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2014-12-31std: unbox closures used in let bindingsJorge Aparicio-1/+1
2014-12-31std: unbox closures used in function argumentsJorge Aparicio-1/+3
2014-12-31Revert "std: Re-enable at_exit()"Alex Crichton-49/+90
This reverts commit 9e224c2bf18ebf8f871efb2e1aba43ed7970ebb7. Conflicts: src/libstd/sys/windows/os.rs
2014-12-31Test fixes and rebase conflictsAlex Crichton-1/+1
2014-12-30rollup merge of #20061: aturon/stab-2-vec-sliceAlex Crichton-3/+5
Conflicts: src/libcollections/slice.rs src/libcollections/vec.rs src/libstd/sys/windows/os.rs
2014-12-30Fallout from stabilizationAaron Turon-2/+4
2014-12-30rollup merge of #20286: murarth/get-address-nameAlex Crichton-0/+1
2014-12-30std: Re-enable at_exit()Alex Crichton-92/+50
The new semantics of this function are that the callbacks are run when the *main thread* exits, not when all threads have exited. This implies that other threads may still be running when the `at_exit` callbacks are invoked and users need to be prepared for this situation. Users in the standard library have been audited in accordance to these new rules as well. Closes #20012
2014-12-29Test fixes and rebase conflictsAlex Crichton-10/+10
2014-12-29rollup merge of #20231: fhahn/issue-20226-eexistAlex Crichton-0/+2
I've created a patch for #20226, which maps `EEXIST` to the `PathAlreadyExists` error on Unix. To test this, I use `mkdir`, which raises `EEXIST` if the directory already exists. On Windows, I map `ERROR_ALREADY_EXISTS` to `PathAlreadyExist`, but I am note sure if `mkdir` on Windows raises `ERROR_ALREADY_EXISTS` and do not have a Windows installation handy for testing. And I noticed another thing. No error seems to map to `IoErrorKind::PathDoesntExist` and I am wondering what the difference to `FileNotFound` is?
2014-12-29std: Stabilize the prelude moduleAlex Crichton-15/+18
This commit is an implementation of [RFC 503][rfc] which is a stabilization story for the prelude. Most of the RFC was directly applied, removing reexports. Some reexports are kept around, however: * `range` remains until range syntax has landed to reduce churn. * `Path` and `GenericPath` remain until path reform lands. This is done to prevent many imports of `GenericPath` which will soon be removed. * All `io` traits remain until I/O reform lands so imports can be rewritten all at once to `std::io::prelude::*`. This is a breaking change because many prelude reexports have been removed, and the RFC can be consulted for the exact list of removed reexports, as well as to find the locations of where to import them. [rfc]: https://github.com/rust-lang/rfcs/blob/master/text/0503-prelude-stabilization.md [breaking-change] Closes #20068
2014-12-28Added `get_address_name`, an interface to `getnameinfo`Murarth-0/+1
2014-12-27Implement Sync/Send for windows' UnixStreamFlavio Percoco-0/+6
2014-12-26Implement Sync/Send for windows TCP typesFlavio Percoco-0/+12
2014-12-26Implement RaceBox for StdinReaderFlavio Percoco-0/+3
2014-12-26Implement `Sync` for some windows sys typesFlavio Percoco-0/+8
2014-12-25Map EEXIST to PathAlreadyExists error, closes #20226Florian Hahn-0/+2
2014-12-21Fallout of std::str stabilizationAlex Crichton-6/+7
2014-12-21std: Stabilize the std::str moduleAlex Crichton-1/+38
This commit starts out by consolidating all `str` extension traits into one `StrExt` trait to be included in the prelude. This means that `UnicodeStrPrelude`, `StrPrelude`, and `StrAllocating` have all been merged into one `StrExt` exported by the standard library. Some functionality is currently duplicated with the `StrExt` present in libcore. This commit also currently avoids any methods which require any form of pattern to operate. These functions will be stabilized via a separate RFC. Next, stability of methods and structures are as follows: Stable * from_utf8_unchecked * CowString - after moving to std::string * StrExt::as_bytes * StrExt::as_ptr * StrExt::bytes/Bytes - also made a struct instead of a typedef * StrExt::char_indices/CharIndices - CharOffsets was renamed * StrExt::chars/Chars * StrExt::is_empty * StrExt::len * StrExt::lines/Lines * StrExt::lines_any/LinesAny * StrExt::slice_unchecked * StrExt::trim * StrExt::trim_left * StrExt::trim_right * StrExt::words/Words - also made a struct instead