The llvm.copysign and llvm.round intrinsics weren't added until LLVM 3.4, so if
we're on LLVM 3.3 we lower these to calls in libm instead of LLVM intrinsics.
This should fix our travis failures.
This PR brings back limited debuginfo which allows for nice backtraces and breakpoints, but omits any info about variables and types.
The `-g` and `--debuginfo` command line options have been extended to take an optional argument:
`-g0` means no debug info.
`-g1` means line-tables only.
`-g2` means full debug info.
Specifying `-g` without argument is equivalent to `-g2`.
Fixes#12280
Closes#8506.
The `trans::adt` code for statics uses fields with `C_undef` values to
insert alignment padding (because LLVM's own alignment padding isn't
always sufficient for aggregate constants), and assumes that all fields
in the actual Rust value are represented by non-undef LLVM values, to
distinguish them from that padding.
But for nullable pointer enums, if non-null variant has fields other
than the pointer used as the discriminant, they would be set to undef in
the null case, to reflect that they're never accessed.
To avoid the obvious conflict between these two items, the latter undefs
were wrapped in unary LLVM structs to distinguish them from the former
undefs. Except this doesn't actually work -- LLVM, not unreasonably,
treats the "wrapped undef" as a regular undef.
So this commit just sets all fields to null in the null pointer case of
a nullable pointer enum static, because the other fields don't really
need to be undef in the first place.
The llvm.copysign and llvm.round intrinsics weren't added until LLVM 3.4, so if
we're on LLVM 3.3 we lower these to calls in libm instead of LLVM intrinsics.
This should fix our travis failures.
Fixes#10877
There was another PR which attempted to fix this in the parser (#11804) and which was closed due to inactivity.
This PR modifies typeck instead (as suggested in #11804), which indeed seems to be simpler than modifying the parser and allows for a better error message.
I added a new lint for variables whose names contain uppercase characters, since, by convention, variable names should be all lowercase. What motivated me to work on this was when I ran into something like the following:
```rust
use std::io::File;
use std::io::IoError;
fn main() {
let mut f = File::open(&Path::new("/something.txt"));
let mut buff = [0u8, ..16];
match f.read(buff) {
Ok(cnt) => println!("read this many bytes: {}", cnt),
Err(IoError{ kind: EndOfFile, .. }) => println!("Got end of file: {}", EndOfFile.to_str()),
}
}
```
I then got compile errors when I tried to add a wildcard match pattern at the end which I found very confusing since I believed that the 2nd match arm was only matching the EndOfFile condition. The problem is that I hadn't imported io::EndOfFile into the local scope. So, I thought that I was using EndOfFile as a sub-pattern, however, what I was actually doing was creating a new local variable named EndOfFile. This lint makes this error easier to spot by providing a warning that the variable name EndOfFile contains a uppercase characters which provides a nice hint as to why the code isn't doing what is intended.
The lint warns on local bindings as well:
```rust
let Hi = 0;
```
And also struct fields:
```rust
struct Something {
X: uint
}
```
Linker argument order with respect to libraries is important enough that we
shouldn't be attempting to filter out libraries getting passed through to the
linker. When linking with a native library that has multiple dependant native
libraries, it's useful to have control over the link argument order.
- Added `TraitObject` representation to `std::raw`.
- Added doc to `std::raw`.
- Removed `Any::as_void_ptr()` and `Any::as_mut_void_ptr()`
methods as they are uneccessary now after the removal of
headers on owned boxes. This reduces the number of virtual calls needed from 2 to 1.
- Made the `..Ext` implementations work directly with the repr of
a trait object.
- Removed `Any`-related traits from the prelude.
- Added bench.
Bench before/after:
~~~
7 ns/iter (+/- 0)
4 ns/iter (+/- 0)
~~~
- Added `TraitObject` representation to `std::raw`.
- Added doc to `std::raw`.
- Removed `Any::as_void_ptr()` and `Any::as_mut_void_ptr()`
methods as they are uneccessary now after the removal of
headers on owned boxes. This reduces the number of virtual calls needed.
- Made the `..Ext` implementations work directly with the repr of
a trait object.
- Removed `Any`-related traits from the prelude.
- Added bench for `Any`
While we are not yet ready for compiler i18n, this also keeps the error handling code clean. The set of altered error messages was obtained by grepping for `"s"` and `(s)`, so there might be some missing messages.
syntax: make match arms store the expr directly.
Previously `ast::Arm` was always storing a single `ast::Expr` wrapped in an
`ast::Block` (for historical reasons, AIUI), so we might as just store
that expr directly.
Closes#3085.
Previously `ast::Arm` was always storing a single `ast::Expr` wrapped in an
`ast::Block` (for historical reasons, AIUI), so we might as just store
that expr directly.
Closes#3085.
When the metadata format changes, old libraries often cause librustc to abort
when reading their metadata. This should all change with the introduction of SVH
markers, but the loader for crates should gracefully handle libraries without
SVH markers still.
This commit adds support for tripping fewer assertions when loading libraries by
using maybe_get_doc when initially parsing metadata. It's still possible for
some libraries to fall through the cracks, but this should deal with a fairly
large number of them up front.
