`{` and `}` aren’t valid characters on ARM, so this makes Unicode characters render as, e.g., `$u38d$` instead of `$u{38d}`.
This also fixes a small bug where `)` (**r**ight **p**arenthesis) and `*` (**r**aw **p**ointer) would both mangle to `$RP$`, making `)` show up as `*` in backtraces.
`{` and `}` aren’t valid characters on ARM.
This also fixes a small bug where `)` (**r**ight **p**arenthesis) and `*`
(**r**aw **p**ointer) would both mangle to `$RP$`, making `)` show up as `*` in
backtraces.
This commit is an implementation of [RFC 576][rfc] which adds back the `std::io`
module to the standard library. No functionality in `std::old_io` has been
deprecated just yet, and the new `std::io` module is behind the same `io`
feature gate.
[rfc]: https://github.com/rust-lang/rfcs/pull/576
A good bit of functionality was copied over from `std::old_io`, but many tweaks
were required for the new method signatures. Behavior such as precisely when
buffered objects call to the underlying object may have been tweaked slightly in
the transition. All implementations were audited to use composition wherever
possible. For example the custom `pos` and `cap` cursors in `BufReader` were
removed in favor of just using `Cursor<Vec<u8>>`.
A few liberties were taken during this implementation which were not explicitly
spelled out in the RFC:
* The old `LineBufferedWriter` is now named `LineWriter`
* The internal representation of `Error` now favors OS error codes (a
0-allocation path) and contains a `Box` for extra semantic data.
* The io prelude currently reexports `Seek` as `NewSeek` to prevent conflicts
with the real prelude reexport of `old_io::Seek`
* The `chars` method was moved from `BufReadExt` to `ReadExt`.
* The `chars` iterator returns a custom error with a variant that explains that
the data was not valid UTF-8.
Implements [RFC 474](https://github.com/rust-lang/rfcs/pull/474); see
that RFC for details/motivation for this change.
This initial commit does not include additional normalization or
platform-specific path extensions. These will be done in follow up
commits or PRs.
As part of [RFC 474](https://github.com/rust-lang/rfcs/pull/474), this
commit renames `std::path` to `std::old_path`, leaving the existing path
API in place to ease migration to the new one. Updating should be as
simple as adjusting imports, and the prelude still maps to the old path
APIs for now.
[breaking-change]
This commit is an implementation of [RFC 576][rfc] which adds back the `std::io`
module to the standard library. No functionality in `std::old_io` has been
deprecated just yet, and the new `std::io` module is behind the same `io`
feature gate.
[rfc]: https://github.com/rust-lang/rfcs/pull/576
A good bit of functionality was copied over from `std::old_io`, but many tweaks
were required for the new method signatures. Behavior such as precisely when
buffered objects call to the underlying object may have been tweaked slightly in
the transition. All implementations were audited to use composition wherever
possible. For example the custom `pos` and `cap` cursors in `BufReader` were
removed in favor of just using `Cursor<Vec<u8>>`.
A few liberties were taken during this implementation which were not explicitly
spelled out in the RFC:
* The old `LineBufferedWriter` is now named `LineWriter`
* The internal representation of `Error` now favors OS error codes (a
0-allocation path) and contains a `Box` for extra semantic data.
* The io prelude currently reexports `Seek` as `NewSeek` to prevent conflicts
with the real prelude reexport of `old_io::Seek`
* The `chars` method was moved from `BufReadExt` to `ReadExt`.
* The `chars` iterator returns a custom error with a variant that explains that
the data was not valid UTF-8.
