Commit graph

7847 commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Alex Crichton
c18c9284b3 Test fixes from the rollup
Closes #13546 (workcache: Don't assume gcc exists on all platforms)
Closes #13545 (std: Remove pub use globs)
Closes #13530 (test: Un-ignore smallest-hello-world.rs)
Closes #13529 (std: Un-ignore some float tests on windows)
Closes #13528 (green: Add a helper macro for booting libgreen)
Closes #13526 (Remove RUST_LOG="::help" from the docs)
Closes #13524 (dist: Make Windows installer uninstall first. Closes #9563)
Closes #13521 (Change AUTHORS section in the man pages)
Closes #13519 (Update GitHub's Rust projects page.)
Closes #13518 (mk: Change windows to install from stage2)
Closes #13516 (liburl doc: insert missing hyphen)
Closes #13514 (rustdoc: Better sorting criteria for searching.)
Closes #13512 (native: Fix a race in select())
Closes #13506 (Use the unsigned integer types for bitwise intrinsics.)
Closes #13502 (Add a default impl for Set::is_superset)
2014-04-15 22:54:07 -07:00
bors
74bd2338eb auto merge of #13390 : alexcrichton/rust/run-some-destructors, r=brson
Previously, if statements of the form "Foo;" or "let _ = Foo;" were encountered
where Foo had a destructor, the destructors were not run. This changes
the relevant locations in trans to check for ty::type_needs_drop and invokes
trans_to_lvalue instead of trans_into.

Closes #4734
Closes #6892
2014-04-15 21:17:00 -07:00
Alex Crichton
9e8a270681 test: Un-ignore smallest-hello-world.rs
Rebased through the ages to bring the test up to date.

Closes #8538
2014-04-15 19:47:03 -07:00
Huon Wilson
54ec04f1c1 Use the unsigned integer types for bitwise intrinsics.
Exposing ctpop, ctlz, cttz and bswap as taking signed i8/i16/... is just
exposing the internal LLVM names pointlessly (LLVM doesn't have "signed
integers" or "unsigned integers", it just has sized integer types
with (un)signed *operations*).

These operations are semantically working with raw bytes, which the
unsigned types model better.
2014-04-15 19:45:00 -07:00
Alex Crichton
93dc555188 native: Fix a race in select()
During selection, libnative would erroneously re-acquire ownership of a task
when a separate thread still had ownership of the task. The loop in select()
was rewritten to acknowledge this race and instead block waiting to re-acquire
ownership rather than plowing through.

Closes #13494
2014-04-15 19:45:00 -07:00
bors
6fcf43e50e auto merge of #13511 : Meyermagic/rust/enum_typeid, r=alexcrichton
Fixes #13507.

I haven't familiarized myself with this part of the rust compiler, so hopefully there are no mistakes (despite the simplicity of the commit). It is also 5am.
2014-04-15 17:31:54 -07:00
Kiet Tran
79d1e5df21 Support lifetime suggestion for method
This includes a change to the way lifetime names are generated. Say we
figure that `[#0, 'a, 'b]` have to be the same lifetimes, then instead
of just generating a new lifetime `'c` like before to replace them, we
would reuse `'a`. This is done so that when the lifetime name comes
from an impl, we don't give something that's completely off, and we
don't have to do much work to figure out where the name came from. For
example, for the following code snippet:

```rust
struct Baz<'x> {
    bar: &'x int
}

impl<'x> Baz<'x> {
    fn baz1(&self) -> &int {
        self.bar
    }
}
```

`[#1, 'x]` (where `#1` is BrAnon(1) and refers to lifetime of `&int`)
have to be marked the same lifetime. With the old method, we would
generate a new lifetime `'a` and suggest `fn baz1(&self) -> &'a int`
or `fn baz1<'a>(&self) -> &'a int`, both of which are wrong.
2014-04-15 15:47:47 -04:00
bors
189584e792 auto merge of #13489 : JustAPerson/rust/crate-file-name, r=alexcrichton
Before, the `--crate-file-name` flag only checked crate attributes for
possible crate types. Now, if any type is specified by one or more
`--crate-type` flags, only the filenames for those types will be
emitted, and any types specified by crate attributes will be ignored.
2014-04-15 11:02:03 -07:00
Meyer S. Jacobs
b9f7ac591c Fixes #13507
Fixes hashing of DefId for ty_enum.

