Commit Graph

2631 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
bors f19851069e Auto merge of #93921 - matthiaskrgr:rollup-wn3jlxj, r=matthiaskrgr
Rollup of 10 pull requests

Successful merges:

 - #90955 (Rename `FilenameTooLong` to `InvalidFilename` and also use it for Windows' `ERROR_INVALID_NAME`)
 - #91607 (Make `span_extend_to_prev_str()` more robust)
 - #92895 (Remove some unused functionality)
 - #93635 (Add missing platform-specific information on current_dir and set_current_dir)
 - #93660 (rustdoc-json: Add some tests for typealias item)
 - #93782 (Split `pauth` target feature)
 - #93868 (Fix incorrect register conflict detection in asm!)
 - #93888 (Implement `AsFd` for `&T` and `&mut T`.)
 - #93909 (Fix typo: explicitely -> explicitly)
 - #93910 (fix mention of moved function in `rustc_hir` docs)

Failed merges:

r? `@ghost`
`@rustbot` modify labels: rollup
2022-02-11 23:01:50 +00:00
Matthias Krüger 34997f0114 Rollup merge of #93888 - sunfishcode:sunfishcode/impl-asfd-for-ref, r=joshtriplett
Implement `AsFd` for `&T` and `&mut T`.

Add implementations of `AsFd` for `&T` and `&mut T`, so that users can
write code like this:

```rust
pub fn fchown<F: AsFd>(fd: F, uid: Option<u32>, gid: Option<u32>) -> io::Result<()> {
```

with `fd: F` rather than `fd: &F`.

And similar for `AsHandle` and `AsSocket` on Windows.

Also, adjust the `fchown` example to pass the file by reference. The
code can work either way now, but passing by reference is more likely
to be what users will want to do.

This is an alternative to #93869, and is a simpler way to achieve the
same goals: users don't need to pass borrowed-`BorrowedFd` arguments,
and it prevents a pitfall in the case where users write `fd: F` instead
of `fd: &F`.

r? ```@joshtriplett```
2022-02-11 21:48:50 +01:00
Matthias Krüger 15d71cff2d Rollup merge of #93635 - GuillaumeGomez:missing-platform-spec-info, r=Amanieu
Add missing platform-specific information on current_dir and set_current_dir

Fixes #93598.
2022-02-11 21:48:46 +01:00
Matthias Krüger ce4df92c8c Rollup merge of #90955 - JohnTitor:os-error-123-as-invalid-input, r=m-ou-se
Rename `FilenameTooLong` to `InvalidFilename` and also use it for Windows' `ERROR_INVALID_NAME`

Address https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/90940#issuecomment-970157931
`ERROR_INVALID_NAME` (i.e. "The filename, directory name, or volume label syntax is incorrect") happens if we pass an invalid filename, directory name, or label syntax, so mapping as `InvalidInput` is reasonable to me.
2022-02-11 21:48:42 +01:00
bors e789f3a3a3 Auto merge of #90271 - adamgemmell:dev/feat-detect-stabilise, r=Amanieu
Stabilise `is_aarch64_feature_detected!` under `simd_aarch64` feature

Initial implementation, looking for feedback on the approach here. https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/86941

One point I noticed was that I haven't seen different "since" versions for the same feature - does this mean that other features can't be added to to the `simd_aarch64` feature once this is in stable? If so it might need a more specific name.

r? `@Amanieu`
2022-02-11 20:41:51 +00:00
Guillaume Gomez 22a24c98d3 Add missing platform-specific information on current_dir and set_current_dir 2022-02-11 16:33:02 +01:00
Dan Gohman 1f98ef7793 Implement AsFd for &T and &mut T.
Add implementations of `AsFd` for `&T` and `&mut T`, so that users can
write code like this:

```rust
pub fn fchown<F: AsFd>(fd: F, uid: Option<u32>, gid: Option<u32>) -> io::Result<()> {
```

with `fd: F` rather than `fd: &F`.

And similar for `AsHandle` and `AsSocket` on Windows.

Also, adjust the `fchown` example to pass the file by reference. The
code can work either way now, but passing by reference is more likely
to be what users will want to do.

