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2025-09-03thread parking: fix docs and examplesRalf Jung-16/+59
2025-09-02Rollup merge of #146118 - RalfJung:miri-abort, r=joboetGuillaume Gomez-2/+5
improve process::abort rendering in Miri backtraces Also, avoid using the `sys` function directly in the panic machinery -- that seems like an unnecessary layering violation.
2025-09-02Rollup merge of #144066 - RalfJung:extern-c-variadics, r=workingjubileeGuillaume Gomez-1/+0
stabilize c-style varargs for sysv64, win64, efiapi, aapcs This has been split up so the PR now only contains the extended_varargs_abi_support stabilization; "system" has been moved to https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/145954. **Previous (combined) PR description:** This stabilizes extern block declarations of variadic functions with the system, sysv64, win64, efiapi, aapcs ABIs. This corresponds to the extended_varargs_abi_support and extern_system_varargs feature gates. The feature gates were split up since it seemed like there might be further discussion needed for what exactly "system" ABI variadic functions should do, but a [consensus](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/136946#issuecomment-2967847553) has meanwhile been reached: they shall behave like "C" functions. IOW, the ABI of a "system" function is (bold part is new in this PR): - "stdcall" for win32 targets **for non-variadic functions** - "C" for everything else This had been previously stabilized *without FCP* in https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/116161, which got reverted in https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/136897. There was also a "fun" race condition involved with the system ABI being [added](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/119587) to the list of variadic-supporting ABIs between the creation and merge of rust-lang/rust#116161. There was a question raised [here](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/116161#issuecomment-1983829513) whether t-lang even needs to be involved for a change like this. Not sure if that has meanwhile been clarified? The behavior of the "system" ABI (a Rust-specific ABI) definitely feels like t-lang territory to me. Fixes rust-lang/rust#100189 Cc `@rust-lang/lang` # Stabilization report > ## General design > ### What is the RFC for this feature and what changes have occurred to the user-facing design since the RFC was finalized? AFAIK there is no RFC. The tracking issues are - https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/100189 - https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/136946 > ### What behavior are we committing to that has been controversial? Summarize the major arguments pro/con. The only controversial point is whether "system" ABI functions should support variadics. - Pro: This allows crates like windows-rs to consistently use "system", see e.g. https://github.com/microsoft/windows-rs/issues/3626. - Cons: `@workingjubilee` had some implementation concerns, but I think those have been [resolved](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/136946#issuecomment-2967847553). EDIT: turns out Jubilee still has concerns (she mentioned that in a DM); I'll let her express those. Note that "system" is already a magic ABI we introduced to "do the right thing". This just makes it do the right thing in more cases. In particular, it means that on Windows one can almost always just do ```rust extern "system" { // put all the things here } ``` and it'll do the right thing, rather than having to split imports into non-varargs and varargs, with the varargs in a separate `extern "C"` block (and risking accidentally putting a non-vararg there). (I am saying "almost" always because some Windows API functions actually use cdecl, not stdcall, on x86. Those of course need to go in `extern "C"` blocks.) > ### Are there extensions to this feature that remain unstable? How do we know that we are not accidentally committing to those? Actually defining variadic functions in Rust remains unstable, under the [c_variadic feature gate](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/44930). > ## Has a Call for Testing period been conducted? If so, what feedback was received? > > Does any OSS nightly users use this feature? For instance, a useful indication might be "search <grep.app> for `#![feature(FEATURE_NAME)]` and had `N` results". There was no call for testing. A search brings up https://github.com/rust-osdev/uefi-rs/blob/main/uefi-raw/src/table/boot.rs using this for "efiapi". This doesn't seem widely used, but it is an "obvious" gap in our support for c-variadics. > ## Implementation quality All rustc does here is forward the ABI to LLVM so there's lot a lot to say here... > ### Summarize the major parts of the implementation and provide links into the code (or to PRs) > > An example for async closures: <https://rustc-dev-guide.rust-lang.org/coroutine-closures.html>. The check for allowed variadic ABIs is [here](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/blob/9c870d30e2d6434c9e9a004b450c5ccffdf3d844/compiler/rustc_hir_analysis/src/lib.rs#L109-L126). The special handling of "system" is [here](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/blob/c24914ec8329b22ec7bcaa6ab534a784b2bd8ab9/compiler/rustc_target/src/spec/abi_map.rs#L82-L85). > ### Summarize