Commit Graph

6253 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Eduard Burtescu
3e531ed0ed Gate default type parameter overrides.
Fixes #12423.
2014-02-24 22:45:31 +02:00
bors
672097753a auto merge of #12412 : alexcrichton/rust/deriving-show, r=huonw
This commit removes deriving(ToStr) in favor of deriving(Show), migrating all impls of ToStr to fmt::Show.

Most of the details can be found in the first commit message.

Closes #12477
2014-02-24 04:11:53 -08:00
Alex Crichton
8761f79485 Remove deriving(ToStr)
This has been superseded by deriving(Show).

cc #9806
2014-02-24 00:15:17 -08:00
bors
a5342d5970 auto merge of #12380 : alexcrichton/rust/run-rewrite, r=brson
The std::run module is a relic from a standard library long since past, and
there's not much use to having two modules to execute processes with where one
is slightly more convenient. This commit merges the two modules, moving lots of
functionality from std::run into std::io::process and then deleting
std::run.

New things you can find in std::io::process are:

* Process::new() now only takes prog/args
* Process::configure() takes a ProcessConfig
* Process::status() is the same as run::process_status
* Process::output() is the same as run::process_output
* I/O for spawned tasks is now defaulted to captured in pipes instead of ignored
* Process::kill() was added (plus an associated green/native implementation)
* Process::wait_with_output() is the same as the old finish_with_output()
* destroy() is now signal_exit()
* force_destroy() is now signal_kill()

Closes #2625
Closes #10016
2014-02-23 22:06:50 -08:00
Alex Crichton
a9bd447400 Roll std::run into std::io::process
The std::run module is a relic from a standard library long since past, and
there's not much use to having two modules to execute processes with where one
is slightly more convenient. This commit merges the two modules, moving lots of
functionality from std::run into std::io::process and then deleting
std::run.

New things you can find in std::io::process are:

* Process::new() now only takes prog/args
* Process::configure() takes a ProcessConfig
* Process::status() is the same as run::process_status
* Process::output() is the same as run::process_output
* I/O for spawned tasks is now defaulted to captured in pipes instead of ignored
* Process::kill() was added (plus an associated green/native implementation)
* Process::wait_with_output() is the same as the old finish_with_output()
* destroy() is now signal_exit()
* force_destroy() is now signal_kill()

Closes #2625
Closes #10016
2014-02-23 21:51:17 -08:00
Alex Crichton
b78b749810 Remove all ToStr impls, add Show impls
This commit changes the ToStr trait to:

    impl<T: fmt::Show> ToStr for T {
        fn to_str(&self) -> ~str { format!("{}", *self) }
    }

The ToStr trait has been on the chopping block for quite awhile now, and this is
the final nail in its coffin. The trait and the corresponding method are not
being removed as part of this commit, but rather any implementations of the
`ToStr` trait are being forbidden because of the generic impl. The new way to
get the `to_str()` method to work is to implement `fmt::Show`.

Formatting into a `&mut Writer` (as `format!` does) is much more efficient than
`ToStr` when building up large strings. The `ToStr` trait forces many
intermediate allocations to be made while the `fmt::Show` trait allows
incremental buildup in the same heap allocated buffer. Additionally, the
`fmt::Show` trait is much more extensible in terms of interoperation with other
`Writer` instances and in more situations. By design the `ToStr` trait requires
at least one allocation whereas the `fmt::Show` trait does not require any
allocations.

Closes #8242
Closes #9806
2014-02-23 20:51:56 -08:00
bors
3c2650b4d5 auto merge of #12328 : nick29581/rust/abi, r=alexcrichton 2014-02-23 19:26:53 -08:00
Nick Cameron
317a253b22 All uses of extern fn should mean extern "C" fn. Closes #9309. 2014-02-24 13:24:57 +13:00
bors
329fcd48e5 auto merge of #12338 : edwardw/rust/hygienic-break-continue, r=cmr
Makes labelled loops hygiene by performing renaming of the labels defined in e.g. `'x: loop { ... }` and then used in break and continue statements within loop body so that they act hygienically when used with macros.
    
Closes #12262.
2014-02-23 15:37:05 -08:00
bors
ba037475ee auto merge of #12492 : huonw/rust/snapshots, r=alexcrichton
Replaces IterBytes with the new Hash, removing all trace of the old implementation.
2014-02-23 13:07:01 -08:00
Huon Wilson
efaf4db24c Transition to new Hash, removing IterBytes and std::to_bytes. 2014-02-24 07:44:10 +11:00
Edward Wang
386db05df8 Make break and continue hygienic
Makes labelled loops hygiene by performing renaming of the labels
defined in e.g. `'x: loop { ... }` and then used in break and continue
statements within loop body so that they act hygienically when used with
macros.

