Commit graph

29473 commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Cameron Zwarich
d123188b20 Clean up check_loans.
Refactor a number of functions in check_loans to take node IDs and spans
rather than taking expressions directly. Also rename some variables to
make them less ambiguous.

This is the first step towards using ExprUseVisitor in check_loans, as
now some of the interfaces more closely match those used in
ExprUseVisitor.
2014-06-06 11:59:32 -07:00
bors
071e22ed89 auto merge of #14673 : sylvestre/rust/master, r=alexcrichton
Remove a warning (./configure: 1140: [: unexpected operator) when built with --disable-manage-submodules
2014-06-06 06:27:00 -07:00
bors
566b7b93c6 auto merge of #14671 : aochagavia/rust/patch-1, r=alexcrichton 2014-06-06 04:41:53 -07:00
bors
76baa5f086 auto merge of #14668 : aochagavia/rust/pr3, r=alexcrichton
Closes https://github.com/mozilla/rust/issues/14577
Closes https://github.com/mozilla/rust/issues/14639
2014-06-06 03:01:57 -07:00
bors
732e057815 auto merge of #14667 : aochagavia/rust/pr2, r=huonw 2014-06-06 01:21:54 -07:00
Adolfo Ochagavía
501b904bb7 Change to_str().to_string() to just to_str() 2014-06-06 09:56:59 +02:00
Adolfo Ochagavía
75891274c4 Document BigInt's new and from_slice methods
Fixes https://github.com/mozilla/rust/issues/14639
2014-06-06 09:09:59 +02:00
Adolfo Ochagavía
7d07a1e74b Fix documentation for slice()
Fixes https://github.com/mozilla/rust/issues/14577
2014-06-06 09:09:58 +02:00
bors
100ff4cf30 auto merge of #14669 : TeXitoi/rust/relicense-shootout-meteor, r=brson
part of #14248, fix #14420

Removed @richo's contribution (outdated comment)

Quoting @brson: let's move forward with this one. The only
statement I'm missing is @richo's and it sounds like his was a
minor patch.
2014-06-05 23:36:56 -07:00
bors
ae9577052d auto merge of #14664 : reem/rust/lifetimes-guide-grammar, r=brson
Removed strange fragment-like thing in the intro.
2014-06-05 20:16:53 -07:00
bors
e14bc6698a auto merge of #14653 : alexcrichton/rust/travis-opt, r=cmr
The most frequent failure for our travis builds is running into the timeout
limits when building the compiler itself. Building librustc takes a very long
amount of time, often hitting the 10 minutes with no output threshold that
travis imposes on us.

This commit switches the relevant `make` step to being wrapped in the
`travis_wait` command [1]. This command will print something once a minute so as
to not time out a build.

This will hopefully enable us to have fewer flaky builds on travis!

[1]: http://docs.travis-ci.com/user/build-timeouts/
2014-06-05 18:36:56 -07:00
bors
5ec49c7924 auto merge of #14641 : darnuria/rust/add_documentation_to_std_os, r=alexcrichton
Just opening a pull request for adding code examples and documentation to std::os.

More to come soon.
2014-06-05 16:41:53 -07:00
bors
ba3ba002d5 auto merge of #14538 : alexcrichton/rust/libcollections, r=brson
As with the previous commit with `librand`, this commit shuffles around some
`collections` code. The new state of the world is similar to that of librand:

* The libcollections crate now only depends on libcore and liballoc.
* The standard library has a new module, `std::collections`. All functionality
  of libcollections is reexported through this module.

I would like to stress that this change is purely cosmetic. There are very few
alterations to these primitives.

There are a number of notable points about the new organization:

* std::{str, slice, string, vec} all moved to libcollections. There is no reason
  that these primitives shouldn't be necessarily usable in a freestanding
  context that has allocation. These are all reexported in their usual places in
  the standard library.

* The `hashmap`, and transitively the `lru_cache`, modules no longer reside in
  `libcollections`, but rather in libstd. The reason for this is because the
  `HashMap::new` contructor requires access to the OSRng for initially seeding
  the hash map. Beyond this requirement, there is no reason that the hashmap
  could not move to libcollections.

