fn from_mut<T>(s: &mut T) -> &mut [T; 1];

// core::slice
pub const fn from_ref<T>(s: &T) -> &[T];
pub const fn from_mut<T>(s: &mut T) -> &mut [T];
```

Note that `from_ref` methods require `const_raw_ptr_deref` feature (which seems totally fine, since it's being stabilized, see #89551), `from_mut` methods require `const_mut_refs` (which seems fine too since this PR marks `from_mut` functions as const unstable).

r? ````@oli-obk````
2021-10-24 15:48:44 +02:00
Pietro Albini
b63ab8005a update cfg(bootstrap) 2021-10-23 21:55:57 -04:00
Maybe Waffle
5f390cfb72 Add tests for const_slice_from_ref and const_array_from_ref 2021-10-23 22:51:22 +03:00
Matthias Krüger
5ea0274563
Rollup merge of #83233 - jethrogb:split_array, r=yaahc
Implement split_array and split_array_mut

This implements `[T]::split_array::<const N>() -> (&[T; N], &[T])` and `[T; N]::split_array::<const M>() -> (&[T; M], &[T])` and their mutable equivalents. These are another few “missing” array implementations now that const generics are a thing, similar to #74373, #75026, etc. Fixes #74674.

This implements `[T; N]::split_array` returning an array and a slice. Ultimately, this is probably not what we want, we would want the second return value to be an array of length N-M, which will likely be possible with future const generics enhancements. We need to implement the array method now though, to immediately shadow the slice method. This way, when the slice methods get stabilized, calling them on an array will not be automatic through coercion, so we won't have trouble stabilizing the array methods later (cf. into_iter debacle).

An unchecked version of `[T]::split_array` could also be added as in #76014. This would not be needed for `[T; N]::split_array` as that can be compile-time checked. Edit: actually, since split_at_unchecked is internal-only it could be changed to be split_array-only.
2021-10-23 05:28:19 +02:00
Jethro Beekman
4a439769ec Implement split_array and split_array_mut 2021-10-22 09:58:24 +02:00
woppopo
2fc780638e Make From impls of NonZero integer const.
I also changed the feature gate added to `From` impls of Atomic integer to `const_num_from_num` from `const_convert`.
2021-10-20 12:04:58 +09:00
Miguel Ojeda
63d7882575 Stabilize option_result_unwrap_unchecked
Closes https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/81383.

Signed-off-by: Miguel Ojeda <ojeda@kernel.org>
2021-10-20 04:03:43 +02:00
Yuki Okushi
9f2ad0a061
Rollup merge of #90009 - woppopo:const_from_more, r=dtolnay
Make more `From` impls `const` (libcore)

Adding `const` to `From` implementations in the core. `rustc_const_unstable` attribute is not added to unstable implementations.

Tracking issue: #88674

<details>
<summary>Done</summary><div>

- `T` from `T`
- `T` from `!`
- `Option<T>` from `T`
- `Option<&T>` from `&Option<T>`
- `Option<&mut T>` from `&mut Option<T>`
- `Cell<T>` from `T`
- `RefCell<T>` from `T`
- `UnsafeCell<T>` from `T`
- `OnceCell<T>` from `T`
- `Poll<T>` from `T`
- `u32` from `char`
- `u64` from `char`
- `u128` from `char`
- `char` from `u8`
- `AtomicBool` from `bool`
- `AtomicPtr<T>` from `*mut T`
- `AtomicI(bits)` from `i(bits)`
- `AtomicU(bits)` from `u(bits)`
- `i(bits)` from `NonZeroI(bits)`
- `u(bits)` from `NonZeroU(bits)`
- `NonNull<T>` from `Unique<T>`
- `NonNull<T>` from `&T`
- `NonNull<T>` from `&mut T`
- `Unique<T>` from `&mut T`
- `Infallible` from `!`
- `TryIntError` from `!`
- `TryIntError` from `Infallible`
- `TryFromSliceError` from `Infallible`
- `FromResidual for Option<T>`
</div></details>

<details>
<summary>Remaining</summary><dev>

- `NonZero` from `NonZero`
These can't be made const at this time because these use Into::into.
https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/blob/master/library/core/src/convert/num.rs#L393

- `std`, `alloc`
There may still be many implementations that can be made `const`.
</div></details>
2021-10-20 04:35:15 +09:00
Yuki Okushi
ca6798ab07
Rollup merge of #86479 - exphp-forks:float-debug-exponential, r=yaahc
Automatic exponential formatting in Debug

Context: See [this comment from the libs team](https://github.com/rust-lang/rfcs/pull/2729#issuecomment-853454204)

---

Makes `"{:?}"` switch to exponential for floats based on magnitude. The libs team suggested exploring this idea in the discussion thread for RFC rust-lang/rfcs#2729. (**note:** this is **not** an implementation of the RFC; it is an implementation of one of the alternatives)

Thresholds chosen were 1e-4 and 1e16.  Justification described [here](https://github.com/rust-lang/rfcs/pull/2729#issuecomment-864482954).

**This will require a crater run.**

---

As mentioned in the commit message of 8731d4dfb4, this behavior will not apply when a precision is supplied, because I wanted to preserve the following existing and useful behavior of `{:.PREC?}` (which recursively applies `{:.PREC}` to floats in a struct):

```rust
assert_eq!(
    format!("{:.2?}", [100.0, 0.000004]),
    "[100.00, 0.00]",
)
```

I looked around and am not sure where there are any tests that actually use this in the test suite, though?

All things considered, I'm surprised that this change did not seem to break even a single existing test in `x.py test --stage 2`.  (even when I tried a smaller threshold of 1e6)
2021-10-20 04:35:10 +09:00
woppopo
7936ecff48 Make more From impls const 2021-10-18 19:19:28 +09:00
woppopo
ea28abee28 Make Result::as_mut const 2021-10-17 18:39:54 +09:00
woppopo
d1f7608699 Add #![cfg_attr(bootstrap, feature(const_panic))] to library/core/tests/lib.rs 2021-10-17 00:32:01 +09:00
woppopo
00dba3a693 Make Option::as_mut const 2021-10-17 00:02:42 +09:00
bors
1dafe6d1c3 Auto merge of #88540 - ibraheemdev:swap-unchecked, r=kennytm
add `slice::swap_unchecked`

An unsafe version of `slice::swap` that does not do bounds checking.
2021-10-15 09:35:45 +00:00
John Kugelman
21f4677744 Add #[must_use] to expensive computations
The unifying theme for this commit is weak, admittedly. I put together a
list of "expensive" functions when I originally proposed this whole
effort, but nobody's cared about that criterion. Still, it's a decent
way to bite off a not-too-big chunk of work.

Given the grab bag nature of this commit, the messages I used vary quite
a bit.
2021-10-12 23:27:17 -04:00
bors
ffdf18d144 Auto merge of #88788 - falk-hueffner:speedup-int-log10-branchless, r=joshtriplett
Speedup int log10 branchless

This is achieved with a branchless bit-twiddling implementation of the case x < 100_000, and using this as building block.

Benchmark on an Intel i7-8700K (Coffee Lake):

```
name                                   old ns/iter  new ns/iter  diff ns/iter   diff %  speedup
num::int_log::u8_log10_predictable     165          169                     4    2.42%   x 0.98
num::int_log::u8_log10_random          438          423                   -15   -3.42%   x 1.04
num::int_log::u8_log10_random_small    438          423                   -15   -3.42%   x 1.04
num::int_log::u16_log10_predictable    633          417                  -216  -34.12%   x 1.52
num::int_log::u16_log10_random         908          471                  -437  -48.13%   x 1.93
num::int_log::u16_log10_random_small   945          471                  -474  -50.16%   x 2.01
num::int_log::u32_log10_predictable    1,496        1,340                -156  -10.43%   x 1.12
num::int_log::u32_log10_random         1,076        873                  -203  -18.87%   x 1.23
num::int_log::u32_log10_random_small   1,145        874                  -271  -23.67%   x 1.31
num::int_log::u64_log10_predictable    4,005        3,171                -834  -20.82%   x 1.26
num::int_log::u64_log10_random         1,247        1,021                -226  -18.12%   x 1.22
num::int_log::u64_log10_random_small   1,265        921                  -344  -27.19%   x 1.37
num::int_log::u128_log10_predictable   39,667       39,579                -88   -0.22%   x 1.00
num::int_log::u128_log10_random        6,456        6,696                 240    3.72%   x 0.96
num::int_log::u128_log10_random_small  4,108        3,903                -205   -4.99%   x 1.05
```

Benchmark on an M1 Mac Mini:

