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Using clock nanosleep leads to more accurate sleep times on platforms
where it is supported.
To enable using clock_nanosleep this makes `sleep_until` platform
specific. That unfortunatly requires identical placeholder
implementations for the other platforms (windows/mac/wasm etc).
we will land platform specific implementations for those later. See the
`sleep_until` tracking issue.
This requires an accessors for the Instant type. As that accessor is only
used on the platforms that have clock_nanosleep it is marked as allow_unused.
32bit time_t targets do not use clock_nanosleep atm, they instead rely
on the same placeholder as the other platforms. We could make them
use clock_nanosleep too in the future using `__clock_nanosleep_time64`.
__clock_nanosleep_time64 is documented at:
https://www.gnu.org/software/libc/manual/html_node/64_002dbit-time-symbol-handling.html
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Although `Env` (as `Vars`), `Args`, path functions, and OS constants are
publicly exposed via `std::env`, their implementations are each
self-contained. Keep them separate in `std::sys` and make a new module,
`sys::env`, for `Env`.
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wasm: increase default thread stack size to 1 MB
The default stack size for the [main thread is 1 MB as specified by linker options](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/blob/38cf49dde8a5b0b284bb6dffd423d223c9f8f7a3/compiler/rustc_target/src/spec/base/wasm.rs#L14).
However, the default stack size for threads was only 64 kB.
This is surprisingly small and thus we increase it to 1 MB to match the main thread.
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As per #117276, this moves the implementations of `Process` and friends out of the `pal` module and into the `sys` module, removing quite a lot of error-prone `#[path]` imports in the process (hah, get it ;-)). I've also made the `zircon` module a dedicated submodule of `pal::unix`, hopefully we can move some other definitions there as well (they are currently quite a lot of duplications in `sys`). Also, the `ensure_no_nuls` function on Windows now lives in `sys::pal::windows` – it's not specific to processes and shared by the argument implementation.
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The default stack size for the main thread is 1 MB as specified by linker options.
However, the default stack size for threads was only 64 kB.
This is surprisingly small and thus we increase it to 1 MB to match the
main thread.
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As per #117276, this moves the platform definitions of `Stdout` and friends into `sys`. This PR also unifies the UNIX and Hermit implementations and moves the `__rust_print_err` function needed by libunwind on SGX into the dedicated module for such helper functions.
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Use `std::mem::{size_of, size_of_val, align_of, align_of_val}` from the
prelude instead of importing or qualifying them.
These functions were added to all preludes in Rust 1.80.
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Use `tell` for `<File as Seek>::stream_position`
Some platforms have a more efficient way to get the current offset of the file than by seeking. For example, Wasi has `fd_tell` and SOLID has `SOLID_FS_Ftell`. Implement `<File as Seek>::stream_position()` in terms of those.
I do not use any APIs that were not already used in `std`. Although, the `libc` crate has [`ftell`](https://docs.rs/libc/latest/libc/fn.ftell.html), [`ftello`](https://docs.rs/libc/latest/libc/fn.ftello.html), and [`ftello64`](https://docs.rs/libc/latest/libc/fn.ftello64.html), I do not know platform coverage. It appears that Windows has no `tell`-like API.
I have checked that it builds on each relevant platform.
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Use `const_error!` when possible
Replace usages of `io::Error::new(io::ErrorKind::Variant, "constant string")` with `io::const_error!(io::ErrorKind::Variant, "constant string")` to avoid allocations when possible. Additionally, fix `&&str` error messages in SGX and missing/misplaced trailing commas in `const_error!`.
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As per #117276, this PR moves `sys_common::net` and the `sys::pal::net` into the newly created `sys::net` module. In order to support #135141, I've moved all the current network code into a separate `connection` module, future functions like `hostname` can live in separate modules.
I'll probably do a follow-up PR and clean up some of the actual code, this is mostly just a reorganization.
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r=Noratrieb
wasi/fs: Improve stopping condition for <ReadDir as Iterator>::next
When upgrading [Zed](https://github.com/zed-industries/zed/pull/19349) to Rust 1.82 I've encountered a test failure in our test suite. Specifically, one of our extension tests started hanging. I've tracked it down to a call to std::fs::remove_dir_all not returning when an extension is compiled with Rust 1.82 Our extension system uses WASM components, thus I've looked at the diff between 1.81 and 1.82 with respect to WASI and found 736f773844e7ebf05ccb827c17b7ad9eb28aa295
As it turned out, calling remove_dir_all from extension returned io::ErrorKind::NotFound in 1.81; the underlying issue is that the ReadDir iterator never actually terminates iteration, however since it loops around, with 1.81 we'd come across an entry second time and fail to remove it, since it would've been removed previously. With 1.82 and 736f773844e7ebf05ccb827c17b7ad9eb28aa295 it is no longer the case, thus we're seeing the hang. The tests do pass when everything but the extensions is compiled with 1.82.
This commit makes ReadDir::next adhere to readdir contract, namely it will no longer call readdir once the returned # of bytes is smaller than the size of a passed-in buffer. Previously we'd only terminate the loop if readdir returned 0.
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thread::available_parallelism for wasm32-wasip1-threads
The target has limited POSIX support and provides the `libc::sysconf` function which allows querying the number of available CPUs.
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The target has limited POSIX support and provides the sysconf
function which allows querying the number of available
CPUs.
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When upgrading [Zed](https://github.com/zed-industries/zed/pull/19349) to Rust 1.82 I've encountered a test failure in our test suite. Specifically, one of our extension tests started hanging. I've tracked it down to a call to std::fs::remove_dir_all not returning when an extension is compiled with Rust 1.82
Our extension system uses WASM components, thus I've looked at the diff between 1.81 and 1.82 with respect to WASI and found 736f773844e7ebf05ccb827c17b7ad9eb28aa295
As it turned out, calling remove_dir_all from extension returned io::ErrorKind::NotFound in 1.81;
the underlying issue is that the ReadDir iterator never actually terminates iteration, however since it loops around, with 1.81 we'd come across an entry second time and fail to remove it, since it would've been removed previously.
