Commit graph

347 commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Ivan Nejgebauer
0314d179aa Use hints with getaddrinfo() in std::net::lokup_host()
When resolving a hostname, pass a hints struct where ai_socktype is
set to SOCK_STREAM in order to eliminate repeated results for each
protocol family.
2016-07-07 12:03:31 +02:00
Tobias Bucher
a03a82e5e0 Convert a simple tail call to a loop 2016-06-29 11:39:56 +02:00
Tobias Bucher
d6237cefcb Ignore unknown address types when looking up hosts
Previously, any function using a `ToSocketAddrs` input would fail if
passed a hostname that resolves to an address type different from the
ones recognized by Rust.

This also changes the `LookupHost` iterator to only include the known
address types, as a result, it doesn't have to return `Result`s any
more, which are likely misinterpreted as failed name lookups.
2016-06-29 11:39:56 +02:00
Tobias Bucher
8ff5c4394c Use len instead of size_hint where appropiate
This makes it clearer that we're not just looking for a lower bound but
rather know that the iterator is an `ExactSizeIterator`.
2016-06-23 12:26:15 +02:00
Ariel Ben-Yehuda
f0174fcbee use the slice_pat hack in libstd too 2016-06-09 00:38:38 +03:00
Ariel Ben-Yehuda
8ac3b46cac address review comments 2016-06-09 00:38:38 +03:00
Ariel Ben-Yehuda
5c717a6fc2 implement RFC495 semantics for slice patterns
non-MIR translation is still not supported for these and will happily ICE.

This is a [breaking-change] for many uses of slice_patterns.
2016-06-09 00:38:38 +03:00
bors
9552bcdd92 Auto merge of #33861 - Amanieu:lock_elision_fix, r=alexcrichton
Make sure Mutex and RwLock can't be re-locked on the same thread

Fixes #33770

r? @alexcrichton
2016-06-03 04:09:31 -07:00
Amanieu d'Antras
d73f5e65ec Fix undefined behavior when re-locking a mutex from the same thread
The only applies to pthread mutexes. We solve this by creating the
mutex with the PTHREAD_MUTEX_NORMAL type, which guarantees that
re-locking from the same thread will deadlock.
2016-06-02 13:31:01 +01:00
bors
12d16599d8 Auto merge of #33814 - lambda:rtabort-use-platform-abort, r=alexcrichton
Open code the __fastfail intrinsic for rtabort! on windows

As described https://msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/dn774154.aspx

This is a Windows 8+ mechanism for terminating the process quickly,
which degrades to either an access violation or bugcheck in older versions.

I'm not sure this is better the the current mechanism of terminating
with an illegal instruction, but we recently converted unix to
terminate more correctly with SIGABORT, and this *seems* more correct
for windows.

[breaking-change]
2016-06-01 10:21:55 -07:00
bors
d5759a3417 Auto merge of #33699 - alexcrichton:stabilize-1.10, r=aturon
std: Stabilize APIs for the 1.10 release

This commit applies the FCP decisions made by the libs team for the 1.10 cycle,
including both new stabilizations and deprecations. Specifically, the list of
APIs is:

Stabilized:

* `os::windows::fs::OpenOptionsExt::access_mode`
* `os::windows::fs::OpenOptionsExt::share_mode`
* `os::windows::fs::OpenOptionsExt::custom_flags`
* `os::windows::fs::OpenOptionsExt::attributes`
* `os::windows::fs::OpenOptionsExt::security_qos_flags`
* `os::unix::fs::OpenOptionsExt::custom_flags`
* `sync::Weak::new`
* `Default for sync::Weak`
* `panic::set_hook`
* `panic::take_hook`
* `panic::PanicInfo`
* `panic::PanicInfo::payload`
* `panic::PanicInfo::location`
* `panic::Location`
* `panic::Location::file`
* `panic::Location::line`
* `ffi::CStr::from_bytes_with_nul`
* `ffi::CStr::from_bytes_with_nul_unchecked`
* `ffi::FromBytesWithNulError`
* `fs::Metadata::modified`
* `fs::Metadata::accessed`
* `fs::Metadata::created`
* `sync::atomic::Atomic{Usize,Isize,Bool,Ptr}::compare_exchange`
* `sync::atomic::Atomic{Usize,Isize,Bool,Ptr}::compare_exchange_weak`
* `collections::{btree,hash}_map::{Occupied,Vacant,}Entry::key`
* `os::unix::net::{UnixStream, UnixListener, UnixDatagram, SocketAddr}`
* `SocketAddr::is_unnamed`
* `SocketAddr::as_pathname`
* `UnixStream::connect`
* `UnixStream::pair`
* `UnixStream::try_clone`
* `UnixStream::local_addr`
* `UnixStream::peer_addr`
* `UnixStream::set_read_timeout`
* `UnixStream::set_write_timeout`
* `UnixStream::read_timeout`
* `UnixStream::write_Timeout`
* `UnixStream::set_nonblocking`
* `UnixStream::take_error`
* `UnixStream::shutdown`
* Read/Write/RawFd impls for `UnixStream`
* `UnixListener::bind`
* `UnixListener::accept`
* `UnixListener::try_clone`
* `UnixListener::local_addr`
* `UnixListener::set_nonblocking`
* `UnixListener::take_error`
* `UnixListener::incoming`
* RawFd impls for `UnixListener`
* `UnixDatagram::bind`
* `UnixDatagram::unbound`
* `UnixDatagram::pair`
* `UnixDatagram::connect`
* `UnixDatagram::try_clone`
* `UnixDatagram::local_addr`
* `UnixDatagram::peer_addr`
* `UnixDatagram::recv_from`
* `UnixDatagram::recv`
* `UnixDatagram::send_to`
* `UnixDatagram::send`
* `UnixDatagram::set_read_timeout`
* `UnixDatagram::set_write_timeout`
* `UnixDatagram::read_timeout`
* `UnixDatagram::write_timeout`
* `UnixDatagram::set_nonblocking`
* `UnixDatagram::take_error`
* `UnixDatagram::shutdown`
* RawFd impls for `UnixDatagram`
* `{BTree,Hash}Map::values_mut`
* `<[_]>::binary_search_by_key`

Deprecated:

* `StaticCondvar` - this, and all other static synchronization primitives
                    below, are usable today through the lazy-static crate on
                    stable Rust today. Additionally, we'd like the non-static
                    versions to be directly usable in a static context one day,
                    so they're unlikely to be the final forms of the APIs in any
                    case.
* `CONDVAR_INIT`
* `StaticMutex`
* `MUTEX_INIT`
* `StaticRwLock`
* `RWLOCK_INIT`
* `iter::Peekable::is_empty`

Closes #27717
Closes #27720
Closes #30014
Closes #30425
Closes #30449
Closes #31190
Closes #31399
Closes #31767
Closes #32111
Closes #32281
Closes #32312
Closes #32551
Closes #33018
2016-05-25 20:36:09 -07:00
Alex Crichton
cae91d7c8c std: Stabilize APIs for the 1.10 release
This commit applies the FCP decisions made by the libs team for the 1.10 cycle,
including both new stabilizations and deprecations. Specifically, the list of
APIs is:

Stabilized:

* `os::windows::fs::OpenOptionsExt::access_mode`
* `os::windows::fs::OpenOptionsExt::share_mode`
* `os::windows::fs::OpenOptionsExt::custom_flags`
* `os::windows::fs::OpenOptionsExt::attributes`
* `os::windows::fs::OpenOptionsExt::security_qos_flags`
* `os::unix::fs::OpenOptionsExt::custom_flags`
* `sync::Weak::new`
* `Default for sync::Weak`
* `panic::set_hook`
* `panic::take_hook`
* `panic::PanicInfo`
* `panic::PanicInfo::payload`
* `panic::PanicInfo::location`
* `panic::Location`
* `panic::Location::file`
* `panic::Location::line`
* `ffi::CStr::from_bytes_with_nul`
* `ffi::CStr::from_bytes_with_nul_unchecked`
* `ffi::FromBytesWithNulError`
* `fs::Metadata::modified`
* `fs::Metadata::accessed`
* `fs::Metadata::created`
* `sync::atomic::Atomic{Usize,Isize,Bool,Ptr}::compare_exchange`
* `sync::atomic::Atomic{Usize,Isize,Bool,Ptr}::compare_exchange_weak`
* `collections::{btree,hash}_map::{Occupied,Vacant,}Entry::key`
* `os::unix::net::{UnixStream, UnixListener, UnixDatagram, SocketAddr}`
* `SocketAddr::is_unnamed`
* `SocketAddr::as_pathname`
* `UnixStream::connect`
* `UnixStream::pair`
* `UnixStream::try_clone`
* `UnixStream::local_addr`
* `UnixStream::peer_addr`
* `UnixStream::set_read_timeout`
* `UnixStream::set_write_timeout`
* `UnixStream::read_timeout`
* `UnixStream::write_Timeout`
* `UnixStream::set_nonblocking`
* `UnixStream::take_error`
* `UnixStream::shutdown`
* Read/Write/RawFd impls for `UnixStream`
* `UnixListener::bind`
* `UnixListener::accept`
* `UnixListener::try_clone`
* `UnixListener::local_addr`
* `UnixListener::set_nonblocking`
* `UnixListener::take_error`
* `UnixListener::incoming`
* RawFd impls for `UnixListener`
* `UnixDatagram::bind`
* `UnixDatagram::unbound`
* `UnixDatagram::pair`
* `UnixDatagram::connect`
* `UnixDatagram::try_clone`
* `UnixDatagram::local_addr`
* `UnixDatagram::peer_addr`
* `UnixDatagram::recv_from`
* `UnixDatagram::recv`
* `UnixDatagram::send_to`
* `UnixDatagram::send`
* `UnixDatagram::set_read_timeout`
* `UnixDatagram::set_write_timeout`
* `UnixDatagram::read_timeout`
* `UnixDatagram::write_timeout`
* `UnixDatagram::set_nonblocking`
* `UnixDatagram::take_error`
* `UnixDatagram::shutdown`
* RawFd impls for `UnixDatagram`
* `{BTree,Hash}Map::values_mut`
* `<[_]>::binary_search_by_key`

Deprecated:

* `StaticCondvar` - this, and all other static synchronization primitives
                    below, are usable today through the lazy-static crate on
                    stable Rust today. Additionally, we'd like the non-static
                    versions to be directly usable in a static context one day,
                    so they're unlikely to be the final forms of the APIs in any
                    case.
* `CONDVAR_INIT`
* `StaticMutex`
* `MUTEX_INIT`
* `StaticRwLock`
* `RWLOCK_INIT`
* `iter::Peekable::is_empty`

Closes #27717
Closes #27720
cc #27784 (but encode methods still exist)
Closes #30014
Closes #30425
Closes #30449
Closes #31190
Closes #31399
Closes #31767
Closes #32111
Closes #32281
Closes #32312
Closes #32551
Closes #33018
2016-05-24 09:00:39 -07:00
Brian Anderson
696a570a00 Open code the __fastfail intrinsic for rtabort! on windows
As described https://msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/dn774154.aspx

This is a Windows 8+ mechanism for terminating the process quickly,
which degrades to either an access violation or bugcheck in older versions.

I'm not sure this is better the the current mechanism of terminating
with an illegal instruction, but we recently converted unix to
terminate more correctly with SIGABORT, and this *seems* more correct
for windows.