  I do, however, have a plan to move the hash map to the collections module. The
  `HashMap::new` function could be altered to require that the `H` hasher
  parameter ascribe to the `Default` trait, allowing the entire `hashmap` module
  to live in libcollections. The key idea would be that the default hasher would
  be different in libstd. Something along the lines of:

      // src/libstd/collections/mod.rs

      pub type HashMap<K, V, H = RandomizedSipHasher> =
            core_collections::HashMap<K, V, H>;

  This is not possible today because you cannot invoke static methods through
  type aliases. If we modified the compiler, however, to allow invocation of
  static methods through type aliases, then this type definition would
  essentially be switching the default hasher from `SipHasher` in libcollections
  to a libstd-defined `RandomizedSipHasher` type. This type's `Default`
  implementation would randomly seed the `SipHasher` instance, and otherwise
  perform the same as `SipHasher`.

  This future state doesn't seem incredibly far off, but until that time comes,
  the hashmap module will live in libstd to not compromise on functionality.

* In preparation for the hashmap moving to libcollections, the `hash` module has
  moved from libstd to libcollections. A previously snapshotted commit enables a
  distinct `Writer` trait to live in the `hash` module which `Hash`
  implementations are now parameterized over.

  Due to using a custom trait, the `SipHasher` implementation has lost its
  specialized methods for writing integers. These can be re-added
  backwards-compatibly in the future via default methods if necessary, but the
  FNV hashing should satisfy much of the need for speedier hashing.

A list of breaking changes:

* HashMap::{get, get_mut} no longer fails with the key formatted into the error
  message with `{:?}`, instead, a generic message is printed. With backtraces,
  it should still be not-too-hard to track down errors.

* The HashMap, HashSet, and LruCache types are now available through
  std::collections instead of the collections crate.

* Manual implementations of hash should be parameterized over `hash::Writer`
  instead of just `Writer`.

[breaking-change]
2014-06-05 15:01:54 -07:00
Alex Crichton
760b93adc0 Fallout from the libcollections movement 2014-06-05 13:55:11 -07:00
Alex Crichton
6a585375a0 std: Recreate a collections module
As with the previous commit with `librand`, this commit shuffles around some
`collections` code. The new state of the world is similar to that of librand:

* The libcollections crate now only depends on libcore and liballoc.
* The standard library has a new module, `std::collections`. All functionality
  of libcollections is reexported through this module.

I would like to stress that this change is purely cosmetic. There are very few
alterations to these primitives.

There are a number of notable points about the new organization:

* std::{str, slice, string, vec} all moved to libcollections. There is no reason
  that these primitives shouldn't be necessarily usable in a freestanding
  context that has allocation. These are all reexported in their usual places in
  the standard library.

* The `hashmap`, and transitively the `lru_cache`, modules no longer reside in
  `libcollections`, but rather in libstd. The reason for this is because the
  `HashMap::new` contructor requires access to the OSRng for initially seeding
  the hash map. Beyond this requirement, there is no reason that the hashmap
  could not move to libcollections.

  I do, however, have a plan to move the hash map to the collections module. The
  `HashMap::new` function could be altered to require that the `H` hasher
  parameter ascribe to the `Default` trait, allowing the entire `hashmap` module
  to live in libcollections. The key idea would be that the default hasher would
  be different in libstd. Something along the lines of:

      // src/libstd/collections/mod.rs

      pub type HashMap<K, V, H = RandomizedSipHasher> =
            core_collections::HashMap<K, V, H>;

  This is not possible today because you cannot invoke static methods through
  type aliases. If we modified the compiler, however, to allow invocation of
  static methods through type aliases, then this type definition would
  essentially be switching the default hasher from `SipHasher` in libcollections
  to a libstd-defined `RandomizedSipHasher` type. This type's `Default`
  implementation would randomly seed the `SipHasher` instance, and otherwise
  perform the same as `SipHasher`.

  This future state doesn't seem incredibly far off, but until that time comes,
  the hashmap module will live in libstd to not compromise on functionality.

* In preparation for the hashmap moving to libcollections, the `hash` module has
  moved from libstd to libcollections. A previously snapshotted commit enables a
  distinct `Writer` trait to live in the `hash` module which `Hash`
  implementations are now parameterized over.

  Due to using a custom trait, the `SipHasher` implementation has lost its
  specialized methods for writing integers. These can be re-added
  backwards-compatibly in the future via default methods if necessary, but the
  FNV hashing should satisfy much of the need for speedier hashing.

