Commit Graph

32593 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Evan Klitzke
29424ee219 fix a misspelling in the configure script 2014-09-25 16:40:10 -07:00
bors
2550243b41 auto merge of #17466 : nikomatsakis/rust/oibt, r=pcwalton
Moves the vast majority of builtin bound checking out of type contents and into the trait system.

This is a preliminary step for a lot of follow-on work:

- opt-in builtin types, obviously
- generalized where clauses, because TypeContents has this notion that a type parameter has a single set of builtin kinds, but with where clauses it depends on context
- generalized coherence, because this adds support for recursive trait selection

Unfortunately I wasn't able to completely remove Type Contents from the front-end checking in this PR. It's still used by EUV to decide what gets moved and what doesn't.

r? @pcwalton
2014-09-25 19:02:44 +00:00
Niko Matsakis
6473909a1b Fix various places that were affected by adding core as dep of libc 2014-09-25 13:59:24 -04:00
bors
3be6a2fba8 auto merge of #17482 : hoeppnertill/rust/master, r=alexcrichton
Intended to prevent each user to write his own partial_min/max, possibly differing in slight details. @sfackler encouraged to PR this on IRC.

(Let's hope this works... First PR.)
2014-09-25 17:17:43 +00:00
bors
3f8da69618 auto merge of #17455 : steveklabnik/rust/document_default, r=alexcrichton
Given that the `Default` module is now stable, it might as well get good docs.
2014-09-25 15:32:49 +00:00
bors
58413c09cd auto merge of #17498 : coyotebush/rust/iter-doc, r=huonw
OrdIterator: the doc says that values must implement `PartialOrd`, while the implementation is only for `Ord` values. It looks like this initially got out of sync in 4e1c215. Removed the doc sentence entirely since it seems redundant.

MultiplicativeIterator: Fixed weird sentence.
2014-09-25 13:47:46 +00:00
Till Hoeppner
29c2d3df52 Add partial_min/max to libcore/cmp
Add partial_min/max to libcore/cmp

Match against None and mark as experimental

Shortened documentation.

Removed whitespace
2014-09-25 14:12:03 +02:00
bors
375fe17218 auto merge of #17497 : nodakai/rust/libnative-misc-fixes, r=alexcrichton
libnative/io: datasync() wrongly called fsync().
liblibc and libnative: send() should use const buffers.
2014-09-25 12:02:52 +00:00
Niko Matsakis
ca8e563bb7 Remove as much of TypeContents as I can -- unfortunately, it is still
used by EUV to compute whether a given type moves-by-default.
2014-09-25 07:09:13 -04:00
Niko Matsakis
3694f42b8c Move checking of whether fields are Sized or not into wf / trait code. 2014-09-25 07:09:13 -04:00
Niko Matsakis
e924357554 Remove the last redundant check from kindck, and then remove the pass as well. 2014-09-25 07:09:13 -04:00
Niko Matsakis
2ec305d1bc Move checks for closure bounds out of kind.rs 2014-09-25 07:09:08 -04:00
Niko Matsakis
034f69ec4b Remove redundant local variable checks. 2014-09-25 07:08:36 -04:00
Niko Matsakis
62e5dc929c Remove checks that are already being done during typeck 2014-09-25 07:07:51 -04:00
Niko Matsakis
7119974f82 Move unsafe destructor check from kind.rs into wf.rs 2014-09-25 07:06:28 -04:00
Niko Matsakis
c31623b0e4 Integrate caching of results. Measurements show approx 90% hit rate. 2014-09-25 07:06:27 -04:00
Niko Matsakis
effb3636cc Integrate builtin bounds fully into the trait checker 2014-09-25 07:06:27 -04:00
bors
d299bafb31 auto merge of #17492 : alexcrichton/rust/issue-16274, r=aturon
Details in the commits.
2014-09-25 07:12:37 +00:00
bors
9ff308137a auto merge of #17428 : fhahn/rust/issue-16114-rename-begin-unwind-2, r=alexcrichton
This is a PR for #16114 and includes to following things:

* Rename `begin_unwind` lang item to `fail_fmt`
*  Rename `core::failure::begin_unwind` to `fail_impl`
* Rename `fail_` lang item to `fail`
2014-09-25 05:17:31 +00:00
bors
5e13d3aa00 auto merge of #17378 : Gankro/rust/hashmap-entry, r=aturon
Deprecates the `find_or_*` family of "internal mutation" methods on `HashMap` in
favour of the "external mutation" Entry API as part of RFC 60. Part of #17320,
but this still needs to be done on the rest of the maps. However they don't have
any internal mutation methods defined, so they can be done without deprecating
or breaking anything. Work on `BTree` is part of the complete rewrite in #17334.

