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2014-09-22std::rt::backtrace: Fix symbol names on Windowsklutzy-3/+5
Fixes #17372
2014-09-18std::rt::backtrace: Fix backtrace on Win64klutzy-0/+4
`struct CONTEXT` and its substructs require 16-byte alignment.
2014-09-16Fallout from renamingAaron Turon-2/+2
2014-09-03Fix spelling errors and capitalization.Joseph Crail-3/+3
2014-08-30auto merge of #16859 : alexcrichton/rust/snapshots, r=huonwbors-24/+0
2014-08-29Register new snapshotsAlex Crichton-24/+0
2014-08-30Unify non-snake-case lints and non-uppercase statics lintsP1start-3/+3
This unifies the `non_snake_case_functions` and `uppercase_variables` lints into one lint, `non_snake_case`. It also now checks for non-snake-case modules. This also extends the non-camel-case types lint to check type parameters, and merges the `non_uppercase_pattern_statics` lint into the `non_uppercase_statics` lint. Because the `uppercase_variables` lint is now part of the `non_snake_case` lint, all non-snake-case variables that start with lowercase characters (such as `fooBar`) will now trigger the `non_snake_case` lint. New code should be updated to use the new `non_snake_case` lint instead of the previous `non_snake_case_functions` and `uppercase_variables` lints. All use of the `non_uppercase_pattern_statics` should be replaced with the `non_uppercase_statics` lint. Any code that previously contained non-snake-case module or variable names should be updated to use snake case names or disable the `non_snake_case` lint. Any code with non-camel-case type parameters should be changed to use camel case or disable the `non_camel_case_types` lint. [breaking-change]
2014-08-27Implement generalized object and type parameter bounds (Fixes #16462)Niko Matsakis-1/+1
2014-08-22auto merge of #16647 : vhbit/rust/ios-build-fixes, r=alexcrichtonbors-2/+2
2014-08-21iOS compilation fixValerii Hiora-2/+2
2014-08-20Stage #[repr(packed)] in std::rtCorey Richardson-1/+32
2014-08-20librustc: handle repr on structs, require it for ffi, unify with packedCorey Richardson-1/+1
As of RFC 18, struct layout is undefined. Opting into a C-compatible struct layout is now down with #[repr(C)]. For consistency, specifying a packed layout is now also down with #[repr(packed)]. Both can be specified. To fix errors caused by this, just add #[repr(C)] to the structs, and change #[packed] to #[repr(packed)] Closes #14309 [breaking-change]
2014-08-13std: Rename various slice traits for consistencyBrian Anderson-3/+3
ImmutableVector -> ImmutableSlice ImmutableEqVector -> ImmutableEqSlice ImmutableOrdVector -> ImmutableOrdSlice MutableVector -> MutableSlice MutableVectorAllocating -> MutableSliceAllocating MutableCloneableVector -> MutableCloneableSlice MutableOrdVector -> MutableOrdSlice These are all in the prelude so most code will not break. [breaking-change]
2014-08-06auto merge of #16258 : aturon/rust/stabilize-atomics, r=alexcrichtonbors-4/+4
This commit stabilizes the `std::sync::atomics` module, renaming it to `std::sync::atomic` to match library precedent elsewhere, and tightening up behavior around incorrect memory ordering annotations. The vast majority of the module is now `stable`. However, the `AtomicOption` type has been deprecated, since it is essentially unused and is not truly a primitive atomic type. It will eventually be replaced by a higher-level abstraction like MVars. Due to deprecations, this is a: [breaking-change]
2014-08-04stabilize atomics (now atomic)Aaron Turon-4/+4
This commit stabilizes the `std::sync::atomics` module, renaming it to `std::sync::atomic` to match library precedent elsewhere, and tightening up behavior around incorrect memory ordering annotations. The vast majority of the module is now `stable`. However, the `AtomicOption` type has been deprecated, since it is essentially unused and is not truly a primitive atomic type. It will eventually be replaced by a higher-level abstraction like MVars. Due to deprecations, this is a: [breaking-change]
2014-08-04rustc: Link entire archives of native librariesAlex Crichton-0/+3
As discovered in #15460, a particular #[link(kind = "static", ...)] line is not actually guaranteed to link the library at all. The reason for this is that if the external library doesn't have any referenced symbols in the object generated by rustc, the entire library is dropped by the linker. For dynamic native libraries, this is solved by passing -lfoo for all downstream compilations unconditionally. For static libraries in rlibs this is solved because the entire archive is bundled in the rlib. The only situation in which this was a problem was when a static native library was linked to a rust dynamic library. This commit brings the behavior of dylibs in line with rlibs by passing the --whole-archive flag to the linker when linking native libraries. On OSX, this uses the -force_load flag. This flag ensures that the entire archive is considered candidate for being linked into the final dynamic library. This is a breaking change because if any static library is included twice in the same compilation unit then the linker will start emitting errors about duplicate definitions now. The fix for this would involve only statically linking to a library once. Closes #15460 [breaking-change]
