add doc(alias("AsciiChar")) to core::ascii::Char
Added it to the reexported, which is intended rustdoc behavior, but is apparently untested, so I also added a test for it.
Add diagnostic items for Clippy
Clippy still uses some paths to access items from the standard library. Adding the missing diagnostic items allows removing the last remaining paths.
Closesrust-lang/rust-clippy#5393
Marks ADT live if it appears in pattern
Marks ADT live if it appears in pattern, it implies the construction of the ADT.
1. Then we can detect unused private ADTs impl `Default`, without special logics for `Default` and other std traits.
2. We can also remove `rustc_trivial_field_reads` on `Default`, and the logic in `should_ignore_item` (introduced by rust-lang/rust#126302).
Fixesrust-lang/rust#120770
Extracted from rust-lang/rust#128637.
r? `@petrochenkov`
Convert `ilog(10)` to `ilog10()`
Except in tests, convert `integer.ilog(10)` to `integer.ilog10()` for better speed and to provide better examples of code that efficiently counts decimal digits. I couldn't find any instances of `integer.ilog(2)`.
Implement send_signal for unix child processes
Tracking issue: rust-lang/rust#141975
There are two main differences between my implementation and the Public API section of the tracking issue. ~First, `send_signal` requires a mutable reference, like `Child::kill`.~ Second, `ChildExt` has `Sealed` as a supertrait, bringing it more in line with other extension traits like `CommandExt`.
try-job: `dist-various*`
try-job: `test-various*`
Use a distinct `ToString` implementation for `u128` and `i128`
Part of https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/135543.
Follow-up of rust-lang/rust#136264.
When working on https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/142098, I realized that `i128` and `u128` could also benefit from a distinct `ToString` implementation so here it.
The last commit is just me realizing that I forgot to add the format tests for `usize` and `isize`.
Here is the bench comparison:
| bench name | last nightly | with this PR | diff |
|-|-|-|-|
| bench_i128 | 29.25 ns/iter (+/- 0.66) | 17.52 ns/iter (+/- 0.7) | -40.1% |
| bench_u128 | 34.06 ns/iter (+/- 0.21) | 16.1 ns/iter (+/- 0.6) | -52.7% |
I used this code to test:
```rust
#![feature(test)]
extern crate test;
use test::{Bencher, black_box};
#[inline(always)]
fn convert_to_string<T: ToString>(n: T) -> String {
n.to_string()
}
macro_rules! decl_benches {
($($name:ident: $ty:ident,)+) => {
$(
#[bench]
fn $name(c: &mut Bencher) {
c.iter(|| convert_to_string(black_box({ let nb: $ty = 20; nb })));
}
)+
}
}
decl_benches! {
bench_u128: u128,
bench_i128: i128,
}
```
Handle win32 separator for cygwin paths
This PR handles a issue that cygwin actually supports Win32 path, so we need to handle the Win32 prefix and separaters.
r? `@mati865`
cc `@jeremyd2019`
~~Not sure if I should handle the prefix like the windows target... Cygwin *does* support win32 paths directly going through the APIs, but I think it's not the recommended way.~~
Here I just use `cygwin_conv_path` because it handles both cygwin and win32 paths correctly and convert them into absolute POSIX paths.
UPDATE: Windows path prefix is handled.
library: Increase timeout on mpmc test to reduce flakes
This recently spuriously failed in a rollup, so I think we can afford to increase the base timeout and the amount of time slept for to provide a much wider margin for the timeout to be reached.
Rollup of 6 pull requests
Successful merges:
- rust-lang/rust#135656 (Add `-Z hint-mostly-unused` to tell rustc that most of a crate will go unused)
- rust-lang/rust#138237 (Get rid of `EscapeDebugInner`.)
