It's quite possible that small programs don't use all of jemalloc, and building
with -ffunction-sections and -fdata-sections allows the linker (via
--gc-sections) to strip out all unused code at link time. This decreases the
size of a "hello world" executable for me from 716K to 482K with no measurable
impact on link time. After this patch jemalloc is still the largest portion of
our hello world executables, but this helps cut down on the size at least
somewhat!
The example derived Hash + Eq on a type that was used as *values* for
a hashmap.. for the example to make sense, we have to use a custom *key*
type.
Write a slightly more involved example, still using Vikings, but this
time as key.
I preferred using String over &str here, since that's the typical usage
and we might want to lead users down that path.
We render HRTB and the unboxed closure trait sugar (the so-called
"parenthesized" notation) where appropriate. Also address the new
`for` syntax on the old closures.
According to [RFC 344][], methods that return `&[u8]` should have names ending in `bytes`. Though `include_bin!` is a macro not a method, it seems reasonable to follow the convention anyway.
We keep the old name around for now, but trigger a deprecation warning when it is used.
[RFC 344]: https://github.com/rust-lang/rfcs/blob/master/text/0344-conventions-galore.md
[breaking-change]
`check::autoderef()` returns a `ty_err` when it fails to infer the type. `probe::probe()` should respect this failure and fail together to prevent further corruption.
Fixes#19692.
Fixes#19583.
Fixes#19297.
The previous behaviour of using the smallest type possible caused LLVM
to treat padding too conservatively, causing poor codegen. This commit
changes the behaviour to use an alignment-sized integer as the
discriminant. This keeps types the same size, but helps LLVM understand
the data structure a little better, resulting in better codegen.
Adds support for all variants of ast::WherePredicate in clean/mod.rs. Fixes#20048, but will need modification when EqualityPredicates are fully implemented in #20041.
This commit adds support for the compiler to distinguish between different forms
of lookup paths in the compiler itself. Issue #19767 has some background on this
topic, as well as some sample bugs which can occur if these lookup paths are not
separated.
This commits extends the existing command line flag `-L` with the same trailing
syntax as the `-l` flag. Each argument to `-L` can now have a trailing `:all`,
`:native`, `:crate`, or `:dependency`. This suffix indicates what form of lookup
path the compiler should add the argument to. The `dependency` lookup path is
used when looking up crate dependencies, the `crate` lookup path is used when
looking for immediate dependencies (`extern crate` statements), and the `native`
lookup path is used for probing for native libraries to insert into rlibs. Paths
with `all` are used for all of these purposes (the default).
The default compiler lookup path (the rustlib libdir) is by default added to all
of these paths. Additionally, the `RUST_PATH` lookup path is added to all of
these paths.
Closes#19767
Rename `FPCategory` to `FpCategory` and `Fp* to `*` in order to adhere to the
naming convention
This is a [breaking-change].
Existing code like this:
```
use std::num::{FPCategory, FPNaN};
```
should be adjusted to this:
```
use std::num::FpCategory as Fp
```
In the following code you can use the constants `Fp::Nan`, `Fp::Normal`, etc.
According to [RFC 344][], methods that return `&[u8]` should have names
ending in `bytes`. Though `include_bin!` is a macro not a method, it
seems reasonable to follow the convention anyway.
We keep the old name around for now, but trigger a deprecation warning
when it is used.
[RFC 344]: https://github.com/rust-lang/rfcs/blob/master/text/0344-conventions-galore.md
[breaking-change]