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where available use AtomicU{64,128} instead of mutex for Instant backsliding protection #83093
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r? @sfackler (rust-highfive has picked a reviewer for you, use r? to override) |
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Very nice! Thank you for working on this. |
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It should be ready for review now. I have only tested on x86_64 linux but touched code for other platforms too, so there's a chance that it'll break during a full build. |
Not sure if this is the right place to ask, but what does this protect against? Why is the tsc less reliable on Windows? I thought rdtsc behavior was only determined by the CPU, not the OS. Is the use of atomics just to facilitate only needing to store a single value regardless of number of threads, or is this somehow trying to make comparing Instants collected on different threads more safe? |
Well, it's complicated. The OS plays some role, such as a synchronizing the counters on all cores. Additionally they might inject additional adjustments (e.g. NTP corrections) into some of their time APIs.
Observed time going backwards when
The latter. The OS time source is still queried on each There already exists a default implementation of this protection which is based on a Mutex. This PR just offers a faster alternative on platforms that have the appropriate atomics. |
To elaborate on this: The following would panic without backsliding protection if the time moves backwards: let a = Instant::now();
// some work
let b = Instant::now();
let duration = b - a; // panic: supplied instant is later than self This panic would need to happen as |
Hm. Is this still an issue with Windows 7+? I'm reading Guidance for acquiring time stamps. The only outstanding issue it mentions is that multiple threads using QPC have ambiguous ordering if the counters only differ by ± 1 "tick". |
See #56560 for an example involving windows 10 in a virtualized environment. |
📌 Commit 17ceb386ee21cfc76ecd00d567df96c06dddc0b8 has been approved by |
Thanks, fixed. That the sys module and runner share a name but are different platforms is a bit confusing. I should have paid more attention to the module documentation. |
⌛ Testing commit 17ceb386ee21cfc76ecd00d567df96c06dddc0b8 with merge 87078bd63304a678e0c178410426c1397940a408... |
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💔 Test failed - checks-actions |
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@bors r+ |
📌 Commit cd82b42 has been approved by |
☀️ Test successful - checks-actions |
…=kennytm fix potential race in AtomicU64 time monotonizer The AtomicU64-based monotonizer introduced in rust-lang#83093 is incorrect because several threads could try to update the value concurrently and a thread which doesn't have the newest value among all the updates could win. That bug probably has little real world impact since it doesn't make observed time worse than hardware clocks. The worst case would probably be a thread which has a clock that is behind by several cycles observing several inconsistent fixups, which should be similar to observing the unfiltered backslide in the first place. New benchmarks, they don't look as good as the original PR but still an improvement compared to the mutex. I don't know why the contended mutex case is faster now than in the previous benchmarks. ``` actually_monotonic() == true: test time::tests::instant_contention_01_threads ... bench: 44 ns/iter (+/- 0) test time::tests::instant_contention_02_threads ... bench: 45 ns/iter (+/- 0) test time::tests::instant_contention_04_threads ... bench: 45 ns/iter (+/- 0) test time::tests::instant_contention_08_threads ... bench: 45 ns/iter (+/- 0) test time::tests::instant_contention_16_threads ... bench: 46 ns/iter (+/- 0) atomic u64: test time::tests::instant_contention_01_threads ... bench: 66 ns/iter (+/- 0) test time::tests::instant_contention_02_threads ... bench: 287 ns/iter (+/- 14) test time::tests::instant_contention_04_threads ... bench: 296 ns/iter (+/- 43) test time::tests::instant_contention_08_threads ... bench: 604 ns/iter (+/- 163) test time::tests::instant_contention_16_threads ... bench: 1,147 ns/iter (+/- 29) mutex: test time::tests::instant_contention_01_threads ... bench: 78 ns/iter (+/- 0) test time::tests::instant_contention_02_threads ... bench: 652 ns/iter (+/- 275) test time::tests::instant_contention_04_threads ... bench: 900 ns/iter (+/- 32) test time::tests::instant_contention_08_threads ... bench: 1,927 ns/iter (+/- 62) test time::tests::instant_contention_16_threads ... bench: 3,748 ns/iter (+/- 146) ```
