Implement iterator specialization traits on more adapters
This adds
* `TrustedLen` to `Skip` and `StepBy`
* `TrustedRandomAccess` to `Skip`
* `InPlaceIterable` and `SourceIter` to `Copied` and `Cloned`
The first two might improve performance in the compiler itself since `skip` is used in several places. Constellations that would exercise the last point are probably rare since it would require an owning iterator that has references as Items somewhere in its iterator pipeline.
Improvements for `Skip`:
```
# old
test iter::bench_skip_trusted_random_access ... bench: 8,335 ns/iter (+/- 90)
# new
test iter::bench_skip_trusted_random_access ... bench: 2,753 ns/iter (+/- 27)
```
Rollup of 8 pull requests
Successful merges:
- #116090 (Implement strict integer operations that panic on overflow)
- #118811 (Use `bool` instead of `PartiolOrd` as return value of the comparison closure in `{slice,Iteraotr}::is_sorted_by`)
- #119081 (Add Ipv6Addr::is_ipv4_mapped)
- #119461 (Use an interpreter in MIR jump threading)
- #119996 (Move OS String implementation into `sys`)
- #120015 (coverage: Format all coverage tests with `rustfmt`)
- #120027 (pattern_analysis: Remove `Ty: Copy` bound)
- #120084 (fix(rust-analyzer): use new pkgid spec to compare)
r? `@ghost`
`@rustbot` modify labels: rollup
coverage: Format all coverage tests with `rustfmt`
As suggested by <https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/119984#discussion_r1452856806>.
Test files in `tests/` are normally ignored by `x fmt`, but sometimes those files end up being run through `rustfmt` anyway, either by `rust-analyzer` or by hand.
When that happens, it's annoying to have to manually revert formatting changes that are unrelated to the actual changes being made. So it's helpful for the tests in the repository to already have standard formatting beforehand.
However, there are several coverage tests that deliberately use non-standard formatting, so that line counts reveal more information about where code regions begin and end. In those cases, we can use `#[rustfmt::skip]` to prevent that code from being disturbed.
``@rustbot`` label +A-code-coverage
Move OS String implementation into `sys`
Part of #117276. The new structure is really useful here, since we can easily eliminate a number of ugly `#[path]`-based imports.
In the future, it might be good to move the WTF-8 implementation directly to the OS string implementation, I cannot see it being used anywhere else. That is a story for another PR, however.
Add Ipv6Addr::is_ipv4_mapped
This change consists of cherry-picking the content from the original PR[1], which got closed due to inactivity, and applying the following changes:
* Resolving merge conflicts (obviously)
* Linked to to_ipv4_mapped instead of to_ipv4 in the documentation (seems more appropriate)
* Added the must_use and rustc_const_unstable attributes the original didn't have
I think it's a reasonably useful method to have.
[1] https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/86490
Use `bool` instead of `PartiolOrd` as return value of the comparison closure in `{slice,Iteraotr}::is_sorted_by`
Changes the function signature of the closure given to `{slice,Iteraotr}::is_sorted_by` to return a `bool` instead of a `PartiolOrd` as suggested by the libs-api team here: https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/53485#issuecomment-1766411980.
This means these functions now return true if the closure returns true for all the pairs of values.
Implement strict integer operations that panic on overflow
This PR implements the first part of the ACP for adding panic on overflow style arithmetic operations (https://github.com/rust-lang/libs-team/issues/270), mentioned in #116064.
It adds the following operations on both signed and unsigned integers:
- `strict_add`
- `strict_sub`
- `strict_mul`
- `strict_div`
- `strict_div_euclid`
- `strict_rem`
- `strict_rem_euclid`
- `strict_neg`
- `strict_shl`
- `strict_shr`
- `strict_pow`
Additionally, signed integers have:
- `strict_add_unsigned`
- `strict_sub_unsigned`
- `strict_abs`
And unsigned integers have:
- `strict_add_signed`
The `div` and `rem` operations are the same as normal division and remainder but are added for completeness similar to the corresponding `wrapping_*` operations.
I'm not sure if I missed any operations, I basically found them from the `wrapping_*` and `checked_*` operations on both integer types.
Don't forget that the lifetime on hir types is `'tcx`
This PR just tracks the `'tcx` lifetime to wherever the original objects actually have that lifetime. This code is needed for https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/107606 (now #120131) so that `ast_ty_to_ty` can invoke `lit_to_const` on an argument passed to it. Currently the argument is `&hir::Ty<'_>`, but after this PR it is `&'tcx hir::Ty<'tcx>`.
internal: add `max_line_length` to `.editorconfig`
This helps with setting proper visual guides/rulers for the right margin in some editors/IDEs (e.g. CLion)
Avoid code generation for ThinVec<Diagnostic>'s destructor in the query system
This avoids 2 instances of the destructor of `ThinVec<Diagnostic>` from being included in `execute_job`. It also outlines the cold branch in `store_side_effects` / `store_side_effects_for_anon_node`.
fix panic with reference in macro
it panic at `builder.make_mut(segment)`, where segment is from macro expand. And the usage reference in orginal macro call isn't a `PathSegment` so we can't update it in `apply_references`, I can't find a way to deal with it properly so here just filter out the reference in macro. LMK if there are better way to fix this
try to close https://github.com/rust-lang/rust-analyzer/issues/16328
Work through temporarily allowed clippy lints, part 1
This is the first batch of not allowing but actually fixing the clippy lints. Each commit removes one lint from the lint table and then fixes the resulting warnings.
Follow-up to #16401