Commit Graph

935 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Alex Crichton
806cb35f4d rollup merge of #20289: nick29581/shadowing
r? eddyb
2014-12-29 16:36:49 -08:00
Alex Crichton
1c61e74518 rollup merge of #20250: ipetkov/deriving
* Both enums already derived `Copy`, but storing them in any
  struct/container would prevent implementing `Clone` for said
  struct/container even though they should be clonable.
* Also add PartialEq and Eq for good measure.
2014-12-29 16:36:22 -08:00
Alex Crichton
3801c2678f rollup merge of #20231: fhahn/issue-20226-eexist
I've created a patch for #20226, which maps `EEXIST` to the `PathAlreadyExists` error on Unix. To test this, I use `mkdir`, which raises `EEXIST` if the directory already exists.

On Windows, I map `ERROR_ALREADY_EXISTS` to `PathAlreadyExist`, but I am note sure if `mkdir` on Windows raises `ERROR_ALREADY_EXISTS` and do not have a Windows installation handy for testing.

And I noticed another thing. No error seems to map to `IoErrorKind::PathDoesntExist` and I am wondering what the difference to `FileNotFound` is?
2014-12-29 16:36:12 -08:00
Alex Crichton
dbc8440821 rollup merge of #20160: nick29581/ranges2
The first six commits are from an earlier PR (#19858) and have already been reviewed. This PR makes an awful hack in the compiler to accommodate slices both natively and in the index a range form. After a snapshot we can hopefully add the new Index impls and then we can remove these awful hacks.

r? @nikomatsakis (or anyone who knows the compiler, really)
2014-12-29 16:35:53 -08:00
Alex Crichton
52315a97c6 rollup merge of #20042: alexcrichton/second-pass-ptr
This commit performs a second pass for stabilization over the `std::ptr` module.
The specific actions taken were:

* The `RawPtr` trait was renamed to `PtrExt`
* The `RawMutPtr` trait was renamed to `PtrMutExt`
* The module name `ptr` is now stable.
* These functions were all marked `#[stable]` with no modification:
  * `null`
  * `null_mut`
  * `swap`
  * `replace`
  * `read`
  * `write`
  * `PtrExt::is_null`
  * `PtrExt::is_not_null`
  * `PtrExt::offset`
* These functions remain unstable:
  * `as_ref`, `as_mut` - the return value of an `Option` is not fully expressive
                         as null isn't the only bad value, and it's unclear
                         whether we want to commit to these functions at this
                         time. The reference/lifetime semantics as written are
                         also problematic in how they encourage arbitrary
                         lifetimes.
  * `zero_memory` - This function is currently not used at all in the
                    distribution, and in general it plays a broader role in the
                    "working with unsafe pointers" story. This story is not yet
                    fully developed, so at this time the function remains
                    unstable for now.
  * `read_and_zero` - This function remains unstable for largely the same
                      reasons as `zero_memory`.
* These functions are now all deprecated:
  * `PtrExt::null` - call `ptr::null` or `ptr::null_mut` instead.
  * `PtrExt::to_uint` - use an `as` expression instead.
2014-12-29 16:35:51 -08:00
Nick Cameron
3bf405682d Fallout from mut slices 2014-12-30 13:06:25 +13:00
Alex Crichton
54452cdd68 std: Second pass stabilization for ptr
This commit performs a second pass for stabilization over the `std::ptr` module.
The specific actions taken were:

* The `RawPtr` trait was renamed to `PtrExt`
* The `RawMutPtr` trait was renamed to `MutPtrExt`
* The module name `ptr` is now stable.
* These functions were all marked `#[stable]` with no modification:
  * `null`
  * `null_mut`
  * `swap`
  * `replace`
  * `read`
  * `write`
  * `PtrExt::is_null`
  * `PtrExt::offset`
* These functions remain unstable:
  * `as_ref`, `as_mut` - the return value of an `Option` is not fully expressive
                         as null isn't the only bad value, and it's unclear
                         whether we want to commit to these functions at this
                         time. The reference/lifetime semantics as written are
                         also problematic in how they encourage arbitrary
                         lifetimes.
  * `zero_memory` - This function is currently not used at all in the
                    distribution, and in general it plays a broader role in the
                    "working with unsafe pointers" story. This story is not yet
                    fully developed, so at this time the function remains
                    unstable for now.
  * `read_and_zero` - This function remains unstable for largely the same
                      reasons as `zero_memory`.
* These functions are now all deprecated:
  * `PtrExt::null` - call `ptr::null` or `ptr::null_mut` instead.
  * `PtrExt::to_uint` - use an `as` expression instead.
  * `PtrExt::is_not_null` - use `!p.is_null()` instead.
2014-12-29 15:57:28 -08:00
Alex Crichton
bc83a009f6 std: Second pass stabilization for comm
This commit is a second pass stabilization for the `std::comm` module,
performing the following actions:

* The entire `std::comm` module was moved under `std::sync::mpsc`. This movement
  reflects that channels are just yet another synchronization primitive, and
  they don't necessarily deserve a special place outside of the other
  concurrency primitives that the standard library offers.
* The `send` and `recv` methods have all been removed.
* The `send_opt` and `recv_opt` methods have been renamed to `send` and `recv`.
  This means that all send/receive operations return a `Result` now indicating
  whether the operation was successful or not.
* The error type of `send` is now a `SendError` to implement a custom error
  message and allow for `unwrap()`. The error type contains an `into_inner`
  method to extract the value.
* The error type of `recv` is now `RecvError` for the same reasons as `send`.
* The `TryRecvError` and `TrySendError` types have had public reexports removed
  of their variants and the variant names have been tweaked with enum
  namespacing rules.
* The `Messages` iterator is renamed to `Iter`

This functionality is now all `#[stable]`:

* `Sender`
* `SyncSender`
* `Receiver`
* `std::sync::mpsc`
* `channel`
* `sync_channel`
* `Iter`
* `Sender::send`
* `Sender::clone`
* `SyncSender::send`
* `SyncSender::try_send`
* `SyncSender::clone`
* `Receiver::recv`
* `Receiver::try_recv`
* `Receiver::iter`
* `SendError`
* `RecvError`
* `TrySendError::{mod, Full, Disconnected}`
* `TryRecvError::{mod, Empty, Disconnected}`
* `SendError::into_inner`
* `TrySendError::into_inner`

This is a breaking change due to the modification of where this module is
located, as well as the changing of the semantics of `send` and `recv`. Most
programs just need to rename imports of `std::comm` to `std::sync::mpsc` and
add calls to `unwrap` after a send or a receive operation.

[breaking-change]
2014-12-29 12:16:49 -08:00
Alex Crichton
76e5ed655c std: Return Result from RWLock/Mutex methods
All of the current std::sync primitives have poisoning enable which means that
when a task fails inside of a write-access lock then all future attempts to
acquire the lock will fail. This strategy ensures that stale data whose
invariants are possibly not upheld are never viewed by other tasks to help
propagate unexpected panics (bugs in a program) among tasks.

Currently there is no way to test whether a mutex or rwlock is poisoned. One
method would be to duplicate all the methods with a sister foo_catch function,
for example. This pattern is, however, against our [error guidelines][errors].
As a result, this commit exposes the fact that a task has failed internally
through the return value of a `Result`.

[errors]: https://github.com/rust-lang/rfcs/blob/master/text/0236-error-conventions.md#do-not-provide-both-result-and-fail-variants

All methods now return a `LockResult<T>` or a `TryLockResult<T>` which
communicates whether the lock was poisoned or not. In a `LockResult`, both the
`Ok` and `Err` variants contains the `MutexGuard<T>` that is being returned in
order to allow access to the data if poisoning is not desired. This also means
that the lock is *always* held upon returning from `.lock()`.

A new type, `PoisonError`, was added with one method `into_guard` which can
consume the assertion that a lock is poisoned to gain access to the underlying
data.

This is a breaking change because the signatures of these methods have changed,
often incompatible ways. One major difference is that the `wait` methods on a
condition variable now consume the guard and return it in as a `LockResult` to
indicate whether the lock was poisoned while waiting. Most code can be updated
by calling `.unwrap()` on the return value of `.lock()`.

[breaking-change]
2014-12-29 09:18:09 -08:00
Alex Crichton
c32d03f417 std: Stabilize the prelude module
This commit is an implementation of [RFC 503][rfc] which is a stabilization
story for the prelude. Most of the RFC was directly applied, removing reexports.
Some reexports are kept around, however:

* `range` remains until range syntax has landed to reduce churn.
* `Path` and `GenericPath` remain until path reform lands. This is done to
  prevent many imports of `GenericPath` which will soon be removed.
* All `io` traits remain until I/O reform lands so imports can be rewritten all
  at once to `std::io::prelude::*`.

This is a breaking change because many prelude reexports have been removed, and
the RFC can be consulted for the exact list of removed reexports, as well as to
find the locations of where to import them.

[rfc]: https://github.com/rust-lang/rfcs/blob/master/text/0503-prelude-stabilization.md
[breaking-change]

Closes #20068
2014-12-29 08:58:21 -08:00
Nick Cameron
ac095351fb Fallout from globs/re-export/shadowing change 2014-12-29 19:10:08 +13:00
Murarth
e6c8b8f480 Added get_address_name, an interface to getnameinfo 2014-12-28 15:45:43 -07:00
Eduard Burtescu
647e54d6d1 Fallout of changing format_args!(f, args) to f(format_args!(args)). 2014-12-27 23:57:43 +02:00
bors
4a4c89c7a4 auto merge of #20119 : FlaPer87/rust/oibit-send-and-friends, r=nikomatsakis
More work on opt-in built in traits. `Send` and `Sync` are not opt-in, `OwnedPtr` renamed to `UniquePtr` and the `Send` and `Sync` traits are now unsafe.

NOTE: This likely needs to be rebased on top of the yet-to-land snapshot.

r? @nikomatsakis 

cc #13231
2014-12-27 13:11:48 +00:00
Nick Cameron
dbde7419cc Fix fallout 2014-12-27 09:55:25 +13:00
Ivan Petkov
3358e64b8e Derive Clone, PartialEq, and Eq for std::io::{FileAccess, FileMode}
* Both enums already derived `Copy`, but storing them in any
  struct/container would prevent implementing `Clone` for said
  struct/container even though they should be clonable.
* Also add PartialEq and Eq for good measure.
2014-12-26 11:07:24 -08:00
Flavio Percoco
bb315f25f8 Implement RaceBox for StdinReader 2014-12-26 17:26:33 +01:00
Florian Hahn
eb4b20288e Map EEXIST to PathAlreadyExists error, closes #20226 2014-12-25 22:22:44 +01:00
P1start
d9769ec383 Parse fully-qualified associated types in generics without whitespace
This breaks code that looks like this:

    let x = foo as bar << 13;

Change such code to look like this:

    let x = (foo as bar) << 13;

Closes #17362.

[breaking-change]
2014-12-25 18:58:47 +13:00
Huon Wilson
832c3e3cd7 Fix some spelling errors. 2014-12-23 16:13:15 +11:00
Alex Crichton
082bfde412 Fallout of std::str stabilization 2014-12-21 23:31:42 -08:00
Alex Crichton
0191dce41d rollup merge of #20077: shepmaster/stdin-typo 2014-12-21 09:27:36 -08:00
Alex Crichton
1dc5e6312f rollup merge of #20070: aturon/stab-2-clone
This patch marks `clone` stable, as well as the `Clone` trait, but
leaves `clone_from` unstable. The latter will be decided by the beta.

The patch also marks most manual implementations of `Clone` as stable,
except where the APIs are otherwise deprecated or where there is
uncertainty about providing `Clone`.

r? @alexcrichton
2014-12-21 09:27:36 -08:00
Alex Crichton
264088c1ee rollup merge of #19932: elszben/master
First attempt to contribute to rust (and using github). This commit adds a few examples to std::io::TempDir. The examples seem to look okay (in my browser) and make check also passes.
2014-12-21 09:26:42 -08:00
Jake Goulding
b4a065a3a0 Correct typo in doc for StdinReaderGuard 2014-12-20 11:08:51 -05:00
Aaron Turon
92ccc073e1 Stabilize clone
This patch marks `clone` stable, as well as the `Clone` trait, but
leaves `clone_from` unstable. The latter will be decided by the beta.

The patch also marks most manual implementations of `Clone` as stable,
except where the APIs are otherwise deprecated or where there is
uncertainty about providing `Clone`.
2014-12-20 00:37:44 -08:00
Eduard Burtescu
b45d30da34 Fix fallout of removing import_shadowing in tests. 2014-12-20 07:49:37 +02:00
Jorge Aparicio
a77e8a63d5 libstd: use #[deriving(Copy)] 2014-12-19 10:51:00 -05:00
Aaron Turon
0ce5faaa7b Delete rest of rustrt
... and address other rebasing fallout.
2014-12-18 23:35:52 -08:00
Aaron Turon
a27fbac868 Revise std::thread API to join by default
This commit is part of a series that introduces a `std::thread` API to
replace `std::task`.

In the new API, `spawn` returns a `JoinGuard`, which by default will
join the spawned thread when dropped. It can also be used to join
explicitly at any time, returning the thread's result. Alternatively,
the spawned thread can be explicitly detached (so no join takes place).

As part of this change, Rust processes now terminate when the main
thread exits, even if other detached threads are still running, moving
Rust closer to standard threading models. This new behavior may break code
that was relying on the previously implicit join-all.

In addition to the above, the new thread API also offers some built-in
support for building blocking abstractions in user space; see the module
doc for details.

Closes #18000

[breaking-change]
2014-12-18 23:31:52 -08:00
Alex Crichton
9644d60cc4 Fix the capture_stderr test
There's always a fun time having two sets of standard libraries when testing!
2014-12-18 23:31:52 -08:00
Aaron Turon
ced2239852 Disable capture_stderr test for now 2014-12-18 23:31:51 -08:00
Aaron Turon
43ae4b3301 Fallout from new thread API 2014-12-18 23:31:51 -08:00
Aaron Turon
2b3477d373 libs: merge librustrt into libstd
This commit merges the `rustrt` crate into `std`, undoing part of the
facade. This merger continues the paring down of the runtime system.

