Feat: hide double underscored symbols from symbol search
Fixes#17272 by changing the default behavior of query to skip results that start with `__` (two underscores).
Not sure if this has any far reaching implications - a review would help to understand if this is the right place to do the filtering, and if it's fine to do it by default on the query.
If you type `__` as your search, then we'll show the matching double unders, just in case you actually need the symbol.
Make TLS accessors closures that return pointers
The current TLS macros generate a function that returns an `Option<&'static T>`. This is both risky as we lie about lifetimes, and necessitates that those functions are `unsafe`. By returning a `*const T` instead, the accessor function do not have safety requirements any longer and can be made closures without hassle. This PR does exactly that!
For native TLS, the closure approach makes it trivial to select the right accessor function at compile-time, which could result in a slight speed-up (I have the hope that the accessors are now simple enough for the MIR-inliner to kick in).
Show files produced by `--emit foo` in json artifact notifications
Right now it is possible to ask `rustc` to save some intermediate representation into one or more files with `--emit=foo`, but figuring out what exactly was produced is difficult. This pull request adds information about `llvm_ir` and `asm` intermediate files into notifications produced by `--json=artifacts`.
Related discussion: https://internals.rust-lang.org/t/easier-access-to-files-generated-by-emit-foo/20477
Motivation - `cargo-show-asm` parses those intermediate files and presents them in a user friendly way, but right now I have to apply some dirty hacks. Hacks make behavior confusing: https://github.com/hintron/computer-enhance/issues/35
This pull request introduces a new behavior: now `rustc` will emit a new artifact notification for every artifact type user asked to `--emit`, for example for `--emit asm` those will include all the `.s` files.
Most users won't notice this behavior, to be affected by it all of the following must hold:
- user must use `rustc` binary directly (when `cargo` invokes `rustc` - it consumes artifact notifications and doesn't emit anything)
- user must specify both `--emit xxx` and `--json artifacts`
- user must refuse to handle unknown artifact types
- user must disable incremental compilation (or deal with it better than cargo does, or use a workaround like `save-temps`) in order not to hit #88829 / #89149
internal: Improve `find_path` performance
cc https://github.com/rust-lang/rust-analyzer/issues/17339, db80216dac should fix a case where we don't reduce our search space appropriately. This also adds a fuel system which really shouldn't ever be hit, hence why it warns
Don't mark `#[rustc_deprecated_safe_2024]` functions as unsafe
`std::env::set_var` will be unsafe in edition 2024, but not before it. I couldn't quite figure out how to check for the span properly, so for now we just turn the false positives into false negatives, which are less bad.
Add `Function::fn_ptr_type(…)` for obtaining name-erased function type
The use case of this function if being able to group functions by their function ptr type.
cc `@flodiebold`
fix: Only generate snippets for `extract_expressions_from_format_string` if snippets are supported
Part of #17332
Fixes `extract_expressions_from_format_string` so that it doesn't generate snippets if the client doesn't support it.
Use parenthetical notation for `Fn` traits
Always use the `Fn(T) -> R` format when printing closure traits instead of `Fn<(T,), Output = R>`.
Address #67100:
```
error[E0277]: expected a `Fn()` closure, found `F`
--> file.rs:6:13
|
6 | call_fn(f)
| ------- ^ expected an `Fn()` closure, found `F`
| |
| required by a bound introduced by this call
|
= note: wrap the `F` in a closure with no arguments: `|| { /* code */ }`
note: required by a bound in `call_fn`
--> file.rs:1:15
|
1 | fn call_fn<F: Fn() -> ()>(f: &F) {
| ^^^^^^^^^^ required by this bound in `call_fn`
help: consider further restricting this bound
|
5 | fn call_any<F: std::any::Any + Fn()>(f: &F) {
| ++++++
```
Do not suggest unresolvable builder methods
Fixes#125303
The issue was that when a builder method cannot be resolved we are suggesting alternatives that themselves cannot be resolved. This PR adds a check that filters them from the list of suggestions.
Avoid checking the edition as much as possible
Inside https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/123865, we are adding support for the new semantics for expr2024, but we have noted a performance issue.
While talking with `@eholk,` we realized there is a redundant check for each token regarding an edition. This commit moves the edition check to the end, avoiding some extra checks that can slow down compilation time.
However, we should keep this issue under observation because we may want to improve the edition check if we are unable to significantly improve compiler performance.
r? ghost
std::pal::unix::thread fetching min stack size on netbsd.
PTHREAD_STACK_MIN is not defined however sysconf/_SC_THREAD_STACK_MIN returns it as it can vary from arch to another.
Rollup of 3 pull requests
Successful merges:
- #125311 (Make repr(packed) vectors work with SIMD intrinsics)
- #125849 (Migrate `run-make/emit-named-files` to `rmake.rs`)
- #125851 (Add some more specific checks to the MIR validator)
r? `@ghost`
`@rustbot` modify labels: rollup
`std::env::set_var` will be unsafe in edition 2024, but not before it.
I couldn't quite figure out how to check for the span properly, so for now
we just turn the false positives into false negatives, which are less bad.
Make repr(packed) vectors work with SIMD intrinsics
In #117116 I fixed `#[repr(packed, simd)]` by doing the expected thing and removing padding from the layout. This should be the last step in providing a solution to rust-lang/portable-simd#319
Unroll first iteration of checked_ilog loop
This follows the optimization of #115913. As shown in https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/115913#issuecomment-2066788006, the performance was improved in all important cases, but some regressions were introduced for the benchmarks `u32_log_random_small`, `u8_log_random` and `u8_log_random_small`.
Basically, #115913 changed the implementation from one division per iteration to one multiplication per iteration plus one division. When there are zero iterations, this is a regression from zero divisions to one division.
This PR avoids this by avoiding the division if we need zero iterations by returning `Some(0)` early. It also reduces the number of multiplications by one in all other cases.