Adds tests for cross-crate TypeId equivalence for various types.
2014-04-14 17:39:52 -07:00
JustAPerson
0162f8e6e1 Only check --crate-type flags if present.
Before, normal compilation and the --crate-file-name flag would
generate output based on both #![crate_type] attributes and
--crate-type flags. Now, if one or more flag is specified by command
line, only those will be used.

Closes #11573.
2014-04-14 16:53:06 -05:00
bors
168b2d1a3f auto merge of #13496 : alexcrichton/rust/issue-13495, r=sfackler
This bug was introduced in #13384 by accident, and this commit continues the
work of #13384 by finishing support for loading a syntax extension crate without
registering it with the local cstore.

Closes #13495
2014-04-14 14:36:54 -07:00
bors
246ebd2d5a auto merge of #13493 : Manishearth/rust/newattr-everywhere, r=alexcrichton
See #13478
2014-04-14 12:21:52 -07:00
bors
347e9e4ffe auto merge of #13480 : edwardw/rust/vtable-ice, r=alexcrichton
A mismatched type with more type parameters than the expected one causes
`typeck` looking up out of the bound of type parameter vector, which
leads to ICE.

Closes #13466
2014-04-14 11:00:20 -07:00
Manish Goregaokar
713e87526e Use new attribute syntax in python files in src/etc too (#13478) 2014-04-14 21:00:31 +05:30
Alex Crichton
e163ab2151 rustc: Don't link in syntax extensions
This bug was introduced in #13384 by accident, and this commit continues the
work of #13384 by finishing support for loading a syntax extension crate without
registering it with the local cstore.

Closes #13495
2014-04-13 11:29:28 -07:00
bors
465109df62 auto merge of #13452 : Ryman/rust/fix_uint_as_u, r=alexcrichton
Fixes #13359.
2014-04-13 10:36:47 -07:00
bors
2f79054650 auto merge of #13463 : alexcrichton/rust/c-linkage-oh-my, r=brson
Previously, upstream C libraries were linked in a nondeterministic fashion
because they were collected through iter_crate_data() which is a nodeterministic
traversal of a hash map. When upstream rlibs had interdependencies among their
native libraries (such as libfoo depending on libc), then the ordering would
occasionally be wrong, causing linkage to fail.

This uses the topologically sorted list of libraries to collect native
libraries, so if a native library depends on libc it just needs to make sure
that the rust crate depends on liblibc.
2014-04-13 02:16:54 -07:00
Kevin Butler
888517df4d libsyntax: update helper to stringify TyU* and TyI* to take into account having a value.
Fixes #13359.
2014-04-13 02:39:19 +01:00
bors
ab0d847277 auto merge of #13448 : alexcrichton/rust/rework-chan-return-values, r=brson
There are currently a number of return values from the std::comm methods, not
all of which are necessarily completely expressive:

 * `Sender::try_send(t: T) -> bool`
    This method currently doesn't transmit back the data `t` if the send fails
    due to the other end having disconnected. Additionally, this shares the name
    of the synchronous try_send method, but it differs in semantics in that it
    only has one failure case, not two (the buffer can never be full).

 * `SyncSender::try_send(t: T) -> TrySendResult<T>`
    This method accurately conveys all possible information, but it uses a
    custom type to the std::comm module with no convenience methods on it.
    Additionally, if you want to inspect the result you're forced to import
    something from `std::comm`.

 * `SyncSender::send_opt(t: T) -> Option<T>`
    This method uses Some(T) as an "error value" and None as a "success value",
    but almost all other uses of Option<T> have Some/None the other way

 * `Receiver::try_recv(t: T) -> TryRecvResult<T>`
    Similarly to the synchronous try_send, this custom return type is lacking in
    terms of usability (no convenience methods).

