Rollup merge of #76599 - hameerabbasi:const-generics-revs, r=lcnr
Finish off revisions for const generics UI tests.
This time it really does fix it. 😅 The only ones left are `min-and-full-same-time.rs`, which doesn't need it, and `array-impls/` which check the feature indirectly.
Rollup merge of #76583 - CDirkx:os-doc, r=jonas-schievink
Update `std::os` module documentation.
Adds missing descriptions for the modules `std::os::linux::fs` and `std::os::windows::io`.
Also adds punctuation for consistency with other descriptions.
Rollup merge of #76484 - fusion-engineering-forks:maybe-uninit-drop, r=RalfJung
Add MaybeUninit::assume_init_drop.
`ManuallyDrop`'s documentation tells the user to use `MaybeUninit` instead when handling uninitialized data. However, the main functionality of `ManuallyDrop` (`drop`) is not available directly on `MaybeUninit`. Adding it makes it easier to switch from one to the other.
I re-used the `maybe_uninit_extra` feature and tracking issue number (#63567), since it seems very related. (And to avoid creating too many features tracking issues for `MaybeUninit`.)
Rollup merge of #76114 - marmeladema:duration-saturating-ops, r=shepmaster
Add saturating methods for `Duration`
In some project, I needed a `saturating_add` method for `Duration`. I implemented it myself but i thought it would be a nice addition to the standard library as it matches closely with the integers types.
3 new methods have been introduced and are gated by the new `duration_saturating_ops` unstable feature:
* `Duration::saturating_add`
* `Duration::saturating_sub`
* `Duration::saturating_mul`
If have left the tracking issue to `none` for now as I want first to understand if those methods would be acceptable at all. If agreed, I'll update the PR with the tracking issue.
Further more, to match the behavior of integers types, I introduced 2 associated constants:
* `Duration::MIN`: this one is somehow a duplicate from `Duration::zero()` method, but at the time this method was added, `MIN` was rejected as it was considered a different semantic (see https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/72790#issuecomment-636511743).
* `Duration::MAX`
Both have been gated by the already existing unstable feature `duration_constants`, I can introduce a new unstable feature if needed or just re-use the `duration_saturating_ops`.
We might have to decide whether:
* `MIN` should be replaced by `ZERO`?
* associated constants over methods?
- Add `PerNS::into_iter()` so I didn't have to keep rewriting hacks around it. Also add `PerNS::iter()` for consistency. Let me know if this should be `impl IntoIterator` instead.
- Make `ResolutionFailure` an enum instead of a unit variant. This was most of the changes: everywhere that said `ErrorKind::ResolutionFailure` now has to say _why_ the link failed to resolve.
- Store the resolution in case of an anchor failure. Previously this was implemented as variants on `AnchorFailure` which was prone to typos and had inconsistent output compared to the rest of the diagnostics.
- Turn some `Err`ors into unwrap() or panic()s, because they're rustdoc bugs and not user error. These have comments as to why they're bugs (in particular this would have caught #76073 as a bug a while ago).
- If an item is not in scope at all, say the first segment in the path that failed to resolve
- If an item exists but not in the current namespaces, say that and suggests linking to that namespace.
- If there is a partial resolution for an item (part of the segments resolved, but not all of them), say the partial resolution and why the following segment didn't resolve.
- Add the `DefId` of associated items to `kind_side_channel` so it can be used for diagnostics (tl;dr of the hack: the rest of rustdoc expects the id of the item, but for diagnostics we need the associated item).
- No longer suggests escaping the brackets for every link that failed to resolve; this was pretty obnoxious. Now it only suggests `\[ \]` if no segment resolved and there is no `::` in the link.
- Add `Suggestion`, which says _what_ to prefix the link with, not just 'prefix with the item kind'.
Places where this is currently buggy:
<details><summary>All outdated</summary>
~~1. When the link has the wrong namespace:~~ Now fixed.
