Commit graph

91894 commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Masaki Hara
4dcd6cc208 Fix failing tests. 2019-04-05 02:27:01 +08:00
Masaki Hara
e55d82c8a3 Fix expectations on some ui tests involving FnOnce. 2019-04-05 02:26:59 +08:00
Masaki Hara
219097ecf6 Add unstable-book articles on fnbox and boxed_closure_impls. 2019-04-05 02:26:56 +08:00
Masaki Hara
480dcb403c Add tests for boxed_closure_impls. 2019-04-05 02:26:54 +08:00
Masaki Hara
059ec76d9b Add Fn* blanket impls for Box. 2019-04-05 02:26:51 +08:00
Masaki Hara
79941973af Make FnBox a subtrait of FnOnce. 2019-04-05 02:26:49 +08:00
Alex Crichton
1bf04c9ad7 std: Upgrade compiler_builtins to fix wasi linkage
Turns out we needed to exclude a number of math functions on the
`wasm32-unknown-wasi` target, and this was fixed in 0.1.9 of
compiler-builtins and this is pulling in the fix to libstd's own build.
2019-04-04 11:24:53 -07:00
bors
53f2165c54 Auto merge of #59676 - alexcrichton:osx-deadlock, r=sfackler
std: Avoid usage of `Once` in `Instant`

This commit removes usage of `Once` from the internal implementation of
time utilities on OSX and Windows. It turns out that we accidentally hit
a deadlock today (#59020) via events that look like:

* A thread invokes `park_timeout`
* Internally, only on OSX, `park_timeout` calls `Instant::elapsed`
* Inside of `Instant::elapsed` on OSX we enter a `Once` to initialize
  global timer data
* Inside of `Once`, it attempts to `park`

This means on the same stack frame, when there's contention, we're
calling `park` from inside `park_timeout`, causing a deadlock!

The solution implemented in this commit was to remove usage of `Once`
and instead just do a small dance with atomics. There's no real need we
need to guarantee that the global information is only learned once, only
that it's only *stored* once. This implementation may have multiple
threads invoke `mach_timebase_info`, but only one will store the global
information which will amortize the cost for all other threads.

A similar fix has been applied to windows to be uniform across our
implementations, but looking at the code on Windows no deadlock was
possible. This is purely just a consistency update for Windows and in
theory a slightly leaner implementation.

Closes #59020
2019-04-04 18:22:34 +00:00
David Tolnay
d6b91fe18f
Update cargo 2019-04-04 10:39:23 -07:00
hgallagher1993
a96492112c Use declare_lint_pass! and impl_lint_pass! in more places 2019-04-04 13:23:11 -04:00
bors
52980d0fb3 Auto merge of #59695 - Centril:rollup-88qffc2, r=Centril
Rollup of 8 pull requests

Successful merges:

 - #59470 (Document std::fs::File close behavior ignoring errors)
 - #59555 (update miri)
 - #59556 (update stdsimd)
 - #59596 (Forward formatter settings to bounds of `Range<T>` in `fmt::Debug` impl)
 - #59639 (Never return uninhabited values at all)
 - #59671 (Make some of lexer's API private)
 - #59685 (Add description for -Os and -Oz in rustc.1)
 - #59686 (Temporarily disable stack probing for gnux32.)

Failed merges:

r? @ghost
2019-04-04 15:36:17 +00:00
Alex Crichton
cb57484dca std: Avoid usage of Once in Instant
This commit removes usage of `Once` from the internal implementation of
time utilities on OSX and Windows. It turns out that we accidentally hit
a deadlock today (#59020) via events that look like:

* A thread invokes `park_timeout`
* Internally, only on OSX, `park_timeout` calls `Instant::elapsed`
* Inside of `Instant::elapsed` on OSX we enter a `Once` to initialize
  global timer data
* Inside of `Once`, it attempts to `park`

This means on the same stack frame, when there's contention, we're
calling `park` from inside `park_timeout`, causing a deadlock!

The solution implemented in this commit was to remove usage of `Once`
and instead just do a small dance with atomics. There's no real need we
need to guarantee that the global information is only learned once, only
that it's only *stored* once. This implementation may have multiple
threads invoke `mach_timebase_info`, but only one will store the global
information which will amortize the cost for all other threads.

A similar fix has been applied to windows to be uniform across our
implementations, but looking at the code on Windows no deadlock was
possible. This is purely just a consistency update for Windows and in
theory a slightly leaner implementation.

