This optimizes `read` for the case in which the number of bytes
requested is larger than the internal buffer. Note that the first
comparison occurs again right afterwards and should thus be free. The
second comparison occurs only in the cold branch.
This improves the spectralnorm shootout benchmark through a few vectors after
looking at the leading C implementation:
* The simd-based f64x2 is now used to parallelize a few computations
* RWLock usage has been removed. A custom `parallel` function was added as a
form of stack-based fork-join parallelism. I found that the contention on the
locks was high as well as hindering other optimizations.
This does, however, introduce one `unsafe` block into the benchmarks, which
previously had none.
In terms of timings, the before and after numbers are:
```
$ time ./shootout-spectralnorm-before
./shootout-spectralnorm-before 2.07s user 0.71s system 324% cpu 0.857 total
$ time ./shootout-spectralnorm-before 5500
./shootout-spectralnorm-before 5500 11.88s user 1.13s system 459% cpu 2.830 total
$ time ./shootout-spectralnorm-after
./shootout-spectralnorm-after 0.58s user 0.01s system 280% cpu 0.210 tota
$ time ./shootout-spectralnorm-after 5500
./shootout-spectralnorm-after 5500 3.55s user 0.01s system 455% cpu 0.783 total
```
AsciiStr::to_lower is now AsciiStr::to_lowercase and AsciiStr::to_upper is AsciiStr::to_uppercase to match Ascii trait.
Part of issue #17790.
This is my first pull request so let me know if anything is incorrect.
Thanks!
[breaking-changes]
Out goes reflection! This means your code will break if you used the `:?` format specifier, anything else from libdebug, or the `visit_tydesc` intrinsic directly.
Closes#18046.
[breaking-change]
librustc: Improve method autoderef/deref/index behavior more, and enable IndexMut on mutable vectors.
This fixes a bug whereby the mutability fixups for method behavior were
not kicking in after autoderef failed to happen at any level. It also
adds support for `Index` to the fixer-upper.
Closes#12825.
r? @pnkfelix
The array is the fundamental concept; vectors are growable arrays, and
slices are views into either. Show common array ops up front: length
and iteration. Mention arrays are immutable by default. Highlight
definite initialization and bounds-checking as safety features. Show
that you only need a type suffix on one element of initializers.
Explain that vectors are a value-add library type over arrays, not a
fundamental type; show they have the same "interface." Motivate slices
as efficient views into arrays; explain you can slice vectors, Strings,
&str because they're backed by arrays. Show off new, easy-to-read
[a..b] slice syntax.
Previously it had some uninituitive conditionals due to the interaction
with the Rand construction and Clone reinitialisation to create
sequential identifying numbers. This replaces all that with just
constructing the DropCounters with the appropriate identifiers.
[RFC 344](https://github.com/rust-lang/rfcs/pull/344) proposes a set of naming conventions for lints. This PR
renames existing lints to follow the conventions.
Use the following sed script to bring your code up to date:
```
s/unnecessary_typecast/unused_typecasts/g
s/unsigned_negate/unsigned_negation/g
s/type_limits/unused_comparisons/g
s/type_overflow/overflowing_literals/g
s/ctypes/improper_ctypes/g
s/owned_heap_memory/box_pointers/g
s/unused_attribute/unused_attributes/g
s/path_statement/path_statements/g
s/unused_must_use/unused_must_use/g
s/unused_result/unused_results/g
s/non_uppercase_statics/non_upper_case_globals/g
s/unnecessary_parens/unused_parens/g
s/unnecessary_import_braces/unused_import_braces/g
s/unused_unsafe/unused_unsafe/g
s/unsafe_block/unsafe_blocks/g
s/unused_mut/unused_mut/g
s/unnecessary_allocation/unused_allocation/g
s/missing_doc/missing_docs/g
s/unused_imports/unused_imports/g
s/unused_extern_crate/unused_extern_crates/g
s/unnecessary_qualification/unused_qualifications/g
s/unrecognized_lint/unknown_lints/g
s/unused_variable/unused_variables/g
s/dead_assignment/unused_assignments/g
s/unknown_crate_type/unknown_crate_types/g
s/variant_size_difference/variant_size_differences/g
s/transmute_fat_ptr/fat_ptr_transmutes/g
```
Since a large number of lints are being renamed for RFC 344, this PR
adds some basic deprecation/renaming functionality to the pluggable lint
system. It allows a simple mapping of old to new names, and can warn
when old names are being used.
This change needs to be rolled out in stages. In this PR, the
deprecation warning is commented out, but the old name is forwarded to
the new one.
Once the PR lands and we have generated a new snapshot of the
compiler, we can add the deprecation warning and rename all uses of the
lints in the rust codebase. I will file a PR to do so.
Closes#16545Closes#17932
r? @pcwalton
The array is the fundamental concept; vectors are growable arrays, and
slices are views into either. Show common array ops up front: length
and iteration. Mention arrays are immutable by default. Highlight
definite initialization and bounds-checking as safety features. Show
that you only need a type suffix on one element of initializers.
Explain that vectors are a value-add library type over arrays, not a
fundamental type; show they have the same "interface." Motivate slices
as efficient views into arrays; explain you can slice vectors, Strings,
&str because they're backed by arrays.
Since a large number of lints are being renamed for RFC 344, this commit
adds some basic deprecation/renaming functionality to the pluggable lint
system. It allows a simple mapping of old to new names, and can warn
when old names are being used.
This change needs to be rolled out in stages. In this commit, the
deprecation warning is commented out, but the old name is forwarded to
the new one.
Once the commit lands and we have generated a new snapshot of the
compiler, we can add the deprecation warning and rename all uses of the
lints in the rust codebase.
RFC 344 proposes a set of naming conventions for lints. This commit
renames existing lints to follow the conventions.
Use the following sed script to bring your code up to date:
```
s/unnecessary_typecast/unused_typecasts/g
s/unsigned_negate/unsigned_negation/g
s/type_limits/unused_comparisons/g
s/type_overflow/overflowing_literals/g
s/ctypes/improper_ctypes/g
s/owned_heap_memory/box_pointers/g
s/unused_attribute/unused_attributes/g
s/path_statement/path_statements/g
s/unused_must_use/unused_must_use/g
s/unused_result/unused_results/g
s/non_uppercase_statics/non_upper_case_globals/g
s/unnecessary_parens/unused_parens/g
s/unnecessary_import_braces/unused_import_braces/g
s/unused_unsafe/unused_unsafe/g
s/unsafe_block/unsafe_blocks/g
s/unused_mut/unused_mut/g
s/unnecessary_allocation/unused_allocation/g
s/missing_doc/missing_docs/g
s/unused_imports/unused_imports/g
s/unused_extern_crate/unused_extern_crates/g
s/unnecessary_qualification/unused_qualifications/g
s/unrecognized_lint/unknown_lints/g
s/unused_variable/unused_variables/g
s/dead_assignment/unused_assignments/g
s/unknown_crate_type/unknown_crate_types/g
s/variant_size_difference/variant_size_differences/g
s/transmute_fat_ptr/fat_ptr_transmutes/g
```
Closes#16545Closes#17932
Due to deprecation, this is a:
[breaking-change]
`IndexMut` on mutable vectors.
This fixes a bug whereby the mutability fixups for method behavior were
not kicking in after autoderef failed to happen at any level. It also
adds support for `Index` to the fixer-upper.
Closes#12825.
Previously it had some uninituitive conditionals due to the interaction
with the Rand construction and Clone reinitialisation to create
sequential identifying numbers. This replaces all that with just
constructing the DropCounters with the appropriate identifiers.