<details>
```rust
/// [type@S::h]
impl S {
pub fn h() {}
}
/// [type@T::g]
pub trait T {
fn g() {}
}
```
```
error: unresolved link to `T::g`
--> /home/joshua/rustc/src/test/rustdoc-ui/intra-link-errors.rs:53:6
|
53 | /// [type@T::g]
| ^^^^^^^^^
|
= note: this link partially resolves to the trait `T`,
= note: `T` has no field, variant, or associated item named `g`
error: unresolved link to `S::h`
--> /home/joshua/rustc/src/test/rustdoc-ui/intra-link-errors.rs:48:6
|
48 | /// [type@S::h]
| ^^^^^^^^^
|
= note: this link partially resolves to the struct `S`,
= note: `S` has no field, variant, or associated item named `h`
```
Instead it should suggest changing the disambiguator, the way it currently does for macros:
```
error: unresolved link to `S`
--> /home/joshua/rustc/src/test/rustdoc-ui/intra-link-errors.rs:38:6
|
38 | /// [S!]
| ^^ help: to link to the unit struct, use its disambiguator: `value@S`
|
= note: this link resolves to the unit struct `S`, which is not in the macro namespace
```
</details>
2. ~~Associated items for values. It says that the value isn't in scope; instead it should say that values can't have associated items.~~ Fixed.
<details>
```
error: unresolved link to `f::A`
--> /home/joshua/rustc/src/test/rustdoc-ui/intra-link-errors.rs:14:6
|
14 | /// [f::A]
| ^^^^
|
= note: no item named `f` is in scope
= help: to escape `[` and `]` characters, add '\' before them like `\[` or `\]`
```
This is _mostly_ fixed, it now says
```rust
warning: unresolved link to `f::A`
--> /home/joshua/test-rustdoc/f.rs:1:6
|
1 | /// [f::A]
| ^^^^
|
= note: this link partially resolves to the function `f`
= note: `f` is a function, not a module
```
'function, not a module' seems awfully terse when what I actually mean is '`::` isn't allowed here', though.
</details>
It looks a lot nicer now, it says
```
error: unresolved link to `f::A`
--> /home/joshua/rustc/src/test/rustdoc-ui/intra-link-errors.rs:13:6
|
13 | /// [f::A]
| ^^^^
|
= note: `f` is a function, not a module or type, and cannot have associated items
```
3. ~~I'm also not very happy with the second note for this error:~~
<details>
```
error: unresolved link to `S::A`
--> /home/joshua/rustc/src/test/rustdoc-ui/intra-link-errors.rs:19:6
|
19 | /// [S::A]
| ^^^^
|
= note: this link partially resolves to the struct `S`,
= note: `S` has no field, variant, or associated item named `A`
```
but I'm not sure how better to word it.
I ended up going with 'no `A` in `S`' to match `rustc_resolve` but that seems terse as well.
</details>
This now says
```
error: unresolved link to `S::A`
--> /home/joshua/rustc/src/test/rustdoc-ui/intra-link-errors.rs:17:6
|
17 | /// [S::A]
| ^^^^
|
= note: the struct `S` has no field or associated item named `A`
```
which I think looks pretty good :)
4. This is minor, but it would be nice to say that `path` wasn't found instead of the full thing:
```
error: unresolved link to `path::to::nonexistent::module`
--> /home/joshua/rustc/src/test/rustdoc-ui/intra-link-errors.rs:8:6
|
8 | /// [path::to::nonexistent::module]
| ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
```
It will now look at most 3 paths up (so it reports `path::to` as not in scope), but it doesn't work with arbitrarily many paths.
</details>
~~I recommend only reviewing the last few commits - the first 7 are all from #74489.~~ Rebased so that only the relevant commits are shown. Let me know if I should squash the history some more.
Auto merge of #75021 - cuviper:array_chunks_mut, r=scottmcm
Add `slice::array_chunks_mut`
This follows `array_chunks` from #74373 with a mutable version, `array_chunks_mut`. The implementation is identical apart from mutability. The new tests are adaptations of the `chunks_exact_mut` tests, plus an inference test like the one for `array_chunks`.
I reused the unstable feature `array_chunks` and tracking issue #74985, but I can separate that if desired.
