Commit Graph

5064 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Huon Wilson
07aadc2e8b core/std: squash dead_code warnings from fail! invocations.
The fail macro defines some function/static items internally, which got
a dead_code warning when `fail!()` is used inside a dead function. This
is ugly and unnecessarily reveals implementation details, so the
warnings can be squashed.

Fixes #16192.
2014-08-11 18:26:31 +10:00
Huon Wilson
f3d88c320d lint: dead_code ignores items with leading underscores.
This generalises the behaviour with struct fields (which recieve no
dead_code warning if they have a leading _), and other similar lints, to
all items, e.g. `fn _foo() {} fn main() {}` has no warnings.
2014-08-10 22:49:41 +10:00
bors
351cc4fc99 auto merge of #16359 : epdtry/rust/mono-item-dedup-foreign, r=alexcrichton
Extend the changes from #16059 to the new generic foreign functions introduced by #15831.
2014-08-09 23:26:18 +00:00
bors
48ee81682a auto merge of #16346 : vadimcn/rust/win64-cabi, r=brson
This fixes
run-pass/extern-pass-TwoU64s.rs
run-pass/extern-pass-empty.rs
run-pass/extern-return-TwoU64s.rs
2014-08-09 18:11:22 +00:00
bors
f9a4323c08 auto merge of #16340 : thestinger/rust/pie, r=brson
Rust already builds all code as position independent by default, so the
linker can be told to build a position independent executable if it's
not disabled with `-C relocation-model=dynamic-no-pic`. Position
independent code does have a significant cost on i686 (not on x86_64 or
ARM) but there's no significant cost to linking code that's already
position independent as a position independent executable.

Address space layout randomization makes exploiting vulnerabilities much
more difficult by providing a statistical defence against an attempt to
find or modify existing code / data. Without ASLR, it's trivial to use a
vulnerability to take over control of the process via return-oriented
programming.

Rust code can be used for return-oriented programming whether it is safe
or unsafe, so even a fully safe application needs to be built as a
position independent executable to defend against vulnerabilities in
unsafe blocks or C libraries.

Sample program:

    extern crate libc;

    use std::mem;

    static mut global: u32 = 5;
    static constant: u32 = 5;
    fn foo() {}

    fn main() {
        let local = 5;
        println!("stack: {}, global: {}, constant: {}, fn: {}, lib fn: {}",
                 &local as *const u32,
                 unsafe { &global as *const u32 },
                 &constant as *const u32,
                 unsafe { mem::transmute::<_, *const ()>(foo) },
                 unsafe { mem::transmute::<_, *const ()>(libc::mprotect) });
    }

Before:

    stack: 0x3ff15eb9f94, global: 0x6ab488, constant: 0x47db40, fn: 0x4030e0, lib fn: 0x32749547530
    stack: 0x3b5d47d80e4, global: 0x6ab488, constant: 0x47db40, fn: 0x4030e0, lib fn: 0x394469a7530
    stack: 0x3fe2c4e5564, global: 0x6ab488, constant: 0x47db40, fn: 0x4030e0, lib fn: 0x399734a2530
    stack: 0x3e525e0fb24, global: 0x6ab488, constant: 0x47db40, fn: 0x4030e0, lib fn: 0x2f62a810530
    stack: 0x3b50fb3eae4, global: 0x6ab488, constant: 0x47db40, fn: 0x4030e0, lib fn: 0x2e590e86530

After:

    stack: 0x38cf12c90a4, global: 0x3e2d46b488, constant: 0x3e2d23cf80, fn: 0x3e2d1c2510, lib fn: 0x2617d3b4530
    stack: 0x3d733faf474, global: 0x7eb1839488, constant: 0x7eb160af80, fn: 0x7eb1590510, lib fn: 0x32d30c1f530
    stack: 0x3bb42212ec4, global: 0x5bbb365488, constant: 0x5bbb136f80, fn: 0x5bbb0bc510, lib fn: 0x3595e6c1530
    stack: 0x39f678c1ab4, global: 0x22c4e3c488, constant: 0x22c4c0df80, fn: 0x22c4b93510, lib fn: 0x3835b727530
    stack: 0x3afb25bd394, global: 0x493eab2488, constant: 0x493e883f80, fn: 0x493e809510, lib fn: 0x3478d6a7530

