Commit graph

4315 commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Nick Cameron
e7122a5a09 Change lint names to plurals 2015-03-25 10:06:13 +13:00
Nick Cameron
95602a759d Add trivial cast lints.
This permits all coercions to be performed in casts, but adds lints to warn in those cases.

Part of this patch moves cast checking to a later stage of type checking. We acquire obligations to check casts as part of type checking where we previously checked them. Once we have type checked a function or module, then we check any cast obligations which have been acquired. That means we have more type information available to check casts (this was crucial to making coercions work properly in place of some casts), but it means that casts cannot feed input into type inference.

[breaking change]

* Adds two new lints for trivial casts and trivial numeric casts, these are warn by default, but can cause errors if you build with warnings as errors. Previously, trivial numeric casts and casts to trait objects were allowed.
* The unused casts lint has gone.
* Interactions between casting and type inference have changed in subtle ways. Two ways this might manifest are:
- You may need to 'direct' casts more with extra type information, for example, in some cases where `foo as _ as T` succeeded, you may now need to specify the type for `_`
- Casts do not influence inference of integer types. E.g., the following used to type check:

```
let x = 42;
let y = &x as *const u32;
```

Because the cast would inform inference that `x` must have type `u32`. This no longer applies and the compiler will fallback to `i32` for `x` and thus there will be a type error in the cast. The solution is to add more type information:

```
let x: u32 = 42;
let y = &x as *const u32;
```
2015-03-25 10:03:57 +13:00
Alex Crichton
3112716f12 rollup merge of #23506: alexcrichton/remove-some-deprecated-things
Conflicts:
	src/test/run-pass/deprecated-no-split-stack.rs
2015-03-23 15:27:06 -07:00
Alex Crichton
753efb5042 rollup merge of #23601: nikomatsakis/by-value-index
This is a [breaking-change]. When indexing a generic map (hashmap, etc) using the `[]` operator, it is now necessary to borrow explicitly, so change `map[key]` to `map[&key]` (consistent with the `get` routine). However, indexing of string-valued maps with constant strings can now be written `map["abc"]`.

r? @japaric
cc @aturon @Gankro
2015-03-23 15:10:50 -07:00
Alex Crichton
fd13400627 rollup merge of #23538: aturon/conversion
Conflicts:
	src/librustc_back/rpath.rs
2015-03-23 15:09:05 -07:00
Alex Crichton
ec1a85a85c rollup merge of #23211: FlaPer87/oibit-send-and-friends
Fixes #23225

r? @nikomatsakis
2015-03-23 15:07:21 -07:00
Aaron Turon
8389253df0 Add generic conversion traits
This commit:

* Introduces `std::convert`, providing an implementation of
RFC 529.

* Deprecates the `AsPath`, `AsOsStr`, and `IntoBytes` traits, all
in favor of the corresponding generic conversion traits.

  Consequently, various IO APIs now take `AsRef<Path>` rather than
`AsPath`, and so on. Since the types provided by `std` implement both
traits, this should cause relatively little breakage.

* Deprecates many `from_foo` constructors in favor of `from`.

* Changes `PathBuf::new` to take no argument (creating an empty buffer,
  as per convention). The previous behavior is now available as
  `PathBuf::from`.

* De-stabilizes `IntoCow`. It's not clear whether we need this separate trait.

Closes #22751
Closes #14433

[breaking-change]
2015-03-23 15:01:45 -07:00
Niko Matsakis
8e58af4004 Fallout in stdlib, rustdoc, rustc, etc. For most maps, converted uses of
`[]` on maps to `get` in rustc, since stage0 and stage1+ disagree about
how to use `[]`.
2015-03-23 16:55:45 -04:00
bors
e2fa53e593 Auto merge of #23512 - oli-obk:result_ok_unwrap, r=alexcrichton
because then the call to `unwrap()` will not print the error object.
2015-03-20 23:16:47 +00:00
Flavio Percoco
01d24297eb Feature gate defaulted traits 2015-03-20 16:43:11 +01:00
Oliver Schneider
b4a1e59146 don't use Result::ok just to be able to use unwrap/unwrap_or 2015-03-20 08:19:13 +01:00
Vladimir Pouzanov
bd1f562e19 Added missing impl_to_source! and impl_to_tokens! for TraitItem. 2015-03-19 17:04:03 +00:00
Vladimir Pouzanov
e3cde9783b Added missing impl_to_source! and impl_to_tokens! for ImplItem.
This fixes several use cases that were broken after #23265 landed.
2015-03-19 17:01:15 +00:00
bors
d5408f376f Auto merge of #23507 - jbcrail:fix-comment-spelling, r=alexcrichton
I corrected misspelled comments in several crates.
2015-03-19 09:50:13 +00:00
Joseph Crail
857035ade7 Fix spelling errors in comments.
I corrected misspelled comments in several crates.
2015-03-19 00:48:08 -04:00
Manish Goregaokar
e8c1d771fc Rollup merge of #23428 - Manishearth:ast-doc, r=steveklabnik
I often have to run `ast-json` or look into the pretty-printer source to figure out what the fields of an AST enum mean. I've tried to document most of what I know (and some semi-obvious stuff).

