Commit graph

3888 commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
bors
1dc6359a0a auto merge of #12175 : sfackler/rust/phase-use-ignored, r=alexcrichton
It could throw an error but I think it's best to not since `#[phase(..)]` syntax in other places would be silently ignored.

Closes #11806
2014-02-11 02:11:41 -08:00
bors
86e6a5cf7b auto merge of #12170 : aepsil0n/rust/feature/reserve_do_keyword, r=brson
This resolves issue #12157. Does that do it already or is there something else that needs taking care of?  

As a side note, there seems to be some documentation, in which the old existence of the do keyword is explained. The list of keywords is not up-to-date either. But these are certainly separate issues.
2014-02-11 00:41:44 -08:00
Steven Fackler
ccd1cda10e Ignore #[phase] on use view items
Closes #11806
2014-02-10 20:10:17 -08:00
Eduard Bopp
a2fab457dc Reserve do as a keyword
Resolves issue #12157. `do` is hereby reinstated as a keyword; no syntax is
associated with it though. Along the way, a unit test had to be adapted, since
it was using `do` as a method identifier.

Breaking changes:

- Any code using `do` as an identifier will no longer work.
2014-02-11 00:19:27 +01:00
bors
38ed4674e8 auto merge of #11956 : edwardw/rust/issue-7556, r=cmr
Closes #7556.

Also move ``std::util::Void`` to ``std::any::Void``. It makes more sense to me.
2014-02-10 14:56:47 -08:00
Edward Wang
e9ff91e9be Move replace and swap to std::mem. Get rid of std::util
Also move Void to std::any, move drop to std::mem and reexport in
prelude.
2014-02-11 05:21:35 +08:00
bors
cf9164f94c auto merge of #12095 : FlaPer87/rust/issue-11709, r=nikomatsakis
Closes #11709
2014-02-10 12:56:40 -08:00
Flavio Percoco
31576c7ef0 Switch to Ignore output mode for () blocks
Closes #11709
Closes #11865
2014-02-10 21:20:08 +01:00
bors
d440a569bb auto merge of #12084 : alexcrichton/rust/codegen-opts, r=cmr
Move them all behind a new -C switch. This migrates some -Z flags and some
top-level flags behind this -C codegen option.

The -C flag takes values of the form "-C name=value" where the "=value" is
optional for some flags.

Flags affected:

* --llvm-args           => -C llvm-args
* --passes              => -C passes
* --ar                  => -C ar
* --linker              => -C linker
* --link-args           => -C link-args
* --target-cpu          => -C target-cpu
* --target-feature      => -C target-fature
* --android-cross-path  => -C android-cross-path
* --save-temps          => -C save-temps
* --no-rpath            => -C no-rpath
* -Z no-prepopulate     => -C no-prepopulate-passes
* -Z no-vectorize-loops => -C no-vectorize-loops
* -Z no-vectorize-slp   => -C no-vectorize-slp
* -Z soft-float         => -C soft-float
* -Z gen-crate-map      => -C gen-crate-map
* -Z prefer-dynamic     => -C prefer-dynamic
* -Z no-integrated-as   => -C no-integrated-as

As a bonus, this also promotes the -Z extra-debug-info flag to a first class -g
or --debuginfo flag.

* -Z debug-info         => removed
* -Z extra-debug-info   => -g or --debuginfo

Closes #9770
Closes #12000
2014-02-10 01:26:24 -08:00
Alex Crichton
071ee96277 Consolidate codegen-related compiler flags
Move them all behind a new -C switch. This migrates some -Z flags and some
top-level flags behind this -C codegen option.

The -C flag takes values of the form "-C name=value" where the "=value" is
optional for some flags.

Flags affected:

* --llvm-args           => -C llvm-args
* --passes              => -C passes
* --ar                  => -C ar
* --linker              => -C linker
* --link-args           => -C link-args
* --target-cpu          => -C target-cpu
* --target-feature      => -C target-fature
* --android-cross-path  => -C android-cross-path
* --save-temps          => -C save-temps
* --no-rpath            => -C no-rpath
* -Z no-prepopulate     => -C no-prepopulate-passes
* -Z no-vectorize-loops => -C no-vectorize-loops
* -Z no-vectorize-slp   => -C no-vectorize-slp
* -Z soft-float         => -C soft-float
* -Z gen-crate-map      => -C gen-crate-map
* -Z prefer-dynamic     => -C prefer-dynamic
* -Z no-integrated-as   => -C no-integrated-as

As a bonus, this also promotes the -Z extra-debug-info flag to a first class -g
or --debuginfo flag.