With this number of drawbacks in mind, I believed it was time to re-work the
return types of these methods. The new API for the comm module is:

    Sender::send(t: T) -> ()
    Sender::send_opt(t: T) -> Result<(), T>
    SyncSender::send(t: T) -> ()
    SyncSender::send_opt(t: T) -> Result<(), T>
    SyncSender::try_send(t: T) -> Result<(), TrySendError<T>>
    Receiver::recv() -> T
    Receiver::recv_opt() -> Result<T, ()>
    Receiver::try_recv() -> Result<T, TryRecvError>

The notable changes made are:

* Sender::try_send => Sender::send_opt. This renaming brings the semantics in
  line with the SyncSender::send_opt method. An asychronous send only has one
  failure case, unlike the synchronous try_send method which has two failure
  cases (full/disconnected).

* Sender::send_opt returns the data back to the caller if the send is guaranteed
  to fail. This method previously returned `bool`, but then it was unable to
  retrieve the data if the data was guaranteed to fail to send. There is still a
  race such that when `Ok(())` is returned the data could still fail to be
  received, but that's inherent to an asynchronous channel.

* Result is now the basis of all return values. This not only adds lots of
  convenience methods to all return values for free, but it also means that you
  can inspect the return values with no extra imports (Ok/Err are in the
  prelude). Additionally, it's now self documenting when something failed or not
  because the return value has "Err" in the name.

Things I'm a little uneasy about:

* The methods send_opt and recv_opt are not returning options, but rather
  results. I felt more strongly that Option was the wrong return type than the
  _opt prefix was wrong, and I coudn't think of a much better name for these
  methods. One possible way to think about them is to read the _opt suffix as
  "optionally".

* Result<T, ()> is often better expressed as Option<T>. This is only applicable
  to the recv_opt() method, but I thought it would be more consistent for
  everything to return Result rather than one method returning an Option.

Despite my two reasons to feel uneasy, I feel much better about the consistency
in return values at this point, and I think the only real open question is if
there's a better suffix for {send,recv}_opt.

Closes #11527
2014-04-12 12:21:58 -07:00
Stepan Koltsov
7fefc1c7f4 Append missing padding after last field of struct
This patch fixes issue #13186.

When generating constant expression for enum, it is possible that
alignment of expression may be not equal to alignment of type.  In that
case space after last struct field must be padded to match size of value
and size of struct. This commit adds that padding.

See detailed explanation in src/test/run-pass/trans-tag-static-padding.rs
2014-04-12 18:56:34 +00:00
Edward Wang
fc043c054f Check bounds when looking up type parameters
A mismatched type with more type parameters than the expected one causes
`typeck` looking up out of the bound of type parameter vector, which
leads to ICE.

Closes #13466
2014-04-12 21:14:24 +08:00
Alex Crichton
e6072fa0c4 rustc: Deterministically link upstream C libraries
Previously, upstream C libraries were linked in a nondeterministic fashion
because they were collected through iter_crate_data() which is a nodeterministic
traversal of a hash map. When upstream rlibs had interdependencies among their
native libraries (such as libfoo depending on libc), then the ordering would
occasionally be wrong, causing linkage to fail.

This uses the topologically sorted list of libraries to collect native
libraries, so if a native library depends on libc it just needs to make sure
that the rust crate depends on liblibc.
2014-04-11 12:20:33 -07:00
Alex Crichton
545d4718c8 std: Make std::comm return types consistent
There are currently a number of return values from the std::comm methods, not
all of which are necessarily completely expressive:

  Sender::try_send(t: T) -> bool
    This method currently doesn't transmit back the data `t` if the send fails
    due to the other end having disconnected. Additionally, this shares the name
    of the synchronous try_send method, but it differs in semantics in that it
    only has one failure case, not two (the buffer can never be full).

  SyncSender::try_send(t: T) -> TrySendResult<T>
    This method accurately conveys all possible information, but it uses a
    custom type to the std::comm module with no convenience methods on it.
    Additionally, if you want to inspect the result you're forced to import
    something from `std::comm`.

