While working on #122661, some of these started triggering our "unnecessary parens" lints due to a change in the `assert!` desugaring. A cursory search identified a few more. Some of these have been carried from before 1.0, were a bulk rename from the previous name of `assert!` left them in that state. I went and removed as many of these unnecessary parens as possible in order to have fewer annoyances in the future if we make the lint smarter.
Add missing allocator safety in alloc crate
### PR Description
In the previous PR [#135009](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/135009), PR [#134496](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/134496), some incomplete API documentation issues have been fixed.
Based on these changes, other inconsistencies related to the allocator have also been identified, including:
- `Box::from_non_null`
- `Box::from_non_null_in`
- `Weak::from_raw`
Enable `unreachable_pub` lint in `alloc`
This PR enables the [`unreachable_pub`](https://doc.rust-lang.org/rustc/lints/listing/allowed-by-default.html#unreachable-pub) lint as warn in the `alloc` crate.
Most of changes are in the btree implementation and in tests.
*The diff was mostly generated with `./x.py fix --stage 1 library/alloc/ -- --broken-code`, as well as manual edits for code in macros and in tests.*
Continuation of #134286 and #135366
r? libs
Update emscripten std tests
This disables a bunch of emscripten tests that test things emscripten doesn't support and re-enables a whole bunch of tests which now work just fine on emscripten.
Tested with `EMCC_CFLAGS="-s MAXIMUM_MEMORY=2GB" ./x.py test library/ --target wasm32-unknown-emscripten`.
Implement `ByteStr` and `ByteString` types
Approved ACP: https://github.com/rust-lang/libs-team/issues/502
Tracking issue: https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/134915
These types represent human-readable strings that are conventionally,
but not always, UTF-8. The `Debug` impl prints non-UTF-8 bytes using
escape sequences, and the `Display` impl uses the Unicode replacement
character.
This is a minimal implementation of these types and associated trait
impls. It does not add any helper methods to other types such as `[u8]`
or `Vec<u8>`.
I've omitted a few implementations of `AsRef`, `AsMut`, and `Borrow`,
when those would be the second implementation for a type (counting the
`T` impl), to avoid potential inference failures. We can attempt to add
more impls later in standalone commits, and run them through crater.
In addition to the `bstr` feature, I've added a `bstr_internals` feature
for APIs provided by `core` for use by `alloc` but not currently
intended for stabilization.
This API and its implementation are based *heavily* on the `bstr` crate
by Andrew Gallant (`@BurntSushi).`
r? `@BurntSushi`
Update documentation for Arc::from_raw, Arc::increment_strong_count, and Arc::decrement_strong_count to clarify allocator requirement
### Related Issue:
This update addresses parts of the issue raised in [#134242](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/134242), where Arc's documentation lacks `Global Allocator` safety descriptions for three APIs. And this was confirmed by ```@workingjubilee``` :
> Wait, nevermind. I apparently forgot the `increment_strong_count` is implicitly A = Global. Ugh. Another reason these things are hard to track, unfortunately.
### PR Description
This PR updates the document for the following APIs:
- `Arc::from_raw`
- `Arc::increment_strong_count`
- `Arc::decrement_strong_count`
These APIs currently lack an important piece of documentation: **the raw pointer must point to a block of memory allocated by the global allocator**. This crucial detail is specified in the source code but is not reflected in the documentation, which could lead to confusion or incorrect usage by users.
