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path: root/src/libstd/io/test.rs
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2014-02-15std: clean up ptr a bitCorey Richardson-6/+4
2014-01-29Removing do keyword from libstd and librustcScott Lawrence-1/+1
2014-01-22Implement native timersAlex Crichton-0/+1
Native timers are a much hairier thing to deal with than green timers due to the interface that we would like to expose (both a blocking sleep() and a channel-based interface). I ended up implementing timers in three different ways for the various platforms that we supports. In all three of the implementations, there is a worker thread which does send()s on channels for timers. This worker thread is initialized once and then communicated to in a platform-specific manner, but there's always a shared channel available for sending messages to the worker thread. * Windows - I decided to use windows kernel timer objects via CreateWaitableTimer and SetWaitableTimer in order to provide sleeping capabilities. The worker thread blocks via WaitForMultipleObjects where one of the objects is an event that is used to wake up the helper thread (which then drains the incoming message channel for requests). * Linux/(Android?) - These have the ideal interface for implementing timers, timerfd_create. Each timer corresponds to a timerfd, and the helper thread uses epoll to wait for all active timers and then send() for the next one that wakes up. The tricky part in this implementation is updating a timerfd, but see the implementation for the fun details * OSX/FreeBSD - These obviously don't have the windows APIs, and sadly don't have the timerfd api available to them, so I have thrown together a solution which uses select() plus a timeout in order to ad-hoc-ly implement a timer solution for threads. The implementation is backed by a sorted array of timers which need to fire. As I said, this is an ad-hoc solution which is certainly not accurate timing-wise. I have done this implementation due to the lack of other primitives to provide an implementation, and I've done it the best that I could, but I'm sure that there's room for improvement. I'm pretty happy with how these implementations turned out. In theory we could drop the timerfd implementation and have linux use the select() + timeout implementation, but it's so inaccurate that I would much rather continue to use timerfd rather than my ad-hoc select() implementation. The only change that I would make to the API in general is to have a generic sleep() method on an IoFactory which doesn't require allocating a Timer object. For everything but windows it's super-cheap to request a blocking sleep for a set amount of time, and it's probably worth it to provide a sleep() which doesn't do something like allocate a file descriptor on linux.
2013-12-27Implement native TCP I/OAlex Crichton-5/+6
2013-12-27Bring native process bindings up to dateAlex Crichton-0/+1
Move the tests into libstd, use the `iotest!` macro to test both native and uv bindings, and use the cloexec trick to figure out when the child process fails in exec.
2013-12-25Test fixes and rebase conflictsAlex Crichton-0/+1
* vec::raw::to_ptr is gone * Pausible => Pausable * Removing @ * Calling the main task "<main>" * Removing unused imports * Removing unused mut * Bringing some libextra tests up to date * Allowing compiletest to work at stage0 * Fixing the bootstrap-from-c rmake tests * assert => rtassert in a few cases * printing to stderr instead of stdout in fail!()
2013-12-24Test fixes and rebase problemsAlex Crichton-0/+79
Note that this removes a number of run-pass tests which are exercising behavior of the old runtime. This functionality no longer exists and is thoroughly tested inside of libgreen and libnative. There isn't really the notion of "starting the runtime" any more. The major notion now is "bootstrapping the initial task".
2013-12-24std: Get stdtest all passing againAlex Crichton-4/+40
This commit brings the library up-to-date in order to get all tests passing again
2013-12-24std: Delete rt::testAlex Crichton-0/+79
This module contains many M:N specific concepts. This will no longer be available with libgreen, and most functions aren't really that necessary today anyway. New testing primitives will be introduced as they become available for 1:1 and M:N. A new io::test module is introduced with the new ip4/ip6 address helpers to continue usage in io tests.