Improve `Iterator::by_ref` example
I split the example into two: one that fails to compile, and one that
works. I also made them identical except for the addition of `by_ref`
so we don't confuse readers with random differences.
cc `@steveklabnik,` who is the one that added the previous version of this example
rustc: Use LLVM's new saturating float-to-int intrinsics
This commit updates rustc, with an applicable LLVM version, to use
LLVM's new `llvm.fpto{u,s}i.sat.*.*` intrinsics to implement saturating
floating-point-to-int conversions. This results in a little bit tighter
codegen for x86/x86_64, but the main purpose of this is to prepare for
upcoming changes to the WebAssembly backend in LLVM where wasm's
saturating float-to-int instructions will now be implemented with these
intrinsics.
This change allows simplifying a good deal of surrounding code, namely
removing a lot of wasm-specific behavior. WebAssembly no longer has any
special-casing of saturating arithmetic instructions and the need for
`fptoint_may_trap` is gone and all handling code for that is now
removed. This means that the only wasm-specific logic is in the
`fpto{s,u}i` instructions which only get used for "out of bounds is
undefined behavior". This does mean that for the WebAssembly target
specifically the Rust compiler will no longer be 100% compatible with
pre-LLVM 12 versions, but it seems like that's unlikely to be relied on
by too many folks.
Note that this change does immediately regress the codegen of saturating
float-to-int casts on WebAssembly due to the specialization of the LLVM
intrinsic not being present in our LLVM fork just yet. I'll be following
up with an LLVM update to pull in those patches, but affects a few other
SIMD things in flight for WebAssembly so I wanted to separate this change.
Eventually the entire `cast_float_to_int` function can be removed when
LLVM 12 is the minimum version, but that will require sinking the
complexity of it into other backends such as Cranelfit.
Using `fuse` on an iterator that incorrectly implements
`FusedIterator` does not fuse the iterator. This commit adds a
note about this in the documentation of this method to increase
awareness about this potential issue (esp. when relying on fuse
in unsafe code).
rustdoc: Remove most fields from ExternalCrate
Once https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/84304 is fixed, I can get rid of ExternCrate altogether in favor of CrateNum, but in the meantime, this shrinks ExternalCrate quite a lot.
This might hurt compile-times; if it does, I can add `primitive` and `keyword` queries. I expect this to improve compilemem.
Helps with https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/76382.
r? GuillaumeGomez
rustdoc: Hide `#text` in doc-tests
Since `#![attr]` and `#[attr]` are the only valid syntax that start with `#`, we can just special case those two tokens.
Fixes https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/83284.
RustWrapper: work around unification of diagnostic handlers
This lets me build against llvm/main as of March 23rd, 2021. I'm not
entirely sure this is _correct_, but it appears to be functionally
identical to what was done in LLVM: existing callsites of
setInlineAsmDiagnosticHandler were moved to SetDiagnosticHandler() on
the context object, which we already set up in both places that we
called setInlineAsmDiagnosticHandler().
Added CharIndices::offset function
The CharIndices iterator has a field internally called front_offset, that I think would be very useful to have access to.
You can already do something like ``char_indices.next().map(|(offset, _)| offset)``, but that is wordy, in addition to not handling the case where the iterator has ended, where you'd want the offset to be equal to the length.
I'm very new to the open source world and the rust repository, so I'm sorry if I missed a step or did something weird.
Improve rebuilding behaviour of BinaryHeap::retain.
This changes `BinaryHeap::retain` such that it doesn't always fully rebuild the heap, but only rebuilds the parts for which that's necessary.
This makes use of the fact that retain gives out `&T`s and not `&mut T`s.
Retaining every element or removing only elements at the end results in no rebuilding at all. Retaining most elements results in only reordering the elements that got moved (those after the first removed element), using the same logic as was already used for `append`.
cc `@KodrAus` `@sfackler` - We briefly discussed this possibility in the meeting last week while we talked about stabilization of this function (#71503).
Use arrayvec 0.7, drop smallvec 0.6
With the arrival of min const generics, many alt-vec libraries have
updated to use it in some way and arrayvec is no exception. Use the
latest with minor refactoring.
Also, rustc_workspace_hack is the only user of smallvec 0.6 in the
entire tree, so drop it.
This lets me build against llvm/main as of March 23rd, 2021. I'm not
entirely sure this is _correct_, but it appears to be functionally
identical to what was done in LLVM: existing callsites of
setInlineAsmDiagnosticHandler were moved to SetDiagnosticHandler() on
the context object, which we already set up in both places that we
called setInlineAsmDiagnosticHandler().
Rollup of 7 pull requests
Successful merges:
- #84343 (Remove `ScopeTree::closure_tree`)
- #84376 (Uses flex to fix formatting of h1 at any width)
- #84377 (Followup to #83944)
- #84396 (Update LLVM submodule)
- #84402 (Move `sys_common::rwlock::StaticRWLock` etc. to `sys::unix::rwlock`)
- #84404 (Check for intrinsics before coercing to a function pointer)
- #84413 (Remove `sys::args::Args::inner_debug` and use `Debug` instead)
Failed merges:
r? `@ghost`
`@rustbot` modify labels: rollup
Remove `sys::args::Args::inner_debug` and use `Debug` instead
This removes the method `sys::args::Args::inner_debug` on all platforms and implements `Debug` for `Args` instead.
I believe this creates a more natural API for the different platforms under `sys`: export a type `Args: Debug + Iterator + ...` vs. `Args: Iterator + ...` and with a method `inner_debug`.
Check for intrinsics before coercing to a function pointer
Return an error if coercing function items / non-capturing closures
to a common function pointer type would require reifying an intrinsic.
Turns ICE reported in #84297 into a proper error.
Move `sys_common::rwlock::StaticRWLock` etc. to `sys::unix::rwlock`
This moves `sys_common::rwlock::StaticRwLock`, `RWLockReadGuard` and `RWLockWriteGuard` to `sys::unix::rwlock`. They are already `#[cfg(unix)]` and don't need to be in `sys_common`.
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*`.
Add missing information on what standard-library features are supported
by the UEFI targets.
All current UEFI targets (which is i686 and x86_64) only support no_std
cross-compilations. `std` support has not been worked on and is unlikely
to emerge anytime soon, due to the much restricted environment that UEFI
provides.