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use_file: Just use libstd
on targets that we know have libstd, instead of pthreads + libc.
#453
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Thanks for the mention @briansmith, just FYI, I have abandoned the work to bring std support to x86 QNX neutrino 7.0. QNX dropped support for 32-bit architectures in 7.1 (released 2020) and the cost-benefit for adding support to a 7-year-old release doesn't make sense anymore. That being said, I also don't care if no_std x86 QNX 7.0 breaks, and I would wager pretty strongly that virtually nobody else is using it either (it is much more likely that they are using the more recent QNX 7.1 or the in-progress support for QNX 8). |
libstd
on targets that we know have libstd, instead of pthreads + libc.libstd
on targets that we know have libstd, instead of pthreads + libc.
I think we should switch 32-bit x86 QNX to be a target for which we support custom implementations, and drop the built-in implementation for it. That way we don't have to carry around the current implementation forever just for it. Anybody who needs the current implementation could adopt the current |
Works for me. 👍 |
My long-term goal would still be to have Rust's standard library use
So I think this issue is still worth considering, even if we do try to get this into libstd one day.
Do you know if there would be a way to |
I agree with your "even if this crate were used by libstd...".
I think we'd still need to use |
pthreads mutexes are not safe to move. While it is very unlikely that the mutex we create will ever be moved, we don't actively do anything to actively prevent it from being moved. (libstd, when it used/uses pthreads mutexes, would box them to prevent them from being moved.) Also, now on Linux and Android (and many other targets for which we don't use use_std), libstd uses futexes instead of pthreads mutexes. Thus using libstd's Mutex will be more efficient and avoid adding an often-otherwise-unnecessary libpthreads dependency on these targets. * Linux, Android: Futex [1]. * Haiku, Redox, NTO, AIX: pthreads [2]. * others: not using `use_file`. This breaks 32-bit x86 QNX Neutrino, which doesn't have libstd because the target itself is abandoned [3]. the other QNX Neutrino targets didn't get libstd support until Rust 1.69, so this effectively raises the MSRV for them to 1.69. On x86_64 Linux, this change removes all libpthreads dependencies: - call qword ptr [rip + pthread_mutex_lock@GOTPCREL] - call qword ptr [rip + pthread_mutex_unlock@GOTPCREL] and adds these dependencies: + core::ptr::drop_in_place<std::sync::mutex::MutexGuard<()>> + std::panicking::panic_count::is_zero_slow_path + std::sys::sync::mutex::futex::Mutex::lock_contended + std::sys::sync::mutex::futex::Mutex::wake as measured using `cargo asm`. [1] https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/blob/c1dba09f263cbff6170f130aa418e28bdf22bd96/library/std/src/sys/sync/mutex/mod.rs#L4-L10 [2] https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/blob/c1dba09f263cbff6170f130aa418e28bdf22bd96/library/std/src/sys/sync/mutex/mod.rs#L17-L20 [3] rust-random#453 (comment)
pthreads mutexes are not safe to move. While it is very unlikely that the mutex we create will ever be moved, we don't actively do anything to actively prevent it from being moved. (libstd, when it used/uses pthreads mutexes, would box them to prevent them from being moved.) Also, now on Linux and Android (and many other targets for which we don't use use_std), libstd uses futexes instead of pthreads mutexes. Thus using libstd's Mutex will be more efficient and avoid adding an often-otherwise-unnecessary libpthreads dependency on these targets. * Linux, Android: Futex [1]. * Haiku, Redox, NTO, AIX: pthreads [2]. * others: not using `use_file`. This will not affect our plans for *-*-linux-none, since we don't plan to use `use_file` for it. This breaks 32-bit x86 QNX Neutrino, which doesn't have libstd because the target itself is abandoned [3]. the other QNX Neutrino targets didn't get libstd support until Rust 1.69, so this effectively raises the MSRV for them to 1.69. On x86_64 Linux, this change removes all libpthreads dependencies: - call qword ptr [rip + pthread_mutex_lock@GOTPCREL] - call qword ptr [rip + pthread_mutex_unlock@GOTPCREL] and adds these dependencies: + core::ptr::drop_in_place<std::sync::mutex::MutexGuard<()>> + std::panicking::panic_count::is_zero_slow_path + std::sys::sync::mutex::futex::Mutex::lock_contended + std::sys::sync::mutex::futex::Mutex::wake as measured using `cargo asm`. [1] https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/blob/c1dba09f263cbff6170f130aa418e28bdf22bd96/library/std/src/sys/sync/mutex/mod.rs#L4-L10 [2] https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/blob/c1dba09f263cbff6170f130aa418e28bdf22bd96/library/std/src/sys/sync/mutex/mod.rs#L17-L20 [3] rust-random#453 (comment)
pthreads mutexes are not safe to move. While it is very unlikely that the mutex we create will ever be moved, we don't actively do anything to actively prevent it from being moved. (libstd, when it used/uses pthreads mutexes, would box them to prevent them from being moved.) Also, now on Linux and Android (and many other targets for which we don't use use_std), libstd uses futexes instead of pthreads mutexes. Thus using libstd's Mutex will be more efficient and avoid adding an often-otherwise-unnecessary libpthreads dependency on these targets. * Linux, Android: Futex [1]. * Haiku, Redox, NTO, AIX: pthreads [2]. * others: not using `use_file`. This will not affect our plans for *-*-linux-none, since we don't plan to use `use_file` for it. This breaks 32-bit x86 QNX Neutrino, which doesn't have libstd because the target itself is abandoned [3]. the other QNX Neutrino targets didn't get libstd support until Rust 1.69, so this effectively raises the MSRV for them to 1.69. On x86_64 Linux, this change removes all libpthreads dependencies: - pthread_mutex_lock - pthread_mutex_unlock and adds these dependencies: + core::ptr::drop_in_place<std::sync::mutex::MutexGuard<()>> + std::panicking::panic_count::is_zero_slow_path + std::sys::sync::mutex::futex::Mutex::lock_contended + std::sys::sync::mutex::futex::Mutex::wake as measured using `cargo asm`. [1] https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/blob/c1dba09f263cbff6170f130aa418e28bdf22bd96/library/std/src/sys/sync/mutex/mod.rs#L4-L10 [2] https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/blob/c1dba09f263cbff6170f130aa418e28bdf22bd96/library/std/src/sys/sync/mutex/mod.rs#L17-L20 [3] rust-random#453 (comment)
