Commit graph

1407 commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
bors
5a4ab26459 Auto merge of #78880 - CDirkx:not_supported, r=joshtriplett
Add `Unsupported` to `std::io::ErrorKind`

I noticed a significant portion of the uses of `ErrorKind::Other` in std is for unsupported operations.
The notion that a specific operation is not available on a target (and will thus never succeed) seems semantically distinct enough from just "an unspecified error occurred", which is why I am proposing to add the variant `Unsupported` to `std::io::ErrorKind`.

**Implementation**:

The following variant will be added to `std::io::ErrorKind`:

```rust
/// This operation is unsupported on this platform.
Unsupported
```
`std::io::ErrorKind::Unsupported` is an error returned when a given operation is not supported on a platform, and will thus never succeed; there is no way for the software to recover. It will be used instead of `Other` where appropriate, e.g. on wasm for file and network operations.

`decode_error_kind` will be updated  to decode operating system errors to `Unsupported`:
- Unix and VxWorks: `libc::ENOSYS`
- Windows: `c::ERROR_CALL_NOT_IMPLEMENTED`
- WASI: `wasi::ERRNO_NOSYS`

**Stability**:
This changes the kind of error returned by some functions on some platforms, which I think is not covered by the stability guarantees of the std? User code could depend on this behavior, expecting `ErrorKind::Other`, however the docs already mention:

> Errors that are `Other` now may move to a different or a new `ErrorKind` variant in the future. It is not recommended to match an error against `Other` and to expect any additional characteristics, e.g., a specific `Error::raw_os_error` return value.

The most recent variant added to `ErrorKind` was `UnexpectedEof` in `1.6.0` (almost 5 years ago), but `ErrorKind` is marked as `#[non_exhaustive]` and the docs warn about exhaustively matching on it, so adding a new variant per se should not be a breaking change.

The variant `Unsupported` itself could be marked as `#[unstable]`, however, because this PR also immediately uses this new variant and changes the errors returned by functions I'm inclined to agree with the others in this thread that the variant should be insta-stabilized.
2021-04-18 20:03:54 +00:00
CDirkx
b42e52f2cc Bump to 1.53.0
Co-authored-by: Mara Bos <m-ou.se@m-ou.se>
2021-04-18 09:29:24 +02:00
Christiaan Dirkx
0895a693bd Fix test metadata_access_times to also check for Unsupported 2021-04-18 09:29:24 +02:00
Christiaan Dirkx
af0dec2795 Rename NotSupported to Unsupported 2021-04-18 09:29:23 +02:00
Christiaan Dirkx
1b5f117c47 Use NotSupported in more places 2021-04-18 09:29:23 +02:00
CDirkx
86592b9939 Bump since to 1.52.0 2021-04-18 09:29:22 +02:00
Christiaan Dirkx
9f589b023f Update decode_error_kind to decode os errors to NotSupported 2021-04-18 09:29:22 +02:00
Christiaan Dirkx
4a15bd8eaf Add and insta-stabilize std::io::ErrorKind::NotSupported 2021-04-18 09:29:22 +02:00
bors
d7c3386414 Auto merge of #84207 - SimonSapin:deprecate-core-raw, r=dtolnay
Deprecate the core::raw / std::raw module

It only contains the `TraitObject` struct which exposes components of wide pointer. Pointer metadata APIs are designed to replace this: https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/81513
2021-04-18 07:23:54 +00:00
Josh Triplett
9aa4d068a1 Add documentation to help people find Ipv4Addr::UNSPECIFIED
People looking for `INADDR_ANY` don't always find
`Ipv4Addr::UNSPECIFIED`; add some documentation and an alias to help.
2021-04-16 13:18:04 -07:00
Alex Crichton
c6eea222a9 std: Add a variant of thread locals with const init
This commit adds a variant of the `thread_local!` macro as a new
`thread_local_const_init!` macro which requires that the initialization
expression is constant (e.g. could be stuck into a `const` if so
desired). This form of thread local allows for a more efficient
implementation of `LocalKey::with` both if the value has a destructor
and if it doesn't. If the value doesn't have a destructor then `with`
should desugar to exactly as-if you use `#[thread_local]` given
sufficient inlining.

The purpose of this new form of thread locals is to precisely be
equivalent to `#[thread_local]` on platforms where possible for values
which fit the bill (those without destructors). This should help close
the gap in performance between `thread_local!`, which is safe, relative
to `#[thread_local]`, which is not easy to use in a portable fashion.
2021-04-16 09:21:38 -07:00
David Tolnay
e9bd80f961
Requires deprecated *and* deprecated_in_future, depending on what stage is building 2021-04-14 19:28:39 -07:00
David Tolnay
28efb22745
s/deprecated_in_future/deprecated/ 2021-04-14 18:44:22 -07:00
Simon Sapin
b80a96c286 Deprecate the core::raw / std::raw module
It only contains the `TraitObject` struct which exposes components
of wide pointer. Pointer metadata APIs are designed to replace this:
https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/81513
2021-04-15 02:32:33 +02:00
Dylan DPC
d783f399e5
Rollup merge of #84177 - ehuss:join_paths-err, r=kennytm
Fix join_paths error display.