r? @steveklabnik

f? @eddyb
2015-03-19 08:49:38 +05:30
Manish Goregaokar
288acc755f Rollup merge of #23494 - mdinger:patch-1, r=steveklabnik
Typo
2015-03-19 08:49:36 +05:30
Manish Goregaokar
a32bb1bcc4 Rollup merge of #23475 - nikomatsakis:closure-ret-syntax, r=acrichto
Require braces when a closure has an explicit return type. This is a [breaking-change]: instead of a closure like `|| -> i32 22`, prefer `|| -> i32 { 22 }`.

Fixes #23420.
2015-03-19 08:49:34 +05:30
Manish Goregaokar
c20c652a92 Space and punctuation fixes 2015-03-19 08:24:43 +05:30
Manish Goregaokar
d943d9b801 Address huon's comments 2015-03-19 08:24:42 +05:30
mdinger
835c9bbbf0 Update ast.rs
Typo
2015-03-19 08:24:40 +05:30
Alex Crichton
f945190e63 rustc: Remove some long deprecated features:
* no_split_stack was renamed to no_stack_check
* deriving was renamed to derive
* `use foo::mod` was renamed to `use foo::self`;
* legacy lifetime definitions in closures have been replaced with `for` syntax
* `fn foo() -> &A + B` has been deprecated for some time (needs parens)
* Obsolete `for Sized?` syntax
* Obsolete `Sized? Foo` syntax
* Obsolete `|T| -> U` syntax
2015-03-18 19:46:25 -07:00
Niko Matsakis
c225824bde Require braces when a closure has an explicit return type. This is a
[breaking-change]: instead of a closure like `|| -> i32 22`, prefer `||
-> i32 { 22 }`.

Fixes #23420.
2015-03-18 20:07:27 -04:00
Alex Crichton
fccf5a0005 Register new snapshots 2015-03-18 16:32:32 -07:00
Manish Goregaokar
2a106d68f4 Rollup merge of #23428 - Manishearth:ast-doc, r=huon
I often have to run `ast-json` or look into the pretty-printer source to figure out what the fields of an AST enum mean. I've tried to document most of what I know (and some semi-obvious stuff).

r? @steveklabnik

f? @eddyb
2015-03-18 22:21:09 +05:30
Manish Goregaokar
a5828ff7b0 Address huon's comments 2015-03-18 18:06:10 +05:30
Manish Goregaokar
13881df1b2 Clarify Expr 2015-03-18 17:54:57 +05:30
Manish Goregaokar
edf65c43f6 ast: Document Item and ForeignItem 2015-03-18 17:54:57 +05:30
Manish Goregaokar
084f3bcfd4 ast: Document Lit 2015-03-18 17:54:57 +05:30
Manish Goregaokar
b08d5eee6a ast: Document Pat and Block 2015-03-18 17:54:57 +05:30
Manish Goregaokar
1debe9d112 ast: Document paths and where clauses 2015-03-18 17:54:57 +05:30
Manish Goregaokar
c42067c9e9 ast: Document Expr_, UnOp, and BinOp 2015-03-18 17:54:57 +05:30
Alex Crichton
aa88da6317 std: Tweak some unstable features of str
This commit clarifies some of the unstable features in the `str` module by
moving them out of the blanket `core` and `collections` features.

The following methods were moved to the `str_char` feature which generally
encompasses decoding specific characters from a `str` and dealing with the
result. It is unclear if any of these methods need to be stabilized for 1.0 and
the most conservative route for now is to continue providing them but to leave
them as unstable under a more specific name.

