Improve `select_nth_unstable` documentation clarity
* Instead uses `before` and `after` variable names in the example
where `greater` and `lesser` are flipped.
* Uses `<=` and `>=` instead of "less than or equal to" and "greater
than or equal to" to make the docs more concise.
* General attempt to remove unnecessary words and be more precise. For
example it seems slightly wrong to say "its final sorted position",
since this implies there is only one sorted position for this element.
Clarify note in `std::sync::LazyLock` example
I doubt most people know what it means, as I did not until a week ago. In the current form, it seems like a `TODO:`.
Update documentation for Arc::from_raw, Arc::increment_strong_count, and Arc::decrement_strong_count to clarify allocator requirement
### Related Issue:
This update addresses parts of the issue raised in [#134242](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/134242), where Arc's documentation lacks `Global Allocator` safety descriptions for three APIs. And this was confirmed by ```@workingjubilee``` :
> Wait, nevermind. I apparently forgot the `increment_strong_count` is implicitly A = Global. Ugh. Another reason these things are hard to track, unfortunately.
### PR Description
This PR updates the document for the following APIs:
- `Arc::from_raw`
- `Arc::increment_strong_count`
- `Arc::decrement_strong_count`
These APIs currently lack an important piece of documentation: **the raw pointer must point to a block of memory allocated by the global allocator**. This crucial detail is specified in the source code but is not reflected in the documentation, which could lead to confusion or incorrect usage by users.
### Problem:
The following example demonstrates the potential confusion caused by the lack of documentation:
```rust
#![feature(allocator_api)]
use std::alloc::{Allocator,AllocError, Layout};
use std::ptr::NonNull;
use std::sync::Arc;
struct LocalAllocator {
memory: NonNull<u8>,
size: usize,
}
impl LocalAllocator {
fn new(size: usize) -> Self {
Self {
memory: unsafe { NonNull::new_unchecked(&mut 0u8 as *mut u8) },
size,
}
}
}
unsafe impl Allocator for LocalAllocator {
fn allocate(&self, _layout: Layout) -> Result<NonNull<[u8]>, AllocError> {
Ok(NonNull::slice_from_raw_parts(self.memory, self.size))
}
unsafe fn deallocate(&self, _ptr: NonNull<u8>, _layout: Layout) {
}
}
fn main() {
let allocator = LocalAllocator::new(64);
let arc = Arc::new_in(5, &allocator); // Here, allocator could be any non-global allocator
let ptr = Arc::into_raw(arc);
unsafe {
Arc::increment_strong_count(ptr);
let arc = Arc::from_raw(ptr);
assert_eq!(2, Arc::strong_count(&arc)); // Failed here!
}
}
```
[cfg_match] Adjust syntax
A year has passed since the creation of #115585 and the feature, as expected, is not moving forward. Let's change that.
This PR proposes changing the arm's syntax from `cfg(SOME_CONDITION) => { ... }` to `SOME_CODITION => {}`.
```rust
match_cfg! {
unix => {
fn foo() { /* unix specific functionality */ }
}
target_pointer_width = "32" => {
fn foo() { /* non-unix, 32-bit functionality */ }
}
_ => {
fn foo() { /* fallback implementation */ }
}
}
```
Why? Because after several manual migrations in https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/116342 it became clear, at least for me, that `cfg` prefixes are unnecessary, verbose and redundant.
Again, everything is just a proposal to move things forward. If the shown syntax isn't ideal, feel free to close this PR or suggest other alternatives.
Rollup of 5 pull requests
Successful merges:
- #135497 (fix typo in typenames of pin documentation)
- #135522 (add incremental test for issue 135514)
- #135523 (const traits: remove some known-bug that do not seem to make sense)
- #135535 (Add GUI test for #135499)
- #135541 (Methods of const traits are const)
r? `@ghost`
`@rustbot` modify labels: rollup
fix typo in typenames of pin documentation
I noticed this whilst reading the documentation for pin.