When the metadata format changes, old libraries often cause librustc to abort
when reading their metadata. This should all change with the introduction of SVH
markers, but the loader for crates should gracefully handle libraries without
SVH markers still.
This commit adds support for tripping fewer assertions when loading libraries by
using maybe_get_doc when initially parsing metadata. It's still possible for
some libraries to fall through the cracks, but this should deal with a fairly
large number of them up front.
Similarly to #12422 which made stdin buffered by default, this commit makes the
output streams also buffered by default. Now that buffered writers will flush
their contents when they are dropped, I don't believe that there's no reason why
the output shouldn't be buffered by default, which is what you want in 90% of
cases.
As with stdin, there are new stdout_raw() and stderr_raw() functions to get
unbuffered streams to stdout/stderr.
We weren't passing the node id for the enum and hence it couldn't retrieve the field types for the struct variant we were trying to destructure.
Fixes#11577.
From my comment on #11450:
The reason for the ICE is because for operators `rustc` does a little bit of magic. Notice that while you implement the `Mul` trait for some type `&T` (i.e a reference to some T), you can simply do `Vec2 {..} * 2.0f32`. That is, `2.0f32` is `f32` and not `&f32`. This works because `rustc` will automatically take a reference. So what's happening is that with `foo * T`, the compiler is expecting the `mul` method to take some `&U` and then it can compare to make sure `T == U` (or more specifically that `T` coerces to `U`). But in this case, the argument of the `mul` method is not a reference and hence the "no ref" error.
I don't think we should ICE in this case since we do catch the mismatched trait/impl method and hence provide a better error message that way.
Fixes#11450
Formatting via reflection has been a little questionable for some time now, and
it's a little unfortunate that one of the standard macros will silently use
reflection when you weren't expecting it. This adds small bits of code bloat to
libraries, as well as not always being necessary. In light of this information,
this commit switches assert_eq!() to using {} in the error message instead of
{:?}.
In updating existing code, there were a few error cases that I encountered:
* It's impossible to define Show for [T, ..N]. I think DST will alleviate this
because we can define Show for [T].
* A few types here and there just needed a #[deriving(Show)]
* Type parameters needed a Show bound, I often moved this to `assert!(a == b)`
* `Path` doesn't implement `Show`, so assert_eq!() cannot be used on two paths.
I don't think this is much of a regression though because {:?} on paths looks
awful (it's a byte array).
Concretely speaking, this shaved 10K off a 656K binary. Not a lot, but sometime
significant for smaller binaries.
This commit alters the diagnostic emission machinery to be focused around a
Writer for emitting errors. This allows it to not hard-code emission of errors
to stderr (useful for other applications).
This new SVH is used to uniquely identify all crates as a snapshot in time of
their ABI/API/publicly reachable state. This current calculation is just a hash
of the entire crate's AST. This is obviously incorrect, but it is currently the
reality for today.
This change threads through the new Svh structure which originates from crate
dependencies. The concept of crate id hash is preserved to provide efficient
matching on filenames for crate loading. The inspected hash once crate metadata
is opened has been changed to use the new Svh.
The goal of this hash is to identify when upstream crates have changed but
downstream crates have not been recompiled. This will prevent the def-id drift
problem where upstream crates were recompiled, thereby changing their metadata,
but downstream crates were not recompiled.
In the future this hash can be expanded to exclude contents of the AST like doc
comments, but limitations in the compiler prevent this change from being made at
this time.
Closes#10207
The previous code passed around a {name,version} pair everywhere, but this is
better expressed as a CrateId. This patch changes these paths to store and pass
around crate ids instead of these pairs of name/version. This also prepares the
code to change the type of hash that is stored in crates.
There's a lot of these types in the compiler libraries, and a few of the
older or private stdlib ones. Some types are obviously meant to be
public, others not so much.
These are types that are in exported type signatures, but are not
exported themselves, e.g.
struct Foo { ... }
pub fn bar() -> Foo { ... }
will warn about the Foo.
Such types are not listed in documentation, and cannot be named outside
the crate in which they are declared, which is very user-unfriendly.
cc #10573
This PR allows `HashMap`s to work with custom hashers. Also with this patch are:
* a couple generic implementations of `Hash` for a variety of types.
* added `Default`, `Clone` impls to the hashers.
* added a `HashMap::with_hasher()` constructor.
Closes#12546 (Add new target 'make dist-osx' to create a .pkg installer for OS X) r=brson
Closes#12575 (rustc: Move local native libs back in link-args) r=brson
Closes#12587 (Provide a more helpful error for tests that fail due to noexec) r=brson
Closes#12589 (rustc: Remove codemap and reachable from metadata encoder) r=alexcrichton
Closes#12591 (Fix syntax::ext::deriving{,::*} docs formatting.) r=huonw
Closes#12592 (Miscellaneous Vim improvements) r=alexcrichton
Closes#12596 (path: Implement windows::make_non_verbatim()) r=alexcrichton
Closes#12598 (Improve the ctags function regular expression) r=alexcrichton
Closes#12599 (Tutorial improvement (new variant of PR #12472).) r=pnkfelix
Closes#12603 (std: Export the select! macro) r=pcwalton
Closes#12605 (Fix typo in doc of Binary trait in std::fmt) r=alexcrichton
Closes#12613 (Fix bytepos_to_file_charpos) r=brson