of a typedef Unstable * from_utf8 - the error type was changed to a `Result`, but the error type has yet to prove itself * from_c_str - this function will be handled by the c_str RFC * FromStr - this trait will have an associated error type eventually * StrExt::escape_default - needs iterators at least, unsure if it should make the cut * StrExt::escape_unicode - needs iterators at least, unsure if it should make the cut * StrExt::slice_chars - this function has yet to prove itself * StrExt::slice_shift_char - awaiting conventions about slicing and shifting * StrExt::graphemes/Graphemes - this functionality may only be in libunicode * StrExt::grapheme_indices/GraphemeIndices - this functionality may only be in libunicode * StrExt::width - this functionality may only be in libunicode * StrExt::utf16_units - this functionality may only be in libunicode * StrExt::nfd_chars - this functionality may only be in libunicode * StrExt::nfkd_chars - this functionality may only be in libunicode * StrExt::nfc_chars - this functionality may only be in libunicode * StrExt::nfkc_chars - this functionality may only be in libunicode * StrExt::is_char_boundary - naming is uncertain with container conventions * StrExt::char_range_at - naming is uncertain with container conventions * StrExt::char_range_at_reverse - naming is uncertain with container conventions * StrExt::char_at - naming is uncertain with container conventions * StrExt::char_at_reverse - naming is uncertain with container conventions * StrVector::concat - this functionality may be replaced with iterators, but it's not certain at this time * StrVector::connect - as with concat, may be deprecated in favor of iterators Deprecated * StrAllocating and UnicodeStrPrelude have been merged into StrExit * eq_slice - compiler implementation detail * from_str - use the inherent parse() method * is_utf8 - call from_utf8 instead * replace - call the method instead * truncate_utf16_at_nul - this is an implementation detail of windows and does not need to be exposed. * utf8_char_width - moved to libunicode * utf16_items - moved to libunicode * is_utf16 - moved to libunicode * Utf16Items - moved to libunicode * Utf16Item - moved to libunicode * Utf16Encoder - moved to libunicode * AnyLines - renamed to LinesAny and made a struct * SendStr - use CowString<'static> instead * str::raw - all functionality is deprecated * StrExt::into_string - call to_string() instead * StrExt::repeat - use iterators instead * StrExt::char_len - use .chars().count() instead * StrExt::is_alphanumeric - use .chars().all(..) * StrExt::is_whitespace - use .chars().all(..) Pending deprecation -- while slicing syntax is being worked out, these methods are all #[unstable] * Str - while currently used for generic programming, this trait will be replaced with one of [], deref coercions, or a generic conversion trait. * StrExt::slice - use slicing syntax instead * StrExt::slice_to - use slicing syntax instead * StrExt::slice_from - use slicing syntax instead * StrExt::lev_distance - deprecated with no replacement Awaiting stabilization due to patterns and/or matching * StrExt::contains * StrExt::contains_char * StrExt::split * StrExt::splitn * StrExt::split_terminator * StrExt::rsplitn * StrExt::match_indices * StrExt::split_str * StrExt::starts_with * StrExt::ends_with * StrExt::trim_chars * StrExt::trim_left_chars * StrExt::trim_right_chars * StrExt::find * StrExt::rfind * StrExt::find_str * StrExt::subslice_offset
2014-12-21Remove a ton of public reexportsCorey Farwell-1/+1
Remove most of the public reexports mentioned in #19253 These are all leftovers from the enum namespacing transition In particular: * src/libstd/num/strconv.rs * ExponentFormat * SignificantDigits * SignFormat * src/libstd/path/windows.rs * PathPrefix * src/libstd/sys/windows/timer.rs * Req * src/libcollections/str.rs * MaybeOwned * src/libstd/collections/hash/map.rs * Entry * src/libstd/collections/hash/table.rs * BucketState * src/libstd/dynamic_lib.rs * Rtld * src/libstd/io/net/ip.rs * IpAddr * src/libstd/os.rs * MemoryMapKind * MapOption * MapError * src/libstd/sys/common/net.rs * SocketStatus * InAddr * src/libstd/sys/unix/timer.rs * Req [breaking-change]
2014-12-20Fix the fallout of removing feature(import_shadowing).Eduard Burtescu-14/+8