pthreads mutexes are not safe to move. While it is very unlikely that the mutex we create will ever be moved, we don't actively do anything to actively prevent it from being moved. (libstd, when it used/uses pthreads mutexes, would box them to prevent them from being moved.) Also, now on Linux and Android (and many other targets for which we don't use use_std), libstd uses futexes instead of pthreads mutexes. Thus using libstd's Mutex will be more efficient and avoid adding an often-otherwise-unnecessary libpthreads dependency on these targets. * Linux, Android: Futex [1]. * Haiku, Redox, NTO, AIX: pthreads [2]. * others: not using `use_file`. This will not affect our plans for *-*-linux-none, since we don't plan to use `use_file` for it. This breaks 32-bit x86 QNX Neutrino, which doesn't have libstd because the target itself is abandoned [3]. the other QNX Neutrino targets didn't get libstd support until Rust 1.69, so this effectively raises the MSRV for them to 1.69. On x86_64 Linux, this change removes all libpthreads dependencies: ```diff - pthread_mutex_lock - pthread_mutex_unlock ``` and adds these dependencies: ```diff + std::panicking::panic_count::is_zero_slow_path + std::sys::sync::mutex::futex::Mutex::lock_contended + std::sys::sync::mutex::futex::Mutex::wake + std::panicking::panic_count::GLOBAL_PANIC_COUNT ``` as measured using `cargo asm`. [1] https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/blob/c1dba09f263cbff6170f130aa418e28bdf22bd96/library/std/src/sys/sync/mutex/mod.rs#L4-L10 [2] https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/blob/c1dba09f263cbff6170f130aa418e28bdf22bd96/library/std/src/sys/sync/mutex/mod.rs#L17-L20 [3] rust-random#453 (comment)
pthreads mutexes are not safe to move. While it is very unlikely that the mutex we create will ever be moved, we don't actively do anything to actively prevent it from being moved. (libstd, when it used/uses pthreads mutexes, would box them to prevent them from being moved.) Also, now on Linux and Android (and many other targets for which we don't use use_std), libstd uses futexes instead of pthreads mutexes. Thus using libstd's Mutex will be more efficient and avoid adding an often-otherwise-unnecessary libpthreads dependency on these targets. * Linux, Android: Futex [1]. * Haiku, Redox, NTO, AIX: pthreads [2]. * others: not using `use_file`. This will not affect our plans for *-*-linux-none, since we don't plan to use `use_file` for it. OnceLock This breaks 32-bit x86 QNX Neutrino, which doesn't have libstd because the target itself is abandoned [3]. the other QNX Neutrino targets didn't get libstd support until Rust 1.69, so this effectively raises the MSRV for them to 1.69. Otherwise, the MSRV increases to 1.63 for the above-mentioned targets, as that's when `Mutex::new()` became a `const fn`. I tried to use `Once` to avoid the MSRV increase but it doesn't support fallible initialization even in Nightly. `OnceLock` wasn't added until 1.70. On x86_64 Linux, this change removes all libpthreads dependencies: ```diff - pthread_mutex_lock - pthread_mutex_unlock ``` and adds these libstd dependencies: ```diff + std::panicking::panic_count::GLOBAL_PANIC_COUNT + std::panicking::panic_count::is_zero_slow_path + std::sys::sync::mutex::futex::Mutex::lock_contended + std::sys::sync::mutex::futex::Mutex::wake ``` as measured using `cargo asm`. [1] https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/blob/c1dba09f263cbff6170f130aa418e28bdf22bd96/library/std/src/sys/sync/mutex/mod.rs#L4-L10 [2] https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/blob/c1dba09f263cbff6170f130aa418e28bdf22bd96/library/std/src/sys/sync/mutex/mod.rs#L17-L20 [3] rust-random#453 (comment)
pthreads mutexes are not safe to move. While it is very unlikely that the mutex we create will ever be moved, we don't actively do anything to actively prevent it from being moved. (libstd, when it used/uses pthreads mutexes, would box them to prevent them from being moved.) Also, now on Linux and Android (and many other targets for which we don't use use_std), libstd uses futexes instead of pthreads mutexes. Thus using libstd's Mutex will be more efficient and avoid adding an often-otherwise-unnecessary libpthreads dependency on these targets. * Linux, Android: Futex [1]. * Haiku, Redox, NTO, AIX: pthreads [2]. * others: not using `use_file`. This will not affect our plans for *-*-linux-none, since we don't plan to use `use_file` for it. OnceLock This breaks 32-bit x86 QNX Neutrino, which doesn't have libstd because the target itself is abandoned [3]. the other QNX Neutrino targets didn't get libstd support until Rust 1.69, so this effectively raises the MSRV for them to 1.69. Otherwise, the MSRV increases to 1.63 for the above-mentioned targets, as that's when `Mutex::new()` became a `const fn`. I tried to use `Once` to avoid the MSRV increase but it doesn't support fallible initialization even in Nightly. `OnceLock` wasn't added until 1.70. On x86_64 Linux, this change removes all libpthreads dependencies: ```diff - pthread_mutex_lock - pthread_mutex_unlock ``` and adds these libstd dependencies: ```diff + std::panicking::panic_count::GLOBAL_PANIC_COUNT + std::panicking::panic_count::is_zero_slow_path + std::sys::sync::mutex::futex::Mutex::lock_contended + std::sys::sync::mutex::futex::Mutex::wake ``` as measured using `cargo asm`. [1] https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/blob/c1dba09f263cbff6170f130aa418e28bdf22bd96/library/std/src/sys/sync/mutex/mod.rs#L4-L10 [2] https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/blob/c1dba09f263cbff6170f130aa418e28bdf22bd96/library/std/src/sys/sync/mutex/mod.rs#L17-L20 [3] rust-random#453 (comment)
pthreads mutexes are not safe to move. While it is very unlikely that the mutex we create will ever be moved, we don't actively do anything to actively prevent it from being moved. (libstd, when it used/uses pthreads mutexes, would box them to prevent them from being moved.) Also, now on Linux and Android (and many other targets for which we don't use use_std), libstd uses futexes instead of pthreads mutexes. Thus using libstd's Mutex will be more efficient and avoid adding an often-otherwise-unnecessary libpthreads dependency on these targets. * Linux, Android: Futex [1]. * Haiku, Redox, NTO, AIX: pthreads [2]. * others: not using `use_file`. This will not affect our plans for *-*-linux-none, since we don't plan to use `use_file` for it. OnceLock This breaks 32-bit x86 QNX Neutrino, which doesn't have libstd because the target itself is abandoned [3]. the other QNX Neutrino targets didn't get libstd support until Rust 1.69, so this effectively raises the MSRV for them to 1.69. Otherwise, the MSRV increases to 1.63 for the above-mentioned targets, as that's when `Mutex::new()` became a `const fn`. I tried to use `Once` to avoid the MSRV increase but it doesn't support fallible initialization even in Nightly. `OnceLock` wasn't added until 1.70. On x86_64 Linux, this change removes all libpthreads dependencies: ```diff - pthread_mutex_lock - pthread_mutex_unlock ``` and adds these libstd dependencies: ```diff + std::panicking::panic_count::GLOBAL_PANIC_COUNT + std::panicking::panic_count::is_zero_slow_path + std::sys::sync::mutex::futex::Mutex::lock_contended + std::sys::sync::mutex::futex::Mutex::wake ``` as measured using `cargo asm`. [1] https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/blob/c1dba09f263cbff6170f130aa418e28bdf22bd96/library/std/src/sys/sync/mutex/mod.rs#L4-L10 [2] https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/blob/c1dba09f263cbff6170f130aa418e28bdf22bd96/library/std/src/sys/sync/mutex/mod.rs#L17-L20 [3] rust-random#453 (comment)