This may also be necessary on other platforms, but I can only test on
Linux right now. Note that GDB gained support for debugging position
independent executables in version 7.1 (March 2010).
2014-08-09 13:21:20 +00:00
bors
1712ab2300 auto merge of #16253 : luqmana/rust/muv, r=nikomatsakis
Fixes #11958.
2014-08-09 11:36:22 +00:00
bors
87134c7d72 auto merge of #16326 : pnkfelix/rust/fsk-add-path-suffix-lookup, r=huonw
Extended `ast_map::Map` with an iterator over all node id's that match a path suffix.

Extended pretty printer to let users choose particular items to pretty print, either by indicating an integer node-id, or by providing a path suffix.

 * Example 1: the suffix `typeck::check::check_struct` matches the item with the path `rustc::middle::typeck::check::check_struct` when compiling the `rustc` crate.

 * Example 2: the suffix `and` matches `core::option::Option::and` and `core::result::Result::and` when compiling the `core` crate.

Refactored `pprust` slightly to support the pretty printer changes.

(See individual commits for more description.)
2014-08-09 09:51:23 +00:00
Felix S. Klock II
575ea18d46 pretty-printer: let users choose particular items to pretty print.
With this change:

  * `--pretty variant=<node-id>` will print the item associated with
    `<node-id>` (where `<node-id>` is an integer for some node-id in
    the AST, and `variant` means one of {`normal`,`expanded`,...}).

  * `--pretty variant=<path-suffix>` will print all of the items that
    match the `<path-suffix>` (where `<path-suffix>` is a suffix of a
    path, and `variant` again means one of {`normal`,`expanded`,...}).

    Example 1: the suffix `typeck::check::check_struct` matches the
    item with the path `rustc::middle::typeck::check::check_struct`
    when compiling the `rustc` crate.

    Example 2: the suffix `and` matches `core::option::Option::and`
    and `core::result::Result::and` when compiling the `core` crate.

Both of the `--pretty variant=...` modes will include the full path to
the item in a comment that follows the item.

Note that when multiple paths match, then either:

  1. all matching items are printed, in series; this is what happens in
     the usual pretty-print variants, or

  2. the compiler signals an error; this is what happens in flowgraph
     printing.

----

Some drive-by improvements:

Heavily refactored the pretty-printing glue in driver.rs, introducing
a couple local traits to avoid cut-and-pasting very code segments that
differed only in how they accessed the `Session` or the
`ast_map::Map`. (Note the previous code had three similar calls to
`print_crate` which have all been unified in this revision; the
addition of printing individual node-ids exacerbated the situation
beyond tolerance.) We may want to consider promoting some of these
traits, e.g. `SessionCarrier`, for use more generally elsewhere in the
compiler; right now I have to double check how to access the `Session`
depending on what context I am hacking in.

Refactored `PpMode` to make the data directly reflect the fundamental
difference in the categories (in terms of printing source-code with
various annotations, versus printing a control-flow graph).

(also, addressed review feedback.)
2014-08-09 10:18:02 +02:00
Luqman Aden
ead3edb7b9 librustc: Update unused mut lint to properly track moved upvars. 2014-08-08 23:43:38 -07:00
Luqman Aden
6559323a51 librustc: Allow mutation of moved upvars. 2014-08-08 23:43:38 -07:00
bors
413328b0f2 auto merge of #15964 : huonw/rust/gensym-test, r=alexcrichton
This requires avoiding `quote_...!` for constructing the parts of the
__test module, since that stringifies and reinterns the idents, losing
the special gensym'd nature of them. (#15962.)
2014-08-09 03:06:21 +00:00
Huon Wilson
edc9191921 testsuite: implement #[reexport_test_harness_name] to get access to the
default entrypoint of the --test binary.