This is an implementation of [RFC 578][rfc] which adds a new `std::env` module
to replace most of the functionality in the current `std::os` module. More
details can be found in the RFC itself, but as a summary the following methods
have all been deprecated:
[rfc]: https://github.com/rust-lang/rfcs/pull/578
* `os::args_as_bytes` => `env::args`
* `os::args` => `env::args`
* `os::consts` => `env::consts`
* `os::dll_filename` => no replacement, use `env::consts` directly
* `os::page_size` => `env::page_size`
* `os::make_absolute` => use `env::current_dir` + `join` instead
* `os::getcwd` => `env::current_dir`
* `os::change_dir` => `env::set_current_dir`
* `os::homedir` => `env::home_dir`
* `os::tmpdir` => `env::temp_dir`
* `os::join_paths` => `env::join_paths`
* `os::split_paths` => `env::split_paths`
* `os::self_exe_name` => `env::current_exe`
* `os::self_exe_path` => use `env::current_exe` + `pop`
* `os::set_exit_status` => `env::set_exit_status`
* `os::get_exit_status` => `env::get_exit_status`
* `os::env` => `env::vars`
* `os::env_as_bytes` => `env::vars`
* `os::getenv` => `env::var` or `env::var_string`
* `os::getenv_as_bytes` => `env::var`
* `os::setenv` => `env::set_var`
* `os::unsetenv` => `env::remove_var`
Many function signatures have also been tweaked for various purposes, but the
main changes were:
* `Vec`-returning APIs now all return iterators instead
* All APIs are now centered around `OsString` instead of `Vec<u8>` or `String`.
There is currently on convenience API, `env::var_string`, which can be used to
get the value of an environment variable as a unicode `String`.
All old APIs are `#[deprecated]` in-place and will remain for some time to allow
for migrations. The semantics of the APIs have been tweaked slightly with regard
to dealing with invalid unicode (panic instead of replacement).
The new `std::env` module is all contained within the `env` feature, so crates
must add the following to access the new APIs:
#![feature(env)]
[breaking-change]
- consolidate target_record_sp_limit and target_get_sp_limit functions
for aarch64, powerpc, arm-ios and openbsd as there are all without
segmented stacks (no need to duplicate functions).
- rename __load_self function to rust_load_self
- use a mutex inner load_self() as underline implementation is not thread-safe
Fixes#10302
I really am not sure I'm doing this right, so here goes nothing...
Also testing this isn't easy. I don't have any other *nix boxes besides a Linux one.
Test code:
```rust
use std::thread;
use std::io::timer::sleep;
use std::time::duration::Duration;
fn make_thread<'a>(i: i64) -> thread::JoinGuard<'a, ()>
{
thread::Builder::new().name(format!("MyThread{}", i).to_string()).scoped(move ||
{
println!("Start: {}", i);
sleep(Duration::seconds(i));
println!("End: {}", i);
})
}
fn main()
{
let mut guards = vec![make_thread(3)];
for i in 4i64..16
{
guards.push(make_thread(i));
}
}
```
GDB output on my machine:
```
(gdb) info threads
Id Target Id Frame
15 Thread 0x7fdfbb35f700 (LWP 23575) "MyThread3" 0x00007fdfbbe35a8d in nanosleep () from /usr/lib/libpthread.so.0
14 Thread 0x7fdfba7ff700 (LWP 23576) "MyThread4" 0x00007fdfbbe35a8d in nanosleep () from /usr/lib/libpthread.so.0
13 Thread 0x7fdfba5fe700 (LWP 23577) "MyThread5" 0x00007fdfbbe35a8d in nanosleep () from /usr/lib/libpthread.so.0
12 Thread 0x7fdfba3fd700 (LWP 23578) "MyThread6" 0x00007fdfbbe35a8d in nanosleep () from /usr/lib/libpthread.so.0
11 Thread 0x7fdfb8dfe700 (LWP 23580) "MyThread4" 0x00007fdfbb746193 in select () from /usr/lib/libc.so.6
