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2014-04-11Fix tests. Add Vec<u8> conversion to StrBuf.Huon Wilson-1/+1
2014-04-10rustc: Disallow importing through use statementsAlex Crichton-1/+1
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
2014-04-10Remove an unnecessary file.OGINO Masanori-0/+0
Signed-off-by: OGINO Masanori <masanori.ogino@gmail.com>
2014-04-10native: remove some internal ~[].Huon Wilson-15/+15
2014-04-10std,native,green,rustuv: make readdir return `Vec`.Huon Wilson-8/+7
Replacing `~[]`. This also makes the `walk_dir` iterator use a `Vec` internally.
2014-04-10libstd: Implement `StrBuf`, a new string buffer type like `Vec`, andPatrick Walton-4/+5
port all code over to use it.
2014-04-08auto merge of #13397 : alexcrichton/rust/rollup, r=alexcrichtonbors-5/+5
2014-04-08Register new snapshotsAlex Crichton-5/+5
2014-04-07native: Try hard to not malloc on a forked childAlex Crichton-1/+31
This appears to be causing the BSD bots to lock up when looking at the core dumps I've managed to get. Dropping the `FileDesc` structure triggers the `Arc` it's contained in to get cleaned up, invoking free(). This instead just closes the file descriptor (the arc itself is never cleaned up). I'm still not entirely sure why this is a problem because the pthreads runtime should register hooks for fork() to prevent this sort of deadlock, but perhaps that's only done on linux?
2014-04-07Fix some windows rpass testsAlex Crichton-26/+55
2014-04-06auto merge of #13315 : alexcrichton/rust/libc, r=alexcrichton,mebors-40/+42
Rebasing of #12526 with a very obscure bug fixed on windows.
2014-04-04Register new snapshotsAlex Crichton-2/+0
2014-04-04Fix fallout from std::libc separationCorey Richardson-40/+42
2014-04-03Bump version to 0.11-preBrian Anderson-1/+1
This also changes some of the download links in the documentation to 'nightly'.
2014-04-03auto merge of #13286 : alexcrichton/rust/release, r=brsonbors-1/+1
Merging the 0.10 release into the master branch.
2014-04-02Fix fallout of requiring uint indicesAlex Crichton-3/+3
2014-04-01auto merge of #13115 : huonw/rust/rand-errors, r=alexcrichtonbors-70/+5
move errno -> IoError converter into std, bubble up OSRng errors Also adds a general errno -> `~str` converter to `std::os`, and makes the failure messages for the things using `OSRng` (e.g. (transitively) the task-local RNG, meaning hashmap initialisation failures aren't such a black box).
2014-04-01std: migrate the errno -> IoError converter from libnative.Huon Wilson-70/+5
This also adds a direct `errno` -> `~str` converter, rather than only being possible to get a string for the very last error.
2014-03-31native: Switch field privacy as necessaryAlex Crichton-37/+39
2014-03-31Bump version to 0.10Alex Crichton-1/+1
2014-03-30Removed deprecated functions `map` and `flat_map` for vectors and slices.Marvin Löbel-2/+4
2014-03-28Convert most code to new inner attribute syntax.Brian Anderson-9/+9
Closes #2569
2014-03-28auto merge of #13158 : alexcrichton/rust/issue-13123, r=brsonbors-0/+18
Some unix platforms will send a SIGPIPE signal instead of returning EPIPE from a syscall by default. The native runtime doesn't install a SIGPIPE handler, causing the program to die immediately in this case. This brings the behavior in line with libgreen by ignoring SIGPIPE and propagating EPIPE upwards to the application in the form of an IoError. Closes #13123
2014-03-28native: Ignore SIGPIPE by defaultAlex Crichton-0/+18
Some unix platforms will send a SIGPIPE signal instead of returning EPIPE from a syscall by default. The native runtime doesn't install a SIGPIPE handler, causing the program to die immediately in this case. This brings the behavior in line with libgreen by ignoring SIGPIPE and propagating EPIPE upwards to the application in the form of an IoError. Closes #13123
2014-03-28native: Use WNOHANG before signalingAlex Crichton-23/+58
It turns out that on linux, and possibly other platforms, child processes will continue to accept signals until they have been *reaped*. This means that once the child has exited, it will succeed to receive signals until waitpid() has been invoked on it. This is unfortunate behavior, and differs from what is seen on OSX and windows. This commit changes the behavior of Process::signal() to be the same across platforms, and updates the documentation of Process::kill() to note that when signaling a foreign process it may accept signals until reaped. Implementation-wise, this invokes waitpid() with WNOHANG before each signal to the child to ensure that if the child has exited that we will reap it. Other possibilities include installing a SIGCHLD signal handler, but at this time I believe that that's too complicated. Closes #13124
2014-03-27doc: Update the tutorial about bounds for traitsAlex Crichton-8/+8
2014-03-27Fix fallout of removing default boundsAlex Crichton-52/+53
This is all purely fallout of getting the previous commit to compile.
