| Age | Commit message (Collapse) | Author | Lines |
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When working with an arbitrary reader or writer, code that uses vectored
operations may end up being slower than code that copies into a single
buffer when the underlying reader or writer doesn't actually support
vectored operations. These new methods allow you to ask the reader or
witer up front if vectored operations are efficiently supported.
Currently, you have to use some heuristics to guess by e.g. checking if
the read or write only accessed the first buffer. Hyper is one concrete
example of a library that has to do this dynamically:
https://github.com/hyperium/hyper/blob/0eaf304644a396895a4ce1f0146e596640bb666a/src/proto/h1/io.rs#L582-L594
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This commit applies rustfmt with rust-lang/rust's default settings to
files in src/libstd *that are not involved in any currently open PR* to
minimize merge conflicts. THe list of files involved in open PRs was
determined by querying GitHub's GraphQL API with this script:
https://gist.github.com/dtolnay/aa9c34993dc051a4f344d1b10e4487e8
With the list of files from the script in outstanding_files, the
relevant commands were:
$ find src/libstd -name '*.rs' \
| xargs rustfmt --edition=2018 --unstable-features --skip-children
$ rg libstd outstanding_files | xargs git checkout --
Repeating this process several months apart should get us coverage of
most of the rest of libstd.
To confirm no funny business:
$ git checkout $THIS_COMMIT^
$ git show --pretty= --name-only $THIS_COMMIT \
| xargs rustfmt --edition=2018 --unstable-features --skip-children
$ git diff $THIS_COMMIT # there should be no difference
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This renames `std::io::IoVec` to `std::io::IoSlice` and
`std::io::IoVecMut` to `std::io::IoSliceMut`, and stabilizes
`std::io::IoSlice`, `std::io::IoSliceMut`,
`std::io::Read::read_vectored`, and `std::io::Write::write_vectored`.
Closes #58452
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Returning &'a mut [u8] was unsound, and we may as well just have them
directly deref to their slices to make it easier to work with them.
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This functionality has lived for a while in the tokio ecosystem, where
it can improve performance by minimizing copies.
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Fixes https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/52524.
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Fixes https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/49233.
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fix an incorrect assertion in the doc example for `std::io::copy`
I think this wasn't caught by CI because the `foo` wrapper function was only defined and not called. This seems to be the norm for doc examples that define a `foo` function. Is that on purpose?
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This is an API that allows types to indicate that they can be passed
buffers of uninitialized memory which can improve performance.
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This was never established as a convention we should follow in the 'More
API Documentation Conventions' RFC:
https://github.com/rust-lang/rfcs/blob/master/text/1574-more-api-documentation-conventions.md
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The versions show up in rustdoc.
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See #38644.
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Part of https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/31869.
Also turn on the `missing_debug_implementations` lint at the crate
level.
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Add doc example for `std::io::sink`.
None
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Add doc example for `std::io::repeat`.
None
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Remove unnecessary hidden `foo` function.
Demonstrate this emptiness of the resulting string.
Combine imports.
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Automated conversion using the untry tool [1] and the following command:
```
$ find -name '*.rs' -type f | xargs untry
```
at the root of the Rust repo.
[1]: https://github.com/japaric/untry
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Removes all unstable and deprecated APIs prior to the 1.8 release. All APIs that
are deprecated in the 1.8 release are sticking around for the rest of this
cycle.
Some notable changes are:
* The `dynamic_lib` module was moved into `rustc_back` as the compiler still
relies on a few bits and pieces.
* The `DebugTuple` formatter now special-cases an empty struct name with only
one field to append a trailing comma.
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* Lots of core prelude imports removed
* Makefile support for MSVC env vars and Rust crates removed
* Makefile support for morestack removed
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std: Allow ?Sized parameters in std::io::copy
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std::io::copy did not allow passing trait objects directly (only with an
extra &mut wrapping).
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This commit is an implementation of [RFC 1184][rfc] which tweaks the behavior of
the `#![no_std]` attribute and adds a new `#![no_core]` attribute. The
`#![no_std]` attribute now injects `extern crate core` at the top of the crate
as well as the libcore prelude into all modules (in the same manner as the
standard library's prelude). The `#![no_core]` attribute disables both std and
core injection.