…=kennytm fix potential race in AtomicU64 time monotonizer The AtomicU64-based monotonizer introduced in rust-lang#83093 is incorrect because several threads could try to update the value concurrently and a thread which doesn't have the newest value among all the updates could win. That bug probably has little real world impact since it doesn't make observed time worse than hardware clocks. The worst case would probably be a thread which has a clock that is behind by several cycles observing several inconsistent fixups, which should be similar to observing the unfiltered backslide in the first place. New benchmarks, they don't look as good as the original PR but still an improvement compared to the mutex. I don't know why the contended mutex case is faster now than in the previous benchmarks. ``` actually_monotonic() == true: test time::tests::instant_contention_01_threads ... bench: 44 ns/iter (+/- 0) test time::tests::instant_contention_02_threads ... bench: 45 ns/iter (+/- 0) test time::tests::instant_contention_04_threads ... bench: 45 ns/iter (+/- 0) test time::tests::instant_contention_08_threads ... bench: 45 ns/iter (+/- 0) test time::tests::instant_contention_16_threads ... bench: 46 ns/iter (+/- 0) atomic u64: test time::tests::instant_contention_01_threads ... bench: 66 ns/iter (+/- 0) test time::tests::instant_contention_02_threads ... bench: 287 ns/iter (+/- 14) test time::tests::instant_contention_04_threads ... bench: 296 ns/iter (+/- 43) test time::tests::instant_contention_08_threads ... bench: 604 ns/iter (+/- 163) test time::tests::instant_contention_16_threads ... bench: 1,147 ns/iter (+/- 29) mutex: test time::tests::instant_contention_01_threads ... bench: 78 ns/iter (+/- 0) test time::tests::instant_contention_02_threads ... bench: 652 ns/iter (+/- 275) test time::tests::instant_contention_04_threads ... bench: 900 ns/iter (+/- 32) test time::tests::instant_contention_08_threads ... bench: 1,927 ns/iter (+/- 62) test time::tests::instant_contention_16_threads ... bench: 3,748 ns/iter (+/- 146) ```
Pkgsrc changes: * Remove one now-longer-applicable patch, adjust a few others * Bump bootstrap requirements to 1.55.0. Upstream changes: Version 1.56.0 (2021-10-21) ======================== Language -------- - [The 2021 Edition is now stable.][rust#88100] See [the edition guide][rust-2021-edition-guide] for more details. - [The pattern in `binding @ pattern` can now also introduce new bindings.] [rust#85305] - [Union field access is permitted in `const fn`.][rust#85769] [rust-2021-edition-guide]: https://doc.rust-lang.org/nightly/edition-guide/rust-2021/index.html Compiler -------- - [Upgrade to LLVM 13.][rust#87570] - [Support memory, address, and thread sanitizers on aarch64-unknown-freebsd.][rust#88023] - [Allow specifying a deployment target version for all iOS targets][rust#87699] - [Warnings can be forced on with `--force-warn`.][rust#87472] This feature is primarily intended for usage by `cargo fix`, rather than end users. - [Promote `aarch64-apple-ios-sim` to Tier 2\*.][rust#87760] - [Add `powerpc-unknown-freebsd` at Tier 3\*.][rust#87370] - [Add `riscv32imc-esp-espidf` at Tier 3\*.][rust#87666] \* Refer to Rust's [platform support page][platform-support-doc] for more information on Rust's tiered platform support. Libraries --------- - [Allow writing of incomplete UTF-8 sequences via stdout/stderr on Windows.] [rust#83342] The Windows console still requires valid Unicode, but this change allows splitting a UTF-8 character across multiple write calls. This allows, for