existing test coverage of this feature > > Consider what the "edges" of this feature are. We're particularly interested in seeing tests that assure us about exactly what nearby things we're not stabilizing. > > Within each test, include a comment at the top describing the purpose of the test and what set of invariants it intends to demonstrate. This is a great help to those reviewing the tests at stabilization time. > > - What does the test coverage landscape for this feature look like? > - Tests for compiler errors when you use the feature wrongly or make mistakes? > - Tests for the feature itself: > - Limits of the feature (so failing compilation) > - Exercises of edge cases of the feature > - Tests that checks the feature works as expected (where applicable, `//@ run-pass`). > - Are there any intentional gaps in test coverage? > > Link to test folders or individual tests (ui/codegen/assembly/run-make tests, etc.). Prior PRs add a codegen test for all ABIs and tests actually calling extern variadic functions for sysv64 and win64: - https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/144359 - https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/144379 We don't have a way of executing uefi target code in the test suite, so it's unclear how to fully test efiapi. aapcs could probably be done? (But note that we have hardly an such actually-calling-functions tests for ABI things, we almost entirely rely on codegen tests.) The test ensuring that we do *not* stabilize *defining* c-variadic functions is `tests/ui/feature-gates/feature-gate-c_variadic.rs`. > ### What outstanding bugs in the issue tracker involve this feature? Are they stabilization-blocking? None that I am aware of. > ### What FIXMEs are still in the code for that feature and why is it ok to leave them there? None that I am aware of. > ### Summarize contributors to the feature by name for recognition and assuredness that people involved in the feature agree with stabilization `@Soveu` added sysv64, win64, efiapi, aapcs to the list of ABIs that allow variadics, `@beepster4096` added system. `@workingjubilee` recently refactored the ABI handling in the compiler, also affecting this feature. > ### Which tools need to be adjusted to support this feature. Has this work been done? > > Consider rustdoc, clippy, rust-analyzer, rustfmt, rustup, docs.rs. Maybe RA needs to be taught about the new allowed ABIs? No idea how precisely they mirror what exactly rustc accepts and rejects here. > ## Type system and execution rules > ### What compilation-time checks are done that are needed to prevent undefined behavior? > > (Be sure to link to tests demonstrating that these tests are being done.) Nothing new here, this just expands the existing support for calling variadic functions to more ABIs. > ### Does the feature's implementation need checks to prevent UB or is it sound by default and needs opt in in places to perform the dangerous/unsafe operations? If it is not sound by default, what is the rationale? Nothing new here, this just expands the existing support for calling variadic functions to more ABIs. > ### Can users use this feature to introduce undefined behavior, or use this feature to break the abstraction of Rust and expose the underlying assembly-level implementation? (Describe.) Nothing new here, this just expands the existing support for calling variadic functions to more ABIs. > ### What updates are needed to the reference/specification? (link to PRs when they exist) - https://github.com/rust-lang/reference/pull/1936 > ## Common interactions > ### Does this feature introduce new expressions and can they produce temporaries? What are the lifetimes of those temporaries? No. > ### What other unstable features may be exposed by this feature? None.
2025-09-02improve process::abort rendering in Miri backtracesRalf Jung-2/+5
2025-09-02stabilize extended_varargs_abi_supportRalf Jung-1/+0
2025-09-01Constify conversion traitsltdk-9/+19
2025-08-31std: fix `SplitPaths` regressionjoboet-5/+15
2025-08-30Rollup merge of #146030 - ChrisDenton:wait-timeout, r=tgross35Trevor Gross-6/+18
Fix `sys::process::windows::tests::test_thread_handle` spurious failure Instead of sleeping, wait for the process to finish so that we can be sure it's done. We use a timeout because otherwise this test can be stuck indefinitely if it fails (unfortunately std doesn't currently have a way to wait with a timeout so a manual OS API call is necessary). I also changed the test to run `whoami` and pipe the output to null so that it doesn't clutter up the test output. Fixes rust-lang/rust#146024
2025-08-30Rollup merge of #144964 - 0xdeafbeef:fix-open-options, r=ibraheemdevTrevor Gross-22/+91
std: clarify `OpenOptions` error for create without write access Fixes rust-lang/rust#140621
2025-08-30Fix spurious test timeoutChris Denton-6/+18
2025-08-30std: clarify `OpenOptions` error for create without write accessVladimir Petrzhikovskii-22/+91
Previously, attempting to create/truncate a file without write/append access would result in platform-specific error messages: - Unix: "Invalid argument" - Windows: raw OS error code 87 These error codes look like system errors, which could waste hours of debugging for what is actually an API misuse issue.
