Commit Graph

28625 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Kevin Ballard
2a0dac6f58 Handle fallout for vector addition
Adding two vectors now results in a Vec<T> instead of a ~[T].

Implement Add on Vec<T>.
2014-05-08 12:06:22 -07:00
Kevin Ballard
cc42b61936 Handle fallout in io::net::addrinfo, io::process, and rt::rtio
API Changes:

- get_host_addresses() returns IoResult<Vec<IpAddr>>
- Process.extra_io is Vec<Option<io::PipeStream>>
2014-05-08 12:06:22 -07:00
Kevin Ballard
f340fb9b12 Handle fallout in os
os::env(), os::args(), and related functions now use Vec<T> instead of
~[T].
2014-05-08 12:06:21 -07:00
Kevin Ballard
001a8741b4 Handle fallout in iter, option, result, and sync::arc
API changes:

- UnsafeArc::newN() returns Vec<UnsafeArc<T>>
2014-05-08 12:06:21 -07:00
Kevin Ballard
11613fc1c0 Handle fallout in std::ascii and std::strconv
API changes:

- OwnedAsciiCast returns Vec<Ascii> instead of ~[Ascii]
- OwnedAsciiCast is implemented on Vec<u8>
- AsciiStr.to_lower/upper() returns Vec<Ascii>
- IntoBytes::into_bytes() returns Vec<u8>
- float_to_str_bytes_common() returns (Vec<u8>, bool)
2014-05-08 12:06:21 -07:00
Kevin Ballard
bbc35eada9 Handle fallout in std::strbuf 2014-05-08 12:06:21 -07:00
Kevin Ballard
44e8021b59 Even more fallout, this time in std::str
- StrSlice.to_utf16() now returns a Vec<u8>.
- Other miscellaneous fallout in std::str.
2014-05-08 12:06:21 -07:00
Kevin Ballard
8e42fde4e7 More fallout from removing FromIterator on ~[T] 2014-05-08 12:06:21 -07:00
Kevin Ballard
189dc5f30b Move slice::raw::from_buf_raw() to vec::raw::from_buf()
Change from_buf_raw() to return a Vec<T> instead of a ~[T]. As such, it
belongs in vec, in the newly-created vec::raw module.
2014-05-08 12:06:21 -07:00
Kevin Ballard
3296bd7e46 Rename slice::unzip() to vec::unzip()
unzip() has nothing to do with slices, so it belongs in vec.
2014-05-08 12:06:21 -07:00
Kevin Ballard
21dae8e1e0 More fallout from removing FromIterator on ~[T]
A few methods in slice that used to return ~[T] now return Vec<T>:

- VectorVector.concat/connect_vec() returns Vec<T>
- slice::unzip() returns (Vec<T>, Vec<U>)
- ImmutableCloneableVector.partitioned() returns (Vec<T>, Vec<T>)
- OwnedVector.partition() returns (Vec<T>, Vec<T>)
2014-05-08 12:06:21 -07:00
Kevin Ballard
4af84313d6 Rewrite &[T].to_owned() to allocate directly
This used to create a Vec<T> and then call .move_iter().collect() to
convert to a ~[T]. We can't do that anymore, so construct the ~[T] in
place instead. This has the added benefit of avoiding an unnecessary
memory copy (from the Vec<T> to the ~[T]).
2014-05-08 12:06:21 -07:00
Kevin Ballard
bf1e065371 Remove FromIterator impl for ~[T]
As part of the shift from ~[T] to Vec<T>, recently ~[T] was made
non-growable. However, the FromIterator implementation for ~[T] was left
intact (albeit implemented inefficiently), which basically provided a
loophole to grow a ~[T] despite its non-growable nature. This is a
problem, both for performance reasons and because it encourages APIs to
continue returning ~[T] when they should return Vec<T>. Removing
FromIterator forces these APIs to adopt the correct type.

Furthermore, during today's weekly meeting it was decided that we should
remove all instances of ~[T] from the standard libraries in favor of
Vec<T>. Removing the FromIterator impl makes sense to do as a result.

This commit only includes the removal of the FromIterator impl. The
subsequent commits involve handling all of the breakage that results,
including changing APIs to use Vec<T> instead of ~[T]. The precise API
changes are documented in the subsequent commit messages, but each
commit is not individually marked as a breaking change.

