Use `target_vendor = "apple"` instead of `target_os = "..."`
Use `target_vendor = "apple"` instead of `all(target_os = "macos", target_os = "ios", target_os = "tvos", target_os = "watchos", target_os = "visionos")`.
The apple targets are quite close to being identical, with iOS, tvOS, watchOS and visionOS being even closer, so using `target_vendor` when possible makes it clearer when something is actually OS-specific, or just Apple-specific.
Note that `target_vendor` will [be deprecated in the future](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/100343), but not before an alternative (like `target_family = "apple"`) is available.
While doing this, I found various inconsistencies and small mistakes in the standard library, see the commits for details. Will follow-up with an extra PR for a similar issue that need a bit more discussion. EDIT: https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/124494
Since you've talked about using `target_vendor = "apple"` in the past:
r? workingjubilee
CC `@simlay,` `@thomcc`
`@rustbot` label O-macos O-ios O-tvos O-watchos O-visionos
Fix#124478 - offset_of! returns a temporary
This was due to the must_use() call. Adding HIR's `OffsetOf` to the must_use checking within the compiler avoids this issue while maintaining the lint output.
Fixes#124478. `@tgross35`
Update `is_val_statically_known` Docs
* Add `Type Requirements` section, listing the allowed inputs, as requested by #121115
* Add `Pointers` subsection, explaining is_val_statically_known handles pointers.
* Add `Stability concerns` section, referring to other documentation relating to consistency in `const` functions.
Fixes#121115
Sorry this took so long.
`man posix_spawn` documents it to be able to return `ENOENT`, and there
should be nothing preventing this. Tested in the iOS simulator and on
Mac Catalyst.
Abort a process when FD ownership is violated
When an owned FD has already been closed before it's dropped that means something else touched an FD in ways it is not allowed to. At that point things can already be arbitrarily bad, e.g. clobbered mmaps. Recovery is not possible.
All we can do is hasten the fire.
Unlike the previous attempt in #124130 this shouldn't suffer from the possibility that FUSE filesystems can return arbitrary errors.
Unconditionally call `really_init` on GNU/Linux
This makes miri not diverge in behavior, it fixes running Rust linux-gnu binaries on musl with gcompat, it fixes dlopen edge-cases that cranelift somehow hits, etc.
Fixes#124126
thou hast gazed into this abyss with me:
r? ``@ChrisDenton``
This makes miri not diverge in behavior, it fixes running Rust linux-gnu
binaries on musl with gcompat, it fixes dlopen edge-cases that cranelift
somehow hits, etc.
thread_local: be excruciatingly explicit in dtor code
Use raw pointers to accomplish internal mutability, and clearly split references where applicable. This reduces the likelihood that any of these parts are misunderstood, either by humans or the compiler's optimizations.
Fixes#124317
r? ``@joboet``
PathBuf: replace transmuting by accessor functions
The existing `repr(transparent)` was anyway insufficient as `OsString` was not `repr(transparent)`. And furthermore, on Windows it was blatantly wrong as `OsString` wraps `Wtf8Buf` which is a `repr(Rust)` type with 2 fields:
51a7396ad3/library/std/src/sys_common/wtf8.rs (L131-L146)
So let's just be honest about what happens and add accessor methods that make this abstraction-breaking act of PathBuf visible on the APIs that it pierces through.
Fixes https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/124409
Convert some iter macros to normal functions
With all the MIR optimization changes that have happened since these were written, let's see if they still actually matter.
\*perf comes back\*
Well, it looks like it's not longer relevant for instruction, cycle, nor wall-time perf. Looks like a bunch of things are maybe 10kb bigger in debug, but some are also 50k *smaller* in debug.
So I think they should switch to being normal functions as the "greatly improves performance" justification for them being macros seems to no longer be true -- probably thanks to us always building `core` with `-Z inline-mir` so the difference is negligible.