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2014-06-24librustc: Remove the fallback to `int` from typechecking.Niko Matsakis-5/+5
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]
2014-06-11std: Remove i18n/l10n from format!Alex Crichton-1/+1
* The select/plural methods from format strings are removed * The # character no longer needs to be escaped * The \-based escapes have been removed * '{{' is now an escape for '{' * '}}' is now an escape for '}' Closes #14810 [breaking-change]
2014-05-29std: Recreate a `rand` moduleAlex Crichton-6/+2
This commit shuffles around some of the `rand` code, along with some reorganization. The new state of the world is as follows: * The librand crate now only depends on libcore. This interface is experimental. * The standard library has a new module, `std::rand`. This interface will eventually become stable. Unfortunately, this entailed more of a breaking change than just shuffling some names around. The following breaking changes were made to the rand library: * Rng::gen_vec() was removed. This has been replaced with Rng::gen_iter() which will return an infinite stream of random values. Previous behavior can be regained with `rng.gen_iter().take(n).collect()` * Rng::gen_ascii_str() was removed. This has been replaced with Rng::gen_ascii_chars() which will return an infinite stream of random ascii characters. Similarly to gen_iter(), previous behavior can be emulated with `rng.gen_ascii_chars().take(n).collect()` * {IsaacRng, Isaac64Rng, XorShiftRng}::new() have all been removed. These all relied on being able to use an OSRng for seeding, but this is no longer available in librand (where these types are defined). To retain the same functionality, these types now implement the `Rand` trait so they can be generated with a random seed from another random number generator. This allows the stdlib to use an OSRng to create seeded instances of these RNGs. * Rand implementations for `Box<T>` and `@T` were removed. These seemed to be pretty rare in the codebase, and it allows for librand to not depend on liballoc. Additionally, other pointer types like Rc<T> and Arc<T> were not supported. If this is undesirable, librand can depend on liballoc and regain these implementations. * The WeightedChoice structure is no longer built with a `Vec<Weighted<T>>`, but rather a `&mut [Weighted<T>]`. This means that the WeightedChoice structure now has a lifetime associated with it. * The `sample` method on `Rng` has been moved to a top-level function in the `rand` module due to its dependence on `Vec`. cc #13851 [breaking-change]
2014-05-24core: rename strbuf::StrBuf to string::StringRicho Healey-1/+1
[breaking-change]
2014-05-22libcore: Remove all uses of `~str` from `libcore`.Patrick Walton-4/+12
[breaking-change]
2014-05-18Refactoring: Introduce distinct host and target rpath var setters.Felix S. Klock II-6/+13
Two line summary: Distinguish HOST_RPATH and TARGET_RPATH; added RPATH_LINK_SEARCH; skip tests broken in stage1; general cleanup. `HOST_RPATH_VAR$(1)_T_$(2)_H_$(3)` and `TARGET_RPATH_VAR$(1)_T_$(2)_H_$(3)` both match the format of the old `RPATH_VAR$(1)_T_$(2)_H_$(3)` (which is still being set the same way that it was before, to one of either HOST/TARGET depending on what stage we are building). Namely, the format is <XXX>_RPATH_VAR = "<LD_LIB_PATH_ENVVAR>=<COLON_SEP_PATH_ENTRIES>" What this commit does: * Pass both of the (newly introduced) HOST and TARGET rpath setup vars to `maketest.py` * Update `maketest.py` to no longer update the LD_LIBRARY_PATH itself Instead, it passes along the HOST and TARGET rpath setup vars in environment variables `HOST_RPATH_ENV` and `TARGET_RPATH_ENV` * Also, pass the current stage number to maketest.py; it in turn passes it (via an env var) to run-make tests. This allows the run-make tests to selectively change behavior (e.g. turn themselves off) to deal with incompatibilities with e.g. stage1. * Cleanup: Distinguish in tools.mk between the command to run (`RUN`) and the file to generate to drive that command (`RUN_BINFILE`). The main thing this enables is that `RUN` can now setup the `TARGET_RPATH_ENV` without having to dirty up the runner code in each of the `run-make` Makefiles. * Cleanup: Factored out commands to delete dylib/rlib into REMOVE_DYLIBS/REMOVE_RLIBS. There were places where we were only calling `rm $(call DYLIB,foo)` even though we really needed to get rid of the whole glob (at least based on alex's findings on #13753 that removing the symlink does not suffice). Therefore rather than peppering the code with the awkward `rm $(TMPDIR)/$(call DYLIB_GLOB,foo)`, I instead introduced a common `REMOVE_DYLIBS` user function that expands into that when called. After I adding an analogous `REMOVE_RLIBS`, I changed all of the existing calls that rm dylibs or rlibs to use these routines instead. Note that the latter is not a true refactoring since I may have changed cases where it was our intent to only remove the sym-link. (But if that is the case, then we need to more deeply investigate alex's findings on #13753 where the system was still dynamically loading up the non-symlinked libraries that it finds on the load path.) * Added RPATH_LINK_SEARCH command and use it on Linux. On some platforms, namely Linux, when you have libboot.so that has its internal rpath set (to e.g. $(ORIGIN)/path/to/HOSTDIR), the linker still complains when you do the link