* `is_char_boundary`
* `char_at`
* `char_range_at`
* `char_at_reverse`
* `char_range_at_reverse`
* `slice_shift_char`

The following methods were moved into the generic `unicode` feature as they are
specifically enabled by the `unicode` crate itself.

* `nfd_chars`
* `nfkd_chars`
* `nfc_chars`
* `graphemes`
* `grapheme_indices`
* `width`
2015-03-17 18:03:03 -07:00
Manish Goregaokar
925d5ad715 Rollup merge of #23415 - alexcrichton:stabilize-flush, r=aturon
The [associated RFC][rfc] for possibly splitting out `flush` has been closed and
as a result there are no more blockers for stabilizing this method, so this
commit marks the method as such.

[rfc]: https://github.com/rust-lang/rfcs/pull/950
2015-03-17 15:20:03 +05:30
Manish Goregaokar
74adeda78a Rollup merge of #23400 - nrc:pub_use, r=eddyb
r? @eddyb
2015-03-17 15:19:45 +05:30
Jorge Aparicio
8256241d3a impl f{32,64} 2015-03-16 21:57:43 -05:00
bors
92dd995e17 Auto merge of #23331 - eddyb:attr-lookahead, r=nikomatsakis
Most of the changes are cleanup facilitated by straight-forward attribute handling.
This is a minor [breaking-change] for users of `quote_stmt!` (returns `Option<P<Stmt>>` now) and some of the public methods in `Parser` (a few `Vec<Attribute>` arguments/returns were removed).

r? @nikomatsakis
2015-03-16 22:13:52 +00:00
Alex Crichton
b3a44859ec std: Stabilize the Write::flush method
The [associated RFC][rfc] for possibly splitting out `flush` has been closed and
as a result there are no more blockers for stabilizing this method, so this
commit marks the method as such.

[rfc]: https://github.com/rust-lang/rfcs/pull/950
2015-03-16 11:51:57 -07:00
bors
bde09eea35 Auto merge of #23347 - aturon:stab-misc, r=alexcrichton
This commit deprecates the `count`, `range` and `range_step` functions
in `iter`, in favor of range notation. To recover all existing
functionality, a new `step_by` adapter is provided directly on `ops::Range`
and `ops::RangeFrom`.

[breaking-change]

r? @alexcrichton
2015-03-16 17:02:11 +00:00
Nick Cameron
1fd38c181a Reviewer changes 2015-03-16 17:01:12 +13:00
Nick Cameron
432011d143 Fallout in testing. 2015-03-16 11:03:54 +13:00
Aaron Turon
1d5983aded Deprecate range, range_step, count, distributions
This commit deprecates the `count`, `range` and `range_step` functions
in `iter`, in favor of range notation. To recover all existing
functionality, a new `step_by` adapter is provided directly on `ops::Range`
and `ops::RangeFrom`.

[breaking-change]
2015-03-13 14:45:13 -07:00
bors
3e4be02b80 Auto merge of #23292 - alexcrichton:stabilize-io, r=aturon
The new `std::io` module has had some time to bake now, and this commit
stabilizes its functionality. There are still portions of the module which
remain unstable, and below contains a summart of the actions taken.

This commit also deprecates the entire contents of the `old_io` module in a
blanket fashion. All APIs should now have a reasonable replacement in the
new I/O modules.

Stable APIs:

* `std::io` (the name)
* `std::io::prelude` (the name)
* `Read`
* `Read::read`
* `Read::{read_to_end, read_to_string}` after being modified to return a `usize`
  for the number of bytes read.
* `ReadExt`
* `Write`
* `Write::write`
* `Write::{write_all, write_fmt}`
* `WriteExt`
* `BufRead`
* `BufRead::{fill_buf, consume}`
* `BufRead::{read_line, read_until}` after being modified to return a `usize`
  for the number of bytes read.
* `BufReadExt`
* `BufReader`
* `BufReader::{new, with_capacity}`
* `BufReader::{get_ref, get_mut, into_inner}`
* `{Read,BufRead} for BufReader`
* `BufWriter`
* `BufWriter::{new, with_capacity}`
* `BufWriter::{get_ref, get_mut, into_inner}`
* `Write for BufWriter`
* `IntoInnerError`
* `IntoInnerError::{error, into_inner}`
* `{Error,Display} for IntoInnerError`
* `LineWriter`
* `LineWriter::{new, with_capacity}` - `with_capacity` was added
* `LineWriter::{get_ref, get_mut, into_inner}` - `get_mut` was added)
* `Write for LineWriter`
* `BufStream`
* `BufStream::{new, with_capacities}`
* `BufStream::{get_ref, get_mut, into_inner}`
* `{BufRead,Read,Write} for BufStream`
* `stdin`
* `Stdin`
* `Stdin::lock`
* `Stdin::read_line` - added method
* `StdinLock`
* `Read for Stdin`
* `{Read,BufRead} for StdinLock`
* `stdout`
* `Stdout`
* `Stdout::lock`
* `StdoutLock`
* `Write for Stdout`
* `Write for StdoutLock`
* `stderr`
* `Stderr`
* `Stderr::lock`
* `StderrLock`
* `Write for Stderr`
* `Write for StderrLock`
* `io::Result`
* `io::Error`
* `io::Error::last_os_error`
* `{Display, Error} for Error`

