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thread parking: fix docs and examples
Fixes https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/145816
r? ```@joboet```
Cc ```@m-ou-se``` ```@Amanieu```
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Migrate the standard library from using the external `cfg_if` crate to
using the now-built-in `cfg_select` macro.
This does not yet eliminate the dependency from
`library/std/Cargo.toml`, because while the standard library itself no
longer uses `cfg_if`, it also incorporates the `backtrace` crate, which
does.
Migration assisted by the following vim command (after selecting the
full `cfg_if!` invocation):
```
'<,'>s/\(cfg_if::\)\?cfg_if/cfg_select/ | '<,'>s/^\( *\)} else {/\1}\r\1_ => {/c | '<,'>s/^\( *\)} else if #\[cfg(\(.*\))\] /\1}\r\1\2 => /e | '<,'>s/if #\[cfg(\(.*\))\] {/\1 => {/e
```
This is imperfect, but substantially accelerated the process. This
prompts for confirmation on the `} else {` since that can also appear
inside one of the arms. This also requires manual intervention to handle
any multi-line conditions.
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`panic!` does not print any identifying information for threads that are
unnamed. However, in many cases, the thread ID can be determined.
This changes the panic message from something like this:
thread '<unnamed>' panicked at src/main.rs:3:5:
explicit panic
To something like this:
thread '<unnamed>' (0xff9bf) panicked at src/main.rs:3:5:
explicit panic
Stack overflow messages are updated as well.
This change applies to both named and unnamed threads. The ID printed is
the OS integer thread ID rather than the Rust thread ID, which should
also be what debuggers print.
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`available_parallelism`: Add documentation for why we don't look at `ulimit`
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thread name in stack overflow message
Fixes rust-lang/rust#144481, which is caused by the thread name not being initialised yet when setting up the stack overflow information. Unfortunately, the stack overflow UI test did not test for the correct thread name being present, and testing this separately didn't occur to me when writing https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/140628.
This PR contains the smallest possible fix I could think of: passing the thread name explicitly to the platform thread creation function. In the future I'd very much like to explore some possibilities around merging the thread packet and thread handle into one structure and using that in the platform code instead – but that's best left for another PR.
This PR also amends the stack overflow test to check for thread names, so we don't run into this again.
``@rustbot`` label +beta-nominated
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Guarantee 8 bytes of alignment in Thread::into_raw
When using `AtomicPtr` for synchronization it's incredibly useful when you've got a couple bits you can stuff metadata in. By guaranteeing that `Thread`'s `Inner` struct is aligned to 8 bytes everyone can use the bottom 3 bits to signal other things, such as a critical section, etc.
This guarantee is thus very useful and costs us nothing.
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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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in core/alloc/std only for now, and ignoring test files
Co-authored-by: Pavel Grigorenko <GrigorenkoPV@ya.ru>
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Fixes #139665
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Co-authored-by: Jubilee <workingjubilee@gmail.com>
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There is a time window during which the OS can terminate a thread before stdlib
can retreive its `Packet`. Currently the `Thread::join` panics with no message
in such an event, which makes debugging difficult; fixes #124466.
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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).
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This reverts commit 0747f2898e83df7e601189c0f31762e84328becb.
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a release operation synchronizes with an acquire operation
Change:
1. `Calls to park _synchronize-with_ calls to unpark` to `Calls to unpark _synchronize-with_ calls to park`
2. `park synchronizes-with _all_ prior unpark operations` to `_all_ prior unpark operations synchronize-with park`
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std: allow after-main use of synchronization primitives
By creating an unnamed thread handle when the actual one has already been destroyed, synchronization primitives using thread parking can be used even outside the Rust runtime.
This also fixes an inefficiency in the queue-based `RwLock`: if `thread::current` was not initialized yet, it will create a new handle on every parking attempt without initializing `thread::current`. The private `current_or_unnamed` function introduced here fixes this.
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1. Make the effect thread local.
2. Don't return a io::Result from hooks.
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By creating an unnamed thread handle when the actual one has already been destroyed, synchronization primitives using thread parking can be used even outside the Rust runtime.