Code relying on the public API of `rustrt` will break; some of this API
is now available through `std::rt`, but is likely to change and/or be
removed very soon.

[breaking-change]
2014-12-18 23:31:34 -08:00
Patrick Walton
ddb2466f6a librustc: Always parse macro!()/macro![] as expressions if not
followed by a semicolon.

This allows code like `vec![1i, 2, 3].len();` to work.

This breaks code that uses macros as statements without putting
semicolons after them, such as:

    fn main() {
        ...
        assert!(a == b)
        assert!(c == d)
        println(...);
    }

It also breaks code that uses macros as items without semicolons:

    local_data_key!(foo)

    fn main() {
        println("hello world")
    }

Add semicolons to fix this code. Those two examples can be fixed as
follows:

    fn main() {
        ...
        assert!(a == b);
        assert!(c == d);
        println(...);
    }

    local_data_key!(foo);

    fn main() {
        println("hello world")
    }

RFC #378.

Closes #18635.

[breaking-change]
2014-12-18 12:09:07 -05:00
Alex Crichton
3369b33a20 rollup merge of #19902: alexcrichton/second-pass-mem
This commit stabilizes the `mem` and `default` modules of std.
2014-12-17 11:50:29 -08:00
Alex Crichton
cd07efd264 rollup merge of #19873: drewm1980/master
In US english, "that" is used in restrictive clauses in place of
"which", and often affects the meaning of sentences.

In UK english and many dialects, no distinction is
made.

While Rust devs want to avoid unproductive pedanticism, it is worth at
least being uniform in documentation such as:

http://doc.rust-lang.org/std/iter/index.html

and also in cases where correct usage of US english clarifies the
sentence.
2014-12-17 11:50:28 -08:00
Alex Crichton
64faa74d08 rollup merge of #19869: sfackler/free-stdin
r? @aturon
2014-12-17 11:50:27 -08:00
Alex Crichton
de0570de21 rollup merge of #19859: alexcrichton/flaky-test
This test would read with a timeout and then send a UDP message, expecting the
message to be received. The receiving port, however, was bound in the child
thread so it could be the case that the timeout and send happens before the
child thread runs. To remedy this we just bind the port before the child thread
runs, moving it into the child later on.

cc #19120
2014-12-17 11:50:27 -08:00
elszben
c910252769 Replaced wrapper functions with no_run and as_str().unwrap() with display() 2014-12-17 07:21:29 +01:00
elszben
c0e8dc6dce Added example to TempDir 2014-12-16 19:23:06 +01:00
bors
41f5907fa6 auto merge of #19777 : nikomatsakis/rust/warn-on-shadowing, r=acrichto
per rfc 459
cc https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/19390

One question is: should we start by warning, and only switch to hard error later? I think we discussed something like this in the meeting. 

r? @alexcrichton
2014-12-16 08:42:40 +00:00
Alex Crichton
9021f61ef7 std: Second pass stabilization of default
This commit performs a second pass stabilization of the `std::default` module.
The module was already marked `#[stable]`, and the inheritance of `#[stable]`
was removed since this attribute was applied. This commit adds the `#[stable]`
attribute to the trait definition and one method name, along with all
implementations found in the standard distribution.
2014-12-15 20:04:52 -08:00
bors
b497f05008 auto merge of #19747 : alexcrichton/rust/slice-one-trait, r=brson
This commit collapses the various prelude traits for slices into just one trait:

* SlicePrelude/SliceAllocPrelude => SliceExt
* CloneSlicePrelude/CloneSliceAllocPrelude => CloneSliceExt
* OrdSlicePrelude/OrdSliceAllocPrelude => OrdSliceExt
* PartialEqSlicePrelude => PartialEqSliceExt
2014-12-16 01:32:33 +00:00
Niko Matsakis
1718cd6ee0 Remove all shadowed lifetimes. 2014-12-15 10:23:48 -05:00
Brian Anderson
6c4a2bc55f rollup merge of #19710: steveklabnik/gh15449
Fixes #15499.
2014-12-15 06:44:20 -08:00
Andrew Wagner
8fcc832198 Standardize some usages of "which" in docstrings
In US english, "that" is used in restrictive clauses in place of
"which", and often affects the meaning of sentences.

In UK english and many dialects, no distinction is
made.

While Rust devs want to avoid unproductive pedanticism, it is worth at
least being uniform in documentation such as:

http://doc.rust-lang.org/std/iter/index.html

and also in cases where correct usage of US english clarifies the
sentence.
2014-12-15 10:50:42 +01:00
Steven Fackler
8d6895a9c0 Free stdin on exit 2014-12-14 23:36:50 -08:00
Alex Crichton
7741516a8b std: Collapse SlicePrelude traits
This commit collapses the various prelude traits for slices into just one trait:

* SlicePrelude/SliceAllocPrelude => SliceExt
* CloneSlicePrelude/CloneSliceAllocPrelude => CloneSliceExt
* OrdSlicePrelude/OrdSliceAllocPrelude => OrdSliceExt
* PartialEqSlicePrelude => PartialEqSliceExt
2014-12-14 19:03:56 -08:00
Alex Crichton
0d38cae0b9 std: Bind port early to make a test more reliable
This test would read with a timeout and then send a UDP message, expecting the
message to be received. The receiving port, however, was bound in the child
thread so it could be the case that the timeout and send happens before the
child thread runs. To remedy this we just bind the port before the child thread
runs, moving it into the child later on.

cc #19120
2014-12-14 18:58:13 -08:00
bors
126db549b0 auto merge of #19742 : vhbit/rust/copy-for-bitflags, r=alexcrichton 2014-12-15 00:07:35 +00:00
Niko Matsakis
5c3d398919 Mostly rote conversion of proc() to move|| (and occasionally Thunk::new) 2014-12-14 04:21:56 -05:00
Jorge Aparicio
cdbb3ca9b7 libstd: use unboxed closures 2014-12-13 17:03:47 -05:00
Valerii Hiora
319c379bac Add Copy to bitflags-generated structures 2014-12-13 07:52:00 +02:00
Alex Crichton
52edb2ecc9 Register new snapshots 2014-12-11 11:30:38 -08:00
Steve Klabnik
6780031540 Fix inappropriate ## headings
Fixes #15499.
2014-12-10 13:54:56 -05:00
Niko Matsakis
096a28607f librustc: Make Copy opt-in.
This change makes the compiler no longer infer whether types (structures
and enumerations) implement the `Copy` trait (and thus are implicitly
copyable). Rather, you must implement `Copy` yourself via `impl Copy for
MyType {}`.

A new warning has been added, `missing_copy_implementations`, to warn
you if a non-generic public type has been added that could have
implemented `Copy` but didn't.

For convenience, you may *temporarily* opt out of this behavior by using
`#![feature(opt_out_copy)]`. Note though that this feature gate will never be
accepted and will be removed by the time that 1.0 is released, so you should
transition your code away from using it.

This breaks code like:

    #[deriving(Show)]
    struct Point2D {
        x: int,
        y: int,
    }

    fn main() {
        let mypoint = Point2D {
            x: 1,
            y: 1,
        };
        let otherpoint = mypoint;
        println!("{}{}", mypoint, otherpoint);
    }

Change this code to:

    #[deriving(Show)]
    struct Point2D {
        x: int,
        y: int,
    }

    impl Copy for Point2D {}

    fn main() {
        let mypoint = Point2D {
            x: 1,
            y: 1,
        };
        let otherpoint = mypoint;
        println!("{}{}", mypoint, otherpoint);
    }

This is the backwards-incompatible part of #13231.

Part of RFC #3.

[breaking-change]
2014-12-08 13:47:44 -05:00
bors
83a44c7fa6 auto merge of #19378 : japaric/rust/no-as-slice, r=alexcrichton
Now that we have an overloaded comparison (`==`) operator, and that `Vec`/`String` deref to `[T]`/`str` on method calls, many `as_slice()`/`as_mut_slice()`/`to_string()` calls have become redundant. This patch removes them. These were the most common patterns:

- `assert_eq(test_output.as_slice(), "ground truth")` -> `assert_eq(test_output, "ground truth")`
- `assert_eq(test_output, "ground truth".to_string())` -> `assert_eq(test_output, "ground truth")`
- `vec.as_mut_slice().sort()` -> `vec.sort()`
- `vec.as_slice().slice(from, to)` -> `vec.slice(from_to)`

---

Note that e.g. `a_string.push_str(b_string.as_slice())` has been left untouched in this PR, since we first need to settle down whether we want to favor the `&*b_string` or the `b_string[]` notation.

This is rebased on top of #19167

cc @alexcrichton @aturon
2014-12-08 02:32:31 +00:00
Jorge Aparicio
1fea900de7 Fix syntax error on android tests 2014-12-07 08:49:17 -05:00
Jorge Aparicio
c2da923fc9 libstd: remove unnecessary to_string() calls 2014-12-06 23:53:02 -05:00
Jorge Aparicio
60338d91c4 libstd: remove unnecessary as_slice() calls 2014-12-06 23:53:00 -05:00
bors
f7d18b92f8 auto merge of #19407 : frewsxcv/rust/rm-reexports, r=cmr
In regards to:

https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/19253#issuecomment-64836729

This commit:

* Changes the #deriving code so that it generates code that utilizes fewer
  reexports (in particur Option::\*, Result::\*, and Ordering::\*), which is necessary to
  remove those reexports in the future
* Changes other areas of the codebase so that fewer reexports are utilized
2014-12-07 04:12:20 +00:00
bors
de83d7dd19 auto merge of #19431 : erickt/rust/buf-writer-error, r=alexcrichton
Previously, `BufWriter::write` would just return an `std::io::OtherIoError` if someone attempted to write past the end of the wrapped buffer. This pull request changes the error to support partial writes and return a `std::io::ShortWrite`, or an `io::io::EndOfFile` if it's been fully exhausted.

 I've also optimized away a bounds check inside `BufWriter::write`, which should help shave off some nanoseconds in an inner loops.
2014-12-06 20:12:13 +00:00
Corey Farwell
4ef16741e3 Utilize fewer reexports
In regards to:

https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/19253#issuecomment-64836729

This commit:

* Changes the #deriving code so that it generates code that utilizes fewer
  reexports (in particur Option::* and Result::*), which is necessary to
  remove those reexports in the future
* Changes other areas of the codebase so that fewer reexports are utilized
2014-12-05 18:13:04 -05:00
Corey Richardson
a6ce402401 rollup merge of #19416: sfackler/global-stdin
io::stdin returns a new `BufferedReader` each time it's called, which
results in some very confusing behavior with disappearing output. It now
returns a `StdinReader`, which wraps a global singleton
`Arc<Mutex<BufferedReader<StdReader>>`. `Reader` is implemented directly
on `StdinReader`. However, `Buffer` is not, as the `fill_buf` method is
fundamentaly un-thread safe. A `lock` method is defined on `StdinReader`
which returns a smart pointer wrapping the underlying `BufferedReader`
while guaranteeing mutual exclusion.

Code that treats the return value of io::stdin as implementing `Buffer`
will break. Add a call to `lock`:

```rust
io::stdin().read_line();
// =>
io::stdin().lock().read_line();
```

Closes #14434

[breaking-change]
2014-12-05 10:06:52 -08:00
Corey Richardson
d066b5c4be rollup merge of #19364: steveklabnik/doc_buffered_reader
We don't need this &mut, and vec could use []s
2014-12-05 10:06:42 -08:00
Erick Tryzelaar
72bc461ce3 std: change BufWriter to return ShortWrite/EndOfFile 2014-12-05 09:42:48 -08:00
bors
361baabb07 auto merge of #19303 : nodakai/rust/libsyntax-reject-dirs, r=alexcrichton
On *BSD systems, we can `open(2)` a directory and directly `read(2)` from it due to an old tradition.  We should avoid doing so by explicitly calling `fstat(2)` to check the type of the opened file.

Opening a directory as a module file can't always be avoided.  Even when there's no "path" attribute trick involved, there can always be a *directory* named `my_module.rs`.

Incidentally, remove unnecessary mutability of `&self` from `io::fs::File::stat()`.
2014-12-05 00:22:58 +00:00
bors
d9c7c00b9a auto merge of #18980 : erickt/rust/reader, r=erickt
This continues the work @thestinger started in #18885 (which hasn't landed yet, so wait for that to land before landing this one). Instead of adding more methods to `BufReader`, this just allows a `&[u8]` to be used directly as a `Reader`. It also adds an impl of `Writer` for `&mut [u8]`.
2014-12-04 21:33:07 +00:00
Steven Fackler
e7c1f57d6c Back io::stdin with a global singleton BufferedReader
io::stdin returns a new `BufferedReader` each time it's called, which
results in some very confusing behavior with disappearing output. It now
returns a `StdinReader`, which wraps a global singleton
`Arc<Mutex<BufferedReader<StdReader>>`. `Reader` is implemented directly
on `StdinReader`. However, `Buffer` is not, as the `fill_buf` method is
fundamentaly un-thread safe. A `lock` method is defined on `StdinReader`
which returns a smart pointer wrapping the underlying `BufferedReader`
while guaranteeing mutual exclusion.

Code that treats the return value of io::stdin as implementing `Buffer`
will break. Add a call to `lock`:

```rust
io::stdin().lines()
// =>
io::stdin().lock().lines()
```

Closes #14434

[breaking-change]
2014-12-03 23:18:52 -08:00
NODA, Kai
3980cdecd0 libstd: explicitly disallow io::fs::File to open a directory.
On *BSD systems, we can open(2) a directory and directly read(2) from
it due to an old tradition.  We should avoid doing so by explicitly
calling fstat(2) to check the type of the opened file.

Opening a directory as a module file can't always be avoided.
Even when there's no "path" attribute trick involved, there can always
be a *directory* named "my_module.rs".

Fix #12460

Signed-off-by: NODA, Kai <nodakai@gmail.com>
2014-12-04 11:19:55 +08:00
NODA, Kai
805a06ca6a libstd: io::fs::File::stat() need not to take &mut self.
The same goes for sys::fs::FileDesc::fstat() on Windows.