A list of breaking changes:

* HashMap::{get, get_mut} no longer fails with the key formatted into the error
  message with `{:?}`, instead, a generic message is printed. With backtraces,
  it should still be not-too-hard to track down errors.

* The HashMap, HashSet, and LruCache types are now available through
  std::collections instead of the collections crate.

* Manual implementations of hash should be parameterized over `hash::Writer`
  instead of just `Writer`.

[breaking-change]
2014-06-05 13:55:10 -07:00
bors
3ec321f535 auto merge of #14647 : BurntSushi/rust/fix-14185, r=alexcrichton
This fix suppresses dead_code warnings from code generated by regex! when
the result of regex! is unused. Correct behavior should be a single
unused variable warning.

Regression tests are included for both `let` and `static` bound regex!
values.

see #14185
2014-06-05 13:26:53 -07:00
bors
d70a9b93d0 auto merge of #14526 : pczarn/rust/hashmap-opt, r=alexcrichton
An interface that gives a better control over the load factor and the minimum capacity for HashMap.
The size of `HashMap<K, V>` is now 64 bytes by default on a 64-bit platform (or at least 40 bytes, that is 3 words less, with FNV and without minimum capacity)

Unanswered questions about `ResizePolicy`

* should it control the `INITIAL_CAPACITY`?
* should it fully control the resizing behavior? Even though the capacity always changes by a factor of 2.
* is caching `grow_at` desirable?

special thanks to @eddyb and @pnkfelix
2014-06-05 11:06:53 -07:00
Axel Viala
85adc09b19 Improve documentation on std::os::env. 2014-06-05 17:36:15 +02:00
bors
57e7147f3e auto merge of #14644 : alexcrichton/rust/more-no-runtime-use-cases, r=brson
A few notable improvements were implemented to cut down on the number of aborts
triggered by the standard library when a local task is not found.

* Primarily, the unwinding functionality was restructured to support an unsafe
  top-level function, `try`. This function invokes a closure, capturing any
  failure which occurs inside of it. The purpose of this function is to be as
  lightweight of a "try block" as possible for rust, intended for use when the
  runtime is difficult to set up.

  This function is *not* meant to be used by normal rust code, nor should it be
  consider for use with normal rust code.

* When invoking spawn(), a `fail!()` is triggered rather than an abort.

* When invoking LocalIo::borrow(), which is transitively called by all I/O
  constructors, None is returned rather than aborting to indicate that there is
  no local I/O implementation.

A test case was also added showing the variety of things that you can do without
a runtime or task set up now. In general, this is just a refactoring to abort
less quickly in the standard library when a local task is not found.
2014-06-05 08:26:51 -07:00
bors
bb57e417ea auto merge of #14643 : jakub-/rust/infinite-loop-unreachable, r=alexcrichton 2014-06-05 06:46:54 -07:00
Sylvestre Ledru
fec04d387b Remove a warning (./configure: 1140: [: unexpected operator) when built with --disable-manage-submodules 2014-06-05 15:18:11 +02:00
bors
a7ac6a4eb7 auto merge of #14642 : aochagavia/rust/pr, r=alexcrichton
The contents of a `RingBuf` are shown in the same way as the contents of a `Vector`. See the tests for examples.
2014-06-05 05:11:54 -07:00
bors
f2821f2c29 auto merge of #14640 : tomjakubowski/rust/fix-14636, r=huonw
Previously, documentation for an inlined trait (i.e. a trait imported
and reexported from another crate) didn't display the trait's supertraits.

Closes #14636
2014-06-05 03:36:52 -07:00
Axel Viala
f377dfe5ac Adding examples and possible failures for getcwd.
For both window and unix platforms.
2014-06-05 11:39:01 +02:00
Adolfo Ochagavía
95b2cce81f Update AUTHORS.txt 2014-06-05 10:43:47 +02:00
Tom Jakubowski
2382bf42df rustdoc: Include supertraits on inlined traits
Previously, documentation for an inlined trait (i.e. a trait imported
and reexported from another crate) didn't display the trait's
supertraits.