[breaking-change]
2016-05-24 08:56:03 -04:00
bors
6e45564095 Auto merge of #31457 - lambda:rtabort-use-libc-abort, r=alexcrichton
Use libc::abort, not intrinsics::abort, in rtabort!

intrinsics::abort compiles down to an illegal instruction, which on
Unix-like platforms causes the process to be killed with SIGILL.  A more
appropriate way to kill the process would be SIGABRT; this indicates
better that the runtime has explicitly aborted, rather than some kind of
compiler bug or architecture mismatch that SIGILL might indicate.

For rtassert!, replace this with libc::abort.  libc::abort raises
SIGABRT, but is defined to do so in such a way that it will terminate
the process even if SIGABRT is currently masked or caught by a signal
handler that returns.

On non-Unix platforms, retain the existing behavior.  On Windows we
prefer to avoid depending on the C runtime, and we need a fallback for
any other platforms that may be defined.  An alternative on Windows
would be to call TerminateProcess, but this seems less essential than
switching to using SIGABRT on Unix-like platforms, where it is common
for the process-killing signal to be printed out or logged.

This is a [breaking-change] for any code that depends on the exact
signal raised to abort a process via rtabort!

cc #31273
cc #31333
2016-05-22 23:14:11 -07:00
Brian Campbell
cfc3865832 Use libc::abort, not intrinsics::abort, in rtabort!
intrinsics::abort compiles down to an illegal instruction, which on
Unix-like platforms causes the process to be killed with SIGILL.  A more
appropriate way to kill the process would be SIGABRT; this indicates
better that the runtime has explicitly aborted, rather than some kind of
compiler bug or architecture mismatch that SIGILL might indicate.

For rtassert!, replace this with libc::abort.  libc::abort raises
SIGABRT, but is defined to do so in such a way that it will terminate
the process even if SIGABRT is currently masked or caught by a signal
handler that returns.

On non-Unix platforms, retain the existing behavior.  On Windows we
prefer to avoid depending on the C runtime, and we need a fallback for
any other platforms that may be defined.  An alternative on Windows
would be to call TerminateProcess, but this seems less essential than
switching to using SIGABRT on Unix-like platforms, where it is common
for the process-killing signal to be printed out or logged.

This is a [breaking-change] for any code that depends on the exact
signal raised to abort a process via rtabort!

cc #31273
cc #31333
2016-05-23 00:22:41 -04:00
Steven Fackler
9393e52d4d Don't use env::current_exe with libbacktrace
If the path we give to libbacktrace doesn't actually correspond to the
current process, libbacktrace will segfault *at best*.

cc #21889
2016-05-12 09:13:58 -07:00
Alex Crichton
0ec321f7b5 rustc: Implement custom panic runtimes
This commit is an implementation of [RFC 1513] which allows applications to
alter the behavior of panics at compile time. A new compiler flag, `-C panic`,
is added and accepts the values `unwind` or `panic`, with the default being
`unwind`. This model affects how code is generated for the local crate, skipping
generation of landing pads with `-C panic=abort`.

[RFC 1513]: https://github.com/rust-lang/rfcs/blob/master/text/1513-less-unwinding.md

Panic implementations are then provided by crates tagged with
`#![panic_runtime]` and lazily required by crates with
`#![needs_panic_runtime]`. The panic strategy (`-C panic` value) of the panic
runtime must match the final product, and if the panic strategy is not `abort`
then the entire DAG must have the same panic strategy.

With the `-C panic=abort` strategy, users can expect a stable method to disable
generation of landing pads, improving optimization in niche scenarios,
decreasing compile time, and decreasing output binary size. With the `-C
panic=unwind` strategy users can expect the existing ability to isolate failure
in Rust code from the outside world.

Organizationally, this commit dismantles the `sys_common::unwind` module in
favor of some bits moving part of it to `libpanic_unwind` and the rest into the
`panicking` module in libstd. The custom panic runtime support is pretty similar
to the custom allocator support with the only major difference being how the
panic runtime is injected (takes the `-C panic` flag into account).
2016-05-09 08:22:36 -07:00
Steven Fackler
c6480e8b6b Remove IPV6_V6ONLY functionality
These settings can only be adjusted before bind time, which doesn't make
sense in the current set of functionality. These methods are stable, but
haven't hit a stable release yet.