This also fixes an inefficiency in the queue-based `RwLock`: if `thread::current` was not initialized yet, it will create a new handle on every parking attempt without initializing `thread::current`. The private `current_or_unnamed` function introduced here fixes this.
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Fixes #130210.
Since #124881, `ReentrantLock` uses `ThreadId` to identify threads. This has the unfortunate consequence of breaking uses of `Stdout` before main: Locking the `ReentrantLock` that synchronizes the output will initialize the thread ID before the handle for the main thread is set in `rt::init`. But since that would overwrite the current thread ID, `thread::set_current` triggers an abort.
This PR fixes the problem by using the already initialized thread ID for constructing the main thread handle and allowing `set_current` calls that do not change the thread's ID.
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Hook up std::net to wasi-libc on wasm32-wasip2 target
One of the improvements of the `wasm32-wasip2` target over `wasm32-wasip1` is better support for networking. Right now, p2 is just re-using the `std::net` implementation from p1. This PR adds a new net module for p2 that makes use of net from `sys_common` and calls wasi-libc functions directly.
There are currently a few limitations:
- Duplicating a socket is not supported by WASIp2 (directly returns an error)
- Peeking is not yet implemented in wasi-libc (we could let wasi-libc handle this, but I opted to directly return an error instead)
- Vectored reads/writes are not supported by WASIp2 (the necessary functions are available in wasi-libc, but they call WASIp1 functions which do not support sockets, so I opted to directly return an error instead)
- Getting/setting `TCP_NODELAY` is faked in wasi-libc (uses the fake implementation instead of returning an error)
- Getting/setting `SO_LINGER` is not supported by WASIp2 (directly returns an error)
- Setting `SO_REUSEADDR` is faked in wasi-libc (since this is done from `sys_common`, the fake implementation is used instead of returning an error)
- Getting/setting `IPV6_V6ONLY` is not supported by WASIp2 and will always be set for IPv6 sockets (since this is done from `sys_common`, wasi-libc will return an error)
- UDP broadcast/multicast is not supported by WASIp2 (since this is configured from `sys_common`, wasi-libc will return appropriate errors)
- The `MSG_NOSIGNAL` send flag is a no-op because there are no signals in WASIp2 (since explicitly setting this flag would require a change to `sys_common` and the result would be exactly the same, I opted to not set it)
Do those decisions make sense?
While working on this PR, I noticed that there is a `std::os::wasi::net::TcpListenerExt` trait that adds a `sock_accept()` method to `std::net::TcpListener`. Now that WASIp2 supports standard accept, would it make sense to remove this?
cc `@alexcrichton`
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Update `catch_unwind` doc comments for `c_unwind`
Updates `catch_unwind` doc comments to indicate that catching a foreign exception _will no longer_ be UB. Instead, there are two possible behaviors, though it is not specified which one an implementation will choose.
Nominated for t-lang to confirm that they are okay with making such a promise based on t-opsem FCP, or whether they would like to be included in the FCP.
Related: https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/74990, https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/115285, https://github.com/rust-lang/reference/pull/1226
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Since the stabilization in #127679 has reached stage0, 1.82-beta, we can
start using `&raw` freely, and even the soft-deprecated `ptr::addr_of!`
and `ptr::addr_of_mut!` can stop allowing the unstable feature.
I intentionally did not change any documentation or tests, but the rest
of those macro uses are all now using `&raw const` or `&raw mut` in the
standard library.
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Add `Thread::{into_raw, from_raw}`
Public API:
```rust
#![unstable(feature = "thread_raw", issue = "97523")]
impl Thread {
pub fn into_raw(self) -> *const ();
pub unsafe fn from_raw(ptr: *const ()) -> Thread;
}
```
ACP: https://github.com/rust-lang/libs-team/issues/200
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Documentation comments for `catch_unwind` and `thread::join` to indicate
new behavioral guarantee when catching a foreign exception.
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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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Many tiny changes to stdlib doc comments to make them consistent (for example
"Returns foo", rather than "Return foo", per RFC1574), adding missing periods, paragraph
breaks, backticks for monospace style, and other minor nits.
https://github.com/rust-lang/rfcs/blob/master/text/1574-more-api-documentation-conventions.md#appendix-a-full-conventions-text
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