Add T to PhantomData impl Debug
This add debug information for `PhantomData`, I believe it's make sense to add this to debug impl of `PhantomData` since `T` is what define what is the `PhantomData` just write `"PhantomData"` is not very useful for debugging.
Alternative:
* `PhantomData::<{}>`
* `PhantomData { t: "str_type" }`
`@rustbot` label +T-libs-api -T-libs
introduce `{char, u8}::is_ascii_octdigit`
This feature adds two new APIs: `char::is_ascii_octdigit` and `u8::is_ascii_octdigit`, under the feature gate `is_ascii_octdigit`. These methods are shorthands for `char::is_digit(self, 8)` and `u8::is_digit(self, 8)`:
```rust
// core::char
impl char {
pub fn is_ascii_octdigit(self) -> bool;
}
// core::num
impl u8 {
pub fn is_ascii_octdigit(self) -> bool;
}
```
---
Couple of things I need help understanding:
- `const`ness: have I used the right attribute in this case?
- is there a way to run the tests for `core::char` alone, instead of `./x.py test library/core`?
docs: Improve AsRef / AsMut docs on blanket impls
There are several issues with the current state of `AsRef` and `AsMut` as [discussed here on IRLO](https://internals.rust-lang.org/t/semantics-of-asref/17016). See also #39397, #45742, #73390, #98905, and the FIXMEs [here](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/blob/1.62.0/library/core/src/convert/mod.rs#L509-L515) and [here](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/blob/1.62.0/library/core/src/convert/mod.rs#L530-L536). These issues are difficult to fix. This PR aims to update the documentation to better reflect the status-quo and to give advice on how `AsRef` and `AsMut` should be used.
In particular:
- Explicitly mention that `AsRef` and `AsMut` do not auto-dereference generally for all dereferencable types (but only if inner type is a shared and/or mutable reference)
- Give advice to not use `AsRef` or `AsMut` for the sole purpose of dereferencing
- Suggest providing a transitive `AsRef` or `AsMut` implementation for types which implement `Deref`
- Add new section "Reflexivity" in documentation comments for `AsRef` and `AsMut`
- Provide better example for `AsMut`
- Added heading "Relation to `Borrow`" in `AsRef`'s docs to improve structure
docs: be less harsh in wording for Vec::from_raw_parts
In particular, be clear that it is sound to specify memory not
originating from a previous `Vec` allocation. That is already suggested
in other parts of the documentation about zero-alloc conversions to Box<[T]>.
Incorporate a constraint from `slice::from_raw_parts` that was missing
but needs to be fulfilled, since a `Vec` can be converted into a slice.
Fixes https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/98780.
Document the conditional existence of `alloc::sync` and `alloc::task`.
`alloc` declares
```rust
#[cfg(target_has_atomic = "ptr")]
pub mod sync;
```
but there is no public documentation of this condition. This PR fixes that, so that users of `alloc` can understand how to make their code compile everywhere `alloc` does, if they are writing a library with impls for `Arc`.
The wording is copied from `std::sync::atomic::AtomicPtr`, with additional advice on how to `#[cfg]` for it.
I feel quite uncertain about whether the paragraph I added to `Arc`'s documentation should actually be there, as it is a distraction for anyone using `std`. On the other hand, maybe more reminders that no_std exists would benefit the ecosystem.
Note: `target_has_atomic` is [stabilized](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/32976) but [not yet documented in the reference](https://github.com/rust-lang/reference/pull/1171).
Improve documentation of `slice::{from_ptr_range, from_ptr_range_mut}`
Document panic conditions (`T` is a ZST) and sync docs of shared/unique version.
cc `@wx-csy`
Improve `FromStr` example
The `from_str` implementation from the example had an `unwrap` that would make it panic on invalid input strings. Instead of panicking, it nows returns an error to better reflect the intented behavior of the `FromStr` trait.
Rollup of 5 pull requests
Successful merges:
- #100451 (Do not panic when a test function returns Result::Err.)
- #102098 (Use fetch_update in sync::Weak::upgrade)
- #102538 (Give `def_span` the same SyntaxContext as `span_with_body`.)
- #102556 (Make `feature(const_btree_len)` implied by `feature(const_btree_new)`)
- #102566 (Add a known-bug test for #102498)
Failed merges:
r? `@ghost`
`@rustbot` modify labels: rollup
Make `feature(const_btree_len)` implied by `feature(const_btree_new)`
...this should fix code that used the old feature that was changed in #102197
cc ```@davidtwco``` it seems like tidy doesn't check `implied_by`, should it?
Do not panic when a test function returns Result::Err.
Rust's test library allows test functions to return a `Result`, so that the test is deemed to have failed if the function returns a `Result::Err` variant. Currently, this works by having `Result` implement the `Termination` trait and asserting in assert_test_result that `Termination::report()` indicates successful completion. This turns a `Result::Err` into a panic, which is caught and unwound in the test library.