```
name                                   old ns/iter  new ns/iter  diff ns/iter   diff %  speedup
num::int_log::u8_log10_predictable     143          130                   -13   -9.09%   x 1.10
num::int_log::u8_log10_random          375          325                   -50  -13.33%   x 1.15
num::int_log::u8_log10_random_small    376          325                   -51  -13.56%   x 1.16
num::int_log::u16_log10_predictable    500          322                  -178  -35.60%   x 1.55
num::int_log::u16_log10_random         794          405                  -389  -48.99%   x 1.96
num::int_log::u16_log10_random_small   1,035        405                  -630  -60.87%   x 2.56
num::int_log::u32_log10_predictable    1,144        894                  -250  -21.85%   x 1.28
num::int_log::u32_log10_random         832          786                   -46   -5.53%   x 1.06
num::int_log::u32_log10_random_small   832          787                   -45   -5.41%   x 1.06
num::int_log::u64_log10_predictable    2,681        2,057                -624  -23.27%   x 1.30
num::int_log::u64_log10_random         1,015        806                  -209  -20.59%   x 1.26
num::int_log::u64_log10_random_small   1,004        795                  -209  -20.82%   x 1.26
num::int_log::u128_log10_predictable   56,825       56,526               -299   -0.53%   x 1.01
num::int_log::u128_log10_random        9,056        8,861                -195   -2.15%   x 1.02
num::int_log::u128_log10_random_small  1,528        1,527                  -1   -0.07%   x 1.00
```

The 128 bit case remains ridiculously slow because llvm fails to optimize division by a constant 128-bit value to multiplications. This could be worked around but it seems preferable to fix this in llvm.

From u32 up, table lookup (like suggested [here](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/70887#issuecomment-881099813)) is still faster, but requires a hardware `leading_zeros` to be viable, and might clog up the cache.
2021-10-12 03:18:54 +00:00
Ibraheem Ahmed
c517a0de3e add slice::swap tests 2021-10-11 16:16:20 -04:00
Guillaume Gomez
86bf3ce859
Rollup merge of #75644 - c410-f3r:array, r=yaahc
Add 'core::array::from_fn' and 'core::array::try_from_fn'

These auxiliary methods fill uninitialized arrays in a safe way and are particularly useful for elements that don't implement `Default`.

```rust
// Foo doesn't implement Default
struct Foo(usize);

let _array = core::array::from_fn::<_, _, 2>(|idx| Foo(idx));
```

Different from `FromIterator`, it is guaranteed that the array will be fully filled and no error regarding uninitialized state will be throw. In certain scenarios, however, the creation of an **element** can fail and that is why the `try_from_fn` function is also provided.

```rust
#[derive(Debug, PartialEq)]
enum SomeError {
    Foo,
}

let array = core::array::try_from_fn(|i| Ok::<_, SomeError>(i));
assert_eq!(array, Ok([0, 1, 2, 3, 4]));