* -Z debug-info         => removed
* -Z extra-debug-info   => -g or --debuginfo

Closes #9770
Closes #12000
2014-02-10 00:50:39 -08:00
bors
47e14456f7 auto merge of #12134 : FlaPer87/rust/temporary-conditions, r=nikomatsakis
Closes #12033

IR Before:

```llvm
normal-return:                                    ; preds = %while_body
  %113 = load i64* %i
  %114 = sub i64 %113, 1
  store i64 %114, i64* %i
  br label %while_cond
```

IR After:

```llvm
normal-return:                                    ; preds = %while_cond
  store i8 %11, i8* %0
  %18 = load i8* %0, !range !0
  call void @_ZN9Temporary9glue_drop19he4ee51d3c03b9cf4ajE(%struct.Temporary* %10)
  %19 = bitcast %struct.Temporary* %10 to i8*
  call void @_ZN2rt11global_heap14exchange_free_19h4fabdf24a2250163aj4v0.0E(i8* %19)
  %20 = icmp ne i8 %18, 0
  br i1 %20, label %while_body, label %while_exit
```
2014-02-09 20:41:27 -08:00
Flavio Percoco
b0ef791496 Make if and while conditions temporary
Closes #12033
2014-02-09 19:46:44 +01:00
Brian Anderson
c7710cdf45 std: Add move_val_init to mem. Replace direct intrinsic usage 2014-02-09 00:17:41 -08:00
Brian Anderson
d433b80e02 std: Add init and uninit to mem. Replace direct intrinsic usage 2014-02-09 00:17:40 -08:00
bors
5acc998ed9 auto merge of #12098 : kballard/rust/from_utf8_lossy_tweak, r=huonw
MaybeOwned allows from_utf8_lossy to avoid allocation if there are no
invalid bytes in the input.

Before:
```
test str::bench::from_utf8_lossy_100_ascii                      ... bench:       183 ns/iter (+/- 5)
test str::bench::from_utf8_lossy_100_invalid                    ... bench:       341 ns/iter (+/- 15)
test str::bench::from_utf8_lossy_100_multibyte                  ... bench:       227 ns/iter (+/- 13)
test str::bench::from_utf8_lossy_invalid                        ... bench:       102 ns/iter (+/- 4)
test str::bench::is_utf8_100_ascii                              ... bench:         2 ns/iter (+/- 0)
test str::bench::is_utf8_100_multibyte                          ... bench:         2 ns/iter (+/- 0)
```

Now:
```
test str::bench::from_utf8_lossy_100_ascii                      ... bench:        96 ns/iter (+/- 4)
test str::bench::from_utf8_lossy_100_invalid                    ... bench:       318 ns/iter (+/- 10)
test str::bench::from_utf8_lossy_100_multibyte                  ... bench:       105 ns/iter (+/- 2)
test str::bench::from_utf8_lossy_invalid                        ... bench:       105 ns/iter (+/- 2)
test str::bench::is_utf8_100_ascii                              ... bench:         2 ns/iter (+/- 0)
test str::bench::is_utf8_100_multibyte                          ... bench:         2 ns/iter (+/- 0)
```
2014-02-08 05:01:30 -08:00
bors
b60bed9791 auto merge of #12096 : brson/rust/morestack-addr, r=thestinger 2014-02-08 01:56:30 -08:00
Kevin Ballard
086c0dd33f Delete send_str, rewrite clients on top of MaybeOwned<'static>
Declare a `type SendStr = MaybeOwned<'static>` to ease readibility of
types that needed the old SendStr behavior.