This allows one to, e.g., run tests under libgreen by starting it
manually, passing in the test entrypoint.
2014-08-09 13:00:58 +10:00
Stuart Pernsteiner
0c158b4fbf don't translate items when monomorphizing foreign-ABI functions 2014-08-08 11:26:21 -07:00
Vadim Chugunov
d1e03b3bb7 Implement Win64 system ABI. 2014-08-07 23:11:55 -07:00
bors
aae7901a78 auto merge of #16285 : alexcrichton/rust/rename-share, r=huonw
This leaves the `Share` trait at `std::kinds` via a `#[deprecated]` `pub use`
statement, but the `NoShare` struct is no longer part of `std::kinds::marker`
due to #12660 (the build cannot bootstrap otherwise).

All code referencing the `Share` trait should now reference the `Sync` trait,
and all code referencing the `NoShare` type should now reference the `NoSync`
type. The functionality and meaning of this trait have not changed, only the
naming.

Closes #16281
[breaking-change]
2014-08-08 03:51:15 +00:00
Daniel Micay
3cbff72da2 enable PIE by default on Linux for full ASLR
Rust already builds all code as position independent by default, so the
linker can be told to build a position independent executable if it's
not disabled with `-C relocation-model=dynamic-no-pic`. Position
independent code does have a significant cost on i686 (not on x86_64 or
ARM) but there's no significant cost to linking code that's already
position independent as a position independent executable.

Address space layout randomization makes exploiting vulnerabilities much
more difficult by providing a statistical defence against an attempt to
find or modify existing code / data. Without ASLR, it's trivial to use a
vulnerability to take over control of the process via return-oriented
programming.

Rust code can be used for return-oriented programming whether it is safe
or unsafe, so even a fully safe application needs to be built as a
position independent executable to defend against vulnerabilities in
unsafe blocks or C libraries.

Sample program:

    extern crate libc;

    use std::mem;

    static mut global: u32 = 5;
    static constant: u32 = 5;
    fn foo() {}

    fn main() {
        let local = 5;
        println!("stack: {}, global: {}, constant: {}, fn: {}, lib fn: {}",
                 &local as *const u32,
                 unsafe { &global as *const u32 },
                 &constant as *const u32,
                 unsafe { mem::transmute::<_, *const ()>(foo) },
                 unsafe { mem::transmute::<_, *const ()>(libc::mprotect) });
    }

Before:

    stack: 0x3ff15eb9f94, global: 0x6ab488, constant: 0x47db40, fn: 0x4030e0, lib fn: 0x32749547530
    stack: 0x3b5d47d80e4, global: 0x6ab488, constant: 0x47db40, fn: 0x4030e0, lib fn: 0x394469a7530
    stack: 0x3fe2c4e5564, global: 0x6ab488, constant: 0x47db40, fn: 0x4030e0, lib fn: 0x399734a2530
    stack: 0x3e525e0fb24, global: 0x6ab488, constant: 0x47db40, fn: 0x4030e0, lib fn: 0x2f62a810530
    stack: 0x3b50fb3eae4, global: 0x6ab488, constant: 0x47db40, fn: 0x4030e0, lib fn: 0x2e590e86530

After:

    stack: 0x38cf12c90a4, global: 0x3e2d46b488, constant: 0x3e2d23cf80, fn: 0x3e2d1c2510, lib fn: 0x2617d3b4530
    stack: 0x3d733faf474, global: 0x7eb1839488, constant: 0x7eb160af80, fn: 0x7eb1590510, lib fn: 0x32d30c1f530
    stack: 0x3bb42212ec4, global: 0x5bbb365488, constant: 0x5bbb136f80, fn: 0x5bbb0bc510, lib fn: 0x3595e6c1530
    stack: 0x39f678c1ab4, global: 0x22c4e3c488, constant: 0x22c4c0df80, fn: 0x22c4b93510, lib fn: 0x3835b727530
    stack: 0x3afb25bd394, global: 0x493eab2488, constant: 0x493e883f80, fn: 0x493e809510, lib fn: 0x3478d6a7530

This may also be necessary on other platforms, but I can only test on
Linux right now. Note that GDB gained support for debugging position
independent executables in version 7.1 (March 2010).
2014-08-07 22:57:00 -04:00
bors
4879ca7924 auto merge of #15831 : rpjohnst/rust/generic-foreign-fns, r=alexcrichton
This allows for things like this:

    extern "C" fn callback<T>(t: T) { /* ... */ }
    extern "C" {
        fn take_callback(c: extern fn(i32));
    }

and later:

    take_callback(callback::<i32>);

Closes #12502.
2014-08-07 15:56:43 +00:00
Alex Crichton
1f760d5d1a Rename Share to Sync
This leaves the `Share` trait at `std::kinds` via a `#[deprecated]` `pub use`
statement, but the `NoShare` struct is no longer part of `std::kinds::marker`
due to #12660 (the build cannot bootstrap otherwise).