### Problem:
The following example demonstrates the potential confusion caused by the lack of documentation:
```rust
#![feature(allocator_api)]
use std::alloc::{Allocator,AllocError, Layout};
use std::ptr::NonNull;
use std::sync::Arc;
struct LocalAllocator {
memory: NonNull<u8>,
size: usize,
}
impl LocalAllocator {
fn new(size: usize) -> Self {
Self {
memory: unsafe { NonNull::new_unchecked(&mut 0u8 as *mut u8) },
size,
}
}
}
unsafe impl Allocator for LocalAllocator {
fn allocate(&self, _layout: Layout) -> Result<NonNull<[u8]>, AllocError> {
Ok(NonNull::slice_from_raw_parts(self.memory, self.size))
}
unsafe fn deallocate(&self, _ptr: NonNull<u8>, _layout: Layout) {
}
}
fn main() {
let allocator = LocalAllocator::new(64);
let arc = Arc::new_in(5, &allocator); // Here, allocator could be any non-global allocator
let ptr = Arc::into_raw(arc);
unsafe {
Arc::increment_strong_count(ptr);
let arc = Arc::from_raw(ptr);
assert_eq!(2, Arc::strong_count(&arc)); // Failed here!
}
}
```
Add an example for `Vec::splice` inserting elements without removing
This example clearly showcases how `splice` can be used to insert multiple elements efficiently at an index into a vector.
Fixes#135369.
The added example:
> Using `splice` to insert new items into a vector efficiently at a specific position indicated by an empty range:
> ```rust
> let mut v = vec![1, 5];
> let new = [2, 3, 4];
> v.splice(1..1, new);
> assert_eq!(v, [1, 2, 3, 4, 5]);
> ```
`@rustbot` label A-docs A-collections
Rollup of 6 pull requests
Successful merges:
- #129259 (Add inherent versions of MaybeUninit methods for slices)
- #135374 (Suggest typo fix when trait path expression is typo'ed)
- #135377 (Make MIR cleanup for functions with impossible predicates into a real MIR pass)
- #135378 (Remove a bunch of diagnostic stashing that doesn't do anything)
- #135397 (compiletest: add erroneous variant to `string_enum`s conversions error)
- #135398 (add more crash tests)
r? `@ghost`
`@rustbot` modify labels: rollup
Use `NonNull::without_provenance` within the standard library
This API removes the need for several `unsafe` blocks, and leads to clearer code. It uses feature `nonnull_provenance` (#135243).
Close#135343
Update a bunch of library types for MCP807
This greatly reduces the number of places that actually use the `rustc_layout_scalar_valid_range_*` attributes down to just 3:
```
library/core\src\ptr\non_null.rs
68:#[rustc_layout_scalar_valid_range_start(1)]
library/core\src\num\niche_types.rs
19: #[rustc_layout_scalar_valid_range_start($low)]
20: #[rustc_layout_scalar_valid_range_end($high)]
```
Everything else -- PAL Nanoseconds, alloc's `Cap`, niched FDs, etc -- all just wrap those `niche_types` types.
r? ghost
Approved ACP: https://github.com/rust-lang/libs-team/issues/502
Tracking issue: https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/134915
These types represent human-readable strings that are conventionally,
but not always, UTF-8. The `Debug` impl prints non-UTF-8 bytes using
escape sequences, and the `Display` impl uses the Unicode replacement
character.
This is a minimal implementation of these types and associated trait
impls. It does not add any helper methods to other types such as `[u8]`
or `Vec<u8>`.
I've omitted a few implementations of `AsRef`, `AsMut`, `Borrow`,
`From`, and `PartialOrd`, when those would be the second implementation
for a type (counting the `T` impl) or otherwise may cause inference
failures. These impls are important, but we can attempt to add them
later in standalone commits, and run them through crater.
In addition to the `bstr` feature, I've added a `bstr_internals` feature
for APIs provided by `core` for use by `alloc` but not currently
intended for stabilization.
This API and its implementation are based *heavily* on the `bstr` crate
by Andrew Gallant (@BurntSushi).
This greatly reduces the number of places that actually use the `rustc_layout_scalar_valid_range_*` attributes down to just 3:
```
library/core\src\ptr\non_null.rs
68:#[rustc_layout_scalar_valid_range_start(1)]
library/core\src\num\niche_types.rs
19: #[rustc_layout_scalar_valid_range_start($low)]
20: #[rustc_layout_scalar_valid_range_end($high)]
```
Everything else -- PAL Nanoseconds, alloc's `Cap`, niched FDs, etc -- all just wrap those `niche_types` types.