...al work
This is causing really awful scheduler behavior where the main thread scheduler is
continually waking up, stealing work, discovering it can't actually run the work,
and sending it off to another scheduler.
No test cases because we don't have suitable instrumentation for it.
* Allow named parameters to specify width/precision
* Intepret the format string '0$' as "width is the 0th argument" instead of
thinking the lone '0' was the sign-aware-zero-padding flag. To get both you'd
need to put '00$' which makes more sense if you want both to happen.
Closes#9669
Rewrite these methods as methods on Display and FilenameDisplay. This
turns
do path.with_display_str |s| { ... }
into
do path.display().with_str |s| { ... }
Add a new trait BytesContainer that is implemented for both byte vectors
and strings.
Convert Path::from_vec and ::from_str to one function, Path::new().
Remove all the _str-suffixed mutation methods (push, join, with_*,
set_*) and modify the non-suffixed versions to use BytesContainer.
Remove the old path.
Rename path2 to path.
Update all clients for the new path.
Also make some miscellaneous changes to the Path APIs to help the
adoption process.
These methods return an object that can be formatted using {} to print
display strings.
Path itself does not implement fmt::Default to avoid accidental usage of
display strings in incorrect places (e.g. process arguments).
These functions are for working with a string representation of the path
even if it's not UTF-8 encoded. They replace invalid UTF-8 sequences
with the replacement char.
As documented in #7225, we cannot rely on paths being representable in
utf-8. Specifically, Linux allows anything (besides NUL) in a path.
Redesign GenericPath in light of this.
PosixPath hasn't been reimplemented yet for ~[u8].
This is causing really awful scheduler behavior where the main thread scheduler is
continually waking up, stealing work, discovering it can't actually run the work,
and sending it off to another scheduler.
This adds `get_opt` to `std::vec`, which looks up an item by index and returns an `Option`. If the given index is out of range, `None` will be returned, otherwise a `Some`-wrapped item will be returned.
Example use case:
```rust
use std::os;
fn say_hello(name: &str) {
println(fmt!("Hello, %s", name));
}
fn main(){
// Try to get the first cmd line arg, but default to "World"
let args = os::args();
let default = ~"World";
say_hello(*args.get_opt(1).unwrap_or(&default));
}
```
If there's an existing way of implementing this pattern that's cleaner, I'll happily close this. I'm also open to naming suggestions (`index_opt`?)
This patch removes the code responsible for handling older CrateMap versions (as discussed during #9593). Only the new (safer) layout is supported now.
I've left out a way to construct from a `Send` type until #9509 is resolved. I am confident that this interface can remain backwards compatible though, assuming we name the `Pointer` trait method `borrow`.
When there is a way to convert from `Send` (`from_send`), a future RAII-based `Mut` type can be used with this to implemented a mutable reference-counted pointer. For now, I've left around the `RcMut` type but it may drastically change or be removed.
This implements a number of the baby steps needed to start eliminating everything inside of `std::io`. It turns out that there are a *lot* of users of that module, so I'm going to try to tackle them separately instead of bringing down the whole system all at once.
This pull implements a large amount of unimplemented functionality inside of `std::rt::io` including:
* Native file I/O (file descriptors, *FILE)
* Native stdio (through the native file descriptors)
* Native processes (extracted from `std::run`)
I also found that there are a number of users of `std::io` which desire to read an input line-by-line, so I added an implementation of `read_until` and `read_line` to `BufferedReader`.
With all of these changes in place, I started to axe various usages of `std::io`. There's a lot of one-off uses here-and-there, but the major use-case remaining that doesn't have a fantastic solution is `extra::json`. I ran into a few compiler bugs when attempting to remove that, so I figured I'd come back to it later instead.
There is one fairly major change in this pull, and it's moving from native stdio to uv stdio via `print` and `println`. Unfortunately logging still goes through native I/O (via `dumb_println`). This is going to need some thinking, because I still want the goal of logging/printing to be 0 allocations, and this is not possible if `io::stdio::stderr()` is called on each log message. Instead I think that this may need to be cached as the `logger` field inside the `Task` struct, but that will require a little more workings to get right (this is also a similar problem for print/println, do we cache `stdout()` to not have to re-create it every time?).