With 1.82 and 736f773844e7ebf05ccb827c17b7ad9eb28aa295 it is no longer the case, thus we're seeing the hang.
This commit makes ReadDir::next adhere to readdir contract, namely it will no longer call readdir once the returned # of bytes is smaller than the size of a passed-in buffer.
Previously we'd only terminate the loop if readdir returned 0.
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Add as_slice/into_slice for IoSlice/IoSliceMut.
ACP: https://github.com/rust-lang/libs-team/issues/93
Tracking issue: #132818
Based on a623c5233ae7f6b540e5c00f2be02f40b33b0793 (CC `@mpdn)` and #111277 (CC `@Lucretiel).`
Closes: #124659
Tracking Issue: TODO
try-job: test-various
try-job: dist-various-1
try-job: dist-various-2
r? libs
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Co-authored-by: Mike Pedersen <mike@mikepedersen.dk>
Co-authored-by: Nathan West <Lucretiel@gmail.com>
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This adds lock(), lock_shared(), try_lock(), try_lock_shared(), and
unlock() to File gated behind the file_lock feature flag
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Implements the ACP https://github.com/rust-lang/libs-team/issues/393.
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This commit fixes an assert in the WASI-specific implementation of
thread sleep to ensure that sleeping for a very large period of time
blocks instead of panicking. This can come up when testing programs that
sleep "forever", for example.
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fix: fs::remove_dir_all: treat internal ENOENT as success
fixes #127576
try-job: test-various
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fixes #127576
windows implementation still needs some work
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The previous commit updated `rustfmt.toml` appropriately. This commit is
the outcome of running `x fmt --all` with the new formatting options.
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Replace some `mem::forget`'s with `ManuallyDrop`
> but I would like to see a larger effort to replace all uses of `mem::forget`.
_Originally posted by `@saethlin` in https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/127584#issuecomment-2226087767_
So,
r? `@saethlin`
Sorry, I have finished writing all of this before I got your response.
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There are some comments describing multiple subsequent `use` items. When
the big `use` reformatting happens some of these `use` items will be
reordered, possibly moving them away from the comment. With this
additional level of formatting it's not really feasible to have comments
of this type. This commit removes them in various ways:
- merging separate `use` items when appropriate;
- inserting blank lines between the comment and the first `use` item;
- outright deletion (for comments that are relatively low-value);
- adding a separate "top-level" comment.
We also entirely skip formatting for four library files that contain
nothing but `pub use` re-exports, where reordering would be painful.
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std: refactor the TLS implementation
As discovered by Mara in #110897, our TLS implementation is a total mess. In the past months, I have simplified the actual macros and their expansions, but the majority of the complexity comes from the platform-specific support code needed to create keys and register destructors. In keeping with #117276, I have therefore moved all of the `thread_local_key`/`thread_local_dtor` modules to the `thread_local` module in `sys` and merged them into a new structure, so that future porters of `std` can simply mix-and-match the existing code instead of having to copy the same (bad) implementation everywhere. The new structure should become obvious when looking at `sys/thread_local/mod.rs`.
Unfortunately, the documentation changes associated with the refactoring have made this PR rather large. That said, this contains no functional changes except for two small ones:
* the key-based destructor fallback now, by virtue of sharing the implementation used by macOS and others, stores its list in a `#[thread_local]` static instead of in the key, eliminating one indirection layer and drastically simplifying its code.
* I've switched over ZKVM (tier 3) to use the same implementation as WebAssembly, as the implementation was just a way worse version of that
Please let me know if I can make this easier to review! I know these large PRs aren't optimal, but I couldn't think of any good intermediate steps.
`@rustbot` label +A-thread-locals
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As discovered by Mara in #110897, our TLS implementation is a total mess. In the past months, I have simplified the actual macros and their expansions, but the majority of the complexity comes from the platform-specific support code needed to create keys and register destructors. In keeping with #117276, I have therefore moved all of the `thread_local_key`/`thread_local_dtor` modules to the `thread_local` module in `sys` and merged them into a new structure, so that future porters of `std` can simply mix-and-match the existing code instead of having to copy the same (bad) implementation everywhere. The new structure should become obvious when looking at `sys/thread_local/mod.rs`.
Unfortunately, the documentation changes associated with the refactoring have made this PR rather large. That said, this contains no functional changes except for two small ones:
* the key-based destructor fallback now, by virtue of sharing the implementation used by macOS and others, stores its list in a `#[thread_local]` static instead of in the key, eliminating one indirection layer and drastically simplifying its code.
* I've switched over ZKVM (tier 3) to use the same implementation as WebAssembly, as the implementation was just a way worse version of that
Please let me know if I can make this easier to review! I know these large PRs aren't optimal, but I couldn't think of any good intermediate steps.
@rustbot label +A-thread-locals
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Prevent copy-paste errors from producing new starved-for-resources
threaded platforms by raising `DEFAULT_MIN_STACK_SIZE` from 4096 bytes
to at least 64KiB.
Two platforms "affected" by this have no actual threads:
- UEFI
- "unsupported"
Platforms that this actually affects:
- wasm32-wasi with "atomics" enabled
- wasm32-wasi-p1-threads
Two exceptions:
- SGX: a "secure code execution" platform, stays at 4096B
- TEEOS: also a "secure code execution" platform, stays at 8192B
I believe either of these may have sufficiently "interesting" semantics
around threads, or significant external library support. Either would
mean making any choices here for them is suspect.
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