Commit Graph

729 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Steve Klabnik
07fb31a099 Rollup merge of #21471 - michaelwoerister:associated-types, r=alexcrichton
This should fix issue #20797 (but I don't want to close it automatically).
As the actual fix is very small this would be a perfect candidate for a rollup.
2015-01-22 18:09:59 -05:00
Brian Anderson
d3c0bb416e Put #[staged_api] behind the 'staged_api' gate 2015-01-22 13:47:56 -08:00
John Kåre Alsaker
4cfb70026c Better inline assembly errors 2015-01-22 19:43:39 +01:00
Brian Anderson
41278c5441 Remove 'since' from unstable attributes 2015-01-21 19:25:55 -08:00
Brian Anderson
7b73ec4698 Tie stability attributes to feature gates 2015-01-21 16:16:21 -08:00
Brian Anderson
94ca8a3610 Add 'feature' and 'since' to stability attributes 2015-01-21 16:16:18 -08:00
Alex Crichton
df1cddf20a rollup merge of #20179: eddyb/blind-items
Conflicts:
	src/librustc/diagnostics.rs
	src/librustdoc/clean/mod.rs
	src/librustdoc/html/format.rs
	src/libsyntax/parse/parser.rs
2015-01-21 11:56:00 -08:00
Alex Crichton
886c6f3534 rollup merge of #21258: aturon/stab-3-index
Conflicts:
	src/libcore/ops.rs
	src/librustc_typeck/astconv.rs
	src/libstd/io/mem.rs
	src/libsyntax/parse/lexer/mod.rs
2015-01-21 11:53:49 -08:00
Alex Crichton
f4df69a40a rollup merge of #20642: michaelwoerister/sane-source-locations-pt1
Conflicts:
	src/librustc_trans/trans/debuginfo.rs
2015-01-21 11:50:34 -08:00
Michael Woerister
3a44107f9e debuginfo: Fix issue with associated types and struct fields 2015-01-21 18:25:53 +01:00
Alex Crichton
87c3ee861e rollup merge of #21457: alexcrichton/issue-21436
Conflicts:
	src/liballoc/boxed.rs
	src/librustc/middle/traits/error_reporting.rs
	src/libstd/sync/mpsc/mod.rs
2015-01-21 09:20:35 -08:00
Alex Crichton
907db6c834 rollup merge of #21444: petrochenkov/null
Conflicts:
	src/libstd/sync/mpsc/select.rs
2015-01-21 09:18:07 -08:00
Alex Crichton
1646707c6e rollup merge of #21396: japaric/no-parens-in-range
Conflicts:
	src/libsyntax/parse/lexer/comments.rs
2015-01-21 09:15:15 -08:00
Alex Crichton
9173797be1 rollup merge of #21372: arielb1/remove-the-box
It is not used anymore
2015-01-21 09:14:34 -08:00
Alex Crichton
0c981875e4 rollup merge of #21340: pshc/libsyntax-no-more-ints
Collaboration with @rylev!

I didn't change `int` in the [quasi-quoter](99ae1a30f3/src/libsyntax/ext/quote.rs (L328)), because I'm not sure if there will be adverse effects.

Addresses #21095.
2015-01-21 09:13:51 -08:00
Alex Crichton
5da25386b3 rollup merge of #21333: stepancheg/trans-write-diag
File cannot be written, for example, if directory does not exist.

Before this commit:

```
% rustc -o nonexistent/program program.rs
error: could not write output: No such file or directory
```

With this commit:

```
% rustc -o nonexistent/program program.rs
error: could not write output to nonexistent/program.0.o: No such file or directory
```

This is useful when full rust command is not displayed, or when last error is followed by thousands of warnings.
2015-01-21 09:13:49 -08:00
Aaron Turon
a506d4cbfe Fallout from stabilization. 2015-01-21 08:11:07 -08:00
Eduard Burtescu
c91761e83e rustc_trans: fix fallout of merging ast::ViewItem into ast::Item. 2015-01-21 16:27:26 +02:00
Michael Woerister
a55ef3a032 debuginfo: Make debuginfo source location assignment more stable (Pt. 1)
So far, the source location an LLVM instruction was linked to was controlled by
`debuginfo::set_source_location()` and `debuginfo::clear_source_location()`.
This interface mimicked how LLVM's `IRBuilder` handles debug location
assignment. While this interface has some theoretical performance benefits, it
also makes things terribly unstable: One sets some quasi-global state and then
hopes that it is still correct when a given instruction is emitted---an
assumption that has been proven to not hold a bit too often.