2014-07-31Fix trailing whitespaceMichael Neumann-2/+2
2014-07-29Port Rust to DragonFlyBSDMichael Neumann-1/+5
Not included are two required patches: * LLVM: segmented stack support for DragonFly [1] * jemalloc: simple configure patches [1]: http://reviews.llvm.org/D4705
2014-07-15auto merge of #15619 : kwantam/rust/master, r=huonwbors-1/+1
- `width()` computes the displayed width of a string, ignoring the width of control characters. - arguably we might do *something* else for control characters, but the question is, what? - users who want to do something else can iterate over chars() - `graphemes()` returns a `Graphemes` struct, which implements an iterator over the grapheme clusters of a &str. - fully compliant with [UAX#29](http://www.unicode.org/reports/tr29/#Grapheme_Cluster_Boundaries) - passes all [Unicode-supplied tests](http://www.unicode.org/reports/tr41/tr41-15.html#Tests29) - added code to generate additionial categories in `unicode.py` - `Cn` aka `Not_Assigned` - categories necessary for grapheme cluster breaking - tidied up the exports from libunicode - all exports are exposed through a module rather than directly at crate root. - std::prelude imports UnicodeChar and UnicodeStrSlice from std::char and std::str rather than directly from libunicode closes #7043
2014-07-15Fix errorsAdolfo OchagavĂ­a-1/+0
2014-07-15Deprecate `str::from_utf8_owned`Adolfo OchagavĂ­a-1/+1
Use `String::from_utf8` instead [breaking-change]
2014-07-14add Graphemes iterator; tidy unicode exportskwantam-1/+1
- Graphemes and GraphemeIndices structs implement iterators over grapheme clusters analogous to the Chars and CharOffsets for chars in a string. Iterator and DoubleEndedIterator are available for both. - tidied up the exports for libunicode. crate root exports are now moved into more appropriate module locations: - UnicodeStrSlice, Words, Graphemes, GraphemeIndices are in str module - UnicodeChar exported from char instead of crate root - canonical_combining_class is exported from str rather than crate root Since libunicode's exports have changed, programs that previously relied on the old export locations will need to change their `use` statements to reflect the new ones. See above for more information on where the new exports live. closes #7043 [breaking-change]
2014-07-07Add libunicode; move unicode functions from corekwantam-1/+1
- created new crate, libunicode, below libstd - split Char trait into Char (libcore) and UnicodeChar (libunicode) - Unicode-aware functions now live in libunicode - is_alphabetic, is_XID_start, is_XID_continue, is_lowercase, is_uppercase, is_whitespace, is_alphanumeric, is_control, is_digit, to_uppercase, to_lowercase - added width method in UnicodeChar trait - determines printed width of character in columns, or None if it is a non-NULL control character - takes a boolean argument indicating whether the present context is CJK or not (characters with 'A'mbiguous widths are double-wide in CJK contexts, single-wide otherwise) - split StrSlice into StrSlice (libcore) and UnicodeStrSlice (libunicode) - functionality formerly in StrSlice that relied upon Unicode functionality from Char is now in UnicodeStrSlice - words, is_whitespace, is_alphanumeric, trim, trim_left, trim_right - also moved Words type alias into libunicode because words method is in UnicodeStrSlice - unified Unicode tables from libcollections, libcore, and libregex into libunicode - updated unicode.py in src/etc to generate aforementioned tables - generated new tables based on latest Unicode data - added UnicodeChar and UnicodeStrSlice traits to prelude - libunicode is now the collection point for the std::char module, combining the libunicode functionality with the Char functionality from libcore - thus, moved doc comment for char from core::char to unicode::char - libcollections remains the collection point for std::str The Unicode-aware functions that previously lived in the Char and StrSlice traits are no longer available to programs that only use libcore. To regain use of these methods, include the libunicode crate and use the UnicodeChar and/or UnicodeStrSlice traits: extern crate unicode; use unicode::UnicodeChar; use unicode::UnicodeStrSlice; use unicode::Words; // if you want to use the words() method NOTE: this does *not* impact programs that use libstd, since UnicodeChar and UnicodeStrSlice have been added to the prelude. closes #15224 [breaking-change]
2014-07-04auto merge of #15404 : vhbit/rust/ios-ptr-fixes, r=pcwaltonbors-2/+2
2014-07-04Fixed iOS build after *T removalValerii Hiora-2/+2
2014-07-03Fix spelling errors.Joseph Crail-1/+1
2014-06-28Rename all raw pointers as necessaryAlex Crichton-41/+44
2014-06-24librustc: Remove the fallback to `int` from typechecking.Niko Matsakis-1/+1