instance, programs that just read and write data buffers (e.g. copying a file to stdout) without regard for Unicode or character boundaries. - [Prefer `AtomicU{64,128}` over Mutex for Instant backsliding protection.] [rust#83093] For this use case, atomics scale much better under contention. - [Implement `Extend<(A, B)>` for `(Extend<A>, Extend<B>)`][rust#85835] - [impl Default, Copy, Clone for std::io::Sink and std::io::Empty][rust#86744] - [`impl From<[(K, V); N]>` for all collections.][rust#84111] - [Remove `P: Unpin` bound on impl Future for Pin.][rust#81363] - [Treat invalid environment variable names as non-existent.][rust#86183] Previously, the environment functions would panic if given a variable name with an internal null character or equal sign (`=`). Now, these functions will just treat such names as non-existent variables, since the OS cannot represent the existence of a variable with such a name. Stabilised APIs --------------- - [`std::os::unix::fs::chroot`] - [`UnsafeCell::raw_get`] - [`BufWriter::into_parts`] - [`core::panic::{UnwindSafe, RefUnwindSafe, AssertUnwindSafe}`] These APIs were previously stable in `std`, but are now also available in `core`. - [`Vec::shrink_to`] - [`String::shrink_to`] - [`OsString::shrink_to`] - [`PathBuf::shrink_to`] - [`BinaryHeap::shrink_to`] - [`VecDeque::shrink_to`] - [`HashMap::shrink_to`] - [`HashSet::shrink_to`] These APIs are now usable in const contexts: - [`std::mem::transmute`] - [`[T]::first`][`slice::first`] - [`[T]::split_first`][`slice::split_first`] - [`[T]::last`][`slice::last`] - [`[T]::split_last`][`slice::split_last`] Cargo ----- - [Cargo supports specifying a minimum supported Rust version in Cargo.toml.] [`rust-version`] This has no effect at present on dependency version selection. We encourage crates to specify their minimum supported Rust version, and we encourage CI systems that support Rust code to include a crate's specified minimum version in the text matrix for that crate by default. Compatibility notes ------------------- - [Update to new argument parsing rules on Windows.][rust#87580] This adjusts Rust's standard library to match the behavior of the standard libraries for C/C++. The rules have changed slightly over time, and this PR brings us to the latest set of rules (changed in 2008). - [Disallow the aapcs calling convention on aarch64][rust#88399] This was already not supported by LLVM; this change surfaces this lack of support with a better error message. - [Make `SEMICOLON_IN_EXPRESSIONS_FROM_MACROS` warn by default][rust#87385] - [Warn when an escaped newline skips multiple lines.][rust#87671] - [Calls to `libc::getpid` / `std::process::id` from `Command::pre_exec` may return different values on glibc <= 2.24.][rust#81825] Rust now invokes the `clone3` system call directly, when available, to use new functionality available via that system call. Older versions of glibc cache the result of `getpid`, and only update that cache when calling glibc's clone/fork functions, so a direct system call bypasses that cache update. glibc 2.25 and newer no longer cache `getpid` for exactly this reason. Internal changes ---------------- These changes provide no direct user facing benefits, but represent significant improvements to the internals and overall performance of rustc and related tools. - [LLVM is compiled with PGO in published x86_64-unknown-linux-gnu artifacts.][rust#88069] This improves the performance of most Rust builds. - [Unify representation of macros in internal data structures.][rust#88019] This change fixes a host of bugs with the handling of macros by the compiler, as well as rustdoc. [`std::os::unix::fs::chroot`]: https://doc.rust-lang.org/stable/std/os/unix/fs/fn.chroot.html [`Iterator::intersperse`]: https://doc.rust-lang.org/stable/std/iter/trait.Iterator.html#method.intersperse [`Iterator::intersperse_with`]: https://doc.rust-lang.org/stable/std/iter/trait.Iterator.html#method.intersperse [`UnsafeCell::raw_get`]: https://doc.rust-lang.org/stable/std/cell/struct.UnsafeCell.html#method.raw_get [`BufWriter::into_parts`]: https://doc.rust-lang.org/stable/std/io/struct.BufWriter.html#method.into_parts [`core::panic::{UnwindSafe, RefUnwindSafe, AssertUnwindSafe}`]: rust-lang/rust#84662 [`Vec::shrink_to`]: https://doc.rust-lang.org/stable/std/vec/struct.Vec.html#method.shrink_to [`String::shrink_to`]: https://doc.rust-lang.org/stable/std/string/struct.String.html#method.shrink_to [`OsString::shrink_to`]: https://doc.rust-lang.org/stable/std/ffi/struct.OsString.html#method.shrink_to [`PathBuf::shrink_to`]: https://doc.rust-lang.org/stable/std/path/struct.PathBuf.html#method.shrink_to [`BinaryHeap::shrink_to`]: https://doc.rust-lang.org/stable/std/collections/struct.BinaryHeap.html#method.shrink_to [`VecDeque::shrink_to`]: https://doc.rust-lang.org/stable/std/collections/struct.VecDeque.html#method.shrink_to [`HashMap::shrink_to`]: https://doc.rust-lang.org/stable/std/collections/hash_map/struct.HashMap.html#method.shrink_to [`HashSet::shrink_to`]: https://doc.rust-lang.org/stable/std/collections/hash_set/struct.HashSet.html#method.shrink_to [`std::mem::transmute`]: https://doc.rust-lang.org/stable/std/mem/fn.transmute.html [`slice::first`]: https://doc.rust-lang.org/stable/std/primitive.slice.html#method.first [`slice::split_first`]: https://doc.rust-lang.org/stable/std/primitive.slice.html#method.split_first [`slice::last`]: https://doc.rust-lang.org/stable/std/primitive.slice.html#method.last [`slice::split_last`]: https://doc.rust-lang.org/stable/std/primitive.slice.html#method.split_last [`rust-version`]: https://doc.rust-lang.org/nightly/cargo/reference/manifest.html#the-rust-version-field [rust#87671]: rust-lang/rust#87671 [rust#86183]: rust-lang/rust#86183 [rust#87385]: rust-lang/rust#87385 [rust#88100]: rust-lang/rust#88100 [rust#86860]: rust-lang/rust#86860 [rust#84039]: rust-lang/rust#84039 [rust#86492]: rust-lang/rust#86492 [rust#88363]: rust-lang/rust#88363 [rust#85305]: rust-lang/rust#85305 [rust#87832]: rust-lang/rust#87832 [rust#88069]: rust-lang/rust#88069 [rust#87472]: rust-lang/rust#87472 [rust#87699]: rust-lang/rust#87699 [rust#87570]: rust-lang/rust#87570 [rust#88023]: rust-lang/rust#88023 [rust#87760]: rust-lang/rust#87760 [rust#87370]: rust-lang/rust#87370 [rust#87580]: rust-lang/rust#87580 [rust#83342]: rust-lang/rust#83342 [rust#83093]: rust-lang/rust#83093 [rust#88177]: rust-lang/rust#88177 [rust#88548]: rust-lang/rust#88548 [rust#88551]: rust-lang/rust#88551 [rust#88299]: rust-lang/rust#88299 [rust#88220]: rust-lang/rust#88220 [rust#85835]: rust-lang/rust#85835 [rust#86879]: rust-lang/rust#86879 [rust#86744]: rust-lang/rust#86744 [rust#84662]: rust-lang/rust#84662 [rust#86593]: rust-lang/rust#86593 [rust#81050]: rust-lang/rust#81050 [rust#81363]: rust-lang/rust#81363 [rust#84111]: rust-lang/rust#84111 [rust#85769]: rust-lang/rust#85769 (comment) [rust#88490]: rust-lang/rust#88490 [rust#88269]: rust-lang/rust#88269 [rust#84176]: rust-lang/rust#84176 [rust#88399]: rust-lang/rust#88399 [rust#88227]: rust-lang/rust#88227 [rust#88200]: rust-lang/rust#88200 [rust#82776]: rust-lang/rust#82776 [rust#88077]: rust-lang/rust#88077 [rust#87728]: rust-lang/rust#87728 [rust#87050]: rust-lang/rust#87050 [rust#87619]: rust-lang/rust#87619 [rust#81825]: rust-lang/rust#81825 (comment) [rust#88019]: rust-lang/rust#88019 [rust#87666]: rust-lang/rust#87666
Pkgsrc changes: * Bump bootstrap kit version to 1.55.0. * Adjust patches as needed, some no longer apply (so removed) * Update checksum adjustments. * Avoid rust-llvm on SunOS * Optionally build docs * Remove reference to closed/old PR#54621 Upstream changes: Version 1.56.1 (2021-11-01) =========================== - New lints to detect the presence of bidirectional-override Unicode codepoints in the compiled source code ([CVE-2021-42574]) [CVE-2021-42574]: https://cve.mitre.org/cgi-bin/cvename.cgi?name=CVE-2021-42574 Version 1.56.0 (2021-10-21) ======================== Language -------- - [The 2021 Edition is now stable.][rust#88100] See [the edition guide][rust-2021-edition-guide] for more details. - [The pattern in `binding @ pattern` can now also introduce new bindings.] [rust#85305] - [Union field access is permitted in `const fn`.][rust#85769] [rust-2021-edition-guide]: https://doc.rust-lang.org/nightly/edition-guide/rust-2021/index.html Compiler -------- - [Upgrade to LLVM 13.][rust#87570] - [Support memory, address, and thread sanitizers on aarch64-unknown-freebsd.] [rust#88023] - [Allow specifying a deployment target version for all iOS targets][rust#87699] - [Warnings can be forced on with `--force-warn`.][rust#87472] This feature is primarily intended for usage by `cargo fix`, rather than end users. - [Promote `aarch64-apple-ios-sim` to Tier 2\*.][rust#87760] - [Add `powerpc-unknown-freebsd` at Tier 3\*.][rust#87370] - [Add `riscv32imc-esp-espidf` at Tier 3\*.][rust#87666] \* Refer to Rust's [platform support page][platform-support-doc] for more information on Rust's tiered platform support. Libraries --------- - [Allow writing of incomplete UTF-8 sequences via stdout/stderr on Windows.] [rust#83342] The Windows console still requires valid Unicode, but this change allows splitting a UTF-8 character across multiple write calls. This allows, for instance, programs that just read and write data buffers (e.g. copying a file to stdout) without regard for Unicode or character boundaries. - [Prefer `AtomicU{64,128}` over Mutex for Instant backsliding protection.] [rust#83093] For this use case, atomics scale much better under contention. - [Implement `Extend<(A, B)>` for `(Extend<A>, Extend<B>)`][rust#85835] - [impl Default, Copy, Clone for std::io::Sink and std::io::Empty][rust#86744] - [`impl From<[(K, V); N]>` for all collections.][rust#84111] - [Remove `P: Unpin` bound on impl Future for Pin.][rust#81363] - [Treat invalid environment variable names as non-existent.][rust#86183] Previously, the environment functions would panic if given a variable name with an internal null character or equal sign (`=`). Now, these functions will just treat such names as non-existent variables, since the OS cannot represent the existence of a variable with such a name. Stabilised APIs --------------- - [`std::os::unix::fs::chroot`] - [`UnsafeCell::raw_get`] - [`BufWriter::into_parts`] - [`core::panic::{UnwindSafe, RefUnwindSafe, AssertUnwindSafe}`] These APIs were previously stable in `std`, but are now also available in `core`. - [`Vec::shrink_to`] - [`String::shrink_to`] - [`OsString::shrink_to`] - [`PathBuf::shrink_to`] - [`BinaryHeap::shrink_to`] - [`VecDeque::shrink_to`] - [`HashMap::shrink_to`] - [`HashSet::shrink_to`] These APIs are now usable in const contexts: - [`std::mem::transmute`] - [`[T]::first`][`slice::first`] - [`[T]::split_first`][`slice::split_first`] - [`[T]::last`][`slice::last`] - [`[T]::split_last`][`slice::split_last`] Cargo ----- - [Cargo supports specifying a minimum supported Rust version in Cargo.toml.] [`rust-version`] This has no effect at present on dependency version selection. We encourage crates to specify their minimum supported Rust version, and we encourage CI systems that support Rust code to include a crate's specified minimum version in the text matrix for that crate by default. Compatibility notes ------------------- - [Update to new argument parsing rules on Windows.][rust#87580] This adjusts Rust's standard library to match the behavior of the standard libraries for C/C++. The rules have changed slightly over time, and this PR brings us to the latest set of rules (changed in 2008). - [Disallow the aapcs calling convention on aarch64][rust#88399] This was already not supported by LLVM; this change surfaces this lack of support with a better error message. - [Make `SEMICOLON_IN_EXPRESSIONS_FROM_MACROS` warn by default][rust#87385] - [Warn when an escaped newline skips multiple lines.][rust#87671] - [Calls to `libc::getpid` / `std::process::id` from `Command::pre_exec` may return different values on glibc <= 2.24.][rust#81825] Rust now invokes the `clone3` system call directly, when available, to use new functionality available via that system call. Older versions of glibc cache the result of `getpid`, and only update that cache when calling glibc's clone/fork functions, so a direct system call bypasses that cache update. glibc 2.25 and newer no longer cache `getpid` for exactly this reason. Internal changes ---------------- These changes provide no direct user facing benefits, but represent significant improvements to the internals and overall performance of rustc and related tools. - [LLVM is compiled with PGO in published x86_64-unknown-linux-gnu artifacts.] [rust#88069] This improves the performance of most Rust builds. - [Unify representation of macros in internal data structures.][rust#88019] This change fixes a host of bugs with the handling of macros by the compiler, as well as rustdoc. [`std::os::unix::fs::chroot`]: https://doc.rust-lang.org/stable/std/os/unix/fs/fn.chroot.html [`Iterator::intersperse`]: https://doc.rust-lang.org/stable/std/iter/trait.Iterator.html#method.intersperse [`Iterator::intersperse_with`]: https://doc.rust-lang.org/stable/std/iter/trait.Iterator.html#method.intersperse [`UnsafeCell::raw_get`]: https://doc.rust-lang.org/stable/std/cell/struct.UnsafeCell.html#method.raw_get [`BufWriter::into_parts`]: https://doc.rust-lang.org/stable/std/io/struct.BufWriter.html#method.into_parts [`core::panic::{UnwindSafe, RefUnwindSafe, AssertUnwindSafe}`]: rust-lang/rust#84662 [`Vec::shrink_to`]: https://doc.rust-lang.org/stable/std/vec/struct.Vec.html#method.shrink_to [`String::shrink_to`]: https://doc.rust-lang.org/stable/std/string/struct.String.html#method.shrink_to [`OsString::shrink_to`]: https://doc.rust-lang.org/stable/std/ffi/struct.OsString.html#method.shrink_to [`PathBuf::shrink_to`]: https://doc.rust-lang.org/stable/std/path/struct.PathBuf.html#method.shrink_to [`BinaryHeap::shrink_to`]: https://doc.rust-lang.org/stable/std/collections/struct.BinaryHeap.html#method.shrink_to [`VecDeque::shrink_to`]: https://doc.rust-lang.org/stable/std/collections/struct.VecDeque.html#method.shrink_to [`HashMap::shrink_to`]: https://doc.rust-lang.org/stable/std/collections/hash_map/struct.HashMap.html#method.shrink_to [`HashSet::shrink_to`]: https://doc.rust-lang.org/stable/std/collections/hash_set/struct.HashSet.html#method.shrink_to [`std::mem::transmute`]: https://doc.rust-lang.org/stable/std/mem/fn.transmute.html [`slice::first`]: https://doc.rust-lang.org/stable/std/primitive.slice.html#method.first [`slice::split_first`]: https://doc.rust-lang.org/stable/std/primitive.slice.html#method.split_first [`slice::last`]: https://doc.rust-lang.org/stable/std/primitive.slice.html#method.last [`slice::split_last`]: https://doc.rust-lang.org/stable/std/primitive.slice.html#method.split_last [`rust-version`]: https://doc.rust-lang.org/nightly/cargo/reference/manifest.html#the-rust-version-field [rust#87671]: rust-lang/rust#87671 [rust#86183]: rust-lang/rust#86183 [rust#87385]: rust-lang/rust#87385 [rust#88100]: rust-lang/rust#88100 [rust#86860]: rust-lang/rust#86860 [rust#84039]: rust-lang/rust#84039 [rust#86492]: rust-lang/rust#86492 [rust#88363]: rust-lang/rust#88363 [rust#85305]: rust-lang/rust#85305 [rust#87832]: rust-lang/rust#87832 [rust#88069]: rust-lang/rust#88069 [rust#87472]: rust-lang/rust#87472 [rust#87699]: rust-lang/rust#87699 [rust#87570]: rust-lang/rust#87570 [rust#88023]: rust-lang/rust#88023 [rust#87760]: rust-lang/rust#87760 [rust#87370]: rust-lang/rust#87370 [rust#87580]: rust-lang/rust#87580 [rust#83342]: rust-lang/rust#83342 [rust#83093]: rust-lang/rust#83093 [rust#88177]: rust-lang/rust#88177 [rust#88548]: rust-lang/rust#88548 [rust#88551]: rust-lang/rust#88551 [rust#88299]: rust-lang/rust#88299 [rust#88220]: rust-lang/rust#88220 [rust#85835]: rust-lang/rust#85835 [rust#86879]: rust-lang/rust#86879 [rust#86744]: rust-lang/rust#86744 [rust#84662]: rust-lang/rust#84662 [rust#86593]: rust-lang/rust#86593 [rust#81050]: rust-lang/rust#81050 [rust#81363]: rust-lang/rust#81363 [rust#84111]: rust-lang/rust#84111 [rust#85769]: rust-lang/rust#85769 (comment) [rust#88490]: rust-lang/rust#88490 [rust#88269]: rust-lang/rust#88269 [rust#84176]: rust-lang/rust#84176 [rust#88399]: rust-lang/rust#88399 [rust#88227]: rust-lang/rust#88227 [rust#88200]: rust-lang/rust#88200 [rust#82776]: rust-lang/rust#82776 [rust#88077]: rust-lang/rust#88077 [rust#87728]: rust-lang/rust#87728 [rust#87050]: rust-lang/rust#87050 [rust#87619]: rust-lang/rust#87619 [rust#81825]: rust-lang/rust#81825 (comment) [rust#88019]: rust-lang/rust#88019 [rust#87666]: rust-lang/rust#87666 Version 1.55.0 (2021-09-09) ============================ Language -------- - [You can now write open "from" range patterns (`X..