- rust-lang/rust#141614 (lint direct use of rustc_type_ir )
- rust-lang/rust#142123 (Implement initial support for timing sections (`--json=timings`))
- rust-lang/rust#142377 (Try unremapping compiler sources)
- rust-lang/rust#142674 (remove duplicate crash test)
r? `@ghost`
`@rustbot` modify labels: rollup
remove duplicate crash test
I noticed near duplication between "library/alloctests/tests/testing/crash_test.rs" and "library/alloctests/testing/crash_test.rs" and wanted to try and remove that. The only difference is the path used to import `Debug`, but it seems not to matter. Perhaps my change is still wrong?
r? ```@bjorn3```
remove duplicate crash test
I noticed near duplication between "library/alloctests/tests/testing/crash_test.rs" and "library/alloctests/testing/crash_test.rs" and wanted to try and remove that. The only difference is the path used to import `Debug`, but it seems not to matter. Perhaps my change is still wrong?
r? ``@bjorn3``
Change __rust_no_alloc_shim_is_unstable to be a function
This fixes a long sequence of issues:
1. A customer reported that building for Arm64EC was broken: #138541
2. This was caused by a bug in my original implementation of Arm64EC support, namely that only functions on Arm64EC need to be decorated with `#` but Rust was decorating statics as well.
3. Once I corrected Rust to only decorate functions, I started linking failures where the linker couldn't find statics exported by dylib dependencies. This was caused by the compiler not marking exported statics in the generated DEF file with `DATA`, thus they were being exported as functions not data.
4. Once I corrected the way that the DEF files were being emitted, the linker started failing saying that it couldn't find `__rust_no_alloc_shim_is_unstable`. This is because the MSVC linker requires the declarations of statics imported from other dylibs to be marked with `dllimport` (whereas it will happily link to functions imported from other dylibs whether they are marked `dllimport` or not).
5. I then made a change to ensure that `__rust_no_alloc_shim_is_unstable` was marked as `dllimport`, but the MSVC linker started emitting warnings that `__rust_no_alloc_shim_is_unstable` was marked as `dllimport` but was declared in an obj file. This is a harmless warning which is a performance hint: anything that's marked `dllimport` must be indirected via an `__imp` symbol so I added a linker arg in the target to suppress the warning.
6. A customer then reported a similar warning when using `lld-link` (<https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/140176#issuecomment-2872448443>). I don't think it was an implementation difference between the two linkers but rather that, depending on the obj that the declaration versus uses of `__rust_no_alloc_shim_is_unstable` landed in we would get different warnings, so I suppressed that warning as well: #140954.
7. Another customer reported that they weren't using the Rust compiler to invoke the linker, thus these warnings were breaking their build: <https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/140176#issuecomment-2881867433>. At that point, my original change was reverted (#141024) leaving Arm64EC broken yet again.
Taking a step back, a lot of these linker issues arise from the fact that `__rust_no_alloc_shim_is_unstable` is marked as `extern "Rust"` in the standard library and, therefore, assumed to be a foreign item from a different crate BUT the Rust compiler may choose to generate it either in the current crate, some other crate that will be statically linked in OR some other crate that will by dynamically imported.
Worse yet, it is impossible while building a given crate to know if `__rust_no_alloc_shim_is_unstable` will statically linked or dynamically imported: it might be that one of its dependent crates is the one with an allocator kind set and thus that crate (which is compiled later) will decide depending if it has any dylib dependencies or not to import `__rust_no_alloc_shim_is_unstable` or generate it. Thus, there is no way to know if the declaration of `__rust_no_alloc_shim_is_unstable` should be marked with `dllimport` or not.
There is a simple fix for all this: there is no reason `__rust_no_alloc_shim_is_unstable` must be a static. It needs to be some symbol that must be linked in; thus, it could easily be a function instead. As a function, there is no need to mark it as `dllimport` when dynamically imported which avoids the entire mess above.
There may be a perf hit for changing the `volatile load` to be a `tail call`, so I'm happy to change that part back (although I question what the codegen of a `volatile load` would look like, and if the backend is going to try to use load-acquire semantics).
Build with this change applied BEFORE #140176 was reverted to demonstrate that there are no linking issues with either MSVC or MinGW: <https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/actions/runs/15078657205>
Incidentally, I fixed `tests/run-make/no-alloc-shim` to work with MSVC as I needed it to be able to test locally (FYI for #128602)
r? `@bjorn3`
cc `@jieyouxu`
Safer implementation of RepeatN
I've seen the "Use MaybeUninit for RepeatN" commit while reading This Week In Rust and immediately thought about something I've written some time ago - https://github.com/Soveu/repeat_finite/blob/master/src/lib.rs.
Using the fact, that `Option` will find niche in `(T, NonZeroUsize)`, we can construct something that has the same size as `(T, usize)` while completely getting rid of `MaybeUninit`.
This leaves only `unsafe` on `TrustedLen`, which is pretty neat.