Auto merge of #74328 - yoshuawuyts:stabilize-future-readiness-fns, r=sfackler
Stabilize core::future::{pending,ready}
This PR stabilizes `core::future::{pending,ready}`, tracking issue https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/70921.
## Motivation
These functions have been on nightly for three months now, and have lived as part of the futures ecosystem for several years. In that time these functions have undergone several iterations, with [the `async-std` impls](https://docs.rs/async-std/1.6.2/async_std/future/index.html) probably diverging the most (using `async fn`, which in hindsight was a mistake).
It seems the space around these functions has been _thoroughly_ explored over the last couple of years, and the ecosystem has settled on the current shape of the functions. It seems highly unlikely we'd want to make any further changes to these functions, so I propose we stabilize.
## Implementation notes
This stabilization PR was fairly straightforward; this feature has already thoroughly been reviewed by the libs team already in https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/70834. So all this PR does is remove the feature gate.
Add `peek` and `peek_from` to `UnixStream` and `UnixDatagram`
This is my first PR, so I'm sure I've done some things wrong.
This PR:
* adds `peek` function to `UnixStream`;
* adds `peek` and `peek_from` to `UnixDatagram`;
* moves `UnixDatagram::recv_from` implementation to a private function `recv_from_flags`, as `peek_from` uses the same code, just with different flags.
I've taken the documentation from `TcpStream` and `UdpStream`, so it may or may not make sense (I'm bad with english words).
Also, I'm not sure what I should write in the `unstable` attribute, so I've made up the name and set the issue to "none".
Auto merge of #76499 - guswynn:priv_des, r=petrochenkov
Give better diagnostic when using a private tuple struct constructor
Fixes #75907
Some notes:
1. This required some deep changes, including removing a Copy impl for PatKind. If some tests fail, I would still appreciate review on the overall approach
2. this only works with basic patterns (no wildcards for example), and fails if there is any problems getting the visibility of the fields (i am not sure what the failure that can happen in resolve_visibility_speculative, but we check the length of our fields in both cases against each other, so if anything goes wrong, we fall back to the worse error. This could be extended to more patterns
3. this does not yet deal with #75906, but I believe it will be similar
4. let me know if you want more tests
5. doesn't yet at the suggestion that `@yoshuawuyts` suggested at the end of their issue, but that could be added relatively easily (i believe)
Auto merge of #76415 - Mark-Simulacrum:bootstrap-cross-compilation, r=alexcrichton
rustbuild: avoid trying to inversely cross-compile for build triple from host triples
This changes rustbuild's cross compilation logic to better match what users expect,
particularly, avoiding trying to inverse cross-compile for the build triple from host triples.
That is, if build=A, host=B, target=B, we do not want to try and compile for A from B.
Indeed, the only "known to run" triple when cross-compiling is the build triple A.
When testing for a particular target we need to be able to run binaries compiled for
that target though.
The last commit also modifies the default set of host/target triples to avoid producing
needless artifacts for the build triple:
The new behavior is to respect --host and --target when passed as the *only*
configured triples (no triples are implicitly added). The default for --host is
the build triple, and the default for --target is the host triple(s), either
configured or the default build triple.
Fixes #76333
r? `@alexcrichton` if possible, otherwise we'll need to hunt down a reviewer
Mark Rousskov [Sun, 6 Sep 2020 16:57:13 +0000 (12:57 -0400)]
Stop implicitly appending triples to config.toml hosts and targets
Previously, the CLI --target/--host definitions and configured options differed
in their effect: when setting these on the CLI, only the passed triples would be
compiled for, while in config.toml we would also compile for the build triple
and any host triples. This is needlessly confusing; users expect --target and
--host to be identical to editing the configuration file.
The new behavior is to respect --host and --target when passed as the *only*
configured triples (no triples are implicitly added). The default for --host is
the build triple, and the default for --target is the host triple(s), either
configured or the default build triple.
Mark Rousskov [Sun, 6 Sep 2020 16:24:22 +0000 (12:24 -0400)]
Remove host parameter from step configurations
rustc is a natively cross-compiling compiler, and generally none of our steps
should care whether they are using a compiler built of triple A or B, just the
--target directive being passed to the running compiler. e.g., when building for
some target C, you don't generally want to build two stds: one with a host A
compiler and the other with a host B compiler. Just one std is sufficient.