let another_array = core::array::try_from_fn(|_| Err(SomeError::Foo));
assert_eq!(another_array, Err(SomeError::Foo));
 ```
2021-10-09 17:08:38 +02:00
Caio
85c4a52807 Also cfg flag auxiliar function 2021-10-08 06:40:24 -03:00
Jane Lusby
8965b5884a
Revert "Stabilize Iterator::intersperse()" 2021-10-07 10:39:36 -07:00
Manish Goregaokar
4e8c853c9e
Rollup merge of #89502 - FabianWolff:issue-89493, r=joshtriplett
Fix Lower/UpperExp formatting for integers and precision zero

Fixes the integer part of #89493 (I daren't touch the floating-point formatting code). The issue is that the "subtracted" precision essentially behaves like extra trailing zeros, but this is not currently reflected in the code properly.
2021-10-05 12:52:46 -07:00
Jubilee
ca8a10845f
Rollup merge of #87091 - the8472:more-advance-by-impls, r=joshtriplett
implement advance_(back_)_by on more iterators

Add more efficient, non-default implementations for `feature(iter_advance_by)` (#77404) on more iterators and adapters.

This PR only contains implementations where skipping over items doesn't elide any observable side-effects such as user-provided closures or `clone()` functions. I'll put those in a separate PR.
2021-10-04 13:58:07 -07:00
Manish Goregaokar
287af0403a
Rollup merge of #86828 - lambinoo:67441-const-fn-copied-take-replace, r=joshtriplett
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!
2021-10-03 23:13:16 -07:00
Josh Triplett
199b33f0d7
Use a test value that doesn't depend on the handling of even/odd rounding 2021-10-03 20:15:12 -07:00
Fabian Wolff
e3996ffcb6 Fix Lower/UpperExp formatting for integers and precision zero 2021-10-03 23:05:03 +02:00
Caio
91ad91efb6 Skip platforms without unwinding support 2021-10-03 12:25:23 -03:00
Albin Hedman
81bb5a54c3
Revert "Auto merge of #86853 - usbalbin:const_try, r=oli-obk"
This reverts commit c6007fdc70, reversing
changes made to 69c1c6a173.
2021-10-02 00:07:48 +02:00
The8472
2c6e67105e implement advance_(back_)_by on more iterators 2021-09-30 21:23:28 +02:00
Caio
4be574e6c9 Add 'core::array::from_fn' and 'core::array::try_from_fn' 2021-09-30 07:49:32 -03:00
bors
c6007fdc70 Auto merge of #86853 - usbalbin:const_try, r=oli-obk
Constify ?-operator for Result and Option

Try to make `?`-operator usable in `const fn` with `Result` and `Option`, see #74935 . Note that the try-operator itself was constified in #87237.

TODO
* [x] Add tests for const T -> T conversions
* [x] cleanup commits
* [x] Remove `#![allow(incomplete_features)]`
* [?] Await decision in #86808 - I'm not sure
* [x] Await support for parsing `~const` in bootstrapping compiler
* [x] Tracking issue(s)? - #88674
2021-09-30 10:35:24 +00:00
bors
f06f9bbd3a Auto merge of #88999 - Migi:master, r=oli-obk
Make `Duration` respect `width` when formatting using `Debug`

When printing or writing a `std::time::Duration` using `Debug` formatting, it previously completely ignored any specified `width`. This is unlike types like integers and floats, which do pad to `width`, for both `Display` and `Debug`, though not all types consider `width` in their `Debug` output (see e.g. #30164). Curiously, `Duration`'s `Debug` formatting *did* consider `precision`.

This PR makes `Duration` pad to `width` just like integers and floats, so that
```rust
format!("|{:8?}|", Duration::from_millis(1234))
```
returns
```
|1.234s  |
```

Before you ask "who formats `Debug` output?", note that `Duration` doesn't actually implement `Display`, so `Debug` is currently the only way to format `Duration`s. I think that's wrong, and `Duration` should get a `Display` implementation, but in the meantime there's no harm in making the `Debug` formatting respect `width` rather than ignore it.

I chose the default alignment to be left-aligned. The general rule Rust uses is: numeric types are right-aligned by default, non-numeric types left-aligned. It wasn't clear to me whether `Duration` is a numeric type or not. The fact that a formatted `Duration` can end with suffixes of variable length (`"s"`, `"ms"`, `"µs"`, etc.) made me lean towards left-alignment, but it would be trivial to change it.

Fixes issue #88059.
2021-09-24 15:22:26 +00:00
Josh Triplett
3ece63b64e Temporarily rename int_roundings functions to avoid conflicts
These functions are unstable, but because they're inherent they still
introduce conflicts with stable trait functions in crates. Temporarily
rename them to fix these conflicts, until we can resolve those conflicts
in a better way.
2021-09-22 13:56:01 -07:00
Maybe Waffle
71e2eacc7b Stabilize Iterator::map_while 2021-09-17 19:42:46 +03:00
Michiel De Muynck
77ceb2b5d8 Make Duration's Debug format pad to width
Duration's Debug formatting previously ignored the width parameter.
This commit fixes that.

Fixes issue #88059.
2021-09-16 03:09:31 +02:00
Albin Hedman
3051bb9c81
Move tests to library/core/tests 2021-09-15 16:58:02 +02:00
Michael Spector
83925dd453 Allow reverse iteration of lowercase'd/uppercase'd chars 2021-09-11 18:40:04 +03:00
Fabian Wolff
79adda930f Ignore automatically derived impls of Clone and Debug in dead code analysis 2021-09-09 19:49:07 +02:00
Falk Hüffner
d53c483502 Speed up integer log10.
This is achieved with a branchless bit-twiddling implementation of the
case x < 100_000, and using this as building block.

Benchmark on an Intel i7-8700K (Coffee Lake):

name                                   old ns/iter  new ns/iter  diff ns/iter   diff %  speedup
num::int_log::u8_log10_predictable     165          169                     4    2.42%   x 0.98
num::int_log::u8_log10_random          438          423                   -15   -3.42%   x 1.04
num::int_log::u8_log10_random_small    438          423                   -15   -3.42%   x 1.04
num::int_log::u16_log10_predictable    633          417                  -216  -34.12%   x 1.52
num::int_log::u16_log10_random         908          471                  -437  -48.13%   x 1.93
num::int_log::u16_log10_random_small   945          471                  -474  -50.16%   x 2.01
num::int_log::u32_log10_predictable    1,496        1,340                -156  -10.43%   x 1.12
num::int_log::u32_log10_random         1,076        873                  -203  -18.87%   x 1.23
num::int_log::u32_log10_random_small   1,145        874                  -271  -23.67%   x 1.31
num::int_log::u64_log10_predictable    4,005        3,171                -834  -20.82%   x 1.26
num::int_log::u64_log10_random         1,247        1,021                -226  -18.12%   x 1.22
num::int_log::u64_log10_random_small   1,265        921                  -344  -27.19%   x 1.37
num::int_log::u128_log10_predictable   39,667       39,579                -88   -0.22%   x 1.00
num::int_log::u128_log10_random        6,456        6,696                 240    3.72%   x 0.96
num::int_log::u128_log10_random_small  4,108        3,903                -205   -4.99%   x 1.05

Benchmark on an M1 Mac Mini:

name                                   old ns/iter  new ns/iter  diff ns/iter   diff %  speedup
num::int_log::u8_log10_predictable     143          130                   -13   -9.09%   x 1.10
num::int_log::u8_log10_random          375          325                   -50  -13.33%   x 1.15
num::int_log::u8_log10_random_small    376          325                   -51  -13.56%   x 1.16
num::int_log::u16_log10_predictable    500          322                  -178  -35.60%   x 1.55
num::int_log::u16_log10_random         794          405                  -389  -48.99%   x 1.96
num::int_log::u16_log10_random_small   1,035        405                  -630  -60.87%   x 2.56
num::int_log::u32_log10_predictable    1,144        894                  -250  -21.85%   x 1.28
num::int_log::u32_log10_random         832          786                   -46   -5.53%   x 1.06
num::int_log::u32_log10_random_small   832          787                   -45   -5.41%   x 1.06
num::int_log::u64_log10_predictable    2,681        2,057                -624  -23.27%   x 1.30
num::int_log::u64_log10_random         1,015        806                  -209  -20.59%   x 1.26
num::int_log::u64_log10_random_small   1,004        795                  -209  -20.82%   x 1.26
num::int_log::u128_log10_predictable   56,825       56,526               -299   -0.53%   x 1.01
num::int_log::u128_log10_random        9,056        8,861                -195   -2.15%   x 1.02
num::int_log::u128_log10_random_small  1,528        1,527                  -1   -0.07%   x 1.00

The 128 bit case remains ridiculously slow because llvm fails to optimize division by
a constant 128-bit value to multiplications. This could be worked around but it seems
preferable to fix this in llvm.

From u32 up, table lookup (like suggested here
https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/70887#issuecomment-881099813) is still
faster, but requires a hardware leading_zero to be viable, and might clog up the
cache.
2021-09-09 18:14:47 +02:00
Falk Hüffner
d760c33183 Change return type for T::{log,log2,log10} to u32. The value is at
most 128, and this is consistent with using u32 for small values
elsewhere (e.g. BITS, count_ones, leading_zeros).
2021-09-05 17:09:21 +02:00
Mara Bos
80b572b5e5
Rollup merge of #88507 - atsuzaki:slice-fill-maybeuninit-test, r=RalfJung
Add test case for using `slice::fill` with MaybeUninit

Adds test for #87891

Looks alright? `@RalfJung`
Fixes #87891
2021-09-03 13:30:47 +02:00
Mara Bos
2159c5db63
Rollup merge of #88582 - jhpratt:int_roundings, r=joshtriplett
Implement #88581

See #88581 for details. This API was discussed on Zulip.

`@rustbot` label: +T-libs-api +S-waiting-on-review

r? `@joshtriplett`
2021-09-02 19:10:22 +02:00
Jacob Pratt
727a4fc7e3
Implement #88581 2021-09-02 01:53:54 -04:00
Mara Bos
d31352961c
Rollup merge of #88551 - inquisitivecrystal:unsafe_cell_raw_get, r=m-ou-se
Stabilize `UnsafeCell::raw_get()`

This PR stabilizes the associated function `UnsafeCell::raw_get()`. The FCP has [already completed](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/66358#issuecomment-899095068). While there was some discussion about the naming after the close of the FCP, it looks like people have agreed on this name. Still, it would probably be best if a `libs-api` member had a look at this and stated whether more discussion is needed.

While I was at it, I added some tests for `UnsafeCell`, because there were barely any.

Closes #66358.
2021-09-01 09:23:31 +02:00
inquisitivecrystal
227e004d3f Add a few tests for UnsafeCell 2021-08-31 16:32:01 -07:00
inquisitivecrystal
06dd4c03a0 Stabilize Iterator::intersperse() 2021-08-31 14:50:18 -07:00
Katherine Philip
5390ea4644 Move to the top of file 2021-08-31 08:28:51 -07:00
Katherine Philip
8cecac2602 Add test case for using slice::fill with MaybeUninit 2021-08-30 13:20:11 -07:00
Lamb
10ddabc194
const fn for option copied, take & replace + tests
fix: move test that require mut to another

Adding TODOs for Option::take and Option::copied

TODO to FIXME + moving const stability under normal

Moving const stability attr under normal stab attr

move more rustc stability attributes
2021-08-29 13:19:17 +02:00
ibraheemdev
58f988fa40 move object safety test to library/core 2021-08-15 13:00:25 -04:00
Yuki Okushi
9d21b5a39d
Rollup merge of #87876 - lcnr:windows_no_panic, r=m-ou-se
add `windows` count test

cc #87767
2021-08-11 04:18:43 +09:00
Yuki Okushi
bdc92f10e7
Rollup merge of #87636 - Kixiron:unzip-option, r=scottmcm
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
2021-08-11 04:18:34 +09:00
Chase Wilson
9d8081e8b6
Enabled unzip_option feature for core tests & unzip docs 2021-08-09 10:24:02 -05:00
Chase Wilson
eea3520a8f
Added some basic tests for Option::unzip() and Option::zip() (I noticed that zip had no tests) 2021-08-09 10:24:00 -05:00
lcnr
24aa45c95e add windows count test 2021-08-09 11:08:39 +02:00
Albin Hedman
c8bf5ed628
Add test for int to float 2021-08-07 19:03:34 +02:00
Albin Hedman
09928a9a20
Add tests 2021-08-07 19:03:33 +02:00
bors
effea9a2a0 Auto merge of #87689 - JohnTitor:rollup-ns38b56, r=JohnTitor
Rollup of 13 pull requests

Successful merges:

 - #86183 (Change environment variable getters to error recoverably)
 - #86439 (Remove `Ipv4Addr::is_ietf_protocol_assignment`)
 - #86509 (Move `os_str_bytes` to `sys::unix`)
 - #86593 (Partially stabilize `const_slice_first_last`)
 - #86936 (Add documentation for `Ipv6MulticastScope`)
 - #87282 (Ensure `./x.py dist` adheres to `build.tools`)
 - #87468 (Update rustfmt)
 - #87504 (Update mdbook.)
 - #87608 (Remove unused field `Session.system_library_path`)
 - #87629 (Consistent spelling of "adapter" in the standard library)
 - #87633 (Update compiler_builtins to fix i128 shift/mul on thumbv6m)
 - #87644 (Recommend `swap_remove` in `Vec::remove` docs)
 - #87653 (mark a UB doctest as no_run)

Failed merges:

r? `@ghost`
`@rustbot` modify labels: rollup
2021-08-02 02:33:16 +00:00
Yuki Okushi
87c143661c
Rollup merge of #87629 - steffahn:consistent_adapter_spelling, r=m-ou-se
Consistent spelling of "adapter" in the standard library

Change all occurrences of "(A|a)daptor" to "(A|a)dapter".

The spelling “adapter” seems to be significantly more common both in general in the English language and also in the `rust` repository and standard library. I don’t like the inconsistency that’s currently found on pages like https://doc.rust-lang.org/std/iter/trait.Iterator.html. Note however that the Rust book consistently uses the spelling “iterator adaptor”.

Related discussion [on Zulip](https://rust-lang.zulipchat.com/#narrow/stream/219381-t-libs/topic/adapter.20.2F.20adaptor) ([in the archive](https://zulip-archive.rust-lang.org/219381tlibs/60284adapteradaptor.html)).

`@rustbot` label T-libs
2021-08-02 11:03:28 +09:00
bors
24bbf7ac2f Auto merge of #85272 - ChayimFriedman2:matches-leading-pipe, r=m-ou-se
Allow leading pipe in `matches!()` patterns.

This is allowed in `match` statement, and stated in https://internals.rust-lang.org/t/leading-pipe-in-core-matches/14699/2 that it should be allowed in these macros too.
2021-08-02 00:13:40 +00:00
Frank Steffahn
8d2bb9389a Consistent spelling of "adapter" in the standard library
Change all occurrences of "(A|a)daptor" to "(A|a)dapter".
2021-07-30 17:23:07 +02:00
Tim Vermeulen
5e90909f38 Add tests 2021-07-22 22:05:41 +02:00
bors
fabf502a7a Auto merge of #87168 - the8472:flatten-len, r=scottmcm
implement TrustedLen for Flatten/FlatMap if the U: IntoIterator == [T; N]

This only works if arrays are passed directly instead of array iterators
because we need to be sure that they have not been advanced before
Flatten does its size calculation.

resolves #87094
2021-07-20 23:47:48 +00:00
bors
f502bd3abd Auto merge of #86761 - Alexhuszagh:master, r=estebank
Update Rust Float-Parsing Algorithms to use the Eisel-Lemire algorithm.

# Summary

Rust, although it implements a correct float parser, has major performance issues in float parsing. Even for common floats, the performance can be 3-10x [slower](https://arxiv.org/pdf/2101.11408.pdf) than external libraries such as [lexical](https://github.com/Alexhuszagh/rust-lexical) and [fast-float-rust](https://github.com/aldanor/fast-float-rust).

Recently, major advances in float-parsing algorithms have been developed by Daniel Lemire, along with others, and implement a fast, performant, and correct float parser, with speeds up to 1200 MiB/s on Apple's M1 architecture for the [canada](0e2b5d163d/data/canada.txt) dataset, 10x faster than Rust's 130 MiB/s.

In addition, [edge-cases](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/85234) in Rust's [dec2flt](868c702d0c/library/core/src/num/dec2flt) algorithm can lead to over a 1600x slowdown relative to efficient algorithms. This is due to the use of Clinger's correct, but slow [AlgorithmM and Bellepheron](http://citeseerx.ist.psu.edu/viewdoc/download?doi=10.1.1.45.4152&rep=rep1&type=pdf), which have been improved by faster big-integer algorithms and the Eisel-Lemire algorithm, respectively.

Finally, this algorithm provides substantial improvements in the number of floats the Rust core library can parse. Denormal floats with a large number of digits cannot be parsed, due to use of the `Big32x40`, which simply does not have enough digits to round a float correctly. Using a custom decimal class, with much simpler logic, we can parse all valid decimal strings of any digit count.