This recently spuriously failed in a rollup, so I think we can afford to
increase the base timeout and the amount of time slept for to provide
a much wider margin for the timeout to be reached.
Windows: Use anonymous pipes in Command
When setting `Stdio::pipe` on `Command` we want to create an anonymous pipe that can be used asynchronously (at least on our end). Usually we'd use [`CreatePipe`](https://learn.microsoft.com/en-us/windows/win32/api/namedpipeapi/nf-namedpipeapi-createpipe) to open anonymous pipes but unfortunately it opens pipes for synchronous access. The alternative is to use [`CreateNamedPipeW`](https://learn.microsoft.com/en-us/windows/win32/api/namedpipeapi/nf-namedpipeapi-createnamedpipew) which does allow asynchronous access but that requires giving a file name to the pipe. So we currently have this awful hack where we attempt to emulate anonymous pipes using `CreateNamedPipeW` by attempting to create a unique name and looping until we find one that doesn't already exist.
The better option is to use the lower level [`NtCreateNamedPipeFile`](https://learn.microsoft.com/en-us/windows/win32/devnotes/nt-create-named-pipe-file) (which is used internally by both `CreatePipe` and `CreateNamedPipeW`). This function wasn't documented until a few years ago but now that it is it's ok for us to use it.
try-job: *msvc*
try-job: *mingw*
Sized Hierarchy: Part I
This patch implements the non-const parts of rust-lang/rfcs#3729. It introduces two new traits to the standard library, `MetaSized` and `PointeeSized`. See the RFC for the rationale behind these traits and to discuss whether this change makes sense in the abstract.
These traits are unstable (as is their constness), so users cannot refer to them without opting-in to `feature(sized_hierarchy)`. These traits are not behind `cfg`s as this would make implementation unfeasible, there would simply be too many `cfg`s required to add the necessary bounds everywhere. So, like `Sized`, these traits are automatically implemented by the compiler.
RFC 3729 describes changes which are necessary to preserve backwards compatibility given the introduction of these traits, which are implemented and as follows:
- `?Sized` is rewritten as `MetaSized`
- `MetaSized` is added as a default supertrait for all traits w/out an explicit sizedness supertrait already.
There are no edition migrations implemented in this, as these are primarily required for the constness parts of the RFC and prior to stabilisation of this (and so will come in follow-up PRs alongside the const parts). All diagnostic output should remain the same (showing `?Sized` even if the compiler sees `MetaSized`) unless the `sized_hierarchy` feature is enabled.
Due to the use of unstable extern types in the standard library and rustc, some bounds in both projects have had to be relaxed already - this is unfortunate but unavoidable so that these extern types can continue to be used where they were before. Performing these relaxations in the standard library and rustc are desirable longer-term anyway, but some bounds are not as relaxed as they ideally would be due to the inability to relax `Deref::Target` (this will be investigated separately).
It is hoped that this is implemented such that it could be merged and these traits could exist "under the hood" without that being observable to the user (other than in any performance impact this has on the compiler, etc). Some details might leak through due to the standard library relaxations, but this has not been observed in test output.
**Notes:**
- Any commits starting with "upstream:" can be ignored, as these correspond to other upstream PRs that this is based on which have yet to be merged.
- This best reviewed commit-by-commit. I've attempted to make the implementation easy to follow and keep similar changes and test output updates together.
- Each commit has a short description describing its purpose.
- This patch is large but it's primarily in the test suite.
- I've worked on the performance of this patch and a few optimisations are implemented so that the performance impact is neutral-to-minor.
- `PointeeSized` is a different name from the RFC just to make it more obvious that it is different from `std::ptr::Pointee` but all the names are yet to be bikeshed anyway.
- `@nikomatsakis` has confirmed [that this can proceed as an experiment from the t-lang side](https://rust-lang.zulipchat.com/#narrow/channel/435869-project-goals/topic/SVE.20and.20SME.20on.20AArch64.20.28goals.23270.29/near/506196491)
- FCP in https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/137944#issuecomment-2912207485Fixesrust-lang/rust#79409.
r? `@ghost` (I'll discuss this with relevant teams to find a reviewer)
std: refactor explanation of `NonNull`
Fixesrust-lang/rust#141933
I cut out the excessive explanation and used an example to explain how to maintain invariance, but I think what is quoted in the *rust reference* in the document needs to be added with a more layman's explanation and example.
(I'm not sure if I deleted too much)
r? `@workingjubilee`