Auto merge of #76573 - Mark-Simulacrum:bootstrap-with-external-llvm, r=alexcrichton
Only copy LLVM into rust-dev with internal LLVM
This avoids needing to figure out where to locate each of the components with an
external LLVM. This component isn't manifested for rustup consumption and
generally shouldn't matter for anyone except Rust's CI, so it is fine for it to not be
complete elsewhere.
Auto merge of #75611 - JulianKnodt:cg_enum_err, r=lcnr
Add help note when using type in place of const
This adds a small help note when it might be possible that wrapping a parameter in braces might resolve the issue of having a type where a const was expected.
Currently, I am displaying the `HirId`, and I'm not particularly sure where to get the currently displayed path(?).
Auto merge of #76381 - petrochenkov:nomingwcomp, r=Mark-Simulacrum
rustbuild: Do not use `rust-mingw` component when bootstrapping windows-gnu targets
Addresses https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/76326#issuecomment-687273473 (ancient `x86_64-w64-mingw32-gcc` is selected as a linker wrapper, which is not usable in `use_lld=true` mode).
Perhaps the comment about incompatible mingw was true in the past, but many things changed since then.
With this change I was able to build everything successfully locally using a newer mingw toolchain, if it passes through the older toolchain on CI, then it should be good, I think.
Auto merge of #75800 - Aaron1011:feature/full-nt-tokens, r=petrochenkov
Attach tokens to all AST types used in `Nonterminal`
We perform token capturing when we have outer attributes (for nonterminals that support attributes - e.g. `Stmt`), or when we parse a `Nonterminal` for a `macro_rules!` argument. The full list of `Nonterminals` affected by this PR is:
Of these nonterminals, only `NtStmt` and `NtLiteral` (which is actually just an `Expr`), support outer attributes - the rest only ever have token capturing perform when they match a `macro_rules!` argument.
This makes progress towards solving https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/43081 - we now collect tokens for everything that might need them. However, we still need to handle `#[cfg]`, inner attributes, and misc pretty-printing issues (e.g. #75734)
I've separated the changes into (mostly) independent commits, which could be split into individual PRs for each `Nonterminal` variant. The purpose of having them all in one PR is to do a single Crater run for all of them.
Most of the changes in this PR are trivial (adding `tokens: None` everywhere we construct the various AST structs). The significant changes are:
* `ast::Visibility` is changed from `type Visibility = Spanned<VisibilityKind>` to a `struct Visibility { kind, span, tokens }`.
* `maybe_collect_tokens` is made generic, and used for both `ast::Expr` and `ast::Stmt`.
* Some of the statement-parsing functions are refactored so that we can capture the trailing semicolon.
* `Nonterminal` and `Expr` both grew by 8 bytes, as some of the structs which are stored inline (rather than behind a `P`) now have an `Option<TokenStream>` field. Hopefully the performance impact of doing this is negligible.
Auto merge of #74437 - ssomers:btree_no_root_in_noderef, r=Mark-Simulacrum
BTreeMap: move up reference to map's root from NodeRef
Since the introduction of `NodeRef` years ago, it also contained a mutable reference to the owner of the root node of the tree (somewhat disguised as *const). Its intent is to be used only when the rest of the `NodeRef` is no longer needed. Moving this to where it's actually used, thought me 2 things:
- Some sort of "postponed mutable reference" is required in most places that it is/was used, and that's exactly where we also need to store a reference to the length (number of elements) of the tree, for the same reason. The length reference can be a normal reference, because the tree code does not care about tree length (just length per node).
- It's downright obfuscation in `from_sorted_iter` (transplanted to #75329)
- It's one of the reasons for the scary notice on `reborrow_mut`, the other one being addressed in #73971.
This does repeat the raw pointer code in a few places, but it could be bundled up with the length reference.