Closes #59020
2019-04-04 07:19:14 -07:00
Mazdak Farrokhzad
31c2f5d228
Rollup merge of #59686 - crlf0710:disable_gnux32_stackprobe, r=luqmana
Temporarily disable stack probing for gnux32.
2019-04-04 15:09:08 +02:00
Mazdak Farrokhzad
4954cae241
Rollup merge of #59685 - lzutao:patch-1, r=GuillaumeGomez
Add description for -Os and -Oz in rustc.1
2019-04-04 15:09:07 +02:00
Mazdak Farrokhzad
c18c194518
Rollup merge of #59671 - matklad:lexer, r=eddyb
Make some of lexer's API private

Lexer is a `pub` type, so it feels wrong that its fields are just pub (I guess it wasn't exported initially), so let's minimize visibility.

Context: I am looking into extracting rust-lexer into a library, which can be shared by rust-analyzer and rustc. I hope that a simple interface like `fn next_token(src: &str) -> (TokenKind, usize)` would work, but to try this out I need to understand what is the current API of the lexer.
2019-04-04 15:09:06 +02:00
Mazdak Farrokhzad
05c31baf83
Rollup merge of #59639 - cuviper:ignore-uninhabited, r=eddyb
Never return uninhabited values at all

Functions with uninhabited return values are already marked `noreturn`,
but we were still generating return instructions for this. When running
with `-C passes=lint`, LLVM prints:

    Unusual: Return statement in function with noreturn attribute

The LLVM manual makes a stronger statement about `noreturn` though:

> This produces undefined behavior at runtime if the function ever does
dynamically return.

We now emit an `abort` anywhere that would have tried to return an
uninhabited value.

Fixes #48227
cc #7463 #48229

r? @eddyb
2019-04-04 15:09:04 +02:00
Mazdak Farrokhzad
56328a5952
Rollup merge of #59596 - LukasKalbertodt:fix-range-fmt, r=Kimundi
Forward formatter settings to bounds of `Range<T>` in `fmt::Debug` impl

Before this change, formatter settings were lost when printing a `Range`. For example, printing a `Range<f32>` with `{:.2?}` would not apply the precision modifier when printing the floats. Now the `Debug` impls look a bit more verbose, but modifier are not lost.

---

I assume the exact output of `Debug` impls in `std` cannot be relied on by users and thus can change, right?
2019-04-04 15:09:03 +02:00
Mazdak Farrokhzad
9f8f89105c
Rollup merge of #59556 - RalfJung:stdsimd, r=gnzlbg
update stdsimd

Cc @gnzlbg
2019-04-04 15:09:02 +02:00
Mazdak Farrokhzad
2074c9687f
Rollup merge of #59555 - RalfJung:miri, r=oli-obk
update miri

r? @oli-obk

Fixes https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/59477
2019-04-04 15:09:00 +02:00
Mazdak Farrokhzad
886456deab
Rollup merge of #59470 - czipperz:document-fs-file-close, r=dtolnay
Document std::fs::File close behavior ignoring errors

Resolves #52685
2019-04-04 15:08:59 +02:00
Michael Woerister
ef648f4a49 Remove invalid assertion back:🔗:from add_upstream_rust_crates(). 2019-04-04 15:04:37 +02:00
bors
2d065712cf Auto merge of #59619 - alexcrichton:wasi-fs, r=fitzgen
wasi: Implement more of the standard library

This commit fills out more of the `wasm32-unknown-wasi` target's standard library, notably the `std::fs` module and all of its internals. A few tweaks were made along the way to non-`fs` modules, but the last commit contains the bulk of the work which is to wire up all APIs to their equivalent on WASI targets instead of unconditionally returning "unsupported". After this some basic filesystem operations and such should all be working in WASI!
2019-04-04 12:46:20 +00:00
Aleksey Kladov
fdb8752850 cleanup shebang handling in the lexer 2019-04-04 13:31:53 +03:00
Konrad Borowski
a37c33b926 Mark unix::ffi::OsStrExt methods as inline 2019-04-04 10:55:31 +02:00
bors
e43f99ce57 Auto merge of #59517 - Zoxc:new-queries, r=oli-obk
Move query definitions over to the proc macro

r? @oli-obk
2019-04-04 08:26:18 +00:00
CrLF0710
42d652ecd6 Disable stack probing for gnux32. 2019-04-04 14:39:33 +08:00
bors
f717b58dd7 Auto merge of #59089 - petrhosek:llvm-unwind, r=petrhosek
Support using LLVM's libunwind as the unwinder implementation