Signed-off-by: NODA, Kai <nodakai@gmail.com>
2014-12-04 11:19:55 +08:00
Jorge Aparicio
09707d70a4 Fix fallout 2014-12-03 10:41:48 -05:00
Erick Tryzelaar
0d24780793 std: add Reader impl for &[u8] 2014-11-30 16:55:53 -08:00
Erick Tryzelaar
6687b2a6e1 std: add tests for the Vec<u8> Writer impl 2014-11-30 16:55:08 -08:00
Steve Klabnik
44abe92d66 small doc fixes
We don't need this &mut, and vec could use []s
2014-11-28 08:59:35 -05:00
Alex Crichton
e8d743ec1d rollup merge of #19329: steveklabnik/doc_style_cleanup2 2014-11-26 16:51:02 -08:00
Steve Klabnik
cd5c8235c5 /*! -> //!
Sister pull request of https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/19288, but
for the other style of block doc comment.
2014-11-26 16:50:14 -08:00
Alex Crichton
3a1d538e1c rollup merge of #19328: sfackler/buffered-get-mut
This is necessary to e.g. set a timeout on the underlying stream.

r? @alexcrichton
2014-11-26 16:50:13 -08:00
Alex Crichton
f4a775639c rollup merge of #19298: nikomatsakis/unboxed-closure-parse-the-plus
Implements RFC 438.

Fixes #19092.

This is a [breaking-change]: change types like `&Foo+Send` or `&'a mut Foo+'a` to `&(Foo+Send)` and `&'a mut (Foo+'a)`, respectively.

r? @brson
2014-11-26 16:49:46 -08:00
Alex Crichton
3649c2a39f rollup merge of #19273: ogham/rename-file-types
All of the enum components had a redundant 'Type' specifier: TypeSymlink, TypeDirectory, TypeFile. This change removes them, replacing them with a namespace: FileType::Symlink, FileType::Directory, and FileType::RegularFile.

RegularFile is used instead of just File, as File by itself could be mistakenly thought of as referring to the struct.

Part of #19253.
2014-11-26 16:49:35 -08:00
bors
1a44875af9 auto merge of #19176 : aturon/rust/stab-iter, r=alexcrichton
This is an initial pass at stabilizing the `iter` module. The module is
fairly large, but is also pretty polished, so most of the stabilization
leaves things as they are.

Some changes:

* Due to the new object safety rules, various traits needs to be split
  into object-safe traits and extension traits. This includes `Iterator`
  itself. While splitting up the traits adds some complexity, it will
  also increase flexbility: once we have automatic impls of `Trait` for
  trait objects over `Trait`, then things like the iterator adapters
  will all work with trait objects.

* Iterator adapters that use up the entire iterator now take it by
  value, which makes the semantics more clear and helps catch bugs. Due
  to the splitting of Iterator, this does not affect trait objects. If
  the underlying iterator is still desired for some reason, `by_ref` can
  be used. (Note: this change had no fallout in the Rust distro except
  for the useless mut lint.)

* In general, extension traits new and old are following an [in-progress
  convention](rust-lang/rfcs#445). As such, they
  are marked `unstable`.

* As usual, anything involving closures is `unstable` pending unboxed
  closures.

* A few of the more esoteric/underdeveloped iterator forms (like
  `RandomAccessIterator` and `MutableDoubleEndedIterator`, along with
  various unfolds) are left experimental for now.

* The `order` submodule is left `experimental` because it will hopefully
  be replaced by generalized comparison traits.

* "Leaf" iterators (like `Repeat` and `Counter`) are uniformly
  constructed by free fns at the module level. That's because the types
  are not otherwise of any significance (if we had `impl Trait`, you
  wouldn't want to define a type at all).

Closes #17701

Due to renamings and splitting of traits, this is a:

[breaking-change]
2014-11-26 17:42:07 +00:00
Niko Matsakis
f4e29e7e9a Fixup various places that were doing &T+'a and do &(T+'a) 2014-11-26 11:42:06 -05:00
bors
61af402789 auto merge of #19169 : aturon/rust/fds, r=alexcrichton
This PR adds some internal infrastructure to allow the private `std::sys` module to access internal representation details of `std::io`.

It then exposes those details in two new, platform-specific API surfaces: `std::os::unix` and `std::os::windows`.

To start with, these will provide the ability to extract file descriptors, HANDLEs, SOCKETs, and so on from `std::io` types.

More functionality, and more specific platforms (e.g. `std::os::linux`) will be added over time.

Closes #18897
2014-11-26 08:42:09 +00:00
Aaron Turon
b299c2b57d Fallout from stabilization 2014-11-25 17:41:54 -08:00
Steven Fackler
945b4edd67 Allow mutable access to wrapped internal type in Buffered*
This is necessary to e.g. set a timeout on the underlying stream.
2014-11-25 17:39:53 -08:00
bors
f6cb58caee auto merge of #19149 : alexcrichton/rust/issue-19091, r=aturon
This change applies the conventions to unwrap listed in [RFC 430][rfc] to rename
non-failing `unwrap` methods to `into_inner`. This is a breaking change, but all
`unwrap` methods are retained as `#[deprecated]` for the near future. To update
code rename `unwrap` method calls to `into_inner`.

[rfc]: https://github.com/rust-lang/rfcs/pull/430
[breaking-change]

cc #19091
2014-11-25 09:21:45 +00:00
Ben S
3b9dfd6af0 Clean up FileType enum following enum namespacing
All of the enum components had a redundant 'Type' specifier: TypeSymlink, TypeDirectory, TypeFile. This change removes them, replacing them with a namespace: FileType::Symlink, FileType::Directory, and FileType::RegularFile.

RegularFile is used instead of just File, as File by itself could be mistakenly thought of as referring to the struct.

[breaking-change]
2014-11-24 23:01:15 +00:00
Steve Klabnik
534fd3a983 Don't call drop in tcpstream docs
This suggests that you must call it, which is normally not what you want to do.
2014-11-24 15:22:55 -05:00
Alex Crichton
a9c1152c4b std: Add a new top-level thread_local module
This commit removes the `std::local_data` module in favor of a new
`std::thread_local` module providing thread local storage. The module provides
two variants of TLS: one which owns its contents and one which is based on
scoped references. Each implementation has pros and cons listed in the
documentation.

Both flavors have accessors through a function called `with` which yield a
reference to a closure provided. Both flavors also panic if a reference cannot
be yielded and provide a function to test whether an access would panic or not.
This is an implementation of [RFC 461][rfc] and full details can be found in
that RFC.

This is a breaking change due to the removal of the `std::local_data` module.
All users can migrate to the new thread local system like so:

    thread_local!(static FOO: Rc<RefCell<Option<T>>> = Rc::new(RefCell::new(None)))

The old `local_data` module inherently contained the `Rc<RefCell<Option<T>>>` as
an implementation detail which must now be explicitly stated by users.

[rfc]: https://github.com/rust-lang/rfcs/pull/461
[breaking-change]
2014-11-23 23:37:16 -08:00
Alex Crichton
f1f6c1286f Rename unwrap functions to into_inner
This change applies the conventions to unwrap listed in [RFC 430][rfc] to rename
non-failing `unwrap` methods to `into_inner`. This is a breaking change, but all
`unwrap` methods are retained as `#[deprecated]` for the near future. To update
code rename `unwrap` method calls to `into_inner`.

[rfc]: https://github.com/rust-lang/rfcs/pull/430
[breaking-change]

Closes #13159
cc #19091
2014-11-23 15:26:53 -08:00
Aaron Turon
4156bc4417 sys: reveal std::io representation to sys module
This commit adds a `AsInner` trait to `sys_common` and provides
implementations on many `std::io` types. This is a building block for
exposing platform-specific APIs that hook into `std::io` types.
2014-11-21 10:17:13 -08:00
Aaron Turon
32c3d02780 Disable dubious pipe test 2014-11-20 17:19:25 -08:00
Aaron Turon
6987ad22e4 Make most of std::rt private
Previously, the entire runtime API surface was publicly exposed, but
that is neither necessary nor desirable. This commit hides most of the
module, using librustrt directly as needed. The arrangement will need to
be revisited when rustrt is pulled into std.

[breaking-change]
2014-11-20 17:19:24 -08:00
Aaron Turon
40c78ab037 Fallout from libgreen and libnative removal 2014-11-20 17:19:24 -08:00
Alex Crichton
4af3494bb0 std: Stabilize std::fmt
This commit applies the stabilization of std::fmt as outlined in [RFC 380][rfc].
There are a number of breaking changes as a part of this commit which will need
to be handled to migrated old code:

* A number of formatting traits have been removed: String, Bool, Char, Unsigned,
  Signed, and Float. It is recommended to instead use Show wherever possible or
  to use adaptor structs to implement other methods of formatting.

* The format specifier for Boolean has changed from `t` to `b`.

* The enum `FormatError` has been renamed to `Error` as well as becoming a unit
  struct instead of an enum. The `WriteError` variant no longer exists.

* The `format_args_method!` macro has been removed with no replacement. Alter
  code to use the `format_args!` macro instead.

* The public fields of a `Formatter` have become read-only with no replacement.
  Use a new formatting string to alter the formatting flags in combination with
  the `write!` macro. The fields can be accessed through accessor methods on the
  `Formatter` structure.

Other than these breaking changes, the contents of std::fmt should now also all
contain stability markers. Most of them are still #[unstable] or #[experimental]

[rfc]: https://github.com/rust-lang/rfcs/blob/master/text/0380-stabilize-std-fmt.md
[breaking-change]

Closes #18904
2014-11-18 21:16:22 -08:00
Barosl Lee
6f422c4c05 Make os::getcwd() return IoResult<Path>
os::getcwd() panics if the current directory is not available. According
to getcwd(3), there are three cases:

- EACCES: Permission denied.
- ENOENT: The current working directory has been removed.
- ERANGE: The buffer size is less than the actual absolute path.

This commit makes os::getcwd() return IoResult<Path>, not just Path,
preventing it from panicking.

As os::make_absolute() depends on os::getcwd(), it is also modified to
return IoResult<Path>.

Fixes #16946.

[breaking-change]
2014-11-19 05:31:45 +09:00
Daniel Micay
85c2c2e38c implement Writer for Vec<u8>
The trait has an obvious, sensible implementation directly on vectors so
the MemWriter wrapper is unnecessary. This will halt the trend towards
providing all of the vector methods on MemWriter along with eliminating
the noise caused by conversions between the two types. It also provides
the useful default Writer methods on Vec<u8>.

After the type is removed and code has been migrated, it would make
sense to add a new implementation of MemWriter with seeking support. The
simple use cases can be covered with vectors alone, and ones with the
need for seeks can use a new MemWriter implementation.
2014-11-18 01:09:46 -05:00
Jakub Bukaj
f1fd6b9407 rollup merge of #19016: gkoz/use_util_copy
This code is identical to io::util::copy()
2014-11-18 00:24:03 +01:00
Gleb Kozyrev
8b16ccdd7b Return proper errors with update_err 2014-11-17 19:18:26 +02:00
Gleb Kozyrev
b7908febca Remove duplicate code by using util::copy() 2014-11-17 19:18:26 +02:00
Steven Fackler
3dcd215740 Switch to purely namespaced enums
This breaks code that referred to variant names in the same namespace as
their enum. Reexport the variants in the old location or alter code to
refer to the new locations:

```
pub enum Foo {
    A,
    B
}

fn main() {
    let a = A;
}
```
=>
```
pub use self::Foo::{A, B};

pub enum Foo {
    A,
    B
}

fn main() {
    let a = A;
}
```
or
```
pub enum Foo {
    A,
    B
}

fn main() {
    let a = Foo::A;
}
```

[breaking-change]
2014-11-17 07:35:51 -08:00
Nick Cameron
ca08540a00 Fix fallout from coercion removal 2014-11-17 22:41:33 +13:00
Jakub Bukaj
3ee9f0df54 Fix warnings 2014-11-16 10:40:34 +01:00
Jakub Bukaj
086b2974de rollup merge of #18985: alexcrichton/issue-18900 2014-11-16 10:22:28 +01:00
Jakub Bukaj
4c30cb2564 rollup merge of #18976: bjz/rfc369-numerics 2014-11-16 10:21:42 +01:00
bors
cb51567e19 auto merge of #18788 : ricky26/rust/master, r=aturon
This moves chars() and lines() out of Buffer and into separate traits (CharsBuffer and LinesBuffer respectively) - this matches the pattern used for bytes() on Reader (with BytesReader).

(I came across this when I wanted a trait object of a Buffer, so that I could use read_line(); rustc errors about std::io::Buffer not being object-safe.)

[breaking-change]
Any uses of Buffer::lines() will need to use the new trait std::io::LinesBuffer.
The same is true for Buffer::chars() with std::io::CharsBuffer.
2014-11-16 04:37:36 +00:00
Brendan Zabarauskas
29bc9c632e Move FromStr to core::str 2014-11-16 12:41:55 +11:00
Alex Crichton
3e0368e621 std: Fix a flaky test on OSX 10.10
This test was somewhat sketchy already with a `loop` around `write`, so this
just adds some explicit synchronization to only call `write` once and guarantee
that the error happens.

Closes #18900
2014-11-15 11:23:40 -08:00
bors
1e4e55aebc auto merge of #18880 : barosl/rust/doc-fail-to-panic, r=alexcrichton
I found some occurrences of "failure" and "fails" in the documentation. I changed them to "panics" if it means a task panic. Otherwise I left it as is, or changed it to "errors" to clearly distinguish them.

Also, I made a minor fix that is breaking the layout of a module page. "Example" is shown in an irrelevant place from the following page: http://doc.rust-lang.org/std/os/index.html
2014-11-14 18:17:28 +00:00
Ricky Taylor
43fd6446ad Make std::io::Buffer object-safe.
[breaking-change]
Any uses of Buffer::lines() and Buffer::chars() will need to use the new trait std::io::BufferPrelude.
2014-11-13 22:38:39 +00:00
Erick Tryzelaar
0ab861aa2d std: Rename AsRef{Reader,Writer} to ByRef{Reader,Writer} 2014-11-11 17:51:43 -08:00
Barosl Lee
8bf77fa786 Fix remaining documentation to reflect fail!() -> panic!()
Throughout the docs, "failure" was replaced with "panics" if it means a
task panic. Otherwise, it remained as is, or changed to "errors" to
clearly differentiate it from a task panic.
2014-11-12 03:36:09 +09:00
Aaron Turon
fa94fdad3e Runtime removal: fully remove rtio
This patch cleans up the remnants of the runtime IO interface.