Aaron Hill [Thu, 10 Sep 2020 20:59:30 +0000 (16:59 -0400)]
Attach tokens to `ast::Stmt`
We currently only attach tokens when parsing a `:stmt` matcher for a
`macro_rules!` macro. Proc-macro attributes on statements are still
unstable, and need additional work.
Rollup merge of #76559 - lcnr:const-evaluatable, r=oli-obk
add the `const_evaluatable_checked` feature
Implements a rather small subset of https://github.com/rust-lang/compiler-team/issues/340
Unlike the MCP, this does not try to compare different constant, but instead only adds the constants found in where clauses
to the predicates of a function. This PR adds the feature gate `const_evaluatable_checked`, without which nothing should change.
Rollup merge of #76555 - alilleybrinker:reword_trivial_casts_lint_doc, r=steveklabnik
Reword `trivial_casts` lint in rustc book to better explain what it does.
The current description of the trivial casts lint under the "allowed
by default" listing in the rustc book indicates the lint is for casts
which may be removed, which is less clear than saying it's for casts
which may be replaced by coercion (which is the wording used by the
error message included in the doc).
This commit changes the wording slightly to better describe what the
lint does.
This issue bit me in some recent code where I was attempting to
convert a `Vec<SomeType>` to a `Vec<SomeTraitObject>`, and
hit my project-wide `#![deny(trivial_casts)]` with
`map(|o| Box::new(o) as TraitObject)`. I'd read the book docs for
`trivial_casts` and was surprised by the error, as I took it to mean
the cast ought to be removed (rather than replaced by ascription
in this case). Removing the cast meant other code didn't compile,
and I then found issues like #23742 and realized my misunderstanding.
Rollup merge of #76524 - davidtwco:issue-76077-inaccessible-private-fields, r=estebank
typeck: don't suggest inaccessible private fields
Fixes #76077.
This PR adjusts the missing field diagnostic logic in typeck so that when none of the missing fields in a struct expr are accessible then the error is less confusing.
Similar to https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/66183; we will accept these constructs syntactically but reject with a semantic check after macro expansion if a proc macro hasn't replaced it with something else meaningful to Rust.
```rust
#[mymacro]
unsafe mod m {
...
}
#[mymacro]
unsafe extern "C++" {
...
}
```
The intention is that this might be used as a kind of "item-level unsafe" in attribute macro DSLs -- holding things which are unsafe to declare but potentially safe to use. For example I look forward to using this in https://github.com/dtolnay/cxx.
In the absence of a procedural macro rewriting them to something else, they'll continue to be rejected at compile time though with a better error message than before.
### Before:
```console
error: expected item, found keyword `unsafe`
--> src/main.rs:1:1
|
1 | unsafe mod m {
| ^^^^^^ expected item
```
### After:
```console
error: module cannot be declared unsafe
--> src/main.rs:1:1
|
1 | unsafe mod m {
| ^^^^^^
David Wood [Thu, 10 Sep 2020 11:32:45 +0000 (12:32 +0100)]
typeck/pat: inaccessible private fields
This commit adjusts the missing field diagnostic logic for struct
patterns in typeck to improve the diagnostic when the missing fields are
inaccessible.
David Wood [Wed, 9 Sep 2020 14:42:37 +0000 (15:42 +0100)]
typeck/expr: inaccessible private fields
This commit adjusts the missing field diagnostic logic for struct
expressions in typeck to improve the diagnostic when the missing
fields are inaccessible.
Auto merge of #76564 - pietroalbini:ci-avoid-wasting-10-minutes, r=Mark-Simulacrum
ci: avoid moving the build directory on GHA
While waiting for a PR job to start testing my code, I noticed the symlink-build-dir step took 10 minutes to complete, so I investigated what caused that.
It seems like something changed in the build environment between version 20200901.1 (where the step took 45 seconds) and version 20200908.1 (where the step took 10 minutes). At the time of writing this commit, the rust-lang organization is on vertsion 20200908.1, while the rust-lang-ci organization is at version 20200901.1 (and is not affected by this yet).
There is no need for this step anymore on GHA, as our XL builders got an increase in the root paritition size, so this commit removes the code that moved stuff around on GHA (while keeping it on Azure).
