Currently, the parser doesn't give any context when it finds an unclosed
delimiter and it's not EOF. Report the most recent unclosed delimiter, to help
the user along.
Closes#10636
Currently, the parser doesn't give any context when it finds an unclosed
delimiter and it's not EOF. Report the most recent unclosed delimiter, to help
the user along.
Closes#10636
This was needed to access UEFI boot services in my new Boot2Rust experiment.
I also realized that Rust functions declared as extern always use the C calling convention regardless of how they were declared, so this pull request fixes that as well.
ToStr, Encodable and Decodable are not marked as such, since they're
already expensive, and lead to large methods, so inlining will bloat the
metadata & the binaries.
This means that something like
#[deriving(Eq)]
struct A { x: int }
creates an instance like
#[doc = "Automatically derived."]
impl ::std::cmp::Eq for A {
#[inline]
fn eq(&self, __arg_0: &A) -> ::bool {
match *__arg_0 {
A{x: ref __self_1_0} =>
match *self {
A{x: ref __self_0_0} => true && __self_0_0.eq(__self_1_0)
}
}
}
#[inline]
fn ne(&self, __arg_0: &A) -> ::bool {
match *__arg_0 {
A{x: ref __self_1_0} =>
match *self {
A{x: ref __self_0_0} => false || __self_0_0.ne(__self_1_0)
}
}
}
}
(The change being the `#[inline]` attributes.)
ToStr, Encodable and Decodable are not marked as such, since they're
already expensive, and lead to large methods, so inlining will bloat the
metadata & the binaries.
This means that something like
#[deriving(Eq)]
struct A { x: int }
creates an instance like
#[doc = "Automatically derived."]
impl ::std::cmp::Eq for A {
#[inline]
fn eq(&self, __arg_0: &A) -> ::bool {
match *__arg_0 {
A{x: ref __self_1_0} =>
match *self {
A{x: ref __self_0_0} => true && __self_0_0.eq(__self_1_0)
}
}
}
#[inline]
fn ne(&self, __arg_0: &A) -> ::bool {
match *__arg_0 {
A{x: ref __self_1_0} =>
match *self {
A{x: ref __self_0_0} => false || __self_0_0.ne(__self_1_0)
}
}
}
}
(The change being the `#[inline]` attributes.)
Now the privacy pass returns enough information that other passes do not need to duplicate the visibility rules, and the missing_doc implementation is more consistent with other lint checks.
Previously, the `exported_items` set created by the privacy pass was
incomplete. Specifically, it did not include items that had been defined
at a private path but then `pub use`d at a public path. This commit
finds all crate exports during the privacy pass. Consequently, some code
in the reachable pass and in rustdoc is no longer necessary. This commit
then removes the separate `MissingDocLintVisitor` lint pass, opting to
check missing_doc lint in the same pass as the other lint checkers using
the visibility result computed by the privacy pass.
Fixes#9777.
These two attributes are no longer useful now that Rust has decided to leave
segmented stacks behind. It is assumed that the rust task's stack is always
large enough to make an FFI call (due to the stack being very large).
There's always the case of stack overflow, however, to consider. This does not
change the behavior of stack overflow in Rust. This is still normally triggered
by the __morestack function and aborts the whole process.
C stack overflow will continue to corrupt the stack, however (as it did before
this commit as well). The future improvement of a guard page at the end of every
rust stack is still unimplemented and is intended to be the mechanism through
which we attempt to detect C stack overflow.
Closes#8822Closes#10155
This adds an other ABI option which allows a custom selection over the target
architecture and OS. The only current candidate for this change is that kernel32
on win32 uses stdcall, but on win64 it uses the cdecl calling convention.
Otherwise everywhere else this is defined as using the Cdecl calling convention.
cc #10049Closes#8774
This adds an other ABI option which allows a custom selection over the target
architecture and OS. The only current candidate for this change is that kernel32
on win32 uses stdcall, but on win64 it uses the cdecl calling convention.
Otherwise everywhere else this is defined as using the Cdecl calling convention.
cc #10049Closes#8774
Fully support multiple lifetime parameters on types and elsewhere, removing special treatment for `'self`. I am submitting this a touch early in that I plan to push a new commit with more tests specifically targeting types with multiple lifetime parameters -- but the current code bootstraps and passes `make check`.
Fixes#4846
This rearranges the deriving code so that #[deriving] a trait on a field
that doesn't implement that trait will point to the field in question,
e.g.
struct NotEq; // doesn't implement Eq
#[deriving(Eq)]
struct Foo {
ok: int,
also_ok: ~str,
bad: NotEq // error points here.
}
Unfortunately, this means the error is disconnected from the `deriving`
itself but there's no current way to pass that information through to
rustc except via the spans, at the moment.
Fixes#7724.