Closes #12262.
2014-02-23 21:20:37 +08:00
bors
8786405047 auto merge of #12416 : alexcrichton/rust/highlight, r=huonw
This adds simple syntax highlighting based off libsyntax's lexer to be sure to
stay up to date with rust's grammar. Some of the highlighting is a bit ad-hoc,
but it definitely seems to get the job done!

This currently doesn't highlight rustdoc-rendered function signatures and
structs that are emitted to each page because the colors already signify what's
clickable and I think we'd have to figure out a different scheme before
colorizing them. This does, however, colorize all code examples and source code.

Closes #11393
2014-02-23 03:36:56 -08:00
bors
551da06157 auto merge of #12311 : brson/rust/unstable, r=alexcrichton
With the stability attributes we can put public-but unstable modules next to others, so this moves `intrinsics` and `raw` out of the `unstable` module (and marks both as `#[experimental]`).
2014-02-23 02:21:53 -08:00
Brian Anderson
4d10bdc5b9 std: Move intrinsics to std::intrinsics.
Issue #1457
2014-02-23 01:07:53 -08:00
Alex Crichton
2a14e084cf Move std::{trie, hashmap} to libcollections
These two containers are indeed collections, so their place is in
libcollections, not in libstd. There will always be a hash map as part of the
standard distribution of Rust, but by moving it out of the standard library it
makes libstd that much more portable to more platforms and environments.

This conveniently also removes the stuttering of 'std::hashmap::HashMap',
although 'collections::HashMap' is only one character shorter.
2014-02-23 00:35:11 -08:00
Alex Crichton
ad9e26dab3 rustdoc: Add syntax highlighting
This adds simple syntax highlighting based off libsyntax's lexer to be sure to
stay up to date with rust's grammar. Some of the highlighting is a bit ad-hoc,
but it definitely seems to get the job done!

This currently doesn't highlight rustdoc-rendered function signatures and
structs that are emitted to each page because the colors already signify what's
clickable and I think we'd have to figure out a different scheme before
colorizing them. This does, however, colorize all code examples and source code.

Closes #11393
2014-02-23 00:16:23 -08:00
bors
9b9e2f80d5 auto merge of #12450 : FlaPer87/rust/issue-10682, r=alexcrichton
Fixes #10682
2014-02-22 20:21:54 -08:00
bors
22d3669b9e auto merge of #11863 : erickt/rust/hash, r=acrichto
This PR merges `IterBytes` and `Hash` into a trait that allows for generic non-stream-based hashing. It makes use of @eddyb's default type parameter support in order to have a similar usage to the old `Hash` framework.

Fixes #8038.

Todo:

- [x] Better documentation
- [ ] Benchmark
- [ ] Parameterize `HashMap` on a `Hasher`.
2014-02-22 15:01:58 -08:00
bors
2ba0a8a096 auto merge of #11603 : alexcrichton/rust/issue-11591, r=brson
This prevents linker errors as found in #11591

Closes #11591
2014-02-22 11:41:48 -08:00
Alex Crichton
351d0ffaa1 Force all lang items to be reachable
This prevents linker errors as found in #11591

Closes #11591
2014-02-22 10:29:06 -08:00
bors
eb5ba4d269 auto merge of #12366 : aepsil0n/rust/feature/unnecessary_parens_around_assigned_values, r=alexcrichton
Fixes #12350.

Parentheses around assignment statements such as

```rust
let mut a = (0);
a = (1);
a += (2);
```

are not necessary and therefore an unnecessary_parens warning is raised when
statements like this occur.

NOTE: In `let` declarations this does not work as intended. Is it possible that they do not count as assignment expressions (`ExprAssign`)? (edit: this is fixed by now)

Furthermore, there are some cases that I fixed in the rest of the code, where parentheses could potentially enhance readability. Compare these lines:

```rust
a = b == c;
a = (b == c);
```

Thus, after having worked on this I'm not entirely sure, whether we should go through with this patch or not. Probably a matter of debate. ;)
2014-02-22 10:26:46 -08:00
bors
87e3b5fe7f auto merge of #12441 : kud1ing/rust/backticks, r=brson
Not all of those messages are covered by tests. I am not sure how to trigger them and where to put those tests.