Closes #14636
2014-06-05 01:43:30 -07:00
Guillaume Pinot
ec8ef0d24d relicense shootout-meteor.rs
part of #14248, fix #14420

Removed @richo's contribution (outdated comment)

Quoting @brson: let's move forward with this one. The only
statement I'm missing is @richo's and it sounds like his was a
minor patch.
2014-06-05 10:39:09 +02:00
bors
0c74911f87 auto merge of #14568 : erickt/rust/slice-update, r=alexcrichton
This PR adds two features to make it possible to transform an `Iterator<u8>` into a `Reader`. The first patch adds a method to mutable slices that allows it to be updated with an `Iterator<T>` without paying for the bounds cost. The second adds a Iterator adaptor, `IterReader`, to provide that `Reader` interface.

I had two questions. First, are these named the right things? Second, should `IterReader` instead wrap an `Iterator<Result<u8, E>>`? This would allow you to `IterReader::new(rdr.bytes())`, which could be useful if you want to apply some iterator transformations on a reader while still exporting the Reader interface, but I'd expect there'd be a lot of overhead annotating each byte with an error result.
2014-06-05 00:51:48 -07:00
Jonathan Reem
7e0cc34d62 Fixed weird grammar in lifetimes guide. 2014-06-04 22:27:21 -07:00
bors
073c8f10fc auto merge of #14592 : alexcrichton/rust/rustdoc-links, r=huonw
These are a few assorted fixes for some issues I found this morning (details in the commits).
2014-06-04 22:21:43 -07:00
bors
422d54bed2 auto merge of #14610 : alexcrichton/rust/issue-14008, r=brson
This commit removes the <M: Any + Send> type parameter from Option::expect in
favor of just taking a hard-coded `&str` argument. This allows this function to
move into libcore.

Previous code using strings with `expect` will continue to work, but code using
this implicitly to transmit task failure will need to unwrap manually with a
`match` statement.

[breaking-change]
Closes #14008
2014-06-04 20:41:44 -07:00
bors
193574ae1e auto merge of #14529 : brson/rust/ptr, r=brson
This time we're not promoting anything directly to 'stable', but instead promoting functions we're happy with to 'unstable'. They'll become stable in another pass later.

* null and mut_null are unstable. Their names may change if the unsafe
  pointer types change.
* copy_memory and copy_overlapping_memory are unstable. We think they
  aren't going to change.
* set_memory and zero_memory are experimental. Both the names and
  the semantics are under question.
* swap and replace are unstable and probably won't change.
* read is unstable, probably won't change
* read_and_zero is experimental. It's necessity is in doubt.
* mem::overwrite is now called ptr::write to match read and is
  unstable. mem::overwrite is now deprecated
* array_each, array_each_with_len, buf_len, and position are
  all deprecated because they use old style iteration and their
  utility is generally under question.

Note that `mem::overwrite`, which was just declared stable last week, is deprecated now in favor of `ptr::write`. Woo!
2014-06-04 18:56:48 -07:00
Brian Anderson
9b228f8424 core: Apply stability attributes to ptr mod
* null and mut_null are unstable. Their names may change if the unsafe
  pointer types change.
* copy_memory and copy_overlapping_memory are unstable. We think they
  aren't going to change.
* set_memory and zero_memory are experimental. Both the names and
  the semantics are under question.
* swap and replace are unstable and probably won't change.
* read is unstable, probably won't change
* read_and_zero is experimental. It's necessity is in doubt.
* mem::overwrite is now called ptr::write to match read and is
  unstable. mem::overwrite is now deprecated
* array_each, array_each_with_len, buf_len, and position are
  all deprecated because they use old style iteration and their
  utility is generally under question.
2014-06-04 18:21:21 -07:00
Alex Crichton
bc17897116 travis: Prevent timeouts with travis_wait
The most frequent failure for our travis builds is running into the timeout
limits when building the compiler itself. Building librustc takes a very long
amount of time, often hitting the 10 minutes with no output threshold that
travis imposes on us.

This commit switches the relevant `make` step to being wrapped in the
`travis_wait` command [1]. This command will print something once a minute so as
to not time out a build.

This will hopefully enable us to have fewer flaky builds on travis!

[1]: http://docs.travis-ci.com/user/build-timeouts/
2014-06-04 17:16:37 -07:00
bors
aa09561bb6 auto merge of #14633 : huonw/rust/nodylibc, r=alexcrichton
libc: only provide an rlib.