2025-08-30Rollup merge of #144651 - connortsui20:nonpoison_condvar, r=joboetStuart Cook-76/+530
Implementation: `#[feature(nonpoison_condvar)]` Tracking Issue: https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/134645 This PR continues the effort made in https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/144022 by adding the implementation of `nonpoison::condvar`. Many of the changes here are similar to the changes made to implement `nonpoison::mutex`. There are two other changes here. The first is that the `Barrier` implementation is migrated to use the `nonpoison::Condvar` instead of the `poison` variant. The second (which might be subject to some discussion) is that `WaitTimeoutResult` is moved up to `mod.rs`, as both `condvar` variants need that type (and I do not know if there is a better place to put it now). ### Related PRs - `nonpoison_rwlock` implementation: https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/144648 - `nonpoison_once` implementation: https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/144653
2025-08-30Rollup merge of #143462 - Rudxain:read_to_string_usize, r=joboetStuart Cook-2/+2
fix(lib-std-fs): handle `usize` overflow in `read*` I assume this is a non-breaking change, as there would be an OOM `panic` anyways. This patch ensures a fast-fail when there's not enough memory to load the file. This only changes behavior on platforms where `usize` is smaller than 64bits
2025-08-29Rollup merge of #146017 - maurer:pipe2, r=Mark-SimulacrumTrevor Gross-0/+1
Mark pipe2 supported in Android Android has supported pipe2 since 2010, long before the current min SDK.
2025-08-29Rollup merge of #145991 - GrigorenkoPV:haiku, r=tgross35Trevor Gross-1/+1
std: haiku: fix `B_FIND_PATH_IMAGE_PATH` Fixes https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/145952, which was caused by https://github.com/rust-lang/libc/pull/4575 ```````@rustbot``````` label T-libs O-haiku
2025-08-29Rollup merge of #145756 - okaneco:stabilize_char_boundary, r=scottmcmTrevor Gross-1/+0
str: Stabilize `round_char_boundary` feature Closes https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/93743 FCP completed https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/93743#issuecomment-3168382171
2025-08-29Rollup merge of #145467 - Kivooeo:stabilize-strict_provenance_atomic_ptr, ↵Trevor Gross-1/+0
r=scottmcm Stabilize `strict_provenance_atomic_ptr` feature This closes [tracking issue](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/99108) and stabilises `AtomicPtr::{fetch_ptr_add, fetch_ptr_sub, fetch_byte_add, fetch_byte_sub, fetch_or, fetch_and, fetch_xor}` --- EDIT: FCP completed at https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/99108#issuecomment-3168260347
2025-08-29std: use a TAIT to define `SplitPaths` on UNIXjoboet-29/+7
2025-08-29std: haiku: fix `B_FIND_PATH_IMAGE_PATH`Pavel Grigorenko-1/+1
2025-08-29Rollup merge of #145793 - he32:netbsd-libexecinfo-fix, r=Mark-SimulacrumStuart Cook-0/+1
std library: use execinfo library also on NetBSD. The execinfo library is also available on NetBSD.