Finally, a new trait FromVec is introduced that provides a mechanism to
convert Vec<T> back into ~[T] if truly necessary. It is a bit awkward to
use by design, and is anticipated that it will be more useful in a
post-DST world to convert to an arbitrary Foo<[T]> smart pointer.

[breaking-change]
2014-05-08 12:06:21 -07:00
bors
aa6725407a auto merge of #14032 : pcwalton/rust/detildestr, r=alexcrichton
r? @brson
2014-05-08 09:06:42 -07:00
Patrick Walton
7f8f3dcf17 libsyntax: Remove uses of ~str from libsyntax, and fix fallout 2014-05-08 08:38:23 -07:00
bors
e454851813 auto merge of #14033 : alexcrichton/rust/fix-mk-install, r=huonw
Forgot to update the installation procedure with the knowledge that libcore is
only available as an rlib, not as a dylib.

Closes #14026
2014-05-08 06:11:37 -07:00
bors
574cbe5b07 auto merge of #13986 : alexcrichton/rust/box-keyword, r=thestinger
This keyword is about to be used much more often than it was a few weeks ago,
it's time to tell editors about the new keyword.
2014-05-08 03:06:37 -07:00
bors
b9ff86e27f auto merge of #13835 : alexcrichton/rust/localdata, r=brson
This commit brings the local_data api up to modern rust standards with a few key
improvements:

* All functionality is now exposed as a method on the keys themselves. Instead
  of importing std::local_data, you now use "key.set()" and "key.get()".

* All closures have been removed in favor of RAII functionality. This means that
  get() and get_mut() no long require closures, but rather return
  Option<SmartPointer> where the smart pointer takes care of relinquishing the
  borrow and also implements the necessary Deref traits

* The modify() function was removed to cut the local_data interface down to its
  bare essentials (similarly to how RefCell removed set/get).

[breaking-change]
2014-05-08 01:26:39 -07:00
bors
c39b1cb1be auto merge of #13814 : alexcrichton/rust/read-timeout, r=brson
This PR is an implementation of `set_timeout`, `set_read_timeout`, and `set_write_timeout` for TCP, UDP, and Unix streams (named pipes on windows).

The implementation was much more difficult than I imagined it was going to be throughout the 9 categories ({tcp, udp, unix} x {windows, unix, green}). The major snag is that libuv doesn't support canceling writes, so I chose to word the `set_write_timeout` documentation in such a way that it accomadates the behavior seen when running around with libgreen.

The first commit is from #13751, and I just included it to pre-emptively avoid rebase conflicts. The following commits are relevant to this PR. The tests aren't quite passing on windows just yet, but I should have those working by tomorrow once my VM is back up and running. For now, I wanted to see what others' thoughts were on this strategy.
2014-05-08 00:01:41 -07:00
Alex Crichton
418f197351 Test fixes and rebase conflicts 2014-05-07 23:58:55 -07:00
Alex Crichton
ab92ea526d std: Modernize the local_data api
This commit brings the local_data api up to modern rust standards with a few key
improvements:

* The `pop` and `set` methods have been combined into one method, `replace`

* The `get_mut` method has been removed. All interior mutability should be done
  through `RefCell`.

* All functionality is now exposed as a method on the keys themselves. Instead
  of importing std::local_data, you now use "key.replace()" and "key.get()".

* All closures have been removed in favor of RAII functionality. This means that
  get() and get_mut() no long require closures, but rather return
  Option<SmartPointer> where the smart pointer takes care of relinquishing the
  borrow and also implements the necessary Deref traits

* The modify() function was removed to cut the local_data interface down to its
  bare essentials (similarly to how RefCell removed set/get).

[breaking-change]
2014-05-07 23:43:39 -07:00
Alex Crichton
8e95302181 native: Implement timeouts for windows pipes
This is the last remaining networkig object to implement timeouts for. This
takes advantage of the CancelIo function and the already existing asynchronous
I/O functionality of pipes.
2014-05-07 23:29:35 -07:00
Alex Crichton
b2c6d6fd3f rustuv: Implement timeouts for unix networking
This commit implements the set{,_read,_write}_timeout() methods for the
libuv-based networking I/O objects. The implementation details are commented
thoroughly throughout the implementation.
2014-05-07 23:29:04 -07:00
Alex Crichton
295e0a04ad native: Implement timeouts for unix networking
This commit has an implementation of the previous commit's timeout interface for
I/O objects on unix platforms. For implementation details, see the large comment
at the end of libnative/io/net.rs which talks about the general strategy taken.