Closes #33052

[breaking-change]
2016-04-20 21:42:19 -07:00
Alex Crichton
552eda70d3 std: Stabilize APIs for the 1.9 release
This commit applies all stabilizations, renamings, and deprecations that the
library team has decided on for the upcoming 1.9 release. All tracking issues
have gone through a cycle-long "final comment period" and the specific APIs
stabilized/deprecated are:

Stable

* `std::panic`
* `std::panic::catch_unwind` (renamed from `recover`)
* `std::panic::resume_unwind` (renamed from `propagate`)
* `std::panic::AssertUnwindSafe` (renamed from `AssertRecoverSafe`)
* `std::panic::UnwindSafe` (renamed from `RecoverSafe`)
* `str::is_char_boundary`
* `<*const T>::as_ref`
* `<*mut T>::as_ref`
* `<*mut T>::as_mut`
* `AsciiExt::make_ascii_uppercase`
* `AsciiExt::make_ascii_lowercase`
* `char::decode_utf16`
* `char::DecodeUtf16`
* `char::DecodeUtf16Error`
* `char::DecodeUtf16Error::unpaired_surrogate`
* `BTreeSet::take`
* `BTreeSet::replace`
* `BTreeSet::get`
* `HashSet::take`
* `HashSet::replace`
* `HashSet::get`
* `OsString::with_capacity`
* `OsString::clear`
* `OsString::capacity`
* `OsString::reserve`
* `OsString::reserve_exact`
* `OsStr::is_empty`
* `OsStr::len`
* `std::os::unix::thread`
* `RawPthread`
* `JoinHandleExt`
* `JoinHandleExt::as_pthread_t`
* `JoinHandleExt::into_pthread_t`
* `HashSet::hasher`
* `HashMap::hasher`
* `CommandExt::exec`
* `File::try_clone`
* `SocketAddr::set_ip`
* `SocketAddr::set_port`
* `SocketAddrV4::set_ip`
* `SocketAddrV4::set_port`
* `SocketAddrV6::set_ip`
* `SocketAddrV6::set_port`
* `SocketAddrV6::set_flowinfo`
* `SocketAddrV6::set_scope_id`
* `<[T]>::copy_from_slice`
* `ptr::read_volatile`
* `ptr::write_volatile`
* The `#[deprecated]` attribute
* `OpenOptions::create_new`

Deprecated

* `std::raw::Slice` - use raw parts of `slice` module instead
* `std::raw::Repr` - use raw parts of `slice` module instead
* `str::char_range_at` - use slicing plus `chars()` plus `len_utf8`
* `str::char_range_at_reverse` - use slicing plus `chars().rev()` plus `len_utf8`
* `str::char_at` - use slicing plus `chars()`
* `str::char_at_reverse` - use slicing plus `chars().rev()`
* `str::slice_shift_char` - use `chars()` plus `Chars::as_str`
* `CommandExt::session_leader` - use `before_exec` instead.

Closes #27719
cc #27751 (deprecating the `Slice` bits)
Closes #27754
Closes #27780
Closes #27809
Closes #27811
Closes #27830
Closes #28050
Closes #29453
Closes #29791
Closes #29935
Closes #30014
Closes #30752
Closes #31262
cc #31398 (still need to deal with `before_exec`)
Closes #31405
Closes #31572
Closes #31755
Closes #31756
2016-04-11 08:57:53 -07:00
Timon Van Overveldt
6e41885bd8 Fix backtraces on ARM EHABI.
Before this patch, our rust_eh_personality_catch routine would cut
backtracing short at the __rust_try function, due to it not handling
the _US_FORCE_UNWIND bit properly, which is passed by libunwind
implementations on ARM EHABI.

