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Rollup of 7 pull requests #75712

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172e67e
Adjust installation place for compiler docs
Mark-Simulacrum Aug 16, 2020
695d86f
Make OnceCell<T> transparent to dropck
matklad Aug 17, 2020
5d49c0e
Move to intra doc links for std::io
poliorcetics Aug 18, 2020
70dfe3f
move const param structural match checks to wfcheck
lcnr Aug 2, 2020
6ad01e9
run wfcheck in parralel again, add test for 74950
lcnr Aug 13, 2020
7542615
change const param ty warning message
lcnr Aug 18, 2020
9eeb3ee
Suppress MIR comments for FnDef in ty::Const
tesuji Aug 18, 2020
7c4d315
bless tests
tesuji Aug 19, 2020
34e7eac
Remove `#[cfg(miri)]` from OnceCell tests
matklad Aug 19, 2020
967ec1f
Refactor `impl_for_type` into a separate function
jyn514 Aug 17, 2020
8a0aa7b
Say `tcx.lang_items()` less
jyn514 Aug 17, 2020
3ddd8b2
Return all impls, not just the primary one
jyn514 Aug 17, 2020
06d6d3d
impl_for_type -> PrimitiveType::impls
jyn514 Aug 17, 2020
9cf2fa8
Allow reusing the code in `collect_trait_impls`
jyn514 Aug 17, 2020
219e93d
Use `impls` for intra doc links as well
jyn514 Aug 17, 2020
121974e
xpy fmt
jyn514 Aug 17, 2020
570b0d9
Add a test
jyn514 Aug 17, 2020
dad8e11
Fix nits in intra-doc links for std io
poliorcetics Aug 19, 2020
aff01f8
Add test for f32 and f64 methods
jyn514 Aug 19, 2020
f0b7901
Rollup merge of #75069 - lcnr:type-of-lazy-norm, r=varkor
tmandry Aug 19, 2020
42b3ed6
Rollup merge of #75593 - Mark-Simulacrum:compiler-docs-must-not-overl…
tmandry Aug 19, 2020
576c121
Rollup merge of #75648 - matklad:lazy-dropck, r=KodrAus
tmandry Aug 19, 2020
f59775a
Rollup merge of #75649 - jyn514:inherent-lang-impls, r=guillaumegomez
tmandry Aug 19, 2020
5256b95
Rollup merge of #75670 - lzutao:suppress-mir-fndef-ty, r=oli-obk
tmandry Aug 19, 2020
10f52c3
Rollup merge of #75674 - poliorcetics:intra-links-std-io, r=jyn514
tmandry Aug 19, 2020
d2dbc4c
Rollup merge of #75696 - matklad:mirit, r=RalfJung
tmandry Aug 19, 2020
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1 change: 1 addition & 0 deletions Cargo.lock
Original file line number Diff line number Diff line change
Expand Up @@ -4106,6 +4106,7 @@ dependencies = [
"rustc-rayon",
"serde",
"serde_json",
"smallvec 1.4.2",
"tempfile",
]

Expand Down
9 changes: 9 additions & 0 deletions library/core/tests/lazy.rs
Original file line number Diff line number Diff line change
Expand Up @@ -122,3 +122,12 @@ fn reentrant_init() {
});
eprintln!("use after free: {:?}", dangling_ref.get().unwrap());
}

#[test]
fn dropck() {
let cell = OnceCell::new();
{
let s = String::new();
cell.set(&s).unwrap();
}
}
50 changes: 24 additions & 26 deletions library/std/src/io/buffered.rs
Original file line number Diff line number Diff line change
Expand Up @@ -21,17 +21,16 @@ use crate::memchr;
/// *repeated* read calls to the same file or network socket. It does not
/// help when reading very large amounts at once, or reading just one or a few
/// times. It also provides no advantage when reading from a source that is
/// already in memory, like a `Vec<u8>`.
/// already in memory, like a [`Vec`]`<u8>`.
///
/// When the `BufReader<R>` is dropped, the contents of its buffer will be
/// discarded. Creating multiple instances of a `BufReader<R>` on the same
/// stream can cause data loss. Reading from the underlying reader after
/// unwrapping the `BufReader<R>` with `BufReader::into_inner` can also cause
/// unwrapping the `BufReader<R>` with [`BufReader::into_inner`] can also cause
/// data loss.
///
/// [`Read`]: ../../std/io/trait.Read.html
/// [`TcpStream::read`]: ../../std/net/struct.TcpStream.html#method.read
/// [`TcpStream`]: ../../std/net/struct.TcpStream.html
/// [`TcpStream::read`]: Read::read
/// [`TcpStream`]: crate::net::TcpStream
///
/// # Examples
///
Expand Down Expand Up @@ -155,7 +154,9 @@ impl<R> BufReader<R> {