pthreads mutexes are not safe to move. While it is very unlikely that the mutex we create will ever be moved, we don't actively do anything to actively prevent it from being moved. (libstd, when it used/uses pthreads mutexes, would box them to prevent them from being moved.) Also, now on Linux and Android (and many other targets for which we don't use use_std), libstd uses futexes instead of pthreads mutexes. Thus using libstd's Mutex will be more efficient and avoid adding an often-otherwise-unnecessary libpthreads dependency on these targets. * Linux, Android: Futex [1]. * Haiku, Redox, NTO, AIX: pthreads [2]. * others: not using `use_file`. This will not affect our plans for *-*-linux-none, since we don't plan to use `use_file` for it. OnceLock This breaks 32-bit x86 QNX Neutrino, which doesn't have libstd because the target itself is abandoned [3]. the other QNX Neutrino targets didn't get libstd support until Rust 1.69, so this effectively raises the MSRV for them to 1.69. Otherwise, the MSRV increases to 1.63 for the above-mentioned targets, as that's when `Mutex::new()` became a `const fn`. I tried to use `Once` to avoid the MSRV increase but it doesn't support fallible initialization even in Nightly. `OnceLock` wasn't added until 1.70. On x86_64 Linux, this change removes all libpthreads dependencies: ```diff - pthread_mutex_lock - pthread_mutex_unlock ``` and adds these libstd dependencies: ```diff + std::panicking::panic_count::GLOBAL_PANIC_COUNT + std::panicking::panic_count::is_zero_slow_path + std::sys::sync::mutex::futex::Mutex::lock_contended + std::sys::sync::mutex::futex::Mutex::wake ``` as measured using `cargo asm`. [1] https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/blob/c1dba09f263cbff6170f130aa418e28bdf22bd96/library/std/src/sys/sync/mutex/mod.rs#L4-L10 [2] https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/blob/c1dba09f263cbff6170f130aa418e28bdf22bd96/library/std/src/sys/sync/mutex/mod.rs#L17-L20 [3] rust-random#453 (comment)
pthreads mutexes are not safe to move. While it is very unlikely that the mutex we create will ever be moved, we don't actively do anything to actively prevent it from being moved. (libstd, when it used/uses pthreads mutexes, would box them to prevent them from being moved.) Also, now on Linux and Android (and many other targets for which we don't use use_std), libstd uses futexes instead of pthreads mutexes. Thus using libstd's Mutex will be more efficient and avoid adding an often-otherwise-unnecessary libpthreads dependency on these targets. * Linux, Android: Futex [1]. * Haiku, Redox, NTO, AIX: pthreads [2]. * others: not using `use_file`. This will not affect our plans for *-*-linux-none, since we don't plan to use `use_file` for it. OnceLock This breaks 32-bit x86 QNX Neutrino, which doesn't have libstd because the target itself is abandoned [3]. the other QNX Neutrino targets didn't get libstd support until Rust 1.69, so this effectively raises the MSRV for them to 1.69. Otherwise, the MSRV increases to 1.63 for the above-mentioned targets, as that's when `Mutex::new()` became a `const fn`. I tried to use `Once` to avoid the MSRV increase but it doesn't support fallible initialization even in Nightly. `OnceLock` wasn't added until 1.70. On x86_64 Linux, this change removes all libpthreads dependencies: ```diff - pthread_mutex_lock - pthread_mutex_unlock ``` and adds these libstd dependencies: ```diff + std::panicking::panic_count::GLOBAL_PANIC_COUNT + std::panicking::panic_count::is_zero_slow_path + std::sys::sync::mutex::futex::Mutex::lock_contended + std::sys::sync::mutex::futex::Mutex::wake ``` as measured using `cargo asm`. [1] https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/blob/c1dba09f263cbff6170f130aa418e28bdf22bd96/library/std/src/sys/sync/mutex/mod.rs#L4-L10 [2] https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/blob/c1dba09f263cbff6170f130aa418e28bdf22bd96/library/std/src/sys/sync/mutex/mod.rs#L17-L20 [3] rust-random#453 (comment)
pthreads mutexes are not safe to move. While it is very unlikely that the mutex we create will ever be moved, we don't actively do anything to actively prevent it from being moved. (libstd, when it used/uses pthreads mutexes, would box them to prevent them from being moved.) Also, now on Linux and Android (and many other targets for which we don't use use_std), libstd uses futexes instead of pthreads mutexes. Thus using libstd's Mutex will be more efficient and avoid adding an often-otherwise-unnecessary libpthreads dependency on these targets. * Linux, Android: Futex [1]. * Haiku, Redox, NTO, AIX: pthreads [2]. * others: not using `use_file`. This will not affect our plans for *-*-linux-none, since we don't plan to use `use_file` for it. OnceLock This breaks 32-bit x86 QNX Neutrino, which doesn't have libstd because the target itself is abandoned [3]. the other QNX Neutrino targets didn't get libstd support until Rust 1.69, so this effectively raises the MSRV for them to 1.69. Otherwise, the MSRV increases to 1.63 for the above-mentioned targets, as that's when `Mutex::new()` became a `const fn`. I tried to use `Once` to avoid the MSRV increase but it doesn't support fallible initialization even in Nightly. `OnceLock` wasn't added until 1.70. On x86_64 Linux, this change removes all libpthreads dependencies: ```diff - pthread_mutex_lock - pthread_mutex_unlock ``` and adds these libstd dependencies: ```diff + std::panicking::panic_count::GLOBAL_PANIC_COUNT + std::panicking::panic_count::is_zero_slow_path + std::sys::sync::mutex::futex::Mutex::lock_contended + std::sys::sync::mutex::futex::Mutex::wake ``` as measured using `cargo asm`. [1] https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/blob/c1dba09f263cbff6170f130aa418e28bdf22bd96/library/std/src/sys/sync/mutex/mod.rs#L4-L10 [2] https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/blob/c1dba09f263cbff6170f130aa418e28bdf22bd96/library/std/src/sys/sync/mutex/mod.rs#L17-L20 [3] rust-random#453 (comment)