  SyncSender::send_opt(t: T) -> Option<T>
    This method uses Some(T) as an "error value" and None as a "success value",
    but almost all other uses of Option<T> have Some/None the other way

  Receiver::try_recv(t: T) -> TryRecvResult<T>
    Similarly to the synchronous try_send, this custom return type is lacking in
    terms of usability (no convenience methods).

With this number of drawbacks in mind, I believed it was time to re-work the
return types of these methods. The new API for the comm module is:

  Sender::send(t: T) -> ()
  Sender::send_opt(t: T) -> Result<(), T>
  SyncSender::send(t: T) -> ()
  SyncSender::send_opt(t: T) -> Result<(), T>
  SyncSender::try_send(t: T) -> Result<(), TrySendError<T>>
  Receiver::recv() -> T
  Receiver::recv_opt() -> Result<T, ()>
  Receiver::try_recv() -> Result<T, TryRecvError>

The notable changes made are:

* Sender::try_send => Sender::send_opt. This renaming brings the semantics in
  line with the SyncSender::send_opt method. An asychronous send only has one
  failure case, unlike the synchronous try_send method which has two failure
  cases (full/disconnected).

* Sender::send_opt returns the data back to the caller if the send is guaranteed
  to fail. This method previously returned `bool`, but then it was unable to
  retrieve the data if the data was guaranteed to fail to send. There is still a
  race such that when `Ok(())` is returned the data could still fail to be
  received, but that's inherent to an asynchronous channel.

* Result is now the basis of all return values. This not only adds lots of
  convenience methods to all return values for free, but it also means that you
  can inspect the return values with no extra imports (Ok/Err are in the
  prelude). Additionally, it's now self documenting when something failed or not
  because the return value has "Err" in the name.

Things I'm a little uneasy about:

* The methods send_opt and recv_opt are not returning options, but rather
  results. I felt more strongly that Option was the wrong return type than the
  _opt prefix was wrong, and I coudn't think of a much better name for these
  methods. One possible way to think about them is to read the _opt suffix as
  "optionally".

* Result<T, ()> is often better expressed as Option<T>. This is only applicable
  to the recv_opt() method, but I thought it would be more consistent for
  everything to return Result rather than one method returning an Option.

Despite my two reasons to feel uneasy, I feel much better about the consistency
in return values at this point, and I think the only real open question is if
there's a better suffix for {send,recv}_opt.

Closes #11527
2014-04-10 21:41:19 -07:00
bors
cea8def620 auto merge of #13440 : huonw/rust/strbuf, r=alexcrichton
libstd: Implement `StrBuf`, a new string buffer type like `Vec`, and port all code over to use it.

Rebased & tests-fixed version of https://github.com/mozilla/rust/pull/13269
2014-04-10 21:01:41 -07:00
Huon Wilson
def90f43e2 Fix tests. Add Vec<u8> conversion to StrBuf. 2014-04-11 10:55:30 +10:00
Alex Crichton
1f2c18a0af rustc: Don't allow priv use to shadow pub use
Previously, a private use statement would shadow a public use statement, all of
a sudden publicly exporting the privately used item. The correct behavior here
is to only shadow the use for the module in question, but for now it just
reverts the entire name to private so the pub use doesn't have much effect.

The behavior isn't exactly what we want, but this no longer has backwards
compatibility hazards.
2014-04-10 15:22:01 -07:00
Alex Crichton
df533c6e87 rustc: Don't succeed on shadowed nonexistent import
Previously resolve was checking the "import resolution" for whether an import
had succeeded or not, but this was the same structure filled in by a previous
import if a name is shadowed. Instead, this alters resolve to consult the local
resolve state (as opposed to the shared one) to test whether an import succeeded
or not.