/// Returns a reference to the internally buffered data.
///
/// Unlike `fill_buf`, this will not attempt to fill the buffer if it is empty.
/// Unlike [`fill_buf`], this will not attempt to fill the buffer if it is empty.
///
/// [`fill_buf`]: BufRead::fill_buf
///
/// # Examples
///
Expand Down Expand Up @@ -338,27 +339,26 @@ where
impl<R: Seek> Seek for BufReader<R> {
/// Seek to an offset, in bytes, in the underlying reader.
///
/// The position used for seeking with `SeekFrom::Current(_)` is the
/// The position used for seeking with [`SeekFrom::Current`]`(_)` is the
/// position the underlying reader would be at if the `BufReader<R>` had no
/// internal buffer.
///
/// Seeking always discards the internal buffer, even if the seek position
/// would otherwise fall within it. This guarantees that calling
/// `.into_inner()` immediately after a seek yields the underlying reader
/// [`BufReader::into_inner()`] immediately after a seek yields the underlying reader
/// at the same position.
///
/// To seek without discarding the internal buffer, use [`BufReader::seek_relative`].
///
/// See [`std::io::Seek`] for more details.
///
/// Note: In the edge case where you're seeking with `SeekFrom::Current(n)`
/// Note: In the edge case where you're seeking with [`SeekFrom::Current`]`(n)`
/// where `n` minus the internal buffer length overflows an `i64`, two
/// seeks will be performed instead of one. If the second seek returns
/// `Err`, the underlying reader will be left at the same position it would
/// have if you called `seek` with `SeekFrom::Current(0)`.
/// [`Err`], the underlying reader will be left at the same position it would
/// have if you called `seek` with [`SeekFrom::Current`]`(0)`.
///
/// [`BufReader::seek_relative`]: struct.BufReader.html#method.seek_relative
/// [`std::io::Seek`]: trait.Seek.html
/// [`std::io::Seek`]: Seek
fn seek(&mut self, pos: SeekFrom) -> io::Result<u64> {
let result: u64;
if let SeekFrom::Current(n) = pos {
Expand Down Expand Up @@ -397,7 +397,7 @@ impl<R: Seek> Seek for BufReader<R> {
/// *repeated* write calls to the same file or network socket. It does not
/// help when writing very large amounts at once, or writing just one or a few
/// times. It also provides no advantage when writing to a destination that is
/// in memory, like a `Vec<u8>`.
/// in memory, like a [`Vec`]<u8>`.
///
/// It is critical to call [`flush`] before `BufWriter<W>` is dropped. Though
/// dropping will attempt to flush the contents of the buffer, any errors
Expand Down Expand Up @@ -441,10 +441,9 @@ impl<R: Seek> Seek for BufReader<R> {
/// together by the buffer and will all be written out in one system call when
/// the `stream` is flushed.
///
/// [`Write`]: ../../std/io/trait.Write.html
/// [`TcpStream::write`]: ../../std/net/struct.TcpStream.html#method.write
/// [`TcpStream`]: ../../std/net/struct.TcpStream.html
/// [`flush`]: #method.flush
/// [`TcpStream::write`]: Write::write
/// [`TcpStream`]: crate::net::TcpStream
/// [`flush`]: Write::flush
#[stable(feature = "rust1", since = "1.0.0")]
pub struct BufWriter<W: Write> {
inner: Option<W>,
Expand All @@ -455,7 +454,7 @@ pub struct BufWriter<W: Write> {
panicked: bool,
}

/// An error returned by `into_inner` which combines an error that
/// An error returned by [`BufWriter::into_inner`] which combines an error that
/// happened while writing out the buffer, and the buffered writer object
/// which may be used to recover from the condition.
///
Expand Down Expand Up @@ -629,7 +628,7 @@ impl<W: Write> BufWriter<W> {
///
/// # Errors
///
/// An `Err` will be returned if an error occurs while flushing the buffer.
/// An [`Err`] will be returned if an error occurs while flushing the buffer.
///
/// # Examples
///
Expand Down Expand Up @@ -725,7 +724,8 @@ impl<W: Write> Drop for BufWriter<W> {
}