2025-08-29Rollup merge of #144354 - rafaeling:fix-142726-qnx8-link-fail, r=tgross35Stuart Cook-1/+1
fix(std): Fix undefined reference to __my_thread_exit on QNX 8.0 When cross-compiling for the x86_64/aarch64-unknown-nto-qnx800 target (QNX SDP 8.0), the build fails during the final link stage with the error: ``` error: linking with `qcc` failed: exit status: 1 ... = note: undefined reference to `__my_thread_exit' ``` - **On QNX 7.1**: The __my_thread_exit symbol is defined and exported by the main C library (libc.a/libc.so). The std backtrace code can therefore successfully take its address at compile time. - **On QNX 8.0**: As part of a toolchain modernization, this symbol has been refactored. It is no longer present in any of the standard system libraries (.a or .so). This patch addresses the problem at its source by conditionally compiling the problematic code. Fixes rust-lang/rust#142726
2025-08-29Mark pipe2 supported in AndroidMatthew Maurer-0/+1
Android has supported pipe2 since 2010, long before the current min SDK.
2025-08-28std: Start supporting WASIp2 nativelyAlex Crichton-13/+177
This commit is the start of an effort to support WASIp2 natively in the standard library. Before this commit the `wasm32-wasip2` target behaved exactly like `wasm32-wasip1` target by importing APIs from the core wasm module `wasi_snapshot_preview1`. These APIs are satisfied by the `wasm-component-ld` target by using an [adapter] which implements WASIp1 in terms of WASIp2. This adapter comes at a cost, however, in terms of runtime indirection and instantiation cost, so ideally the adapter would be removed entirely. The purpose of this adapter was to provide a smoother on-ramp from WASIp1 to WASIp2 when it was originally created. The `wasm32-wasip2` target has been around for long enough now that it's much more established. Additionally the only thing historically blocking using WASIp2 directly was implementation effort. Work is now underway to migrate wasi-libc itself to using WASIp2 directly and now seems as good a time as any to migrate the Rust standard library too. Implementation-wise the milestones here are: * The `wasm32-wasip2` target now also depends on the `wasi` crate at version 0.14.* in addition to the preexisting dependency of 0.11.*. The 0.14.* release series binds WASIp2 APIs instead of WASIp1 APIs. * Some preexisting naming around `mod wasi` or `wasi.rs` was renamed to `wasip1` where appropriate. For example `std::sys::pal::wasi` is now called `std::sys::pal::wasip1`. * More platform-specific WASI modules are now split between WASIp1 and WASIp2. For example getting the current time, randomness, and process arguments now use WASIp2 APIs directly instead of using WASIp1 APIs that require an adapter. It's worth pointing out that this PR does not migrate the entire standard library away from using WASIp1 APIs on the `wasm32-wasip2` target. Everything related to file descriptors and filesystem APIs is still using WASIp1. Migrating that is left for a future PR. In the meantime the goal of this change is to lay the groundwork necessary for migrating in the future. Eventually the goal is to drop the `wasi` 0.11.* dependency on the `wasm32-wasip2` target (the `wasm32-wasip1` target will continue to retain this dependency). [adapter]: https://github.com/bytecodealliance/wasmtime/blob/main/crates/wasi-preview1-component-adapter/README.md
2025-08-28Rollup merge of #142727 - hkBst:rm-static-mut-wasm, r=ChrisDentonStuart Cook-7/+10
wasm: rm static mut More https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/125035. I'm not sure this is correct, but it compiles.