The implemented API deviates from the API described in the RFC in two key places:

* `VacantEntry.set` yields a mutable reference to the inserted element to avoid code
duplication where complex logic needs to be done *regardless* of whether the entry
was vacant or not.
* `OccupiedEntry.into_mut` was added so that it is possible to return a reference
into the map beyond the lifetime of the Entry itself, providing functional parity
to `VacantEntry.set`.

This allows the full find_or_insert functionality to be implemented using this API.
A PR will be submitted to the RFC to amend this.

[breaking-change]
2014-09-25 03:32:36 +00:00
Alexis Beingessner
fe8a413fc0 handling fallout from entry api 2014-09-24 21:53:58 -04:00
Alexis Beingessner
8e58f3088b implement entry API for HashMap
Deprecates the `find_or_*` family of "internal mutation" methods on `HashMap` in
favour of the "external mutation" Entry API as part of RFC 60. Part of #17320,
although this still needs to be done on the rest of the maps, they don't have
any internal mutation methods defined, so they can be done without deprecating
or breaking anything. Work on `BTree`'s is part of the complete rewrite in #17334.

The implemented API deviates from the API described in the RFC in two key places:

* `VacantEntry.set` yields a mutable reference to the inserted element to avoid code
duplication where complex logic needs to be done *regardless* of whether the entry
was vacant or not.
* `OccupiedEntry.into_mut` was added so that it is possible to return a reference
into the map beyond the lifetime of the Entry itself, providing functional parity
to `VacantEntry.set`.

This allows the full find_or_insert functionality to be implemented using this API.
A PR will be submitted to the RFC to amend this.

[breaking-change]
2014-09-24 21:53:57 -04:00
Steve Klabnik
03b96d1ab6 Beef up Default documentation 2014-09-24 20:35:33 -04:00
Florian Hahn
c8b767dd3d Rename begin_unwind_string to fail_str, refs #16114 2014-09-25 01:09:14 +02:00
Florian Hahn
1c7d253ca3 Rename fail_ lang item to fail, closes #16114 2014-09-25 01:09:09 +02:00
Florian Hahn
45f4081e61 Rename core::failure::begin_unwind to fail_impl, refs #16114 2014-09-24 23:44:00 +02:00
Florian Hahn
9a01da9460 Rename begin_unwind lang item to fail_fmt, refs #16114 2014-09-24 23:44:00 +02:00
bors
4d69696ff6 auto merge of #17410 : jakub-/rust/dead-code, r=alexcrichton 2014-09-24 20:35:52 +00:00
Jakub Wieczorek
fd52224e78 Remove dead code from librustc 2014-09-24 21:03:55 +02:00
Jakub Wieczorek
5bcc154dff Remove unused enum variants 2014-09-24 21:03:55 +02:00
Jakub Wieczorek
3530e4a647 Use more descriptive names in dead code messages 2014-09-24 21:03:55 +02:00
Jakub Wieczorek
2ec795b4f0 Add detection of unused enum variants 2014-09-24 21:03:55 +02:00
bors
e0bd16c5ec auto merge of #17477 : vhbit/rust/ios-deprecation-fix, r=alexcrichton 2014-09-24 17:30:51 +00:00
bors
9e3bf02c38 auto merge of #17472 : kaseyc/rust/ICE_fix, r=aturon
Add checks for null bytes in the value strings for the export_name and link_section attributes, reporting an error if any are found, before calling with_c_str on them.

Fixes #16478
2014-09-24 15:45:48 +00:00
bors
5366cfecf3 auto merge of #17438 : alexcrichton/rust/string-stable, r=aturon
# Rationale

When dealing with strings, many functions deal with either a `char` (unicode
codepoint) or a byte (utf-8 encoding related). There is often an inconsistent
way in which methods are referred to as to whether they contain "byte", "char",
or nothing in their name.  There are also issues open to rename *all* methods to
reflect that they operate on utf8 encodings or bytes (e.g. utf8_len() or
byte_len()).