Because this eliminates APIs in `libnative` and `librustrt`, it is a:

[breaking-change]

This functionality is likely to be available publicly, in some form,
from `std` in the future.
2014-11-08 20:40:39 -08:00
Aaron Turon
431dcdc840 Runtime removal: refactor tty
This patch continues runtime removal by moving the tty implementations
into `sys`.

Because this eliminates APIs in `libnative` and `librustrt`, it is a:

[breaking-change]

This functionality is likely to be available publicly, in some form,
from `std` in the future.
2014-11-08 20:40:39 -08:00
Aaron Turon
b8f1193bb1 Runtime removal: refactor timer
This patch continues runtime removal by moving out timer-related code
into `sys`.

Because this eliminates APIs in `libnative` and `librustrt`, it is a:

[breaking-change]

This functionality is likely to be available publicly, in some form,
from `std` in the future.
2014-11-08 20:40:39 -08:00
Aaron Turon
0f98e75b69 Runtime removal: refactor process
This patch continues the runtime removal by moving and refactoring the
process implementation into the new `sys` module.

Because this eliminates APIs in `libnative` and `librustrt`, it is a:

[breaking-change]

This functionality is likely to be available publicly, in some form,
from `std` in the future.
2014-11-08 20:40:39 -08:00
Aaron Turon
d34b1b0ca9 Runtime removal: refactor pipes and networking
This patch continues the runtime removal by moving pipe and
networking-related code into `sys`.

Because this eliminates APIs in `libnative` and `librustrt`, it is a:

[breaking-change]

This functionality is likely to be available publicly, in some form,
from `std` in the future.
2014-11-08 20:40:38 -08:00
Aaron Turon
0c1e1ff1e3 Runtime removal: refactor fs
This moves the filesystem implementation from libnative into the new
`sys` modules, refactoring along the way and hooking into `std::io::fs`.

Because this eliminates APIs in `libnative` and `librustrt`, it is a:

[breaking-change]

This functionality is likely to be available publicly, in some form,
from `std` in the future.
2014-11-08 20:40:38 -08:00
Aaron Turon
3a527f2b33 Runtime removal: add private sys, sys_common modules
These modules will house the code that used to be part of the runtime system
in libnative. The `sys_common` module contains a few low-level but
cross-platform details. The `sys` module is set up using `#[cfg()]` to
include either a unix or windows implementation of a common API
surface. This API surface is *not* exported directly in `libstd`, but is
instead used to bulid `std::os` and `std::io`.

Ultimately, the low-level details in `sys` will be exposed in a
controlled way through a separate platform-specific surface, but that
setup is not part of this patch.
2014-11-08 20:40:38 -08:00
gamazeps
16c8cd931c Renamed Extendable to Extend
In order to upgrade, simply rename the Extendable trait to Extend in
your code

Part of #18424

[breaking-change]
2014-11-08 15:02:09 +01:00
Alex Crichton
e4cf9c4b58 rollup merge of #18691 : subhashb/add_clone_trait_to_filetype 2014-11-06 13:53:27 -08:00
Alex Crichton
8a25e071e8 rollup merge of #18605 : Gankro/collect-fruit 2014-11-06 13:29:31 -08:00
Alexis Beingessner
eec145be3f Fallout from collection conventions 2014-11-06 12:26:08 -05:00
Aaron Turon
cfafc1b737 Prelude: rename and consolidate extension traits
This commit renames a number of extension traits for slices and string
slices, now that they have been refactored for DST. In many cases,
multiple extension traits could now be consolidated. Further
consolidation will be possible with generalized where clauses.

The renamings are consistent with the [new `-Prelude`
suffix](https://github.com/rust-lang/rfcs/pull/344). There are probably
a few more candidates for being renamed this way, but that is left for
API stabilization of the relevant modules.

Because this renames traits, it is a:

[breaking-change]

However, I do not expect any code that currently uses the standard
library to actually break.

Closes #17917
2014-11-06 08:03:18 -08:00
Subhash Bhushan
2cde618b17 Make Filetype Clonable 2014-11-06 19:17:50 +05:30
Vladimir Matveev
0f610f3c14 Fixed not compiling code in docstring 2014-11-05 19:18:30 +03:00
Vladimir Matveev
d1ec703329 Added more documentation on ToSocketAddr trait 2014-11-05 12:01:24 +03:00
Vladimir Matveev
7af0cb8af7 Fixed tidy errors 2014-11-05 12:01:24 +03:00
Vladimir Matveev
7d379fa78f Fixed other tests to pass make check 2014-11-05 12:01:23 +03:00
Vladimir Matveev
7e3344b17f Migrated io::net::udp over to ToSocketAddr
UdpSocket constructor methods now use ToSocketAddr trait instead of
SocketAddr.

[breaking-change]
2014-11-05 12:01:23 +03:00
Vladimir Matveev
ac846749f0 Switched io::net::tcp to use ToSocketAddr
TcpListener and TcpStream are converted to use ToSocketAddr trait in
their constructor methods.

[breaking-change]
2014-11-05 12:01:23 +03:00
Vladimir Matveev
d97bfb22f8 Added ToSocketAddr trait
This commit adds ToSocketAddr trait to std::io::net::ip module. This
trait is used for generic conversion from different types (strings,
(string, u16) tuples, etc.) into a SocketAddr instance. It supports
multiple output SocketAddresses when it is appropriate (e.g. DNS name
resolution).

This trait is going to be used by TcpStream, TcpListener and UdpSocket
structures.
2014-11-05 12:01:23 +03:00
Jorge Aparicio
6d951b2cbd std: Fix fallout of changing #[deriving(Clone)] 2014-11-03 18:29:25 -05:00
bors
b9b396cd75 auto merge of #18463 : japaric/rust/bytes2, r=alexcrichton
- The `BytesContainer::container_into_owned_bytes` method has been removed

- Methods that used to take `BytesContainer` implementors by value, now take them by reference. In particular, this breaks some uses of Path:

``` rust
Path::new("foo")  // Still works
path.join(another_path) -> path.join(&another_path)
```

[breaking-change]

---

Re: `container_into_owned_bytes`, I've removed it because

- Nothing in the whole repository uses it
- Takes `self` by value, which is incompatible with unsized types (`str`)

The alternative to removing this method is to split `BytesContainer` into `BytesContainer for Sized?` and `SizedBytesContainer: BytesContainer + Sized`, where the second trait only contains the `container_into_owned_bytes` method. I tried this alternative [in another branch](https://github.com/japaric/rust/commits/bytes) and it works, but it seemed better not to create a new trait for an unused method.

Re: Breakage of `Path` methods

We could use the idea that @alexcrichton proposed in #18457 (add blanket `impl BytesContainer for &T where T: BytesContainer` + keep taking `T: BytesContainer` by value in `Path` methods) to avoid breaking any code.

r? @aturon 
cc #16918
2014-11-03 12:12:24 +00:00
Aaron Turon
7c152f870d Add Error impls to a few key error types 2014-11-02 15:31:52 -08:00
Jorge Aparicio
fe256f8140 Remove unnecessary allocations 2014-11-01 19:56:07 -05:00
Alex Crichton
21ac985af4 collections: Remove all collections traits
As part of the collections reform RFC, this commit removes all collections
traits in favor of inherent methods on collections themselves. All methods
should continue to be available on all collections.

This is a breaking change with all of the collections traits being removed and
no longer being in the prelude. In order to update old code you should move the
trait implementations to inherent implementations directly on the type itself.

Note that some traits had default methods which will also need to be implemented
to maintain backwards compatibility.

[breaking-change]
cc #18424
2014-11-01 11:37:04 -07:00
Alex Crichton
c10c163377 rollup merge of #18445 : alexcrichton/index-mut
Conflicts:
	src/libcollections/vec.rs
2014-10-30 17:37:55 -07:00
Alex Crichton
00975e041d rollup merge of #18398 : aturon/lint-conventions-2
Conflicts:
	src/libcollections/slice.rs
	src/libcore/failure.rs
	src/libsyntax/parse/token.rs
	src/test/debuginfo/basic-types-mut-globals.rs
	src/test/debuginfo/simple-struct.rs
	src/test/debuginfo/trait-pointers.rs
2014-10-30 17:37:22 -07:00
Alex Crichton
f3d72dc6a7 rollup merge of #18443 : alexcrichton/deref-vec-and-string 2014-10-30 17:36:49 -07:00
Alex Crichton
1d356624a1 collections: Enable IndexMut for some collections
This commit enables implementations of IndexMut for a number of collections,
including Vec, RingBuf, SmallIntMap, TrieMap, TreeMap, and HashMap. At the same
time this deprecates the `get_mut` methods on vectors in favor of using the
indexing notation.

cc #18424
2014-10-30 08:54:30 -07:00
bors
abb3b9c505 auto merge of #18374 : steveklabnik/rust/gh18197, r=sfackler
Fixes #18197
2014-10-30 13:57:07 +00:00
Nick Cameron
dd2a1e3469 Change extensions traits to blanket impls 2014-10-30 15:51:56 +13:00
Nick Cameron
c48a1ab158 changes to tests 2014-10-30 15:51:56 +13:00
Nick Cameron
1d500cfd74 changes to libs 2014-10-30 15:51:55 +13:00
Alex Crichton
8e9f8f924c collections: impl Deref for Vec/String
This commit adds the following impls:

    impl<T> Deref<[T]> for Vec<T>
    impl<T> DerefMut<[T]> for Vec<T>
    impl Deref<str> for String

This commit also removes all duplicated inherent methods from vectors and
strings as implementations will now silently call through to the slice
implementation. Some breakage occurred at std and beneath due to inherent
methods removed in favor of those in the slice traits and std doesn't use its
own prelude,

cc #18424
2014-10-29 18:48:30 -07:00
Steve Klabnik
7828c3dd28 Rename fail! to panic!
https://github.com/rust-lang/rfcs/pull/221

The current terminology of "task failure" often causes problems when
writing or speaking about code. You often want to talk about the
possibility of an operation that returns a Result "failing", but cannot
because of the ambiguity with task failure. Instead, you have to speak
of "the failing case" or "when the operation does not succeed" or other
circumlocutions.

Likewise, we use a "Failure" header in rustdoc to describe when
operations may fail the task, but it would often be helpful to separate
out a section describing the "Err-producing" case.

We have been steadily moving away from task failure and toward Result as
an error-handling mechanism, so we should optimize our terminology
accordingly: Result-producing functions should be easy to describe.

To update your code, rename any call to `fail!` to `panic!` instead.
Assuming you have not created your own macro named `panic!`, this
will work on UNIX based systems:

    grep -lZR 'fail!' . | xargs -0 -l sed -i -e 's/fail!/panic!/g'

You can of course also do this by hand.

[breaking-change]
2014-10-29 11:43:07 -04:00
Steve Klabnik
72fb8f3688 Fix example for BufferedReader
Fixes #18197
2014-10-28 15:55:56 -04:00
Aaron Turon
e0ad0fcb95 Update code with new lint names 2014-10-28 08:54:21 -07:00
Alex Crichton
287df9e0eb rollup merge of #18329 : sfackler/memwriter-clear 2014-10-27 15:12:30 -07:00
Steven Fackler
bed5a7d92a Add MemWriter::from_vec 2014-10-25 19:23:39 -07:00
Julian Orth
d6dc01e797 Deprecate UdpStream 2014-10-25 09:11:47 +02:00
Julian Orth
8adfd02368 Make UdpStream block until the next non-empty msg. 2014-10-25 09:06:35 +02:00
bors
7d0cc44f87 auto merge of #18070 : alexcrichton/rust/spring-cleaning, r=aturon
This is a large spring-cleaning commit now that the 0.12.0 release has passed removing an amount of deprecated functionality. This removes a number of deprecated crates (all still available as cargo packages in the rust-lang organization) as well as a slew of deprecated functions. All `#[crate_id]` support has also been removed.

I tried to avoid anything that was recently deprecated, but I may have missed something! The major pain points of this commit is the fact that rustc/syntax have `#[allow(deprecated)]`, but I've removed that annotation so moving forward they should be cleaned up as we go.
2014-10-20 16:07:43 +00:00
bors
045bc283ec auto merge of #18108 : mahkoh/rust/buffered_reader, r=alexcrichton
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.
2014-10-20 03:27:12 +00:00
Julian Orth
3839696529 Optimize BufferedReader::read for large buffers.
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.
2014-10-20 01:47:33 +02:00
Alex Crichton
9d5d97b55d Remove a large amount of deprecated functionality
Spring cleaning is here! In the Fall! This commit removes quite a large amount
of deprecated functionality from the standard libraries. I tried to ensure that
only old deprecated functionality was removed.

This is removing lots and lots of deprecated features, so this is a breaking
change. Please consult the deprecation messages of the deleted code to see how
to migrate code forward if it still needs migration.

[breaking-change]
2014-10-19 12:59:40 -07:00
bors
1600e0b93c auto merge of #17998 : rapha/rust/master, r=alexcrichton 2014-10-17 00:17:25 +00:00
Luqman Aden
3bab3dc574 libstd: Remove all uses of {:?}. 2014-10-16 11:15:35 -04:00
Raphael Speyer
7081007678 impl Buffer for ChanReader 2014-10-16 04:39:58 +11:00
NODA, Kai
f27ad3d3e9 Clean up rustc warnings.
compiletest: compact "linux" "macos" etc.as "unix".
liballoc: remove a superfluous "use".
libcollections: remove invocations of deprecated methods in favor of
    their suggested replacements and use "_" for a loop counter.
libcoretest: remove invocations of deprecated methods;  also add
    "allow(deprecated)" for testing a deprecated method itself.
libglob: use "cfg_attr".
libgraphviz: add a test for one of data constructors.
libgreen: remove a superfluous "use".
libnum: "allow(type_overflow)" for type cast into u8 in a test code.
librustc: names of static variables should be in upper case.
libserialize: v[i] instead of get().
libstd/ascii: to_lowercase() instead of to_lower().
libstd/bitflags: modify AnotherSetOfFlags to use i8 as its backend.
    It will serve better for testing various aspects of bitflags!.
libstd/collections: "allow(deprecated)" for testing a deprecated
    method itself.
libstd/io: remove invocations of deprecated methods and superfluous "use".
    Also add #[test] where it was missing.
libstd/num: introduce a helper function to effectively remove
    invocations of a deprecated method.
libstd/path and rand: remove invocations of deprecated methods and
    superfluous "use".
libstd/task and libsync/comm: "allow(deprecated)" for testing
    a deprecated method itself.
libsync/deque: remove superfluous "unsafe".
libsync/mutex and once: names of static variables should be in upper case.
libterm: introduce a helper function to effectively remove
    invocations of a deprecated method.