All code referencing the `Share` trait should now reference the `Sync` trait,
and all code referencing the `NoShare` type should now reference the `NoSync`
type. The functionality and meaning of this trait have not changed, only the
naming.

Closes #16281
[breaking-change]
2014-08-07 08:54:38 -07:00
Huon Wilson
3826026f98 rustc: gensym the module names for --test to avoid introducing user-accessible names.
This requires avoiding `quote_...!` for constructing the parts of the
__test module, since that stringifies and reinterns the idents, losing
the special gensym'd nature of them. (#15962.)
2014-08-07 21:54:13 +10:00
Niko Matsakis
fcab98038c Temporary bootstrapping hack: introduce syntax for r egion bounds like 'b:'a,
meaning `'b outlives 'a`. Syntax currently does nothing but is needed for full
fix to #5763. To use this syntax, the issue_5763_bootstrap feature guard is
required.
2014-08-07 07:23:59 -04:00
bors
7be8f0af03 auto merge of #16306 : pnkfelix/rust/fsk-ast-refactor-PatWild, r=alexcrichton
AST refactoring: merge PatWild and PatWildMulti into one variant with a flag
2014-08-07 02:26:07 +00:00
bors
dd20f09611 auto merge of #15985 : jfager/rust/r6334, r=pnkfelix
Closes #6334
2014-08-06 17:31:19 +00:00
Felix S. Klock II
d3202354f5 AST refactoring: merge PatWild and PatWildMulti into one variant with a flag. 2014-08-06 17:04:44 +02:00
Russell
e6e6ef24ab Allow generic foreign functions.
Generic extern functions written in Rust have their names mangled, as well as their internal clownshoe __rust_abi functions. This allows e.g. specific monomorphizations of these functions to be used as callbacks.

Closes #12502.
2014-08-05 23:28:50 -06:00
bors
6da38890f1 auto merge of #15709 : hirschenberger/rust/issue-14269, r=cmr
Fixes missing overflow lint for i64 #14269

The `type_overflow` lint, doesn't catch the overflow for `i64` because the overflow happens earlier in the parse phase when the `u64` as biggest possible int gets casted to `i64` , without checking the for
overflows.
We can't lint in the parse phase, so we emit a compiler error, as we do for overflowing `u64`

Perhaps a consistent behaviour would be to emit a parse error for *all*  overflowing integer types.

See #14269
2014-08-05 17:21:23 +00:00
Falco Hirschenberger
0dc215741b Fixes missing overflow lint for i64 #14269
The `type_overflow` lint, doesn't catch the overflow for `i64` because
the overflow happens earlier in the parse phase when the `u64` as biggest
possible int gets casted to `i64` , without checking the for overflows.
We can't lint in the parse phase, so a refactoring of the `LitInt` type
was necessary.

The types `LitInt`, `LitUint` and `LitIntUnsuffixed` where merged to one
type `LitInt` which stores it's value as `u64`. An additional parameter was
added which indicate the signedness of the type and the sign of the value.
2014-08-05 09:59:03 +02:00
Alex Crichton
1ae1461fbf rustc: Link entire archives of native libraries
As discovered in #15460, a particular #[link(kind = "static", ...)] line is not
actually guaranteed to link the library at all. The reason for this is that if
the external library doesn't have any referenced symbols in the object generated
by rustc, the entire library is dropped by the linker.

For dynamic native libraries, this is solved by passing -lfoo for all downstream
compilations unconditionally. For static libraries in rlibs this is solved
because the entire archive is bundled in the rlib. The only situation in which
this was a problem was when a static native library was linked to a rust dynamic
library.

