remove unused field
Followup to #104455. The field is no longer needed since ExtractIf (previously DrainFilter) doesn't keep draining in its drop impl.
Implement PartialOrd for `Vec`s over different allocators
It is already possible to `PartialEq` `Vec`s with different allocators, but that is not the case with `PartialOrd`.
Remove the assume(!is_null) from Vec::as_ptr
At a guess, this code is leftover from LLVM was worse at keeping track of the niche information here. In any case, we don't need this anymore: Removing this `assume` doesn't get rid of the `nonnull` attribute on the return type.
In the past, Vec::clone_from was implemented using slice::clone_into.
The code from clone_into was later duplicated into clone_from in
8725e4c337, which is the commit that adds custom allocator support to
Vec. Presumably this was done because the slice::clone_into only works
for vecs with the default allocator so it would have the wrong type to
clone into Vec<T, A>.
Now that the clone_into implementation is moved out into a specializable
trait anyway we might as well use that to share the code between the two
methods.
Remove incorrect comment in `Vec::drain`
r? ``@scottmcm``
Turns out this comment wasn't correct for 6 years, since #34951, which switched from using `slice::IterMut` into using `slice::Iter`.
add Vec::push_within_capacity - fallible, does not allocate
This method can serve several purposes. It
* is fallible
* guarantees that items in Vec aren't moved
* allows loops that do `reserve` and `push` separately to avoid pulling in the allocation machinery a second time in the `push` part which should make things easier on the optimizer
* eases the path towards `ArrayVec` a bit since - compared to `push()` - there are fewer questions around how it should be implemented
I haven't named it `try_push` because that should probably occupy a middle ground that will still try to reserve and only return an error in the unlikely OOM case.
resolves#84649
Fix in-place collection leak when remaining element destructor panic
Fixes#101628
cc `@the8472`
I went for the drop guard route, placing it immediately before the `forget_allocation_drop_remaining` call and after the comment, as to signal they are closely related.
I also updated the test to check for the leak, though the only change really needed was removing the leak clean up for miri since now that's no longer leaked.
docs: be less harsh in wording for Vec::from_raw_parts
In particular, be clear that it is sound to specify memory not
originating from a previous `Vec` allocation. That is already suggested
in other parts of the documentation about zero-alloc conversions to Box<[T]>.
Incorporate a constraint from `slice::from_raw_parts` that was missing
but needs to be fulfilled, since a `Vec` can be converted into a slice.
Fixes https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/98780.
There's a bunch of these checks because of special handing for ZSTs in various unsafe implementations of stuff.
This lets them be `T::IS_ZST` instead of `mem::size_of::<T>() == 0` every time, making them both more readable and more terse.
*Not* proposed for stabilization at this time. Would be `pub(crate)` except `alloc` wants to use it too.
(And while it doesn't matter now, if we ever get something like 85836 making it a const can help codegen be simpler.)
This PR will fix some typos detected by [typos].
I only picked the ones I was sure were spelling errors to fix, mostly in
the comments.
[typos]: https://github.com/crate-ci/typos
Add guarantee that Vec::default() does not alloc
Currently `Vec::new()` is guaranteed to not allocate until elements are pushed onto the `Vec`, but such a guarantee is missing for `Vec`'s implementation of `Default::default`.
This adds such a guarantee for `Vec::default()` to the API reference.
See also [this discussion on URLO](https://users.rust-lang.org/t/guarantee-that-vec-default-does-not-allocate/79903).
Guarantee `try_reserve` preserves the contents on error
Update doc comments to make the guarantee explicit. However, some
implementations does not have the statement though.
* `HashMap`, `HashSet`: require guarantees on hashbrown side.
* `PathBuf`: simply redirecting to `OsString`.
Fixes#99606.
Currently `Vec::new()` is guaranteed to not allocate until elements are
pushed onto the `Vec`, but such a guarantee is missing for `Vec`'s
implementation of `Default::default`. This adds such a guarantee for
`Vec::default()` to the API reference.
Replace most uses of `pointer::offset` with `add` and `sub`
As PR title says, it replaces `pointer::offset` in compiler and standard library with `pointer::add` and `pointer::sub`. This generally makes code cleaner, easier to grasp and removes (or, well, hides) integer casts.
This is generally trivially correct, `.offset(-constant)` is just `.sub(constant)`, `.offset(usized as isize)` is just `.add(usized)`, etc. However in some cases we need to be careful with signs of things.
r? ````@scottmcm````
_split off from #100746_
Update doc comments to make the guarantee explicit. However, some
implementations does not have the statement though.
* `HashMap`, `HashSet`: require guarantees on hashbrown side.
* `PathBuf`: simply redirecting to `OsString`.
Fixes#99606.