This patch requires the debug source location to be passed to the actual
instruction emitting function. This makes source location assignment explicit
and will prevent future changes to `trans` from accidentally breaking things in
the majority of cases.

This patch does not yet implement the new principle for all instruction kinds
but the stepping experience should have improved significantly nonetheless
already.
2015-01-21 10:48:10 +01:00
Alex Crichton
3cb9fa26ef std: Rename Show/String to Debug/Display
This commit is an implementation of [RFC 565][rfc] which is a stabilization of
the `std::fmt` module and the implementations of various formatting traits.
Specifically, the following changes were performed:

[rfc]: https://github.com/rust-lang/rfcs/blob/master/text/0565-show-string-guidelines.md

* The `Show` trait is now deprecated, it was renamed to `Debug`
* The `String` trait is now deprecated, it was renamed to `Display`
* Many `Debug` and `Display` implementations were audited in accordance with the
  RFC and audited implementations now have the `#[stable]` attribute
  * Integers and floats no longer print a suffix
  * Smart pointers no longer print details that they are a smart pointer
  * Paths with `Debug` are now quoted and escape characters
* The `unwrap` methods on `Result` now require `Display` instead of `Debug`
* The `Error` trait no longer has a `detail` method and now requires that
  `Display` must be implemented. With the loss of `String`, this has moved into
  libcore.
* `impl<E: Error> FromError<E> for Box<Error>` now exists
* `derive(Show)` has been renamed to `derive(Debug)`. This is not currently
  warned about due to warnings being emitted on stage1+

While backwards compatibility is attempted to be maintained with a blanket
implementation of `Display` for the old `String` trait (and the same for
`Show`/`Debug`) this is still a breaking change due to primitives no longer
implementing `String` as well as modifications such as `unwrap` and the `Error`
trait. Most code is fairly straightforward to update with a rename or tweaks of
method calls.

[breaking-change]
Closes #21436
2015-01-20 22:36:13 -08:00
Barosl LEE
a79f1921a9 Rollup merge of #21375 - petrochenkov:ssbsl, r=alexcrichton
After PR #19766 added implicit coersions `*mut T -> *const T`, the explicit casts can be removed.
(The number of such casts turned out to be relatively small).
2015-01-21 02:16:50 +09:00
bors
65b61ffb3f Auto merge of #21165 - alexcrichton:second-pass-type-id, r=aturon
This commit aims to stabilize the `TypeId` abstraction by moving it out of the
`intrinsics` module into the `any` module of the standard library. Specifically,

* `TypeId` is now defined at `std::any::TypeId`
* `TypeId::hash` has been removed in favor of an implementation of `Hash`.

This commit also performs a final pass over the `any` module, confirming the
following:

* `Any::get_type_id` remains unstable as *usage* of the `Any` trait will likely
  never require this, and the `Any` trait does not need to be implemented for
  any other types. As a result, this implementation detail can remain unstable
  until associated statics are implemented.
* `Any::downcast_ref` is now stable
* `Any::downcast_mut` is now stable
* `BoxAny` remains unstable. While a direct impl on `Box<Any>` is allowed today
  it does not allow downcasting of trait objects like `Box<Any + Send>` (those
  returned from `Thread::join`). This is covered by #18737.
* `BoxAny::downcast` is now stable.
2015-01-19 23:35:12 +00:00
Ariel Ben-Yehuda
8e1e0f0b57 Remove onceness & bounds - they don't do anything. 2015-01-20 00:50:14 +02:00
Ariel Ben-Yehuda
e0eb3ccba0 Kill TraitStore 2015-01-20 00:43:15 +02:00
Jorge Aparicio
49684850be remove unnecessary parentheses from range notation 2015-01-19 12:24:43 -05:00
bors
cda3490f8f Auto merge of #21269 - alexcrichton:issue-6936, r=pnkfelix
This commit modifies resolve to prevent conflicts with typedef names in the same
method that conflits are prevented with enum names. This is a breaking change
due to the differing semantics in resolve, and any errors generated on behalf of
this change require that a conflicting typedef, module, or structure to be
renamed so they do not conflict.

[breaking-change]
Closes #6936
2015-01-19 15:44:41 +00:00
bors
43f2c199e4 Auto merge of #21282 - Aatch:init-memzero, r=alexcrichton
LLVM gets overwhelmed when presented with a zeroinitializer for a large
type. In unoptimised builds, it generates a long sequence of stores to
memory. In optmised builds, it manages to generate a standard memset of
zero values, but takes a long time doing so.

Call out to the `llvm.memset` function to zero out the memory instead.