Examples of where the _US_FORCE_UNWIND bit is passed to the PR:
- GCC's libunwind: f1717362de/libgcc/unwind-arm-common.inc (L590)
- LLVM's libunwind: 61278584b5/src/UnwindLevel1-gcc-ext.c (L153)
2016-04-04 21:15:37 -07:00
Emanuel Czirai
e1d2eda7f3 allow RUST_BACKTRACE=0 to act as if unset
/# This is a combination of 16 commits.
/# The first commit's message is:
allow RUST_BACKTRACE=disabled to act as if unset

When RUST_BACKTRACE is set to "disabled" then this acts as if the env.
var is unset.

/# This is the 2nd commit message:

case insensitive "DiSaBLeD" RUST_BACKTRACE value

previously it expected a lowercase "disabled" to treat the env. var as
unset

/# This is the 3rd commit message:

RUST_BACKTRACE=0 acts as if unset

previously RUST_BACKTRACE=disabled was doing the same thing

/# This is the 4th commit message:

RUST_BACKTRACE=0|n|no|off acts as if unset

previously only RUST_BACKTRACE=0 acted as if RUST_BACKTRACE was unset
Now added more options (case-insensitive): 'n','no' and 'off'
eg. RUST_BACKTRACE=oFF

/# This is the 5th commit message:

DRY on the value of 2

DRY=don't repeat yourself
Because having to remember to keep the two places of '2' in sync is not
ideal, even though this is a simple enough case.

/# This is the 6th commit message:

Revert "DRY on the value of 2"

This reverts commit 95a0479d5cf72a2b2d9d21ec0bed2823ed213fef.

Nevermind this DRY on 2, because we already have a RY on 1,
besides the code is less readable this way...

/# This is the 7th commit message:

attempt to document unsetting RUST_BACKTRACE

/# This is the 8th commit message:

curb allocations when checking for RUST_BACKTRACE

this means we don't check for case-insensitivity anymore

/# This is the 9th commit message:

as decided, RUST_BACKTRACE=0 turns off backtrace

/# This is the 10th commit message:

RUST_TEST_NOCAPTURE=0 acts as if unset

(that is, capture is on)

Any other value acts as if nocapture is enabled (that is, capture is off)

/# This is the 11th commit message:

update other RUST_TEST_NOCAPTURE occurrences

apparently only one place needs updating

/# This is the 12th commit message:

update RUST_BACKTRACE in man page

/# This is the 13th commit message:

handle an occurrence of RUST_BACKTRACE

/# This is the 14th commit message:

ensure consistency with new rules for backtrace

/# This is the 15th commit message:

a more concise comment for RUST_TEST_NOCAPTURE

/# This is the 16th commit message:

update RUST_TEST_NOCAPTURE in man page
2016-03-31 23:02:59 +02:00
Kamal Marhubi
93569acdbe style: Use iter for IntoIterator parameter names
This commit standardizes the codebase on `iter` for parameters with
IntoIterator bounds.

Previously about 40% of IntoIterator parameters were named `iterable`,
with most of the rest being named `iter`. There was a single place where
it was named `iterator`.
2016-03-28 13:59:38 -04:00
Jorge Aparicio
2628f3cc8f fix alignment 2016-03-22 22:03:54 -05:00
Jorge Aparicio
0f02309e4b try! -> ?
Automated conversion using the untry tool [1] and the following command:

```
$ find -name '*.rs' -type f | xargs untry
```

at the root of the Rust repo.

[1]: https://github.com/japaric/untry
2016-03-22 22:01:37 -05:00
Alex Crichton
48d5fe9ec5 std: Change encode_utf{8,16} to return iterators
Currently these have non-traditional APIs which take a buffer and report how
much was filled in, but they're not necessarily ergonomic to use. Returning an
iterator which *also* exposes an underlying slice shouldn't result in any
performance loss as it's just a lazy version of the same implementation, and
it's also much more ergonomic!

cc #27784
2016-03-22 10:25:30 -07:00
Steven Fackler
c0d989ed6b Add unix socket support to the standard library 2016-03-20 18:57:58 -07:00
Alex Crichton
b53764c73b std: Clean out deprecated APIs
Removes all unstable and deprecated APIs prior to the 1.8 release. All APIs that
are deprecated in the 1.8 release are sticking around for the rest of this
cycle.