This breaks a fair amount of code. The typical patterns are: * `for _ in range(0, 10)`: change to `for _ in range(0u, 10)`; * `println!("{}", 3)`: change to `println!("{}", 3i)`; * `[1, 2, 3].len()`: change to `[1i, 2, 3].len()`. RFC #30. Closes #6023. [breaking-change]
2014-06-16auto merge of #14715 : vhbit/rust/ios-pr2, r=alexcrichtonbors-8/+57
2014-06-13Rolling up PRs in the queueAlex Crichton-4/+4
Closes #14797 (librustc: Fix the issue with labels shadowing variable names by making) Closes #14823 (Improve error messages for io::fs) Closes #14827 (libsyntax: Allow `+` to separate trait bounds from objects.) Closes #14834 (configure: Don't sync unused submodules) Closes #14838 (Remove typo on collections::treemap::UnionItems) Closes #14839 (Fix the unused struct field lint for struct variants) Closes #14840 (Clarify `Any` docs) Closes #14846 (rustc: [T, ..N] and [T, ..N+1] are not the same) Closes #14847 (Audit usage of NativeMutex) Closes #14850 (remove unnecessary PaX detection) Closes #14856 (librustc: Take in account mutability when casting array to raw ptr.) Closes #14859 (librustc: Forbid `transmute` from being called on types whose size is) Closes #14860 (Fix `quote_pat!` & parse outer attributes in `quote_item!`)
2014-06-13Cosmetic fixes & commentsValerii Hiora-3/+8
2014-06-12Basic iOS supportValerii Hiora-8/+52
2014-06-10auto merge of #14696 : jakub-/rust/dead-struct-fields, r=alexcrichtonbors-0/+1
This uncovered some dead code, most notably in middle/liveness.rs, which I think suggests there must be something fishy with that part of the code. The #[allow(dead_code)] annotations on some of the fields I am not super happy about but as I understand, marker type may disappear at some point.
2014-06-09std: Move dynamic_lib from std::unstable to stdBrian Anderson-1/+1
This leaves a deprecated reexport in place temporarily. Closes #1457.
2014-06-09core: Move the collections traits to libcollectionsAlex Crichton-1/+1
This commit moves Mutable, Map, MutableMap, Set, and MutableSet from `core::collections` to the `collections` crate at the top-level. Additionally, this removes the `deque` module and moves the `Deque` trait to only being available at the top-level of the collections crate. All functionality continues to be reexported through `std::collections`. [breaking-change]
2014-06-08core: Rename `container` mod to `collections`. Closes #12543Brian Anderson-2/+2
Also renames the `Container` trait to `Collection`. [breaking-change]
2014-06-08Remove the dead code identified by the new lintJakub Wieczorek-0/+1
2014-06-06libs: Fix miscellaneous fallout of librustrtAlex Crichton-3/+3
2014-06-06std: Extract librustrt out of libstdAlex Crichton-2/+101
As part of the libstd facade efforts, this commit extracts the runtime interface out of the standard library into a standalone crate, librustrt. This crate will provide the following services: * Definition of the rtio interface * Definition of the Runtime interface * Implementation of the Task structure * Implementation of task-local-data * Implementation of task failure via unwinding via libunwind * Implementation of runtime initialization and shutdown * Implementation of thread-local-storage for the local rust Task Notably, this crate avoids the following services: * Thread creation and destruction. The crate does not require the knowledge of an OS threading system, and as a result it seemed best to leave out the `rt::thread` module from librustrt. The librustrt module does depend on mutexes, however. * Implementation of backtraces. There is no inherent requirement for the runtime to be able to generate backtraces. As will be discussed later, this functionality continues to live in libstd rather than librustrt. As usual, a number of architectural changes were required to make this crate possible. Users of "stable" functionality will not be impacted by this change, but users of the `std::rt` module will likely note the changes. A list of architectural changes made is: * The stdout/stderr handles no longer live directly inside of the `Task` structure. This is a consequence of librustrt not knowing about `std::io`. These two handles are now stored inside of task-local-data. The handles were originally stored inside of the `Task` for perf reasons, and TLD is not currently as fast as it could be. For comparison, 100k prints goes from 59ms to 68ms (a 15% slowdown). This appeared to me to be an acceptable perf loss for the successful extraction of a librustrt crate. * The `rtio` module was forced to duplicate more functionality of `std::io`. As the module no longer depends on `std::io`, `rtio` now defines structures such as socket addresses, addrinfo fiddly bits, etc. The primary change made was that `rtio` now defines its own `IoError` type. This type is distinct from `std::io::IoError` in that it does not have an enum for what error occurred, but rather a platform-specific error code. The native and green libraries will be updated in later commits for this change, and the bulk of this effort was put behind updating the two libraries for this change (with `rtio`). * Printing