We still see a few warnings about using obsoleted native::task::spawn()
in the test modules for libsync.  I'm not sure how I should replace them
with std::task::TaksBuilder and native::task::NativeTaskBuilder
(dependency to libstd?)

Signed-off-by: NODA, Kai <nodakai@gmail.com>
2014-10-13 14:16:22 +08:00
Alex Crichton
dae48a07f3 Register new snapshots
Also convert a number of `static mut` to just a plain old `static` and remove
some unsafe blocks.
2014-10-10 22:09:49 -07:00
Daniel Micay
02d976a7f9 improve the performance of the vec![] macro
Closes #17865
2014-10-10 14:20:12 -04:00
Alex Crichton
ab5935c88d std: Convert statics to constants
This commit repurposes most statics as constants in the standard library itself,
with the exception of TLS keys which precisely have their own memory location as
an implementation detail.

This commit also rewrites the bitflags syntax to use `const` instead of
`static`. All invocations will need to replace the word `static` with `const`
when declaring flags.

Due to the modification of the `bitflags!` syntax, this is a:

[breaking-change]
2014-10-09 09:44:51 -07:00
John Gallagher
7091fe3972 Remove use of final and override (now reserved) 2014-10-07 22:18:12 -04:00
Nick Cameron
cd21e4a72c Rename slice::Slice 2014-10-07 15:49:53 +13:00
Nick Cameron
2d3823441f Put slicing syntax behind a feature gate.
[breaking-change]

If you are using slicing syntax you will need to add #![feature(slicing_syntax)] to your crate.
2014-10-07 15:49:53 +13:00
Nick Cameron
59976942ea Use slice syntax instead of slice_to, etc. 2014-10-07 15:49:53 +13:00
P1start
e3ca987f74 Rename the file permission statics in std::io to be uppercase
For example, this renames `GroupRWX` to `GROUP_RWX`, and deprecates the old
name. Code using these statics should be updated accordingly.
2014-10-06 16:43:34 +13:00
Brian Koropoff
e364584071 Fix infinite recursion in Writer impl for &mut Writer
Closes issue #17767
2014-10-04 10:24:10 -07:00
Alex Crichton
48cdb55d79 rollup merge of #17739 : eddyb/fix-process-test 2014-10-03 07:39:45 -07:00
Eduard Burtescu
ef693885a7 Fix a race condition between remove_from_env and other io::process tests. 2014-10-03 17:16:05 +03:00
P1start
94bcd3539c Set the non_uppercase_statics lint to warn by default 2014-10-03 20:39:56 +13:00
Alex Crichton
4c8d0334ee rollup merge of #17719 : alexcrichton/diagnose 2014-10-02 14:49:29 -07:00
Alex Crichton
53cdaa58d3 std: Help diagnose a flaky test
This test has recently been failing on the bots, and I'm not entirely sure why.
I haven't been able to reproduce locally or on the bots, so I'm adding some
messages to help diagnose the problem hopefully.
2014-10-02 13:14:14 -07:00
Aaron Turon
d2ea0315e0 Revert "Use slice syntax instead of slice_to, etc."
This reverts commit 40b9f5ded5.
2014-10-02 11:48:07 -07:00
Aaron Turon
7bf56df4c8 Revert "Put slicing syntax behind a feature gate."
This reverts commit 95cfc35607.
2014-10-02 11:47:51 -07:00
Nick Cameron
95cfc35607 Put slicing syntax behind a feature gate.
[breaking-change]

If you are using slicing syntax you will need to add #![feature(slicing_syntax)] to your crate.
2014-10-02 13:23:36 +13:00
Nick Cameron
40b9f5ded5 Use slice syntax instead of slice_to, etc. 2014-10-02 13:19:45 +13:00
Aaron Turon
dad59bdcbc Remove std::io::signal
The `std::io::signal` API was only implemented under `librustuv`, which
is now being removed. Rather than keep around an unimplemented API, this
commit removes it altogether.

See the [runtime removal
RFC](https://github.com/rust-lang/rfcs/pull/230) for more context.

See [green-rs](https://github.com/alexcrichton/green-rs/) for a possible
migration path for signal handling code, although in the long run we
plan to add native signal handling to `std::io`.

[breaking-change]
2014-10-01 12:42:30 -07:00
Aaron Turon
15966c3c1f Remove iotest macro
This commit removes the `iotest!` macro from `std::io`. The macro was
primarily used to ensure that all io-related tests were run on both
libnative and libgreen/librustuv. However, now that the librustuv stack
is being removed, the macro is no longer needed.

See the [runtime removal
RFC](https://github.com/rust-lang/rfcs/pull/230) for more context.

[breaking-change]
2014-10-01 10:34:39 -07:00
bors
49fcb27df6 auto merge of #17667 : wizeman/rust/fix-override-env, r=alexcrichton
In some build environments (such as chrooted Nix builds), `env` can only
be found in the explicitly-provided PATH, not in default places such as
/bin or /usr/bin. So we need to pass-through PATH when spawning the
`env` sub-process.

Fixes #17617
2014-10-01 15:32:30 +00:00
Ricardo M. Correia
5f4c2800fc libstd: Pass-through PATH in test_override_env
In some build environments (such as chrooted Nix builds), `env` can only
be found in the explicitly-provided PATH, not in default places such as
/bin or /usr/bin. So we need to pass-through PATH when spawning the
`env` sub-process.

Fixes #17617
2014-10-01 03:35:35 +02:00
Steven Fackler
d5647a8ea3 Fix libstd 2014-09-30 12:52:00 -07:00
Alex Crichton
5fae40c33a rollup merge of #17548 : cgaebel/master 2014-09-29 08:12:14 -07:00
bors
43d7d7c15e auto merge of #17506 : sfackler/rust/cfg-attr, r=alexcrichton
cc #17490 

Reopening of #16230
2014-09-27 01:37:53 +00:00
Patrick Walton
21df9c805f librustc: Give trait methods accessible via fewer autoderefs priority
over inherent methods accessible via more autoderefs.

This simplifies the trait matching algorithm. It breaks code like:

    impl Foo {
        fn foo(self) {
            // before this change, this will be called
        }
    }

    impl<'a,'b,'c> Trait for &'a &'b &'c Foo {
        fn foo(self) {
            // after this change, this will be called
        }
    }

    fn main() {
        let x = &(&(&Foo));
        x.foo();
    }

To explicitly indicate that you wish to call the inherent method, perform
explicit dereferences. For example:

    fn main() {
        let x = &(&(&Foo));
        (***x).foo();
    }

Part of #17282.

[breaking-change]
2014-09-26 13:02:47 -07:00
Brian Anderson
6f5f2be392 Ignore two I/O tests that are failing on the win32 bot 2014-09-25 20:49:15 -07:00
Clark Gaebel
c2f8db12fd Added bitflag toggling. 2014-09-25 18:08:49 -07:00
Steven Fackler
65cca7c8b1 Deprecate #[ignore(cfg(...))]
Replace `#[ignore(cfg(a, b))]` with `#[cfg_attr(all(a, b), ignore)]`
2014-09-23 23:49:20 -07:00
Alex Crichton
0169218047 Fix fallout from Vec stabilization 2014-09-21 22:15:51 -07:00
Alex Crichton
81d1feb980 Remove #[allow(deprecated)] from libstd 2014-09-21 21:05:05 -07:00
bors
482e7788c7 auto merge of #17249 : vadimcn/rust/env-keys, r=alexcrichton
Closes #16937
2014-09-18 17:05:35 +00:00
Vadim Chugunov
8b84911120 Pacify lint gods. 2014-09-17 23:40:27 -07:00
Alex Crichton
d76f51c264 rollup merge of #17297 : treeman/net-unix 2014-09-17 08:49:33 -07:00
Vadim Chugunov
ffa8b2917c Case-insensitive environment keys. 2014-09-17 00:56:13 -07:00
Aaron Turon
fc525eeb4e Fallout from renaming 2014-09-16 14:37:48 -07:00
Aaron Turon
d8dfe1957b Align with _mut conventions
As per [RFC
52](https://github.com/rust-lang/rfcs/blob/master/active/0052-ownership-variants.md),
use `_mut` suffixes to mark mutable variants, and `into_iter` for moving
iterators.

[breaking-change]
2014-09-16 11:46:52 -07:00
Jonas Hietala
04f4bb4290 Rename std::io::net::unix to std::io::net::pipe.
Renamed as we may support pipes for other platforms.

Closes #12093

[breaking-change]
2014-09-16 11:37:44 +02:00
Patrick Walton
467bea04fa librustc: Forbid inherent implementations that aren't adjacent to the
type they provide an implementation for.

This breaks code like:

    mod foo {
        struct Foo { ... }
    }

    impl foo::Foo {
        ...
    }

Change this code to:

    mod foo {
        struct Foo { ... }

        impl Foo {
            ...
        }
    }

Additionally, if you used the I/O path extension methods `stat`,
`lstat`, `exists`, `is_file`, or `is_dir`, note that these methods have
been moved to the the `std::io::fs::PathExtensions` trait. This breaks
code like:

    fn is_it_there() -> bool {
        Path::new("/foo/bar/baz").exists()
    }

Change this code to:

    use std::io::fs::PathExtensions;

    fn is_it_there() -> bool {
        Path::new("/foo/bar/baz").exists()
    }

Closes #17059.

RFC #155.

[breaking-change]
2014-09-13 02:07:39 -07:00
bors
325808a33d auto merge of #16952 : alexcrichton/rust/windows-large-console-write, r=brson
I've found that 64k is still too much and continue to see the errors as reported
in #14940. I've locally found that 32k fails, and 24k succeeds, so I've trimmed
the size down to 10000 which the included links in the added comment end up
recommending.

It sounds like the limit can still be hit with many threads in play, but I have
yet to reproduce this, so I figure we can wait until that's hit (if it's
possible) and then take action.
2014-09-08 20:51:14 +00:00
Alex Crichton
198030fadf std: Turn down the stdout chunk size
I've found that 64k is still too much and continue to see the errors as reported
in #14940. I've locally found that 32k fails, and 24k succeeds, so I've trimmed
the size down to 8192 which libuv happens to use as well.

It sounds like the limit can still be hit with many threads in play, but I have
yet to reproduce this, so I figure we can wait until that's hit (if it's
possible) and then take action.
2014-09-08 12:54:32 -07:00
Huon Wilson
524e1b20af Register snapshots.
Closes #16880.
2014-09-07 20:42:14 +10:00
bors
20c0ba1279 auto merge of #16907 : SimonSapin/rust/tempdir-result, r=huonw
This allows using `try!()`

[breaking-change]

Fixes #16875
2014-09-06 08:01:33 +00:00
bors
67b97ab6d2 auto merge of #16843 : bkoropoff/rust/reader-writer-box, r=alexcrichton
Cargo needs this to be able to instantiate `TerminfoTerminal<Box<Writer+'a>>` for 'a other than 'static.
2014-09-05 03:31:07 +00:00
bors
e024017f60 auto merge of #16986 : bjz/rust/bitflags, r=alexcrichton
Closes #16469
2014-09-04 20:21:02 +00:00
bors
d3e7922ddd auto merge of #16982 : jbcrail/rust/comment-and-string-corrections, r=alexcrichton
I corrected spelling and capitalization errors in comments and strings.
2014-09-04 18:30:59 +00:00
Brendan Zabarauskas
ef354d850e Use {} for bitflags! definition and invocations
This looks nicer because it reflects Rust's other syntactic structures.
2014-09-05 03:33:00 +10:00
bors
6d8b5c9f7d auto merge of #16976 : treeman/rust/issue-16943, r=kballard
Closes #16943.
2014-09-04 11:11:08 +00:00
Jonas Hietala
38bf999f4a Print file permissions with 4 digits. 2014-09-04 09:01:51 +02:00
Joseph Crail
b7bfe04b2d Fix spelling errors and capitalization. 2014-09-03 23:10:38 -04:00
Jonas Hietala
fca8a1d151 Print file permissions in octal form.
Closes #16943.
2014-09-03 23:59:22 +02:00
Nick Cameron
7f72884f13 Remove cross-borrowing for traits.
Closes #15349

[breaking-change]

Trait objects are no longer implicitly coerced from Box<T> to &T. You must make an explicit coercion using `&*`.
2014-09-03 08:32:35 +12:00
Simon Sapin
a049fb98cd Have std::io::TempDir::new and new_in return IoResult
This allows using `try!()`

[breaking-change]

Fixes #16875
2014-08-31 22:06:11 +02:00
Alex Crichton
d15d559739 Register new snapshots 2014-08-29 14:33:08 -07:00
Brian Koropoff
3c182e4226 Relax lifetime bounds on Reader/Writer impls for trait boxes
Cargo needs this to be able to instantiate `TerminfoTerminal<Box<Writer+'a>>`
for 'a other than 'static.
2014-08-29 01:13:43 -07:00
bors
2e92c67dc0 auto merge of #16664 : aturon/rust/stabilize-option-result, r=alexcrichton
Per API meeting

  https://github.com/rust-lang/meeting-minutes/blob/master/Meeting-API-review-2014-08-13.md

# Changes to `core::option`

Most of the module is marked as stable or unstable; most of the unstable items are awaiting resolution of conventions issues.