pthreads mutexes are not safe to move. While it is very unlikely that the mutex we create will ever be moved, we don't actively do anything to actively prevent it from being moved. (libstd, when it used/uses pthreads mutexes, would box them to prevent them from being moved.) Also, now on Linux and Android (and many other targets for which we don't use use_std), libstd uses futexes instead of pthreads mutexes. Thus using libstd's Mutex will be more efficient and avoid adding an often-otherwise-unnecessary libpthreads dependency on these targets. * Linux, Android: Futex [1]. * Haiku, Redox, NTO, AIX: pthreads [2]. * others: not using `use_file`. This will not affect our plans for *-*-linux-none, since we don't plan to use `use_file` for it. OnceLock This breaks 32-bit x86 QNX Neutrino, which doesn't have libstd because the target itself is abandoned [3]. the other QNX Neutrino targets didn't get libstd support until Rust 1.69, so this effectively raises the MSRV for them to 1.69. Otherwise, the MSRV increases to 1.63 for the above-mentioned targets, as that's when `Mutex::new()` became a `const fn`. I tried to use `Once` to avoid the MSRV increase but it doesn't support fallible initialization even in Nightly. `OnceLock` wasn't added until 1.70. On x86_64 Linux, this change removes all libpthreads dependencies: ```diff - pthread_mutex_lock - pthread_mutex_unlock ``` and adds these libstd dependencies: ```diff + std::panicking::panic_count::GLOBAL_PANIC_COUNT + std::panicking::panic_count::is_zero_slow_path + std::sys::sync::mutex::futex::Mutex::lock_contended + std::sys::sync::mutex::futex::Mutex::wake ``` as measured using `cargo asm`. [1] https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/blob/c1dba09f263cbff6170f130aa418e28bdf22bd96/library/std/src/sys/sync/mutex/mod.rs#L4-L10 [2] https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/blob/c1dba09f263cbff6170f130aa418e28bdf22bd96/library/std/src/sys/sync/mutex/mod.rs#L17-L20 [3] rust-random#453 (comment)
pthreads mutexes are not safe to move. While it is very unlikely that the mutex we create will ever be moved, we don't actively do anything to actively prevent it from being moved. (libstd, when it used/uses pthreads mutexes, would box them to prevent them from being moved.) Also, now on Linux and Android (and many other targets for which we don't use use_std), libstd uses futexes instead of pthreads mutexes. Thus using libstd's Mutex will be more efficient and avoid adding an often-otherwise-unnecessary libpthreads dependency on these targets. * Linux, Android: Futex [1]. * Haiku, Redox, NTO, AIX: pthreads [2]. * others: not using `use_file`. This will not affect our plans for *-*-linux-none, since we don't plan to use `use_file` for it. OnceLock This breaks 32-bit x86 QNX Neutrino, which doesn't have libstd because the target itself is abandoned [3]. the other QNX Neutrino targets didn't get libstd support until Rust 1.69, so this effectively raises the MSRV for them to 1.69. Otherwise, the MSRV increases to 1.63 for the above-mentioned targets, as that's when `Mutex::new()` became a `const fn`. I tried to use `Once` to avoid the MSRV increase but it doesn't support fallible initialization even in Nightly. `OnceLock` wasn't added until 1.70. On x86_64 Linux, this change removes all libpthreads dependencies: ```diff - pthread_mutex_lock - pthread_mutex_unlock ``` and adds these libstd dependencies: ```diff + std::panicking::panic_count::GLOBAL_PANIC_COUNT + std::panicking::panic_count::is_zero_slow_path + std::sys::sync::mutex::futex::Mutex::lock_contended + std::sys::sync::mutex::futex::Mutex::wake ``` as measured using `cargo asm`. [1] https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/blob/c1dba09f263cbff6170f130aa418e28bdf22bd96/library/std/src/sys/sync/mutex/mod.rs#L4-L10 [2] https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/blob/c1dba09f263cbff6170f130aa418e28bdf22bd96/library/std/src/sys/sync/mutex/mod.rs#L17-L20 [3] rust-random#453 (comment)
I am fine with using |
Note that this would be a breaking change, since we'd need to remove the |
The I don't think this would be a breaking change for any target mentioned in https://doc.rust-lang.org/rustc/platform-support.html. It could perhaps be a breaking change for other targets, but I'm not sure getrandom supports any such targets (maybe accidentally). |
Maybe we could remove use of mutexes entirely and use sleep like we do for VxWorks? Contention of the file opening section is quite unlikely in practice, so even if the sleeping branch will be triggered, it's unlikely that impact will be noticeable by users. |
@newpavlov mentioned that we basically implemented a spinlock for VxWorks. It seems like the Rust VxWorks targets support libstd, so I am hoping that we can replace that spinlock with whatever primitive we use in use_file, since VxWorks has the same structure as use_file on Linux, namely blocking on the operating system to report that the system PRNG has been seeded. One of my goals is to remove as much of the custom synchronization logic in getrandom as we can, so I am hoping we can find a way to use libstd-provided primitives when possible. Unfortunately, the MSRV situation makes it tricky since OnceLock seems like the best choice, but it was only stablized in Rust 1.70. |
pthreads mutexes are not safe to move. While it is very unlikely that the mutex we create will ever be moved, we don't actively do anything to actively prevent it from being moved. (libstd, when it used/uses pthreads mutexes, would box them to prevent them from being moved.) Also, now on Linux and Android (and many other targets for which we don't use use_std), libstd uses futexes instead of pthreads mutexes. Thus using libstd's Mutex will be more efficient and avoid adding an often-otherwise-unnecessary libpthreads dependency on these targets. * Linux, Android: Futex [1]. * Haiku, Redox, NTO, AIX: pthreads [2]. * others: not using `use_file`. This will not affect our plans for *-*-linux-none, since we don't plan to use `use_file` for it. OnceLock This breaks 32-bit x86 QNX Neutrino, which doesn't have libstd because the target itself is abandoned [3]. the other QNX Neutrino targets didn't get libstd support until Rust 1.69, so this effectively raises the MSRV for them to 1.69. Otherwise, the MSRV increases to 1.63 for the above-mentioned targets, as that's when `Mutex::new()` became a `const fn`. I tried to use `Once` to avoid the MSRV increase but it doesn't support fallible initialization even in Nightly. `OnceLock` wasn't added until 1.70. On x86_64 Linux, this change removes all libpthreads dependencies: ```diff - pthread_mutex_lock - pthread_mutex_unlock ``` and adds these libstd dependencies: ```diff + std::panicking::panic_count::GLOBAL_PANIC_COUNT + std::panicking::panic_count::is_zero_slow_path + std::sys::sync::mutex::futex::Mutex::lock_contended + std::sys::sync::mutex::futex::Mutex::wake ``` as measured using `cargo asm`. [1] https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/blob/c1dba09f263cbff6170f130aa418e28bdf22bd96/library/std/src/sys/sync/mutex/mod.rs#L4-L10 [2] https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/blob/c1dba09f263cbff6170f130aa418e28bdf22bd96/library/std/src/sys/sync/mutex/mod.rs#L17-L20 [3] rust-random#453 (comment)