Also some message patterns in the existing tests are not complete.
For example, i find `error: mismatched types: expected "i32" but found "char" (expected i32 but found char)` a bit repetitive, but as i can see there is no test covering that.
2014-02-22 09:11:47 -08:00
Eduard Bopp
9982de6397 Warn about unnecessary parentheses upon assignment
Closes #12366.

Parentheses around assignment statements such as

    let mut a = (0);
    a = (1);
    a += (2);

are not necessary and therefore an unnecessary_parens warning is raised when
statements like this occur.

The warning mechanism was refactored along the way to allow for code reuse
between the routines for checking expressions and statements.

Code had to be adopted throughout the compiler and standard libraries to comply
with this modification of the lint.
2014-02-22 16:32:48 +01:00
bors
51676b21d6 auto merge of #12437 : alexcrichton/rust/travis-yml, r=brson
Travis CI provides an easy-to-use continuous integration infrastructure for
github repos to use. Travis will automatically test all PRs which are opened
against the rust repository, informing PR owners of the test results.

I believe that this will be a very convenient piece of infrastructure as we'll
be able to reduce the load on bors quite a bit. In theory all PRs opened have
had the full test suite run against them, but unfortunately this is rarely the
case (I'm a prime suspect). Travis will be able to provide easy and relatively
quick (~30min) feedback for PRs. By ensuring fewer failures on bors, we can
hopefully feed more successful jobs to bors.

Overall, I expect this to be very helpful for new contributors as well as
regular contributors as it's another layer of tests being run which will
hopefully catch things sooner. One of the most convenient parts about using
Travis is that there's very little burden in terms of maintenance, and if things
go wrong we can easily turn travis completely off.

Note that this is *not* the metric by which a PR will be merged with. Using
travis will purely be another source for running tests, we will continue to gate
all PRs on bors.
2014-02-22 06:41:48 -08:00
bors
068781e5aa auto merge of #12422 : alexcrichton/rust/buffered-default, r=brson
One of the most common ways to use the stdin stream is to read it line by line
for a small program. In order to facilitate this common usage pattern, this
commit changes the stdin() function to return a BufferedReader by default. A new
`stdin_raw()` method was added to get access to the raw unbuffered stream.

I have not changed the stdout or stderr methods because they are currently
unable to flush in their destructor, but #12403 should have just fixed that.
2014-02-21 23:56:47 -08:00
Erick Tryzelaar
d223dd1e57 std: rewrite Hash to make it more generic
This patch merges IterBytes and Hash traits, which clears up the
confusion of using `#[deriving(IterBytes)]` to support hashing.
Instead, it now is much easier to use the new `#[deriving(Hash)]`
for making a type hashable with a stream hash.

Furthermore, it supports custom non-stream-based hashers, such as
if a value's hash was cached in a database.

This does not yet replace the old IterBytes-hash with this new
version.
2014-02-21 21:33:23 -08:00
bors
56cf237ee2 auto merge of #12411 : Arcterus/rust/time, r=alexcrichton
More work towards finishing #8784.
2014-02-21 19:46:51 -08:00
bors
d2f73abf10 auto merge of #12382 : bjz/rust/fmt-int, r=alexcrichton
This is PR is the beginning of a complete rewrite and ultimate removal of the `std::num::strconv` module (see #6220), and the removal of the `ToStrRadix` trait in favour of using the `std::fmt` functionality directly. This should make for a cleaner API, encourage less allocation, and make the implementation more comprehensible .

The `Formatter::{pad_integral, with_padding}` methods have also been refactored make things easier to understand.

The formatting tests for integers have been moved out of `run-pass/ifmt.rs` in order to provide more immediate feedback when building using `make check-stage2-std NO_REBUILD=1`.

Arbitrary radixes are now easier to use in format strings. For example:

~~~rust
assert_eq!(format!("{:04}", radix(3, 2)), ~"0011");
~~~