Thankfully, all of these implementations can share code because they're
performing all the same operations.

This commit does not implement timeouts for named pipes on windows, only tcp/udp
objects on windows (which are quite similar to their unix equivalents).
2014-05-07 23:28:10 -07:00
Alex Crichton
e27f27c858 std: Add I/O timeouts to networking objects
These timeouts all follow the same pattern as established by the timeouts on
acceptors. There are three methods: set_timeout, set_read_timeout, and
set_write_timeout. Each of these sets a point in the future after which
operations will time out.

Timeouts with cloned objects are a little trickier. Each object is viewed as
having its own timeout, unaffected by other objects' timeouts. Additionally,
timeouts do not propagate when a stream is cloned or when a cloned stream has
its timeouts modified.

This commit is just the public interface which will be exposed for timeouts, the
implementation will come in later commits.
2014-05-07 23:27:01 -07:00
Alex Crichton
6aefce6f16 mk: Fix make install
Forgot to update the installation procedure with the knowledge that libcore is
only available as an rlib, not as a dylib.

Closes #14026
2014-05-07 23:23:17 -07:00
bors
26632d541c auto merge of #13976 : pnkfelix/rust/fsk-fix-13965, r=alexcrichton
Fix #13965.

This commit adopts the second strategy I outlined in #13965, where the bulk of the code is still "smoke tested" (in the sense that rustdoc attempts to run it, sending all of the generated output into a locally allocated `MemWriter`).  The part of the code that is ignored (but included in the presentation) is isolated to a three-line `main` function that invokes the core rendering routine.

In the generated rustdoc output, this leads to a small break between the two code blocks, but I do not think this is a large issue.
2014-05-07 22:01:37 -07:00
bors
e0fcb4eb3d auto merge of #13964 : alexcrichton/rust/more-buffers, r=brson
This will allow methods like read_line() on RefReader, LimitReader, etc.
2014-05-07 20:36:37 -07:00
bors
ab22d99e73 auto merge of #13751 : alexcrichton/rust/io-close-read, r=brson
Two new methods were added to TcpStream and UnixStream:

    fn close_read(&mut self) -> IoResult<()>;
    fn close_write(&mut self) -> IoResult<()>;

These two methods map to shutdown()'s behavior (the system call on unix),
closing the reading or writing half of a duplex stream. These methods are
primarily added to allow waking up a pending read in another task. By closing
the reading half of a connection, all pending readers will be woken up and will
return with EndOfFile. The close_write() method was added for symmetry with
close_read(), and I imagine that it will be quite useful at some point.

Implementation-wise, librustuv got the short end of the stick this time. The
native versions just delegate to the shutdown() syscall (easy). The uv versions
can leverage uv_shutdown() for tcp/unix streams, but only for closing the
writing half. Closing the reading half is done through some careful dancing to
wake up a pending reader.

As usual, windows likes to be different from unix. The windows implementation
uses shutdown() for sockets, but shutdown() is not available for named pipes.
Instead, CancelIoEx was used with same fancy synchronization to make sure
everyone knows what's up.

cc #11165
2014-05-07 17:21:37 -07:00
Alex Crichton
ec9ade938e std: Add close_{read,write}() methods to I/O
Two new methods were added to TcpStream and UnixStream:

    fn close_read(&mut self) -> IoResult<()>;
    fn close_write(&mut self) -> IoResult<()>;

These two methods map to shutdown()'s behavior (the system call on unix),
closing the reading or writing half of a duplex stream. These methods are
primarily added to allow waking up a pending read in another task. By closing
the reading half of a connection, all pending readers will be woken up and will
return with EndOfFile. The close_write() method was added for symmetry with
close_read(), and I imagine that it will be quite useful at some point.

Implementation-wise, librustuv got the short end of the stick this time. The
native versions just delegate to the shutdown() syscall (easy). The uv versions
can leverage uv_shutdown() for tcp/unix streams, but only for closing the
writing half. Closing the reading half is done through some careful dancing to
wake up a pending reader.