2025-08-27Rollup merge of #145746 - ivmarkov:fix-nofollow-espidf, r=ibraheemdevJacob Pratt-2/+11
Fix STD build failing for target_os = "espidf" A regression from rust-lang/rust#142938 cc `@lolbinarycat` cc `@ibraheemdev` ESP-IDF (and a few other embedded Tier-3 systems) is considered `cfg(unix)`, but it does not have the `O_NOFOLLOW` flag because neither of its three supported filesystems (FATFS, LitteLF and Spiffs) has symbolic links in the first place. What this fix does is to keep the `set_permissions_nofollow` method available and non-failing for ESP-IDF, but it behaves as if no `O_NONFOLLOW` was set. This should be fine as there is nothing to follow in the first place, as there are no symbolic links there. EDIT: Also added the same fix for Horizon, as requested by `@Meziu.`
2025-08-27Rollup merge of #145335 - clarfonthey:wtf8-core-alloc, r=Mark-SimulacrumMatthias Krüger-1842/+40
Move WTF-8 code from std into core and alloc This is basically a small portion of rust-lang/rust#129411 with a smaller scope. It *does not*\* affect any public APIs; this code is still internal to the standard library. It just moves the WTF-8 code into `core` and `alloc` so it can be accessed by `no_std` crates like `backtrace`. > \* The only public API this affects is by adding a `Debug` implementation to `std::os::windows::ffi::EncodeWide`, which was not present before. This is due to the fact that `core` requires `Debug` implementations for all types, but `std` does not (yet) require this. Even though this was ultimately changed to be a wrapper over the original type, not a re-export, I decided to keep the `Debug` implementation so it remains useful. Like we do with ordinary strings, the tests are still located entirely in `alloc`, rather than splitting them into `core` and `alloc`. ---- Reviewer note: for ease of review, this is split into three commits: 1. Moving the original files into their new "locations" 2. Actually modifying the code to compile. 3. Removing aesthetic changes that were made so that the diff for commit 2 was readable. You can review commits 1 and 3 to verify these claims, but commit 2 contains the majority of the changes you should care about. ---- API changes: `impl Debug for std::os::windows::ffi::EncodeWide`
2025-08-27Rollup merge of #145290 - ntc2:patch-1, r=joshtriplett,tgross35Matthias Krüger-0/+3
Improve std::fs::read_dir docs Call out early that the results returned can differ across calls / aren't deterministic. This was already mentioned at the bottom of examples, but I think it's worth calling out early, since this caused at least one person (me!) great confusion.
2025-08-27Rollup merge of #145078 - minxuanz:riscv-cacheline, r=samueltardieuMatthias Krüger-5/+3
Fix wrong cache line size of riscv64 see https://go-review.googlesource.com/c/go/+/526659, All of riscv CPU using 64B for cache-line size.
2025-08-27Improve std::fs::read_dir docsNathan Collins-0/+3
Call out early that the results returned can differ across calls / aren't deterministic. This was already mentioned at the bottom of examples, but I think it's worth calling out early, since this caused at least one person (me!) great confusion. [ Added a comma to the docs, reflowed commit message - Trevor ]
2025-08-26Rollup merge of #145615 - lorenzleutgeb:socket-doc, r=ChrisDentonGuillaume Gomez-1/+1
Fix doc of `std::os::windows::io::BorrowedSocket::borrow_raw` A small oversight in 0cb69dec57f I noticed while reading.
2025-08-26Rollup merge of #144373 - hkBst:remove-deprecated-1, r=jhprattGuillaume Gomez-191/+28
remove deprecated Error::description in impls [libs-api permission](https://github.com/rust-lang/libs-team/issues/615#issuecomment-3074045829) r? `@cuviper` or `@jhpratt`
2025-08-26remove deprecated Error::description in implsMarijn Schouten-191/+28
2025-08-25fix(std): Add __my_thread_exit stub for QNX 8Rafael RL-1/+1
This commit adds an empty stub for the function for QNX 8 targets. This symbol is required by the unwinder but is not present, causing a linking failure when building with the standard library. Address review feedback: use whitelist for QNX versions
2025-08-23Rollup merge of #145799 - ada4a:patch-3, r=GuillaumeGomezJacob Pratt-1/+1
std/src/lib.rs: mention "search button" instead of "search bar" r? ```@GuillaumeGomez```
2025-08-23Rollup merge of #145307 - connortsui20:lazylock-poison-msg, r=AmanieuJacob Pratt-3/+6
Fix `LazyLock` poison panic message Fixes the issue raised in https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/144872#issuecomment-3151100248 r? ```@Amanieu```
2025-08-23std/src/lib.rs: mention "search button" instead of "search bar"Ada Alakbarova-1/+1
2025-08-23Rollup merge of #144452 - morinmorin:apple/update_read_limit, r=ChrisDentonSamuel Tardieu-3/+3
std/sys/fd: Relax `READ_LIMIT` on Darwin Darwin's `read`/`write` syscalls emit `EINVAL` only when `nbyte > INT_MAX`. The case `nbyte == INT_MAX` is valid, so the subtraction (`- 1`) in ```rust const READ_LIMIT: usize = if cfg!(target_vendor = "apple") { libc::c_int::MAX as usize - 1 // <- HERE } else { libc::ssize_t::MAX as usize }; ``` can be removed. I tested that the case `nbyte == INT_MAX` is valid on various versions of macOS, including old one like Mac OS X 10.5. The man page says: - read() and pread() will fail if the parameter nbyte exceeds INT_MAX (link: https://keith.github.io/xcode-man-pages/read.2.html) - write() and pwrite() will fail if the parameter nbyte exceeds INT_MAX (link: https://keith.github.io/xcode-man-pages/write.2.html) Here are links to Darwin's code: - [macOS 15.5] https://github.com/apple-oss-distributions/xnu/blob/e3723e1f17661b24996789d8afc084c0c3303b26/bsd/kern/sys_generic.c#L307 - [Mac OS X 10.2] https://github.com/apple/darwin-xnu/blob/d738f900846ed2d5f685e18bf85ce63b0176f61a/bsd/kern/sys_generic.c#L220 Related PR: rust-lang/rust#38622.