```rust
// Issue in Rust's dec2fly.
"2.47032822920623272088284396434110686182e-324".parse::<f64>();   // Err(ParseFloatError { kind: Invalid })
```

# Solution

This pull request implements the Eisel-Lemire algorithm, modified from [fast-float-rust](https://github.com/aldanor/fast-float-rust) (which is licensed under Apache 2.0/MIT), along with numerous modifications to make it more amenable to inclusion in the Rust core library. The following describes both features in fast-float-rust and improvements in fast-float-rust for inclusion in core.

**Documentation**

Extensive documentation has been added to ensure the code base may be maintained by others, which explains the algorithms as well as various associated constants and routines. For example, two seemingly magical constants include documentation to describe how they were derived as follows:

```rust
    // Round-to-even only happens for negative values of q
    // when q ≥ −4 in the 64-bit case and when q ≥ −17 in
    // the 32-bitcase.
    //
    // When q ≥ 0,we have that 5^q ≤ 2m+1. In the 64-bit case,we
    // have 5^q ≤ 2m+1 ≤ 2^54 or q ≤ 23. In the 32-bit case,we have
    // 5^q ≤ 2m+1 ≤ 2^25 or q ≤ 10.
    //
    // When q < 0, we have w ≥ (2m+1)×5^−q. We must have that w < 2^64
    // so (2m+1)×5^−q < 2^64. We have that 2m+1 > 2^53 (64-bit case)
    // or 2m+1 > 2^24 (32-bit case). Hence,we must have 2^53×5^−q < 2^64
    // (64-bit) and 2^24×5^−q < 2^64 (32-bit). Hence we have 5^−q < 2^11
    // or q ≥ −4 (64-bit case) and 5^−q < 2^40 or q ≥ −17 (32-bitcase).
    //
    // Thus we have that we only need to round ties to even when
    // we have that q ∈ [−4,23](in the 64-bit case) or q∈[−17,10]
    // (in the 32-bit case). In both cases,the power of five(5^|q|)
    // fits in a 64-bit word.
    const MIN_EXPONENT_ROUND_TO_EVEN: i32;
    const MAX_EXPONENT_ROUND_TO_EVEN: i32;
```

This ensures maintainability of the code base.

**Improvements for Disguised Fast-Path Cases**

The fast path in float parsing algorithms attempts to use native, machine floats to represent both the significant digits and the exponent, which is only possible if both can be exactly represented without rounding. In practice, this means that the significant digits must be 53-bits or less and the then exponent must be in the range `[-22, 22]` (for an f64). This is similar to the existing dec2flt implementation.

However, disguised fast-path cases exist, where there are few significant digits and an exponent above the valid range, such as `1.23e25`. In this case, powers-of-10 may be shifted from the exponent to the significant digits, discussed at length in https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/85198.

**Digit Parsing Improvements**

Typically, integers are parsed from string 1-at-a-time, requiring unnecessary multiplications which can slow down parsing. An approach to parse 8 digits at a time using only 3 multiplications is described in length [here](https://johnnylee-sde.github.io/Fast-numeric-string-to-int/). This leads to significant performance improvements, and is implemented for both big and little-endian systems.

**Unsafe Changes**

Relative to fast-float-rust, this library makes less use of unsafe functionality and clearly documents it. This includes the refactoring and documentation of numerous unsafe methods undesirably marked as safe. The original code would look something like this, which is deceptively marked as safe for unsafe functionality.

```rust
impl AsciiStr {
    #[inline]
    pub fn step_by(&mut self, n: usize) -> &mut Self {
        unsafe { self.ptr = self.ptr.add(n) };
        self
    }
}

...

#[inline]
fn parse_scientific(s: &mut AsciiStr<'_>) -> i64 {
    // the first character is 'e'/'E' and scientific mode is enabled
    let start = *s;
    s.step();
    ...
}
```

The new code clearly documents safety concerns, and does not mark unsafe functionality as safe, leading to better safety guarantees.

```rust
impl AsciiStr {
    /// Advance the view by n, advancing it in-place to (n..).
    pub unsafe fn step_by(&mut self, n: usize) -> &mut Self {
        // SAFETY: same as step_by, safe as long n is less than the buffer length
        self.ptr = unsafe { self.ptr.add(n) };
        self
    }
}

...

/// Parse the scientific notation component of a float.
fn parse_scientific(s: &mut AsciiStr<'_>) -> i64 {
    let start = *s;
    // SAFETY: the first character is 'e'/'E' and scientific mode is enabled
    unsafe {
        s.step();
    }
    ...
}
```

This allows us to trivially demonstrate the new implementation of dec2flt is safe.

**Inline Annotations Have Been Removed**

In the previous implementation of dec2flt, inline annotations exist practically nowhere in the entire module. Therefore, these annotations have been removed, which mostly does not impact [performance](https://github.com/aldanor/fast-float-rust/issues/15#issuecomment-864485157).

**Fixed Correctness Tests**

Numerous compile errors in `src/etc/test-float-parse` were present, due to deprecation of `time.clock()`, as well as the crate dependencies with `rand`. The tests have therefore been reworked as a [crate](https://github.com/Alexhuszagh/rust/tree/master/src/etc/test-float-parse), and any errors in `runtests.py` have been patched.

**Undefined Behavior**

An implementation of `check_len` which relied on undefined behavior (in fast-float-rust) has been refactored, to ensure that the behavior is well-defined. The original code is as follows:

```rust
    #[inline]
    pub fn check_len(&self, n: usize) -> bool {
        unsafe { self.ptr.add(n) <= self.end }
    }
```

And the new implementation is as follows:

```rust
    /// Check if the slice at least `n` length.
    fn check_len(&self, n: usize) -> bool {
        n <= self.as_ref().len()
    }
```

Note that this has since been fixed in [fast-float-rust](https://github.com/aldanor/fast-float-rust/pull/29).

**Inferring Binary Exponents**

Rather than explicitly store binary exponents, this new implementation infers them from the decimal exponent, reducing the amount of static storage required. This removes the requirement to store [611 i16s](868c702d0c/library/core/src/num/dec2flt/table.rs (L8)).

# Code Size

The code size, for all optimizations, does not considerably change relative to before for stripped builds, however it is **significantly** smaller prior to stripping the resulting binaries. These binary sizes were calculated on x86_64-unknown-linux-gnu.

**new**

Using rustc version 1.55.0-dev.

opt-level|size|size(stripped)
|:-:|:-:|:-:|
0|400k|300K
1|396k|292K
2|392k|292K
3|392k|296K
s|396k|292K
z|396k|292K

**old**

Using rustc version 1.53.0-nightly.

opt-level|size|size(stripped)
|:-:|:-:|:-:|
0|3.2M|304K
1|3.2M|292K
2|3.1M|284K
3|3.1M|284K
s|3.1M|284K
z|3.1M|284K

# Correctness

The dec2flt implementation passes all of Rust's unittests and comprehensive float parsing tests, along with numerous other tests such as Nigel Toa's comprehensive float [tests](https://github.com/nigeltao/parse-number-fxx-test-data) and Hrvoje Abraham  [strtod_tests](https://github.com/ahrvoje/numerics/blob/master/strtod/strtod_tests.toml). Therefore, it is unlikely that this algorithm will incorrectly round parsed floats.

# Issues Addressed

This will fix and close the following issues:

- resolves #85198
- resolves #85214
- resolves #85234
- fixes #31407
- fixes #31109
- fixes #53015
- resolves #68396
- closes https://github.com/aldanor/fast-float-rust/issues/15
2021-07-17 12:56:22 +00:00
Alex Huszagh
8752b40369 Changed dec2flt to use the Eisel-Lemire algorithm.
Implementation is based off fast-float-rust, with a few notable changes.

- Some unsafe methods have been removed.
- Safe methods with inherently unsafe functionality have been removed.
- All unsafe functionality is documented and provably safe.
- Extensive documentation has been added for simpler maintenance.
- Inline annotations on internal routines has been removed.
- Fixed Python errors in src/etc/test-float-parse/runtests.py.
- Updated test-float-parse to be a library, to avoid missing rand dependency.
- Added regression tests for #31109 and #31407 in core tests.
- Added regression tests for #31109 and #31407 in ui tests.
- Use the existing slice primitive to simplify shared dec2flt methods
- Remove Miri ignores from dec2flt, due to faster parsing times.

- resolves #85198
- resolves #85214
- resolves #85234
- fixes #31407
- fixes #31109
- fixes #53015
- resolves #68396
- closes https://github.com/aldanor/fast-float-rust/issues/15
2021-07-17 00:30:34 -05:00
The8472
8dd903cc77 implement ConstSizeIntoIterator for &[T;N] in addition to [T;N]
Due to #20400 the corresponding TrustedLen impls need a helper trait
instead of directly adding `Item = &[T;N]` bounds.
Since TrustedLen is a public trait this in turn means
the helper trait needs to be public. Since it's just a workaround
for a compiler deficit it's marked hidden, unstable and unsafe.
2021-07-16 20:38:42 +02:00
inquisitivecrystal
7fc4fc747c Stabilize [T; N]::map() 2021-07-15 16:27:08 -07:00
The8472
bd1c39dc6c implement TrustedLen for Flatten/FlatMap if the U: IntoIterator == [T; N]
This only works if arrays are passed directly instead of array iterators
because we need to be sure that they have not been advanced before
Flatten does its size calculation.
2021-07-15 22:59:30 +02:00
Chayim Refael Friedman
f10da9f50a Allow leading pipe in matches!() patterns.
This is allowed in `match` statement, and stated in https://internals.rust-lang.org/t/leading-pipe-in-core-matches/14699/2 that it should be allowed in these macros too.
2021-07-15 22:05:45 +03:00
Trevor Spiteri
b0f98c60a6 test integer log10 values close to all powers of 10 2021-07-07 14:07:32 +02:00
Yuki Okushi
c630b6b0fc
Rollup merge of #86880 - m-ou-se:test-manuallydrop-clone-from, r=Mark-Simulacrum
Test ManuallyDrop::clone_from.

See #86288
2021-07-07 12:17:41 +09:00
Yuki Okushi
9bbc470e97
Rollup merge of #80918 - yoshuawuyts:int-log2, r=m-ou-se
Add Integer::log variants

_This is another attempt at landing https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/70835, which was approved by the libs team but failed on Android tests through Bors. The text copied here is from the original issue. The only change made so far is the addition of non-`checked_` variants of the log methods._

_Tracking issue: #70887_

---

This implements `{log,log2,log10}` methods for all integer types. The implementation was provided by `@substack` for use in the stdlib.

_Note: I'm not big on math, so this PR is a best effort written with limited knowledge. It's likely I'll be getting things wrong, but happy to learn and correct. Please bare with me._

## Motivation
Calculating the logarithm of a number is a generally useful operation. Currently the stdlib only provides implementations for floats, which means that if we want to calculate the logarithm for an integer we have to cast it to a float and then back to an int.

> would be nice if there was an integer log2 instead of having to either use the f32 version or leading_zeros() which i have to verify the results of every time to be sure

_— [`@substack,` 2020-03-08](https://twitter.com/substack/status/1236445105197727744)_

At higher numbers converting from an integer to a float we also risk overflows. This means that Rust currently only provides log operations for a limited set of integers.

The process of doing log operations by converting between floats and integers is also prone to rounding errors. In the following example we're trying to calculate `base10` for an integer. We might try and calculate the `base2` for the values, and attempt [a base swap](https://www.rapidtables.com/math/algebra/Logarithm.html#log-rules) to arrive at `base10`. However because we're performing intermediate rounding we arrive at the wrong result:

```rust
// log10(900) = ~2.95 = 2
dbg!(900f32.log10() as u64);

// log base change rule: logb(x) = logc(x) / logc(b)
// log2(900) / log2(10) = 9/3 = 3
dbg!((900f32.log2() as u64) / (10f32.log2() as u64));
```
_[playground](https://play.rust-lang.org/?version=stable&mode=debug&edition=2018&gist=6bd6c68b3539e400f9ca4fdc6fc2eed0)_

This is somewhat nuanced as a lot of the time it'll work well, but in real world code this could lead to some hard to track bugs. By providing correct log implementations directly on integers we can help prevent errors around this.

## Implementation notes

I checked whether LLVM intrinsics existed before implementing this, and none exist yet. ~~Also I couldn't really find a better way to write the `ilog` function. One option would be to make it a private method on the number, but I didn't see any precedent for that. I also didn't know where to best place the tests, so I added them to the bottom of the file. Even though they might seem like quite a lot they take no time to execute.~~

## References

- [Log rules](https://www.rapidtables.com/math/algebra/Logarithm.html#log-rules)
- [Rounding error playground](https://play.rust-lang.org/?version=stable&mode=debug&edition=2018&gist=6bd6c68b3539e400f9ca4fdc6fc2eed0)
- [substack's tweet asking about integer log2 in the stdlib](https://twitter.com/substack/status/1236445105197727744)
- [Integer Logarithm, A. Jaffer 2008](https://people.csail.mit.edu/jaffer/III/ilog.pdf)
2021-07-07 12:17:32 +09:00
Mara Bos
3d20b2a14f Test ManuallyDrop::clone_from. 2021-07-05 11:55:45 +00:00
bors
90442458ac Auto merge of #86048 - nbdd0121:no_floating_point, r=Amanieu
core: add unstable no_fp_fmt_parse to disable float formatting code

In some projects (e.g. kernel), floating point is forbidden. They can disable
hardware floating point support and use `+soft-float` to avoid fp instructions
from being generated, but as libcore contains the formatting code for `f32`
and `f64`, some fp intrinsics are depended. One could define stubs for these
intrinsics that just panic [1], but it means that if any formatting functions
are accidentally used, mistake can only be caught during the runtime rather
than during compile-time or link-time, and they consume a lot of space without
LTO.

This patch provides an unstable cfg `no_fp_fmt_parse` to disable these.
A panicking stub is still provided for the `Debug` implementation (unfortunately)
because there are some SIMD types that use `#[derive(Debug)]`.

[1]: https://lkml.org/lkml/2021/4/14/1028
2021-07-04 14:18:57 +00:00
Charles Lew
0d1919c7ab Remove the deprecated core::raw and std::raw module. 2021-07-03 14:03:27 +08:00
Guillaume Gomez
cd3a48fdb6
Rollup merge of #86797 - inquisitivecrystal:bound-cloned, r=jyn514
Stabilize `Bound::cloned()`

This PR stabilizes the function `Bound::cloned()`.

Closes #61356.
2021-07-02 11:35:31 +02:00
Aris Merchant
f2b21e2d0b Stabilize Bound::cloned() 2021-07-01 17:09:57 -07:00
Mark Rousskov
06661ba759 Update to new bootstrap compiler 2021-06-28 11:30:49 -04:00
Albin Hedman
6c890bb969
Revert "Revert tests added by PR 81167."
This reverts commit cebfcd3256.
2021-06-27 12:05:17 +02:00
Yoshua Wuyts
9f579968cd Add Integer::{log,log2,log10} variants 2021-06-25 18:52:46 +02:00
bors
75ed34223a Auto merge of #84910 - eopb:stabilize_int_error_matching, r=yaahc
stabilize `int_error_matching`

closes #22639

> It has been over half a year since https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/77640#pullrequestreview-511263516, and the indexing question is rejected in https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/79728#pullrequestreview-633030341, so I guess we can submit another stabilization attempt? 😉

_Originally posted by `@kennytm` in https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/22639#issuecomment-831738266_
2021-06-22 09:30:15 +00:00
The8472
b4734b7c38 disable test on platforms that don't support unwinding 2021-06-20 12:20:05 +02:00
Michael Lamparski
8731d4dfb4 Automatic exponential formatting in Debug
* {:.PREC?} already had legitimately useful behavior (recursive formatting of structs using
  fixed precision for floats) and I suspect that changes to the output there would be unwelcome.

  (besides, precision introduces sinister edge cases where a number can be rounded up to one
  of the thresholds)

  Thus, the new behavior of Debug is, "dynamically switch to exponential, but only if there's
  no precision."

* This could not be implemented in terms of float_to_decimal_common without repeating the branch
  on precision, so 'float_to_general_debug' is a new function.  The name is '_debug' instead of
  '_common' because the considerations in the previous bullet make this logic pretty specific
  to Debug.

* 'float_to_decimal_common' is now only used by Display, so I inlined the min_precision argument
  and renamed the function accordingly.
2021-06-19 20:53:26 -04:00
The8472
8b518542d0 fix panic-safety in specialized Zip::next_back
This was unsound since a panic in a.next_back() would result in the
length not being updated which would then lead to the same element
being revisited in the side-effect preserving code.
2021-06-19 02:20:51 +02:00
Yuki Okushi
5936ecc24f
Rollup merge of #85608 - scottmcm:stabilize-control-flow-enum-basics, r=m-ou-se
Stabilize `ops::ControlFlow` (just the type)

Tracking issue: https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/75744 (which also tracks items *not* closed by this PR).

With the new `?` desugar implemented, [it's no longer possible to mix `Result` and `ControlFlow`](https://play.rust-lang.org/?version=nightly&mode=debug&edition=2018&gist=13feec97f5c96a9d791d97f7de2d49a6).  (At the time of making this PR, godbolt was still on the 2021-05-01 nightly, where you can see that [the mixing example compiled](https://rust.godbolt.org/z/13Ke54j16).)  That resolves the only blocker I know of, so I'd like to propose that `ControlFlow` be considered for stabilization.

Its basic existence was part of https://github.com/rust-lang/rfcs/pull/3058, where it got a bunch of positive comments (examples [1](https://github.com/rust-lang/rfcs/pull/3058#issuecomment-758277325) [2](https://github.com/rust-lang/rfcs/pull/3058#pullrequestreview-592106494) [3](https://github.com/rust-lang/rfcs/pull/3058#issuecomment-784444155) [4](https://github.com/rust-lang/rfcs/pull/3058#issuecomment-797031584)).  Its use in the compiler has been well received (https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/78182#issuecomment-713695594), and there are ecosystem updates interested in using it (https://github.com/rust-itertools/itertools/issues/469#issuecomment-677729589, https://github.com/jonhoo/rust-imap/issues/194).

As this will need an FCP, picking a libs member manually:
r? `@m-ou-se`

## Stabilized APIs