Implement all the traits for MaybeOwned that SendStr used to implement.
2014-02-07 22:31:52 -08:00
Huon Wilson
6a8b3ae22f Implement #[deriving(Show)]. 2014-02-08 13:53:21 +11:00
Huon Wilson
8d1204a4b7 std::fmt: convert the formatting traits to a proper self.
Poly and String have polymorphic `impl`s and so require different method
names.
2014-02-08 13:53:21 +11:00
Brian Anderson
b91caac729 rustc: Remove 'morestack_addr' intrinsic. Unused 2014-02-07 13:21:35 -08:00
Derek Guenther
730bdb6403 Added tests to make tidy 2014-02-07 12:49:24 -06:00
HeroesGrave
d81bb441da moved collections from libextra into libcollections 2014-02-07 19:49:26 +13:00
bors
87fe3ccf09 auto merge of #12039 : alexcrichton/rust/no-conditions, r=brson
This has been a long time coming. Conditions in rust were initially envisioned
as being a good alternative to error code return pattern. The idea is that all
errors are fatal-by-default, and you can opt-in to handling the error by
registering an error handler.

While sounding nice, conditions ended up having some unforseen shortcomings:

* Actually handling an error has some very awkward syntax:

        let mut result = None;                                        
        let mut answer = None;                                        
        io::io_error::cond.trap(|e| { result = Some(e) }).inside(|| { 
            answer = Some(some_io_operation());                       
        });                                                           
        match result {                                                
            Some(err) => { /* hit an I/O error */ }                   
            None => {                                                 
                let answer = answer.unwrap();                         
                /* deal with the result of I/O */                     
            }                                                         
        }                                                             

  This pattern can certainly use functions like io::result, but at its core
  actually handling conditions is fairly difficult

* The "zero value" of a function is often confusing. One of the main ideas
  behind using conditions was to change the signature of I/O functions. Instead
  of read_be_u32() returning a result, it returned a u32. Errors were notified
  via a condition, and if you caught the condition you understood that the "zero
  value" returned is actually a garbage value. These zero values are often
  difficult to understand, however.

  One case of this is the read_bytes() function. The function takes an integer
  length of the amount of bytes to read, and returns an array of that size. The
  array may actually be shorter, however, if an error occurred.

  Another case is fs::stat(). The theoretical "zero value" is a blank stat
  struct, but it's a little awkward to create and return a zero'd out stat
  struct on a call to stat().

  In general, the return value of functions that can raise error are much more
  natural when using a Result as opposed to an always-usable zero-value.

* Conditions impose a necessary runtime requirement on *all* I/O. In theory I/O
  is as simple as calling read() and write(), but using conditions imposed the
  restriction that a rust local task was required if you wanted to catch errors
  with I/O. While certainly an surmountable difficulty, this was always a bit of
  a thorn in the side of conditions.

* Functions raising conditions are not always clear that they are raising
  conditions. This suffers a similar problem to exceptions where you don't
  actually know whether a function raises a condition or not. The documentation
  likely explains, but if someone retroactively adds a condition to a function
  there's nothing forcing upstream users to acknowledge a new point of task
  failure.

* Libaries using I/O are not guaranteed to correctly raise on conditions when an
  error occurs. In developing various I/O libraries, it's much easier to just
  return `None` from a read rather than raising an error. The silent contract of
  "don't raise on EOF" was a little difficult to understand and threw a wrench
  into the answer of the question "when do I raise a condition?"

Many of these difficulties can be overcome through documentation, examples, and
general practice. In the end, all of these difficulties added together ended up
being too overwhelming and improving various aspects didn't end up helping that
much.

A result-based I/O error handling strategy also has shortcomings, but the
cognitive burden is much smaller. The tooling necessary to make this strategy as
usable as conditions were is much smaller than the tooling necessary for
conditions.

Perhaps conditions may manifest themselves as a future entity, but for now
we're going to remove them from the standard library.

Closes #9795
Closes #8968
2014-02-06 17:11:33 -08:00
Alex Crichton
454882dcb7 Remove std::condition
This has been a long time coming. Conditions in rust were initially envisioned
as being a good alternative to error code return pattern. The idea is that all
errors are fatal-by-default, and you can opt-in to handling the error by
registering an error handler.