The benchmarks have been standardised between `std::num::strconv` and `std::num::fmt` to make it easier to compare the performance of the different implementations.

~~~
 type | radix | std::num::strconv      | std::num::fmt
======|=======|========================|======================
 int  | bin   | 1748 ns/iter (+/- 150) | 321 ns/iter (+/- 25)
 int  | oct   |  706 ns/iter (+/- 53)  | 179 ns/iter (+/- 22)
 int  | dec   |  640 ns/iter (+/- 59)  | 207 ns/iter (+/- 10)
 int  | hex   |  637 ns/iter (+/- 77)  | 205 ns/iter (+/- 19)
 int  | 36    |  446 ns/iter (+/- 30)  | 309 ns/iter (+/- 20)
------|-------|------------------------|----------------------
 uint | bin   | 1724 ns/iter (+/- 159) | 322 ns/iter (+/- 13)
 uint | oct   |  663 ns/iter (+/- 25)  | 175 ns/iter (+/- 7)
 uint | dec   |  613 ns/iter (+/- 30)  | 186 ns/iter (+/- 6)
 uint | hex   |  519 ns/iter (+/- 44)  | 207 ns/iter (+/- 20)
 uint | 36    |  418 ns/iter (+/- 16)  | 308 ns/iter (+/- 32)
~~~
2014-02-21 16:36:52 -08:00
Flavio Percoco
7d94de2b04 Test nested proc can access outer owned data
Fixes #10682
2014-02-21 20:40:24 +01:00
bors
b5995b4e93 auto merge of #12326 : bjz/rust/integer, r=alexcrichton
This is part of the effort to simplify `std::num`, as tracked in issue #10387.
2014-02-21 09:46:49 -08:00
Brendan Zabarauskas
e37327bfee Decouple integer formatting from std::num::strconv
This works towards a complete rewrite and ultimate removal of the `std::num::strconv` module (see #6220), and the removal of the `ToStrRadix` trait in favour of using the `std::fmt` functionality directly. This should make for a cleaner API, encourage less allocation, and make the implementation far more comprehensible.

The `Formatter::pad_integral` method has also been refactored make it easier to understand.

The formatting tests for integers have been moved out of `run-pass/ifmt.rs` in order to provide more immediate feedback when building using `make check-stage2-std NO_REBUILD=1`.

The benchmarks have been standardised between std::num::strconv and std::num::fmt to make it easier to compare the performance of the different implementations.

Arbitrary radixes are now easier to use in format strings. For example:

~~~
assert_eq!(format!("{:04}", radix(3, 2)), ~"0011");
~~~
2014-02-22 03:56:16 +11:00
Arcterus
66f93291ec Move time out of extra (cc #8784) 2014-02-21 07:44:11 -08:00
bors
c6aaf2c7bd auto merge of #12419 : huonw/rust/compiler-unsafe, r=alexcrichton
Previously an `unsafe` block created by the compiler (like those in the
formatting macros) would be "ignored" if surrounded by `unsafe`, that
is, the internal unsafety would be being legitimised by the external
block:

    unsafe { println!("...") } =(expansion)=> unsafe { ... unsafe { ... } }

And the code in the inner block would be using the outer block, making
it considered used (and the inner one considered unused).

This patch forces the compiler to create a new unsafe context for
compiler generated blocks, so that their internal unsafety doesn't
escape to external blocks.

Fixes #12418.
2014-02-21 07:06:51 -08:00
Brendan Zabarauskas
3a9eca3a7b Move std::num::Integer to libnum 2014-02-22 01:45:29 +11:00
kud1ing
766e138aa2 backticks 2014-02-21 08:26:20 +01:00
mr.Shu
70319f7b25 Changed NonCamelCaseTypes lint to warn by default
Added allow(non_camel_case_types) to librustc where necesary

Tried to fix problems with non_camel_case_types outside rustc

fixed failing tests

Docs updated

Moved #[allow(non_camel_case_types)] a level higher.

markdown.rs reverted

Fixed timer that was failing tests

Fixed another timer
2014-02-21 08:11:52 +01:00
Alex Crichton
5bb204ffdb Add a Travis-CI configuration for the repo
Travis CI provides an easy-to-use continuous integration infrastructure for
github repos to use. Travis will automatically test all PRs which are opened
against the rust repository, informing PR owners of the test results.

I believe that this will be a very convenient piece of infrastructure as we'll
be able to reduce the load on bors quite a bit. In theory all PRs opened have
had the full test suite run against them, but unfortunately this is rarely the
case (I'm a prime suspect). Travis will be able to provide easy and relatively
quick (~30min) feedback for PRs. By ensuring fewer failures on bors, we can
hopefully feed more successful jobs to bors.

Overall, I expect this to be very helpful for new contributors as well as
regular contributors as it's another layer of tests being run which will
hopefully catch things sooner. One of the most convenient parts about using
Travis is that there's very little burden in terms of maintenance, and if things
go wrong we can easily turn travis completely off.