This is an alternative to #93869, and is a simpler way to achieve the
same goals: users don't need to pass borrowed-`BorrowedFd` arguments,
and it prevents a pitfall in the case where users write `fd: F` instead
of `fd: &F`.
2022-02-10 18:26:12 -08:00
Adam Gemmell 102a0ffd37 Move is_aarch64_feature_detected! to simd_aarch64 feature and stabilise 2022-02-10 15:24:13 +00:00
Yuki Okushi a898b31662 Rename to InvalidFilename 2022-02-10 23:49:27 +09:00
Josh Triplett 861f3c70a2 Fix description of FilenameInvalid
Co-authored-by: Mara Bos <m-ou.se@m-ou.se>
2022-02-10 23:42:27 +09:00
Yuki Okushi cc9407924d Map ERROR_INVALID_NAME to FilenameInvalid 2022-02-10 23:42:27 +09:00
Yuki Okushi 755e475c8b Rename FilenameTooLong to FilenameInvalid 2022-02-10 23:42:26 +09:00
Yuki Okushi 1115f15e1c windows: Map ERROR_INVALID_NAME as InvalidInput 2022-02-10 23:42:23 +09:00
Matthias Krüger 8c60f44877 Rollup merge of #93843 - solid-rs:fix-kmc-solid-condvar, r=m-ou-se
kmc-solid: Fix wait queue manipulation errors in the `Condvar` implementation

This PR fixes a number of bugs in the `Condvar` wait queue implementation used by the [`*-kmc-solid_*`](https://doc.rust-lang.org/nightly/rustc/platform-support/kmc-solid.html) Tier 3 targets. These bugs can occur when there are multiple threads waiting on the same `Condvar` and sometimes manifest as an `unwrap` failure.
2022-02-10 12:10:02 +01:00
Tomoaki Kawada 1d180caf1a kmc-solid: Wait queue should be sorted in the descending order of task priorities
In ITRON, lower priority values mean higher priorities.
2022-02-10 11:35:37 +09:00
Tomoaki Kawada bdc9508bb6 kmc-solid: Fix wait queue manipulation errors in the Condvar implementation 2022-02-10 10:21:39 +09:00
Amanieu d'Antras 49d4823112 Stabilize cfg_target_has_atomic
Closes #32976
2022-02-09 18:45:44 +00:00
Yuki Okushi ec2fd8a35f Rollup merge of #93445 - yaahc:exitcode-constructor, r=dtolnay
Add From<u8> for ExitCode

This should cover a mostly cross-platform subset of supported exit codes.

We decided to stick with `u8` initially since its the common subset between all platforms that we support (excluding wasm which I think only works with `true` or `false`). Posix is supposed to take i32s, but in practice many unix platforms mask out all but the low 8 bits or in some cases the 8-15th bits. Windows takes a u32 instead of an i32. Bourne-compatible shells also report signals as exitcode 128 + `signal_no`, so there's some ambiguity there when returning exit codes > 127, but it is possible to disambiguate them on the other side so we decided against restricting the possible codes further than to `u8`.

## Related

- Detailed analysis of exit code support on various platforms: https://internals.rust-lang.org/t/mini-pre-rfc-redesigning-process-exitstatus/5426
- https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/48711
- https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/43301
- https://rust-lang.zulipchat.com/#narrow/stream/219381-t-libs/topic/Termination.2FExit.20Status.20Stabilization
2022-02-09 14:12:17 +09:00
Matthias Krüger 9cb39a6083 Rollup merge of #93206 - ChrisDenton:ntopenfile, r=nagisa
Use `NtCreateFile` instead of `NtOpenFile` to open a file

Generally the internal `Nt*` functions should be avoided but when we do need to use one we should stick to the most commonly used for the job. To that end, this PR replaces `NtOpenFile` with `NtCreateFile`.

NOTE: The initial version of this comment hypothesised that this may help with some recent false positives from malware scanners. This hypothesis proved wrong. Sorry for the distraction.
2022-02-08 16:40:49 +01:00
Jane Lusby 4c5a36e2d1 fix exclusive range error 2022-02-07 12:45:36 -08:00
bors 734368a200 Auto merge of #87869 - thomcc:skinny-io-error, r=yaahc
Make io::Error use 64 bits on targets with 64 bit pointers.

I've wanted this for a long time, but didn't see a good way to do it without having extra allocation. When looking at it yesterday, it was more clear what to do for some reason.

This approach avoids any additional allocations, and reduces the size by half (8 bytes, down from 16). AFAICT it doesn't come additional runtime cost, and the compiler seems to do a better job with code using it.