Fixes #21264
2015-01-19 12:17:07 +00:00
we
2c2480df5d Replace 0 as *const/mut T with ptr::null/null_mut() 2015-01-19 08:27:09 +03:00
Alex Crichton
70f7165cc8 std: Stabilize TypeId and tweak BoxAny
This commit aims to stabilize the `TypeId` abstraction by moving it out of the
`intrinsics` module into the `any` module of the standard library. Specifically,

* `TypeId` is now defined at `std::any::TypeId`
* `TypeId::hash` has been removed in favor of an implementation of `Hash`.

This commit also performs a final pass over the `any` module, confirming the
following:

* `Any::get_type_id` remains unstable as *usage* of the `Any` trait will likely
  never require this, and the `Any` trait does not need to be implemented for
  any other types. As a result, this implementation detail can remain unstable
  until associated statics are implemented.
* `Any::downcast_ref` is now stable
* `Any::downcast_mut` is now stable
* `BoxAny` remains unstable. While a direct impl on `Box<Any>` is allowed today
  it does not allow downcasting of trait objects like `Box<Any + Send>` (those
  returned from `Thread::join`). This is covered by #18737.
* `BoxAny::downcast` is now stable.
2015-01-18 18:29:22 -08:00
Alex Crichton
3121c04043 Fix typedef/module name conflicts in the compiler 2015-01-18 18:26:34 -08:00
James Miller
9c5173f8e5 Add test to catch performance regressions 2015-01-19 09:21:23 +13:00
James Miller
0859e5ebb3 Use zero_mem instead of a zerointializer for init intrinsic
LLVM gets overwhelmed when presented with a zeroinitializer for a large
type. In unoptimised builds, it generates a long sequence of stores to
memory. In optmised builds, it manages to generate a standard memset of
zero values, but takes a long time doing so.

Call out to the `llvm.memset` function to zero out the memory instead.
2015-01-19 09:21:23 +13:00
Seo Sanghyeon
3f0cc8011a Make output type in ast::FnDecl optional 2015-01-18 22:49:19 +09:00
Paul Collier
d5c83652b3 libsyntax: rename functions from uint to usize 2015-01-17 20:47:30 -08:00
Brian Anderson
6f3a80e411 Set allow(unstable) in crates that use unstable features
Lets them build with the -dev, -nightly, or snapshot compiler
2015-01-17 16:38:04 -08:00
Stepan Koltsov
fa01251a8c rustc: print filename if file cannot be written
File cannot be written, for example, if directory does not exist.

Before this commit:

```
% rustc -o nonexistent/program program.rs
error: could not write output: No such file or directory
```

With this commit:

```
% rustc -o nonexistent/program program.rs
error: could not write output to nonexistent/program.0.o: No such file or directory
```

This is useful when full rust command is not displayed, or when last
error is preceded by thousands of warnings.
2015-01-18 03:32:11 +03:00
bors
89c4e3792d auto merge of #21233 : huonw/rust/simd-size, r=Aatch
This stops the compiler ICEing on the use of SIMD types in FFI signatures. It emits correct code for LLVM intrinsics, but I am quite unsure about the ABI handling in general so I've added a new feature gate `simd_ffi` to try to ensure people don't use it without realising there's a non-trivial risk of codegen brokenness.

Closes #20043.
2015-01-17 10:58:43 +00:00
we
812ce6c190 Remove unnecessary explicit conversions to *const T 2015-01-17 07:34:10 +03:00
Huon Wilson
c8e0e9549d Feature gate SIMD in FFI, due to unknown ABIs.
I don't know if this handling of SIMD types is correct for the C ABI on
all platforms, so lets add an even finer feature gate than just the
`simd` one.

The `simd` one can be used with (relatively) little risk of complete
nonsense, the reason for it is that it is likely that things will
change. Using the types in FFI with an incorrect ABI will at best give
absolute nonsense results, but possibly cause serious breakage too, so
this is a step up in badness, hence a new feature gate.
2015-01-17 11:55:46 +11:00
bors
653e6880c9 auto merge of #21113 : alexcrichton/rust/plug-a-hole, r=brson
With the addition of separate search paths to the compiler, it was intended that
applications such as Cargo could require a `--extern` flag per `extern crate`
directive in the source. The system can currently be subverted, however, due to
the `existing_match()` logic in the crate loader.

