Environment variables are global state so this can lead to surprising results if
the driver is called in a multithreaded environment (e.g. doctests). There
shouldn't be any memory corruption that's possible, but a lot of the bots have
been failing because they can't find `cc` or `gcc` in the path during doctests,
and I highly suspect that it is due to the compiler modifying `PATH` in a
multithreaded fashion.
This commit moves the logic for appending to `PATH` to only affect the child
process instead of also affecting the parent, at least for the linking stage.
When loading dynamic libraries the compiler still modifies `PATH` on Windows,
but this may be more difficult to fix than spawning off a new process.
[Randard](https://github.com/brson/rust/blob/relnotes/RELEASES.md).
I need help identifying language things and highlights, and I am kind of tired of the `~X changes, numerous bugfixes` thing, which was cute for a few years.
cc @aturon @nrc @pnkfelix
Expand the "givens" set to cover transitive relations. The givens array
stores relationships like `'c <= '0` (where `'c` is a free region and
`'0` is an inference variable) that are derived from closure
arguments. These are (rather hackily) ignored for purposes of inference,
preventing spurious errors. The current code did not handle transitive
cases like `'c <= '0` and `'0 <= '1`. Fixes#24085.
r? @pnkfelix
cc @bkoropoff
*But* I am not sure whether this fix will have a compile-time hit. I'd like to push to try branch observe cycle times.
Pre-requisite for splitting the type context into global and local parts.
The `Repr` and `UserString` traits were also replaced by `Debug` and `Display`.
stores relationships like `'c <= '0` (where `'c` is a free region and
`'0` is an inference variable) that are derived from closure
arguments. These are (rather hackily) ignored for purposes of inference,
preventing spurious errors. The current code did not handle transitive
cases like `'c <= '0` and `'0 <= '1`. Fixes#24085.
This commit shards the all-encompassing `core`, `std_misc`, `collections`, and `alloc` features into finer-grained components that are much more easily opted into and tracked. This reflects the effort to push forward current unstable APIs to either stabilization or removal. Keeping track of unstable features on a much more fine-grained basis will enable the library subteam to quickly analyze a feature and help prioritize internally about what APIs should be stabilized.
A few assorted APIs were deprecated along the way, but otherwise this change is just changing the feature name associated with each API. Soon we will have a dashboard for keeping track of all the unstable APIs in the standard library, and I'll also start making issues for each unstable API after performing a first-pass for stabilization.
Currently in the E0252 message, traits and modules are all called types (as in "a type named `Foo` has already been imported", even when `Foo` was a trait or module). This commit changes that to additionally detect when the import in question is a trait or module and report it accordingly.
Fixes#25396.
Previously, it said "import `Foo` conflicts with existing submodule" even
when it was a type alias, enum, or trait. The message now says the conflict
is with "type in this module" in the case of the first two, and "trait in
this module" for the last one.
Fixes#24081.