pthreads mutexes are not safe to move. While it is very unlikely that the mutex we create will ever be moved, we don't actively do anything to actively prevent it from being moved. (libstd, when it used/uses pthreads mutexes, would box them to prevent them from being moved.) Also, now on Linux and Android (and many other targets for which we don't use use_std), libstd uses futexes instead of pthreads mutexes. Thus using libstd's Mutex will be more efficient and avoid adding an often-otherwise-unnecessary libpthreads dependency on these targets. * Linux, Android: Futex [1]. * Haiku, Redox, NTO, AIX: pthreads [2]. * others: not using `use_file`. This will not affect our plans for *-*-linux-none, since we don't plan to use `use_file` for it. OnceLock This breaks 32-bit x86 QNX Neutrino, which doesn't have libstd because the target itself is abandoned [3]. the other QNX Neutrino targets didn't get libstd support until Rust 1.69, so this effectively raises the MSRV for them to 1.69. Otherwise, the MSRV increases to 1.63 for the above-mentioned targets, as that's when `Mutex::new()` became a `const fn`. I tried to use `Once` to avoid the MSRV increase but it doesn't support fallible initialization even in Nightly. `OnceLock` wasn't added until 1.70. On x86_64 Linux, this change removes all libpthreads dependencies: ```diff - pthread_mutex_lock - pthread_mutex_unlock ``` and adds these libstd dependencies: ```diff + std::panicking::panic_count::GLOBAL_PANIC_COUNT + std::panicking::panic_count::is_zero_slow_path + std::sys::sync::mutex::futex::Mutex::lock_contended + std::sys::sync::mutex::futex::Mutex::wake ``` as measured using `cargo asm`. [1] https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/blob/c1dba09f263cbff6170f130aa418e28bdf22bd96/library/std/src/sys/sync/mutex/mod.rs#L4-L10 [2] https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/blob/c1dba09f263cbff6170f130aa418e28bdf22bd96/library/std/src/sys/sync/mutex/mod.rs#L17-L20 [3] rust-random#453 (comment)
pthreads mutexes are not safe to move. While it is very unlikely that the mutex we create will ever be moved, we don't actively do anything to actively prevent it from being moved. (libstd, when it used/uses pthreads mutexes, would box them to prevent them from being moved.) Also, now on Linux and Android (and many other targets for which we don't use use_std), libstd uses futexes instead of pthreads mutexes. Thus using libstd's Mutex will be more efficient and avoid adding an often-otherwise-unnecessary libpthreads dependency on these targets. * Linux, Android: Futex [1]. * Haiku, Redox, NTO, AIX: pthreads [2]. * others: not using `use_file`. This will not affect our plans for *-*-linux-none, since we don't plan to use `use_file` for it. OnceLock This breaks 32-bit x86 QNX Neutrino, which doesn't have libstd because the target itself is abandoned [3]. the other QNX Neutrino targets didn't get libstd support until Rust 1.69, so this effectively raises the MSRV for them to 1.69. Otherwise, the MSRV increases to 1.63 for the above-mentioned targets, as that's when `Mutex::new()` became a `const fn`. I tried to use `Once` to avoid the MSRV increase but it doesn't support fallible initialization even in Nightly. `OnceLock` wasn't added until 1.70. On x86_64 Linux, this change removes all libpthreads dependencies: ```diff - pthread_mutex_lock - pthread_mutex_unlock ``` and adds these libstd dependencies: ```diff + std::panicking::panic_count::GLOBAL_PANIC_COUNT + std::panicking::panic_count::is_zero_slow_path + std::sys::sync::mutex::futex::Mutex::lock_contended + std::sys::sync::mutex::futex::Mutex::wake ``` as measured using `cargo asm`. [1] https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/blob/c1dba09f263cbff6170f130aa418e28bdf22bd96/library/std/src/sys/sync/mutex/mod.rs#L4-L10 [2] https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/blob/c1dba09f263cbff6170f130aa418e28bdf22bd96/library/std/src/sys/sync/mutex/mod.rs#L17-L20 [3] rust-random#453 (comment)
pthreads mutexes are not safe to move. While it is very unlikely that the mutex we create will ever be moved, we don't actively do anything to actively prevent it from being moved. (libstd, when it used/uses pthreads mutexes, would box them to prevent them from being moved.) Also, now on Linux and Android (and many other targets for which we don't use use_std), libstd uses futexes instead of pthreads mutexes. Thus using libstd's Mutex will be more efficient and avoid adding an often-otherwise-unnecessary libpthreads dependency on these targets. * Linux, Android: Futex [1]. * Haiku, Redox, NTO, AIX: pthreads [2]. * others: not using `use_file`. This will not affect our plans for *-*-linux-none, since we don't plan to use `use_file` for it. OnceLock This breaks 32-bit x86 QNX Neutrino, which doesn't have libstd because the target itself is abandoned [3]. the other QNX Neutrino targets didn't get libstd support until Rust 1.69, so this effectively raises the MSRV for them to 1.69. Otherwise, the MSRV increases to 1.63 for the above-mentioned targets, as that's when `Mutex::new()` became a `const fn`. I tried to use `Once` to avoid the MSRV increase but it doesn't support fallible initialization even in Nightly. `OnceLock` wasn't added until 1.70. On x86_64 Linux, this change removes all libpthreads dependencies: ```diff - pthread_mutex_lock - pthread_mutex_unlock ``` and adds these libstd dependencies: ```diff + std::panicking::panic_count::GLOBAL_PANIC_COUNT + std::panicking::panic_count::is_zero_slow_path + std::sys::sync::mutex::futex::Mutex::lock_contended + std::sys::sync::mutex::futex::Mutex::wake ``` as measured using `cargo asm`. [1] https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/blob/c1dba09f263cbff6170f130aa418e28bdf22bd96/library/std/src/sys/sync/mutex/mod.rs#L4-L10 [2] https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/blob/c1dba09f263cbff6170f130aa418e28bdf22bd96/library/std/src/sys/sync/mutex/mod.rs#L17-L20 [3] rust-random#453 (comment)