Additionally, this `io::Error` has a niche (still), so `io::Result<()>` is *also* 64 bits (8 bytes, down from 16), and `io::Result<usize>` (used for lots of io trait functions) is 2x64 bits (16 bytes, down from 24 — this means on x86_64 it can use the nice rax/rdx 2-reg struct return). More generally, it shaves a whole 64 bit integer register off of the size of basically any `io::Result<()>`.

(For clarity: Improving `io::Result` (rather than io::Error) was most of the motivation for this)

On 32 bit (or other non-64bit) targets we still use something equivalent the old repr — I don't think think there's improving it, since one of the fields it stores is a `i32`, so we can't get below that, and it's already about as close as we can get to it.

---

### Isn't Pointer Tagging Dodgy?

The details of the layout, and why its implemented the way it is, are explained in the header comment of library/std/src/io/error/repr_bitpacked.rs. There's probably more details than there need to be, but I didn't trim it down that much, since there's a lot of stuff I did deliberately, that might have not seemed that way.

There's actually only one variant holding a pointer which gets tagged. This one is the (holder for the) user-provided error.

I believe the scheme used to tag it is not UB, and that it preserves pointer provenance (even though often pointer tagging does not) because the tagging operation is just `core::ptr::add`, and untagging is `core::ptr::sub`. The result of both operations lands inside the original allocation, so it would follow the safety contract of `core::ptr::{add,sub}`.

The other pointer this had to encode is not tagged — or rather, the tagged repr is equivalent to untagged (it's tagged with 0b00, and has >=4b alignment, so we can reuse the bottom bits). And the other variants we encode are just integers, which (which can be untagged using bitwise operations without worry — they're integers).

CC `@RalfJung` for the stuff in repr_bitpacked.rs, as my comments are informed by a lot of the UCG work, but it's possible I missed something or got it wrong (even if the implementation is okay, there are parts of the header comment that says things like "We can't do $x" which could be false).

---

### Why So Many Changes?

The repr change was mostly internal, but changed one widely used API: I had to switch how `io::Error::new_const` works.

This required switching `io::Error::new_const` to take the full message data (including the kind) as a `&'static`, rather than just the string. This would have been really tedious, but I made a macro that made it much simpler, but it was a wide change since `io::Error::new_const` is used everywhere.

This included changing files for a lot of targets I don't have easy access to (SGX? Haiku? Windows? Who has heard of these things), so I expect there to be spottiness in CI initially, unless luck is on my side.

Anyway this large only tangentially-related change is all in the first commit (although that commit also pulls the previous repr out into its own file), whereas the packing stuff is all in commit 2.

---

P.S. I haven't looked at all of this since writing it, and will do a pass over it again later, sorry for any obvious typos or w/e. I also definitely repeat myself in comments and such.

(It probably could use more tests too. I did some basic testing, and made it so we `debug_assert!` in cases the decode isn't what we encoded, but I don't know the degree which I can assume libstd's testing of IO would exercise this. That is: it wouldn't be surprising to me if libstds IO testing were minimal, especially around error cases, although I have no idea).
2022-02-07 20:32:56 +00:00
Jane Lusby cf4ac6b1e1 Add From<u8> for ExitCode
This should cover a mostly cross-platform subset of supported exit codes.
2022-02-06 12:43:12 -08:00
Inteon afb7a502f6 rewrite from_bytes_with_nul to match code style in from_vec_with_nul
Signed-off-by: Inteon <42113979+inteon@users.noreply.github.com>
2022-02-06 20:07:03 +01:00
Thom Chiovoloni 9cbe99488b Add more tests for io::Error packing, and fix some comments that weren't quite accurate anymore 2022-02-04 23:15:02 -08:00
Thom Chiovoloni a17a896d09 Update documentation somewhat 2022-02-04 18:47:31 -08:00
Thom Chiovoloni e98c7f7209 Use wrapping pointer arithmetic in the bitpacked io::Error 2022-02-04 18:47:31 -08:00
Thom Chiovoloni f950edbef7 Elaborate some in the documentation and respond to some review comments 2022-02-04 18:47:31 -08:00
Thom Chiovoloni 06edf082c3 Update library/std/src/io/error/repr_bitpacked.rs
Co-authored-by: the8472 <the8472@users.noreply.github.com>
2022-02-04 18:47:30 -08:00
Thom Chiovoloni 9f7eb7d473 Fix comment typos noticed by code review.
Co-authored-by: Ralf Jung <post@ralfj.de>
2022-02-04 18:47:30 -08:00
Thom Chiovoloni 6b068437cb Address address comments, improve comments slightly 2022-02-04 18:47:30 -08:00
Thom Chiovoloni ea211695bf Optimize io::error::Repr layout on 64 bit targets. 2022-02-04 18:47:30 -08:00
Thom Chiovoloni 554918e311 Hide Repr details from io::Error, and rework io::Error::new_const. 2022-02-04 18:47:29 -08:00
Matthias Krüger af2886eef9 Rollup merge of #93495 - solid-rs:fix-kmc-solid-rtc-month, r=yaahc
kmc-solid: Fix off-by-one error in `SystemTime::now`