Some notable changes are:

* The `dynamic_lib` module was moved into `rustc_back` as the compiler still
  relies on a few bits and pieces.
* The `DebugTuple` formatter now special-cases an empty struct name with only
  one field to append a trailing comma.
2016-03-12 12:31:13 -08:00
Alex Crichton
1c440bdaf2 std: Remove unstable from ReentrantMutex
This isn't exported so it doesn't need a tag.
2016-03-11 22:09:58 -08:00
Alex Crichton
d46c99abe8 std: Funnel read_to_end through to one location
This pushes the implementation detail of proxying `read_to_end` through to
`read_to_end_uninitialized` all the way down to the `FileDesc` and `Handle`
implementations on Unix/Windows. This way intermediate layers will also be able
to take advantage of this optimized implementation.

This commit also adds the optimized implementation for `ChildStdout` and
`ChildStderr`.
2016-03-08 17:45:44 -08:00
Jorge Aparicio
0b7fc0653b rustbuild: fix cross compilation of libstd to i686-unknown-linux-musl
- make sure we copy the third party objects (crt*.o) to the target stage directory.
- apply the x86_64-musl logic also to the i686-musl target.
2016-03-06 08:19:51 -05:00
Steven Fackler
e4aa513139 Fix netbsd 2016-03-03 09:54:15 -08:00
Steven Fackler
ee62aab2ed Fix android build 2016-03-03 08:19:30 -08:00
Steven Fackler
631fa2b8c0 Fix comments and OSX build 2016-03-02 22:05:14 -08:00
Steven Fackler
728d9115e8 Fix windows
Also back out keepalive support for TCP since the API is perhaps not
actually what we want. You can't read the interval on Windows, and
we should probably separate the functionality of turning keepalive on
and overriding the interval.
2016-02-28 09:41:33 -08:00
Steven Fackler
5d6ba17f03 Add UDP functionality from net2 2016-02-28 09:41:33 -08:00
Steven Fackler
827be2de0d Add TCP functionality from net2 2016-02-28 09:41:33 -08:00
bors
f1e191c0b9 Auto merge of #31914 - bluss:copy-from-slice-everywhere, r=alexcrichton
Use .copy_from_slice() where applicable

.copy_from_slice() does the same job of .clone_from_slice(), but the
former is explicitly for Copy elements and calls `memcpy` directly, and
thus is it efficient without optimization too.
2016-02-27 01:15:23 +00:00
bors
1aa6ac38b2 Auto merge of #31858 - alexcrichton:fix-networking-cast, r=brson
Similar to #31825 where the read/write limits were capped for files, this
implements similar limits when reading/writing networking types. On Unix this
shouldn't affect anything because the write size is already a `usize`, but on
Windows this will cap the read/write amounts to `i32::max_value`.

cc #31841
2016-02-26 15:42:44 +00:00
Ulrik Sverdrup
2d6496dd84 Use .copy_from_slice() where applicable
.copy_from_slice() does the same job of .clone_from_slice(), but the
former is explicitly for Copy elements and calls `memcpy` directly, and
thus is it efficient without optimization too.
2016-02-26 14:51:38 +01:00
Alex Crichton
f3be73c84b std: Cap read/write limits on Windows networking
Similar to #31825 where the read/write limits were capped for files, this
implements similar limits when reading/writing networking types. On Unix this
shouldn't affect anything because the write size is already a `usize`, but on
Windows this will cap the read/write amounts to `i32::max_value`.