The current state of String seems to largely be what is desired, so this PR
proposes the following rationale for methods dealing with bytes or characters:

> When constructing a string, the input encoding *must* be mentioned (e.g.
> from_utf8). This makes it clear what exactly the input type is expected to be
> in terms of encoding.
>
> When a method operates on anything related to an *index* within the string
> such as length, capacity, position, etc, the method *implicitly* operates on
> bytes. It is an understood fact that String is a utf-8 encoded string, and
> burdening all methods with "bytes" would be redundant.
>
> When a method operates on the *contents* of a string, such as push() or pop(),
> then "char" is the default type. A String can loosely be thought of as being a
> collection of unicode codepoints, but not all collection-related operations
> make sense because some can be woefully inefficient.

# Method stabilization

The following methods have been marked #[stable]

* The String type itself
* String::new
* String::with_capacity
* String::from_utf16_lossy
* String::into_bytes
* String::as_bytes
* String::len
* String::clear
* String::as_slice

The following methods have been marked #[unstable]

* String::from_utf8 - The error type in the returned `Result` may change to
                      provide a nicer message when it's `unwrap()`'d
* String::from_utf8_lossy - The returned `MaybeOwned` type still needs
                            stabilization
* String::from_utf16 - The return type may change to become a `Result` which
                       includes more contextual information like where the error
                       occurred.
* String::from_chars - This is equivalent to iter().collect(), but currently not
                       as ergonomic.
* String::from_char - This method is the equivalent of Vec::from_elem, and has
                      been marked #[unstable] becuase it can be seen as a
                      duplicate of iterator-based functionality as well as
                      possibly being renamed.
* String::push_str - This *can* be emulated with .extend(foo.chars()), but is
                     less efficient because of decoding/encoding. Due to the
                     desire to minimize API surface this may be able to be
                     removed in the future for something possibly generic with
                     no loss in performance.
* String::grow - This is a duplicate of iterator-based functionality, which may
                 become more ergonomic in the future.
* String::capacity - This function was just added.
* String::push - This function was just added.
* String::pop - This function was just added.
* String::truncate - The failure conventions around String methods and byte
                     indices isn't totally clear at this time, so the failure
                     semantics and return value of this method are subject to
                     change.
* String::as_mut_vec - the naming of this method may change.
* string::raw::* - these functions are all waiting on [an RFC][2]

[2]: rust-lang/rfcs#240

The following method have been marked #[experimental]

* String::from_str - This function only exists as it's more efficient than
                     to_string(), but having a less ergonomic function for
                     performance reasons isn't the greatest reason to keep it
                     around. Like Vec::push_all, this has been marked
                     experimental for now.

The following methods have been #[deprecated]

* String::append - This method has been deprecated to remain consistent with the
                   deprecation of Vec::append. While convenient, it is one of
                   the only functional-style apis on String, and requires more
                   though as to whether it belongs as a first-class method or
                   now (and how it relates to other collections).
* String::from_byte - This is fairly rare functionality and can be emulated with
                      str::from_utf8 plus an assert plus a call to to_string().
                      Additionally, String::from_char could possibly be used.
* String::byte_capacity - Renamed to String::capacity due to the rationale
                          above.
* String::push_char - Renamed to String::push due to the rationale above.
* String::pop_char - Renamed to String::pop due to the rationale above.
* String::push_bytes - There are a number of `unsafe` functions on the `String`
                       type which allow bypassing utf-8 checks. These have all
                       been deprecated in favor of calling `.as_mut_vec()` and
                       then operating directly on the vector returned. These
                       methods were deprecated because naming them with relation
                       to other methods was difficult to rationalize and it's
                       arguably more composable to call .as_mut_vec().
* String::as_mut_bytes - See push_bytes
* String::push_byte - See push_bytes
* String::pop_byte - See push_bytes
* String::shift_byte - See push_bytes

# Reservation methods

This commit does not yet touch the methods for reserving bytes. The methods on
Vec have also not yet been modified. These methods are discussed in the upcoming
[Collections reform RFC][1]

[1]: https://github.com/aturon/rfcs/blob/collections-conventions/active/0000-collections-conventions.md#implicit-growth
2014-09-24 14:00:57 +00:00
bors
8cad720879 auto merge of #17471 : vadimcn/rust/link-libgcc, r=alexcrichton
Closes #17271
Closes #15420
2014-09-24 11:25:48 +00:00
bors
d853666c7b auto merge of #17463 : oskchaitanya/rust/master, r=alexcrichton
Setting LC_ALL to C helps keep gdb's output consistent ('print' gives us expected output). This fixes #17423. I do not have access to a windows/mac machines to test this. I've only tested it on an x86_64 linux box.
2014-09-24 09:40:52 +00:00
bors
d8af469c01 auto merge of #17459 : dradtke/rust/master, r=brson
This PR adds a new Vim compiler file specifically for use with Cargo. It passes all arguments through, so commands like `:make build`, `:make clean`, and `:make run` all work as expected.