This avoids the dependency on host libraries such as libgcc_s which
may be undesirable in some deployment environments where these aren't
available.
2019-04-04 05:24:54 +00:00
lzutao
4c9c2cf160
Add description for -Os and -Oz in rustc.1 2019-04-04 12:20:53 +07:00
Chris Gregory
a969d40987 File: Add documentation about dropping to sync_all 2019-04-03 23:21:10 -04:00
bors
a5dfdc589a Auto merge of #59684 - Centril:rollup-n7pnare, r=Centril
Rollup of 6 pull requests

Successful merges:

 - #59316 (Internal lints take 2)
 - #59663 (Be more direct about borrow contract)
 - #59664 (Updated the documentation of spin_loop and spin_loop_hint)
 - #59666 (Updated the environment description in rustc.)
 - #59669 (Reduce repetition in librustc(_lint) wrt. impl LintPass by using macros)
 - #59677 (rustfix coverage: Skip UI tests with non-json error-format)

Failed merges:

r? @ghost
2019-04-04 02:31:46 +00:00
Mazdak Farrokhzad
231bd482c6
Rollup merge of #59677 - phansch:rustfix_coverage_handle_other_error_formats, r=oli-obk
rustfix coverage: Skip UI tests with non-json error-format

When using the `rustfix-coverage` flag, some tests currently fail
because they define a different error-format than `json`.

The current implementation crashes when encountering those tests. Since
we don't care about non-json test output when collecting the coverage
data, we handle those tests by returning an empty `Vec` instead.

r? @oli-obk
2019-04-04 01:49:13 +02:00
Mazdak Farrokhzad
eb3215e523
Rollup merge of #59669 - Centril:lint-pass-macro, r=oli-obk
Reduce repetition in librustc(_lint) wrt. impl LintPass by using macros

r? @oli-obk
cc @Zoxc
2019-04-04 01:49:12 +02:00
Mazdak Farrokhzad
c87cce6fa4
Rollup merge of #59666 - DevQps:update-rustc-environment-descriptions, r=GuillaumeGomez
Updated the environment description in rustc.

# Description

- Updated the "environment" description in the `rustc` man pages

The old wording suggested that all the mentioned flags influenced the output of the compiler,
where this was not the case.

closes #59504
2019-04-04 01:49:11 +02:00
Mazdak Farrokhzad
b4686ca958
Rollup merge of #59664 - DevQps:improve-yield-spinlock-docs, r=alexcrichton
Updated the documentation of spin_loop and spin_loop_hint

# Description

- Updated the description of `core::hints::spin_loop`
- Updated the description of `core::async::spin_loop_hint`

Both documentation is rewritten to better reflect when one should prefer using a busy-wait spin-loop (and the `spin_loop` and `spin_loop_hint` functions) over `yield_now`. It also dives a little bit deeper on what the function actually does.

closes #55418
2019-04-04 01:49:09 +02:00
Mazdak Farrokhzad
b78cbe6ddd
Rollup merge of #59663 - matklad:borrow, r=dtolnay
Be more direct about borrow contract

I always was confused by the difference between Borrow and AsRef, despite the fact that I've read all available docs at least a dozen of times.

I finally grokked the difference between the two when I realized the Borrow invariant:

> If you implement Borrow, you **must** make sure that Eq, Ord and Hash implementations are equivalent for borrowed and owned data

My problem was that this invariant is not stated explicitly in documentation, and instead some  vague and philosophical notions are used.

So I suggest to mention the requirements of `Borrow` very explicitly: instead of "use Borrow when X and use AsRef when Y", let's phrase this as `Borrow` differs from `AsRef` in `W`, so that's why `Borrow` is for `X` and `AsRef` is for `Y`.

Note that this change could be seen as tightening contract of the Borrow. Let's say Alice has written the following code:

```rust
#[derive(PartialEq, Eq, Hash, PartialOrd, Ord)]
struct Person {
    first_name: String,
    last_name: String,
}

impl Borrow<str> for Person {
      fn borrow(&self) -> &str { self.first_name.as_str() }
}
```

Now Bob uses this `Person` struct, puts it into `HashMap` and tries to look it up using `&str` for the first name. Bob's code naturally fails.

