Remove the `Arc` rt::init allocation for thread info
Removes an allocation pre-main by just not storing anything in std:🧵:Thread for the main thread.
- The thread name can just be a hard coded literal, as was done in #123433.
- Storing ThreadId and Parker in a static that is initialized once at startup. This uses SyncUnsafeCell and MaybeUninit as this is quite performance critical and we don't need synchronization or to store a tag value and possibly leave in a panic.
Some types in `core` are conditionally compiled based on
`target_has_atomic` or `target_has_atomic_load_store` without an
argument, for example `AtomicU64`.
This is less noticeable in Cargo projects, where rust-analyzer adds
the output `RUSTC_BOOTSTRAP=1 cargo rustc --print cfg` so it gets the
full set of cfg flags.
This fixes go-to-definition on `std::sync::atomic::AtomicU64` in
non-cargo projects.
better default capacity for str::replace
Adds smarter capacity for str::replace in cases where we know that the output will be at least as long as the original string.
x86-32 float return for 'Rust' ABI: treat all float types consistently
This helps with https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/131819: for our own ABI on x86-32, we want to *never* use the float registers. The previous logic only considered F32 and F64, but skipped F16 and F128. So I made the logic just apply to all float types.
try-job: i686-gnu
try-job: i686-gnu-nopt
E.g.:
```rust
let v;
macro_rules! m { () => { v }; }
```
This was an existing bug, but it was less severe because unless the variable was shadowed it would be correctly resolved. With hygiene however, without this fix the variable is never resolved.
Or macro_rules hygiene, or mixed site hygiene. In other words, hygiene for variables and labels but not items.
The realization that made me implement this was that while "full" hygiene (aka. def site hygiene) is really hard for us to implement, and will likely involve intrusive changes and performance losses, since every `Name` will have to carry hygiene, mixed site hygiene is very local: it applies only to bodies, and we very well can save it in a side map with minor losses.
This fixes one diagnostic in r-a that was about `izip!()` using hygiene (yay!) but it introduces a huge number of others, because of #18262. Up until now this issue wasn't a major problem because it only affected few cases, but with hygiene identifiers referred by macros like that are not resolved at all. The next commit will fix that.