`), which will start at `X` and will end at the maximum value of the integer.][83918] - [You can now explicitly import the prelude of different editions through `std::prelude` (e.g. `use std::prelude::rust_2021::*;`).][86294] Compiler -------- - [Added tier 3\* support for `powerpc64le-unknown-freebsd`.][83572] \* Refer to Rust's [platform support page][platform-support-doc] for more information on Rust's tiered platform support. Libraries --------- - [Updated std's float parsing to use the Eisel-Lemire algorithm.][86761] These improvements should in general provide faster string parsing of floats, no longer reject certain valid floating point values, and reduce the produced code size for non-stripped artifacts. - [`string::Drain` now implements `AsRef<str>` and `AsRef<[u8]>`.][86858] Stabilised APIs --------------- - [`Bound::cloned`] - [`Drain::as_str`] - [`IntoInnerError::into_error`] - [`IntoInnerError::into_parts`] - [`MaybeUninit::assume_init_mut`] - [`MaybeUninit::assume_init_ref`] - [`MaybeUninit::write`] - [`array::map`] - [`ops::ControlFlow`] - [`x86::_bittest`] - [`x86::_bittestandcomplement`] - [`x86::_bittestandreset`] - [`x86::_bittestandset`] - [`x86_64::_bittest64`] - [`x86_64::_bittestandcomplement64`] - [`x86_64::_bittestandreset64`] - [`x86_64::_bittestandset64`] The following previously stable functions are now `const`. - [`str::from_utf8_unchecked`] Cargo ----- - [Cargo will now deduplicate compiler diagnostics to the terminal when invoking rustc in parallel such as when using `cargo test`.][cargo/9675] - [The package definition in `cargo metadata` now includes the `"default_run"` field from the manifest.][cargo/9550] - [Added `cargo d` as an alias for `cargo doc`.][cargo/9680] - [Added `{lib}` as formatting option for `cargo tree` to print the `"lib_name"` of packages.][cargo/9663] Rustdoc ------- - [Added "Go to item on exact match" search option.][85876] - [The "Implementors" section on traits no longer shows redundant method definitions.][85970] - [Trait implementations are toggled open by default.][86260] This should make the implementations more searchable by tools like `CTRL+F` in your browser. - [Intra-doc links should now correctly resolve associated items (e.g. methods) through type aliases.][86334] - [Traits which are marked with `#[doc(hidden)]` will no longer appear in the "Trait Implementations" section.][86513] Compatibility Notes ------------------- - [std functions that return an `io::Error` will no longer use the `ErrorKind::Other` variant.][85746] This is to better reflect that these kinds of errors could be categorised [into newer more specific `ErrorKind` variants][79965], and that they do not represent a user error. - [Using environment variable names with `process::Command` on Windows now behaves as expected.][85270] Previously using envionment variables with `Command` would cause them to be ASCII-uppercased. - [Rustdoc will now warn on using rustdoc lints that aren't prefixed with `rustdoc::`][86849] [86849]: rust-lang/rust#86849 [86513]: rust-lang/rust#86513 [86334]: rust-lang/rust#86334 [86260]: rust-lang/rust#86260 [85970]: rust-lang/rust#85970 [85876]: rust-lang/rust#85876 [83572]: rust-lang/rust#83572 [86294]: rust-lang/rust#86294 [86858]: rust-lang/rust#86858 [86761]: rust-lang/rust#86761 [85769]: rust-lang/rust#85769 [85746]: rust-lang/rust#85746 [85305]: rust-lang/rust#85305 [85270]: rust-lang/rust#85270 [84111]: rust-lang/rust#84111 [83918]: rust-lang/rust#83918 [79965]: rust-lang/rust#79965 [87370]: rust-lang/rust#87370 [87298]: rust-lang/rust#87298 [cargo/9663]: rust-lang/cargo#9663 [cargo/9675]: rust-lang/cargo#9675 [cargo/9550]: rust-lang/cargo#9550 [cargo/9680]: rust-lang/cargo#9680 [cargo/9663]: rust-lang/cargo#9663 [`array::map`]: https://doc.rust-lang.org/stable/std/primitive.array.html#method.map [`Bound::cloned`]: https://doc.rust-lang.org/stable/std/ops/enum.Bound.html#method.cloned [`Drain::as_str`]: https://doc.rust-lang.org/stable/std/string/struct.Drain.html#method.as_str [`IntoInnerError::into_error`]: https://doc.rust-lang.org/stable/std/io/struct.IntoInnerError.html#method.into_error [`IntoInnerError::into_parts`]: https://doc.rust-lang.org/stable/std/io/struct.IntoInnerError.html#method.into_parts [`MaybeUninit::assume_init_mut`]: https://doc.rust-lang.org/stable/std/mem/union.MaybeUninit.html#method.assume_init_mut [`MaybeUninit::assume_init_ref`]: https://doc.rust-lang.org/stable/std/mem/union.MaybeUninit.html#method.assume_init_ref [`MaybeUninit::write`]: https://doc.rust-lang.org/stable/std/mem/union.MaybeUninit.html#method.write [`Seek::rewind`]: https://doc.rust-lang.org/stable/std/io/trait.Seek.html#method.rewind [`ops::ControlFlow`]: https://doc.rust-lang.org/stable/std/ops/enum.ControlFlow.html [`str::from_utf8_unchecked`]: https://doc.rust-lang.org/stable/std/str/fn.from_utf8_unchecked.html [`x86::_bittest`]: https://doc.rust-lang.org/stable/core/arch/x86/fn._bittest.html [`x86::_bittestandcomplement`]: https://doc.rust-lang.org/stable/core/arch/x86/fn._bittestandcomplement.html [`x86::_bittestandreset`]: https://doc.rust-lang.org/stable/core/arch/x86/fn._bittestandreset.html [`x86::_bittestandset`]: https://doc.rust-lang.org/stable/core/arch/x86/fn._bittestandset.html [`x86_64::_bittest64`]: https://doc.rust-lang.org/stable/core/arch/x86_64/fn._bittest64.html [`x86_64::_bittestandcomplement64`]: https://doc.rust-lang.org/stable/core/arch/x86_64/fn._bittestandcomplement64.html [`x86_64::_bittestandreset64`]: https://doc.rust-lang.org/stable/core/arch/x86_64/fn._bittestandreset64.html [`x86_64::_bittestandset64`]: https://doc.rust-lang.org/stable/core/arch/x86_64/fn._bittestandset64.html
…mulacrum make `Instant::{duration_since, elapsed, sub}` saturating and remove workarounds This removes all mutex/atomic-based workarounds for non-monotonic clocks and makes the previously panicking methods saturating instead. Additionally `saturating_duration_since` becomes deprecated since `duration_since` now fills that role. Effectively this moves the fixup from `Instant` construction to the comparisons. This has some observable effects, especially on platforms without monotonic clocks: * Incorrectly ordered Instant comparisons no longer panic in release mode. This could hide some programming errors, but since debug mode still panics tests can still catch them. * `checked_duration_since` will now return `None` in more cases. Previously it only happened when one compared instants obtained in the wrong order or manually created ones. Now it also does on backslides. * non-monotonic intervals will not be transitive, i.e. `b.duration_since(a) + c.duration_since(b) != c.duration_since(a)` The upsides are reduced complexity and lower overhead of `Instant::now`. ## Motivation Currently we must choose between two poisons. One is high worst-case latency and jitter of `Instant::now()` due to explicit synchronization; see rust-lang#83093 for benchmarks, the worst-case overhead is > 100x. The other is sporadic panics on specific, rare combinations of CPU/hypervisor/operating system due to platform bugs. Use-cases where low-overhead, fine-grained timestamps are needed - such as syscall tracing, performance profiles or sensor data acquisition (drone flight controllers were mentioned in a libs meeting) in multi-threaded programs - are negatively impacted by the synchronization. The panics are user-visible (program crashes), hard to reproduce and can be triggered by any dependency that might be using Instants for any reason. A solution that is fast _and_ doesn't panic is desirable. ---- closes rust-lang#84448 closes rust-lang#86470
This decreases the overhead of backsliding protection on x86 systems with unreliable TSC, e.g. windows. And on aarch64 systems where 128bit atomics are available.
The following benchmarks were taken on x86_64 linux though by overriding
actually_monotonic()
, the numbers may look different on other platformsSince I don't have an arm machine with 128bit atomics I wasn't able to benchmark the AtomicU128 implementation.