Closes #13404
2014-04-10 15:22:00 -07:00
Alex Crichton
83d2c0b8a6 rustc: Disallow importing through use statements
Resolve is currently erroneously allowing imports through private `use`
statements in some circumstances, even across module boundaries. For example,
this code compiles successfully today:

    use std::c_str;
    mod test {
        use c_str::CString;
    }

This should not be allowed because it was explicitly decided that private `use`
statements are purely bringing local names into scope, they are not
participating further in name resolution.

As a consequence of this patch, this code, while valid today, is now invalid:

    mod test {
        use std::c_str;

        unsafe fn foo() {
            ::test::c_str::CString::new(0 as *u8, false);
        }
    }

While plausibly acceptable, I found it to be more consistent if private imports
were only considered candidates to resolve the first component in a path, and no
others.

Closes #12612
2014-04-10 15:22:00 -07:00
Kasey Carrothers
0bf4e900d4 Renamed ast::Purity to ast::FnStyle and ast::ImpureFn to ast::NormalFn and updated associated variable and function names. 2014-04-10 15:22:00 -07:00
Alex Crichton
6d6d4c987f test: Add a test for #7663
I think that the test case from this issue has become out of date with resolve
changes in the past 9 months, and it's not entirely clear to me what the
original bug was.

Regardless, it seems like tricky resolve behavior, so tests were added to make
sure things resolved correctly and warnings were correctly reported.

Closes #7663
2014-04-10 15:21:59 -07:00
Felix S. Klock II
da25539c1a Generalized the pretty-print entry points to support -o <file>. 2014-04-10 15:21:59 -07:00
Huon Wilson
6e63b12f5f Remove some internal ~[] from several libraries.
Some straggling instances of `~[]` across a few different libs. Also,
remove some public ones from workcache.
2014-04-10 15:21:58 -07:00
Kevin Ballard
8135032779 Remove references to @Trait from a compiler error message 2014-04-10 15:21:57 -07:00
Michael Woerister
5099b8c863 debuginfo: Don't create debuginfo for statics inlined from other crates.
Fixes issue #13213, that is linker errors when the inlined static has been optimized out of the exporting crate.
2014-04-10 15:21:57 -07:00
Patrick Walton
d8e45ea7c0 libstd: Implement StrBuf, a new string buffer type like Vec, and
port all code over to use it.
2014-04-10 22:10:10 +10:00
Kasey Carrothers
27920afa85 Remove the unused Point struct in the assert-eq-macro-fail.rs test. 2014-04-09 21:56:21 -07:00
bors
7fbcb400f0 auto merge of #13413 : alexcrichton/rust/once-fn-move, r=brson
This fixes the categorization of the upvars of procs (represented internally
as once fns) to consider usage to require a loan. In doing so, upvars are no
longer allowed to be moved out of repeatedly in loops and such.

Closes #10398
Closes #12041
Closes #12127
2014-04-09 18:31:58 -07:00
Kiet Tran
13d6c35c56 Collect move errors before reporting
This commit changes the way move errors are reported when some value is
captured by a PatIdent. First, we collect all of the "cannot move out
of" errors before reporting them, and those errors with the same "move
source" are reported together. If the move is caused by a PatIdent (that
binds by value), we add a note indicating where it is and suggest the
user to put `ref` if they don't want the value to move. This makes the
"cannot move out of" error in match expression nicer (though the extra
note may not feel that helpful in other places :P). For example, with
the following code snippet,

```rust
enum Foo {
    Foo1(~u32, ~u32),
    Foo2(~u32),
    Foo3,
}

fn main() {
    let f = &Foo1(~1u32, ~2u32);
    match *f {
        Foo1(num1, num2) => (),
        Foo2(num) => (),
        Foo3 => ()
    }
}
```

Errors before the change:

```rust
test.rs:10:9: 10:25 error: cannot move out of dereference of `&`-pointer
test.rs:10         Foo1(num1, num2) => (),
                   ^~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
test.rs:10:9: 10:25 error: cannot move out of dereference of `&`-pointer
test.rs:10         Foo1(num1, num2) => (),
                   ^~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
test.rs:11:9: 11:18 error: cannot move out of dereference of `&`-pointer
test.rs:11         Foo2(num) => (),
                   ^~~~~~~~~
```