2014-03-25libstd: Document the following modules:Patrick Walton-2/+3
* native::io * std::char * std::fmt * std::fmt::parse * std::io * std::io::extensions * std::io::net::ip * std::io::net::udp * std::io::net::unix * std::io::pipe * std::num * std::num::f32 * std::num::f64 * std::num::strconv * std::os
2014-03-24auto merge of #12900 : alexcrichton/rust/rewrite-sync, r=brsonbors-5/+5
* Remove clone-ability from all primitives. All shared state will now come from the usage of the primitives being shared, not the primitives being inherently shareable. This allows for fewer allocations for stack-allocated primitives. * Add `Mutex<T>` and `RWLock<T>` which are stack-allocated primitives for purely wrapping a piece of data * Remove `RWArc<T>` in favor of `Arc<RWLock<T>>` * Remove `MutexArc<T>` in favor of `Arc<Mutex<T>>` * Shuffle around where things are located * The `arc` module now only contains `Arc` * A new `lock` module contains `Mutex`, `RWLock`, and `Barrier` * A new `raw` module contains the primitive implementations of `Semaphore`, `Mutex`, and `RWLock` * The Deref/DerefMut trait was implemented where appropriate * `CowArc` was removed, the functionality is now part of `Arc` and is tagged with `#[experimental]`. * The crate now has #[deny(missing_doc)] * `Arc` now supports weak pointers This is not a large-scale rewrite of the functionality contained within the `sync` crate, but rather a shuffling of who does what an a thinner hierarchy of ownership to allow for better composability.
2014-03-24auto merge of #13080 : alexcrichton/rust/possible-osx-deadlock, r=brsonbors-107/+105
The OSX bots have been deadlocking recently in the rustdoc tests. I have only been able to rarely reproduce the deadlock on my local setup. When reproduced, it looks like the child process is spinning on the malloc mutex, which I presume is locked with no other threads to unlock it. I'm not convinced that this is what's happening, because OSX should protect against this with pthread_atfork by default. Regardless, running as little code as possible in the child after fork() is normally a good idea anyway, so this commit moves all allocation to the parent process to run before the child executes. After running 6k iterations of rustdoc tests, this deadlocked twice before, and after 20k iterations afterwards, it never deadlocked. I draw the conclusion that this is either sweeping the bug under the rug, or it did indeed fix the underlying problem.
2014-03-23std: Move NativeMutex from &mut self to &selfAlex Crichton-4/+4
The proper usage of shared types is now sharing through `&self` rather than `&mut self` because the mutable version will provide stronger guarantees (no aliasing on *any* thread).
2014-03-23Snapshot cleanupAlex Crichton-1/+1
2014-03-23Register new snapshotsFlavio Percoco-1/+0
2014-03-22native: Fix a possible deadlock in spawnAlex Crichton-107/+105
The OSX bots have been deadlocking recently in the rustdoc tests. I have only been able to rarely reproduce the deadlock on my local setup. When reproduced, it looks like the child process is spinning on the malloc mutex, which I presume is locked with no other threads to unlock it. I'm not convinced that this is what's happening, because OSX should protect against this with pthread_atfork by default. Regardless, running as little code as possible in the child after fork() is normally a good idea anyway, so this commit moves all allocation to the parent process to run before the child executes. After running 6k iterations of rustdoc tests, this deadlocked twice before, and after 20k iterations afterwards, it never deadlocked. I draw the conclusion that this is either sweeping the bug under the rug, or it did indeed fix the underlying problem.
2014-03-21rustc: Switch defaults from libgreen to libnativeAlex Crichton-1/+17
The compiler will no longer inject libgreen as the default runtime for rust programs, this commit switches it over to libnative by default. Now that libnative has baked for some time, it is ready enough to start getting more serious usage as the default runtime for rustc generated binaries. We've found that there isn't really a correct decision in choosing a 1:1 or M:N runtime as a default for all applications, but it seems that a larger number of programs today would work more reasonable with a native default rather than a green default. With this commit come a number of bugfixes: * The main native task is now named "<main>" * The main native task has the stack bounds set up properly * #[no_uv] was renamed to #[no_start] * The core-run-destroy test was rewritten for both libnative and libgreen and one of the tests was modified to be more robust. * The process-detach test was locked to libgreen because it uses signal handling
2014-03-20Register new snapshotsAlex Crichton-0/+1
2014-03-20Removing imports of std::vec_ng::VecAlex Crichton-2/+0
It's now in the prelude.
2014-03-20rename std::vec_ng -> std::vecDaniel Micay-1/+1
Closes #12771
2014-03-20rename std::vec -> std::sliceDaniel Micay-9/+8
Closes #12702
2014-03-15Test fixes and rebase conflictsAlex Crichton-1/+1
This commit switches over the backtrace infrastructure from piggy-backing off the RUST_LOG environment variable to using the RUST_BACKTRACE environment variable (logging is now disabled in libstd).