```rust
#[derive(Debug, Clone, Copy, PartialEq)]
pub enum ControlFlow<B, C = ()> {
    /// Exit the operation without running subsequent phases.
    Break(B),
    /// Move on to the next phase of the operation as normal.
    Continue(C),
}
```

As well as using `?` on a `ControlFlow<B, _>` in a function returning `ControlFlow<B, _>`.  (Note, in particular, that there's no `From::from`-conversion on the `Break` value, the way there is for `Err`s.)

## Existing APIs *not* stabilized here

All the associated methods and constants: `break_value`, `is_continue`, `map_break`, [`CONTINUE`](https://doc.rust-lang.org/nightly/std/ops/enum.ControlFlow.html#associatedconstant.CONTINUE), etc.

Some of the existing methods in nightly seem reasonable, some seem like they should be removed, and some need more discussion to decide.  But none of them are *essential*, so [as in the RFC](https://rust-lang.github.io/rfcs/3058-try-trait-v2.html#methods-on-controlflow), they're all omitted from this PR.

They can be considered separately later, as further usage demonstrates which are important.
2021-06-15 17:40:08 +09:00
Ethan Brierley
b59f7d9662 stabilize int_error_matching 2021-06-14 09:58:32 +01:00
bors
46ad16b70f Auto merge of #85630 - gilescope:to_digit_speedup3, r=nagisa
to_digit simplification (less jumps)

I just realised we might be able to make use of the fact that changing case in ascii is easy to help simplify to_digit some more.

It looks a bit cleaner and it looks like it's less jumps and there's less instructions in the generated assembly:

https://godbolt.org/z/84Erh5dhz

The benchmarks don't really tell me much. Maybe a slight improvement on the var radix.

Before:
```
test char::methods::bench_to_digit_radix_10                     ... bench:      53,819 ns/iter (+/- 8,314)
test char::methods::bench_to_digit_radix_16                     ... bench:      57,265 ns/iter (+/- 10,730)
test char::methods::bench_to_digit_radix_2                      ... bench:      55,077 ns/iter (+/- 5,431)
test char::methods::bench_to_digit_radix_36                     ... bench:      56,549 ns/iter (+/- 3,248)
test char::methods::bench_to_digit_radix_var                    ... bench:      43,848 ns/iter (+/- 3,189)

test char::methods::bench_to_digit_radix_10                     ... bench:      51,707 ns/iter (+/- 10,946)
test char::methods::bench_to_digit_radix_16                     ... bench:      52,835 ns/iter (+/- 2,689)
test char::methods::bench_to_digit_radix_2                      ... bench:      51,012 ns/iter (+/- 2,746)
test char::methods::bench_to_digit_radix_36                     ... bench:      53,210 ns/iter (+/- 8,645)
test char::methods::bench_to_digit_radix_var                    ... bench:      40,386 ns/iter (+/- 4,711)

test char::methods::bench_to_digit_radix_10                     ... bench:      54,088 ns/iter (+/- 5,677)
test char::methods::bench_to_digit_radix_16                     ... bench:      55,972 ns/iter (+/- 17,229)
test char::methods::bench_to_digit_radix_2                      ... bench:      52,083 ns/iter (+/- 2,425)
test char::methods::bench_to_digit_radix_36                     ... bench:      54,132 ns/iter (+/- 1,548)
test char::methods::bench_to_digit_radix_var                    ... bench:      41,250 ns/iter (+/- 5,299)
```
After:
```
test char::methods::bench_to_digit_radix_10                     ... bench:      48,907 ns/iter (+/- 19,449)
test char::methods::bench_to_digit_radix_16                     ... bench:      52,673 ns/iter (+/- 8,122)
test char::methods::bench_to_digit_radix_2                      ... bench:      48,509 ns/iter (+/- 2,885)
test char::methods::bench_to_digit_radix_36                     ... bench:      50,526 ns/iter (+/- 4,610)
test char::methods::bench_to_digit_radix_var                    ... bench:      38,618 ns/iter (+/- 3,180)

test char::methods::bench_to_digit_radix_10                     ... bench:      54,202 ns/iter (+/- 6,994)
test char::methods::bench_to_digit_radix_16                     ... bench:      56,585 ns/iter (+/- 8,448)
test char::methods::bench_to_digit_radix_2                      ... bench:      50,548 ns/iter (+/- 1,674)
test char::methods::bench_to_digit_radix_36                     ... bench:      52,749 ns/iter (+/- 2,576)
test char::methods::bench_to_digit_radix_var                    ... bench:      40,215 ns/iter (+/- 3,327)