However, a few methods have been deprecated, either due to lack of use or redundancy:

* `take_unwrap`, `get_ref` and `get_mut_ref` (redundant, and we prefer for this functionality to go through an explicit .unwrap)
* `filtered` and `while`
* `mutate` and `mutate_or_set`
* `collect`: this functionality is being moved to a new `FromIterator` impl.

# Changes to `core::result`

Most of the module is marked as stable or unstable; most of the unstable items are awaiting resolution of conventions issues.

* `collect`: this functionality is being moved to a new `FromIterator` impl.
* `fold_` is deprecated due to lack of use
* Several methods found in `core::option` are added here, including `iter`, `as_slice`, and variants.

Due to deprecations, this is a:

[breaking-change]
2014-08-28 23:56:20 +00:00
bors
1a33d7a541 auto merge of #16626 : ruud-v-a/rust/duration-reform, r=brson
This changes the internal representation of `Duration` from

    days: i32,
    secs: i32,
    nanos: u32

to

    secs: i64,
    nanos: i32

This resolves #16466. Note that `nanos` is an `i32` and not `u32` as suggested, because `i32` is easier to deal with, and it is not exposed anyway. Some methods now take `i64` instead of `i32` due to the increased range. Some methods, like `num_milliseconds`, now return an `Option<i64>` instead of `i64`, because the range of `Duration` is now larger than e.g. 2^63 milliseconds.

A few remarks:
- Negating `MIN` is impossible. I chose to return `MAX` as `-MIN`, but it is one nanosecond less than the actual negation. Is this the desired behaviour?
- In `std::io::timer`, some functions accept a `Duration`, which is internally converted into a number of milliseconds. However, the range of `Duration` is now larger than 2^64 milliseconds. There is already a FIXME in the file that this should be addressed (without a ticket number though). I chose to silently use 0 ms if the duration is too long. Is that right, as long as the backend still uses milliseconds?
- Negative durations are not formatted correctly, but they were not formatted correctly before either.
2014-08-28 22:11:18 +00:00
Aaron Turon
276b8b125d Fallout from stabilizing core::option 2014-08-28 09:12:54 -07:00
Niko Matsakis
1b487a8906 Implement generalized object and type parameter bounds (Fixes #16462) 2014-08-27 21:46:52 -04:00
Nick Cameron
37a94b80f2 Use temp vars for implicit coercion to ^[T] 2014-08-26 12:37:45 +12:00
Alex Crichton
fd763a5b1e native: clone/close_accept for win32 pipes
This commits takes a similar strategy to the previous commit to implement
close_accept and clone for the native win32 pipes implementation.

Closes #15595
2014-08-24 17:08:14 -07:00
Alex Crichton
110168de2a native: Implement clone/close_accept for unix
This commits implements {Tcp,Unix}Acceptor::{clone,close_accept} methods for
unix. A windows implementation is coming in a later commit.

The clone implementation is based on atomic reference counting (as with all
other clones), and the close_accept implementation is based on selecting on a
self-pipe which signals that a close has been seen.
2014-08-24 17:08:14 -07:00
Vadim Chugunov
68811817f7 Complete renaming of win32 to windows 2014-08-23 02:11:28 -07:00
Ruud van Asseldonk
26af5da6d4 libstd: Limit Duration range to i64 milliseconds.
This enables `num_milliseconds` to return an `i64` again instead of
`Option<i64>`, because it is guaranteed not to overflow.

The Duration range is now rougly 300e6 years (positive and negative),
whereas it was 300e9 years previously. To put these numbers in
perspective, 300e9 years is about 21 times the age of the universe
(according to Wolfram|Alpha). 300e6 years is about 1/15 of the age of
the earth (according to Wolfram|Alpha).
2014-08-21 11:28:50 +02:00
Corey Richardson
bc19a77631 Add #[repr(C)] to all the things! 2014-08-20 21:02:23 -04:00
Ruud van Asseldonk
39133efebf libstd: Refactor Duration.
This changes the internal representation of `Duration` from

    days: i32,
    secs: i32,
    nanos: u32

to

    secs: i64,
    nanos: i32

This resolves #16466. Some methods now take `i64` instead of `i32` due
to the increased range. Some methods, like `num_milliseconds`, now
return an `Option<i64>` instead of `i64`, because the range of
`Duration` is now larger than e.g. 2^63 milliseconds.
2014-08-20 13:55:02 +02:00
Steve Klabnik
4a288bc4b7 Explain EOF behavior in File.eof().
Fies #16239.
2014-08-18 15:28:27 -04:00
bors
cb9c1e0e70 auto merge of #16498 : Kimundi/rust/inline-utf-encoding, r=alexcrichton
The first commit improves code generation through a few changes:
- The `#[inline]` attributes allow llvm to constant fold the encoding step away in certain situations. For example, code like this changes from a call to `encode_utf8` in a inner loop to the pushing of a byte constant:

 ```rust
let mut s = String::new();
for _ in range(0u, 21) {
        s.push_char('a');
}
```
- Both methods changed their semantic from causing run time failure if the target buffer is not large enough to returning `None` instead. This makes llvm no longer emit code for causing failure for these methods.
- A few debug `assert!()` calls got removed because they affected code generation due to unwinding, and where basically unnecessary with today's sound handling of `char` as a Unicode scalar value.

~~The second commit is optional. It changes the methods from regular indexing with the `dst[i]` syntax to unsafe indexing with `dst.unsafe_mut_ref(i)`. This does not change code generation directly - in both cases llvm is smart enough to see that there can never be an out-of-bounds access. But it makes it emit a `nounwind` attribute for the function. 
However, I'm not sure whether that is a real improvement, so if there is any objection to this I'll remove the commit.~~

This changes how the methods behave on a too small buffer, so this is a 

[breaking-change]
2014-08-17 04:42:32 +00:00
Patrick Walton
7f928d150e librustc: Forbid external crates, imports, and/or items from being
declared with the same name in the same scope.

This breaks several common patterns. First are unused imports:

    use foo::bar;
    use baz::bar;

Change this code to the following:

    use baz::bar;

Second, this patch breaks globs that import names that are shadowed by
subsequent imports. For example:

    use foo::*; // including `bar`
    use baz::bar;

Change this code to remove the glob:

    use foo::{boo, quux};
    use baz::bar;

Or qualify all uses of `bar`:

    use foo::{boo, quux};
    use baz;

    ... baz::bar ...

Finally, this patch breaks code that, at top level, explicitly imports
`std` and doesn't disable the prelude.

    extern crate std;

Because the prelude imports `std` implicitly, there is no need to
explicitly import it; just remove such directives.

The old behavior can be opted into via the `import_shadowing` feature
gate. Use of this feature gate is discouraged.

This implements RFC #116.

Closes #16464.

[breaking-change]
2014-08-16 19:32:25 -07:00
Marvin Löbel
13079c1a85 Optimized IR generation for UTF-8 and UTF-16 encoding
- Both can now be inlined and constant folded away
- Both can no longer cause failure
- Both now return an `Option` instead

Removed debug `assert!()`s over the valid ranges of a `char`
- It affected optimizations due to unwinding
- Char handling is now sound enought that they became uneccessary
2014-08-16 21:13:39 +02:00
Steven Fackler
89a0060997 std::io::util cleanup + fixes
* Fix `LimitReader`'s `Buffer::consume` impl to avoid limit underflow
* Make `MultiWriter` fail fast instead of always running through each
    `Writer`. This may or may not be what we want, but it at least
    doesn't throw any errors encountered in later `Writer`s into oblivion.
* Prevent `IterReader`'s `Reader::read` impl from returning EOF if given
    an empty buffer.

[breaking-change]
2014-08-14 23:14:56 -07:00
bors
385c39a77b auto merge of #16332 : brson/rust/slicestab, r=aturon
This implements some of the recommendations from https://github.com/rust-lang/meeting-minutes/blob/master/Meeting-API-review-2014-08-06.md.

Explanation in commits.
2014-08-14 05:36:25 +00:00
Brian Anderson
31281b4bd1 std: Fix build errors 2014-08-13 11:31:48 -07:00
Brian Anderson
ee10f3501c std: Make connect_timeout return Err on zero duration
[breaking-change]
2014-08-13 11:31:48 -07:00
Brian Anderson
a391934ba8 Fix various fallout from timer changes 2014-08-13 11:31:48 -07:00
Brian Anderson
4475e6a095 std: connect_timeout requires a positive Duration
This is only breaking if you were previously specifying a duration
of zero for some mysterious reason.

[breaking-change]
2014-08-13 11:31:48 -07:00
Brian Anderson
9fdcddb317 std: Make the TCP/UDP connect_timeout methods take Duration
[breaking-change]
2014-08-13 11:31:48 -07:00
Brian Anderson
63cd4acf53 std: Clarify what timers do with zero and negative durations
Add tests. Also fix a bunch of broken time tests.
2014-08-13 11:31:47 -07:00
Brian Anderson
734834c7d6 std: Restore missing timer examples 2014-08-13 11:31:47 -07:00
Brian Anderson
1666dabcbc std: Remove ms-taking methods from timers 2014-08-13 11:31:47 -07:00
Brian Anderson
6cb2093f74 std: Update Duration from upstream
From rust-chrono 4f34003e03e259bd5cbda0cb4d35325861307cc6
2014-08-13 11:31:47 -07:00
Brian Anderson
dc8b23bc1f std: Add sleep, oneshot and periodic timers, taking Duration 2014-08-13 11:31:47 -07:00
Brian Anderson
657b679b15 std: Rename sleep, periodic, and oneshot timers to sleep_ms, etc.
Rename io::timer::sleep, Timer::sleep, Timer::oneshot,
Timer::periodic, to sleep_ms, oneshot_ms, periodic_ms. These functions
all take an integer and interpret it as milliseconds.

Replacement functions will be added that take Duration.

[breaking-change]
2014-08-13 11:31:47 -07:00
Brian Anderson
fbc93082ec std: Rename slice::Vector to Slice
This required some contortions because importing both raw::Slice
and slice::Slice makes rustc crash.

Since `Slice` is in the prelude, this renaming is unlikely to
casue breakage.

[breaking-change]
2014-08-13 11:30:14 -07:00
Brian Anderson
4f5b6927e8 std: Rename various slice traits for consistency
ImmutableVector -> ImmutableSlice
ImmutableEqVector -> ImmutableEqSlice
ImmutableOrdVector -> ImmutableOrdSlice
MutableVector -> MutableSlice
MutableVectorAllocating -> MutableSliceAllocating
MutableCloneableVector -> MutableCloneableSlice
MutableOrdVector -> MutableOrdSlice

These are all in the prelude so most code will not break.

[breaking-change]
2014-08-13 11:30:14 -07:00
Ivan Petkov
3fe0ba9afc libnative: process spawning should not close inherited file descriptors
* The caller should be responsible for cleaning up file descriptors
* If a caller safely creates a file descriptor (via
  native::io::file::open) the returned structure (FileDesc) will try to
  clean up the file, failing in the process and writing error messages
  to the screen.
* This should not happen as the caller has no public interface for
  telling the FileDesc structure to NOT free the underlying fd.
* Alternatively, if another file is opened under the same fd held by
  the FileDesc structure returned by native::io::file::open, it will
  close the wrong file upon destruction.
2014-08-12 19:09:18 -07:00
bors
57630eb809 auto merge of #16336 : retep998/rust/master, r=brson
Several of the tests in `make check-fast` were failing so this fixes those tests.
2014-08-08 19:51:11 +00:00
Niko Matsakis
4fd797e757 Register new snapshot 12e0f72 2014-08-08 07:55:00 -04:00
Peter Atashian
feb219d23f windows: Fix several tests on 64-bit.
Signed-off-by: Peter Atashian <retep998@gmail.com>
2014-08-07 04:05:00 -04:00
bors
1a53c00117 auto merge of #16220 : tshepang/rust/temp, r=steveklabnik 2014-08-07 07:16:04 +00:00
bors
8fe73f1166 auto merge of #16291 : nham/rust/byte_literals, r=alexcrichton
This replaces many instances chars being casted to u8 with byte literals.
2014-08-06 23:41:05 +00:00
bors
84782c4e26 auto merge of #16258 : aturon/rust/stabilize-atomics, r=alexcrichton
This commit stabilizes the `std::sync::atomics` module, renaming it to
`std::sync::atomic` to match library precedent elsewhere, and tightening
up behavior around incorrect memory ordering annotations.

The vast majority of the module is now `stable`. However, the
`AtomicOption` type has been deprecated, since it is essentially unused
and is not truly a primitive atomic type. It will eventually be replaced
by a higher-level abstraction like MVars.

Due to deprecations, this is a:

[breaking-change]
2014-08-06 08:31:28 +00:00
nham
3fb78e29f4 Use byte literals in libstd 2014-08-06 02:02:50 -04:00
bors
fd02916f0e auto merge of #16243 : alexcrichton/rust/fix-utime-for-windows, r=brson
Apparently the units are in milliseconds, not in seconds!
2014-08-05 13:11:20 +00:00
Aaron Turon
68bde0a073 stabilize atomics (now atomic)
This commit stabilizes the `std::sync::atomics` module, renaming it to
`std::sync::atomic` to match library precedent elsewhere, and tightening
up behavior around incorrect memory ordering annotations.

The vast majority of the module is now `stable`. However, the
`AtomicOption` type has been deprecated, since it is essentially unused
and is not truly a primitive atomic type. It will eventually be replaced
by a higher-level abstraction like MVars.

Due to deprecations, this is a:

[breaking-change]
2014-08-04 16:03:21 -07:00
Tshepang Lekhonkhobe
349afcfa74 doc: make the sentence make more sense 2014-08-03 21:08:49 +02:00
Alex Crichton
2677e5f4a0 native: Fix utime() for windows
Apparently the units are in milliseconds, not in seconds!
2014-08-02 10:52:49 -07:00
Joseph Crail
ad06dfe496 Fix misspelled comments. 2014-08-01 19:42:52 -04:00
bors
75a39e0fb8 auto merge of #15399 : kballard/rust/rewrite_local_data, r=alexcrichton
This was motivated by a desire to remove allocation in the common
pattern of

    let old = key.replace(None)
    do_something();
    key.replace(old);

This also switched the map representation from a Vec to a TreeMap. A Vec
may be reasonable if there's only a couple TLD keys, but a TreeMap
provides better behavior as the number of keys increases.