This commit brings the behavior of dylibs in line with rlibs by passing the
--whole-archive flag to the linker when linking native libraries. On OSX, this
uses the -force_load flag. This flag ensures that the entire archive is
considered candidate for being linked into the final dynamic library.

This is a breaking change because if any static library is included twice in the
same compilation unit then the linker will start emitting errors about duplicate
definitions now. The fix for this would involve only statically linking to a
library once.

Closes #15460
[breaking-change]
2014-08-04 11:02:26 -07:00
bors
795f6ae829 auto merge of #16213 : huonw/rust/more-token-numbers, r=pnkfelix
Using the Show impl for Names created global symbols with names like
`"str\"str\"(1027)"`. This adjusts strings, binaries and vtables to
avoid using that impl.
2014-08-04 07:01:10 +00:00
Huon Wilson
e753dbb431 rustc: use Name numbers rather than the Show impl for constants.
Using the Show impl for Names created global symbols with names like
`"str\"str\"(1027)"`. This adjusts strings, binaries and vtables to
avoid using that impl.

Fixes #15799.
2014-08-04 16:32:35 +10:00
Michael Woerister
ff0fa8f1d1 Use a versioning scheme for bytecode objects in rlibs.
Before this commit, the LLVM IR of exported items was simply zip-compressed and stored as an object file inside rlib archives. This commit adds a header to this "object" containing a file identifier and a format version number so the compiler can deal with changes in the way bytecode objects are stored within rlibs.

While updating the format of bytecode objects, this commit also worksaround a problem in LLDB which could not handle odd-sized objects within archives before mid-2014.
2014-08-03 20:27:06 +02:00
Joseph Crail
ad06dfe496 Fix misspelled comments. 2014-08-01 19:42:52 -04:00
bors
6136381ed8 auto merge of #16102 : zwarich/rust/borrowck-unboxed, r=pcwalton
This removes the ability of the borrow checker to determine that repeated dereferences of a Box<T> refer to the same memory object.
2014-08-01 18:36:01 +00:00
Patrick Walton
5b85c8cbe7 librustc: Forbid pattern bindings after @s, for memory safety.
This is an alternative to upgrading the way rvalues are handled in the
borrow check. Making rvalues handled more like lvalues in the borrow
check caused numerous problems related to double mutable borrows and
rvalue scopes. Rather than come up with more borrow check rules to try
to solve these problems, I decided to just forbid pattern bindings after
`@`. This affected fewer than 10 lines of code in the compiler and
libraries.

This breaks code like:

    match x {
        y @ z => { ... }
    }

    match a {
        b @ Some(c) => { ... }
    }

Change this code to use nested `match` or `let` expressions. For
example:

    match x {
        y => {
            let z = y;
            ...
        }
    }

    match a {
        Some(c) => {
            let b = Some(c);
            ...
        }
    }

Closes #14587.

[breaking-change]
2014-08-01 08:45:22 -07:00
bors
51ff6c075a auto merge of #16153 : kballard/rust/fix_gensym_symbols, r=luqmana
When generating a unique symbol for things like closures or glue_drop,
we call token::gensym() to create a crate-unique Name. Recently, Name
changed its Show impl so it no longer prints as a number. This caused
symbols like glue_drop:1542 to become glue_drop:"glue_drop"(1542), or in
mangled form, glue_drop.$x22glue_drop$x22$LP$1542$RP$.
2014-08-01 11:31:05 +00:00
Kevin Ballard
ff3d902fcb Stop using the Show impl for ast::Name in our symbols
When generating a unique symbol for things like closures or glue_drop,
we call token::gensym() to create a crate-unique Name. Recently, Name
changed its Show impl so it no longer prints as a number. This caused
symbols like glue_drop:1542 to become glue_drop:"glue_drop"(1542), or in
mangled form, glue_drop.$x22glue_drop$x22$LP$1542$RP$.
2014-07-31 19:05:45 -07:00
bors
b495933a7f auto merge of #16141 : alexcrichton/rust/rollup, r=alexcrichton 2014-08-01 01:56:32 +00:00
Luqman Aden
bc24819bb2 librustc: Don't ICE with struct exprs where the name is not a valid struct. 2014-07-31 11:50:24 -07:00
Luqman Aden
bd15854114 librustc: Don't ICE when trying to subst regions in destructor call. 2014-07-31 11:50:24 -07:00
Simon Sapin
efd42a355d Byte literals! 2014-07-31 11:50:23 -07:00
bors
8c00357f9d auto merge of #15999 : Kimundi/rust/fix_folder, r=nikomatsakis
Note: This PR is motivated by an attempt to write an custom syntax extension that tried to use `syntax::fold`, and that could only do so by fixing bugs in it and copying out private functions.