While sounding nice, conditions ended up having some unforseen shortcomings:

* Actually handling an error has some very awkward syntax:

    let mut result = None;
    let mut answer = None;
    io::io_error::cond.trap(|e| { result = Some(e) }).inside(|| {
        answer = Some(some_io_operation());
    });
    match result {
        Some(err) => { /* hit an I/O error */ }
        None => {
            let answer = answer.unwrap();
            /* deal with the result of I/O */
        }
    }

  This pattern can certainly use functions like io::result, but at its core
  actually handling conditions is fairly difficult

* The "zero value" of a function is often confusing. One of the main ideas
  behind using conditions was to change the signature of I/O functions. Instead
  of read_be_u32() returning a result, it returned a u32. Errors were notified
  via a condition, and if you caught the condition you understood that the "zero
  value" returned is actually a garbage value. These zero values are often
  difficult to understand, however.

  One case of this is the read_bytes() function. The function takes an integer
  length of the amount of bytes to read, and returns an array of that size. The
  array may actually be shorter, however, if an error occurred.

  Another case is fs::stat(). The theoretical "zero value" is a blank stat
  struct, but it's a little awkward to create and return a zero'd out stat
  struct on a call to stat().

  In general, the return value of functions that can raise error are much more
  natural when using a Result as opposed to an always-usable zero-value.

* Conditions impose a necessary runtime requirement on *all* I/O. In theory I/O
  is as simple as calling read() and write(), but using conditions imposed the
  restriction that a rust local task was required if you wanted to catch errors
  with I/O. While certainly an surmountable difficulty, this was always a bit of
  a thorn in the side of conditions.

* Functions raising conditions are not always clear that they are raising
  conditions. This suffers a similar problem to exceptions where you don't
  actually know whether a function raises a condition or not. The documentation
  likely explains, but if someone retroactively adds a condition to a function
  there's nothing forcing upstream users to acknowledge a new point of task
  failure.

* Libaries using I/O are not guaranteed to correctly raise on conditions when an
  error occurs. In developing various I/O libraries, it's much easier to just
  return `None` from a read rather than raising an error. The silent contract of
  "don't raise on EOF" was a little difficult to understand and threw a wrench
  into the answer of the question "when do I raise a condition?"

Many of these difficulties can be overcome through documentation, examples, and
general practice. In the end, all of these difficulties added together ended up
being too overwhelming and improving various aspects didn't end up helping that
much.

A result-based I/O error handling strategy also has shortcomings, but the
cognitive burden is much smaller. The tooling necessary to make this strategy as
usable as conditions were is much smaller than the tooling necessary for
conditions.

Perhaps conditions may manifest themselves as a future entity, but for now
we're going to remove them from the standard library.

Closes #9795
Closes #8968
2014-02-06 15:48:56 -08:00
Eduard Burtescu
b2d30b72bf Removed @self and @Trait. 2014-02-07 00:38:33 +02:00
Arcterus
c09ca940e5 getopts: replaced base functions with those from group 2014-02-06 10:04:26 -08:00
Arcterus
9752c63035 Move getopts out of extra 2014-02-06 10:00:17 -08:00
Jeff Olson
b8852e89ce pull extra::{serialize, ebml} into a separate libserialize crate
- `extra::json` didn't make the cut, because of `extra::json` required
   dep on `extra::TreeMap`. If/when `extra::TreeMap` moves out of `extra`,
   then `extra::json` could move into `serialize`
- `libextra`, `libsyntax` and `librustc` depend on the newly created
  `libserialize`
- The extensions to various `extra` types like `DList`, `RingBuf`, `TreeMap`
  and `TreeSet` for `Encodable`/`Decodable` were moved into the respective
  modules in `extra`
- There is some trickery, evident in `src/libextra/lib.rs` where a stub
  of `extra::serialize` is set up (in `src/libextra/serialize.rs`) for
  use in the stage0 build, where the snapshot rustc is still making
  deriving for `Encodable` and `Decodable` point at extra. Big props to
  @huonw for help working out the re-export solution for this

