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`description` has been documented as soft-deprecated since 1.27.0 (17
months ago). There is no longer any reason to call it or implement it.
This commit:
- adds #[rustc_deprecated(since = "1.41.0")] to Error::description;
- moves description (and cause, which is also deprecated) below the
source and backtrace methods in the Error trait;
- reduces documentation of description and cause to take up much less
vertical real estate in rustdocs, while preserving the example that
shows how to render errors without needing to call description;
- removes the description function of all *currently unstable* Error
impls in the standard library;
- marks #[allow(deprecated)] the description function of all *stable*
Error impls in the standard library;
- replaces miscellaneous uses of description in example code and the
compiler.
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This commit applies rustfmt with rust-lang/rust's default settings to
files in src/libstd *that are not involved in any currently open PR* to
minimize merge conflicts. THe list of files involved in open PRs was
determined by querying GitHub's GraphQL API with this script:
https://gist.github.com/dtolnay/aa9c34993dc051a4f344d1b10e4487e8
With the list of files from the script in outstanding_files, the
relevant commands were:
$ find src/libstd -name '*.rs' \
| xargs rustfmt --edition=2018 --unstable-features --skip-children
$ rg libstd outstanding_files | xargs git checkout --
Repeating this process several months apart should get us coverage of
most of the rest of libstd.
To confirm no funny business:
$ git checkout $THIS_COMMIT^
$ git show --pretty= --name-only $THIS_COMMIT \
| xargs rustfmt --edition=2018 --unstable-features --skip-children
$ git diff $THIS_COMMIT # there should be no difference
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rename cfg(rustdoc) into cfg(doc)
Needed by https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/61351
r? @QuietMisdreavus
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This allows Miri to print backtraces in isolation mode
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- the old interface between HermitCore and the Rust Standard Library
based on a small C library (newlib)
- remove this interface and call directly the unikernel
- remove the dependency to the HermitCore linker
- use rust-lld as linker
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This is a stylistic change to libstd to reduce the number of checks of
`feature = "backtrace"` now that we unconditionally depend on the
`backtrace` crate and rely on it having an empty implementation.
otherwise.
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std: Add a `backtrace` module
This commit adds a `backtrace` module to the standard library, as
designed in [RFC 2504]. The `Backtrace` type is intentionally very
conservative, effectively only allowing capturing it and printing it.
Additionally this commit also adds a `backtrace` method to the `Error`
trait which defaults to returning `None`, as specified in [RFC 2504].
More information about the design here can be found in [RFC 2504] and in
the [tracking issue].
Implementation-wise this is all based on the `backtrace` crate and very
closely mirrors the `backtrace::Backtrace` type on crates.io. Otherwise
it's pretty standard in how it handles everything internally.
[RFC 2504]: https://github.com/rust-lang/rfcs/blob/master/text/2504-fix-error.md
[tracking issue]: https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/53487
cc #53487
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This commit adds a `backtrace` module to the standard library, as
designed in [RFC 2504]. The `Backtrace` type is intentionally very
conservative, effectively only allowing capturing it and printing it.
Additionally this commit also adds a `backtrace` method to the `Error`
trait which defaults to returning `None`, as specified in [RFC 2504].
More information about the design here can be found in [RFC 2504] and in
the [tracking issue].
Implementation-wise this is all based on the `backtrace` crate and very
closely mirrors the `backtrace::Backtrace` type on crates.io. Otherwise
it's pretty standard in how it handles everything internally.
[RFC 2504]: https://github.com/rust-lang/rfcs/blob/master/text/2504-fix-error.md
[tracking issue]: https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/53487
cc #53487
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Use backtrace formatting from the backtrace crate
r? @alexcrichton
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This commit rejiggers the generics used in the implementation of
`Command::env` with the purpose of reducing the amount of codegen that
needs to happen in consumer crates, instead preferring to generate code
into libstd.
This was found when profiling the compile times of the `cc` crate where
the binary rlib produced had a lot of `BTreeMap` code compiled into it
but the crate doesn't actually use `BTreeMap`. It turns out that
`Command::env` is generic enough to codegen the entire implementation in
calling crates, but in this case there's no performance concern so it's
fine to compile the code into the standard library.
This change is done by removing the generic on the `CommandEnv` map
which is intended to handle case-insensitive variables on Windows.
Instead now a generic isn't used but rather a `use` statement defined
per-platform is used.
With this commit a debug build of `Command::new("foo").env("a", "b")`
drops from 21k lines of LLVM IR to 10k.
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Add #[repr(transparent)] for several types
In some functions, types mentioned in this PR are transmuted into their inner value.
Example for `PathBuf`: https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/blob/master/src/libstd/path.rs#L1132.
This PR adds `#[repr(transparent)]` to those types, so their correct behavior doesn't depend on compiler details. (As far as I understand, currently that line, converting `PathBuf` to `Vec<u8>`, is UB).
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This is duplicated in a few locations throughout the sysroot to work
around issues with not exporting a macro in libstd but still wanting it
available to sysroot crates to define blocks. Nowadays though we can
simply depend on the `cfg-if` crate on crates.io, allowing us to use it
from there!
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This commit removes all in-tree support for generating backtraces in
favor of depending on the `backtrace` crate on crates.io. This resolves
a very longstanding piece of duplication where the standard library has
long contained the ability to generate a backtrace on panics, but the
code was later extracted and duplicated on crates.io with the
`backtrace` crate. Since that fork each implementation has seen various
improvements one way or another, but typically `backtrace`-the-crate has
lagged behind libstd in one way or another.
The goal here is to remove this duplication of a fairly critical piece
of code and ensure that there's only one source of truth for generating
backtraces between the standard library and the crate on crates.io.