As usual, windows likes to be different from unix. The windows implementation
uses shutdown() for sockets, but shutdown() is not available for named pipes.
Instead, CancelIoEx was used with same fancy synchronization to make sure
everyone knows what's up.

cc #11165
2014-05-07 17:18:07 -07:00
bors
c217a84479 auto merge of #14005 : alexcrichton/rust/extern-unsafe, r=pcwalton
Previously, the parser would not allow you to simultaneously implement a
function with a different abi as well as being unsafe at the same time. This
extends the parser to allow functions of the form:

    unsafe extern fn foo() {
        // ...
    }

The closure type grammar was also changed to reflect this reversal, types
previously written as "extern unsafe fn()" must now be written as
"unsafe extern fn()". The parser currently has a hack which allows the old
style, but this will go away once a snapshot has landed.

Closes #10025

[breaking-change]
2014-05-07 14:56:39 -07:00
bors
828ffab627 auto merge of #13726 : michaelwoerister/rust/lldb-autotests, r=alexcrichton
This pull request contains preparations for adding LLDB autotests:
+ the debuginfo tests are split into debuginfo-gdb and debuginfo-lldb
  + the `compiletest` tool is updated to support the debuginfo-lldb mode
  + tests.mk is modified to provide debuginfo-gdb and debuginfo-lldb make targets
  + GDB test cases are moved from `src/test/debug-info` to `src/test/debuginfo-gdb`
+ configure will now look for LLDB and set the appropriate CFG variables
+ the `lldb_batchmode.py` script is added to `src/etc`. It emulates GDB's batch mode

The LLDB autotests themselves are not part of this PR. Those will probable require some manual work on the test bots to make them work for the first time. Better to get these unproblematic preliminaries out of the way in a separate step.
2014-05-07 13:26:41 -07:00
bors
87115fd001 auto merge of #13901 : alexcrichton/rust/facade, r=brson
This is the second step in implementing #13851. This PR cannot currently land until a snapshot exists with #13892, but I imagine that this review will take longer.

This PR refactors a large amount of functionality outside of the standard library into a new library, libcore. This new library has 0 dependencies (in theory). In practice, this library currently depends on these symbols being available:

* `rust_begin_unwind` and `rust_fail_bounds_check` - These are the two entry points of failure in libcore. The symbols are provided by libstd currently. In the future (see the bullets on #13851) this will be officially supported with nice error mesages. Additionally, there will only be one failure entry point once `std::fmt` migrates to libcore.
* `memcpy` - This is often generated by LLVM. This is also quite trivial to implement for any platform, so I'm not too worried about this.
* `memcmp` - This is required for comparing strings. This function is quite common *everywhere*, so I don't feel to bad about relying on a consumer of libcore to define it.
* `malloc` and `free` - This is quite unfortunate, and is a temporary stopgap until we deal with the `~` situation. More details can be found in the module `core::should_not_exist`
* `fmod` and `fmodf` - These exist because the `Rem` trait is defined in libcore, so the `Rem` implementation for floats must also be defined in libcore. I imagine that any platform using floating-point modulus will have these symbols anyway, and otherwise they will be optimized out.
* `fdim` and `fdimf` - Like `fmod`, these are from the `Signed` trait being defined in libcore. I don't expect this to be much of a problem

These dependencies all "Just Work" for now because libcore only exists as an rlib, not as a dylib.

The commits themselves are organized to show that the overall diff of this extraction is not all that large. Most modules were able to be moved with very few modifications. The primary module left out of this iteration is `std::fmt`. I plan on migrating the `fmt` module to libcore, but I chose to not do so at this time because it had implications on the `Writer` trait that I wanted to deal with in isolation. There are a few breaking changes in these commits, but they are fairly minor, and are all labeled with `[breaking-change]`.

The nastiest parts of this movement come up with `~[T]` and `~str` being language-defined types today. I believe that much of this nastiness will get better over time as we migrate towards `Vec<T>` and `Str` (or whatever the types will be named). There will likely always be some extension traits, but the situation won't be as bad as it is today.

Known deficiencies:

* rustdoc will get worse in terms of readability. This is the next issue I will tackle as part of #13851. If others think that the rustdoc change should happen first, I can also table this to fix rustdoc first.
* The compiler reveals that all these types are reexports via error messages like `core::option::Option`. This is filed as #13065, and I believe that issue would have a higher priority now. I do not currently plan on fixing that as part of #13851. If others believe that this issue should be fixed, I can also place it on the roadmap for #13851.