extra: inline extra::serialize stub

fix stuff clobbered in rebase + don't reexport serialize::serialize

no more globs in libserialize

syntax: fix import of libserialize traits

librustc: fix bad imports in encoder/decoder

add serialize dep to librustdoc

fix failing run-pass tests w/ serialize dep

adjust uuid dep

more rebase de-clobbering for libserialize

fixing tests, pushing libextra dep into cfg(test)

fix doc code in extra::json

adjust index.md links to serialize and uuid library
2014-02-05 10:38:22 -08:00
JeremyLetang
dd21a51d29 move concurrent stuff from libextra to libsync 2014-02-05 11:56:04 -05:00
bors
4509b49451 auto merge of #12018 : alexcrichton/rust/triage, r=sfackler
Mostly just test suite modifications.
2014-02-04 21:46:35 -08:00
Alex Crichton
8a1dda92ba Adding tests for closed issues
Closes #5521
Closes #9396
Closes #10714
2014-02-04 18:05:13 -08:00
bors
10de762f6c auto merge of #11717 : DiamondLovesYou/rust/master, r=alexcrichton
Note that it still doesn't allow generic types to be marked with #[simd].
2014-02-04 01:11:34 -08:00
Richard Diamond
7becc0f34c Added missing xfail-fast. 2014-02-04 02:26:02 -06:00
Richard Diamond
63ba2e1219 Simd feature gating + Win32/64 fixes. 2014-02-04 01:04:19 -06:00
Flavio Percoco
c6b1bce96f Replace NonCopyable usage with NoPod
cc #10834
2014-02-04 00:15:27 +01:00
Alex Crichton
b00147a99b Add an AtomicU64 type to std::sync::atomics
This also generalizes all atomic intrinsics over T so we'll be able to add u8
atomics if we really feel the need to (do we really want to?)
2014-02-03 12:04:30 -08:00
Alex Crichton
29e7247fd8 rpass: Remove io_error usage 2014-02-03 09:32:34 -08:00
Eduard Burtescu
fdf985cd14 Substitute type params in default type params using them. 2014-02-02 12:54:22 +02:00
bors
dce61c980e auto merge of #11948 : huonw/rust/show, r=alexcrichton
- renames `Default` to `Show`
- introduces some hidden `std::fmt::secret_...` functions, designed to work-around the lack of UFCS (with UFCS they can be replaced by referencing the trait methods directly) because I'm going to convert the traits to have methods rather than static functions, since `#[deriving]` works much better with true methods.

I'm blocked on a snapshot after this. (I could probably do a large number of `#[cfg]`s, but I can work on other things in the meantime.)
2014-02-01 22:31:26 -08:00
bors
16f1a72f0a auto merge of #11975 : jfager/rust/r8498, r=alexcrichton
Closes #8498
2014-02-01 19:16:26 -08:00
Huon Wilson
003ce50235 std: rename fmt::Default to Show.
This is a better name with which to have a #[deriving] mode.

Decision in:
https://github.com/mozilla/rust/wiki/Meeting-weekly-2014-01-28
2014-02-02 12:55:15 +11:00
Jason Fager
e704561003 un-xfail test for #8498 and replace prints w/ asserts 2014-02-01 12:36:59 -05:00
Huon Wilson
b972cadf61 Update/delete tests using @[]. 2014-02-02 02:59:03 +11:00
Patrick Walton
7a80fa647a test: Remove @str from the test suite 2014-02-02 01:44:49 +11:00
Alex Crichton
a67a3b7749 Fixing tests 2014-01-31 22:11:18 -08:00
OGINO Masanori
ed5b897899 Add test cases for #4063.
Signed-off-by: OGINO Masanori <masanori.ogino@gmail.com>
2014-01-31 21:43:09 -08:00
JeremyLetang
4f24caae11 Add test case for issue 7911 2014-01-31 21:43:08 -08:00
Virgile Andreani
b9a026afba Fix minor doc typos 2014-01-31 21:43:07 -08:00
Alex Crichton
2c8b112580 Un-xfail test for 7385
I've verified that it works on osx x86_64

Closes #7385
2014-01-31 21:43:07 -08:00
Niko Matsakis
81d8328517 Introduce marker types for indicating variance and for opting out
of builtin bounds.

Fixes #10834.
Fixes #11385.
cc #5922.
2014-01-31 21:18:48 -05:00