do not claim that transmute is like memcpy
Saying transmute is like memcpy is not a well-formed statement, since memcpy is by-ref whereas transmute is by-val. The by-val nature of transmute inherently means that padding is lost along the way. (This is not specific to transmute, this is how all by-value operations work.) So adjust the docs to clarify this aspect.
Cc `@workingjubilee`
Remove synchronization from Windows `hashmap_random_keys`
Unfortunately using synchronization when generating hashmap keys can prevent it being used in `DllMain`.
~~Fixes #99341~~
Add validation to const fn CStr creation
Improves upon the existing validation that only worked when building the stdlib from source. `CStr::from_bytes_with_nul_unchecked` now utilizes `const_eval_select` to validate the safety requirements of the function when used as `const FOO: &CStr = CStr::from_bytes_with_nul_unchecked(b"Foobar\0");`.
This can help catch erroneous code written by accident and, assuming a new enough `rustc` in use, remove the need for boilerplate safety comments for this function in `const` contexts.
~~I think this might need a UI test, but I don't know where to put it. If this is a worth change, a perf run would be nice to make sure the `O(n)` validation isn't too bad. I didn't notice a difference building the stdlib tests locally.~~
Rollup of 8 pull requests
Successful merges:
- #99156 (`codegen_fulfill_obligation` expect erased regions)
- #99293 (only run --all-targets in stage0 for Std)
- #99779 (Fix item info pos and height)
- #99994 (Remove `guess_head_span`)
- #100011 (Use Parser's `restrictions` instead of `let_expr_allowed`)
- #100017 (kmc-solid: Update `Socket::connect_timeout` to be in line with #78802)
- #100037 (Update rustc man page to match `rustc --help`)
- #100042 (Update books)
Failed merges:
r? `@ghost`
`@rustbot` modify labels: rollup
kmc-solid: Update `Socket::connect_timeout` to be in line with #78802
Fixes the build failure of the [`*-kmc-solid_*`](https://doc.rust-lang.org/nightly/rustc/platform-support/kmc-solid.html) Tier 3 targets after #78802.
```
error[E0308]: mismatched types
--> library\std\src\sys\solid\net.rs:234:45
|
234 | cvt(netc::connect(self.0.raw(), addrp, len))
| ------------- ^^^^^ expected *-ptr, found union `SocketAddrCRepr`
| |
| arguments to this function are incorrect
|
= note: expected raw pointer `*const sockets::sockaddr`
found union `SocketAddrCRepr`
note: function defined here
--> library\std\src\sys\solid\abi\sockets.rs:173:12
|
173 | pub fn connect(s: c_int, name: *const sockaddr, namelen: socklen_t) -> c_int;
| ^^^^^^^
```
Support setting file accessed/modified timestamps
Add `struct FileTimes` to contain the relevant file timestamps, since
most platforms require setting all of them at once. (This also allows
for future platform-specific extensions such as setting creation time.)
Add `File::set_file_time` to set the timestamps for a `File`.
Implement the `sys` backends for UNIX, macOS (which needs to fall back
to `futimes` before macOS 10.13 because it lacks `futimens`), Windows,
and WASI.
Currently we skip deriving `PartialEq::ne` for C-like (fieldless) enums
and empty structs, thus reyling on the default `ne`. This behaviour is
unnecessarily conservative, because the `PartialEq` docs say this:
> Implementations must ensure that eq and ne are consistent with each other:
>
> `a != b` if and only if `!(a == b)` (ensured by the default
> implementation).
This means that the default implementation (`!(a == b)`) is always good
enough. So this commit changes things such that `ne` is never derived.
The motivation for this change is that not deriving `ne` reduces compile
times and binary sizes.
Observable behaviour may change if a user has defined a type `A` with an
inconsistent `PartialEq` and then defines a type `B` that contains an
`A` and also derives `PartialEq`. Such code is already buggy and
preserving bug-for-bug compatibility isn't necessary.
Two side-effects of the change:
- There is only one error message produced for types where `PartialEq`
cannot be derived, instead of two.
- For coverage reports, some warnings about generated `ne` methods not
being executed have disappeared.
Both side-effects seem fine, and possibly preferable.
Fix unwinding on certain platforms when debug assertions are enabled
This came up on `armv7-apple-ios` when using `-Zbuild-std`.
Looks like this is a leftover from a [conversion from C to Rust](051c2d14fb), where integer wrapping is implicit.
Not at all sure how the unwinding code works!
Implement network primitives with ideal Rust layout, not C system layout
This PR is the result of this internals forum thread: https://internals.rust-lang.org/t/why-are-socketaddrv4-socketaddrv6-based-on-low-level-sockaddr-in-6/13321.
Instead of basing `std:::net::{Ipv4Addr, Ipv6Addr, SocketAddrV4, SocketAddrV6}` on system (C) structs, they are encoded in a more optimal and idiomatic Rust way.
This changes the public API of std by introducing structural equality impls for all four types here, which means that `match ipv4addr { SOME_CONSTANT => ... }` will now compile, whereas previously this was an error. No other intentional changes are introduced to public API.
It's possible to observe the current layout of these types (e.g., by pointer casting); most but not all libraries which were found by Crater to do this have had updates issued and affected versions yanked. See report below.
### Benefits of this change
- It will become possible to move these fundamental network types from `std` into `core` ([RFC](https://github.com/rust-lang/rfcs/pull/2832)).
- Some methods that can't be made `const fn`s today can be made `const fn`s with this change.
- `SocketAddrV4` only occupies 6 bytes instead of 16 bytes.
- These simple primitives become easier to read and uses less `unsafe`.
- Makes these types support structural equality, which means you can now (for instance) match an `Ipv4Addr` against a constant
### ~Remaining~ Previous problems
This change obviously changes the memory layout of the types. And it turns out some libraries invalidly assumes the memory layout and does very dangerous pointer casts to convert them. These libraries will have undefined behaviour and perform invalid memory access until patched.
- [x] - `mio` - Issue: https://github.com/tokio-rs/mio/issues/1386.
- [x] `0.7` branch https://github.com/tokio-rs/mio/pull/1388
- [x] `0.7.6` published https://github.com/tokio-rs/mio/pull/1398
- [x] Yank all `0.7` versions older than `0.7.6`
- [x] Report `<0.7.6` to RustSec Advisory Database https://rustsec.org/advisories/RUSTSEC-2020-0081.html
- [x] - `socket2` - Issue: https://github.com/rust-lang/socket2-rs/issues/119.
- [x] `0.3.x` branch https://github.com/rust-lang/socket2-rs/pull/120
- [x] `0.3.16` published
- [x] `master` branch https://github.com/rust-lang/socket2-rs/pull/122
- [x] Yank all `0.3` versions older than `0.3.16`
- [x] Report `<0.3.16` to RustSec Advisory Database https://rustsec.org/advisories/RUSTSEC-2020-0079.html
- [x] - `net2` - Issue: https://github.com/deprecrated/net2-rs/issues/105
- [x] https://github.com/deprecrated/net2-rs/pull/106
- [x] `0.2.36` published
- [x] Yank all `0.2` versions older than `0.2.36`
- [x] Report `<0.2.36` to RustSec Advisory Database https://rustsec.org/advisories/RUSTSEC-2020-0078.html
- [x] - `miow` - Issue: https://github.com/yoshuawuyts/miow/issues/38
- [x] `0.3.x` - https://github.com/yoshuawuyts/miow/pull/39
- [x] `0.3.6` published
- [x] `0.2.x` - https://github.com/yoshuawuyts/miow/pull/40
- [x] `0.2.2` published
- [x] Yanked all `0.2` versions older than `0.2.2`
- [x] Yanked all `0.3` versions older than `0.3.6`
- [x] Report `<0.2.2` and `<0.3.6` to RustSec Advisory Database https://rustsec.org/advisories/RUSTSEC-2020-0080.html
- [x] - `quinn master` (aka what became 0.7) - https://github.com/quinn-rs/quinn/issues/968https://github.com/quinn-rs/quinn/pull/987
- [x] - `quinn 0.6` - https://github.com/quinn-rs/quinn/pull/1045
- [x] - `quinn 0.5` - https://github.com/quinn-rs/quinn/pull/1046
- [x] - Release `0.7.0`, `0.6.2` and `0.5.4`
- [x] - `nb-connect` - https://github.com/smol-rs/nb-connect/issues/1
- [x] - Release `1.0.3`
- [x] - Yank all versions older than `1.0.3`
- [x] - `shadowsocks-rust` - https://github.com/shadowsocks/shadowsocks-rust/issues/462
- [ ] - `rio` - https://github.com/spacejam/rio/issues/44
- [ ] - `seaslug` - https://github.com/spacejam/seaslug/issues/1
#### Fixed crate versions
All crates I have found that assumed the memory layout have been fixed and published. The crates and versions that will continue working even as/if this PR is merged is (please upgrade these to help unblock this PR):
* `net2 0.2.36`
* `socket2 0.3.16`
* `miow 0.2.2`
* `miow 0.3.6`
* `mio 0.7.6`
* `mio 0.6.23` - Never had the invalid assumption itself, but has now been bumped to only allow fixed dependencies (`net2` + `miow`)
* `nb-connect 1.0.3`
* `quinn 0.5.4`
* `quinn 0.6.2`
### Release notes draft
This release changes the memory layout of `Ipv4Addr`, `Ipv6Addr`, `SocketAddrV4` and `SocketAddrV6`. The standard library no longer implements these as the corresponding `libc` structs (`sockaddr_in`, `sockaddr_in6` etc.). This internal representation was never exposed, but some crates relied on it anyway by unsafely transmuting. This change will cause those crates to make invalid memory accesses. Notably `net2 <0.2.36`, `socket2 <0.3.16`, `mio <0.7.6`, `miow <0.3.6` and a few other crates are affected. All known affected crates have been patched and have had fixed versions published over a year ago. If any affected crate is still in your dependency tree, you need to upgrade them before using this version of Rust.
Rewrite Windows `compat_fn` macro
This allows using most delay loaded functions before the init code initializes them. It also only preloads a select few functions, rather than all functions.
This is optimized for the common case where a function is used after already being loaded (or failed to load). The only change in codegen at the call site is to use an atomic load instead of a plain load, which should have negligible or no impact.
I've split the old `compat_fn` macro in two so as not to mix two different use cases. If/when Windows 7 support is dropped `compat_fn_optional` can be removed entirely.
r? rust-lang/libs
This is done by having the crossbeam dependency inserted into the
proc_macro server code from the server side, to avoid adding a
dependency to proc_macro.
In addition, this introduces a -Z command-line option which will switch
rustc to run proc-macros using this cross-thread executor. With the
changes to the bridge in #98186, #98187, #98188 and #98189, the
performance of the executor should be much closer to same-thread
execution.
In local testing, the crossbeam executor was substantially more
performant than either of the two existing CrossThread strategies, so
they have been removed to keep things simple.
mem::uninitialized: mitigate many incorrect uses of this function
Alternative to https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/98966: fill memory with `0x01` rather than leaving it uninit. This is definitely bitewise valid for all `bool` and nonnull types, and also those `Option<&T>` that we started putting `noundef` on. However it is still invalid for `char` and some enums, and on references the `dereferenceable` attribute is still violated, so the generated LLVM IR still has UB -- but in fewer cases, and `dereferenceable` is hopefully less likely to cause problems than clearly incorrect range annotations.
This can make using `mem::uninitialized` a lot slower, but that function has been deprecated for years and we keep telling everyone to move to `MaybeUninit` because it is basically impossible to use `mem::uninitialized` correctly. For the cases where that hasn't helped (and all the old code out there that nobody will ever update), we can at least mitigate the effect of using this API. Note that this is *not* in any way a stable guarantee -- it is still UB to call `mem::uninitialized::<bool>()`, and Miri will call it out as such.
This is somewhat similar to https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/87032, which proposed to make `uninitialized` return a buffer filled with 0x00. However
- That PR also proposed to reduce the situations in which we panic, which I don't think we should do at this time.
- The 0x01 bit pattern means that nonnull requirements are satisfied, which (due to references) is the most common validity invariant.
`@5225225` I hope I am using `cfg(sanitize)` the right way; I was not sure for which ones to test here.
Cc https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/66151
Fixes https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/87675