Fix typos
This commit is contained in:
parent
37becd887e
commit
bd4ee7c7d2
src
compiletest
libcore
librustc/middle
libstd
libsyntax/ext
rt
test
@ -764,7 +764,7 @@ fn _arm_exec_compiled_test(config: config, props: TestProps,
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logv(config, fmt!("executing (%s) %s", config.target, cmdline));
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// adb shell dose not forward stdout and stderr of internal result
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// to stdout and stderr seperately but to stdout only
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// to stdout and stderr separately but to stdout only
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let mut newargs_out = ~[];
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let mut newargs_err = ~[];
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let subargs = args.args;
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@ -52,7 +52,7 @@ pub fn capacity<T>(v: @[T]) -> uint {
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* # Arguments
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*
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* * size - An initial size of the vector to reserve
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* * builder - A function that will construct the vector. It recieves
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* * builder - A function that will construct the vector. It receives
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* as an argument a function that will push an element
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* onto the vector being constructed.
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*/
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@ -70,7 +70,7 @@ pub fn build_sized<A>(size: uint, builder: &fn(push: &fn(v: A))) -> @[A] {
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*
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* # Arguments
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*
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* * builder - A function that will construct the vector. It recieves
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* * builder - A function that will construct the vector. It receives
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* as an argument a function that will push an element
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* onto the vector being constructed.
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*/
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@ -87,7 +87,7 @@ pub fn build<A>(builder: &fn(push: &fn(v: A))) -> @[A] {
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* # Arguments
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*
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* * size - An option, maybe containing initial size of the vector to reserve
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* * builder - A function that will construct the vector. It recieves
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* * builder - A function that will construct the vector. It receives
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* as an argument a function that will push an element
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* onto the vector being constructed.
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*/
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@ -11,7 +11,7 @@
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//! Utility mixins that apply to all Readers and Writers
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// XXX: Not sure how this should be structured
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// XXX: Iteration should probably be considered seperately
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// XXX: Iteration should probably be considered separately
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pub trait ReaderUtil {
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@ -133,7 +133,7 @@ unsafe fn get_newsched_local_map(local: *mut LocalStorage) -> TaskLocalMap {
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unsafe fn key_to_key_value<T: 'static>(key: LocalDataKey<T>) -> *libc::c_void {
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// Keys are closures, which are (fnptr,envptr) pairs. Use fnptr.
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// Use reintepret_cast -- transmute would leak (forget) the closure.
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// Use reinterpret_cast -- transmute would leak (forget) the closure.
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let pair: (*libc::c_void, *libc::c_void) = cast::transmute_copy(&key);
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pair.first()
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}
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@ -219,7 +219,7 @@ pub fn build<A>(builder: &fn(push: &fn(v: A))) -> ~[A] {
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* # Arguments
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*
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* * size - An option, maybe containing initial size of the vector to reserve
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* * builder - A function that will construct the vector. It recieves
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* * builder - A function that will construct the vector. It receives
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* as an argument a function that will push an element
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* onto the vector being constructed.
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*/
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@ -87,7 +87,7 @@ pub fn nonzero_llsize_of(cx: @CrateContext, t: TypeRef) -> ValueRef {
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}
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// Returns the preferred alignment of the given type for the current target.
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// The preffered alignment may be larger than the alignment used when
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// The preferred alignment may be larger than the alignment used when
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// packing the type into structs. This will be used for things like
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// allocations inside a stack frame, which LLVM has a free hand in.
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pub fn llalign_of_pref(cx: @CrateContext, t: TypeRef) -> uint {
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@ -96,7 +96,7 @@ pub fn llalign_of_pref(cx: @CrateContext, t: TypeRef) -> uint {
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}
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}
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// Returns the minimum alignment of a type required by the plattform.
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// Returns the minimum alignment of a type required by the platform.
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// This is the alignment that will be used for struct fields, arrays,
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// and similar ABI-mandated things.
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pub fn llalign_of_min(cx: @CrateContext, t: TypeRef) -> uint {
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@ -31,7 +31,7 @@ use syntax::print::pprust::expr_to_str;
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use syntax::visit;
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// vtable resolution looks for places where trait bounds are
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// subsituted in and figures out which vtable is used. There is some
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// substituted in and figures out which vtable is used. There is some
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// extra complication thrown in to support early "opportunistic"
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// vtable resolution. This is a hacky mechanism that is invoked while
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// typechecking function calls (after typechecking non-closure
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@ -20,7 +20,7 @@
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// calling the destructors on them.