On unix, the error from `join_paths` looked like this:

```
path segment contains separator `58`
```

This PR changes it to look like this:

```
path segment contains separator `:`
```
2021-04-15 01:27:53 +02:00
Dylan DPC
80ee7cbb37
Rollup merge of #82492 - CDirkx:sys_common_alloc, r=m-ou-se
Move `std::sys_common::alloc` to new module `std::sys::common`

6b56603e35/library/std/src/sys_common/mod.rs (L7-L13)

It was my impression that the goal for `std::sys` has changed from extracting it into a separate crate to making std work with features. However the fact remains that there is a lot of interdependence between `sys` and `sys_common`, this is because `sys_common` contains two types of code:

- abstractions over the different platform implementations in `std::sys` (for example [`std::sys_common::mutex`](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/blob/master/library/std/src/sys_common/mutex.rs))
- code shared between platforms (for example [`std::sys_common::alloc`](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/blob/master/library/std/src/sys_common/alloc.rs))

This PR attempts to address this by adding a new module `common` to `std::sys` which will contain code shared between platforms, `alloc.rs` in this case but more can be moved over in the future.
2021-04-15 01:27:52 +02:00
Christiaan Dirkx
cac0dd63b3 Update documentation 2021-04-14 14:03:00 +02:00
Christiaan Dirkx
905d23b65c Move std::sys_common::alloc to std::sys::common 2021-04-14 13:24:10 +02:00
Eric Huss
a8fbe2f22f Fix join_paths error display. 2021-04-13 14:20:49 -07:00
Dylan DPC
3d6a364e33
Rollup merge of #84084 - m-ou-se:stabilize-zero, r=scottmcm
Stabilize duration_zero.

FCP here: https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/73544#issuecomment-817201305
2021-04-13 11:10:40 +02:00
bors
d4d7ebf142 Auto merge of #82992 - philippeitis:stabilize_bufreader_seek_relative, r=workingjubilee
Stabilize `bufreader_seek_relative`

This PR marks `BufReader::seek_relative` as stable - the associated issue, #31100, has passed the final comment period without any issues, and from what I understand, the only thing left to stabilize this is to submit a PR marking the method as stable.

Closes #31100.
2021-04-13 00:52:00 +00:00
bors
11d0528483 Auto merge of #82918 - Manishearth:edition-2015-warn, r=oli-obk
Turn old edition lint (anonymous-parameters) into warn-by-default on 2015

This makes `anonymous_parameters` <s>and `keyword_idents` </s>warn-by-default on the 2015 edition. I would also like to do this for `absolute_paths_not_starting_with_crate`, but I feel that case is slightly less clear-cut.

Note that this only affects code on the 2015 edition, such code is illegal in future editions anyway.

This was spurred by https://github.com/dtolnay/syn/issues/972: old edition syntax breaks tooling (like syn), and while the tooling should be free to find its balance on how much to support prior editions, it does seem like we should be nudging such code towards the newer edition, and we can do that by turning this Allow lint into a Warn.

In general, I feel like migration lints from an old edition should be made Warn after a year or so, and idiom lints for the new edition should be made Warn after a couple months.

cc `@m-ou-se,` this is for stuff from the 2015-2018 migration but you might be interested.
2021-04-12 22:26:15 +00:00
bors
d0695c9081 Auto merge of #83776 - jyn514:update-stdarch-docs, r=Amanieu
Update stdarch submodule (to before it switched to const generics)

https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/83278#issuecomment-812389823: This unblocks #82539.

Major changes:
- More AVX-512 intrinsics.
- More ARM & AArch64 NEON intrinsics.
- Updated unstable WASM intrinsics to latest draft standards.
- std_detect is now a separate crate instead of a submodule of std.

I double-checked and the first use of const generics looks like 8d5017861e, which isn't included in this PR.

r? `@Amanieu`
2021-04-12 18:29:25 +00:00
Manish Goregaokar
664c3e71b8 Turn old edition lints (anonymous-parameters, keyword-idents) into warn-by-default on 2015 2021-04-12 09:45:59 -07:00
Mara Bos
d1e23b8af8 Stabilize duration_zero. 2021-04-12 16:32:56 +02:00
Joshua Nelson
1b0b7e95be Update stdarch submodule (to before it switched to const generics)
This also includes a cherry-pick of
ec1461905b
and https://github.com/rust-lang/stdarch/pull/1108 to fix a build
failure.