2014-12-18Rebasing fixes.Aaron Turon-2/+2
2014-12-18std: Lower abstractions for thread_local/at_exitAlex Crichton-20/+42
The current implementations use `std::sync` primitives, but these primitives currently end up relying on `thread_info` and a local `Thread` being available (mainly for checking the panicking flag). To get around this, this commit lowers the abstractions used by the windows thread_local implementation as well as the at_exit_imp module. Both of these modules now use a `sys::Mutex` and a `static mut` and manage the allocation/locking manually.
2014-12-18Revise std::thread API to join by defaultAaron Turon-16/+17
This commit is part of a series that introduces a `std::thread` API to replace `std::task`. In the new API, `spawn` returns a `JoinGuard`, which by default will join the spawned thread when dropped. It can also be used to join explicitly at any time, returning the thread's result. Alternatively, the spawned thread can be explicitly detached (so no join takes place). As part of this change, Rust processes now terminate when the main thread exits, even if other detached threads are still running, moving Rust closer to standard threading models. This new behavior may break code that was relying on the previously implicit join-all. In addition to the above, the new thread API also offers some built-in support for building blocking abstractions in user space; see the module doc for details. Closes #18000 [breaking-change]
2014-12-18Fallout from new thread APIAaron Turon-5/+2
2014-12-18Remove rt::{mutex, exclusive}Aaron Turon-2/+2
2014-12-18Refactor std::os to use sys::osAaron Turon-3/+195
2014-12-18libs: merge librustrt into libstdAaron Turon-3/+592
This commit merges the `rustrt` crate into `std`, undoing part of the facade. This merger continues the paring down of the runtime system. Code relying on the public API of `rustrt` will break; some of this API is now available through `std::rt`, but is likely to change and/or be removed very soon. [breaking-change]
2014-12-18librustc: Always parse `macro!()`/`macro![]` as expressions if notPatrick Walton-9/+9
followed by a semicolon. This allows code like `vec![1i, 2, 3].len();` to work. This breaks code that uses macros as statements without putting semicolons after them, such as: fn main() { ... assert!(a == b) assert!(c == d) println(...); } It also breaks code that uses macros as items without semicolons: local_data_key!(foo) fn main() { println("hello world") } Add semicolons to fix this code. Those two examples can be fixed as follows: fn main() { ... assert!(a == b); assert!(c == d); println(...); } local_data_key!(foo); fn main() { println("hello world") } RFC #378. Closes #18635. [breaking-change]
2014-12-14Mostly rote conversion of `proc()` to `move||` (and occasionally `Thunk::new`)Niko Matsakis-1/+1
2014-12-13Get rid of all the remaining uses of `refN`/`valN`/`mutN`/`TupleN`Jorge Aparicio-2/+2
2014-12-13libstd: use unboxed closuresJorge Aparicio-5/+6
2014-12-11Register new snapshotsAlex Crichton-2/+2
2014-12-09rollup merge of #19620: retep998/memorymapAlex Crichton-1/+1
2014-12-07Make MemoryMap use HANDLE on Windows.Peter Atashian-1/+1
Also fixes some conflicting module names. Signed-off-by: Peter Atashian <retep998@gmail.com>
2014-12-06libstd: remove unnecessary `to_string()` callsJorge Aparicio-5/+5
2014-12-06libstd: remove unnecessary `as_slice()` callsJorge Aparicio-5/+5
2014-12-05rollup merge of #19274: alexcrichton/rewrite-syncCorey Richardson-5/+262
This commit is a reimplementation of `std::sync` to be based on the system-provided primitives wherever possible. The previous implementation was fundamentally built on top of channels, and as part of the runtime reform it has become clear that this is not the level of abstraction that the standard level should be providing. This rewrite aims to provide as thin of a shim as possible on top of the system primitives in order to make them safe. The overall interface of the `std::sync` module has in general not changed, but there are a few important distinctions, highlighted below: * The condition variable type, `Condvar`, has been separated out of a `Mutex`. A condition variable is now an entirely separate type. This separation benefits users who only use one mutex, and provides a clearer distinction of who's