test char::methods::bench_to_digit_radix_10                     ... bench:      50,233 ns/iter (+/- 22,272)
test char::methods::bench_to_digit_radix_16                     ... bench:      50,841 ns/iter (+/- 19,981)
test char::methods::bench_to_digit_radix_2                      ... bench:      50,386 ns/iter (+/- 4,555)
test char::methods::bench_to_digit_radix_36                     ... bench:      52,369 ns/iter (+/- 2,737)
test char::methods::bench_to_digit_radix_var                    ... bench:      40,417 ns/iter (+/- 2,766)
```

I removed the likely as it resulted in a few less instructions. (It's not been in there long - I added it in the last to_digit iteration).
2021-06-10 23:14:11 +00:00
Giles Cope
9c3d81e186
Further simplification of to_digit 2021-06-10 20:16:35 +01:00
bors
eab201df70 Auto merge of #86003 - pnkfelix:issue-84297-revert-81238, r=Mark-Simulacrum
Make copy/copy_nonoverlapping fn's again

Make copy/copy_nonoverlapping fn's again, rather than intrinsics.

This a short-term change to address issue #84297.

It effectively reverts PRs #81167 #81238 (and part of #82967), #83091, and parts of #79684.
2021-06-09 16:47:05 +00:00
Yuki Okushi
f923f73b9a
Rollup merge of #85930 - mominul:array_into_iter, r=m-ou-se
Update standard library for IntoIterator implementation of arrays

This PR partially resolves issue #84513 of updating the standard library part.

I haven't found any remaining doctest examples which are using iterators over e.g. &i32 instead of just i32 in the standard library. Can anyone point me to them if there's remaining any?

Thanks!

r? ```@m-ou-se```
2021-06-06 19:11:19 +09:00
Gary Guo
37647d1733 Move flt2dec::{Formatted, Part} to dedicated module
They are used by integer formatting as well and is not exclusive to float.
2021-06-06 02:54:51 +01:00
Felix S. Klock II
cebfcd3256 Revert tests added by PR 81167. 2021-06-04 16:44:28 -04:00
Yuki Okushi
0a12431962
Rollup merge of #85963 - m-ou-se:constructor-type-name, r=yaahc
Show `::{{constructor}}` in std::any::type_name().

Fix #84666

Before:
```
[src/main.rs:6] type_name::<T>() = "playground::Velocity"
[src/main.rs:6] type_name::<T>() = "playground::Velocity"
```

After:
```
[src/main.rs:6] type_name::<T>() = "scratchpad::Velocity::{{constructor}}"
[src/main.rs:6] type_name::<T>() = "scratchpad::Velocity"
```

cc ``@scottmcm``
2021-06-04 13:43:02 +09:00
Mara Bos
e3b19e5c25 Add test for issue 84666. 2021-06-03 16:13:45 +02:00
Muhammad Mominul Huque
507d97b26e Update expressions where we can use array's IntoIterator implementation 2021-06-02 16:09:04 +06:00
Muhammad Mominul Huque
01d4d46f66 Replace IntoIter::new with IntoIterator::into_iter in std 2021-06-02 16:09:04 +06:00
Jacob Pratt
35ce36812a
Unify feature flags as step_trait
While stdlib implementations of the unchecked methods require unchecked
math, there is no reason to gate it behind this for external users. The
reasoning for a separate `step_trait_ext` feature is unclear, and as
such has been merged as well.
2021-05-26 18:07:10 -04:00
Scott McMurray
65a0a8b386 Stabilize ops::ControlFlow (just the type) 2021-05-23 13:20:05 -07:00
Scott McMurray
58a85d55e8 #[cfg(bootstrap)] out the v1 try_trait stuff 2021-05-19 13:32:15 -07:00
Scott McMurray
266a72637a Simple library test updates 2021-05-06 11:37:45 -07:00
Yuki Okushi
46b67ab0f9
Rollup merge of #84105 - WaffleLapkin:stabilize_array_from_ref, r=m-ou-se
stabilize `core::array::{from_ref,from_mut}` in `1.53.0`

I didn't get any response in https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/77101#issuecomment-761831104, so I figured out I can try opening stabilization pr.

---

This PR stabilizes following functions:
```rust
// core::array
pub fn from_ref<T>(s: &T) -> &[T; 1];
pub fn from_mut<T>(s: &mut T) -> &mut [T; 1];
```

Functions are similar to already stabilized `core::slice::{`[`from_ref`](https://doc.rust-lang.org/std/slice/fn.from_ref.html),[`from_mut`](https://doc.rust-lang.org/std/slice/fn.from_mut.html)`}` and were unstable without any problems/questions for a while now.

---

resolves #77101

``@rustbot`` modify labels: +T-libs
2021-04-25 01:53:10 +09:00
bors
ccf171242b Auto merge of #77704 - AnthonyMikh:slice_index_with_ops_bound_pair, r=m-ou-se
Implement indexing slices with pairs of core::ops::Bound<usize>

Closes #49976.

I am not sure about code duplication between `check_range` and `into_maybe_range`. Should be former implemented in terms of the latter? Also this PR doesn't address code duplication between `impl SliceIndex for Range*`.
2021-04-22 15:36:27 +00:00
Mara Bos
49a5c80a3b
Rollup merge of #84390 - m-ou-se:make-debug-non-exhaustive-without-fields-a-little-bit-less-verbose, r=kennytm
Format `Struct { .. }` on one line even with `{:#?}`.

The result of `debug_struct("A").finish_non_exhaustive()` before this change:
```
A {
    ..
}
```
And after this change:
```
A { .. }
```

If there's any fields, the result stays unchanged:
```
A {
    field: value,
    ..
}
2021-04-21 23:06:21 +02:00
Mara Bos
82dc73b1ae Format Struct { .. } on one line even with {:#?}. 2021-04-21 13:50:56 +02:00
Simon Sapin
4d683c0292 Allow use of deprecated std::raw in a test for that feature 2021-04-15 19:16:18 +02:00
AnthonyMikh
7efba4f982 Implement indexing slices with pairs of ops::Bound<usize> 2021-04-13 09:57:24 -04:00
Dylan DPC
3d6a364e33
Rollup merge of #84084 - m-ou-se:stabilize-zero, r=scottmcm
Stabilize duration_zero.

FCP here: https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/73544#issuecomment-817201305
2021-04-13 11:10:40 +02:00
bors
7ce470fd9b Auto merge of #84082 - andjo403:stabilize_nonzero_leading_trailing_zeros, r=m-ou-se
Stabilize nonzero_leading_trailing_zeros

Stabilizing nonzero_leading_trailing_zeros and due to this also stabilizing the intrinsic cttz_nonzero

FCP finished here: https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/79143#issuecomment-817216153
`@rustbot` modify labels: +T-libs

Closes #79143
2021-04-13 03:18:10 +00:00
Mara Bos
d1e23b8af8 Stabilize duration_zero. 2021-04-12 16:32:56 +02:00
bors
d68f7a2f50 Auto merge of #84090 - marmeladema:stabilize-duration-saturating-ops, r=m-ou-se
Stabilize feature `duration_saturating_ops`

FCP here: https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/76416#issuecomment-817201314

Closes #76416

r? `@m-ou-se`
2021-04-12 05:44:25 +00:00
Waffle
740b0529fb stabilize core::array::{from_ref,from_mut} 2021-04-11 22:06:32 +03:00
Andreas Jonson
12249acdc8 Stabilize nonzero_leading_trailing_zeros 2021-04-11 19:15:55 +02:00
marmeladema
7d89148385 Stabilize feature duration_saturating_ops
Closes #76416
2021-04-11 11:34:42 +01:00
Tomasz Miąsko
60780e438a Remove FixedSizeArray 2021-04-11 00:00:00 +00:00
Dylan DPC
461297e3fd
Rollup merge of #81938 - lukaslueg:stab_peek_mut, r=Amanieu
Stabilize `peekable_peek_mut`

Resolves #78302. Also adds some documentation on `std::iter::Iterator::peekable()` regarding the new method.

The feature was added in #77491 in Nov' 20, which is recently, but the feature seems reasonably small. Never did a stabilization-pr, excuse my ignorance if there is a protocol I'm not aware of.
2021-04-08 20:29:57 +02:00
bors
ef2ef926a5 Auto merge of #81047 - glittershark:stabilize-cmp-min-max-by, r=kodraus
Stabilize cmp_min_max_by

I would like to propose cmp::{min_by, min_by_key, max_by, max_by_key}
for stabilization.

These are relatively simple and seemingly uncontroversial functions and
have been unchanged in unstable for a while now.

Closes: #64460
2021-04-07 18:02:21 +00:00
Griffin Smith
462f86da9a Stabilize cmp_min_max_by
I would like to propose cmp::{min_by, min_by_key, max_by, max_by_key}
for stabilization.

These are relatively simple and seemingly uncontroversial functions and
have been unchanged in unstable for a while now.
2021-04-07 10:29:04 -04:00
lukaslueg
72796a7c36
Merge branch 'master' into stab_peek_mut 2021-04-06 18:23:21 +02:00
Mark Rousskov
b3a4f91b8d Bump cfgs 2021-04-04 14:57:05 -04:00
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
Lukas Lueg
abcbe54575 Stabilize peekable_peek_mut
Resolves #78302

Update peekable.rs

Update library/core/src/iter/traits/iterator.rs

Co-authored-by: Ashley Mannix <kodraus@hey.com>
2021-03-26 17:41:14 +01:00
bors
bba40880c0 Auto merge of #82565 - m-ou-se:ununstabilize-bits, r=kennytm
Revert reverting of stabilizing integer::BITS.

Now that `lexical-core` has an updated version that won't break with this stabilization, let's try to stabilize this again.

See https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/81654#issuecomment-778564715

Tracking issue with FCP: https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/76904
2021-03-25 10:29:58 +00:00
Yuki Okushi
921a82007a
Rollup merge of #83421 - faern:add-into-err, r=joshtriplett
Add Result::into_err where the Ok variant is the never type

Equivalent of #66045 but for the inverse situation where `T: Into<!>` rather than `E: Into<!>`.

I'm using the same feature gate name. I can't see why one of these methods would be OK to stabilize but not the other.

Tracking issue: #61695
2021-03-25 09:07:28 +09:00
Yuki Okushi
29e64e913a
Rollup merge of #83349 - m-ou-se:unwrap-none, r=dtolnay
Remove Option::{unwrap_none, expect_none}.

This removes `Option::unwrap_none` and `Option::expect_none` since we're not going to stabilize them, see https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/62633.

Closes #62633
2021-03-25 09:07:26 +09:00
Mara Bos
81932be5e7 Revert "Revert stabilizing integer::BITS." 2021-03-24 22:34:36 +01:00
Linus Färnstrand
3bf076e76b Add test for Result::into_err 2021-03-23 21:41:50 +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
Jubilee Young
fc9b234928 Add IEEE754 tests 2021-03-22 17:02:06 -07:00
Mara Bos
8dc0ae24bc Remove Option::{unwrap_none, expect_none}. 2021-03-14 12:54:34 +01:00
Gus Wynn
73ddfa0eea stabilize debug_non_exhaustive 2021-03-11 15:17:44 -08:00
Yuki Okushi
c46f948a80
Rollup merge of #79208 - LeSeulArtichaut:stable-unsafe_op_in_unsafe_fn, r=nikomatsakis
Stabilize `unsafe_op_in_unsafe_fn` lint

This makes it possible to override the level of the `unsafe_op_in_unsafe_fn`, as proposed in https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/71668#issuecomment-729770896.