impl<W> IntoInnerError<W> {
/// Returns the error which caused the call to `into_inner()` to fail.
/// Returns the error which caused the call to [`BufWriter::into_inner()`]
/// to fail.
///
/// This error was returned when attempting to write the internal buffer.
///
Expand Down Expand Up @@ -819,17 +819,15 @@ impl<W> fmt::Display for IntoInnerError<W> {
/// Wraps a writer and buffers output to it, flushing whenever a newline
/// (`0x0a`, `'\n'`) is detected.
///
/// The [`BufWriter`][bufwriter] struct wraps a writer and buffers its output.
/// The [`BufWriter`] struct wraps a writer and buffers its output.
/// But it only does this batched write when it goes out of scope, or when the
/// internal buffer is full. Sometimes, you'd prefer to write each line as it's
/// completed, rather than the entire buffer at once. Enter `LineWriter`. It
/// does exactly that.
///
/// Like [`BufWriter`][bufwriter], a `LineWriter`’s buffer will also be flushed when the
/// Like [`BufWriter`], a `LineWriter`’s buffer will also be flushed when the
/// `LineWriter` goes out of scope or when its internal buffer is full.
///
/// [bufwriter]: struct.BufWriter.html
///
/// If there's still a partial line in the buffer when the `LineWriter` is
/// dropped, it will flush those contents.
///
Expand Down Expand Up @@ -979,7 +977,7 @@ impl<W: Write> LineWriter<W> {
///
/// # Errors
///
/// An `Err` will be returned if an error occurs while flushing the buffer.
/// An [`Err`] will be returned if an error occurs while flushing the buffer.
///
/// # Examples
///
Expand Down
14 changes: 5 additions & 9 deletions library/std/src/io/cursor.rs
Original file line number Diff line number Diff line change
Expand Up @@ -9,7 +9,7 @@ use core::convert::TryInto;
/// [`Seek`] implementation.
///
/// `Cursor`s are used with in-memory buffers, anything implementing
/// `AsRef<[u8]>`, to allow them to implement [`Read`] and/or [`Write`],
/// [`AsRef`]`<[u8]>`, to allow them to implement [`Read`] and/or [`Write`],
/// allowing these buffers to be used anywhere you might use a reader or writer
/// that does actual I/O.
///
Expand All @@ -23,12 +23,8 @@ use core::convert::TryInto;
/// code, but use an in-memory buffer in our tests. We can do this with
/// `Cursor`:
///
/// [`Seek`]: trait.Seek.html
/// [`Read`]: ../../std/io/trait.Read.html
/// [`Write`]: ../../std/io/trait.Write.html
/// [`Vec`]: ../../std/vec/struct.Vec.html
/// [bytes]: ../../std/primitive.slice.html
/// [`File`]: ../fs/struct.File.html
/// [bytes]: crate::slice
/// [`File`]: crate::fs::File
///
/// ```no_run
/// use std::io::prelude::*;
Expand Down Expand Up @@ -81,8 +77,8 @@ pub struct Cursor<T> {
impl<T> Cursor<T> {
/// Creates a new cursor wrapping the provided underlying in-memory buffer.
///
/// Cursor initial position is `0` even if underlying buffer (e.g., `Vec`)
/// is not empty. So writing to cursor starts with overwriting `Vec`
/// Cursor initial position is `0` even if underlying buffer (e.g., [`Vec`])
/// is not empty. So writing to cursor starts with overwriting [`Vec`]
/// content, not with appending to it.
///
/// # Examples
Expand Down
65 changes: 35 additions & 30 deletions library/std/src/io/error.rs
Original file line number Diff line number Diff line change
Expand Up @@ -4,8 +4,7 @@ use crate::fmt;
use crate::result;
use crate::sys;