[rfc]: https://github.com/rust-lang/rfcs/pull/1184
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How embarassing :sob:
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These provide various special readers, so point their docs to their
constructor functions in a manner consistent with everything else.
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This round: io::Result and the free functions.
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Changes the style guidelines regarding unit tests to recommend using a
sub-module named "tests" instead of "test" for unit tests as "test"
might clash with imports of libtest.
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The new `io` module has had some time to bake and this commit stabilizes some of
the utilities associated with it. This commit also deprecates a number of
`std::old_io::util` functions and structures.
These items are now `#[stable]`
* `Cursor`
* `Cursor::{new, into_inner, get_ref, get_mut, position, set_position}`
* Implementations of I/O traits for `Cursor<T>`
* Delegating implementations of I/O traits for references and `Box` pointers
* Implementations of I/O traits for primitives like slices and `Vec<T>`
* `ReadExt::bytes`
* `Bytes` (and impls)
* `ReadExt::chain`
* `Chain` (and impls)
* `ReadExt::take` (and impls)
* `BufReadExt::lines`
* `Lines` (and impls)
* `io::copy`
* `io::{empty, Empty}` (and impls)
* `io::{sink, Sink}` (and impls)
* `io::{repeat, Repeat}` (and impls)
These items remain `#[unstable]`
* Core I/O traits. These may want a little bit more time to bake along with the
commonly used methods like `read_to_end`.
* `BufReadExt::split` - this function may be renamed to not conflict with
`SliceExt::split`.
* `Error` - there are a number of questions about its representation,
`ErrorKind`, and usability.
These items are now `#[deprecated]` in `old_io`
* `LimitReader` - use `take` instead
* `NullWriter` - use `io::sink` instead
* `ZeroReader` - use `io::repeat` instead
* `NullReader` - use `io::empty` instead
* `MultiWriter` - use `broadcast` instead
* `ChainedReader` - use `chain` instead
* `TeeReader` - use `tee` instead
* `copy` - use `io::copy` instead
[breaking-change]
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This commit is an implementation of [RFC 576][rfc] which adds back the `std::io`
module to the standard library. No functionality in `std::old_io` has been
deprecated just yet, and the new `std::io` module is behind the same `io`
feature gate.
[rfc]: https://github.com/rust-lang/rfcs/pull/576
A good bit of functionality was copied over from `std::old_io`, but many tweaks
were required for the new method signatures. Behavior such as precisely when
buffered objects call to the underlying object may have been tweaked slightly in
the transition. All implementations were audited to use composition wherever
possible. For example the custom `pos` and `cap` cursors in `BufReader` were
removed in favor of just using `Cursor<Vec<u8>>`.
A few liberties were taken during this implementation which were not explicitly
spelled out in the RFC:
* The old `LineBufferedWriter` is now named `LineWriter`
* The internal representation of `Error` now favors OS error codes (a
0-allocation path) and contains a `Box` for extra semantic data.
* The io prelude currently reexports `Seek` as `NewSeek` to prevent conflicts
with the real prelude reexport of `old_io::Seek`
* The `chars` method was moved from `BufReadExt` to `ReadExt`.
* The `chars` iterator returns a custom error with a variant that explains that
the data was not valid UTF-8.
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In preparation for the I/O rejuvination of the standard library, this commit
renames the current `io` module to `old_io` in order to make room for the new
I/O modules. It is expected that the I/O RFCs will land incrementally over time
instead of all at once, and this provides a fresh clean path for new modules to
enter into as well as guaranteeing that all old infrastructure will remain in
place for some time.
As each `old_io` module is replaced it will be deprecated in-place for new
structures in `std::{io, fs, net}` (as appropriate).
This commit does *not* leave a reexport of `old_io as io` as the deprecation
lint does not currently warn on this form of use. This is quite a large breaking
change for all imports in existing code, but all functionality is retained
precisely as-is and path statements simply need to be renamed from `io` to
`old_io`.
[breaking-change]
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