Rollup merge of #55632 - ollie27:deny_overflowing_literals, r=Centril
Deny the `overflowing_literals` lint for all editions
The `overflowing_literals` was made deny by default for the 2018 edition by #54507, however I'm not aware of any reason it can't be made deny by default for the 2015 edition as well.
bors [Mon, 25 Feb 2019 06:27:35 +0000 (06:27 +0000)]
Auto merge of #57609 - matthewjasper:more-restrictive-match, r=pnkfelix
Use normal mutable borrows in matches
`ref mut` borrows are currently two-phase with NLL enabled. This changes them to be proper mutable borrows. To accommodate this, first the position of fake borrows is changed:
```text
[ 1. Pre-match ]
|
[ (old create fake borrows) ]
[ 2. Discriminant testing -- check discriminants ] <-+
| |
| (once a specific arm is chosen) |
| |
[ (old read fake borrows) ] |
[ 3. Create "guard bindings" for arm ] |
[ (create fake borrows) ] |
| |
[ 4. Execute guard code ] |
[ (read fake borrows) ] --(guard is false)-----------+
|
| (guard results in true)
|
[ 5. Create real bindings and execute arm ]
|
[ Exit match ]
```
The following additional changes are made to accommodate `ref mut` bindings:
* We no longer create fake `Shared` borrows. These borrows are no longer needed for soundness, just to avoid some arguably strange cases.
* `Shallow` borrows no longer conflict with existing borrows, avoiding conflicting access between the guard borrow access and the `ref mut` borrow.
There is some further clean up done in this PR:
* Avoid the "later used here" note for Shallow borrows (since it's not relevant with the message provided)
* Make any use of a two-phase borrow activate it.
* Simplify the cleanup_post_borrowck passes into a single pass.
bors [Mon, 25 Feb 2019 03:48:12 +0000 (03:48 +0000)]
Auto merge of #58714 - Centril:rollup, r=Centril
Rollup of 5 pull requests
Successful merges:
- #58370 (Relax some Hash bounds on HashMap<K, V, S> and HashSet<T, S>)
- #58421 (Relax some Ord bounds on BinaryHeap<T>)
- #58686 (replace deprecated rustfmt_skip with rustfmt::skip)
- #58697 (Use ? in some macros)
- #58704 (Remove some unnecessary 'extern crate')
bors [Sun, 24 Feb 2019 06:59:13 +0000 (06:59 +0000)]
Auto merge of #58691 - Centril:rollup, r=Centril
Rollup of 6 pull requests
Successful merges:
- #57364 (Improve parsing diagnostic for negative supertrait bounds)
- #58183 (Clarify guarantees for `Box` allocation)
- #58442 (Simplify the unix `Weak` functionality)
- #58454 (Refactor Windows stdio and remove stdin double buffering )
- #58511 (Const to op simplification)
- #58642 (rustdoc: support methods on primitives in intra-doc links)
Rollup merge of #58454 - pitdicker:windows_stdio, r=alexcrichton
Refactor Windows stdio and remove stdin double buffering
I was looking for something nice and small to work on, tried to tackle a few FIXME's in Windows stdio, and things grew from there.
This part of the standard library contains some tricky code, and has changed over the years to handle more corner cases. It could use some refactoring and extra comments.
Changes/fixes:
- Made `StderrRaw` `pub(crate)`, to remove the `Write` implementations on `sys::Stderr` (used unsynchronised for panic output).
- Remove the unused `Read` implementation on `sys::windows::stdin`
- The `windows::stdio::Output` enum made sense when we cached the handles, but we can use simple functions like `is_console` now that we get the handle on every read/write
- `write` can now calculate the number of written bytes as UTF-8 when we can't write all `u16`s.
- If `write` could only write one half of a surrogate pair, attempt another write for the other because user code can't reslice in any way that would allow us to write it otherwise.
- Removed the double buffering on stdin. Documentation on the unexposed `StdinRaw` says: 'This handle is not synchronized or buffered in any fashion'; which is now true.