responsible for managing condition variables (the application). * All of `Condvar`, `Mutex`, and `RWLock` are now directly built on top of system primitives rather than using a custom implementation. The `Once`, `Barrier`, and `Semaphore` types are still built upon these abstractions of the system primitives. * The `Condvar`, `Mutex`, and `RWLock` types all have a new static type and constant initializer corresponding to them. These are provided primarily for C FFI interoperation, but are often useful to otherwise simply have a global lock. The types, however, will leak memory unless `destroy()` is called on them, which is clearly documented. * The fundamental architecture of this design is to provide two separate layers. The first layer is that exposed by `sys_common` which is a cross-platform bare-metal abstraction of the system synchronization primitives. No attempt is made at making this layer safe, and it is quite unsafe to use! It is currently not exported as part of the API of the standard library, but the stabilization of the `sys` module will ensure that these will be exposed in time. The purpose of this layer is to provide the core cross-platform abstractions if necessary to implementors. The second layer is the layer provided by `std::sync` which is intended to be the thinnest possible layer on top of `sys_common` which is entirely safe to use. There are a few concerns which need to be addressed when making these system primitives safe: * Once used, the OS primitives can never be **moved**. This means that they essentially need to have a stable address. The static primitives use `&'static self` to enforce this, and the non-static primitives all use a `Box` to provide this guarantee. * Poisoning is leveraged to ensure that invalid data is not accessible from other tasks after one has panicked. In addition to these overall blanket safety limitations, each primitive has a few restrictions of its own: * Mutexes and rwlocks can only be unlocked from the same thread that they were locked by. This is achieved through RAII lock guards which cannot be sent across threads. * Mutexes and rwlocks can only be unlocked if they were previously locked. This is achieved by not exposing an unlocking method. * A condition variable can only be waited on with a locked mutex. This is achieved by requiring a `MutexGuard` in the `wait()` method. * A condition variable cannot be used concurrently with more than one mutex. This is guaranteed by dynamically binding a condition variable to precisely one mutex for its entire lifecycle. This restriction may be able to be relaxed in the future (a mutex is unbound when no threads are waiting on the condvar), but for now it is sufficient to guarantee safety. * Condvars support timeouts for their blocking operations. The implementation for these operations is provided by the system. Due to the modification of the `Condvar` API, removal of the `std::sync::mutex` API, and reimplementation, this is a breaking change. Most code should be fairly easy to port using the examples in the documentation of these primitives. [breaking-change] Closes #17094 Closes #18003
2014-12-05Fall out of the std::sync rewriteAlex Crichton-7/+10
2014-12-05std: Rewrite the `sync` moduleAlex Crichton-0/+254
This commit is a reimplementation of `std::sync` to be based on the system-provided primitives wherever possible. The previous implementation was fundamentally built on top of channels, and as part of the runtime reform it has become clear that this is not the level of abstraction that the standard level should be providing. This rewrite aims to provide as thin of a shim as possible on top of the system primitives in order to make them safe. The overall interface of the `std::sync` module has in general not changed, but there are a few important distinctions, highlighted below: * The condition variable type, `Condvar`, has been separated out of a `Mutex`. A condition variable is now an entirely separate type. This separation benefits users who only use one mutex, and provides a clearer distinction of who's responsible for managing condition variables (the application). * All of `Condvar`, `Mutex`, and `RWLock` are now directly built on top of system primitives rather than using a custom implementation. The `Once`, `Barrier`, and `Semaphore` types are still built upon these abstractions of the system primitives. * The `Condvar`, `Mutex`, and `RWLock` types all have a new static type and constant initializer corresponding to them. These are provided primarily for C FFI interoperation, but are often useful to otherwise simply have a global lock. The types, however, will leak memory unless `destroy()` is called on them, which is clearly documented. * The `Condvar` implementation for an `RWLock` write lock has been removed. This may be added back in the future with a userspace implementation, but this commit is focused on exposing the system primitives first. * The fundamental architecture of this design is to provide two separate layers. The first layer is that exposed by `sys_common` which is a cross-platform bare-metal abstraction of the system synchronization primitives. No attempt is made at making this layer safe, and it is quite unsafe to use! It is currently not exported as part of the API of the standard library, but the stabilization of the `sys` module will ensure that these will be exposed in time. The purpose of this layer is to provide the core cross-platform abstractions if necessary to implementors. The second layer is the layer provided by `std::sync` which is intended to be the thinnest possible layer on top of `sys_common` which is entirely safe to use. There are a few concerns which need to be addressed when making these system primitives safe: * Once used, the OS primitives can never be **moved**. This means that they essentially need to have a stable address. The static primitives use `&'static self` to enforce this, and the non-static primitives all use a `Box` to provide this guarantee. * Poisoning is leveraged to ensure that invalid data is not accessible from other tasks after one has panicked. In addition to these overall blanket safety limitations, each primitive has a few restrictions of its own: * Mutexes and rwlocks can only be unlocked from the same thread that they were locked by. This is achieved through RAII lock guards which cannot be sent across threads. * Mutexes and rwlocks can only be unlocked if they were previously locked. This is achieved by not exposing an unlocking method. * A condition variable can only be waited on with a locked mutex. This is achieved by requiring a `MutexGuard` in the `wait()` method. * A condition variable cannot be used concurrently with more than one mutex. This is guaranteed by dynamically binding a condition variable to precisely one mutex for its entire lifecycle. This restriction may be able to be relaxed in the future (a mutex is unbound when no threads are waiting on the condvar), but for now it is sufficient to guarantee safety. * Condvars now support timeouts for their blocking operations. The implementation for these operations is provided by the system. Due to the modification of the `Condvar` API, removal of the `std::sync::mutex` API, and reimplementation, this is a breaking change. Most code should be fairly easy to port using the examples in the documentation of these primitives. [breaking-change] Closes #17094 Closes #18003
2014-12-05std: Close TcpListener with closesocket()Alex Crichton-20/+24
This may have inadvertently switched during the runtime overhaul, so this switches TcpListener back to using sockets instead of file descriptors. This also renames a bunch of variables called `fd` to `socket` to clearly show that it's not a file descriptor. Closes #19333
2014-12-04libstd: io::fs::File::stat() need not to take &mut self.NODA, Kai-1/+1
The same goes for sys::fs::FileDesc::fstat() on Windows. Signed-off-by: NODA, Kai <nodakai@gmail.com>
2014-11-26rollup merge of #19288: steveklabnik/doc_style_cleanupAlex Crichton-17/+13
This is considered good convention. This is about half of them in total, I just don't want an impossible to land patch. :smile:
2014-11-26rollup merge of #19273: ogham/rename-file-typesAlex Crichton-6/+6
All of the enum components had a redundant 'Type' specifier: TypeSymlink, TypeDirectory, TypeFile. This change removes them, replacing them with a namespace: FileType::Symlink, FileType::Directory, and FileType::RegularFile. RegularFile is used instead of just File, as File by itself could be mistakenly thought of as referring to the struct. Part of #19253.
