This allows implementing traits that require a raw FD on Arc and Box.
Previously, you'd have to add the function to the trait itself:
```rust
trait MyTrait {
fn as_raw_fd(&self) -> RawFd;
}
impl<T: MyTrait> MyTrait for Arc<T> {
fn as_raw_fd(&self) -> RawFd {
(**self).as_raw_fd()
}
}
```
Document Rust's stance on `/proc/self/mem`
Add documentation to `std::os::unix::io` describing Rust's stance on
`/proc/self/mem`, treating it as an external entity which is outside
the scope of Rust's safety guarantees.
`Stdio::makes_pipe`
Wrappers around `std::process::Command` may want to be able to override pipe creation. However, [`std::process::Stdio`](https://doc.rust-lang.org/std/process/struct.Stdio.html) is opaque so there's no way to tell if `Command` was told to create new pipes or not.
This is in some ways a more generic (and cross-platform) alternative to #97149. However, unlike that feature, this comes with the price of the user needing to actually create their own pipes rather than reusing the std one. So I think it stands (or not) on its own.
# Example
```rust
#![feature(stdio_makes_pipe)]
use std::process::Stdio;
let io = Stdio::piped();
assert_eq!(io.makes_pipe(), true);
```
Windows: `CommandExt::async_pipes`
Discussed in https://github.com/tokio-rs/tokio/issues/4670 was the need for third party crates to be able to force `process::Command::spawn` to create pipes as async.
This implements the suggestion for a `async_pipes` method that gives third party crates that option.
# Example:
```rust
use std::process::{Command, Stdio};
Command::new("cmd")
.async_pipes(true)
.stdin(Stdio::piped())
.stdout(Stdio::piped())
.stderr(Stdio::piped())
.spawn()
.unwrap();
```
Stabilize `Path::try_exists()` and improve doc
This stabilizes the `Path::try_exists()` method which returns
`Result<bool, io::Error>` instead of `bool` allowing handling of errors
unrelated to the file not existing. (e.g permission errors)
Along with the stabilization it also:
* Warns that the `exists()` method is error-prone and suggests to use
the newly stabilized one.
* Suggests it instead of `metadata()` to handle errors.
* Mentions TOCTOU bugs to avoid false assumption that `try_exists()` is
completely safe fixed version of `exists()`.
* Renames the feature of still-unstable `std::fs::try_exists()` to
`fs_try_exists` to avoid name conflict.
The tracking issue #83186 remains open to track `fs_try_exists`.
Documentation for the following methods
with_capacity
with_capacity_in
with_capacity_and_hasher
reserve
reserve_exact
try_reserve
try_reserve_exact
was inconsistent and often not entirely correct where they existed on the following types
Vec
VecDeque
String
OsString
PathBuf
BinaryHeap
HashSet
HashMap
BufWriter
LineWriter
since the allocator is allowed to allocate more than the requested capacity in all such cases, and will frequently "allocate" much more in the case of zero-sized types (I also checked BufReader, but there the docs appear to be accurate as it appears to actually allocate the exact capacity).
Some effort was made to make the documentation more consistent between types as well.
Fix with_capacity* methods for Vec
Fix *reserve* methods for Vec
Fix docs for *reserve* methods of VecDeque
Fix docs for String::with_capacity
Fix docs for *reserve* methods of String
Fix docs for OsString::with_capacity
Fix docs for *reserve* methods on OsString
Fix docs for with_capacity* methods on HashSet
Fix docs for *reserve methods of HashSet
Fix docs for with_capacity* methods of HashMap
Fix docs for *reserve methods on HashMap
Fix expect messages about OOM in doctests
Fix docs for BinaryHeap::with_capacity
Fix docs for *reserve* methods of BinaryHeap
Fix typos
Fix docs for with_capacity on BufWriter and LineWriter
Fix consistent use of `hasher` between `HashMap` and `HashSet`
Fix warning in doc test
Add test for capacity of vec with ZST
Fix doc test error
once cell renamings
This PR does the renamings proposed in https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/74465#issuecomment-1153703128
- Move/rename `lazy::{OnceCell, Lazy}` to `cell::{OnceCell, LazyCell}`
- Move/rename `lazy::{SyncOnceCell, SyncLazy}` to `sync::{OnceLock, LazyLock}`
(I used `Lazy...` instead of `...Lazy` as it seems to be more consistent, easier to pronounce, etc)
```@rustbot``` label +T-libs-api -T-libs
Avoid `thread::panicking()` in non-poisoning methods of `Mutex` and `RwLock`
`Mutex::lock()` and `RwLock::write()` are poison-guarded against panics,
in that they set the poison flag if a panic occurs while they're locked.
But if we're already in a panic (`thread::panicking()`), they leave the
poison flag alone.
That check is a bit of a waste for methods that never set the poison
flag though, namely `get_mut()`, `into_inner()`, and `RwLock::read()`.
These use-cases are now split to avoid that unnecessary call.
Windows: No panic if function not (yet) available
In some situations (e.g. #97814) it is possible for required functions to be called before they've had a chance to be loaded. Therefore, we make it possible to recover from this situation simply by looking at error codes.
`@rustbot` label +O-windows
Add `#[inline]` to small fns of futex `RwLock`
The important methods like `read` and `write` were already inlined,
which can propagate all the way to inlining in user code, but these
small state functions were left behind as normal calls. They should
almost always be inlined as well, as they're just a few instructions.
Test NLL fix of bad lifetime inference for reference captured in closure.
This came up as a use-case for `thread::scope` API that only compiles successfully since `feature(nll)` got stabilized recently.
Closes#93203 which had been re-opened for tracking this very test case to be added.
Entry and_modify doc
This PR modifies the documentation for [HashMap](https://doc.rust-lang.org/std/collections/struct.HashMap.html#) and [BTreeMap](https://doc.rust-lang.org/std/collections/struct.BTreeMap.html#) by introducing examples for `and_modify`. `and_modify` is a function that tends to give more idiomatic rust code when dealing with these data structures -- yet it lacked examples and was hidden away. This PR adds that and addresses #98122.
I've made some choices which I tried to explain in my commits. This is my first time contributing to rust, so hopefully, I made the right choices.
os str capacity documentation
This is based on https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/95394 , with expansion and consolidation
to address comments from `@dtolnay` and other `@rust-lang/libs-api` team members.