Unstable APIs:

(reasons can be found in the commit itself)

* `Write::flush`
* `Seek`
* `ErrorKind`
* `Error::new`
* `Error::from_os_error`
* `Error::kind`

Deprecated APIs

* `Error::description` - available via the `Error` trait
* `Error::detail` - available via the `Display` implementation
* `thread::Builder::{stdout, stderr}`

Changes in functionality:

* `old_io::stdio::set_stderr` is now a noop as the infrastructure for printing
  backtraces has migrated to `std::io`.

[breaking-change]
2015-03-13 20:22:16 +00:00
Alex Crichton
981bf5f690 Fallout of std::old_io deprecation 2015-03-13 10:00:28 -07:00
Manish Goregaokar
40b64645fe rm unused import 2015-03-13 19:52:18 +05:30
Manish Goregaokar
d0f98fcc7f Rollup merge of #23322 - dotdash:jemalloc_attrs, r=brson
When this attribute is applied to a function, its return value gets the
noalias attribute, which is how you tell LLVM that the function returns
a \"new\" pointer that doesn't alias anything accessible to the caller,
i.e. it acts like a memory allocator.

Plain malloc doesn't need this attribute because LLVM already knows
about malloc and adds the attribute itself.
2015-03-13 18:11:51 +05:30
Eduard Burtescu
9889aae13e syntax: use lookahead to distinguish inner and outer attributes, instead of passing the latter around. 2015-03-13 11:36:30 +02:00
Björn Steinbrink
0942803f50 Add an "allocator" attribute to mark functions as allocators
When this attribute is applied to a function, its return value gets the
noalias attribute, which is how you tell LLVM that the function returns
a "new" pointer that doesn't alias anything accessible to the caller,
i.e. it acts like a memory allocator.

Plain malloc doesn't need this attribute because LLVM already knows
about malloc and adds the attribute itself.
2015-03-13 03:19:30 +01:00
bors
79dd393a4f Auto merge of #23229 - aturon:stab-path, r=alexcrichton
This commit stabilizes essentially all of the new `std::path` API. The
API itself is changed in a couple of ways (which brings it in closer
alignment with the RFC):

* `.` components are now normalized away, unless they appear at the
  start of a path. This in turn effects the semantics of e.g. asking for
  the file name of `foo/` or `foo/.`, both of which yield `Some("foo")`
  now. This semantics is what the original RFC specified, and is also
  desirable given early experience rolling out the new API.

* The `parent` method is now `without_file` and succeeds if, and only
  if, `file_name` is `Some(_)`. That means, in particular, that it fails
  for a path like `foo/../`. This change affects `pop` as well.

In addition, the `old_path` module is now deprecated.

[breaking-change]

r? @alexcrichton
2015-03-13 01:00:02 +00:00
Aaron Turon
42c4e481cd Stabilize std::path
This commit stabilizes essentially all of the new `std::path` API. The
API itself is changed in a couple of ways (which brings it in closer
alignment with the RFC):

* `.` components are now normalized away, unless they appear at the
  start of a path. This in turn effects the semantics of e.g. asking for
  the file name of `foo/` or `foo/.`, both of which yield `Some("foo")`
  now. This semantics is what the original RFC specified, and is also
  desirable given early experience rolling out the new API.

* The `parent` function now succeeds if, and only if, the path has at
  least one non-root/prefix component. This change affects `pop` as
  well.

* The `Prefix` component now involves a separate `PrefixComponent`
  struct, to better allow for keeping both parsed and unparsed prefix data.

In addition, the `old_path` module is now deprecated.

Closes #23264

[breaking-change]
2015-03-12 16:38:58 -07:00