Like the Vec, this TreeMap implementation does not shrink the container
when a value is removed. Unlike Vec, this TreeMap implementation cannot
reuse an empty node for a different key. Therefore any key that has been
inserted into the TLD at least once will continue to take up space in
the Map until the task ends. The expectation is that the majority of
keys that are inserted into TLD will be expected to have a value for
most of the rest of the task's lifetime. If this assumption is wrong,
there are two reasonable ways to fix this that could be implemented in
the future:

1. Provide an API call to either remove a specific key from the TLD and
   destruct its node (e.g. `remove()`), or instead to explicitly clean
   up all currently-empty nodes in the map (e.g. `compact()`). This is
   simple, but requires the user to explicitly call it.
2. Keep track of the number of empty nodes in the map and when the map
   is mutated (via `replace()`), if the number of empty nodes passes
   some threshold, compact it automatically. Alternatively, whenever a
   new key is inserted that hasn't been used before, compact the map at
   that point.

---

Benchmarks:

I ran 3 benchmarks. tld_replace_none just replaces the tld key with None
repeatedly. tld_replace_some replaces it with Some repeatedly. And
tld_replace_none_some simulates the common behavior of replacing with
None, then replacing with the previous value again (which was a Some).

Old implementation:

    test tld_replace_none      ... bench:        20 ns/iter (+/- 0)
    test tld_replace_none_some ... bench:        77 ns/iter (+/- 4)
    test tld_replace_some      ... bench:        57 ns/iter (+/- 2)

New implementation:

    test tld_replace_none      ... bench:        11 ns/iter (+/- 0)
    test tld_replace_none_some ... bench:        23 ns/iter (+/- 0)
    test tld_replace_some      ... bench:        12 ns/iter (+/- 0)
2014-07-31 23:16:33 +00:00
Kevin Ballard
24a62e176a Tweak error reporting in io::net::tcp tests
Errors can be printed with {}, printing with {:?} does not work very
well.

Not actually related to this PR, but it came up when running the tests
and now is as good a time to fix it as any.
2014-07-31 13:14:06 -07:00
bors
6f833ee151 auto merge of #16074 : nham/rust/bitflags_traits, r=alexcrichton
I wanted to add an implementation of `Default` inside the bitflags macro, but `Default` isn't in the prelude, which means anyone who wants to use `bitflags!` needs to import it. This seems not nice, so I've just implemented for `FilePermission` instead.
2014-07-31 09:31:37 +00:00
nham
96d6126f9b Implement Default for std::io::FilePermission 2014-07-30 16:05:24 -04:00
nham
f3e0db1559 Derive PartialOrd, Ord and Hash for bitflags types.
In order to prevent users from having to manually implement Hash and Ord for
bitflags types, this commit derives these traits automatically.

This breaks code that has manually implemented any of these traits for types
created by the bitflags! macro. Change this code by removing implementations
of these traits.

[breaking-change]
2014-07-30 16:04:33 -04:00
bors
f681420624 auto merge of #15915 : erickt/rust/master, r=alexcrichton
std: rename MemWriter to SeekableMemWriter, add seekless MemWriter

Not all users of MemWriter need to seek, but having MemWriter seekable adds between 3-29% in overhead in certain circumstances. This fixes that performance gap by making a non-seekable MemWriter, and creating a new SeekableMemWriter for those circumstances when that functionality is actually needed.

```
test io::mem::test::bench_buf_reader                        ... bench:       682 ns/iter (+/- 85)
test io::mem::test::bench_buf_writer                        ... bench:       580 ns/iter (+/- 57)
test io::mem::test::bench_mem_reader                        ... bench:       793 ns/iter (+/- 99)
test io::mem::test::bench_mem_writer_001_0000               ... bench:        48 ns/iter (+/- 27)
test io::mem::test::bench_mem_writer_001_0010               ... bench:        65 ns/iter (+/- 27) = 153 MB/s
test io::mem::test::bench_mem_writer_001_0100               ... bench:       132 ns/iter (+/- 12) = 757 MB/s
test io::mem::test::bench_mem_writer_001_1000               ... bench:       802 ns/iter (+/- 151) = 1246 MB/s
test io::mem::test::bench_mem_writer_100_0000               ... bench:       481 ns/iter (+/- 28)
test io::mem::test::bench_mem_writer_100_0010               ... bench:      1957 ns/iter (+/- 126) = 510 MB/s
test io::mem::test::bench_mem_writer_100_0100               ... bench:      8222 ns/iter (+/- 434) = 1216 MB/s
test io::mem::test::bench_mem_writer_100_1000               ... bench:     82496 ns/iter (+/- 11191) = 1212 MB/s
test io::mem::test::bench_seekable_mem_writer_001_0000      ... bench:        48 ns/iter (+/- 2)
test io::mem::test::bench_seekable_mem_writer_001_0010      ... bench:        64 ns/iter (+/- 2) = 156 MB/s
test io::mem::test::bench_seekable_mem_writer_001_0100      ... bench:       129 ns/iter (+/- 7) = 775 MB/s
test io::mem::test::bench_seekable_mem_writer_001_1000      ... bench:       801 ns/iter (+/- 159) = 1248 MB/s
test io::mem::test::bench_seekable_mem_writer_100_0000      ... bench:       711 ns/iter (+/- 51)
test io::mem::test::bench_seekable_mem_writer_100_0010      ... bench:      2532 ns/iter (+/- 227) = 394 MB/s
test io::mem::test::bench_seekable_mem_writer_100_0100      ... bench:      8962 ns/iter (+/- 947) = 1115 MB/s
test io::mem::test::bench_seekable_mem_writer_100_1000      ... bench:     85086 ns/iter (+/- 11555) = 1175 MB/s
```
2014-07-30 14:41:18 +00:00
Erick Tryzelaar
2bcb4bd406 std: Make MemWriter clonable 2014-07-29 16:32:07 -07:00
Erick Tryzelaar
e27b88d5bd remove seek from std::io::MemWriter, add SeekableMemWriter to librustc
Not all users of MemWriter need to seek, but having MemWriter
seekable adds between 3-29% in overhead in certain circumstances.
This fixes that performance gap by making a non-seekable MemWriter,
and creating a new SeekableMemWriter for those circumstances when
that functionality is actually needed.

```
test io::mem::test::bench_buf_reader                        ... bench:       682 ns/iter (+/- 85)
test io::mem::test::bench_buf_writer                        ... bench:       580 ns/iter (+/- 57)
test io::mem::test::bench_mem_reader                        ... bench:       793 ns/iter (+/- 99)
test io::mem::test::bench_mem_writer_001_0000               ... bench:        48 ns/iter (+/- 27)
test io::mem::test::bench_mem_writer_001_0010               ... bench:        65 ns/iter (+/- 27) = 153 MB/s
test io::mem::test::bench_mem_writer_001_0100               ... bench:       132 ns/iter (+/- 12) = 757 MB/s
test io::mem::test::bench_mem_writer_001_1000               ... bench:       802 ns/iter (+/- 151) = 1246 MB/s
test io::mem::test::bench_mem_writer_100_0000               ... bench:       481 ns/iter (+/- 28)
test io::mem::test::bench_mem_writer_100_0010               ... bench:      1957 ns/iter (+/- 126) = 510 MB/s
test io::mem::test::bench_mem_writer_100_0100               ... bench:      8222 ns/iter (+/- 434) = 1216 MB/s
test io::mem::test::bench_mem_writer_100_1000               ... bench:     82496 ns/iter (+/- 11191) = 1212 MB/s
test io::mem::test::bench_seekable_mem_writer_001_0000      ... bench:        48 ns/iter (+/- 2)
test io::mem::test::bench_seekable_mem_writer_001_0010      ... bench:        64 ns/iter (+/- 2) = 156 MB/s
test io::mem::test::bench_seekable_mem_writer_001_0100      ... bench:       129 ns/iter (+/- 7) = 775 MB/s
test io::mem::test::bench_seekable_mem_writer_001_1000      ... bench:       801 ns/iter (+/- 159) = 1248 MB/s
test io::mem::test::bench_seekable_mem_writer_100_0000      ... bench:       711 ns/iter (+/- 51)
test io::mem::test::bench_seekable_mem_writer_100_0010      ... bench:      2532 ns/iter (+/- 227) = 394 MB/s
test io::mem::test::bench_seekable_mem_writer_100_0100      ... bench:      8962 ns/iter (+/- 947) = 1115 MB/s
test io::mem::test::bench_seekable_mem_writer_100_1000      ... bench:     85086 ns/iter (+/- 11555) = 1175 MB/s
```

[breaking-change]
2014-07-29 16:31:39 -07:00
Tshepang Lekhonkhobe
f1e14cc10d doc: add missing word 2014-07-29 15:44:21 -07:00
nham
96cf01138b Fix some of the documentation std::io::fs. 2014-07-28 14:14:56 -04:00
Patrick Walton
caa564bea3 librustc: Stop desugaring for expressions and translate them directly.
This makes edge cases in which the `Iterator` trait was not in scope
and/or `Option` or its variants were not in scope work properly.

This breaks code that looks like:

    struct MyStruct { ... }

    impl MyStruct {
        fn next(&mut self) -> Option<int> { ... }
    }

    for x in MyStruct { ... } { ... }

Change ad-hoc `next` methods like the above to implementations of the
`Iterator` trait. For example:

    impl Iterator<int> for MyStruct {
        fn next(&mut self) -> Option<int> { ... }
    }

Closes #15392.

[breaking-change]
2014-07-24 18:58:12 -07:00
Brian Anderson
054b1ff989 Remove kludgy imports from vec! macro 2014-07-23 13:20:17 -07:00
Brian Anderson
d36a8f3f9c collections: Move push/pop to MutableSeq
Implement for Vec, DList, RingBuf. Add MutableSeq to the prelude.

Since the collections traits are in the prelude most consumers of
these methods will continue to work without change.

[breaking-change]
2014-07-23 13:20:10 -07:00
bors
8d43e4474a auto merge of #15867 : cmr/rust/rewrite-lexer4, r=alexcrichton 2014-07-22 07:16:17 +00:00
Corey Richardson
35c0bf3292 Add a ton of ignore-lexer-test 2014-07-21 18:38:40 -07:00
bors
2692ae1ddd auto merge of #15619 : kwantam/rust/master, r=huonw
- `width()` computes the displayed width of a string, ignoring the width of control characters.
    - arguably we might do *something* else for control characters, but the question is, what?
    - users who want to do something else can iterate over chars()

- `graphemes()` returns a `Graphemes` struct, which implements an iterator over the grapheme clusters of a &str.
    - fully compliant with [UAX#29](http://www.unicode.org/reports/tr29/#Grapheme_Cluster_Boundaries)
    - passes all [Unicode-supplied tests](http://www.unicode.org/reports/tr41/tr41-15.html#Tests29)

- added code to generate additionial categories in `unicode.py`
    - `Cn` aka `Not_Assigned`
    - categories necessary for grapheme cluster breaking

- tidied up the exports from libunicode
  - all exports are exposed through a module rather than directly at crate root.
  - std::prelude imports UnicodeChar and UnicodeStrSlice from std::char and std::str rather than directly from libunicode

closes #7043
2014-07-15 22:51:17 +00:00
Adolfo Ochagavía
584fbde5d1 Fix errors 2014-07-15 20:34:16 +02:00
Adolfo Ochagavía
c6b82c7566 Deprecate str::from_utf8_lossy
Use `String::from_utf8_lossy` instead

[breaking-change]
2014-07-15 19:55:21 +02:00
Adolfo Ochagavía
211f1caa29 Deprecate str::from_utf8_owned
Use `String::from_utf8` instead

[breaking-change]
2014-07-15 19:55:17 +02:00
kwantam
cf432b8f8f add Graphemes iterator; tidy unicode exports
- Graphemes and GraphemeIndices structs implement iterators over
  grapheme clusters analogous to the Chars and CharOffsets for chars in
  a string. Iterator and DoubleEndedIterator are available for both.

- tidied up the exports for libunicode. crate root exports are now moved
  into more appropriate module locations:
  - UnicodeStrSlice, Words, Graphemes, GraphemeIndices are in str module
  - UnicodeChar exported from char instead of crate root
  - canonical_combining_class is exported from str rather than crate root

Since libunicode's exports have changed, programs that previously relied
on the old export locations will need to change their `use` statements
to reflect the new ones. See above for more information on where the new
exports live.

closes #7043
[breaking-change]
2014-07-14 19:53:46 -04:00
Alex Crichton
fe67d269a5 std: Make unlink() more consistent
Currently when a read-only file has unlink() invoked on it on windows, the call
will fail. On unix, however, the call will succeed. In order to have a more
consistent behavior across platforms, this error is recognized on windows and
the file is changed to read-write before removal is attempted.
2014-07-14 14:24:50 -07:00
Erick Tryzelaar
c5edc70fad std: make std::io::IoError{,Kind} implement Eq 2014-07-13 16:28:01 -07:00
bors
ffd9966c79 auto merge of #15591 : aturon/rust/box-cell-stability, r=alexcrichton
This PR is the outcome of the library stabilization meeting for the
`liballoc::owned` and `libcore::cell` modules.

Aside from the stability attributes, there are a few breaking changes:

* The `owned` modules is now named `boxed`, to better represent its
  contents. (`box` was unavailable, since it's a keyword.) This will
  help avoid the misconception that `Box` plays a special role wrt
  ownership.

* The `AnyOwnExt` extension trait is renamed to `BoxAny`, and its `move`
  method is renamed to `downcast`, in both cases to improve clarity.

* The recently-added `AnySendOwnExt` extension trait is removed; it was
  not being used and is unnecessary.

[breaking-change]
2014-07-13 21:01:28 +00:00
Aaron Turon
e0ede9c6b3 Stabilization for owned (now boxed) and cell
This PR is the outcome of the library stabilization meeting for the
`liballoc::owned` and `libcore::cell` modules.

Aside from the stability attributes, there are a few breaking changes:

* The `owned` modules is now named `boxed`, to better represent its
  contents. (`box` was unavailable, since it's a keyword.) This will
  help avoid the misconception that `Box` plays a special role wrt
  ownership.