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// One subtle point that needs to be addressed is how to handle
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// failures while running the user provided initializer function. It
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// is important to not run the destructor on uninitalized objects, but
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// is important to not run the destructor on uninitialized objects, but
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// how to detect them is somewhat subtle. Since alloc() can be invoked
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// recursively, it is not sufficient to simply exclude the most recent
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// object. To solve this without requiring extra space, we use the low
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@ -15,7 +15,7 @@ or transformed to and from, byte vectors.
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The `FlatPort` and `FlatChan` types implement the generic channel and
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port interface for arbitrary types and transport strategies. It can
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particularly be used to send and recieve serializable types over I/O
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particularly be used to send and receive serializable types over I/O
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streams.
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`FlatPort` and `FlatChan` implement the same comm traits as pipe-based
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@ -55,7 +55,7 @@ use core::sys::size_of;
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use core::vec;
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/**
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A FlatPort, consisting of a `BytePort` that recieves byte vectors,
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A FlatPort, consisting of a `BytePort` that receives byte vectors,
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and an `Unflattener` that converts the bytes to a value.
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Create using the constructors in the `serial` and `pod` modules.
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@ -819,7 +819,7 @@ mod test {
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}
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}
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// Reciever task
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// Receiver task
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do task::spawn || {
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// Wait for a connection
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let (conn, res_chan) = accept_port.recv();
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@ -838,7 +838,7 @@ mod test {
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for int::range(0, 10) |i| {
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let j = port.recv();
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debug!("receieved %?", j);
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debug!("received %?", j);
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assert!(i == j);
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}
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@ -623,7 +623,7 @@ pub mod groups {
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desc_sep
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};
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// Normalize desc to contain words seperated by one space character
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// Normalize desc to contain words separated by one space character
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let mut desc_normalized_whitespace = ~"";
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for str::each_word(desc) |word| {
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desc_normalized_whitespace.push_str(word);
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@ -420,7 +420,7 @@ mod test {
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if result::is_err(&ga_result) {
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fail!(~"got err result from net::ip::get_addr();")
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}
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// note really sure how to realiably test/assert
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// note really sure how to reliably test/assert
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// this.. mostly just wanting to see it work, atm.
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let results = result::unwrap(ga_result);
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debug!("test_get_addr: Number of results for %s: %?",
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@ -565,7 +565,7 @@ pub mod node {
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*
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* # Fields
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*
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* * byte_offset = The number of bytes skippen in `content`
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* * byte_offset = The number of bytes skipped in `content`
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* * byte_len - The number of bytes of `content` to use
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* * char_len - The number of chars in the leaf.
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* * content - Contents of the leaf.
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@ -32,7 +32,7 @@ pub mod rustrt {
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}
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// The name of a test. By convention this follows the rules for rust
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// paths; i.e. it should be a series of identifiers seperated by double
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// paths; i.e. it should be a series of identifiers separated by double
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// colons. This way if some test runner wants to arrange the tests
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// hierarchically it may.
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@ -222,6 +222,6 @@ mod test {
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exit_po.recv();
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};
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debug!(~"test_stress_gl_uv_global_loop_high_level_global_timer"+
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~" exiting sucessfully!");
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~" exiting successfully!");
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}
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}
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@ -243,7 +243,7 @@ fn impl_uv_iotask_async(iotask: &IoTask) {
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exit_po.recv();
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}
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// this fn documents the bear minimum neccesary to roll your own
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// this fn documents the bear minimum necessary to roll your own
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// high_level_loop
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#[cfg(test)]
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fn spawn_test_loop(exit_ch: ~Chan<()>) -> IoTask {
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@ -269,7 +269,7 @@ pub struct sockaddr_in {
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}
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// unix size: 28 .. FIXME #1645
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// stuck with 32 becuse of rust padding structs?
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// stuck with 32 because of rust padding structs?