- `sys::windows::Stdin` now always only partially fills its buffer, so we can guarantee any arbitrary UTF-16 can be re-encoded without losing any data.
- `sys::windows::STDIN_BUF_SIZE` is slightly larger to compensate. There should be no real change in the number of syscalls the buffered `Stdin` does. This buffer is a little larger, while the extra buffer on Stdin is gone.
- `sys::windows::Stdin` now attempts to handle unpaired surrogates at its buffer boundary.
- `sys::windows::Stdin` no langer allocates for its buffer, but the UTF-16 decoding still does.
### Testing
I did some manual testing of reading and writing to console. The console does support UTF-16 in some sense, but doesn't supporting displaying characters outside the BMP.
- compile stage 1 stdlib with a tiny value for `MAX_BUFFER_SIZE` to make it easier to catch corner cases
- run a simple test program that reads on stdin, and echo's to stdout
- write some lines with plenty of ASCII and emoji in a text editor
- copy and paste in console to stdin
- return with `\r\n\` or CTRL-Z
- copy and paste in text editor
- check it round-trips
-----
Fixes https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/23344. All but one of the suggestions in that issue are now implemented. the missing one is:
> * When reading data, we require the entire set of input to be valid UTF-16. We should instead attempt to read as much of the input as possible as valid UTF-16, only returning an error for the actual invalid elements. For example if we read 10 elements, 5 of which are valid UTF-16, the 6th is bad, and then the remaining are all valid UTF-16, we should probably return the first 5 on a call to `read`, then return an error, then return the remaining on the next call to `read`.
Stdin in Console mode is dealing with text directly input by a user. In my opinion getting an unpaired surrogate is quite unlikely in that case, and a valid reason to error on the entire line of input (which is probably short). Dealing with it is incompatible with an unbuffered stdin, which seems the more interesting guarantee to me.
bors [Sat, 23 Feb 2019 17:00:07 +0000 (17:00 +0000)]
Auto merge of #58661 - ehuss:update-cargo, r=alexcrichton
Update cargo
5 commits in b33ce7fc9092962b0657b4c25354984b5e5c47e4..5c6aa46e6f28661270979696e7b4c2f0dff8628f
2019-02-19 18:42:50 +0000 to 2019-02-22 19:32:35 +0000
- convert unused doc comments to regular comments (rust-lang/cargo#6692)
- Add more about system library on whether to keep Cargo.lock (rust-lang/cargo#6685)
- Warn when excluding non-existing packages (rust-lang/cargo#6679)
- Incremental profile cleanup. (rust-lang/cargo#6688)
- Various cosmetic improvements (rust-lang/cargo#6687)
bors [Sat, 23 Feb 2019 11:32:10 +0000 (11:32 +0000)]
Auto merge of #58655 - kennytm:download-docker-cache-with-timeout, r=alexcrichton
Added a connection timeout and speed threshold when downloading the Docker cache
This is an attempt to fix one possible cause of #56112. Similar to #52846, this changed the download docker-cache command to fail if it cannot connect or falls below 10 bytes/s after 30 seconds, so it could be retried sooner.
Rollup merge of #58609 - gabi-250:mutable-refs, r=oli-obk
Allow Self::Module to be mutated.
This only changes `&Self::Module` to `&mut Self::Module` in a couple of places.
`codegen_allocator` and `write_metadata` from `ExtraBackendMethods` mutate the underlying LLVM module. As such, it makes sense for these two functions to receive a mutable reference to the module (as opposed to an immutable one).
I am trying to implement `codegen_allocator` for my backend, and I need to be able to mutate `Self::Module`:
https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/blob/f66e4697ae286985ddefc53c3a047614568458bb/src/librustc_codegen_ssa/traits/backend.rs#L41
Modifying the module in `codegen_allocator`/`write_metadata` is not a problem for the LLVM backend, because [ModuleLlvm](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/blob/master/src/librustc_codegen_llvm/lib.rs#L357) contains a raw pointer to the underlying LLVM module, so it can easily be mutated through FFI calls.