This approach is problematic in certain environments where one wishes to save on both binary size and compute resources when running tests by:
* Compiling all code with `--panic=abort` to avoid having to generate unwinding tables, and
* Running most tests in-process to avoid the overhead of spawning new processes.
This change removes the intermediate panic step and passes a `Result::Err` directly through to the test runner.
To do this, it modifies `assert_test_result` to return a `Result<(), String>` where the `Err` variant holds what was previously the panic message. It changes the types in the `TestFn` enum to return `Result<(), String>`.
This tries to minimise the changes to benchmark tests, so it calls `unwrap()` on the `Result` returned by `assert_test_result`, effectively keeping the same behaviour as before.
Some questions for reviewers:
* Does the change to the return types in the enum `TestFn` constitute a breaking change for the library API? Namely, the enum definition is public but the test library indicates that "Currently, not much of this is meant for users" and most of the library API appears to be marked unstable.
* Is there a way to test this change, i.e., to test that no panic occurs if a test returns `Result::Err`?
* Is there a shorter, more idiomatic way to fold `Result<Result<T,E>,E>` into a `Result<T,E>` than the `fold_err` function I added?
The `from_str` implementation from the example had an `unwrap` that would make it panic on invalid input strings. Instead of panicking, it nows returns an error to better reflect the intented behavior of the `FromStr` trait.
Update docs so that deprecated method points to relevant method
The docs for the deprecated 'park_timeout_ms' method suggests that the user 'use park_timeout' method instead (at https://doc.rust-lang.org/std/thread/index.html).
Making a similar change so that the docs for the deprecated `sleep_ms` method suggest that the user `use sleep` method instead.
Add negation methods for signed non-zero integers.
Performing negation with defined wrapping semantics (such as `wrapping_neg()`) on a non-zero integer currently requires unpacking to a primitive and re-wrapping. Since negation of non-zero signed integers always produces a non-zero result, it is safe to implement the various `*_neg()` methods for `NonZeroI{N}`.
I'm not sure what to do about the `#[unstable(..., issue = "none")]` here -- should I file a tracking issue, or is that handled by the Rust dev team?
ACP: https://github.com/rust-lang/libs-team/issues/105
Add a niche to `Duration`, unix `SystemTime`, and non-apple `Instant`
As the nanoseconds fields is always between `0` and `(NANOS_PER_SEC - 1)` inclusive, use the `rustc_layout_scalar_valid_range` attributes to create a niche in the nanosecond field of `Duration` and `Timespec` (which is used to implement unix `SystemTime` and non-apple unix `Instant`; windows `Instant` is implemented with `Duration` and therefore will also benefit). This change has the benefit of making `Option<T>` the same size as `T` for the previously mentioned types. Also shrinks the nanoseconds field of `Timespec` to a `u32` as nanoseconds do not need the extra range of an `i64`, shrinking `Timespec` by 4 bytes on 32-bit platforms.
r? ```@joshtriplett```
Make `std::os::fd` public.
`std::os::fd` defines types like `OwnedFd` and `RawFd` and is common
between Unix and non-Unix platforms that share a basic file-descriptor
concept. Rust currently uses this internally to simplify its own code,
but it would be useful for external users in the same way, so make it
public.
This means that `OwnedFd` etc. will all appear in three places, for
example on unix platforms:
- `std::os::fd::OwnedFd`
- `std::os::unix::io::OwnedFd`
- `std::os::unix::prelude::OwnedFd`
r? `````@joshtriplett`````
Add `#[rustc_safe_intrinsic]`
This PR adds the `#[rustc_safe_intrinsic]` attribute as mentionned on Zulip. The goal of this attribute is to avoid keeping a list of symbols as the source for stable intrinsics, and instead rely on an attribute. This is similar to `#[rustc_const_stable]` and `#[rustc_const_unstable]`, which among other things, are used to mark the constness of intrinsic functions.
Suggest unwrapping `???<T>` if a method cannot be found on it but is present on `T`.
This suggests various ways to get inside wrapper types if the method cannot be found on the wrapper type, but is present on the wrappee.
For this PR, those wrapper types include `Localkey`, `MaybeUninit`, `RefCell`, `RwLock` and `Mutex`.
Stabilize bench_black_box
This PR stabilize `feature(bench_black_box)`.
```rust
pub fn black_box<T>(dummy: T) -> T;
```
The FCP was completed in https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/64102.
`@rustbot` label +T-libs-api -T-libs
Stabilize `#![feature(mixed_integer_ops)]`
Tracked and FCP completed in #87840.
````@rustbot```` label +T-libs-api +S-waiting-on-review +relnotes
r? rust-lang/t-libs-api