/// A specialized [`Result`](../result/enum.Result.html) type for I/O
/// operations.
/// A specialized [`Result`] type for I/O operations.
///
/// This type is broadly used across [`std::io`] for any operation which may
/// produce an error.
Expand All @@ -16,12 +15,13 @@ use crate::sys;
/// While usual Rust style is to import types directly, aliases of [`Result`]
/// often are not, to make it easier to distinguish between them. [`Result`] is
/// generally assumed to be [`std::result::Result`][`Result`], and so users of this alias
/// will generally use `io::Result` instead of shadowing the prelude's import
/// will generally use `io::Result` instead of shadowing the [prelude]'s import
/// of [`std::result::Result`][`Result`].
///
/// [`std::io`]: ../io/index.html
/// [`io::Error`]: ../io/struct.Error.html
/// [`Result`]: ../result/enum.Result.html
/// [`std::io`]: crate::io
/// [`io::Error`]: Error
/// [`Result`]: crate::result::Result
/// [prelude]: crate::prelude
///
/// # Examples
///
Expand All @@ -48,10 +48,9 @@ pub type Result<T> = result::Result<T, Error>;
/// `Error` can be created with crafted error messages and a particular value of
/// [`ErrorKind`].
///
/// [`Read`]: ../io/trait.Read.html
/// [`Write`]: ../io/trait.Write.html
/// [`Seek`]: ../io/trait.Seek.html
/// [`ErrorKind`]: enum.ErrorKind.html
/// [`Read`]: crate::io::Read
/// [`Write`]: crate::io::Write
/// [`Seek`]: crate::io::Seek
#[stable(feature = "rust1", since = "1.0.0")]
pub struct Error {
repr: Repr,
Expand Down Expand Up @@ -83,7 +82,7 @@ struct Custom {
///
/// It is used with the [`io::Error`] type.
///
/// [`io::Error`]: struct.Error.html
/// [`io::Error`]: Error
#[derive(Clone, Copy, Debug, Eq, Hash, Ord, PartialEq, PartialOrd)]
#[stable(feature = "rust1", since = "1.0.0")]
#[allow(deprecated)]
Expand Down Expand Up @@ -137,7 +136,7 @@ pub enum ErrorKind {
/// For example, a function that reads a file into a string will error with
/// `InvalidData` if the file's contents are not valid UTF-8.
///
/// [`InvalidInput`]: #variant.InvalidInput
/// [`InvalidInput`]: ErrorKind::InvalidInput
#[stable(feature = "io_invalid_data", since = "1.2.0")]
InvalidData,
/// The I/O operation's timeout expired, causing it to be canceled.
Expand All @@ -150,8 +149,8 @@ pub enum ErrorKind {
/// particular number of bytes but only a smaller number of bytes could be
/// written.
///
/// [`write`]: ../../std/io/trait.Write.html#tymethod.write
/// [`Ok(0)`]: ../../std/io/type.Result.html
/// [`write`]: crate::io::Write::write
/// [`Ok(0)`]: Ok
#[stable(feature = "rust1", since = "1.0.0")]
WriteZero,
/// This operation was interrupted.
Expand Down Expand Up @@ -220,9 +219,6 @@ impl From<ErrorKind> for Error {
/// let error = Error::from(not_found);
/// assert_eq!("entity not found", format!("{}", error));
/// ```
///
/// [`ErrorKind`]: ../../std/io/enum.ErrorKind.html
/// [`Error`]: ../../std/io/struct.Error.html
#[inline]
fn from(kind: ErrorKind) -> Error {
Error { repr: Repr::Simple(kind) }
Expand All @@ -235,7 +231,7 @@ impl Error {
///
/// This function is used to generically create I/O errors which do not
/// originate from the OS itself. The `error` argument is an arbitrary
/// payload which will be contained in this `Error`.
/// payload which will be contained in this [`Error`].
///
/// # Examples
///
Expand Down Expand Up @@ -264,7 +260,7 @@ impl Error {
///
/// This function reads the value of `errno` for the target platform (e.g.
/// `GetLastError` on Windows) and will return a corresponding instance of
/// `Error` for the error code.
/// [`Error`] for the error code.
///
/// # Examples
///
Expand All @@ -278,7 +274,7 @@ impl Error {
Error::from_raw_os_error(sys::os::errno() as i32)
}

/// Creates a new instance of an `Error` from a particular OS error code.
/// Creates a new instance of an [`Error`] from a particular OS error code.
///
/// # Examples
///
Expand Down Expand Up @@ -310,9 +306,12 @@ impl Error {

/// Returns the OS error that this error represents (if any).
///
/// If this `Error` was constructed via `last_os_error` or
/// `from_raw_os_error`, then this function will return `Some`, otherwise
/// it will return `None`.
/// If this [`Error`] was constructed via [`last_os_error`] or
/// [`from_raw_os_error`], then this function will return [`Some`], otherwise
/// it will return [`None`].
///
/// [`last_os_error`]: Error::last_os_error
/// [`from_raw_os_error`]: Error::from_raw_os_error
///
/// # Examples
///
Expand Down Expand Up @@ -345,8 +344,10 @@ impl Error {

/// Returns a reference to the inner error wrapped by this error (if any).
///
/// If this `Error` was constructed via `new` then this function will
/// return `Some`, otherwise it will return `None`.
/// If this [`Error`] was constructed via [`new`] then this function will
/// return [`Some`], otherwise it will return [`None`].
///
/// [`new`]: Error::new
///
/// # Examples
///
Expand Down Expand Up @@ -380,8 +381,10 @@ impl Error {
/// Returns a mutable reference to the inner error wrapped by this error
/// (if any).
///
/// If this `Error` was constructed via `new` then this function will
/// return `Some`, otherwise it will return `None`.
/// If this [`Error`] was constructed via [`new`] then this function will
/// return [`Some`], otherwise it will return [`None`].
///
/// [`new`]: Error::new
///
/// # Examples
///
Expand Down Expand Up @@ -448,8 +451,10 @@ impl Error {

/// Consumes the `Error`, returning its inner error (if any).
///
/// If this `Error` was constructed via `new` then this function will
/// return `Some`, otherwise it will return `None`.
/// If this [`Error`] was constructed via [`new`] then this function will
/// return [`Some`], otherwise it will return [`None`].
///
/// [`new`]: Error::new
///
/// # Examples
///
Expand Down Expand Up @@ -480,7 +485,7 @@ impl Error {
}
}

/// Returns the corresponding `ErrorKind` for this error.
/// Returns the corresponding [`ErrorKind`] for this error.
///
/// # Examples
///
Expand Down
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