Tracking issue: #71668
r? ```@nikomatsakis``` cc ```@SimonSapin``` ```@RalfJung```

# Stabilization report

This is a stabilization report for `#![feature(unsafe_block_in_unsafe_fn)]`.

## Summary

Currently, the body of unsafe functions is an unsafe block, i.e. you can perform unsafe operations inside.

The `unsafe_op_in_unsafe_fn` lint, stabilized here, can be used to change this behavior, so performing unsafe operations in unsafe functions requires an unsafe block.

For now, the lint is allow-by-default, which means that this PR does not change anything without overriding the lint level.

For more information, see [RFC 2585](https://github.com/rust-lang/rfcs/blob/master/text/2585-unsafe-block-in-unsafe-fn.md)

### Example

```rust
// An `unsafe fn` for demonstration purposes.
// Calling this is an unsafe operation.
unsafe fn unsf() {}

// #[allow(unsafe_op_in_unsafe_fn)] by default,
// the behavior of `unsafe fn` is unchanged
unsafe fn allowed() {
    // Here, no `unsafe` block is needed to
    // perform unsafe operations...
    unsf();

    // ...and any `unsafe` block is considered
    // unused and is warned on by the compiler.
    unsafe {
        unsf();
    }
}

#[warn(unsafe_op_in_unsafe_fn)]
unsafe fn warned() {
    // Removing this `unsafe` block will
    // cause the compiler to emit a warning.
    // (Also, no "unused unsafe" warning will be emitted here.)
    unsafe {
        unsf();
    }
}

#[deny(unsafe_op_in_unsafe_fn)]
unsafe fn denied() {
    // Removing this `unsafe` block will
    // cause a compilation error.
    // (Also, no "unused unsafe" warning will be emitted here.)
    unsafe {
        unsf();
    }
}
```
2021-03-10 08:01:25 +09:00
Yuki Okushi
1d5b2dc945
Rollup merge of #82292 - SkiFire13:fix-issue-82291, r=m-ou-se
Prevent specialized ZipImpl from calling `__iterator_get_unchecked` twice with the same index

Fixes #82291

It's open for review, but conflicts with #82289, wait before merging. The conflict involves only the new test, so it should be rather trivial to fix.
2021-03-07 10:41:10 +09:00
bors
caca2121ff Auto merge of #74024 - Folyd:master, r=m-ou-se
Improve slice.binary_search_by()'s best-case performance to O(1)

This PR aimed to improve the [slice.binary_search_by()](https://doc.rust-lang.org/std/primitive.slice.html#method.binary_search_by)'s best-case performance to O(1).

# Noticed

I don't know why the docs of `binary_search_by` said `"If there are multiple matches, then any one of the matches could be returned."`, but the implementation isn't the same thing. Actually, it returns the **last one** if multiple matches found.

Then we got two options:

## If returns the last one is the correct or desired result

Then I can rectify the docs and revert my changes.

## If the docs are correct or desired result

Then my changes can be merged after fully reviewed.

However, if my PR gets merged, another issue raised: this could be a **breaking change** since if multiple matches found, the returning order no longer the last one instead of it could be any one.

For example:
```rust
let mut s = vec![0, 1, 1, 1, 1, 2, 3, 5, 8, 13, 21, 34, 55];
let num = 1;
let idx = s.binary_search(&num);
s.insert(idx, 2);

// Old implementations
assert_eq!(s, [0, 1, 1, 1, 1, 2, 2, 3, 5, 8, 13, 21, 34, 42, 55]);

// New implementations
assert_eq!(s, [0, 1, 1, 1, 2, 1, 2, 3, 5, 8, 13, 21, 34, 42, 55]);
```

# Benchmarking

**Old implementations**
```sh
$ ./x.py bench --stage 1 library/libcore
test slice::binary_search_l1           ... bench:          59 ns/iter (+/- 4)
test slice::binary_search_l1_with_dups ... bench:          59 ns/iter (+/- 3)
test slice::binary_search_l2           ... bench:          76 ns/iter (+/- 5)
test slice::binary_search_l2_with_dups ... bench:          77 ns/iter (+/- 17)
test slice::binary_search_l3           ... bench:         183 ns/iter (+/- 23)
test slice::binary_search_l3_with_dups ... bench:         185 ns/iter (+/- 19)
```

**New implementations (1)**

Implemented by this PR.
```rust
if cmp == Equal {
    return Ok(mid);
} else if cmp == Less {
    base = mid
}
```
```sh
$ ./x.py bench --stage 1 library/libcore
test slice::binary_search_l1           ... bench:          58 ns/iter (+/- 2)
test slice::binary_search_l1_with_dups ... bench:          37 ns/iter (+/- 4)
test slice::binary_search_l2           ... bench:          76 ns/iter (+/- 3)
test slice::binary_search_l2_with_dups ... bench:          57 ns/iter (+/- 6)
test slice::binary_search_l3           ... bench:         200 ns/iter (+/- 30)
test slice::binary_search_l3_with_dups ... bench:         157 ns/iter (+/- 6)

$ ./x.py bench --stage 1 library/libcore
test slice::binary_search_l1           ... bench:          59 ns/iter (+/- 8)
test slice::binary_search_l1_with_dups ... bench:          37 ns/iter (+/- 2)
test slice::binary_search_l2           ... bench:          77 ns/iter (+/- 2)
test slice::binary_search_l2_with_dups ... bench:          57 ns/iter (+/- 2)
test slice::binary_search_l3           ... bench:         198 ns/iter (+/- 21)
test slice::binary_search_l3_with_dups ... bench:         158 ns/iter (+/- 11)

```

**New implementations (2)**

Suggested by `@nbdd0121` in [comment](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/74024#issuecomment-665430239).
```rust
base = if cmp == Greater { base } else { mid };
if cmp == Equal { break }
```

```sh
$ ./x.py bench --stage 1 library/libcore
test slice::binary_search_l1           ... bench:          59 ns/iter (+/- 7)
test slice::binary_search_l1_with_dups ... bench:          37 ns/iter (+/- 5)
test slice::binary_search_l2           ... bench:          75 ns/iter (+/- 3)
test slice::binary_search_l2_with_dups ... bench:          56 ns/iter (+/- 3)
test slice::binary_search_l3           ... bench:         195 ns/iter (+/- 15)
test slice::binary_search_l3_with_dups ... bench:         151 ns/iter (+/- 7)

$ ./x.py bench --stage 1 library/libcore
test slice::binary_search_l1           ... bench:          57 ns/iter (+/- 2)
test slice::binary_search_l1_with_dups ... bench:          38 ns/iter (+/- 2)
test slice::binary_search_l2           ... bench:          77 ns/iter (+/- 11)
test slice::binary_search_l2_with_dups ... bench:          57 ns/iter (+/- 4)
test slice::binary_search_l3           ... bench:         194 ns/iter (+/- 15)
test slice::binary_search_l3_with_dups ... bench:         151 ns/iter (+/- 18)

```

I run some benchmarking testings against on two implementations. The new implementation has a lot of improvement in duplicates cases, while in `binary_search_l3` case, it's a little bit slower than the old one.
2021-03-05 20:12:13 +00:00
Giacomo Stevanato
c1bfb9a78d Add relevant test 2021-03-05 19:09:23 +01:00
Mara
ee796c6523
Rollup merge of #82289 - SkiFire13:fix-issue-82282, r=m-ou-se
Fix underflow in specialized ZipImpl::size_hint

Fixes #82282
2021-03-05 10:57:19 +01:00
Mara
e6a6df5daa
Rollup merge of #80723 - rylev:noop-lint-pass, r=estebank
Implement NOOP_METHOD_CALL lint

Implements the beginnings of https://github.com/rust-lang/lang-team/issues/67 - a lint for detecting noop method calls (e.g, calling `<&T as Clone>::clone()` when `T: !Clone`).

This PR does not fully realize the vision and has a few limitations that need to be addressed either before merging or in subsequent PRs:
* [ ] No UFCS support
* [ ] The warning message is pretty plain
* [ ] Doesn't work for `ToOwned`

The implementation uses [`Instance::resolve`](https://doc.rust-lang.org/nightly/nightly-rustc/rustc_middle/ty/instance/struct.Instance.html#method.resolve) which is normally later in the compiler. It seems that there are some invariants that this function relies on that we try our best to respect. For instance, it expects substitutions to have happened, which haven't yet performed, but we check first for `needs_subst` to ensure we're dealing with a monomorphic type.

Thank you to ```@davidtwco,``` ```@Aaron1011,``` and ```@wesleywiser``` for helping me at various points through out this PR ❤️.
2021-03-05 10:57:14 +01:00
Giacomo Stevanato
8b9ac4d415 Add test for underflow in specialized Zip's size_hint 2021-03-03 21:16:08 +01:00