Fixes a miscalculation of `SystemTime`  on the [`*-kmc-solid_*`](https://doc.rust-lang.org/nightly/rustc/platform-support/kmc-solid.html) Tier 3 targets.

Unlike the identically-named libc counterpart `tm::tm_mon`, `SOLID_RTC_TIME::tm_mon` contains a 1-based month number.
2022-02-04 18:42:14 +01:00
Matthias Krüger f070e0b5a6 Rollup merge of #93555 - ChrisDenton:fs-try-exists-doc, r=Mark-Simulacrum
Link `try_exists` docs to `Path::exists`

Links to the existing `Path::exists` method from both `std::Path::try_exists` and `std::fs:try_exists`.

Tracking issue for `path_try_exists`: #83186
2022-02-04 14:59:02 +01:00
bors 796bf14f2e Auto merge of #93146 - workingjubilee:use-std-simd, r=Mark-Simulacrum
pub use std::simd::StdFloat;

Syncs portable-simd up to commit rust-lang/portable-simd@03f6fbb21e,
Diff: https://github.com/rust-lang/portable-simd/compare/533f0fc81ab9ba097779fcd27c8f9ea12261fef5...03f6fbb21e6050da2a05b3ce8f480c020b384916

This sync requires a little bit more legwork because it also introduces a trait into `std::simd`, so that it is no longer simply a reexport of `core::simd`. Out of simple-minded consistency and to allow more options, I replicated the pattern for the way `core::simd` is integrated in the first place, however this is not necessary if it doesn't acquire any interdependencies inside `std`: it could be a simple crate reexport. I just don't know yet if that will happen or not.

To summarize other misc changes:
- Shifts no longer panic, now wrap on too-large shifts (like `Simd` integers usually do!)
- mask16x32 will now be many i16s, not many i32s... 🙃
- `#[must_use]` is spread around generously
- Adjusts division, float min/max, and `Mask::{from,to}_array` internally to be faster
- Adds the much-requested `Simd::cast::<U>` function (equivalent to `simd.to_array().map(|lane| lane as U)`)
2022-02-03 09:15:16 +00:00
bors b3800860e1 Auto merge of #93101 - Mark-Simulacrum:library-backtrace, r=yaahc
Support configuring whether to capture backtraces at runtime

Tracking issue: https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/93346

This adds a new API to the `std::panic` module which configures whether and how the default panic hook will emit a backtrace when a panic occurs.

After discussion with `@yaahc` on [Zulip](https://rust-lang.zulipchat.com/#narrow/stream/219381-t-libs/topic/backtrace.20lib.20vs.2E.20panic), this PR chooses to avoid adjusting or seeking to provide a similar API for the (currently unstable) std::backtrace API. It seems likely that the users of that API may wish to expose more specific settings rather than just a global one (e.g., emulating the `env_logger`, `tracing` per-module configuration) to avoid the cost of capture in hot code. The API added here could plausibly be copied and/or re-exported directly from std::backtrace relatively easily, but I don't think that's the right call as of now.

```rust
mod panic {
    #[derive(Copy, Clone, Debug, PartialEq, Eq)]
    #[non_exhaustive]
    pub enum BacktraceStyle {
        Short,
        Full,
        Off,
    }
    fn set_backtrace_style(BacktraceStyle);
    fn get_backtrace_style() -> Option<BacktraceStyle>;
}
```

Several unresolved questions:

* Do we need to move to a thread-local or otherwise more customizable strategy for whether to capture backtraces? See [this comment](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/79085#issuecomment-727845826) for some potential use cases for this.
   * Proposed answer: no, leave this for third-party hooks.
* Bikeshed on naming of all the options, as usual.
* Should BacktraceStyle be moved into `std::backtrace`?
   * It's already somewhat annoying to import and/or re-type the `std::panic::` prefix necessary to use these APIs, probably adding a second module to the mix isn't worth it.