pthreads mutexes are not safe to move. While it is very unlikely that the mutex we create will ever be moved, we don't actively do anything to actively prevent it from being moved. (libstd, when it used/uses pthreads mutexes, would box them to prevent them from being moved.) Also, now on Linux and Android (and many other targets for which we don't use use_std), libstd uses futexes instead of pthreads mutexes. Thus using libstd's Mutex will be more efficient and avoid adding an often-otherwise-unnecessary libpthreads dependency on these targets. * Linux, Android: Futex [1]. * Haiku, Redox, NTO, AIX: pthreads [2]. * others: not using `use_file`. This will not affect our plans for *-*-linux-none, since we don't plan to use `use_file` for it. OnceLock This breaks 32-bit x86 QNX Neutrino, which doesn't have libstd because the target itself is abandoned [3]. the other QNX Neutrino targets didn't get libstd support until Rust 1.69, so this effectively raises the MSRV for them to 1.69. Otherwise, the MSRV increases to 1.63 for the above-mentioned targets, as that's when `Mutex::new()` became a `const fn`. I tried to use `Once` to avoid the MSRV increase but it doesn't support fallible initialization even in Nightly. `OnceLock` wasn't added until 1.70. On x86_64 Linux, this change removes all libpthreads dependencies: ```diff - pthread_mutex_lock - pthread_mutex_unlock ``` and adds these libstd dependencies: ```diff + std::panicking::panic_count::GLOBAL_PANIC_COUNT + std::panicking::panic_count::is_zero_slow_path + std::sys::sync::mutex::futex::Mutex::lock_contended + std::sys::sync::mutex::futex::Mutex::wake ``` as measured using `cargo asm`. [1] https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/blob/c1dba09f263cbff6170f130aa418e28bdf22bd96/library/std/src/sys/sync/mutex/mod.rs#L4-L10 [2] https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/blob/c1dba09f263cbff6170f130aa418e28bdf22bd96/library/std/src/sys/sync/mutex/mod.rs#L17-L20 [3] rust-random#453 (comment)
pthreads mutexes are not safe to move. While it is very unlikely that the mutex we create will ever be moved, we don't actively do anything to actively prevent it from being moved. (libstd, when it used/uses pthreads mutexes, would box them to prevent them from being moved.) Also, now on Linux and Android (and many other targets for which we don't use use_std), libstd uses futexes instead of pthreads mutexes. Thus using libstd's Mutex will be more efficient and avoid adding an often-otherwise-unnecessary libpthreads dependency on these targets. * Linux, Android: Futex [1]. * Haiku, Redox, NTO, AIX: pthreads [2]. * others: not using `use_file`. This will not affect our plans for *-*-linux-none, since we don't plan to use `use_file` for it. OnceLock This breaks 32-bit x86 QNX Neutrino, which doesn't have libstd because the target itself is abandoned [3]. the other QNX Neutrino targets didn't get libstd support until Rust 1.69, so this effectively raises the MSRV for them to 1.69. Otherwise, the MSRV increases to 1.63 for the above-mentioned targets, as that's when `Mutex::new()` became a `const fn`. I tried to use `Once` to avoid the MSRV increase but it doesn't support fallible initialization even in Nightly. `OnceLock` wasn't added until 1.70. On x86_64 Linux, this change removes all libpthreads dependencies: ```diff - pthread_mutex_lock - pthread_mutex_unlock ``` and adds these libstd dependencies: ```diff + std::panicking::panic_count::GLOBAL_PANIC_COUNT + std::panicking::panic_count::is_zero_slow_path + std::sys::sync::mutex::futex::Mutex::lock_contended + std::sys::sync::mutex::futex::Mutex::wake ``` as measured using `cargo asm`. [1] https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/blob/c1dba09f263cbff6170f130aa418e28bdf22bd96/library/std/src/sys/sync/mutex/mod.rs#L4-L10 [2] https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/blob/c1dba09f263cbff6170f130aa418e28bdf22bd96/library/std/src/sys/sync/mutex/mod.rs#L17-L20 [3] rust-random#453 (comment)
pthreads mutexes are not safe to move. While it is very unlikely that the mutex we create will ever be moved, we don't actively do anything to actively prevent it from being moved. (libstd, when it used/uses pthreads mutexes, would box them to prevent them from being moved.) Also, now on Linux and Android (and many other targets for which we don't use use_std), libstd uses futexes instead of pthreads mutexes. Thus using libstd's Mutex will be more efficient and avoid adding an often-otherwise-unnecessary libpthreads dependency on these targets. * Linux, Android: Futex [1]. * Haiku, Redox, NTO, AIX: pthreads [2]. * others: not using `use_file`. This will not affect our plans for *-*-linux-none, since we don't plan to use `use_file` for it. OnceLock This breaks 32-bit x86 QNX Neutrino, which doesn't have libstd because the target itself is abandoned [3]. the other QNX Neutrino targets didn't get libstd support until Rust 1.69, so this effectively raises the MSRV for them to 1.69. Otherwise, the MSRV increases to 1.63 for the above-mentioned targets, as that's when `Mutex::new()` became a `const fn`. I tried to use `Once` to avoid the MSRV increase but it doesn't support fallible initialization even in Nightly. `OnceLock` wasn't added until 1.70. On x86_64 Linux, this change removes all libpthreads dependencies: ```diff - pthread_mutex_lock - pthread_mutex_unlock ``` and adds these libstd dependencies: ```diff + std::panicking::panic_count::GLOBAL_PANIC_COUNT + std::panicking::panic_count::is_zero_slow_path + std::sys::sync::mutex::futex::Mutex::lock_contended + std::sys::sync::mutex::futex::Mutex::wake ``` as measured using `cargo asm`. [1] https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/blob/c1dba09f263cbff6170f130aa418e28bdf22bd96/library/std/src/sys/sync/mutex/mod.rs#L4-L10 [2] https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/blob/c1dba09f263cbff6170f130aa418e28bdf22bd96/library/std/src/sys/sync/mutex/mod.rs#L17-L20 [3] rust-random#453 (comment)
On second thought, I agree about libpthread mutex being problematic, but what are advantages of using |