I recommend viewing these changes on a commit-by-commit basis. The overall change is likely too overwhelming to take in.
2014-05-07 11:06:45 -07:00
Alex Crichton
07caa22450 Test fixes and rebase conflicts 2014-05-07 11:03:12 -07:00
Michael Woerister
55a8bd56e5 debuginfo: Split debuginfo autotests into debuginfo-gdb and debuginfo-lldb 2014-05-07 19:58:07 +02:00
Alex Crichton
a289ebefb8 Register new snapshots
This is the first snapshot with support to mix rlib and dylib dependencies.
2014-05-07 08:17:32 -07:00
Alex Crichton
0d8f5fa618 core: Move Option::expect to libstd from libcore
See #14008 for more details
2014-05-07 08:17:32 -07:00
Alex Crichton
4a974413dc core: Fix an unsigned negation warning 2014-05-07 08:17:05 -07:00
Alex Crichton
255908ac95 test: Update with std => core movement 2014-05-07 08:17:05 -07:00
Alex Crichton
104e285eb8 core: Get coretest working
This mostly involved frobbing imports between realstd, realcore, and the core
being test. Some of the imports are a little counterintuitive, but it mainly
focuses around libcore's types not implementing Show while libstd's types
implement Show.
2014-05-07 08:16:42 -07:00
Alex Crichton
f62c121eb0 core: Inherit the cell module 2014-05-07 08:16:14 -07:00
Alex Crichton
d4b5d82a33 core: Add unwrap()/unwrap_err() methods to Result
These implementations must live in libstd right now because the fmt module has
not been migrated yet. This will occur in a later PR.

Just to be clear, there are new extension traits, but they are not necessary
once the std::fmt module has migrated to libcore, which is a planned migration
in the future.
2014-05-07 08:16:14 -07:00
Alex Crichton
a156534a96 core: Inherit the result module
The unwrap()/unwrap_err() methods are temporarily removed, and will be added
back in the next commit.
2014-05-07 08:16:14 -07:00
Alex Crichton
f12b51705b core: Remove generics from Option::expect
The prospects of a generic failure function such as this existing in libcore are
bleak, due to monomorphization not working across the crate boundary, and
allocation into a ~Any is not allowed in libcore.

The argument to expect() is now &str instead of <M: Send + Any>

[breaking-change]
2014-05-07 08:16:14 -07:00
Alex Crichton
e4271cae54 core: Add a limited implementation of failure
This adds an small of failure to libcore, hamstrung by the fact that std::fmt
hasn't been migrated yet. A few asserts were re-worked to not use std::fmt
features, but these asserts can go back to their original form once std::fmt has
migrated.

The current failure implementation is to just have some symbols exposed by
std::rt::unwind that are linked against by libcore. This is an explicit circular
dependency, unfortunately. This will be officially supported in the future
through compiler support with much nicer failure messages. Additionally, there
are two depended-upon symbols today, but in the future there will only be one
(once std::fmt has migrated).
2014-05-07 08:16:14 -07:00
Alex Crichton
4686cf2018 core: Bring char/finally test style up to date 2014-05-07 08:16:14 -07:00
Alex Crichton
c9447c5d95 core: Allow some #[deriving] in libcore 2014-05-07 08:16:14 -07:00
Alex Crichton
e0d43b023e core: Implement necessary traits for ~[T]/~str
Coherence requires that libcore's traits be implemented in libcore for ~[T] and
~str (due to them being language defined types). These implementations cannot
live in libcore forever, but for now, until Heap/Box/Uniq is a lang item, these
implementations must reside inside of libcore. While not perfect
implementations, these shouldn't reside in libcore for too long.

With some form of lang item these implementations can be in a proper crate
because the lang item will not be present in libcore.
2014-05-07 08:16:14 -07:00
Alex Crichton
c67ebf1ef3 std: Remove a glob to get std to compile 2014-05-07 08:16:14 -07:00
Alex Crichton
9bae6ec828 core: Inherit possible string functionality
This moves as much allocation as possible from teh std::str module into
core::str. This includes essentially all non-allocating functionality, mostly
iterators and slicing and such.

This primarily splits the Str trait into only having the as_slice() method,
adding a new StrAllocating trait to std::str which contains the relevant new
allocation methods. This is a breaking change if any of the methods of "trait
Str" were overriden. The old functionality can be restored by implementing both
the Str and StrAllocating traits.

[breaking-change]
2014-05-07 08:16:14 -07:00