For the record, at the time of writing this, the disk situation is:
Auto merge of #5931 - montrivo:unit-arg, r=flip1995
improve the suggestion of the lint `unit-arg`
Fixes #5823
Fixes #6015
Changes
```
help: move the expression in front of the call...
|
3 | g();
|
help: ...and use a unit literal instead
|
3 | o.map_or((), |i| f(i))
|
```
into
```
help: move the expression in front of the call and replace it with the unit literal `()`
|
3 | g();
| o.map_or((), |i| f(i))
|
```
changelog: improve the suggestion of the lint `unit-arg`
Pietro Albini [Thu, 10 Sep 2020 10:54:29 +0000 (12:54 +0200)]
ci: avoid moving the build directory on GHA
While waiting for a PR job to start testing my code, I noticed the
symlink-build-dir step took 10 minutes to complete, so I investigated
what caused that.
It seems like something changed in the build environment between version 20200901.1 (where the step took 45 seconds) and version 20200908.1
(where the step took 10 minutes). At the time of writing this commit,
the rust-lang organization is on vertsion 20200908.1, while the
rust-lang-ci organization is at version 20200901.1 (and is not affected
by this yet).
There is no need for this step anymore on GHA, as our XL builders got an
increase in the root paritition size, so this commit removes the code
that moved stuff around on GHA (while keeping it on Azure).
For the record, at the time of writing this, the disk situation is:
Filesystem Size Used Avail Use% Mounted on
/dev/sda1 667G 60G 607G 9% /
/dev/sdb1 110G 4.1G 101G 4% /mnt
Our test suite is generally ready to run with an explicitly specified linker (https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/45191),
so LLD specified with `use-lld = true` works as well.
Only 4 tests fail (on `x86_64-pc-windows-msvc`):
```
ui/panic-runtime/lto-unwind.rs
run-make-fulldeps/debug-assertions
run-make-fulldeps/foreign-exceptions
run-make-fulldeps/test-harness
```
All of them are legitimate issues with LLD (or at least with combination Rust+LLD) and manifest in segfaults on access to TLS (https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/76127#issuecomment-683473325). UPD: These issues are caused by https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/72145 and appear because I had `-Ctarget-cpu=native` set.
UPD: Further commits build tests with LLD for non-MSVC targets and propagate LLD to more places when `use-lld` is enabled.
Auto merge of #75573 - Aaron1011:feature/const-mutation-lint, r=oli-obk
Add CONST_ITEM_MUTATION lint
Fixes #74053
Fixes #55721
This PR adds a new lint `CONST_ITEM_MUTATION`.
Given an item `const FOO: SomeType = ..`, this lint fires on:
* Attempting to write directly to a field (`FOO.field = some_val`) or
array entry (`FOO.array_field[0] = val`)
* Taking a mutable reference to the `const` item (`&mut FOO`), including
through an autoderef `FOO.some_mut_self_method()`
The lint message explains that since each use of a constant creates a
new temporary, the original `const` item will not be modified.
Auto merge of #75573 - Aaron1011:feature/const-mutation-lint, r=oli-obk
Add CONST_ITEM_MUTATION lint
Fixes #74053
Fixes #55721
This PR adds a new lint `CONST_ITEM_MUTATION`.
Given an item `const FOO: SomeType = ..`, this lint fires on:
* Attempting to write directly to a field (`FOO.field = some_val`) or
array entry (`FOO.array_field[0] = val`)
* Taking a mutable reference to the `const` item (`&mut FOO`), including
through an autoderef `FOO.some_mut_self_method()`
The lint message explains that since each use of a constant creates a
new temporary, the original `const` item will not be modified.
Auto merge of #76558 - tmandry:rollup-bskim2r, r=tmandry
Rollup of 7 pull requests
Successful merges:
- #74787 (Move `rustllvm` into `compiler/rustc_llvm`)
- #76458 (Add drain_filter method to HashMap and HashSet)
- #76472 (rustbuild: don't set PYTHON_EXECUTABLE and WITH_POLLY cmake vars since they are no longer supported by llvm)
- #76497 (Use intra-doc links in `core::ptr`)
- #76500 (Add -Zgraphviz_dark_mode and monospace font fix)
- #76543 (Document btree's unwrap_unchecked)
- #76556 (Revert #76285)
Rollup merge of #76500 - richkadel:mir-graphviz-dark, r=tmandry
Add -Zgraphviz_dark_mode and monospace font fix
Many developers use a dark theme with editors and IDEs, but this
typically doesn't extend to graphviz output.