After:

```rust
test.rs:9:11: 9:13 error: cannot move out of dereference of `&`-pointer
test.rs:9     match *f {
                    ^~
test.rs:10:14: 10:18 note: attempting to move value to here (to prevent the move, you can use `ref num1` to capture value by reference)
test.rs:10         Foo1(num1, num2) => (),
                        ^~~~
test.rs:10:20: 10:24 note: and here (use `ref num2`)
test.rs:10         Foo1(num1, num2) => (),
                              ^~~~
test.rs:11:14: 11:17 note: and here (use `ref num`)
test.rs:11         Foo2(num) => (),
                        ^~~
```

Close #8064
2014-04-09 20:03:23 -04:00
bors
e2c84a78b4 auto merge of #13383 : ben0x539/rust/glob-dots, r=brson
Fixes #12930.
2014-04-09 14:11:56 -07:00
Alex Crichton
767ed1a71f rustc: Prevent repeated moves out of proc upvars
This fixes the categorization of the upvars of procs (represented internally
as once fns) to consider usage to require a loan. In doing so, upvars are no
longer allowed to be moved out of repeatedly in loops and such.

Closes #10398
Closes #12041
Closes #12127
2014-04-08 17:10:47 -07:00
Alex Crichton
0cc257eb42 rustc: Run destructors when dest=Ignore
Previously, if statements of the form "Foo;" or "let _ = Foo;" were encountered
where Foo had a destructor, the destructors were not run. This changes
the relevant locations in trans to check for ty::type_needs_drop and invokes
trans_to_lvalue instead of trans_into.

Closes #4734
Closes #6892
2014-04-08 08:28:54 -07:00
JustAPerson
cdf349d442 Add test for #11881
Closes #11881.

This code has been copied from the original issue and updated for
modern Rust APIs.
2014-04-08 00:03:12 -07:00
Kang Seonghoon
7a281718f0 std: make vec!() macro handle a trailing comma
Fixes #12910.
2014-04-08 00:03:12 -07:00
Alex Crichton
6ac34926a4 std: User a smaller stdin buffer on windows
Apparently windows doesn't like reading from stdin with a large buffer size, and
it also apparently is ok with a smaller buffer size. This changes the reader
returned by stdin() to return an 8k buffered reader for stdin rather than a 64k
buffered reader.

Apparently libuv has run into this before, taking a peek at their code, with a
specific comment in their console code saying that "ReadConsole can't handle big
buffers", which I presume is related to invoking ReadFile as if it were a file
descriptor.

Closes #13304
2014-04-08 00:03:12 -07:00
Boris Egorov
00cbda2d0a Improve searching for XXX in tidy script (#3303)
Few places where previous version of tidy script cannot find XXX:
* inside one-line comment preceding by a few spaces;
* inside multiline comments (now it finds it if multiline comment starts
on the same line with XXX).

Change occurences of XXX found by new tidy script.
2014-04-08 00:03:12 -07:00
Daniel Micay
de2567dec9 fix ~ZeroSizeType rvalues
Closes #13360
2014-04-08 00:03:11 -07:00
Alex Crichton
c3ea3e439f Register new snapshots 2014-04-08 00:03:11 -07:00
Benjamin Herr
1700f359bc libglob: only return dirs for globs ending in /
`foo.txt/` should not return `foo.txt` if `foo.txt` is in fact a text
file and not a directory.
2014-04-08 01:21:37 +02:00
Benjamin Herr
4051bd900a libglob: allow "." and ".." to be matched
... also don't read the whole directory if the glob for that path
component doesn't contain any metacharacters.

Patterns like `../*.jpg` will work now, and `.*` will match both `.` and
`..` to be consistent with shell expansion.

As before: Just `*` still won't match `.` and `..`, while it will still
match dotfiles like `.git` by default.
2014-04-08 01:21:28 +02:00
bors
9a33330caa auto merge of #13288 : alexcrichton/rust/remove-check-fast, r=brson
Rebasing of #12304.
2014-04-07 11:26:37 -07:00