Note that this is *not* the metric by which a PR will be merged with. Using
travis will purely be another source for running tests, we will continue to gate
all PRs on bors.
2014-02-20 21:43:25 -08:00
Alex Crichton
afa5f574ff Re-work loading crates with nicer errors
This commit rewrites crate loading internally in attempt to look at less
metadata and provide nicer errors. The loading is now split up into a few
stages:

1. Collect a mapping of (hash => ~[Path]) for a set of candidate libraries for a
   given search. The hash is the hash in the filename and the Path is the
   location of the library in question. All candidates are filtered based on
   their prefix/suffix (dylib/rlib appropriate) and then the hash/version are
   split up and are compared (if necessary).

   This means that if you're looking for an exact hash of library you don't have
   to open up the metadata of all libraries named the same, but also in your
   path.

2. Once this mapping is constructed, each (hash, ~[Path]) pair is filtered down
   to just a Path. This is necessary because the same rlib could show up twice
   in the path in multiple locations. Right now the filenames are based on just
   the crate id, so this could be indicative of multiple version of a crate
   during one crate_id lifetime in the path. If multiple duplicate crates are
   found, an error is generated.

3. Now that we have a mapping of (hash => Path), we error on multiple versions
   saying that multiple versions were found. Only if there's one (hash => Path)
   pair do we actually return that Path and its metadata.

With this restructuring, it restructures code so errors which were assertions
previously are now first-class errors. Additionally, this should read much less
metadata with lots of crates of the same name or same version in a path.

Closes #11908
2014-02-20 17:48:32 -08:00
Alex Crichton
7736985f78 Return a buffered stdin by default.
One of the most common ways to use the stdin stream is to read it line by line
for a small program. In order to facilitate this common usage pattern, this
commit changes the stdin() function to return a BufferedReader by default. A new
`stdin_raw()` method was added to get access to the raw unbuffered stream.

I have not changed the stdout or stderr methods because they are currently
unable to flush in their destructor, but #12403 should have just fixed that.
2014-02-20 09:11:56 -08:00
bors
1366e04cf4 auto merge of #12405 : kud1ing/rust/backticks, r=huonw 2014-02-20 08:21:45 -08:00
bors
06e1281198 auto merge of #12403 : eddyb/rust/generic-dtors-with-bounds, r=nikomatsakis
Fix generic Drop impls with trait bounds.
Fixes #4252.
2014-02-20 07:06:49 -08:00
bors
5f324aaf20 auto merge of #12399 : michaelwoerister/rust/simd-fix, r=alexcrichton
Fixes  #12333.
I also re-enabled the *function-arg-initialization* test case, so if it passes again, fixes #12021.
2014-02-20 05:46:48 -08:00
bors
882c25fa2d auto merge of #12398 : alexcrichton/rust/rlibs-and-dylibs-2, r=cmr
The new methodology can be found in the re-worded comment, but the gist of it is
that -C prefer-dynamic doesn't turn off static linkage. The error messages
should also be a little more sane now.

Closes #12133
2014-02-20 04:31:49 -08:00
Huon Wilson
5ec118383b rustc: avoid compiler generated unsafe blocks leaking.
Previously an `unsafe` block created by the compiler (like those in the
formatting macros) would be "ignored" if surrounded by `unsafe`, that
is, the internal unsafety would be being legitimised by the external
block:

    unsafe { println!("...") } =(expansion)=> unsafe { ... unsafe { ... } }

And the code in the inner block would be using the outer block, making
it considered used (and the inner one considered unused).

This patch forces the compiler to create a new unsafe context for
compiler generated blocks, so that their internal unsafety doesn't
escape to external blocks.

Fixes #12418.
2014-02-20 23:29:57 +11:00
Patrick Walton
33923f47e3 librustc: Remove unique vector patterns from the language.
Preparatory work for removing unique vectors from the language, which is
itself preparatory work for dynamically sized types.
2014-02-19 16:35:31 -08:00
Eduard Burtescu
efaa1ea979 Resolve the vtables for method calls to generic Drop impls with trait bounds. 2014-02-20 00:12:09 +02:00
kud1ing
4ad57513f4 adjust to currently used style 2014-02-19 22:38:15 +01:00
bors
209b47f248 auto merge of #12379 : alexcrichton/rust/fix-ar-thing, r=brson
When creating a staticlib, it unzips all static archives it finds and then
inserts the files manually into the output file. This process is done through
`ar`, and `ar` doesn't like if you specify you want to add files and you don't
give it any files.

This case arose whenever you linked to an archive that didn't have any contents
or all of the contents were filtered out. This just involved ignoring the case
where the number of inputs we have is 0, because we don't have any files to add
anyway.
2014-02-19 10:21:50 -08:00
bors
af4b5b4aac auto merge of #12375 : FlaPer87/rust/issue-7660, r=cmr 2014-02-19 09:01:51 -08:00