10 Thread 0x7fdfb8fff700 (LWP 23579) "MyThread7" 0x00007fdfbbe35a8d in nanosleep () from /usr/lib/libpthread.so.0
9 Thread 0x7fdfb8bfd700 (LWP 23581) "MyThread8" 0x00007fdfbbe35a8d in nanosleep () from /usr/lib/libpthread.so.0
8 Thread 0x7fdfb3fff700 (LWP 23582) "MyThread9" 0x00007fdfbbe35a8d in nanosleep () from /usr/lib/libpthread.so.0
7 Thread 0x7fdfb3dfe700 (LWP 23583) "MyThread10" 0x00007fdfbbe35a8d in nanosleep () from /usr/lib/libpthread.so.0
6 Thread 0x7fdfb3bfd700 (LWP 23584) "MyThread11" 0x00007fdfbbe35a8d in nanosleep () from /usr/lib/libpthread.so.0
5 Thread 0x7fdfb2bff700 (LWP 23585) "MyThread12" 0x00007fdfbbe35a8d in nanosleep () from /usr/lib/libpthread.so.0
4 Thread 0x7fdfb29fe700 (LWP 23586) "MyThread13" 0x00007fdfbbe35a8d in nanosleep () from /usr/lib/libpthread.so.0
3 Thread 0x7fdfb27fd700 (LWP 23587) "MyThread14" 0x00007fdfbbe35a8d in nanosleep () from /usr/lib/libpthread.so.0
2 Thread 0x7fdfb1bff700 (LWP 23588) "MyThread15" 0x00007fdfbbe35a8d in nanosleep () from /usr/lib/libpthread.so.0
* 1 Thread 0x7fdfbc411800 (LWP 23574) "threads" 0x00007fdfbbe2e505 in pthread_join () from /usr/lib/libpthread.so.0
```
(I'm not sure why one of the threads is duplicated, but it does that without my patch too...)
Note: Do not merge until we get a newer snapshot that includes #21374
There was some type inference fallout (see 4th commit) because type inference with `a..b` is not as good as with `range(a, b)` (see #21672).
r? @alexcrichton
In preparation for upcoming changes to the `Writer` trait (soon to be called
`Write`) this commit renames the current `write` method to `write_all` to match
the semantics of the upcoming `write_all` method. The `write` method will be
repurposed to return a `usize` indicating how much data was written which
differs from the current `write` semantics. In order to head off as much
unintended breakage as possible, the method is being deprecated now in favor of
a new name.
[breaking-change]
There are some explicit Send/Sync implementations for Window's types
that don't exist in Unix. While the end result will be the same, I
believe it's clearer if we keep the explicit implementations consistent
by making the os-specific types Send/Sync where needed and possible.
This commit addresses tcp. Existing differences below:
src/libstd/sys/unix/tcp.rs
unsafe impl Sync for TcpListener {}
unsafe impl Sync for AcceptorInner {}
src/libstd/sys/windows/tcp.rs
unsafe impl Send for Event {}
unsafe impl Sync for Event {}
unsafe impl Send for TcpListener {}
unsafe impl Sync for TcpListener {}
unsafe impl Send for TcpAcceptor {}
unsafe impl Sync for TcpAcceptor {}
unsafe impl Send for AcceptorInner {}
unsafe impl Sync for AcceptorInner {}
There are some explicit Send/Sync implementations for Window's types
that don't exist in Unix. While the end result will be the same, I
believe it's clearer if we keep the explicit implementations consistent
by making the os-specific types Send/Sync where needed and possible.
This commit addresses pipe
src/libstd/sys/unix/pipe.rs
unsafe impl Send for UnixListener {}
unsafe impl Sync for UnixListener {}
src/libstd/sys/windows/pipe.rs
unsafe impl Send for UnixStream {}
unsafe impl Sync for UnixStream {}
unsafe impl Send for UnixListener {}
unsafe impl Sync for UnixListener {}
unsafe impl Send for UnixAcceptor {}
unsafe impl Sync for UnixAcceptor {}
unsafe impl Send for AcceptorState {}
unsafe impl Sync for AcceptorState {}