Basically there was just one to many closing angle brackets on the type parameters in the documentation where instead of being `Pin<&mut T>` it was `Pin<&mut T>>`
deprecate `std::intrinsics::transmute` etc, use `std::mem::*` instead
The `rustc_allowed_through_unstable_modules` attribute lets users call `std::mem::transmute` as `std::intrinsics::transmute`. The former is a reexport of the latter, and for a long time we didn't properly check stability for reexports, so making this a hard error now would be a breaking change for little gain. But at the same time, `std::intrinsics::transmute` is not the intended path for this function, so I think it is a good idea to show a deprecation warning when that path is used. This PR implements that, for all the functions in `std::intrinsics` that carry the attribute.
I assume this will need ``@rust-lang/libs-api`` FCP.
std: lazily allocate the main thread handle
https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/123550 eliminated the allocation of the main thread handle, but at the cost of greatly increased complexity. This PR proposes another approach: Instead of creating the main thread handle itself, the runtime simply remembers the thread ID of the main thread. The main thread handle is then only allocated when it is used, using the same lazy-initialization mechanism as for non-runtime use of `thread::current`, and the `name` method uses the thread ID to identify the main thread handle and return the correct name ("main") for it.
Thereby, we also allow accessing `thread::current` before main: as the runtime no longer tries to install its own handle, this will no longer trigger an abort. Rather, the name returned from `name` will only be "main" after the runtime initialization code has run, but I think that is acceptable.
This new approach also requires some changes to the signal handling code, as calling `thread::current` would now allocate when called on the main thread, which is not acceptable. I fixed this by adding a new function (`with_current_name`) that performs all the naming logic without allocation or without initializing the thread ID (which could allocate on some platforms).
Reverts #123550, CC ``@GnomedDev``
Rollup of 7 pull requests
Successful merges:
- #132397 (Make missing_abi lint warn-by-default.)
- #133807 (ci: Enable opt-dist for dist-aarch64-linux builds)
- #134143 (Convert `struct FromBytesWithNulError` into enum)
- #134338 (Use a C-safe return type for `__rust_[ui]128_*` overflowing intrinsics)
- #134678 (Update `ReadDir::next` in `std::sys::pal::unix::fs` to use `&raw const (*p).field` instead of `p.byte_offset().cast()`)
- #135424 (Detect unstable lint docs that dont enable their feature)
- #135520 (Make sure we actually use the right trivial lifetime substs when eagerly monomorphizing drop for ADTs)
r? `@ghost`
`@rustbot` modify labels: rollup
Update `ReadDir::next` in `std::sys::pal::unix::fs` to use `&raw const (*p).field` instead of `p.byte_offset().cast()`
Since https://github.com/rust-lang/reference/pull/1387 and https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/117572, `&raw mut (*p).field`/`addr_of!((*p).field)` is defined to have the same inbounds preconditions as `ptr::offset`/`ptr::byte_offset`. I.e. `&raw const (*p).field` does not require that `p: *const T` point to a full `size_of::<T>()` bytes of memory, only that `p.byte_add(offset_of!(T, field))` is defined.
The old comment "[...] we don't even get to use `&raw const (*entry_ptr).d_name` because that operation requires the full extent of *entry_ptr to be in bounds of the same allocation, which is not necessarily the case here [...]" is now outdated, and the code can be simplified to use `&raw const (*entry_ptr).field`.
-------
There should be no behavior differences from this PR.
The `: *const dirent64` on line 716 and the `const _: usize = mem::offset_of!(dirent64, $field);` and comment on lines 749-751 are just sanity checks and should not affect semantics.
Since the `offset_ptr!` macro is only called three times, and all with the same local variable entry_ptr, I just used the local variable directly in the macro instead of taking it as an input, and renamed the macro to `entry_field_ptr!`.
The whole macro could also be removed and replaced with just using `&raw const (*entry_ptr).field` in the three places, but the comments on the macro seemed worthwhile to keep.
Use a C-safe return type for `__rust_[ui]128_*` overflowing intrinsics
Combined with [1], this will change the overflowing multiplication operations to return an `extern "C"`-safe type.