2025-08-23std library: use execinfo library also on NetBSD.Havard Eidnes-0/+1
2025-08-23fix visibility of private gettersConnor Tsui-3/+6
Signed-off-by: Connor Tsui <connor.tsui20@gmail.com>
2025-08-23move `WaitTimeoutResult` up to `mod.rs`Connor Tsui-137/+68
Since `WaitTimeoutResult` is poison-agnostic, we want to use the same type for both variants of `Condvar`. Signed-off-by: Connor Tsui <connor.tsui20@gmail.com>
2025-08-23change `Barrier` implementation to use `nonpoison::Condvar`Connor Tsui-5/+3
Signed-off-by: Connor Tsui <connor.tsui20@gmail.com>
2025-08-23add `nonpoison::condvar` implementationConnor Tsui-2/+524
Adds the equivalent `nonpoison` types to the `poison::condvar` module. These types and implementations are gated under the `nonpoison_condvar` feature gate. Signed-off-by: Connor Tsui <connor.tsui20@gmail.com>
2025-08-23Fix STD build failing for target_os = espidfivmarkov-2/+11
2025-08-22Rollup merge of #145633 - qxzcode:patch-1, r=jhprattJacob Pratt-4/+4
Fix some typos in LocalKey documentation A few minor grammatical/wording changes in the `std::thread::LocalKey` documentation.
2025-08-22Rollup merge of #144648 - connortsui20:nonpoison_rwlock, r=Mark-SimulacrumJacob Pratt-327/+1458
Implementation: `#[feature(nonpoison_rwlock)]` Tracking Issue: https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/134645 This PR continues the effort made in https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/144022 by adding the implementation of `nonpoison::rwlock`. Many of the changes here are similar to the changes made to implement `nonpoison::mutex`. The only real difference is that this PR includes a reorganizing of the existing `poison::rwlock` file that hopefully makes both variants more readable. ### Related PRs - `nonpoison_condvar` implementation: https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/144651 - `nonpoison_once` implementation: https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/144653
2025-08-22modify `LazyLock` poison panic messageConnor Tsui-3/+6
Fixes an issue where if the underlying `Once` panics because it is poisoned, the panic displays the wrong message. Signed-off-by: Connor Tsui <connor.tsui20@gmail.com>
2025-08-22Stabilize `round_char_boundary` featureokaneco-1/+0
2025-08-21Rollup merge of #137494 - nabijaczleweli:dup, r=Mark-SimulacrumJacob Pratt-24/+26