The question is, who is to blame: Alice, who has written the impl, or Bob, who uses the HashMap. If I read the current docs literally, I would say that `Bob` is to blame: `Eq` and `Hash` bounds appear on HashMap, so it is the HashMap which requires that they are consistent. By using a type for which the `Borrow` impl does not yield well-behaved `Eq`, Bob is violating contract of HashMap.

If, as this PR proposes, we unconditionally require that Eq & friends for borrow should be valid, then the blame shifts to Alice, which I think is more reasonable.

closes https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/44868
2019-04-04 01:49:08 +02:00
Mazdak Farrokhzad
dcccab56ba
Rollup merge of #59316 - flip1995:internal_lints_take_2, r=oli-obk
Internal lints take 2

cc #58701
cc #49509

TODO: Add `#![warn(internal)]` to crates (and fix violations)

Crates depending on `rustc_data_structures`

- [x] librustc_resolve
- [x] librustc_driver
- [x] librustc_passes
- [x] librustc_metadata
- [x] librustc_interface
- [x] librustc_save_analysis
- [x] librustc_lint
- [x] librustc
- [x] librustc_incremental
- [x] librustc_codegen_utils
- [x] libarena
- [x] librustc_target
- [x] librustc_allocator
- [x] librustc_privacy
- [x] librustc_traits
- [x] librustc_borrowck
- [x] libsyntax
- [x] librustc_codegen_ssa
- [x] libsyntax_ext
- [x] librustc_errors
- [x] librustc_mir
- [x] libsyntax_pos
- [x] librustc_typeck

Crates with `feature(rustc_private)`
Excluding crates, which are already in the list above. Also excluding tools and tests.

- [ ] ~~libstd~~
- [x] libfmt_macros
- [x] librustdoc

r? @oli-obk
2019-04-04 01:49:07 +02:00
bors
314a79cd80 Auto merge of #59672 - o01eg:fix-59661, r=oli-obk
Revert rust-lld place changes

Fixes #59661.

Instead of https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/59668 it reverts only failed part.
2019-04-03 23:42:23 +00:00
Josh Stone
c2e0d7f1eb Never return uninhabited values at all
Functions with uninhabited return values are already marked `noreturn`,
but we were still generating return instructions for this. When running
with `-C passes=lint`, LLVM prints:

    Unusual: Return statement in function with noreturn attribute

The LLVM manual makes a stronger statement about `noreturn` though:

> This produces undefined behavior at runtime if the function ever does
dynamically return.

We now emit an `abort` anywhere that would have tried to return an
uninhabited value.
2019-04-03 15:44:49 -07:00
Mazdak Farrokhzad
fba110c805 reduce repetition in librustc(_lint) wrt. impl LintPass 2019-04-03 23:37:31 +02:00
David Tolnay
5c1cd6cc73
Update cargo 2019-04-03 14:10:58 -07:00
Guillaume Gomez
c966c45897 Add test from #59033 2019-04-03 22:18:41 +02:00
Guillaume Gomez
f6eb09bf63 Fix explicit_predicates_of 2019-04-03 22:13:12 +02:00
Philipp Hansch
da99f46711
rustfix coverage: Skip UI tests with non-json error-format
When using the `rustfix-coverage` flag, some tests currently fail
because they define a different error-format than `json`.

The current implementation crashes when encountering those tests. Since
we don't care about non-json test output when collecting the coverage
data, we handle those tests by returning an empty `Vec` instead.
2019-04-03 21:37:45 +02:00
Petr Hosek
86d1678403 Support using LLVM's libunwind as the unwinder implementation
This avoids the dependency on host libraries such as libgcc_s which
may be undesirable in some deployment environments where these aren't
available.
2019-04-03 11:21:40 -07:00
flip1995
c81ce069b4
Compare Tys directly instead of their TyKinds 2019-04-03 19:18:07 +02:00
flip1995
076abfa0f3
Deny internal lints on two more crates
- libfmt_macros
- librustdoc
2019-04-03 19:18:07 +02:00
flip1995
51a792d01b
Add trait_object_dummy_self to CommonTypes 2019-04-03 19:18:07 +02:00
flip1995
dd7483c750
Remove TyKind arg from report_bin_hex_error function 2019-04-03 19:18:07 +02:00
flip1995
4d2a3bb13b
Deny internal lints on librustc_typeck 2019-04-03 19:18:07 +02:00
flip1995
e4b87f5edb
Deny internal lints on librustc_mir 2019-04-03 19:18:07 +02:00