---

Refactored `syntax::fold`

Prior to this, the code there had a few issues:

- Default implementations inconsistenly either had the prefix `noop_` or
  not.
- Some default methods where implemented in terms of a public noop function
  for user code to call, others where implemented directly on the trait
  and did not allow users of the trait to reuse the code.
- Some of the default implementations where private, and thus not reusable
  for other implementors.
- There where some bugs where default implemntations called other default
  implementations directly, rather than to the underlying Folder, with the
  result of some ast nodes never being visted even if the user implemented that
  method. (For example, the current Folder never folded struct fields)

This commit solves this situation somewhat radically by making __all__
`fold_...` functions in the module into Folder methods, and implementing
them all in terms of public `noop_...` functions for other implementors to
call out to.

Some public functions had to be renamed to fit the new system, so this is a
breaking change.

---

Also added a few trait implementations to `ast` types
2014-07-31 16:41:36 +00:00
bors
9826e801be auto merge of #16073 : mneumann/rust/dragonfly2, r=alexcrichton
Not included are two required patches:

* LLVM: segmented stack support for DragonFly [1]

* jemalloc: simple configure patches

[1]: http://reviews.llvm.org/D4705
2014-07-31 14:41:34 +00:00
Erick Tryzelaar
fd9ad77bd2 Move SeekableMemWriter into librbml 2014-07-31 07:30:50 -07:00
Erick Tryzelaar
e1dcbefe52 remove serialize::ebml, add librbml
Our implementation of ebml has diverged from the standard in order
to better serve the needs of the compiler, so it doesn't make much
sense to call what we have ebml anyore. Furthermore, our implementation
is pretty crufty, and should eventually be rewritten into a format
that better suits the needs of the compiler. This patch factors out
serialize::ebml into librbml, otherwise known as the Really Bad
Markup Language. This is a stopgap library that shouldn't be used
by end users, and will eventually be replaced by something better.

[breaking-change]
2014-07-31 07:30:49 -07:00
Brian Anderson
4db68e644e Modify failure lang items to take less pointers.
Divide-by-zero before:

```
        leaq    "str\"str\"(1762)"(%rip), %rax
        movq    %rax, 16(%rsp)
        movq    $27, 24(%rsp)
        leaq    "str\"str\"(1542)"(%rip), %rax
        movq    %rax, (%rsp)
        movq    $19, 8(%rsp)
        leaq    16(%rsp), %rdi
        leaq    (%rsp), %rsi
        movl    $32, %edx
        callq   _ZN7failure5fail_20hc04408f955ce60aaqWjE@PLT
```

After:

```
        leaq    .Lconst(%rip), %rdi
        callq   _ZN7failure5fail_20haf918a97c8f7f2bfqWjE@PLT
```

Bounds check before:

```
        leaq    "str\"str\"(1542)"(%rip), %rax
        movq    %rax, 8(%rsp)
        movq    $19, 16(%rsp)
        leaq    8(%rsp), %rdi
        movl    $38, %esi
        movl    $1, %edx
        movl    $1, %ecx
        callq   _ZN7failure17fail_bounds_check20hf4bc3c69e96caf41RXjE@PLT
```

Bounds check after:

```
        leaq    .Lconst2(%rip), %rdi
        movl    $1, %esi
        movl    $1, %edx
        callq   _ZN7failure17fail_bounds_check20h5267276a537a7de22XjE@PLT
```

Size before:

21277995 librustc-4e7c5e5c.s

```
text       data
12554881   6089335
```

Size after:

21247617 librustc-4e7c5e5c.so

```
text       data
12518497   6095748
```
2014-07-31 07:30:17 -07:00
bors
311a970621 auto merge of #16090 : epdtry/rust/doesnt-use-gc, r=alexcrichton 2014-07-31 13:01:35 +00:00
bors
7c28dd080c auto merge of #16059 : epdtry/rust/mono-item-dedup, r=alexcrichton
Currently, each time a function is monomorphized, all items within that function are translated.  This is unnecessary work because the inner items already get translated when the function declaration is visited by `trans_item`.  This patch adds a flag to the `FunctionContext` to prevent translation of items during monomorphization.
2014-07-30 20:51:22 +00:00
Cameron Zwarich
3607c7a982 Implement RFC #43
Remove the ability of the borrow checker to determine that repeated
dereferences of a Box<T> refer to the same memory object. This will
usually require one of two workarounds:

1) The interior of a Box<T> will sometimes need to be moved / borrowed
into a temporary before moving / borrowing individual derived paths.

2) A `ref x` pattern will have to be replaced with a `box ref x`
pattern.

Fixes #16094.

[breaking-change]
2014-07-30 13:36:21 -07:00
Cameron Zwarich
8c4dbf3d47 Add two helper functions for dealing with OwnedPtr paths 2014-07-30 13:36:21 -07:00
Stuart Pernsteiner
f97f65f7b7 avoid redundant translation of items during monomorphization 2014-07-30 12:07:26 -07:00
bors
f681420624 auto merge of #15915 : erickt/rust/master, r=alexcrichton
std: rename MemWriter to SeekableMemWriter, add seekless MemWriter

Not all users of MemWriter need to seek, but having MemWriter seekable adds between 3-29% in overhead in certain circumstances. This fixes that performance gap by making a non-seekable MemWriter, and creating a new SeekableMemWriter for those circumstances when that functionality is actually needed.

```
test io::mem::test::bench_buf_reader                        ... bench:       682 ns/iter (+/- 85)
test io::mem::test::bench_buf_writer                        ... bench:       580 ns/iter (+/- 57)
test io::mem::test::bench_mem_reader                        ... bench:       793 ns/iter (+/- 99)
test io::mem::test::bench_mem_writer_001_0000               ... bench:        48 ns/iter (+/- 27)
test io::mem::test::bench_mem_writer_001_0010               ... bench:        65 ns/iter (+/- 27) = 153 MB/s
test io::mem::test::bench_mem_writer_001_0100               ... bench:       132 ns/iter (+/- 12) = 757 MB/s
test io::mem::test::bench_mem_writer_001_1000               ... bench:       802 ns/iter (+/- 151) = 1246 MB/s
test io::mem::test::bench_mem_writer_100_0000               ... bench:       481 ns/iter (+/- 28)
test io::mem::test::bench_mem_writer_100_0010               ... bench:      1957 ns/iter (+/- 126) = 510 MB/s
test io::mem::test::bench_mem_writer_100_0100               ... bench:      8222 ns/iter (+/- 434) = 1216 MB/s
test io::mem::test::bench_mem_writer_100_1000               ... bench:     82496 ns/iter (+/- 11191) = 1212 MB/s
test io::mem::test::bench_seekable_mem_writer_001_0000      ... bench:        48 ns/iter (+/- 2)
test io::mem::test::bench_seekable_mem_writer_001_0010      ... bench:        64 ns/iter (+/- 2) = 156 MB/s
test io::mem::test::bench_seekable_mem_writer_001_0100      ... bench:       129 ns/iter (+/- 7) = 775 MB/s
test io::mem::test::bench_seekable_mem_writer_001_1000      ... bench:       801 ns/iter (+/- 159) = 1248 MB/s
test io::mem::test::bench_seekable_mem_writer_100_0000      ... bench:       711 ns/iter (+/- 51)
test io::mem::test::bench_seekable_mem_writer_100_0010      ... bench:      2532 ns/iter (+/- 227) = 394 MB/s
test io::mem::test::bench_seekable_mem_writer_100_0100      ... bench:      8962 ns/iter (+/- 947) = 1115 MB/s
test io::mem::test::bench_seekable_mem_writer_100_1000      ... bench:     85086 ns/iter (+/- 11555) = 1175 MB/s
```
2014-07-30 14:41:18 +00:00