* The `AnyOwnExt` extension trait is renamed to `BoxAny`, and its `move`
  method is renamed to `downcast`, in both cases to improve clarity.

* The recently-added `AnySendOwnExt` extension trait is removed; it was
  not being used and is unnecessary.

[breaking-change]
2014-07-13 12:52:51 -07:00
bors
13dc0d7938 auto merge of #15584 : alexcrichton/rust/warn-annoyances, r=cmr
* Don't warn about `#[crate_name]` if `--crate-name` is specified
* Don't warn about non camel case identifiers on `#[repr(C)]` structs
* Switch `mode` to `mode_t` in libc.
2014-07-13 04:46:31 +00:00
bors
767f4a7937 auto merge of #15592 : arjantop/rust/bufwriter-write-fix, r=alexcrichton
First condition is not needed and just prevents 0 length writes

Fixes #15583
2014-07-12 09:21:39 +00:00
Alex Crichton
ca0b65402b libc: Switch open to use a mode_t on unix
While I'm at it, export O_SYNC with the other flags that are exported.

Closes #15582
2014-07-11 22:39:40 -07:00
Arjan Topolovec
30f07e9067 Allow writes of length 0 to a full buffer 2014-07-11 15:45:06 +02:00
Aaron Turon
bfa853f8ed io::process::Command: add fine-grained env builder
This commit changes the `io::process::Command` API to provide
fine-grained control over the environment:

* The `env` method now inserts/updates a key/value pair.
* The `env_remove` method removes a key from the environment.
* The old `env` method, which sets the entire environment in one shot,
  is renamed to `env_set_all`. It can be used in conjunction with the
  finer-grained methods. This renaming is a breaking change.

To support these new methods, the internal `env` representation for
`Command` has been changed to an optional `HashMap` holding owned
`CString`s (to support non-utf8 data). The `HashMap` is only
materialized if the environment is updated. The implementation does not
try hard to avoid allocation, since the cost of launching a process will
dwarf any allocation cost.

This patch also adds `PartialOrd`, `Eq`, and `Hash` implementations for
`CString`.

[breaking-change]
2014-07-10 12:16:16 -07:00
Jorge Aparicio
6d50828fdb Derive Clone for Command and StdioContainer 2014-07-09 20:18:26 -05:00
bors
66e1f11ef4 auto merge of #15471 : erickt/rust/push_all, r=acrichto
llvm is currently not able to conver `Vec::extend` into a memcpy for `Copy` types, which results in methods like `Vec::push_all` to run twice as slow as it should be running. This patch takes the unsafe `Vec::clone` optimization to speed up all the operations that are cloning a slice into a `Vec`.

before:

```
test vec::tests::bench_clone_from_0000_0000                ... bench:        12 ns/iter (+/- 2)
test vec::tests::bench_clone_from_0000_0010                ... bench:       125 ns/iter (+/- 4) = 80 MB/s
test vec::tests::bench_clone_from_0000_0100                ... bench:       360 ns/iter (+/- 33) = 277 MB/s
test vec::tests::bench_clone_from_0000_1000                ... bench:      2601 ns/iter (+/- 175) = 384 MB/s
test vec::tests::bench_clone_from_0010_0000                ... bench:        12 ns/iter (+/- 2)
test vec::tests::bench_clone_from_0010_0010                ... bench:       125 ns/iter (+/- 10) = 80 MB/s
test vec::tests::bench_clone_from_0010_0100                ... bench:       361 ns/iter (+/- 28) = 277 MB/s
test vec::tests::bench_clone_from_0100_0010                ... bench:       131 ns/iter (+/- 13) = 76 MB/s
test vec::tests::bench_clone_from_0100_0100                ... bench:       360 ns/iter (+/- 9) = 277 MB/s
test vec::tests::bench_clone_from_0100_1000                ... bench:      2575 ns/iter (+/- 168) = 388 MB/s
test vec::tests::bench_clone_from_1000_0100                ... bench:       356 ns/iter (+/- 20) = 280 MB/s
test vec::tests::bench_clone_from_1000_1000                ... bench:      2605 ns/iter (+/- 167) = 383 MB/s
test vec::tests::bench_from_slice_0000                     ... bench:        11 ns/iter (+/- 0)
test vec::tests::bench_from_slice_0010                     ... bench:       115 ns/iter (+/- 5) = 86 MB/s
test vec::tests::bench_from_slice_0100                     ... bench:       309 ns/iter (+/- 170) = 323 MB/s
test vec::tests::bench_from_slice_1000                     ... bench:      2065 ns/iter (+/- 198) = 484 MB/s
test vec::tests::bench_push_all_0000_0000                  ... bench:         7 ns/iter (+/- 0)
test vec::tests::bench_push_all_0000_0010                  ... bench:        79 ns/iter (+/- 7) = 126 MB/s
test vec::tests::bench_push_all_0000_0100                  ... bench:       342 ns/iter (+/- 18) = 292 MB/s
test vec::tests::bench_push_all_0000_1000                  ... bench:      2873 ns/iter (+/- 75) = 348 MB/s
test vec::tests::bench_push_all_0010_0010                  ... bench:       154 ns/iter (+/- 8) = 64 MB/s
test vec::tests::bench_push_all_0100_0100                  ... bench:       518 ns/iter (+/- 18) = 193 MB/s
test vec::tests::bench_push_all_1000_1000                  ... bench:      4490 ns/iter (+/- 223) = 222 MB/s
```

after:

```
test vec::tests::bench_clone_from_0000_0000                ... bench:        12 ns/iter (+/- 1)
test vec::tests::bench_clone_from_0000_0010                ... bench:       123 ns/iter (+/- 5) = 81 MB/s
test vec::tests::bench_clone_from_0000_0100                ... bench:       367 ns/iter (+/- 23) = 272 MB/s
test vec::tests::bench_clone_from_0000_1000                ... bench:      2618 ns/iter (+/- 252) = 381 MB/s
test vec::tests::bench_clone_from_0010_0000                ... bench:        12 ns/iter (+/- 1)
test vec::tests::bench_clone_from_0010_0010                ... bench:       124 ns/iter (+/- 7) = 80 MB/s
test vec::tests::bench_clone_from_0010_0100                ... bench:       369 ns/iter (+/- 34) = 271 MB/s
test vec::tests::bench_clone_from_0100_0010                ... bench:       123 ns/iter (+/- 6) = 81 MB/s
test vec::tests::bench_clone_from_0100_0100                ... bench:       371 ns/iter (+/- 25) = 269 MB/s
test vec::tests::bench_clone_from_0100_1000                ... bench:      2713 ns/iter (+/- 532) = 368 MB/s
test vec::tests::bench_clone_from_1000_0100                ... bench:       369 ns/iter (+/- 14) = 271 MB/s
test vec::tests::bench_clone_from_1000_1000                ... bench:      2611 ns/iter (+/- 194) = 382 MB/s
test vec::tests::bench_from_slice_0000                     ... bench:         7 ns/iter (+/- 0)
test vec::tests::bench_from_slice_0010                     ... bench:       108 ns/iter (+/- 4) = 92 MB/s
test vec::tests::bench_from_slice_0100                     ... bench:       235 ns/iter (+/- 24) = 425 MB/s
test vec::tests::bench_from_slice_1000                     ... bench:      1318 ns/iter (+/- 96) = 758 MB/s
test vec::tests::bench_push_all_0000_0000                  ... bench:         7 ns/iter (+/- 0)
test vec::tests::bench_push_all_0000_0010                  ... bench:        70 ns/iter (+/- 4) = 142 MB/s
test vec::tests::bench_push_all_0000_0100                  ... bench:       176 ns/iter (+/- 16) = 568 MB/s
test vec::tests::bench_push_all_0000_1000                  ... bench:      1125 ns/iter (+/- 94) = 888 MB/s
test vec::tests::bench_push_all_0010_0010                  ... bench:       159 ns/iter (+/- 15) = 62 MB/s
test vec::tests::bench_push_all_0100_0100                  ... bench:       363 ns/iter (+/- 12) = 275 MB/s
test vec::tests::bench_push_all_1000_1000                  ... bench:      2860 ns/iter (+/- 415) = 349 MB/s
```

This also includes extra benchmarks for `Vec` and `MemWriter`.
2014-07-09 20:21:29 +00:00
bors
fa7cbb5a46 auto merge of #15283 : kwantam/rust/master, r=alexcrichton
Add libunicode; move unicode functions from core

- created new crate, libunicode, below libstd
- split `Char` trait into `Char` (libcore) and `UnicodeChar` (libunicode)
  - Unicode-aware functions now live in libunicode
    - `is_alphabetic`, `is_XID_start`, `is_XID_continue`, `is_lowercase`,
      `is_uppercase`, `is_whitespace`, `is_alphanumeric`, `is_control`, `is_digit`,
      `to_uppercase`, `to_lowercase`
  - added `width` method in UnicodeChar trait
    - determines printed width of character in columns, or None if it is a non-NULL control character
    - takes a boolean argument indicating whether the present context is CJK or not (characters with 'A'mbiguous widths are double-wide in CJK contexts, single-wide otherwise)
- split `StrSlice` into `StrSlice` (libcore) and `UnicodeStrSlice` (libunicode)
  - functionality formerly in `StrSlice` that relied upon Unicode functionality from `Char` is now in `UnicodeStrSlice`
    - `words`, `is_whitespace`, `is_alphanumeric`, `trim`, `trim_left`, `trim_right`
  - also moved `Words` type alias into libunicode because `words` method is in `UnicodeStrSlice`
- unified Unicode tables from libcollections, libcore, and libregex into libunicode
- updated `unicode.py` in `src/etc` to generate aforementioned tables
- generated new tables based on latest Unicode data
- added `UnicodeChar` and `UnicodeStrSlice` traits to prelude
- libunicode is now the collection point for the `std::char` module, combining the libunicode functionality with the `Char` functionality from libcore
  - thus, moved doc comment for `char` from `core::char` to `unicode::char`
- libcollections remains the collection point for `std::str`

The Unicode-aware functions that previously lived in the `Char` and `StrSlice` traits are no longer available to programs that only use libcore. To regain use of these methods, include the libunicode crate and `use` the `UnicodeChar` and/or `UnicodeStrSlice` traits:

    extern crate unicode;
    use unicode::UnicodeChar;
    use unicode::UnicodeStrSlice;
    use unicode::Words; // if you want to use the words() method

NOTE: this does *not* impact programs that use libstd, since UnicodeChar and UnicodeStrSlice have been added to the prelude.

closes #15224
[breaking-change]
2014-07-09 18:36:30 +00:00
Richo Healey
12c334a77b std: Rename the ToStr trait to ToString, and to_str to to_string.
[breaking-change]
2014-07-08 13:01:43 -07:00
kwantam
5d4238b6fc Add libunicode; move unicode functions from core
- created new crate, libunicode, below libstd
- split Char trait into Char (libcore) and UnicodeChar (libunicode)
  - Unicode-aware functions now live in libunicode
    - is_alphabetic, is_XID_start, is_XID_continue, is_lowercase,
      is_uppercase, is_whitespace, is_alphanumeric, is_control,
      is_digit, to_uppercase, to_lowercase
  - added width method in UnicodeChar trait
    - determines printed width of character in columns, or None if it is
      a non-NULL control character
    - takes a boolean argument indicating whether the present context is
      CJK or not (characters with 'A'mbiguous widths are double-wide in
      CJK contexts, single-wide otherwise)
- split StrSlice into StrSlice (libcore) and UnicodeStrSlice
  (libunicode)
  - functionality formerly in StrSlice that relied upon Unicode
    functionality from Char is now in UnicodeStrSlice
    - words, is_whitespace, is_alphanumeric, trim, trim_left, trim_right
  - also moved Words type alias into libunicode because words method is
    in UnicodeStrSlice
- unified Unicode tables from libcollections, libcore, and libregex into
  libunicode
- updated unicode.py in src/etc to generate aforementioned tables
- generated new tables based on latest Unicode data
- added UnicodeChar and UnicodeStrSlice traits to prelude
- libunicode is now the collection point for the std::char module,
  combining the libunicode functionality with the Char functionality
  from libcore
  - thus, moved doc comment for char from core::char to unicode::char
- libcollections remains the collection point for std::str

The Unicode-aware functions that previously lived in the Char and
StrSlice traits are no longer available to programs that only use
libcore. To regain use of these methods, include the libunicode crate
and use the UnicodeChar and/or UnicodeStrSlice traits:

    extern crate unicode;
    use unicode::UnicodeChar;
    use unicode::UnicodeStrSlice;
    use unicode::Words; // if you want to use the words() method

NOTE: this does *not* impact programs that use libstd, since UnicodeChar
and UnicodeStrSlice have been added to the prelude.

closes #15224
[breaking-change]
2014-07-07 14:52:24 -04:00
Erick Tryzelaar
90fe1a632b std: flesh out MemWriter benchmarks 2014-07-05 23:11:21 -07:00
John Clements
3e99309bfc make any_pat! and u64_from_be_bytes_bench_impl! macros hygienic 2014-07-04 13:20:14 -07:00
Joseph Crail
4a6fcc51a0 Rename set_broadast() to set_broadcast(). 2014-07-03 12:54:51 -07:00
Joseph Crail
e3fa23bcb6 Fix spelling errors. 2014-07-03 12:54:51 -07:00
bors
3fb3568377 auto merge of #15265 : omasanori/rust/udp, r=alexcrichton
POSIX has recvfrom(2) and sendto(2), but their name seem not to be suitable with Rust. We already renamed getpeername(2) and getsockname(2), so I think it makes sense.

Alternatively, `receive_from` would be fine. However, we have `.recv()` so I chose `recv_from`.

What do you think? If this makes sense, should I provide `recvfrom` and `sendto` deprecated methods just calling new methods for compatibility?
2014-07-02 09:21:39 +00:00
Brian Anderson
d21336ee0a rustc: Remove &str indexing from the language.
Being able to index into the bytes of a string encourages
poor UTF-8 hygiene. To get a view of `&[u8]` from either
a `String` or `&str` slice, use the `as_bytes()` method.

Closes #12710.

[breaking-change]
2014-07-01 19:12:29 -07:00