2014-03-15log: Introduce liblog, the old std::loggingAlex Crichton-16/+5
This commit moves all logging out of the standard library into an external crate. This crate is the new crate which is responsible for all logging macros and logging implementation. A few reasons for this change are: * The crate map has always been a bit of a code smell among rust programs. It has difficulty being loaded on almost all platforms, and it's used almost exclusively for logging and only logging. Removing the crate map is one of the end goals of this movement. * The compiler has a fair bit of special support for logging. It has the __log_level() expression as well as generating a global word per module specifying the log level. This is unfairly favoring the built-in logging system, and is much better done purely in libraries instead of the compiler itself. * Initialization of logging is much easier to do if there is no reliance on a magical crate map being available to set module log levels. * If the logging library can be written outside of the standard library, there's no reason that it shouldn't be. It's likely that we're not going to build the highest quality logging library of all time, so third-party libraries should be able to provide just as high-quality logging systems as the default one provided in the rust distribution. With a migration such as this, the change does not come for free. There are some subtle changes in the behavior of liblog vs the previous logging macros: * The core change of this migration is that there is no longer a physical log-level per module. This concept is still emulated (it is quite useful), but there is now only a global log level, not a local one. This global log level is a reflection of the maximum of all log levels specified. The previously generated logging code looked like: if specified_level <= __module_log_level() { println!(...) } The newly generated code looks like: if specified_level <= ::log::LOG_LEVEL { if ::log::module_enabled(module_path!()) { println!(...) } } Notably, the first layer of checking is still intended to be "super fast" in that it's just a load of a global word and a compare. The second layer of checking is executed to determine if the current module does indeed have logging turned on. This means that if any module has a debug log level turned on, all modules with debug log levels get a little bit slower (they all do more expensive dynamic checks to determine if they're turned on or not). Semantically, this migration brings no change in this respect, but runtime-wise, this will have a perf impact on some code. * A `RUST_LOG=::help` directive will no longer print out a list of all modules that can be logged. This is because the crate map will no longer specify the log levels of all modules, so the list of modules is not known. Additionally, warnings can no longer be provided if a malformed logging directive was supplied. The new "hello world" for logging looks like: #[phase(syntax, link)] extern crate log; fn main() { debug!("Hello, world!"); }
2014-03-13auto merge of #12861 : huonw/rust/lint-owned-vecs, r=thestingerbors-0/+1
lint: add lint for use of a `~[T]`. This is useless at the moment (since pretty much every crate uses `~[]`), but should help avoid regressions once completely removed from a crate.
2014-03-13auto merge of #12855 : alexcrichton/rust/shutdown, r=brsonbors-0/+5
This is something that is plausibly useful, and is provided by libuv. This is not currently surfaced as part of the `TcpStream` type, but it may possibly appear in the future. For now only the raw functionality is provided through the Rtio objects.
2014-03-14lint: add lint for use of a `~[T]`.Huon Wilson-0/+1
This is useless at the moment (since pretty much every crate uses `~[]`), but should help avoid regressions once completely removed from a crate.
2014-03-13io: Bind to shutdown() for TCP streamsAlex Crichton-0/+5
This is something that is plausibly useful, and is provided by libuv. This is not currently surfaced as part of the `TcpStream` type, but it may possibly appear in the future. For now only the raw functionality is provided through the Rtio objects.
2014-03-13std: Rename Chan/Port types and constructorAlex Crichton-106/+103
* Chan<T> => Sender<T> * Port<T> => Receiver<T> * Chan::new() => channel() * constructor returns (Sender, Receiver) instead of (Receiver, Sender) * local variables named `port` renamed to `rx` * local variables named `chan` renamed to `tx` Closes #11765
2014-03-12Remove remaining nolink usages.(fixes #12810)lpy-1/+0
2014-03-05std: Move libnative task count bookkeeping to stdAlex Crichton-52/+3
When using tasks in Rust, the expectation is that the runtime does not exit before all tasks have exited. This is enforced in libgreen through the `SchedPool` type, and it is enforced in libnative through a `bookkeeping` module and a global count/mutex pair. Unfortunately, this means that a process which originates with libgreen will not wait for spawned native tasks. In order to fix this problem, the bookkeeping module was moved from libnative to libstd so the runtime itself can wait for native tasks to exit. Green tasks do not manage themselves through this bookkeeping module, but native tasks will continue to manage themselves through this module. Closes #12684
2014-03-05native: Fix usage of a deallocated mutexAlex Crichton-16/+14
When the timer_helper thread exited, it would attempt to re-acquire the global task count mutex, but the mutex had previously been deallocated, leading to undefined behavior of the mutex, and in some cases deadlock. Another mutex is used to coordinate shutting down the timer helper thread. Closes #12699
2014-03-05native: Move from usleep() to nanosleep()Alex Crichton-6/+20
Using nanosleep() allows us to gracefully recover from EINTR because on error it fills in the second parameter with the remaining time to sleep. Closes #12689