pthreads mutexes are not safe to move. While it is very unlikely that the mutex we create will ever be moved, we don't actively do anything to actively prevent it from being moved. (libstd, when it used/uses pthreads mutexes, would box them to prevent them from being moved.) Also, now on Linux and Android (and many other targets for which we don't use use_std), libstd uses futexes instead of pthreads mutexes. Thus using libstd's Mutex will be more efficient and avoid adding an often-otherwise-unnecessary libpthreads dependency on these targets. * Linux, Android: Futex [1]. * Haiku, Redox, NTO, AIX: pthreads [2]. * others: not using `use_file`. This will not affect our plans for *-*-linux-none, since we don't plan to use `use_file` for it. OnceLock This breaks 32-bit x86 QNX Neutrino, which doesn't have libstd because the target itself is abandoned [3]. the other QNX Neutrino targets didn't get libstd support until Rust 1.69, so this effectively raises the MSRV for them to 1.69. Otherwise, the MSRV increases to 1.63 for the above-mentioned targets, as that's when `Mutex::new()` became a `const fn`. I tried to use `Once` to avoid the MSRV increase but it doesn't support fallible initialization even in Nightly. `OnceLock` wasn't added until 1.70. On x86_64 Linux, this change removes all libpthreads dependencies: ```diff - pthread_mutex_lock - pthread_mutex_unlock ``` and adds these libstd dependencies: ```diff + std::panicking::panic_count::GLOBAL_PANIC_COUNT + std::panicking::panic_count::is_zero_slow_path + std::sys::sync::mutex::futex::Mutex::lock_contended + std::sys::sync::mutex::futex::Mutex::wake ``` as measured using `cargo asm`. [1] https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/blob/c1dba09f263cbff6170f130aa418e28bdf22bd96/library/std/src/sys/sync/mutex/mod.rs#L4-L10 [2] https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/blob/c1dba09f263cbff6170f130aa418e28bdf22bd96/library/std/src/sys/sync/mutex/mod.rs#L17-L20 [3] rust-random#453 (comment)
pthreads mutexes are not safe to move. While it is very unlikely that the mutex we create will ever be moved, we don't actively do anything to actively prevent it from being moved. (libstd, when it used/uses pthreads mutexes, would box them to prevent them from being moved.) Also, now on Linux and Android (and many other targets for which we don't use use_std), libstd uses futexes instead of pthreads mutexes. Thus using libstd's Mutex will be more efficient and avoid adding an often-otherwise-unnecessary libpthreads dependency on these targets. * Linux, Android: Futex [1]. * Haiku, Redox, NTO, AIX: pthreads [2]. * others: not using `use_file`. This will not affect our plans for *-*-linux-none, since we don't plan to use `use_file` for it. OnceLock This breaks 32-bit x86 QNX Neutrino, which doesn't have libstd because the target itself is abandoned [3]. the other QNX Neutrino targets didn't get libstd support until Rust 1.69, so this effectively raises the MSRV for them to 1.69. Otherwise, the MSRV increases to 1.63 for the above-mentioned targets, as that's when `Mutex::new()` became a `const fn`. I tried to use `Once` to avoid the MSRV increase but it doesn't support fallible initialization even in Nightly. `OnceLock` wasn't added until 1.70. On x86_64 Linux, this change removes all libpthreads dependencies: ```diff - pthread_mutex_lock - pthread_mutex_unlock ``` and adds these libstd dependencies: ```diff + std::panicking::panic_count::GLOBAL_PANIC_COUNT + std::panicking::panic_count::is_zero_slow_path + std::sys::sync::mutex::futex::Mutex::lock_contended + std::sys::sync::mutex::futex::Mutex::wake ``` as measured using `cargo asm`. [1] https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/blob/c1dba09f263cbff6170f130aa418e28bdf22bd96/library/std/src/sys/sync/mutex/mod.rs#L4-L10 [2] https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/blob/c1dba09f263cbff6170f130aa418e28bdf22bd96/library/std/src/sys/sync/mutex/mod.rs#L17-L20 [3] rust-random#453 (comment)
pthreads mutexes are not safe to move. While it is very unlikely that the mutex we create will ever be moved, we don't actively do anything to actively prevent it from being moved. (libstd, when it used/uses pthreads mutexes, would box them to prevent them from being moved.) Also, now on Linux and Android (and many other targets for which we don't use use_std), libstd uses futexes instead of pthreads mutexes. Thus using libstd's Mutex will be more efficient and avoid adding an often-otherwise-unnecessary libpthreads dependency on these targets. * Linux, Android: Futex [1]. * Haiku, Redox, NTO, AIX: pthreads [2]. * others: not using `use_file`. This will not affect our plans for *-*-linux-none, since we don't plan to use `use_file` for it. OnceLock This breaks 32-bit x86 QNX Neutrino, which doesn't have libstd because the target itself is abandoned [3]. the other QNX Neutrino targets didn't get libstd support until Rust 1.69, so this effectively raises the MSRV for them to 1.69. Otherwise, the MSRV increases to 1.63 for the above-mentioned targets, as that's when `Mutex::new()` became a `const fn`. I tried to use `Once` to avoid the MSRV increase but it doesn't support fallible initialization even in Nightly. `OnceLock` wasn't added until 1.70. On x86_64 Linux, this change removes all libpthreads dependencies: ```diff - pthread_mutex_lock - pthread_mutex_unlock ``` and adds these libstd dependencies: ```diff + std::panicking::panic_count::GLOBAL_PANIC_COUNT + std::panicking::panic_count::is_zero_slow_path + std::sys::sync::mutex::futex::Mutex::lock_contended + std::sys::sync::mutex::futex::Mutex::wake ``` as measured using `cargo asm`. [1] https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/blob/c1dba09f263cbff6170f130aa418e28bdf22bd96/library/std/src/sys/sync/mutex/mod.rs#L4-L10 [2] https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/blob/c1dba09f263cbff6170f130aa418e28bdf22bd96/library/std/src/sys/sync/mutex/mod.rs#L17-L20 [3] rust-random#453 (comment)
pthreads mutexes are not safe to move. While it is very unlikely that the mutex we create will ever be moved, we don't actively do anything to actively prevent it from being moved. (libstd, when it used/uses pthreads mutexes, would box them to prevent them from being moved.) Also, now on Linux and Android (and many other targets for which we don't use use_std), libstd uses futexes instead of pthreads mutexes. Thus using libstd's Mutex will be more efficient and avoid adding an often-otherwise-unnecessary libpthreads dependency on these targets. * Linux, Android: Futex [1]. * Haiku, Redox, NTO, AIX: pthreads [2]. * others: not using `use_file`. This will not affect our plans for *-*-linux-none, since we don't plan to use `use_file` for it. OnceLock This breaks 32-bit x86 QNX Neutrino, which doesn't have libstd because the target itself is abandoned [3]. the other QNX Neutrino targets didn't get libstd support until Rust 1.69, so this effectively raises the MSRV for them to 1.69. Otherwise, the MSRV increases to 1.63 for the above-mentioned targets, as that's when `Mutex::new()` became a `const fn`. I tried to use `Once` to avoid the MSRV increase but it doesn't support fallible initialization even in Nightly. `OnceLock` wasn't added until 1.70. On x86_64 Linux, this change removes all libpthreads dependencies: ```diff - pthread_mutex_lock - pthread_mutex_unlock ``` and adds these libstd dependencies: ```diff + std::panicking::panic_count::GLOBAL_PANIC_COUNT + std::panicking::panic_count::is_zero_slow_path + std::sys::sync::mutex::futex::Mutex::lock_contended + std::sys::sync::mutex::futex::Mutex::wake ``` as measured using `cargo asm`. [1] https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/blob/c1dba09f263cbff6170f130aa418e28bdf22bd96/library/std/src/sys/sync/mutex/mod.rs#L4-L10 [2] https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/blob/c1dba09f263cbff6170f130aa418e28bdf22bd96/library/std/src/sys/sync/mutex/mod.rs#L17-L20 [3] rust-random#453 (comment)
