about summary refs log tree commit diff
path: root/src/libstd/sys/cloudabi/shims
AgeCommit message (Collapse)AuthorLines
2020-07-27mv std libs to library/mark-970/+0
2020-04-26Fix stragglersSteven Fackler-3/+3
2020-04-26Update nameSteven Fackler-3/+3
2020-04-26Add Read/Write::can_read/write_vectoredSteven Fackler-0/+24
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
2019-12-24Deprecate Error::description for realDavid Tolnay-0/+1
`description` has been documented as soft-deprecated since 1.27.0 (17 months ago). There is no longer any reason to call it or implement it. This commit: - adds #[rustc_deprecated(since = "1.41.0")] to Error::description; - moves description (and cause, which is also deprecated) below the source and backtrace methods in the Error trait; - reduces documentation of description and cause to take up much less vertical real estate in rustdocs, while preserving the example that shows how to render errors without needing to call description; - removes the description function of all *currently unstable* Error impls in the standard library; - marks #[allow(deprecated)] the description function of all *stable* Error impls in the standard library; - replaces miscellaneous uses of description in example code and the compiler.
2019-11-29Format libstd/sys with rustfmtDavid Tolnay-11/+6
This commit applies rustfmt with rust-lang/rust's default settings to files in src/libstd/sys *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/sys -name '*.rs' \ | xargs rustfmt --edition=2018 --unstable-features --skip-children $ rg libstd/sys outstanding_files | xargs git checkout -- Repeating this process several months apart should get us coverage of most of the rest of the files. 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
2019-09-05std: Improve downstream codegen in `Command::env`Alex Crichton-3/+5
This commit rejiggers the generics used in the implementation of `Command::env` with the purpose of reducing the amount of codegen that needs to happen in consumer crates, instead preferring to generate code into libstd. This was found when profiling the compile times of the `cc` crate where the binary rlib produced had a lot of `BTreeMap` code compiled into it but the crate doesn't actually use `BTreeMap`. It turns out that `Command::env` is generic enough to codegen the entire implementation in calling crates, but in this case there's no performance concern so it's fine to compile the code into the standard library. This change is done by removing the generic on the `CommandEnv` map which is intended to handle case-insensitive variables on Windows. Instead now a generic isn't used but rather a `use` statement defined per-platform is used. With this commit a debug build of `Command::new("foo").env("a", "b")` drops from 21k lines of LLVM IR to 10k.
2019-04-27Stabilized vectored IOSteven Fackler-9/+9
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
2019-04-10std: Add `{read,write}_vectored` for more typesAlex Crichton-2/+18
This commit implements the `{read,write}_vectored` methods on more types in the standard library, namely: * `std::fs::File` * `std::process::ChildStd{in,out,err}` * `std::io::Std{in,out,err}` * `std::io::Std{in,out,err}Lock` * `std::io::Std{in,out,err}Raw` Where supported the OS implementations hook up to native support, otherwise it falls back to the already-defaulted implementation.
2019-03-31libstd: deny(elided_lifetimes_in_paths), fixes in cloudabiMazdak Farrokhzad-1/+1
2019-03-31libstd: deny(elided_lifetimes_in_paths)Mazdak Farrokhzad-11/+11
2019-03-16Add peer_addr function to UdpSocketLinus Unnebäck-0/+4
2019-03-09Use lifetime contravariance to elide more lifetimes in core+alloc+stdScott McMurray-2/+2
2019-02-28libstd => 2018Taiki Endo-32/+33
2019-02-24Fix cloudabiSteven Fackler-1/+9
2018-12-25Remove licensesMark Rousskov-80/+0
2018-12-06Refactor net::each_addr/lookup_host to forward error from resolveJethro Beekman-6/+25
2018-12-04cleanup: remove static lifetimes from consts in libstdljedrz-7/+7
2018-03-03Move process::ExitCode internals to sysScott McMurray-0/+12
Now begins the saga of fixing compilation errors on other platforms...
2018-01-11Add shims for modules that we can't implement on CloudABI.Ed Schouten-0/+968
As discussed in #47268, libstd isn't ready to have certain functionality disabled yet. Follow wasm's approach of adding no-op modules for all of the features that we can't implement. I've placed all of those shims in a shims/ subdirectory, so we (the CloudABI folks) can experiment with removing them more easily. It also ensures that the code that does work doesn't get polluted with lots of useless boilerplate code.