Recently I've been working to bring the `backtrace` crate on crates.io
up to speed with the support in the standard library which includes:
* Support for `StackWalkEx` on MSVC to recover inline frames with
debuginfo.
* Using `libbacktrace` by default on MinGW targets.
* Supporting `libbacktrace` on OSX as an option.
* Ensuring all the requisite support in `backtrace`-the-crate compiles
with `#![no_std]`.
* Updating the `libbacktrace` implementation in `backtrace`-the-crate to
initialize the global state with the correct filename where necessary.
After reviewing the code in libstd the `backtrace` crate should be at
exact feature parity with libstd today. The backtraces generated should
have the same symbols and same number of frames in general, and there's
not known divergence from libstd currently.
Note that one major difference between libstd's backtrace support and
the `backtrace` crate is that on OSX the crates.io crate enables the
`coresymbolication` feature by default. This feature, however, uses
private internal APIs that aren't published for OSX. While they provide
more accurate backtraces this isn't appropriate for libstd distributed
as a binary, so libstd's dependency on the `backtrace` crate explicitly
disables this feature and forces OSX to use `libbacktrace` as a
symbolication strategy.
The long-term goal of this refactoring is to eventually move us towards
a world where we can drop `libbacktrace` entirely and simply use Gimli
and the surrounding crates for backtrace support. That's still aways off
but hopefully will much more easily enabled by having the source of
truth for backtraces live in crates.io!
Procedurally if we go forward with this I'd like to transfer the
`backtrace-rs` crate to the rust-lang GitHub organization as well, but I
figured I'd hold off on that until we get closer to merging.
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Debug-print error when using rtunwrap
When I added this macro a while back I didn't have a way to make it print the failure for all types that you might want to unwrap. Now, I came up with a solution.
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Stabilized vectored IO
This renames `std::io::IoVec` to `std::io::IoSlice` and
`std::io::IoVecMut` to `std::io::IoSliceMut`, and stabilizes
`std::io::IoSlice`, `std::io::IoSliceMut`,
`std::io::Read::read_vectored`, and `std::io::Write::write_vectored`.
Closes #58452
r? @alexcrichton
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This renames `std::io::IoVec` to `std::io::IoSlice` and
`std::io::IoVecMut` to `std::io::IoSliceMut`, and stabilizes
`std::io::IoSlice`, `std::io::IoSliceMut`,
`std::io::Read::read_vectored`, and `std::io::Write::write_vectored`.
Closes #58452
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Closes #60271.
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This updates the `Extend` implementations to use `for_each` for many
collections: `BinaryHeap`, `BTreeMap`, `BTreeSet`, `LinkedList`, `Path`,
`TokenStream`, `VecDeque`, and `Wtf8Buf`.
Folding with `for_each` enables better performance than a `for`-loop for
some iterators, especially if they can just forward to internal
iterators, like `Chain` and `FlatMap` do.
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Mark unix::ffi::OsStrExt methods as inline
This is a small change, but I found it surprising it's not inlined looking at the assembly.
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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!
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This commit fills out the `std::fs` module and implementation for WASI.
Not all APIs are implemented, such as permissions-related ones and
`canonicalize`, but all others APIs have been implemented and very
lightly tested so far. We'll eventually want to run a more exhaustive
test suite!
For now the highlights of this commit are:
* The `std::fs::File` type is now backed by `WasiFd`, a raw WASI file
descriptor.
* All APIs in `std::fs` (except permissions/canonicalize) have
implementations for the WASI target.
* A suite of unstable extension traits were added to
`std::os::wasi::fs`. These traits expose the raw filesystem
functionality of WASI, namely `*at` syscalls (opening a file relative
to an already opened one, for example). Additionally metadata only
available on wasi is exposed through these traits.
Perhaps one of the most notable parts is the implementation of
path-taking APIs. WASI actually has no fundamental API that just takes a
path, but rather everything is relative to a previously opened file
descriptor. To allow existing APIs to work (that only take a path) WASI
has a few syscalls to learn about "pre opened" file descriptors by the
runtime. We use these to build a map of existing directory names to file
descriptors, and then when using a path we try to anchor it at an
already-opened file.
This support is very rudimentary though and is intended to be shared
with C since it's likely to be so tricky. For now though the C library
doesn't expose quite an API for us to use, so we implement it for now
and will swap it out as soon as one is available.
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Rollup of 18 pull requests
Successful merges:
- #59106 (Add peer_addr function to UdpSocket)
- #59170 (Add const generics to rustdoc)
- #59172 (Update and clean up several parts of CONTRIBUTING.md)
- #59190 (consistent naming for Rhs type parameter in libcore/ops)
- #59236 (Rename miri component to miri-preview)
- #59266 (Do not complain about non-existing fields after parse recovery)
- #59273 (some small HIR doc improvements)
- #59291 (Make Option<ThreadId> no larger than ThreadId, with NonZeroU64)
- #59297 (convert field/method confusion help to suggestions)
- #59304 (Move some bench tests back from libtest)
- #59309 (Add messages for different verbosity levels. Output copy actions.)
- #59321 (Unify E0109, E0110 and E0111)
- #59322 (Tweak incorrect escaped char diagnostic)
- #59323 (use suggestions for "enum instead of variant" error)
- #59327 (Add NAN test to docs)
- #59329 (cleanup: Remove compile-fail-fulldeps directory again)
- #59347 (Move one test from run-make-fulldeps to ui)
- #59360 (Add tracking issue number for `seek_convenience`)
Failed merges:
r? @ghost
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Unify OsString/OsStr for byte-based implementations
As requested in #57860
r? @joshtriplett
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