libstd: init(): dup() subsequent /dev/nulls instead of opening them again This will be faster, and also it deduplicates the code so win/win The dup() is actually infallible here. But whatever. Before: ``` poll([{fd=0, events=0}, {fd=1, events=0}, {fd=2, events=0}], 3, 0) = 1 ([{fd=2, revents=POLLNVAL}]) openat(AT_FDCWD, "/dev/null", O_RDWR) = 2 rt_sigaction(SIGPIPE, {sa_handler=SIG_IGN, sa_mask=[PIPE], sa_flags=SA_RESTORER|SA_RESTART, sa_restorer=0x7f5749313050}, {sa_handler=SIG_DFL, sa_mask=[], sa_flags=0}, 8) = 0 poll([{fd=0, events=0}, {fd=1, events=0}, {fd=2, events=0}], 3, 0) = 2 ([{fd=0, revents=POLLNVAL}, {fd=2, revents=POLLNVAL}]) openat(AT_FDCWD, "/dev/null", O_RDWR) = 0 openat(AT_FDCWD, "/dev/null", O_RDWR) = 2 rt_sigaction(SIGPIPE, {sa_handler=SIG_IGN, sa_mask=[PIPE], sa_flags=SA_RESTORER|SA_RESTART, sa_restorer=0x7efe12006050}, {sa_handler=SIG_DFL, sa_mask=[], sa_flags=0}, 8) = 0 poll([{fd=0, events=0}, {fd=1, events=0}, {fd=2, events=0}], 3, 0) = 3 ([{fd=0, revents=POLLNVAL}, {fd=1, revents=POLLNVAL}, {fd=2, revents=POLLNVAL}]) openat(AT_FDCWD, "/dev/null", O_RDWR) = 0 openat(AT_FDCWD, "/dev/null", O_RDWR) = 1 openat(AT_FDCWD, "/dev/null", O_RDWR) = 2 rt_sigaction(SIGPIPE, {sa_handler=SIG_IGN, sa_mask=[PIPE], sa_flags=SA_RESTORER|SA_RESTART, sa_restorer=0x7fc2dc7ca050}, {sa_handler=SIG_DFL, sa_mask=[], sa_flags=0}, 8) = 0 ``` After: ``` poll([{fd=0, events=0}, {fd=1, events=0}, {fd=2, events=0}], 3, 0) = 1 ([{fd=1, revents=POLLNVAL}]) openat(AT_FDCWD, "/dev/null", O_RDWR) = 1 rt_sigaction(SIGPIPE, {sa_handler=SIG_IGN, sa_mask=[PIPE], sa_flags=SA_RESTORER|SA_RESTART, sa_restorer=0x7f488a3fb050}, {sa_handler=SIG_DFL, sa_mask=[], sa_flags=0}, 8) = 0 poll([{fd=0, events=0}, {fd=1, events=0}, {fd=2, events=0}], 3, 0) = 2 ([{fd=1, revents=POLLNVAL}, {fd=2, revents=POLLNVAL}]) openat(AT_FDCWD, "/dev/null", O_RDWR) = 1 dup(1) = 2 rt_sigaction(SIGPIPE, {sa_handler=SIG_IGN, sa_mask=[PIPE], sa_flags=SA_RESTORER|SA_RESTART, sa_restorer=0x7f1a8943c050}, {sa_handler=SIG_DFL, sa_mask=[], sa_flags=0}, 8) = 0 poll([{fd=0, events=0}, {fd=1, events=0}, {fd=2, events=0}], 3, 0) = 3 ([{fd=0, revents=POLLNVAL}, {fd=1, revents=POLLNVAL}, {fd=2, revents=POLLNVAL}]) openat(AT_FDCWD, "/dev/null", O_RDWR) = 0 dup(0) = 1 dup(0) = 2 rt_sigaction(SIGPIPE, {sa_handler=SIG_IGN, sa_mask=[PIPE], sa_flags=SA_RESTORER|SA_RESTART, sa_restorer=0x7f4e3a4c7050}, {sa_handler=SIG_DFL, sa_mask=[], sa_flags=0}, 8) = 0 ```
2025-08-21Rollup merge of #145673 - Berrysoft:cygwin-fix-flock, r=joshtriplettJacob Pratt-0/+10
Add flock support for cygwin See discussion: https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/145534#issuecomment-3207265236 cc: ``@jeremyd2019``
2025-08-21Rollup merge of #145525 - typesanitizer:vg/doc, r=Mark-SimulacrumJacob Pratt-1/+1
stdlib: Replace typedef -> type alias in doc comment 'typedef' is jargon from C and C++. Since the Rust reference uses the term [type alias](https://doc.rust-lang.org/reference/items/type-aliases.html), this patch changes the doc comment in io/error.rs to also use 'type alias'.