step and it does not know where to find libraries that libboot.so depends upon that live in HOSTDIR (think e.g. librustuv.so). As far as I can tell, the GNU linker will consult the LD_LIBRARY_PATH as part of the linking process to find such libraries. But if you want to be more careful and not override LD_LIBRARY_PATH for the `gcc` invocation, then you need some other way to tell the linker where it can find the libraries that libboot.so needs. The solution to this on Linux is the `-Wl,-rpath-link` command line option. However, this command line option does not exist on Mac OS X, (which appears to be figuring out how to resolve the libboot.dylib dependency by some other means, perhaps by consulting the rpath setting within libboot.dylib). So, in order to abstract over this distinction, I added the RPATH_LINK_SEARCH macro to the run-make infrastructure and added calls to it where necessary to get Linux working. On architectures other than Linux, the macro expands to nothing. * Disable miscellaneous tests atop stage1. * An especially interesting instance of the previous bullet point: Excuse regex from doing rustdoc tests atop stage1. This was a (nearly-) final step to get `make check-stage1` working again. The use of a special-case check for regex here is ugly but is analogous other similar checks for regex such as the one that landed in PR #13844. The way this is written, the user will get a reminder that doc-crate-regex is being skipped whenever their rules attempt to do the crate documentation tests. This is deliberate: I want people running `make check-stage1` to be reminded about which cases are being skipped. (But if such echo noise is considered offensive, it can obviously be removed.) * Got windows working with the above changes. This portion of the commit is a cleanup revision of the (previously mentioned on try builds) re-architecting of how the LD_LIBRARY_PATH setup and extension is handled in order to accommodate Windows' (1.) use of `$PATH` for that purpose and (2.) use of spaces in `$PATH` entries (problematic for make and for interoperation with tools at the shell). * In addition, since the code has been rearchitected to pass the HOST_RPATH_DIR/TARGET_RPATH_DIR rather than a whole sh environment-variable setting command, there is no need to for the convert_path_spec calls in maketest.py, which in fact were put in place to placate Windows but were now causing the Windows builds to fail. Instead we just convert the paths to absolute paths just like all of the other path arguments. Also, note for makefile hackers: apparently you cannot quote operands to `ifeq` in Makefile (or at least, you need to be careful about adding them, e.g. to only one side).
2014-05-14Process::new etc should support non-utf8 commands/argsAaron Turon-7/+8
The existing APIs for spawning processes took strings for the command and arguments, but the underlying system may not impose utf8 encoding, so this is overly limiting. The assumption we actually want to make is just that the command and arguments are viewable as [u8] slices with no interior NULLs, i.e., as CStrings. The ToCStr trait is a handy bound for types that meet this requirement (such as &str and Path). However, since the commands and arguments are often a mixture of strings and paths, it would be inconvenient to take a slice with a single T: ToCStr bound. So this patch revamps the process creation API to instead use a builder-style interface, called `Command`, allowing arguments to be added one at a time with differing ToCStr implementations for each. The initial cut of the builder API has some drawbacks that can be addressed once issue #13851 (libstd as a facade) is closed. These are detailed as FIXMEs. Closes #11650. [breaking-change]
2014-05-14test: Remove all uses of `~str` from the test suite.Patrick Walton-1/+1
2014-05-08Handle more falloutKevin Ballard-4/+4
os::args() no longer auto-borrows to &[~str].
2014-04-28test: Fix run-make on windowsklutzy-0/+8
2014-04-18Replace all ~"" with "".to_owned()Richo Healey-2/+2
2014-04-14Use new attribute syntax in python files in src/etc too (#13478)Manish Goregaokar-1/+1
2014-04-06De-~[] Reader and WriterSteven Fackler-2/+2
There's a little more allocation here and there now since from_utf8_owned can't be used with Vec.
2014-03-12Update users for the std::rand -> librand move.Huon Wilson-2/+6
2014-02-24Test fixes from rollupAlex Crichton-6/+6
2014-02-24syntax: calculate positions of multibyte characters more correctly.Huon Wilson-1/+79
They are still are not completely correct, since it does not handle graphemes at all, just codepoints, but at least it handles the common case correctly. The calculation was previously very wrong (rather than just a little bit wrong): it wasn't accounting for the fact that every character is 1 byte, and so multibyte characters were pretending to be zero width. cc #8706
2014-02-24syntax: record multibyte chars' positions absolutely, not relative toHuon Wilson-0/+60
file. Previously multibyte UTF-8 chars were being recorded as byte offsets from the start of the file, and then later compared against global byte positions, resulting in the compiler possibly thinking it had a byte position pointing inside a multibyte character, if there were multibyte characters in any non-crate files. (Although, sometimes the byte offsets line up just right to not ICE, but that was a coincidence.) Fixes #11136. Fixes #11178.