It also adds a quickfix autocommand for fixing the paths before populating the error list. `cargo build` reports errors with file paths that are relative to Cargo.toml, so if you're further down in the project tree, then trying to open the error will result in a blank buffer because Vim treats that path as relative to the working directory instead. With this fix, the paths work properly no matter where you are in the project.
2014-09-24 07:55:46 +00:00
bors
9cce2b7bab auto merge of #17449 : mcoffin/rust/master, r=alexcrichton
Right now, libuv will **always** be built for the host system (at least when building on OSX) because the information about the cross compiler is never actually passed to GYP. I don't know how anybody has been managing to build cross compilers with this.

Note that, at least on OSX, there is a bug in GYP that will send clang flags to non-clang compilers and it will still attempt to use Xcode's libtool, so this doesn't completely fix the problem of cross-compiling on an OSX host, but it's a start.
2014-09-24 05:10:45 +00:00
Corey Ford
e87209ecd6 Fix iterator doc
OrdIterator: the doc says that values must implement `PartialOrd`, while the implementation is only for `Ord` values. It looks like this initially got out of sync in 4e1c215. Removed the doc sentence entirely since it seems redundant.

MultiplicativeIterator: Fixed weird sentence.
2014-09-23 21:06:00 -07:00
bors
c8bafe0466 auto merge of #17248 : jbcrail/rust/fix-rational-rounding, r=alexcrichton
When I fixed the previous issue with rational rounding, I had introduced a regression. There was also an overflow bug introduced for fixed-precision rationals. This patch corrects both bugs.
2014-09-24 03:25:44 +00:00
NODA, Kai
d4b7bdae33 liblibc and libnative: send() should use const buffers. 2014-09-24 10:36:40 +08:00
Alex Crichton
50375139e2 Deal with the fallout of string stabilization 2014-09-23 18:31:52 -07:00
NODA, Kai
24bd8124ea libnative/io: datasync() wrongly called fsync(). 2014-09-24 09:06:17 +08:00
Joseph Crail
363c264afa Fix regression and overflow bug for rationals. 2014-09-23 20:28:23 -04:00
Alex Crichton
3d8ca595a1 rustdoc: Don't try to inline the crate root
Fixes other test cases found in #16274
2014-09-23 15:19:30 -07:00
Alex Crichton
d2b30f7d38 rustdoc: Prevent infinite recursion when inlining
Cyclic pub-use chains triggered infinite recursion, and this commit adds a hash
set to guard against cyclic recursion. This will cause one of the reexports to
render as a `pub use` instead of inlining the documentation.

Closes #16274
2014-09-23 15:13:56 -07:00
bors
c669411afa auto merge of #17402 : steveklabnik/rust/update_manual, r=brson
Because I'm still 😷 😷 😷 , I figured some mindless tasks would be better than trying to finish the ownership guide. 

The manual has long been waiting for some ❤️ ❤️ ❤️ , and so I gave it a quick once-over. I made small commits in case any of the changes are a bit weird, I mostly did a few things:

1. changed 'manual' to 'reference.' I feel like this name is better. If it's not, It's not a huge deal. it shouldn't be `rust.md` though.
2. word wrapped everything appropriately. Changes 1&2 are in the first commit, so that its' easier to see the changes in the later ones.
3. fixed other small style issues
4. removed references to things that are in the standard library, and not the language itself

There's still lots of gross in here, but I didn't want to pile on too too many changes.

/cc @brson @nikomatsakis
2014-09-23 22:05:38 +00:00
bors
7fbbfe6bf2 auto merge of #17366 : ohazi/rust/master, r=steveklabnik
See: http://doc.rust-lang.org/std/from_str/trait.FromStr.html
```
let input_num = from_str::<Option<uint>>("5");
```
```
<anon>:2:21: 2:45 error: failed to find an implementation of trait std::from_str::FromStr for core::option::Option<uint>
<anon>:2     let input_num = from_str::<Option<uint>>("5");
                             ^~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
```
2014-09-23 20:20:41 +00:00
Kasey Carrothers
3e8ad53939 Cleanup the check_null function. 2014-09-23 12:54:16 -07:00