It also adds a re-export of various macros to the crate root of libstd -
previously they would show up automatically because std_detect was defined
in the same crate.
2021-04-12 09:39:04 -04:00
Dylan DPC
3ea5a9f301
Rollup merge of #84094 - tmiasko:remove-fixed-size-array, r=m-ou-se
Remove FixedSizeArray

Remove `FixedSizeArray` trait, it has been superseded by const generics.

Closes #27778.
2021-04-12 01:04:09 +02:00
Dylan DPC
269abd886b
Rollup merge of #84067 - rust-lang:steveklabnik-patch-1, r=joshtriplett
clean up example on read_to_string

This is the same thing, but simpler.

This came out of a comment from a user: https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=25318117 but rather than hide the signature of main, I think a `use` plus not including the `'static` makes more sense.
2021-04-12 01:04:07 +02:00
Tomasz Miąsko
60780e438a Remove FixedSizeArray 2021-04-11 00:00:00 +00:00
Steve Klabnik
c2f4a5b9f9
clean up example on read_to_string
This is the same thing, but simpler.
2021-04-10 12:50:04 -05:00
Oleksandr Povar
63d6e32782
Bump libc dependency of std to 0.2.93 2021-04-10 16:12:46 +02:00
Dylan DPC
445aa40153
Rollup merge of #83831 - AngelicosPhosphoros:issue-77583-inline-for-ip, r=m-ou-se
Add `#[inline]` to IpAddr methods

Add some inlines to trivial methods of IpAddr
Closes https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/77583
2021-04-05 13:03:42 +02:00
bors
015d2bc3fe Auto merge of #83864 - Dylan-DPC:rollup-78an86n, r=Dylan-DPC
Rollup of 7 pull requests

Successful merges:

 - #80525 (wasm64 support)
 - #83019 (core: disable `ptr::swap_nonoverlapping_one`'s block optimization on SPIR-V.)
 - #83717 (rustdoc: Separate filter-empty-string out into its own function)
 - #83807 (Tests: Remove redundant `ignore-tidy-linelength` annotations)
 - #83815 (ptr::addr_of documentation improvements)
 - #83820 (Remove attribute `#[link_args]`)
 - #83841 (Allow clobbering unsupported registers in asm!)

Failed merges:

r? `@ghost`
`@rustbot` modify labels: rollup
2021-04-05 01:26:57 +00:00
Dylan DPC
3c2e4ff525
Rollup merge of #83820 - petrochenkov:nolinkargs, r=nagisa
Remove attribute `#[link_args]`

Closes https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/29596

The attribute could always be replaced with `-C link-arg`, but cargo didn't provide a reasonable way to pass such flags to rustc.
Now cargo supports `cargo:rustc-link-arg*` directives in build scripts (https://doc.rust-lang.org/cargo/reference/unstable.html#extra-link-arg), so this attribute can be removed.
2021-04-05 00:24:33 +02:00
Mark Rousskov
b3a4f91b8d Bump cfgs 2021-04-04 14:57:05 -04:00
AngelicosPhosphoros
a3d0fa8008 Add #[inline] to IpAddr methods
Add some inlines to trivial methods of IpAddr
Closes https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/77583
2021-04-04 02:42:56 +03:00
Vadim Petrochenkov
5839bff0ba Remove attribute #[link_args] 2021-04-03 21:25:53 +03:00
Yuki Okushi
961fa632d6
Rollup merge of #83780 - matklad:doc-error-message, r=JohnTitor
Document "standard" conventions for error messages

These are currently documented in the API guidelines:

https://rust-lang.github.io/api-guidelines/interoperability.html#error-types-are-meaningful-and-well-behaved-c-good-err

I think it makes sense to uplift this guideline (in a milder form) into
std docs. Printing and producing errors is something that even
non-expert users do frequently, so it is useful to give at least some
indication of what a typical error message looks like.
2021-04-04 00:19:37 +09:00
Yuki Okushi
3b40d2c1f3
Rollup merge of #82487 - CDirkx:const-socketaddr, r=m-ou-se
Constify methods of `std::net::SocketAddr`, `SocketAddrV4` and `SocketAddrV6`

The following methods are made unstable const under the `const_socketaddr` feature (https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/82485):

```rust
// std::net

impl SocketAddr {
    pub const fn ip(&self) -> IpAddr;
    pub const fn port(&self) -> u16;
    pub const fn is_ipv4(&self) -> bool;
    pub const fn is_ipv6(&self) -> bool;
}

impl SocketAddrV4 {
    pub const fn ip(&self) -> IpAddr;
    pub const fn port(&self) -> u16;
}

impl SocketAddrV6 {
    pub const fn ip(&self) -> IpAddr;
    pub const fn port(&self) -> u16;
    pub const fn flowinfo(&self) -> u32;
    pub const fn scope_id(&self) -> u32;
}
```