Link: https://github.com/rust-lang/compiler-builtins/pull/735 [1]
Convert `struct FromBytesWithNulError` into enum
This PR renames the former `kind` enum from `FromBytesWithNulErrorKind` to `FromBytesWithNulError`, and removes the original struct.
See https://github.com/rust-lang/libs-team/issues/493
## Possible Changes - TBD
* [x] should the new `enum FromBytesWithNulError` derive `Copy`?
* [ ] should there be any new/changed attributes?
* [x] add some more tests
## Problem
One of `CStr` constructors, `CStr::from_bytes_with_nul(bytes: &[u8])` handles 3 cases:
1. `bytes` has one NULL as the last value - creates CStr
2. `bytes` has no NULL - error
3. `bytes` has a NULL in some other position - error
The 3rd case is error that may require lossy conversion, but the 2nd case can easily be handled by the user code. Unfortunately, this function returns an opaque `FromBytesWithNulError` error in both 2nd and 3rd case, so the user cannot detect just the 2nd case - having to re-implement the entire function and bring in the `memchr` dependency.
## Motivating examples or use cases
In [this code](f86d7a8768/varnish-sys/src/vcl/ws.rs (L158)), my FFI code needs to copy user's `&[u8]` into a C-allocated memory blob in a NUL-terminated `CStr` format. My code must first validate if `&[u8]` has a trailing NUL (case 1), no NUL (adds one on the fly - case 2), or NUL in the middle (3rd case - error). I had to re-implement `from_bytes_with_nul` and add `memchr`dependency just to handle the 2nd case.
r? `@Amanieu`
Also, the macro is only called three times, and all with the same local variable entry_ptr, so just use the local variable directly,
and rename the macro to entry_field_ptr.
Enforce syntactical stability of const traits in HIR
This PR enforces what I'm calling *syntactical* const stability of traits. In other words, it enforces the ability to name `~const`/`const` traits in trait bounds in various syntax positions in HIR (including in the trait of an impl header). This functionality is analogous to the *regular* item stability checker, which is concerned with making sure that you cannot refer to unstable items by name, and is implemented as an extension of that pass.
This is separate from enforcing the *recursive* const stability of const trait methods, which is implemented in MIR and runs on MIR bodies. That will require adding a new `NonConstOp` to the const checker and probably adjusting some logic to deduplicate redundant errors.
However, this check is separate and necessary for making sure that users don't add `~const`/`const` bounds to items when the trait is not const-stable in the first place. I chose to separate enforcing recursive const stability out of this PR to make it easier to review. I'll probably open a follow-up following this one, blocked on this PR.
r? `@RalfJung` cc `@rust-lang/project-const-traits`
Thereby, we also allow accessing thread::current before main: as the runtime no longer tries to install its own handle, this will no longer trigger an abort. Rather, the name returned from name will only be "main" after the runtime initialization code has run, but I think that is acceptable.
This new approach also requires some changes to the signal handling code, as calling `thread::current` would now allocate when called on the main thread, which is not acceptable. I fixed this by adding a new function (`with_current_name`) that performs all the naming logic without allocation or without initializing the thread ID (which could allocate on some platforms).
Rollup of 3 pull requests
Successful merges:
- #135381 (Add an example for `Vec::splice` inserting elements without removing)
- #135451 (Remove code duplication when hashing query result and interning node)
- #135464 (fix ICE with references to infinite structs in consts)
r? `@ghost`
`@rustbot` modify labels: rollup
Add an example for `Vec::splice` inserting elements without removing
This example clearly showcases how `splice` can be used to insert multiple elements efficiently at an index into a vector.
Fixes#135369.
The added example:
> Using `splice` to insert new items into a vector efficiently at a specific position indicated by an empty range:
> ```rust
> let mut v = vec![1, 5];
> let new = [2, 3, 4];
> v.splice(1..1, new);
> assert_eq!(v, [1, 2, 3, 4, 5]);
> ```
`@rustbot` label A-docs A-collections
use a single large catch_unwind in lang_start
I originally planned to use `abort_unwind` but reading the comment in `thread_cleanup` it seems we are deliberately going for slightly nicer error messages here, so this preserves that. It still seems nice to not repeat `catch_unwind` so often.