Note that PR #79085 proposed a much simpler API, but particularly in light of the desire to fully replace setting environment variables via `env::set_var` to control the backtrace API, a more complete API seems preferable. This PR likely subsumes that one.
2022-02-02 22:03:23 +00:00
Mark Rousskov 85930c8f44 Configure panic hook backtrace behavior 2022-02-02 13:46:42 -05:00
Matthias Krüger b836b281a8 Rollup merge of #93531 - TheColdVoid:patch-1, r=m-ou-se
Fix incorrect panic message in example

The panic message when calling the `connect()` should probably be a  message about connection failure, not a message about binding address failure.
2022-02-02 07:11:07 +01:00
Matthias Krüger a3deca4675 Rollup merge of #93493 - GKFX:char-docs-2, r=scottmcm
Document valid values of the char type

As discussed at #93392, the current documentation on what constitutes a valid char isn't very detailed and is partly on the MAX constant rather than the type itself.

This PR expands on that information, stating the actual numerical range, giving examples of what won't work, and also mentions how a `char` might be a valid USV but still not be a defined character (terminology checked against [Unicode 14.0, table 2-3](https://www.unicode.org/versions/Unicode14.0.0/ch02.pdf#M9.61673.TableTitle.Table.22.Types.of.Code.Points)).
2022-02-02 07:11:07 +01:00
George Bateman d372baf3f9 Fix annotation of code blocks 2022-02-01 21:44:53 +00:00
bors 2681f253bc Auto merge of #93442 - yaahc:Termination-abstraction, r=Mark-Simulacrum
Change Termination::report return type to ExitCode

Related to https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/43301

The goal of this change is to minimize the forward compatibility risks in stabilizing Termination. By using the opaque type `ExitCode` instead of an `i32` we leave room for us to evolve the API over time to provide what cross-platform consistency we can / minimize footguns when working with exit codes, where as stabilizing on `i32` would limit what changes we could make in the future in how we represent and construct exit codes.
2022-02-01 20:05:46 +00:00
Chris Denton 1bc8f0b49f Link try_exists docs to Path::exists 2022-02-01 18:40:29 +00:00
Matthias Krüger 741b62af07 Rollup merge of #92584 - lcnr:query-stable-lint, r=estebank
add rustc lint, warning when iterating over hashmaps 2

first introduced in #89558 and reverted in #90380 due to its perf impact

r? ``@estebank``
2022-02-01 16:08:03 +01:00
lcnr a1a30f7548 add a rustc::query_stability lint 2022-02-01 10:15:59 +01:00
Eric Huss 8a70ea2394 Rollup merge of #93504 - solid-rs:fix-kmc-solid-stack-size, r=nagisa
kmc-solid: Increase the default stack size

This PR increases the default minimum stack size on the [`*-kmc-solid_*`](https://doc.rust-lang.org/nightly/rustc/platform-support/kmc-solid.html) Tier 3 targets to 64KiB (Arm) and 128KiB (AArch64).

This value was chosen as a middle ground between supporting a relatively complex program (e.g., an application using a full-fledged off-the-shelf web server framework) with no additional configuration and minimizing resource consumption for the embedded platform that doesn't support lazily-allocated pages nor over-commitment (i.e., wasted stack spaces are wasted physical memory). If the need arises, the users can always set the `RUST_MIN_STACK` environmental variable to override the default stack size or use the platform API directly.
2022-01-31 20:12:59 -08:00
Eric Huss 8604161d75 Rollup merge of #93090 - jyn514:errorkind-asstr, r=dtolnay
`impl Display for io::ErrorKind`

This avoids having to convert from `ErrorKind` to `Error` just to print the error message.
2022-01-31 20:12:56 -08:00
TheVoid 76aa92906b Fix incorrect panic message in example 2022-02-01 10:19:08 +08:00
George Bateman 5357ec1473 (#93493) Add items from code review 2022-01-31 23:49:16 +00:00
Jane Lusby 19db85d6cd add inline attribute to new method 2022-01-31 11:57:17 -08:00
Tomoaki Kawada 1a77d6227c kmc-solid: Increase the default stack size 2022-01-31 17:39:38 +09:00