When loading crates we first attempt to match an `extern crate` directive
against all previously loaded crates to avoid reading metadata twice. This "hit
the cache if possible" step was erroneously leaking crates across the search
path boundaries, however. For example:

    extern crate b;
    extern crate a;

If `b` depends on `a`, then it will load crate `a` when the `extern crate b`
directive is being processed. When the compiler reaches `extern crate a` it will
use the previously loaded version no matter what. If the compiler was not
invoked with `-L crate=path/to/a`, it will still succeed.

This behavior is allowing `extern crate` declarations in Cargo without a
corresponding declaration in the manifest of a dependency, which is considered
a bug.

This commit fixes this problem by keeping track of the origin search path for a
crate. Crates loaded from the dependency search path are not candidates for
crates which are loaded from the crate search path.
2015-01-16 19:17:30 +00:00
Alex Crichton
cbeb77ec7a rustc: Fix a leak in dependency= paths
With the addition of separate search paths to the compiler, it was intended that
applications such as Cargo could require a `--extern` flag per `extern crate`
directive in the source. The system can currently be subverted, however, due to
the `existing_match()` logic in the crate loader.

When loading crates we first attempt to match an `extern crate` directive
against all previously loaded crates to avoid reading metadata twice. This "hit
the cache if possible" step was erroneously leaking crates across the search
path boundaries, however. For example:

    extern crate b;
    extern crate a;

If `b` depends on `a`, then it will load crate `a` when the `extern crate b`
directive is being processed. When the compiler reaches `extern crate a` it will
use the previously loaded version no matter what. If the compiler was not
invoked with `-L crate=path/to/a`, it will still succeed.

This behavior is allowing `extern crate` declarations in Cargo without a
corresponding declaration in the manifest of a dependency, which is considered
a bug.

This commit fixes this problem by keeping track of the origin search path for a
crate. Crates loaded from the dependency search path are not candidates for
crates which are loaded from the crate search path.

As a result of this fix, this is a likely a breaking change for a number of
Cargo packages. If the compiler starts informing that a crate can no longer be
found, it likely means that the dependency was forgotten in your Cargo.toml.

[breaking-change]
2015-01-16 08:48:16 -08:00
Huon Wilson
9e83ae931c Put vector types in regs for arm & mips FFI.
This seems to match what clang does on arm, but I cannot do any
experimentation with mips, but it matches how the LLVM intrinsics are
defined in any case...
2015-01-16 22:49:40 +11:00
Huon Wilson
7d4f358de7 Support SSE with integer types in x86-64 FFI.
Unlike the intrinics in C, this types the SSE values base on integer
size. This matches the LLVM intrinsics which have concrete vector types
(`<4 x i32>` etc.), and is no loss of expressivity: if one is using a C
function that really takes an untyped integral SSE value, just give it
whatever Rust type makes most sense.
2015-01-16 22:49:40 +11:00
Huon Wilson
5edbe1f5dd Add Type::int_width for retrieving integer's bit width. 2015-01-16 22:49:39 +11:00
Huon Wilson
3d59a476e5 Support SSE types in extern {} better.
This seems to work on x86-64, but I am not able to test on other
platforms.

cc #20043
2015-01-16 22:49:39 +11:00
bors
317da0bf2a Merge pull request #21181 from nick29581/save-fix
Two minor fixes for save-analysis

Reviewed-by: huonw
2015-01-16 06:31:02 +00:00
Alex Crichton
6dc94f744e rollup merge of #21197: michaelwoerister/linestablesonly-forloop
Fixes #21067.
2015-01-15 14:12:06 -08:00
Alex Crichton
09c0342116 rollup merge of #21191: Zoxc/lto
Fixes #21184
2015-01-15 14:12:04 -08:00
Alex Crichton
7c967afe02 rollup merge of #21170: Diggsey/issue-21058
While it's unstable and will probably be replaced or "reformed" at some point, it's useful in the mean time to be able to introspect the type system when debugging, and not be limited to sized types.

Fixes #21058
2015-01-15 14:12:02 -08:00
Alex Crichton
489294d517 rollup merge of #21115: dotdash/iter_vec
There are two places left where we used to only know the byte
size of/offset into an array and had to cast to i8 and back to get the
right addresses. But by now, we always know the sizes in terms of the
number of elements in the array. In fact we have to add an extra Mul
instruction so we can use the weird cast-to-u8 code. So we should really
just embrace our new knowledge and use simple GEPs to do the address
calculations.

Fixes #3729
2015-01-15 14:11:50 -08:00
Alex Crichton
692d9426e7 rollup merge of #21107: nikomatsakis/assoc-type-ice-hunt-take-1
Fixes for #20831 and #21010

r? @nick29581
2015-01-15 14:11:47 -08:00
Alex Crichton
d11f2b3aea rollup merge of #21089: nikomatsakis/issue-20676-invalid-vtable-for-object
Support UFCS style calls to a method defined in `Trait` where `Self` is bound to a trait object. Fixes #20676.

r? @alexcrichton
2015-01-15 14:11:45 -08:00
Eduard Burtescu
85ba8178e2 rustc: implement fully qualified UFCS expressions. 2015-01-15 18:51:15 +02:00
Eduard Burtescu
2cdc86c180 syntax: add fully qualified UFCS expressions. 2015-01-15 18:51:14 +02:00
Michael Woerister
45c6423cbc debuginfo: Fix ICE when compiling for-loops with lines-tables-only. 2015-01-15 15:22:56 +01:00
John Kåre Alsaker
2c71adaaa2 Disable -C lto optimizations on opt_level=0
Fixes #21184
2015-01-15 09:22:27 +01:00
Diggory Blake
81c5fd8e1f Allow get_tydesc intrinsic to accept unsized types
Fix tabs

Added missing ty_str cases when generating type descriptions

Reduce code duplication and improve test
2015-01-15 06:54:51 +00:00
bors
0c96037ec1 auto merge of #20980 : richo/rust/final-power, r=alexcrichton
Originally, this was going to be discussed and revisted, however I've been working on this for months, and a rebase on top of master was about 1 flight's worth of work so I just went ahead and did it.

This gets you as far as being able to target powerpc with, eg:

    LD_LIBRARY_PATH=./x86_64-unknown-linux-gnu/stage2/lib/ x86_64-unknown-linux-gnu/stage2/bin/rustc -C linker=powerpc-linux-gnu-gcc --target powerpc-unknown-linux-gnu hello.rs

Would really love to get this out before 1.0. r? @alexcrichton
2015-01-15 05:12:30 +00:00
Nick Cameron
33fd10d5e0 save-analysis: fix declid of methods 2015-01-15 16:53:29 +13:00
Niko Matsakis
2479dfcbf7 Revert "rustc_trans: Fix type projection debuginfo" -- it potentially papers over a lack
of normalization that should have taken place.

This reverts commit f7745a9be3.
2015-01-14 16:35:14 -05:00
Niko Matsakis
2868404fca Normalize associated types in the type_is_newtype_immediate pass. Fixes #21010. 2015-01-14 16:35:14 -05:00
Huon Wilson
4ebde950f5 Document, tweak and refactor some trans code. 2015-01-15 00:23:43 +11:00
Nick Cameron
32690b586d Tweek save-analysis treatment of impls 2015-01-14 22:24:09 +13:00
bors
3614e1de6c auto merge of #21061 : japaric/rust/range, r=nick29581 2015-01-14 04:42:01 +00:00
Richo Healey
4ab2c47ce6 Clean up conditions for clobbers 2015-01-13 19:01:37 -08:00
Björn Steinbrink
56671cb357 Prefer GEP instructions over weird pointer casting
There are two places left where we used to only know the byte
size of/offset into an array and had to cast to i8 and back to get the
right addresses. But by now, we always know the sizes in terms of the
number of elements in the array. In fact we have to add an extra Mul
instruction so we can use the weird cast-to-u8 code. So we should really
just embrace our new knowledge and use simple GEPs to do the address
calculations.

Additionally, the pointer calculations in bind_subslice_pat don't handle
zero-sized types correctly, producing slices that point outside the
array that is being matched against. Using GEP fixes that as well.

Fixes #3729
2015-01-13 23:47:38 +01:00
bors
c366e433c1 auto merge of #20957 : Ms2ger/rust/closures, r=alexcrichton
Returning the vectors directly makes the code a lot cleaner.
2015-01-13 21:29:00 +00:00
bors
e94a9f033e auto merge of #20997 : nikomatsakis/rust/assoc-types-enum-field-access, r=nick29581
Various fixes to enum field access. Builds on PR #20955.

r? @nick29581
2015-01-13 14:21:39 +00:00
Niko Matsakis
d3cecbf6f6 Support UFCS style calls to a method defined in Trait where Self
is bound to a trait object. Fixes #20676.
2015-01-13 09:17:07 -05:00
bors
6ba9acd8ab auto merge of #20963 : nick29581/rust/ast_map, r=eddyb 2015-01-13 11:56:31 +00:00
Ms2ger
756466bfd0 Rewrite each_attr to return a vector. 2015-01-13 10:41:56 +01:00
Ms2ger
27db3f0585 Return the Vec from csearch::get_item_attrs.
Using a closure unnecessarily obfuscates the code.
2015-01-13 10:28:06 +01:00
bors
f1241f14dc auto merge of #20960 : erickt/rust/fix-associated-types-debuginfo, r=michaelwoerister
Closes #20797
2015-01-13 09:06:35 +00:00
Jorge Aparicio
c1d48a8508 cleanup: &foo[0..a] -> &foo[..a] 2015-01-12 17:59:37 -05:00
Nick Cameron
22a059ddd1 Add view items to the ast map 2015-01-13 09:15:59 +13:00
Niko Matsakis
47424cda1e Normalize bounds that we extract from where clauses. Fixes #20765. 2015-01-12 09:23:50 -05:00
Niko Matsakis
487a4a174a Fix various oversights in enum field treatment in trans and typeck.
Fixes #20996.
2015-01-12 07:51:35 -05:00
Erick Tryzelaar
f7745a9be3 rustc_trans: Fix type projection debuginfo
Closes #20797
2015-01-11 21:39:03 -08:00
Richo Healey
734093674e powerpc: Fix missing include in cabi_powerpc 2015-01-11 21:15:19 -08:00
Richo Healey
c055d99526 powerpc: Teach trans about powerpc 2015-01-11 21:14:31 -08:00
Richo Healey
33cd9cf9f4 powerpc: initialize llvm 2015-01-11 21:14:31 -08:00
Nick Cameron
55d5c46d3a Make the compilation process more easily customisable 2015-01-12 12:53:07 +13:00
bors
d2d35db570 auto merge of #20755 : dotdash/rust/fca, r=Aatch
Currently, small aggregates are passed to functions as immediate values
as is. This has two consequences.
    
One is that aggregates are passed component-wise by LLVM, so e.g. a
struct containing four u8 values (e.g. an RGBA struct) will be passed as
four individual values.
    
The other is that LLVM isn't very good at optimizing loads/stores of
first class attributes. What clang does is converting the aggregate to
an appropriately sized integer type (e.g. i32 for the four u8 values),
and using that for the function argument. This allows LLVM to create
code that is a lot better.
    
Fixes #20450 #20149 #16506 #13927
2015-01-11 06:55:33 +00:00
Björn Steinbrink
6f1b06eb65 Pass small fixed-size arrays as immediates
Currently even small fixed-size arrays are passed as indirect
parameters, which seems to be just an oversight. Let's handle them the
same as structs of the same size, passing them as immediate values.
2015-01-11 01:44:03 +01:00
Björn Steinbrink
6ef08406dc Avoid loads/stores of first class aggregates
Currently, small aggregates are passed to functions as immediate values
as is. This has two consequences.

One is that aggregates are passed component-wise by LLVM, so e.g. a
struct containing four u8 values (e.g. an RGBA struct) will be passed as
four individual values.

The other is that LLVM isn't very good at optimizing loads/stores of
first class attributes. What clang does is converting the aggregate to
an appropriately sized integer type (e.g. i32 for the four u8 values),
and using that for the function argument. This allows LLVM to create
code that is a lot better.

Fixes #20450 #20149 #16506 #13927
2015-01-11 01:44:02 +01:00
bors
87ed884a9c Merge pull request #20699 from vhbit/ios-archs
Better iOS support

Reviewed-by: alexcrichton
2015-01-09 17:35:09 +00:00
Björn Steinbrink
2100b10c4c Treat struct(T) the same as struct S { x: T } WRT being immediate args
Currently we pass a `struct S(u64)` as an immediate value on i686, but a
`struct S { x: u64 }` is passed indirectly. This seems pretty wrong,
as they both have the same underlying LLVM type `{ i64 }`, no sense in
treating them differently.
2015-01-09 17:40:13 +01:00
Valerii Hiora
ea045d2055 iOS: cabi fixes
Changed alignment according to official Apple docs
2015-01-09 18:38:30 +02:00
bors
00b112c45a auto merge of #20760 : alexcrichton/rust/rollup, r=alexcrichton 2015-01-08 18:40:04 +00:00
Alex Crichton
4281bd1932 rollup merge of #20754: nikomatsakis/int-feature
Conflicts:
	src/test/compile-fail/borrowck-move-out-of-overloaded-auto-deref.rs
	src/test/compile-fail/issue-2590.rs
	src/test/compile-fail/lint-stability.rs
	src/test/compile-fail/slice-mut-2.rs
	src/test/compile-fail/std-uncopyable-atomics.rs
2015-01-08 09:24:08 -08:00
Alex Crichton
6a09aa208f rollup merge of #20746: dotdash/fix_indent
Most of the file lost one level of indentation in a recent rollup. Most
likely an accident during merge conflict resolution.
2015-01-08 09:22:08 -08:00
Alex Crichton
e40f62d9bf rollup merge of #20738: brson/feature-staging2
This gets rid of the 'experimental' level, removes the non-staged_api
case (i.e. stability levels for out-of-tree crates), and lets the
staged_api attributes use 'unstable' and 'deprecated' lints.

This makes the transition period to the full feature staging design
a bit nicer.
2015-01-08 09:22:03 -08:00
Alex Crichton
6a48b181bd rollup merge of #20736: akiss77/pr-u8-c_char 2015-01-08 09:21:59 -08:00
Huon Wilson
4f5a57e80e Remove warning from the libraries.
This adds the int_uint feature to *every* library, whether or not it
needs it.
2015-01-08 11:02:23 -05:00
Huon Wilson
d12514bc58 Add a warning feature gate for int/uint in types and i/u suffixes. 2015-01-08 11:02:23 -05:00
Huon Wilson
e95779554e Store deprecated status of i/u-suffixed literals. 2015-01-08 11:02:23 -05:00
Björn Steinbrink
114d2bdad1 Restore indentation in common.rs
Most of the file lost one level of indentation in a recent rollup. Most
likely an accident during merge conflict resolution.
2015-01-08 13:14:07 +01:00
Brian Anderson
1f70acbf4c Improvements to feature staging
This gets rid of the 'experimental' level, removes the non-staged_api
case (i.e. stability levels for out-of-tree crates), and lets the
staged_api attributes use 'unstable' and 'deprecated' lints.

This makes the transition period to the full feature staging design
a bit nicer.
2015-01-08 03:07:23 -08:00
Manish Goregaokar
7e87ea9fc5 librustc::session : Make DebuggingOpts use the options! macro 2015-01-08 13:38:43 +05:30
Akos Kiss
78c7faf5a6 Fix: libc::c_char is not always i8 2015-01-08 07:12:19 +00:00
Alex Crichton
0dc48b47a8 Test fixes and rebase conflicts 2015-01-07 19:27:27 -08:00
Alex Crichton
11e265c2e0 rollup merge of #20707: nikomatsakis/issue-20582 2015-01-07 17:44:24 -08:00
Alex Crichton
373cbab5b0 rollup merge of #20723: pnkfelix/feature-gate-box-syntax
Conflicts:
	src/compiletest/compiletest.rs
	src/libcollections/lib.rs
	src/libserialize/lib.rs
	src/libsyntax/feature_gate.rs
2015-01-07 17:42:47 -08:00
Alex Crichton
bcebec5084 rollup merge of #20706: nikomatsakis/assoc-types-projections-in-structs-issue-20470
Conflicts:
	src/librustc_trans/trans/expr.rs
2015-01-07 17:35:00 -08:00
Alex Crichton
6e806bdefd rollup merge of #20721: japaric/snap
Conflicts:
	src/libcollections/vec.rs
	src/libcore/fmt/mod.rs
	src/librustc/lint/builtin.rs
	src/librustc/session/config.rs
	src/librustc_trans/trans/base.rs
	src/librustc_trans/trans/context.rs
	src/librustc_trans/trans/type_.rs
	src/librustc_typeck/check/_match.rs
	src/librustdoc/html/format.rs
	src/libsyntax/std_inject.rs
	src/libsyntax/util/interner.rs
	src/test/compile-fail/mut-pattern-mismatched.rs
2015-01-07 17:26:58 -08:00
Niko Matsakis
4dd368b90a Normalize associated types in with_field_tys 2015-01-07 20:26:20 -05:00
Niko Matsakis
9e4e8823c7 Use ty::type_is_sized() so that we handle projection types properly. 2015-01-07 20:26:19 -05:00
Alex Crichton
6301c7878e rollup merge of #20680: nick29581/target-word
Closes #20421

[breaking-change]

r? @brson
2015-01-07 17:17:23 -08:00
Alex Crichton
f3b67afcab rollup merge of #20663: brson/feature-staging
This partially implements the feature staging described in the
[release channel RFC][rc]. It does not yet fully conform to the RFC as
written, but does accomplish its goals sufficiently for the 1.0 alpha
release.

It has three primary user-visible effects:

* On the nightly channel, use of unstable APIs generates a warning.
* On the beta channel, use of unstable APIs generates a warning.
* On the beta channel, use of feature gates generates a warning.

Code that does not trigger these warnings is considered 'stable',
modulo pre-1.0 bugs.