I am trying to avoid interior mutability and `unsafe` as much as I can. What do you think? Does this change make sense, or is there a reason why this should stay the way it is?
Rollup merge of #58595 - stjepang:make-duration-consts-associated, r=oli-obk
Turn duration consts into associated consts
As suggested in https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/57391#issuecomment-459658236, I'm moving `Duration` constants (`SECOND`, `MILLISECOND` and so on; currently behind unstable `duration_constants` feature) into the `impl Duration` block.
Rollup merge of #58526 - pmccarter:master, r=estebank
Special suggestion for illegal unicode curly quote pairs
Fixes #58436
Did not end up expanding the error message span to include the full string literal since I figured the start of the token was the issue, while the help suggestion span would include up to the closing quotation mark.
The look ahead logic does not affect the reader position, not sure if that is an issue (if eg it should still continue to parse after the closing quote without erroring out).
Rollup merge of #58476 - nnethercote:rm-LazyTokenStream, r=petrochenkov
Remove `LazyTokenStream`.
`LazyTokenStream` was added in #40939. Perhaps it was an effective optimization then, but no longer. This PR removes it, making the code both simpler and faster.
Specialize `Iterator::try_fold` and `DoubleEndedIterator::try_rfold` to improve code generation in all internal iteration scenarios.
This changes brings the performance of internal iteration with `RangeInclusive` on par with the performance of iteration with `Range`:
- Single conditional jump in hot loop,
- Unrolling and vectorization,
- And even Closed Form substitution.
Unfortunately, it only applies to internal iteration. Despite various attempts at stream-lining the implementation of `next` and `next_back`, LLVM has stubbornly refused to optimize external iteration appropriately, leaving me with a choice between:
- The current implementation, for which Closed Form substitution is performed, but which uses 2 conditional jumps in the hot loop when optimization fail.
- An implementation using a `is_done` boolean, which uses 1 conditional jump in the hot loop when optimization fail, allowing unrolling and vectorization, but for which Closed Form substitution fails.
In the absence of any conclusive evidence as to which usecase matters most, and with no assurance that the lack of Closed Form substitution is not indicative of other optimizations being foiled, there is no way
to pick one implementation over the other, and thus I defer to the statu quo as far as `next` and `next_back` are concerned.
bors [Fri, 22 Feb 2019 21:32:15 +0000 (21:32 +0000)]
Auto merge of #58644 - Centril:rollup, r=Centril
Rollup of 17 pull requests
Successful merges:
- #57656 (Deprecate the unstable Vec::resize_default)
- #58059 (deprecate before_exec in favor of unsafe pre_exec)
- #58064 (override `VecDeque::try_rfold`, also update iterator)
- #58198 (Suggest removing parentheses surrounding lifetimes)
- #58431 (fix overlapping references in BTree)
- #58555 (Add a note about 2018e if someone uses `try {` in 2015e)
- #58588 (remove a bit of dead code)
- #58589 (cleanup macro after 2018 transition)
- #58591 (Dedup a rustdoc diagnostic construction)
- #58600 (fix small documentation typo)
- #58601 (Search for target_triple.json only if builtin target not found)
- #58606 (Docs: put Future trait into spotlight)
- #58607 (Fixes #58586: Make E0505 erronous example fail for the 2018 edition)
- #58615 (miri: explain why we use static alignment in ref-to-place conversion)
- #58620 (introduce benchmarks of BTreeSet.intersection)
- #58621 (Update miri links)
- #58632 (Make std feature list sorted)
Switch from error patterns to `//~ ERROR` markers.
AFAICT, we do not have the same const-eval issues that we used to when
rust-lang/rust#23926 was filed. (Probably because of the switch to
miri for const-evaluation.)
Rollup merge of #58620 - ssomers:btreeset_intersection_benchmarks, r=KodrAus
introduce benchmarks of BTreeSet.intersection
16 tests combining 4 kinds of contents with different sizes exposing edge cases.
The ones with asymmetric sizes are addressed by https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/58577.