There's absolutely no reason for `libc` to be offered as a dynamic
library.
2014-06-04 15:26:50 -07:00
Andrew Gallant
0f73bf32fe Fixes #14185.
This fix suppresses dead_code warnings from code generated by regex! when
the result of regex! is unused. Correct behavior should be a single
unused variable warning.

Regression tests are included for both `let` and `static` bound regex!
values.
2014-06-04 16:59:27 -04:00
bors
ef9bf3a4ee auto merge of #14630 : cmr/rust/rewrite-lexer, r=alexcrichton
These are a pain to rebase, so I'm separating this from the rest of my work.
Nothing controversial here, just some simple refactoring and removal of an
unused entry in the token table. Brings the lexer into 2012 with methods!
2014-06-04 13:06:47 -07:00
Corey Richardson
181e5f3fc8 syntax: use doc comments in the interner 2014-06-04 12:10:46 -07:00
Corey Richardson
46d1af28b5 syntax: methodify the lexer 2014-06-04 12:10:46 -07:00
Alex Crichton
0c7c93b8e8 std: Improve non-task-based usage
A few notable improvements were implemented to cut down on the number of aborts
triggered by the standard library when a local task is not found.

* Primarily, the unwinding functionality was restructured to support an unsafe
  top-level function, `try`. This function invokes a closure, capturing any
  failure which occurs inside of it. The purpose of this function is to be as
  lightweight of a "try block" as possible for rust, intended for use when the
  runtime is difficult to set up.

  This function is *not* meant to be used by normal rust code, nor should it be
  consider for use with normal rust code.

* When invoking spawn(), a `fail!()` is triggered rather than an abort.

* When invoking LocalIo::borrow(), which is transitively called by all I/O
  constructors, None is returned rather than aborting to indicate that there is
  no local I/O implementation.

* Invoking get() on a TLD key will return None if no task is available

* Invoking replace() on a TLD key will fail if no task is available.

A test case was also added showing the variety of things that you can do without
a runtime or task set up now. In general, this is just a refactoring to abort
less quickly in the standard library when a local task is not found.
2014-06-04 11:13:12 -07:00
bors
7645982efc auto merge of #14623 : exscape/rust-fork/master, r=alexcrichton
Unlike ImmutableClonableVector::permutations() which returns an iterator,
cloning the entire array each iteration, these methods mutate the vector in-place.
For that reason, these methods are much faster; between 35-55 times faster,
depending on the benchmark. They also generate permutations in lexicographical order.
2014-06-04 11:06:49 -07:00
Piotr Czarnecki
2202b104d4 collections: optimize HashMap. Add DefaultResizePolicy.
Refactored the load factor and the minimum capacity out of HashMap.
The size of HashMap<K, V> is now 64 bytes by default on a 64-bit platform
(or 48 bytes, that is 2 words less, with FNV)
Added a documentation in a few places to clarify the behavior.
2014-06-04 19:04:38 +02:00
Jakub Wieczorek
b9752b68ae Fix an ICE when a function argument is of the bottom type
Fixes #13352
2014-06-04 18:38:02 +02:00
Jakub Wieczorek
6d3e89e33c Mark the exit of infinite loops as unreachable 2014-06-04 18:37:46 +02:00
bors
a6401b5226 auto merge of #14616 : forticulous/rust/rc-show, r=alexcrichton
Show impl for Rc
2014-06-04 08:11:51 -07:00
Adolfo Ochagavía
8e4e3abb1d Implement Show for RingBuf 2014-06-04 16:40:30 +02:00
Axel Viala
650909244e Add code example to std::os::getenv for unix. 2014-06-04 16:02:48 +02:00
Huon Wilson
96cc48fba2 libc: only provide an rlib.
There's absolutely no reason for `libc` to be offered as a dynamic
library.
2014-06-04 19:10:40 +10:00
bors
d130acc0d0 auto merge of #14635 : BurntSushi/rust/regex-doco-touchups, r=alexcrichton 2014-06-03 23:51:41 -07:00
bors
5a6dc40a10 auto merge of #14634 : BurntSushi/rust/fix-13843, r=alexcrichton
An empty regex is a valid regex that always matches. This behavior
is consistent with at least Go and Python.

A couple regression tests are included.

I'd just assume that an empty regex is an invalid regex and that an error should be returned (I can't think of any reason to use an empty regex?), but it's probably better to be consistent with other regex libraries.
2014-06-03 22:01:43 -07:00