Fix libstd compile error for windows-gnu targets without `backtrace`
This is basically an addition to #44979. Compiling `libstd` still fails when targeting `windows-gnu` with `panic = "abort"` because the items in the `...c::gnu` module are not used. They are only referenced from `backtrace_gnu.rs`, which is indirectly feature gated behind `backtrace` [here](9f3b09116b/src/libstd/sys/windows/mod.rs (L23)).
We don't want to stabilize them now already. The goal of this set of
commits is just to add inherent methods to the four types. Stabilizing
all of those methods can be done later.
Many AsciiExt imports have become useless thanks to the inherent ascii
methods added in the last commits. These were removed. In some places, I
fully specified the ascii method being called to enforce usage of the
AsciiExt trait. Note that some imports are not removed but tagged with
a `#[cfg(stage0)]` attribute. This is necessary, because certain ascii
methods are not yet available in stage0. All those imports will be
removed later.
Additionally, failing tests were fixed. The test suite should exit
successfully now.
This is done in order to deprecate AsciiExt eventually. Note that
this commit contains a bunch of `cfg(stage0)` statements. This is
due to a new compiler feature this commit depends on: the
`slice_u8` lang item. Once this lang item is available in the
stage0 compiler, all those cfg flags (and more) can be removed.
This is done in order to deprecate AsciiExt eventually. Note that
this commit contains a bunch of `cfg(stage0)` statements. This is
due to a new compiler feature I am using: the `slice_u8` lang item.
Once this lang item is available in the stage0 compiler, all those
cfg flags (and more) can be removed.
The doc comments were incorrect before: since the inherent ascii methods
shadow the `AsciiExt` methods, the examples didn't use the `AsciiExt` at
all. Since the trait will be deprecated soon anyway, the easiest solution
was to remove the examples and already mention that the methods will be
deprecated in the near future.
Since the methods on u8 directly will shadow the AsciiExt methods,
we cannot change the signature without breaking everything. It
would have been nice to take `u8` as argument instead of `&u8`, but
we cannot break stuff! So this commit reverts it to the original
`&u8` version.
This is the first step in order to deprecate AsciiExt. Since
this is a WIP commit, there is still some code duplication (notably
the static arrays) that will be removed later.
Currently, the compiler requires `T` to also be `Send`. There is no reason for
that. `&Rw{Read,Write}LockGuard` only provides a shared referenced to `T`, sending
that across threads is safe if `T` is `Sync`.
More fixes for x86_64-unknown-linux-gnux32
This update libc (all libc testing are passing) and fixes NR_GETRANDOM.
Fix all but one run-pass test (lto-unwind.rs, see https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/45416)
remove the `T: Sync` requirement for `RwLock<T>: Send`
That requirement makes sense for containers like `Arc` that don't
uniquely own their contents, but `RwLock` is not one of those.
This restriction was added in 380d23b5d4, but it's not clear why. @hniksic
and I [were discussing this on reddit](https://www.reddit.com/r/rust/comments/763o7r/blog_posts_introducing_lockfree_rust_comparing/dobcvbm/). I might be totally wrong about this change being sound, but I'm super curious to find out :)
Implement TryFrom<&[T]> for &[T; N]
There are many cases where a buffer with a static compile-time size is preferred over a slice with a dynamic size. This allows for performing a checked conversion from `&[T]` to `&[T; N]`. This may also lead to compile-time optimizations involving `[T; N]` such as loop unrolling.
This is my first PR to Rust, so I'm not sure if discussion of this change should happen here or does it need its own RFC? I figured these changes would be a subset of #33417.
Improve std::process module docs
Addresses part of #29370
I've changed the first `cat` example to a "Hello World" example involving echo, and I've also added another example showing how to pipe output. I'm still working on the module-level description.
For now, I'd like feedback on the examples.
r? @steveklabnik
Bump to 1.23 and update bootstrap
This commit updates the bootstrap compiler, bumps the version to 1.23, updates
Cargo, updates books, and updates crates.io dependencies
std: Optimize thread park/unpark implementation
This is an adaptation of alexcrichton/futures-rs#597 for the standard library.
The goal here is to avoid locking a mutex on the "fast path" for thread
park/unpark where you're waking up a thread that isn't sleeping or otherwise
trying to park a thread that's already been notified. Mutex performance varies
quite a bit across platforms so this should provide a nice consistent speed
boost for the fast path of these functions.
This is an adaptation of alexcrichton/futures-rs#597 for the standard library.
The goal here is to avoid locking a mutex on the "fast path" for thread
park/unpark where you're waking up a thread that isn't sleeping or otherwise
trying to park a thread that's already been notified. Mutex performance varies
quite a bit across platforms so this should provide a nice consistent speed
boost for the fast path of these functions.
Remove deprecated `collections` crate.
The real `collections` was merged with `alloc`, this facade was introduced [in this PR](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/42720) to give `#[no_std]` users time to adapt. This was done at least two cycles ago, now we can consider removing it for good.