a message on task failure (along with the backtrace) continues to live in libstd, not in librustrt. This is a consequence of the above decision to move the stdout/stderr handles to TLD rather than inside the `Task` itself. The unwinding API now supports registration of global callback functions which will be invoked when a task fails, allowing for libstd to register a function to print a message and a backtrace. The API for registering a callback is experimental and unsafe, as the ramifications of running code on unwinding is pretty hairy. * The `std::unstable::mutex` module has moved to `std::rt::mutex`. * The `std::unstable::sync` module has been moved to `std::rt::exclusive` and the type has been rewritten to not internally have an Arc and to have an RAII guard structure when locking. Old code should stop using `Exclusive` in favor of the primitives in `libsync`, but if necessary, old code should port to `Arc<Exclusive<T>>`. * The local heap has been stripped down to have fewer debugging options. None of these were tested, and none of these have been used in a very long time. [breaking-change]
2014-06-06Test fixes from the rollupAlex Crichton-1/+0
2014-06-06Rename Iterator::len to countAaron Turon-1/+1
This commit carries out the request from issue #14678: > The method `Iterator::len()` is surprising, as all the other uses of > `len()` do not consume the value. `len()` would make more sense to be > called `count()`, but that would collide with the current > `Iterator::count(|T| -> bool) -> unit` method. That method, however, is > a bit redundant, and can be easily replaced with > `iter.filter(|x| x < 5).count()`. > After this change, we could then define the `len()` method > on `iter::ExactSize`. Closes #14678. [breaking-change]
2014-05-30windows: Allow snake_case errors for now.Kevin Butler-0/+1
2014-05-11core: Remove the cast moduleAlex Crichton-2/+2
This commit revisits the `cast` module in libcore and libstd, and scrutinizes all functions inside of it. The result was to remove the `cast` module entirely, folding all functionality into the `mem` module. Specifically, this is the fate of each function in the `cast` module. * transmute - This function was moved to `mem`, but it is now marked as #[unstable]. This is due to planned changes to the `transmute` function and how it can be invoked (see the #[unstable] comment). For more information, see RFC 5 and #12898 * transmute_copy - This function was moved to `mem`, with clarification that is is not an error to invoke it with T/U that are different sizes, but rather that it is strongly discouraged. This function is now #[stable] * forget - This function was moved to `mem` and marked #[stable] * bump_box_refcount - This function was removed due to the deprecation of managed boxes as well as its questionable utility. * transmute_mut - This function was previously deprecated, and removed as part of this commit. * transmute_mut_unsafe - This function doesn't serve much of a purpose when it can be achieved with an `as` in safe code, so it was removed. * transmute_lifetime - This function was removed because it is likely a strong indication that code is incorrect in the first place. * transmute_mut_lifetime - This function was removed for the same reasons as `transmute_lifetime` * copy_lifetime - This function was moved to `mem`, but it is marked `#[unstable]` now due to the likelihood of being removed in the future if it is found to not be very useful. * copy_mut_lifetime - This function was also moved to `mem`, but had the same treatment as `copy_lifetime`. * copy_lifetime_vec - This function was removed because it is not used today, and its existence is not necessary with DST (copy_lifetime will suffice). In summary, the cast module was stripped down to these functions, and then the functions were moved to the `mem` module. transmute - #[unstable] transmute_copy - #[stable] forget - #[stable] copy_lifetime - #[unstable] copy_mut_lifetime - #[unstable] [breaking-change]
2014-05-06librustc: Remove `~EXPR`, `~TYPE`, and `~PAT` from the language, exceptPatrick Walton-5/+5
for `~str`/`~[]`. Note that `~self` still remains, since I forgot to add support for `Box<self>` before the snapshot. How to update your code: * Instead of `~EXPR`, you should write `box EXPR`. * Instead of `~TYPE`, you should write `Box<Type>`. * Instead of `~PATTERN`, you should write `box PATTERN`. [breaking-change]
2014-04-27Fix repeated module documentationAlexandre Gagnon-0/+2
2014-04-22Fixed Win64 buildVadim Chugunov-0/+83
2014-04-18std: Fix demangling with middle special charsAlex Crichton-3/+13
Previously, symbols with rust escape sequences (denoted with dollar signs) weren't demangled if the escape sequence showed up in the middle. This alters the printing loop to look through the entire string for dollar characters.
2014-04-06De-~[] Mem{Reader,Writer}Steven Fackler-1/+1
2014-03-28Convert most code to new inner attribute syntax.Brian Anderson-1/+1
Closes #2569
2014-03-20rename std::vec -> std::sliceDaniel Micay-2/+2
Closes #12702