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#[cfg(target_arch="x86_64")]
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pub struct sockaddr_in6 {
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a0: *u8, a1: *u8,
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@ -286,7 +286,7 @@ pub struct sockaddr_in6 {
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}
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// unix size: 28 .. FIXME #1645
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// stuck with 32 becuse of rust padding structs?
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// stuck with 32 because of rust padding structs?
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pub type addr_in = addr_in_impl::addr_in;
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#[cfg(unix)]
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pub mod addr_in_impl {
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@ -1376,7 +1376,7 @@ mod test {
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let tcp_init_result = tcp_init(test_loop as *libc::c_void,
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tcp_handle_ptr);
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if (tcp_init_result == 0) {
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debug!(~"sucessful tcp_init_result");
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debug!(~"successful tcp_init_result");
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debug!(~"building addr...");
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let addr = ip4_addr(ip, port);
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@ -697,7 +697,7 @@ fn expand_tts(cx: @ext_ctxt,
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// compiler (which we don't really want to do) and, in any case, only
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// pushed the problem a very small step further back: an error
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// resulting from a parse of the resulting quote is still attributed to
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// the site the string literal occured, which was in a source file
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// the site the string literal occurred, which was in a source file
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// _other_ than the one the user has control over. For example, an
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// error in a quote from the protocol compiler, invoked in user code
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// using proto! for example, will be attributed to the pipec.rs file in
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@ -24,7 +24,7 @@
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*/
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static lock_and_signal _log_lock;
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/**
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* Indicates whether we are outputing to the console.
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* Indicates whether we are outputting to the console.
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* Protected by _log_lock;
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*/
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static bool _log_to_console = true;
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@ -11,7 +11,7 @@
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#ifndef RUST_SIGNAL_H
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#define RUST_SIGNAL_H
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// Just an abstrict class that reperesents something that can be signalled
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// Just an abstract class that represents something that can be signalled
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class rust_signal {
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public:
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virtual void signal() = 0;
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@ -8,7 +8,7 @@
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// option. This file may not be copied, modified, or distributed
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// except according to those terms.
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// xfail-pretty -- comments are infaithfully preserved
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// xfail-pretty -- comments are unfaithfully preserved
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#[allow(unused_variable)];
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#[allow(dead_assignment)];
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@ -8,7 +8,7 @@
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// option. This file may not be copied, modified, or distributed
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// except according to those terms.
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// xfail-pretty -- comments are infaithfully preserved
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// xfail-pretty -- comments are unfaithfully preserved
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fn main() {
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let mut x: Option<int> = None;
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@ -8,7 +8,7 @@
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// option. This file may not be copied, modified, or distributed
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// except according to those terms.
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// Regresion test for issue #1448 and #1386
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// Regression test for issue #1448 and #1386
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fn main() {
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debug!("%u", 10i); //~ ERROR mismatched types
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@ -8,7 +8,7 @@
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// option. This file may not be copied, modified, or distributed
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// except according to those terms.
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// Regresion test for issue #4935
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// Regression test for issue #4935
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fn foo(a: uint) {}
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fn main() { foo(5, 6) } //~ ERROR this function takes 1 parameter but 2 parameters were supplied
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@ -11,7 +11,7 @@
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// xfail-test leaks
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// error-pattern:ran out of stack
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// Test that the task fails after hiting the recursion limit
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// Test that the task fails after hitting the recursion limit
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// during unwinding
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fn recurse() {
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@ -13,7 +13,7 @@
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// xfail-fast This works standalone on windows but not with check-fast.
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// possibly because there is another test that uses this extern fn but gives it
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// a diferent signature
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// a different signature
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#[deriving(Eq)]
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struct TwoU64s {
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@ -21,7 +21,7 @@ impl methods for () {
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}
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// the position of this function is significant! - if it comes before methods
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// then it works, if it comes after it then it doesnt!
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// then it works, if it comes after it then it doesn't!
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fn to_bools(bitv: Storage) -> ~[bool] {
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vec::from_fn(8, |i| {
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let w = i / 64;
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@ -8,7 +8,7 @@
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// option. This file may not be copied, modified, or distributed
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// except according to those terms.
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// Issue #825: Should recheck the loop contition after continuing
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// Issue #825: Should recheck the loop condition after continuing
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pub fn main() {
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let mut i = 1;
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while i > 0 {
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