2014-11-26auto merge of #19176 : aturon/rust/stab-iter, r=alexcrichtonbors-2/+2
This is an initial pass at stabilizing the `iter` module. The module is fairly large, but is also pretty polished, so most of the stabilization leaves things as they are. Some changes: * Due to the new object safety rules, various traits needs to be split into object-safe traits and extension traits. This includes `Iterator` itself. While splitting up the traits adds some complexity, it will also increase flexbility: once we have automatic impls of `Trait` for trait objects over `Trait`, then things like the iterator adapters will all work with trait objects. * Iterator adapters that use up the entire iterator now take it by value, which makes the semantics more clear and helps catch bugs. Due to the splitting of Iterator, this does not affect trait objects. If the underlying iterator is still desired for some reason, `by_ref` can be used. (Note: this change had no fallout in the Rust distro except for the useless mut lint.) * In general, extension traits new and old are following an [in-progress convention](rust-lang/rfcs#445). As such, they are marked `unstable`. * As usual, anything involving closures is `unstable` pending unboxed closures. * A few of the more esoteric/underdeveloped iterator forms (like `RandomAccessIterator` and `MutableDoubleEndedIterator`, along with various unfolds) are left experimental for now. * The `order` submodule is left `experimental` because it will hopefully be replaced by generalized comparison traits. * "Leaf" iterators (like `Repeat` and `Counter`) are uniformly constructed by free fns at the module level. That's because the types are not otherwise of any significance (if we had `impl Trait`, you wouldn't want to define a type at all). Closes #17701 Due to renamings and splitting of traits, this is a: [breaking-change]
2014-11-26auto merge of #19169 : aturon/rust/fds, r=alexcrichtonbors-4/+113
This PR adds some internal infrastructure to allow the private `std::sys` module to access internal representation details of `std::io`. It then exposes those details in two new, platform-specific API surfaces: `std::os::unix` and `std::os::windows`. To start with, these will provide the ability to extract file descriptors, HANDLEs, SOCKETs, and so on from `std::io` types. More functionality, and more specific platforms (e.g. `std::os::linux`) will be added over time. Closes #18897
2014-11-25/** -> ///Steve Klabnik-17/+13
This is considered good convention.
2014-11-25Fallout from stabilizationAaron Turon-2/+2
2014-11-24Clean up FileType enum following enum namespacingBen S-6/+6
All of the enum components had a redundant 'Type' specifier: TypeSymlink, TypeDirectory, TypeFile. This change removes them, replacing them with a namespace: FileType::Symlink, FileType::Directory, and FileType::RegularFile. RegularFile is used instead of just File, as File by itself could be mistakenly thought of as referring to the struct. [breaking-change]
2014-11-23std: Add a new top-level thread_local moduleAlex Crichton-3/+242
This commit removes the `std::local_data` module in favor of a new `std::thread_local` module providing thread local storage. The module provides two variants of TLS: one which owns its contents and one which is based on scoped references. Each implementation has pros and cons listed in the documentation. Both flavors have accessors through a function called `with` which yield a reference to a closure provided. Both flavors also panic if a reference cannot be yielded and provide a function to test whether an access would panic or not. This is an implementation of [RFC 461][rfc] and full details can be found in that RFC. This is a breaking change due to the removal of the `std::local_data` module. All users can migrate to the new thread local system like so: thread_local!(static FOO: Rc<RefCell<Option<T>>> = Rc::new(RefCell::new(None))) The old `local_data` module inherently contained the `Rc<RefCell<Option<T>>>` as an implementation detail which must now be explicitly stated by users. [rfc]: https://github.com/rust-lang/rfcs/pull/461 [breaking-change]