Windows: Increase a pipe's buffer capacity to 64kb
This brings it inline with typical Linux defaults: https://www.man7.org/linux/man-pages/man7/pipe.7.html
> Since Linux 2.6.11, the pipe capacity is 16 pages (i.e., 65,536 bytes in a system with a page size of 4096 bytes).
This may also help with #45572 and #95759 but does not fix either issue. It simply makes them much less likely to be encountered.
make windows compat_fn (crudely) work on Miri
With https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/95469, Windows `compat_fn!` now has to be supported by Miri to even make stdout work. Unfortunately, it relies on some outside-of-Rust linker hacks (`#[link_section = ".CRT$XCU"]`) that are rather hard to make work in Miri. So I came up with this crude hack to make this stuff work in Miri regardless. It should come at no cost for regular executions, so I hope this is okay.
Cc https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/95627 `@ChrisDenton`
Use gender neutral terms
#95508 was not executed well, but it did find a couple of legitimate issues: some uses of unnecessarily gendered language, and some typos. This PR fixes (properly) the legitimate issues it found.
Correct safety reasoning in `str::make_ascii_{lower,upper}case()`
I don't understand why the previous comment was used (it was inserted in #66564), but it doesn't explain why these functions are safe, only why `str::as_bytes{_mut}()` are safe.
If someone thinks they make perfect sense, I'm fine with closing this PR.
Bump bootstrap compiler to 1.61.0 beta
This PR bumps the bootstrap compiler to the 1.61.0 beta. The first commit changes the stage0 compiler, the second commit applies the "mechanical" changes and the third and fourth commits apply changes explained in the relevant comments.
r? `@Mark-Simulacrum`
Rollup of 5 pull requests
Successful merges:
- #95352 ([bootstrap] Print the full relative path to failed tests)
- #95646 (Mention `std::env::var` in `env!`)
- #95708 (Update documentation for `trim*` and `is_whitespace` to include newlines)
- #95714 (Add test for issue #83474)
- #95725 (Message: Chunks cannot have a size of zero.)
Failed merges:
r? `@ghost`
`@rustbot` modify labels: rollup
Mention `std::env::var` in `env!`
When searching for how to read an environment variable, I first encountered the `env!` macro. It would have been useful to me if the documentation had included a link to `std::env::var`, which is what I was actually looking for.
Update libc to 0.2.121
With the updated libc, UNIX stack overflow handling in libstd can now
use the common `si_addr` accessor function, rather than attempting to
use a field from that name in `siginfo_t`. This simplifies the
collection of the fault address, particularly on platforms where that
data resides within a union in `siginfo_t`.
Improve terse test output.
The current terse output gives 112 chars per line, which causes
wraparound for people using 100 char wide terminals, which is very
common.
This commit changes it to be exactly 100 wide, which makes the output
look much nicer.
Don't cast thread name to an integer for prctl
`libc::prctl` and the `prctl` definitions in glibc, musl, and the kernel headers are C variadic functions. Therefore, all the arguments (except for the first) are untyped. It is only the Linux man page which says that `prctl` takes 4 `unsigned long` arguments. I have no idea why it says this.
In any case, the upshot is that we don't need to cast the pointer to an integer and confuse Miri.
But in light of this... what are we doing with those three `0`s? We're passing 3 `i32`s to `prctl`, which doesn't fill me with confidence. The man page says `unsigned long` and all the constants in the linux kernel are macros for expressions of the form `1UL << N`. I'm mostly commenting on this because looks a whole lot like some UB that was found in SQLite a few years ago: <https://youtu.be/LbzbHWdLAI0?t=1925> that was related to accidentally passing a 32-bit value from a literal `0` instead of a pointer-sized value. This happens to work on x86 due to the size of pointers and happens to work on x86_64 due to the calling convention. But also, there is no good reason for an implementation to be looking at those arguments. Some other calls to `prctl` require that other arguments be zeroed, but not `PR_SET_NAME`... so why are we even passing them?
I would prefer to end such questions by either passing 3 `libc::c_ulong`, or not passing those at all, but I'm not sure which is better.
When searching for how to read an environment variable, I first encountered the `env!` macro. It would have been useful to me if the documentation had included a link to `std::env::var`, which is what I was actually looking for.
Rollup of 4 pull requests
Successful merges:
- #95659 (Rely on #[link] attribute for unwind on Fuchsia.)
- #95684 (rustdoc: Fix item info display overflow)
- #95693 (interp: pass TyCtxt to Machine methods that do not take InterpCx)
- #95699 (fix: Vec leak when capacity is 0)
Failed merges:
r? `@ghost`
`@rustbot` modify labels: rollup
fix: Vec leak when capacity is 0
When `RawVec::with_capacity_in` is called with capacity 0, an allocation of size 0 is allocated.
However, `<RawVec as Drop>::drop` doesn't deallocate, since it only checks if capacity was 0. Fixed by not allocating when capacity is 0.
Fix unsound `File` methods
This is a draft attempt to fix#81357. *EDIT*: this PR now tackles `read()`, `write()`, `read_at()`, `write_at()` and `read_buf`. Still needs more testing though.
cc `@jstarks,` can you confirm the the Windows team is ok with the Rust stdlib using `NtReadFile` and `NtWriteFile`?
~Also, I'm provisionally using `CancelIo` in a last ditch attempt to recover but I'm not sure that this is actually a good idea. Especially as getting into this state would be a programmer error so aborting the process is justified in any case.~ *EDIT*: removed, see comments.
The current terse output gives 112 chars per line, which causes
wraparound for people using 100 char wide terminals, which is very
common.
This commit changes it to be exactly 100 wide, which makes the output
look much nicer.