cc #31841
2016-02-24 09:17:07 -08:00
bors
304c790fc2 Auto merge of #31778 - aturon:snapshot, r=alexcrichton
r? @alexcrichton
2016-02-24 04:42:09 +00:00
Aaron Turon
a92ee0f664 Register new snapshots 2016-02-23 07:31:16 -08:00
Corey Farwell
2338d74197 Add Capacity/length methods for OsString.
https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/29453
2016-02-20 11:37:58 -05:00
Manish Goregaokar
8a5ec51eff Rollup merge of #31589 - reem:remove-unnecessary-poison-bounds, r=sfackler
None
2016-02-14 05:06:34 +05:30
Jonathan Reem
8bbb70cb94 Remove unnecessary bounds on Error and Display implementations for TryLockError and PoisonError. 2016-02-11 17:24:57 -08:00
Alex Crichton
eac0a8bc30 bootstrap: Add directives to not double-link libs
Have all Cargo-built crates pass `--cfg cargobuild` and then add appropriate
`#[cfg]` definitions to all crates to avoid linking anything if this is passed.
This should help allow libstd to compile with both the makefiles and with Cargo.
2016-02-11 11:12:32 -08:00
Brian Anderson
d6c0d859f6 Add the asmjs-unknown-emscripten triple. Add cfgs to libs.
Backtraces, and the compilation of libbacktrace for asmjs, are disabled.

This port doesn't use jemalloc so, like pnacl, it disables jemalloc *for all targets*
in the configure file.

It disables stack protection.
2016-02-06 20:56:14 +00:00
bors
e3bcddb44b Auto merge of #31078 - nbaksalyar:illumos, r=alexcrichton
This pull request adds support for [Illumos](http://illumos.org/)-based operating systems: SmartOS, OpenIndiana, and others. For now it's x86-64 only, as I'm not sure if 32-bit installations are widespread. This PR is based on #28589 by @potatosalad, and also closes #21000, #25845, and #25846.

Required changes in libc are already merged: https://github.com/rust-lang-nursery/libc/pull/138

Here's a snapshot required to build a stage0 compiler:
https://s3-eu-west-1.amazonaws.com/nbaksalyar/rustc-sunos-snapshot.tar.gz
It passes all checks from `make check`.

There are some changes I'm not quite sure about, e.g. macro usage in `src/libstd/num/f64.rs` and `DirEntry` structure in `src/libstd/sys/unix/fs.rs`, so any comments on how to rewrite it better would be greatly appreciated.

Also, LLVM configure script might need to be patched to build it successfully, or a pre-built libLLVM should be used. Some details can be found here: https://llvm.org/bugs/show_bug.cgi?id=25409

Thanks!

r? @brson
2016-02-03 22:40:32 +00:00
bors
2dc132e4d2 Auto merge of #31312 - alexcrichton:no-le-in-powerpc64le, r=alexcrichton
Currently the `mipsel-unknown-linux-gnu` target doesn't actually set the
`target_arch` value to `mipsel` but it rather uses `mips`. Alternatively the
`powerpc64le` target does indeed set the `target_arch` as `powerpc64le`,
causing a bit of inconsistency between theset two.

As these are just the same instance of one instruction set, let's use
`target_endian` to switch between them and only set the `target_arch` as one
value. This should cut down on the number of `#[cfg]` annotations necessary and
all around be a little more ergonomic.
2016-02-02 17:11:48 +00:00
Alex Crichton
8f803c2026 Remove "powerpc64le" and "mipsel" target_arch
Currently the `mipsel-unknown-linux-gnu` target doesn't actually set the
`target_arch` value to `mipsel` but it rather uses `mips`. Alternatively the
`powerpc64le` target does indeed set the `target_arch` as `powerpc64le`,
causing a bit of inconsistency between theset two.

As these are just the same instance of one instruction set, let's use
`target_endian` to switch between them and only set the `target_arch` as one
value. This should cut down on the number of `#[cfg]` annotations necessary and
all around be a little more ergonomic.
2016-02-01 20:39:07 -08:00