pthreads mutexes are not safe to move. While it is very unlikely that the mutex we create will ever be moved, we don't actively do anything to actively prevent it from being moved. (libstd, when it used/uses pthreads mutexes, would box them to prevent them from being moved.) Also, now on Linux and Android (and many other targets for which we don't use use_std), libstd uses futexes instead of pthreads mutexes. Thus using libstd's Mutex will be more efficient and avoid adding an often-otherwise-unnecessary libpthreads dependency on these targets. * Linux, Android: Futex [1]. * Haiku, Redox, NTO, AIX: pthreads [2]. * others: not using `use_file`. This will not affect our plans for *-*-linux-none, since we don't plan to use `use_file` for it. This breaks 32-bit x86 QNX Neutrino, which doesn't have libstd because the target itself is abandoned [3]. the other QNX Neutrino targets didn't get libstd support until Rust 1.69, so this effectively raises the MSRV for them to 1.69. I tried to use `Once` to avoid the MSRV increase but it doesn't support fallible initialization. `OnceLock` wasn't added until 1.70 but even then, `OnceLock::get_or_try_init` is still unstable. On x86_64 Linux, this change removes all libpthreads dependencies: ```diff - pthread_mutex_lock - pthread_mutex_unlock ``` and adds these libstd dependencies: ```diff + std::panicking::panic_count::GLOBAL_PANIC_COUNT + std::panicking::panic_count::is_zero_slow_path + std::sys::sync::mutex::futex::Mutex::lock_contended + std::sys::sync::mutex::futex::Mutex::wake ``` as measured using `cargo asm`. [1] https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/blob/c1dba09f263cbff6170f130aa418e28bdf22bd96/library/std/src/sys/sync/mutex/mod.rs#L4-L10 [2] https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/blob/c1dba09f263cbff6170f130aa418e28bdf22bd96/library/std/src/sys/sync/mutex/mod.rs#L17-L20 [3] rust-random#453 (comment)
Except for some efficient tweaks, pretty much all of the recent changes I've submitted are part of a bigger project that consists of reducing the use of The advantage will be bigger once the the Rust I've submitted PR #481 to make progress towards this. |
OK, so to summarize this: There are two main improvements that are available in libstd over the current code:
PR #485 shows how things would look when libstd's unstable features are stablized. Note that we'd still need OnceBool/LazyBool even still. |
As I wrote in the other PR, I think we can use I am also not sure about |
I agree that that is unfortunate but also I think many of us need to review it anyway for other projects so duplicating it in getrandom is extra work for a lot of people.
It's not the end of the world, but IMO this isn't a great place to be making new synchronization primitives.
I do think that this isn't a good place to put a futex-based mutex implementation either.... |
After looking through some of the proposed ideas:
I don't think we really need an external dependency our a custom futex implementation for this crate; we can simplify the code (and remove the libpthread dependency) without either of these things. I think we should take one of two approaches:
Looking at this, I would prefer the first approach of using |
I'm not sure why the "use I do think the promise that we at open at most N file descriptors where N is very small (1 or 2) should not be discounted. The LazyFd idea is clever but it's still unbounded in the number of file descriptors it opens concurrently as N threads could each open one. I do think the |
Personally, I don't think that our synchronization needs are tricky enough to warrant introduction of a new 2.2 kLoC dependency for tier-1 Linux targets. Even worse, this dependency will be present even with disabled file fallback.
What do you think about the sleep loop approach on non-Linux targets? AFAIK contention on the |
I would prefer to use once_cell if (and only if) we can replace all our synchronization needs with it. I wouldn't want someone doing a security review of this crate to have to read synchronization code in two different places. I initially thought rust-lang/cargo#1197 would prevent us from using the I'll try to prototype what it would look like to actually use
If we end up going with a "no locking" approach, I would be fine implementing something like
Given that the race is very unlikely (I haven't been able to even make it happen once in my testing), any reasonable approach seems fine. |
NetBSD weak symbol support needs at least a new |
The pthreads dependency is removed and Concrete proposals for improving the current code (e.g. whether it's worth to use |
I propose that on all targets where we know libstd is available, we use libstd instead of pthreads and libc for the
use_file
implementation, effectively reverting to the original implementation.The current proposal for x86_64-unknown-linux-none in #424 is to limit support for that target to Linux kernel versions that have the
getrandom
syscall, so it won't useuse_file
.Historically, we've tried to make it so
getrandom
avoids using libstd in part so that libstd itself could usegetrandom
as a dependency. However, I think it is clear that libstd is not going to use this crate as its needs are almost completely different; indeed its code has diverged considerably.Another reason we've avoided libstd is to ensure that we are
#[no_std]
compatible. However, once we add x86_64-unknown-linux-none support, we'll have an actual no-std target that we can build (at least) for to ensure the core parts of this crate remainno_std
compatible.use_file
is a significant chunk of the unsafe code, with the most problematic dependencies (libpthreads). It duplicates functionality that's in libstd, and the functionality it duplicates is exactly the kind of functionality (threading primitives) that we should avoid duplicating, as we're not getting any benefit from the QA and improvements in libstd.Of all the targets that use the
use_file
implementation, only one doesn't have libstd support: 32-bit x86 QNX Neutrino. I believe @samkearney is working on it, based on their comment in rust-lang/rust#109173 (comment).The text was updated successfully, but these errors were encountered: