Tweak some attributes to improve panic_immediate_abort
This is similar to https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/117332; I did the same approach as before where I build a really big project with `-Zbuild-std -Zbuild-std-features=panic_immediate_abort` and grep its symbols for things that look panic-related.
A partial stabilization that only affects:
- AllocType<T>::new_uninit
- AllocType<T>::assume_init
- AllocType<[T]>::new_uninit_slice
- AllocType<[T]>::assume_init
where "AllocType" is Box, Rc, or Arc
Fix typos in floating-point primitive type docs
Fixes a few typos. Also reflows the text of a couple of paragraphs in the source code to the standard line width to make the source easier to read (will have no effect on the rendered documentation).
exit: explain our expectations for the exit handlers registered in a Rust program
This documents the position of ``@Amanieu`` and others in https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/126600: a library with an atexit handler that destroys state that other threads could still be working on is buggy. We do not consider it acceptable for a library to say "you must call the following cleanup function before exiting from `main` or calling `exit`". I don't know if this is established ``@rust-lang/libs-api`` consensus so I presume this will have to go through FCP.
Given that Rust supports concurrency, I don't think there is any way to write a sound Rust wrapper around a library that has such a required cleanup function: even if we made `exit` unsafe, and the Rust wrapper used the scope-with-callback approach to ensure it can run cleanup code before returning from the wrapper (like `thread::scope`), one could still call this wrapper in a second thread and then return from `main` while the wrapper runs. Making this sound would require `std` to provide a way to "block" returning from `main`, so that while the wrapper runs returning from `main` waits until the wrapper is done... that just doesn't seem feasible.
The `exit` docs do not seem like the best place to document this, but I also couldn't think of a better one.
As our implementation of MCP411 nears completion and we begin to
solicit testing, it's no longer reasonable to expect testers to
type or remember `BikeshedIntrinsicFrom`. The name degrades the
ease-of-reading of documentation, and the overall experience of
using compiler safe transmute.
Tentatively, we'll instead adopt `TransmuteFrom`.
This name seems to be the one most likely to be stabilized, after
discussion on Zulip [1]. We may want to revisit the ordering of
`Src` and `Dst` before stabilization, at which point we'd likely
consider `TransmuteInto` or `Transmute`.
[1] https://rust-lang.zulipchat.com/#narrow/stream/216762-project-safe-transmute/topic/What.20should.20.60BikeshedIntrinsicFrom.60.20be.20named.3F
Add SME aarch64 features already supported by LLVM and Linux.
This commit adds compiler support for the following features:
- FEAT_SME
- FEAT_SME_F16F16
- FEAT_SME_F64F64
- FEAT_SME_F8F16
- FEAT_SME_F8F32
- FEAT_SME_FA64
- FEAT_SME_I16I64
- FEAT_SME_LUTv2
- FEAT_SME2
- FEAT_SME2p1
- FEAT_SSVE_FP8DOT2
- FEAT_SSVE_FP8DOT4
- FEAT_SSVE_FP8FMA
Add various aarch64 features already supported by LLVM and Linux.
The features are marked as unstable using a newly added symbol, i.e.
aarch64_unstable_target_feature.
Additionally include some comment fixes to ensure consistency of
feature names with the Arm ARM and support for architecture version
target features up to v9.5a.
This commit adds compiler support for the following features:
- FEAT_CSSC
- FEAT_ECV
- FEAT_FAMINMAX
- FEAT_FLAGM2
- FEAT_FP8
- FEAT_FP8DOT2
- FEAT_FP8DOT4
- FEAT_FP8FMA
- FEAT_FPMR
- FEAT_HBC
- FEAT_LSE128
- FEAT_LSE2
- FEAT_LUT
- FEAT_MOPS
- FEAT_LRCPC3
- FEAT_SVE_B16B16
- FEAT_SVE2p1
- FEAT_WFxT
This behaviour was introduced during the upgrade to LLVM 11. Now that the list
of source files has been cleaned up, we can reasonably expect _all_ of the
listed source files to be present.
simd_shuffle intrinsic: allow argument to be passed as vector
See https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/128738 for context.
I'd like to get rid of [this hack](6c0b89dfac/compiler/rustc_codegen_ssa/src/mir/block.rs (L922-L935)). https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/128537 almost lets us do that since constant SIMD vectors will then be passed as immediate arguments. However, simd_shuffle for some reason actually takes an *array* as argument, not a vector, so the hack is still required to ensure that the array becomes an immediate (which then later stages of codegen convert into a vector, as that's what LLVM needs).
This PR prepares simd_shuffle to also support a vector as the `idx` argument. Once this lands, stdarch can hopefully be updated to pass `idx` as a vector, and then support for arrays can be removed, which finally lets us get rid of that hack.
Document & implement the transmutation modeled by `BikeshedIntrinsicFrom`
Documents that `BikeshedIntrinsicFrom` models transmute-via-union, which is slightly more expressive than the transmute-via-cast implemented by `transmute_copy`. Additionally, we provide an implementation of transmute-via-union as a method on the `BikeshedIntrinsicFrom` trait with additional documentation on the boundary between trait invariants and caller obligations.
Whether or not transmute-via-union is the right kind of transmute to model remains up for discussion [1]. Regardless, it seems wise to document the present behavior.
[1] https://rust-lang.zulipchat.com/#narrow/stream/216762-project-safe-transmute/topic/What.20'kind'.20of.20transmute.20to.20model.3F/near/426331967
Tracking Issue: https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/99571
r? `@compiler-errors`
cc `@scottmcm,` `@Lokathor`
Remove cfg(test) from library/core
The diff here is very small with the ignore whitespace option.
`core` doesn't/can't have unit tests. All of its tests are just modules under `tests/`, so it has no use for `cfg(test)`, because the entire contents of `library/core/src` are only ever compiled with that cfg off, and the entire contents of `library/core/tests` are only ever compiled with that cfg on.
You can tell this is what's happening because we had `#[cfg(test)]` on a module declaration that has no source file.
I also deleted the extra `mod tests {` layer of nesting; there's no need to mention again in the module path that this is a module of tests. This exposes a name collision between the `u128` module of tests and `core::u128`. Fixed that by using `<u128>::MAX` like is done in the `check!` macro, which is what avoids this name ambiguity for the other types.
link to Future::poll from the Poll docs
The most important thing about Poll is that Future::poll returns it, but previously the docs didn't emphasize this.
Add implementations for `unbounded_shl`/`unbounded_shr`
Tracking Issue: https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/129375
This implements `unbounded_shl` and `unbounded_shr` under the feature gate `unbounded_shifts`
Rollup of 9 pull requests
Successful merges:
- #129288 (Use subtyping for `UnsafeFnPointer` coercion, too)
- #129405 (Fixing span manipulation and indentation of the suggestion introduced by #126187)
- #129518 (gitignore: ignore ICE reports regardless of directory)
- #129519 (Remove redundant flags from `lower_ty_common` that can be inferred from the HIR)
- #129525 (rustdoc: clean up tuple <-> primitive conversion docs)
- #129526 (Use `FxHasher` on new solver unconditionally)
- #129544 (Removes dead code from the compiler)
- #129553 (add back test for stable-const-can-only-call-stable-const)
- #129590 (Avoid taking reference of &TyKind)
r? `@ghost`
`@rustbot` modify labels: rollup
rustdoc: clean up tuple <-> primitive conversion docs
This adds a minor missing feature to `fake_variadic`, so that it can render `impl From<(T,)> for [T; 1]` correctly.