When I bring up a MIR graphviz document, the white background is
strikingly bright. This new option changes the colors used for graphviz
output to work better in dark-themed UIs.
Also fixed the monospace font for common graphviz renders (e.g., VS Code extensions), as described in https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/76500#issuecomment-689837948
Rollup merge of #76497 - camelid:intra-doc-links-for-core-ptr, r=jyn514
Use intra-doc links in `core::ptr`
Part of #75080.
The only link that I did not change is a link to a function on the
`pointer` primitive because intra-doc links for the `pointer` primitive
don't work yet (see #63351).
Rollup merge of #76458 - mbrubeck:hash_drain_filter, r=Amanieu
Add drain_filter method to HashMap and HashSet
Add `HashMap::drain_filter` and `HashSet::drain_filter`, implementing part of rust-lang/rfcs#2140. These new methods are unstable. The tracking issue is #59618.
The added iterators behave the same as `BTreeMap::drain_filter` and `BTreeSet::drain_filter`, except their iteration order is arbitrary. The unit tests are adapted from `alloc::collections::btree`.
This branch rewrites `HashSet` to be a wrapper around `hashbrown::HashSet` rather than `std::collections::HashMap`.
(Both are themselves wrappers around `hashbrown::HashMap`, so the in-memory representation is the same either way.) This lets `std` re-use more iterator code from `hashbrown`. Without this change, we would need to duplicate much more code to implement `HashSet::drain_filter`.
This branch also updates the `hashbrown` crate to version 0.9.0. Aside from changes related to the `DrainFilter` iterators, this version only changes features that are not used in libstd or rustc. And it updates `indexmap` to version 1.6.0, whose only change is compatibility with `hashbrown` 0.9.0.
Rollup merge of #74787 - petrochenkov:rustllvm, r=cuviper
Move `rustllvm` into `compiler/rustc_llvm`
The `rustllvm` directory is not self-contained, it contains C++ code built by a build script of the `rustc_llvm` crate which is then linked into that crate.
So it makes sense to make `rustllvm` a part of `rustc_llvm` and move it into its directory.
I replaced `rustllvm` with more obvious `llvm-wrapper` as the subdirectory name, but something like `llvm-adapter` would work as well, other suggestions are welcome.
To make things more confusing, the Rust side of FFI functions defined in `rustllvm` can be found in `rustc_codegen_llvm` rather than in `rustc_llvm`. Perhaps they need to be moved as well, but this PR doesn't do that.
The presence of multiple LLVM-related directories in `src` (`llvm-project`, `rustllvm`, `librustc_llvm`, `librustc_codegen_llvm` and their predecessors) historically confused me and made me wonder about their purpose.
With this PR we will have LLVM itself (`llvm-project`), a FFI crate (`rustc_llvm`, kind of `llvm-sys`) and a codegen backend crate using LLVM through the FFI crate (`rustc_codegen_llvm`).
The current description of the trivial casts lint under the "allowed
by default" listing in the rustc book indicates the lint is for lints
which may be removed, which is less clear than saying it's for lints
which may be replaced by coercion (which is the wording used by the
error message included in the doc).
This commit changes the wording slightly to better describe what the
lint does.
Rollup merge of #76516 - pietroalbini:github-releases, r=Mark-Simulacrum
Enable GitHub Releases synchronization
This PR enables the triagebot feature to automatically populate [GitHub Releases](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/releases) for this repository based on the changelog. See https://github.com/rust-lang/triagebot/pull/811 for the implementation of this feature on triagebot's side, and more insights on how it works.
Note: once this lands people subscribed to the ~~firehose~~ rust-lang/rust repository will probably receive a ton of notifications for all the releases being created, but this should be a one-time thing.