Note: `SocketAddrV4::ip` and `SocketAddrV6::ip` use pointer casting and depend on the unstable feature `const_raw_ptr_deref`
2021-04-04 00:19:30 +09:00
Dylan DPC
cb7133f693
Rollup merge of #83771 - asomers:stack_overflow_freebsd, r=dtolnay
Fix stack overflow detection on FreeBSD 11.1+

Beginning with FreeBSD 10.4 and 11.1, there is one guard page by
default.  And the stack autoresizes, so if Rust allocates its own guard
page, then FreeBSD's will simply move up one page.  The best solution is
to just use the OS's guard page.
2021-04-02 19:57:35 +02:00
Dylan DPC
48ebad58b2
Rollup merge of #83065 - CDirkx:win-alloc, r=dtolnay
Rework `std::sys::windows::alloc`

I came across https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/76676#discussion_r488729990, which points out that there was unsound code in the Windows alloc code, creating a &mut to possibly uninitialized memory. I reworked the code so that that particular issue does not occur anymore, and started adding more documentation and safety comments.

Full list of changes:
 - moved and documented the relevant Windows Heap API functions
 - refactor `allocate_with_flags` to `allocate` (and remove the other helper functions), which now takes just a `bool` if the memory should be zeroed
 - add checks for if `GetProcessHeap` returned null
 - add a test that checks if the size and alignment of a `Header` are indeed <= `MIN_ALIGN`
 - add `#![deny(unsafe_op_in_unsafe_fn)]` and the necessary unsafe blocks with safety comments

I feel like I may have overdone the documenting, the unsoundness fix is the most important part; I could spit this PR up in separate parts.
2021-04-02 19:57:28 +02:00
Christiaan Dirkx
db1d003de1 Remove debug_assert 2021-04-02 17:50:23 +02:00
Christiaan Dirkx
c86e0985f9 Introduce get_process_heap and fix atomic ordering. 2021-04-02 17:37:52 +02:00
Yuki Okushi
417e6b1dd0
Rollup merge of #83740 - obi1kenobi:patch-1, r=joshtriplett
Fix comment typo in once.rs

I believe I came across a minor typo in a comment. I am not particularly familiar with this part of the codebase, but I have read the surrounding code as well as the referenced `park` and `unpark` functions, and I believe my proposed change is true to the intended meaning of the comment.

I intentionally tried to keep the change as minimal as possible. If I have the maintainers' permission, I'd also love to add a comma to improve readability as follows: `Luckily ``park`` comes with the guarantee that if it got an ``unpark`` just before on an unparked thread, it does not park.`
2021-04-02 21:28:23 +09:00
Aleksey Kladov
5547d92746 Document "standard" conventions for error messages
These are currently documented in the API guidelines:

https://rust-lang.github.io/api-guidelines/interoperability.html#error-types-are-meaningful-and-well-behaved-c-good-err

I think it makes sense to uplift this guideline (in a milder form) into
std docs. Printing and producing errors is something that even
non-expert users do frequently, so it is useful to give at least some
indication of what a typical error message looks like.
2021-04-02 15:11:49 +03:00
bors
5662d9343f Auto merge of #80965 - camelid:rename-doc-spotlight, r=jyn514
Rename `#[doc(spotlight)]` to `#[doc(notable_trait)]`

Fixes #80936.

"spotlight" is not a very specific or self-explaining name.
Additionally, the dialog that it triggers is called "Notable traits".
So, "notable trait" is a better name.

* Rename `#[doc(spotlight)]` to `#[doc(notable_trait)]`
* Rename `#![feature(doc_spotlight)]` to `#![feature(doc_notable_trait)]`
* Update documentation
* Improve documentation

r? `@Manishearth`
2021-04-02 07:04:58 +00:00
Alan Somers
ca14abbab1 Fix stack overflow detection on FreeBSD 11.1+
Beginning with FreeBSD 10.4 and 11.1, there is one guard page by
default.  And the stack autoresizes, so if Rust allocates its own guard
page, then FreeBSD's will simply move up one page.  The best solution is
to just use the OS's guard page.
2021-04-01 22:57:20 -06:00
Predrag Gruevski
2e4215cb72
Fix minor typo in once.rs 2021-04-01 00:52:02 -04:00
Frank Steffahn
7509aa108c Apply suggestions from code review
More links, one more occurrence of “a OsString”

Co-authored-by: Yuki Okushi <huyuumi.dev@gmail.com>
2021-03-31 16:09:25 +02:00
Frank Steffahn
f5e7dbb20a Add a few missing links, fix a typo 2021-03-31 16:02:59 +02:00