The pos_vs_neg cases seems (are were meant to be) the same as the neg_vs_pos case (same thing, reverse order) but reality shows a surprsing 25% difference.
Rollup merge of #58615 - RalfJung:ref-to-place-alignment, r=oli-obk
miri: explain why we use static alignment in ref-to-place conversion
@eddyb @oli-obk do you think this makes sense? Or should we use the run-time alignment (`align_of_val`)? I am a bit worried about custom DSTs, but that affects way more areas of Miri so I'd ignore them for now.
Rollup merge of #58607 - gurgalex:fail_E0505_for_2018_edition, r=matthewjasper
Fixes #58586: Make E0505 erronous example fail for the 2018 edition
The original example worked for 2015, but not the 2018 edition of Rust.
Borrowing the moved value after ownership is transferred seems required for 2018.
[this](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/compare/rust-lang:f66e469...gurgalex:b2a02c8#diff-4ca866aea4a6efecd732f1975faaad88R1564) line though is correct for 2018, but not for the 2015 edition.
Rollup merge of #58606 - stjepang:put-future-into-spotlight, r=alexcrichton
Docs: put Future trait into spotlight
If a function returns a type that implements `Future`, there should be a small "i" symbol next to it indicating the return type implements an important trait.
Rollup merge of #58601 - gnzlbg:json_error, r=oli-obk
Search for target_triple.json only if builtin target not found
Before this commit, if the builtin target was found, but an error
happened when instantiating it (e.g. validating the target
specification file failed, etc.), then we ignored those errors
and proceeded to try to find a `target_triple.json` file, and if
that failed, reported that as an error.
With this commit, if rustc is supposed to provide the builtin target,
and something fails while instantiating it, that error will
get properly propagated.
Rollup merge of #58555 - scottmcm:try-2015, r=Centril
Add a note about 2018e if someone uses `try {` in 2015e
Inspired by https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/58491, where a `try_blocks` example was accidentally run in 2015, which of course produces a bunch of errors.
What's the philosophy about gating for this? The keyword is stably a keyword in 2018, so I haven't gated it for now but am not mentioning what the keyword _does_. Let me know if I should do differently.
Rollup merge of #58431 - RalfJung:btree, r=Mark-Simulacrum
fix overlapping references in BTree
This fixes two kinds of overlapping references in BTree (both found by running the BTree test suite in Miri).
In `into_slices_mut`, we did `k.into_key_slice_mut()` followed by `self.into_val_slice_mut()` (where `k` is a copy of `self`). Calling `into_val_slice_mut` calls `self.len()`, which creates a shared reference to `NodeHeader`, which unfortunately (due to padding) overlaps with the mutable reference returned by `into_key_slice_mut`. Hence the key slice got (partially) invalidated. The fix is to avoid creating an `&NodeHeader` after the first slice got created.
In the iterators, we used to first create the references that will be returned, and then perform the walk on the tree. Walking the tree creates references (such as `&mut InternalNode`) that overlap with all of the keys and values stored in a pointer; in particular, they overlap with the references the iterator will later return. This is fixed by reordering the operations of walking the tree and obtaining the inner references.
The test suite still passes (and it passes in Miri now!), but there is a lot of code here that I do not understand...
bors [Thu, 21 Feb 2019 21:35:21 +0000 (21:35 +0000)]
Auto merge of #58592 - nikomatsakis:universe-leak-check, r=aturon
Re-implement leak check in terms of universes
This PR temporarily restores the leak-check, but implemented in terms of universes. This is not because the leak check behavior was necessarily **correct**, but because (a) we may want to have a transition period and because (b) we want to have more breathing room to work through the full implications of handling higher-ranked types correctly. Note that this PR builds atop https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/58056.
Fixes #58451
Fixes #46989
Fixes #57639
r? @aturon
cc @arielb1, @lqd
~~Temporary note: I've not finished running `./x.py test` locally -- I'm confident a lot of error messages in tests will need updating. I sort of expect them to revert to the older, (imo) less good error messages, which is mildly unfortunate. There might be a way to preserve the new error messages, not sure.~~