Disabling the warnings for unstable APIs continues to be done in the
existing (i.e. old) style, via `#[allow(...)]`, not that specified in
the RFC. I deem this marginally acceptable since any code that must do
this is not using the stable dialect of Rust.

Use of feature gates is itself gated with the new 'unstable_features'
lint, on nightly set to 'allow', and on beta 'warn'.

The attribute scheme used here corresponds to an older version of the
RFC, with the `#[staged_api]` crate attribute toggling the staging
behavior of the stability attributes, but the user impact is only
in-tree so I'm not concerned about having to make design changes later
(and I may ultimately prefer the scheme here after all, with the
`#[staged_api]` crate attribute).

Since the Rust codebase itself makes use of unstable features the
compiler and build system do a midly elaborate dance to allow it to
bootstrap while disobeying these lints (which would otherwise be
errors because Rust builds with `-D warnings`).

This patch includes one significant hack that causes a
regression. Because the `format_args!` macro emits calls to unstable
APIs it would trigger the lint.  I added a hack to the lint to make it
not trigger, but this in turn causes arguments to `println!` not to be
checked for feature gates. I don't presently understand macro
expansion well enough to fix. This is bug #20661.

Closes #16678

[rc]: https://github.com/rust-lang/rfcs/blob/master/text/0507-release-channels.md

Next steps are to disable the existing out-of-tree behavior for stability attributes, and convert the remaining system to be feature-based per the RFC. During the first beta cycle we will set these lints to 'forbid'.
2015-01-07 17:17:22 -08:00
Alex Crichton
8bf3ee7c5c rollup merge of #20654: alexcrichton/stabilize-hash
This commit aims to prepare the `std::hash` module for alpha by formalizing its
current interface whileholding off on adding `#[stable]` to the new APIs.  The
current usage with the `HashMap` and `HashSet` types is also reconciled by
separating out composable parts of the design. The primary goal of this slight
redesign is to separate the concepts of a hasher's state from a hashing
algorithm itself.

The primary change of this commit is to separate the `Hasher` trait into a
`Hasher` and a `HashState` trait. Conceptually the old `Hasher` trait was
actually just a factory for various states, but hashing had very little control
over how these states were used. Additionally the old `Hasher` trait was
actually fairly unrelated to hashing.

This commit redesigns the existing `Hasher` trait to match what the notion of a
`Hasher` normally implies with the following definition:

    trait Hasher {
        type Output;
        fn reset(&mut self);
        fn finish(&self) -> Output;
    }

This `Hasher` trait emphasizes that hashing algorithms may produce outputs other
than a `u64`, so the output type is made generic. Other than that, however, very
little is assumed about a particular hasher. It is left up to implementors to
provide specific methods or trait implementations to feed data into a hasher.

The corresponding `Hash` trait becomes:

    trait Hash<H: Hasher> {
        fn hash(&self, &mut H);
    }

The old default of `SipState` was removed from this trait as it's not something
that we're willing to stabilize until the end of time, but the type parameter is
always required to implement `Hasher`. Note that the type parameter `H` remains
on the trait to enable multidispatch for specialization of hashing for
particular hashers.

Note that `Writer` is not mentioned in either of `Hash` or `Hasher`, it is
simply used as part `derive` and the implementations for all primitive types.

With these definitions, the old `Hasher` trait is realized as a new `HashState`
trait in the `collections::hash_state` module as an unstable addition for
now. The current definition looks like:

    trait HashState {
        type Hasher: Hasher;
        fn hasher(&self) -> Hasher;
    }

The purpose of this trait is to emphasize that the one piece of functionality
for implementors is that new instances of `Hasher` can be created.  This
conceptually represents the two keys from which more instances of a
`SipHasher` can be created, and a `HashState` is what's stored in a
`HashMap`, not a `Hasher`.

Implementors of custom hash algorithms should implement the `Hasher` trait, and
only hash algorithms intended for use in hash maps need to implement or worry
about the `HashState` trait.

The entire module and `HashState` infrastructure remains `#[unstable]` due to it
being recently redesigned, but some other stability decision made for the
`std::hash` module are:

* The `Writer` trait remains `#[experimental]` as it's intended to be replaced
  with an `io::Writer` (more details soon).
* The top-level `hash` function is `#[unstable]` as it is intended to be generic
  over the hashing algorithm instead of hardwired to `SipHasher`
* The inner `sip` module is now private as its one export, `SipHasher` is
  reexported in the `hash` module.

And finally, a few changes were made to the default parameters on `HashMap`.

* The `RandomSipHasher` default type parameter was renamed to `RandomState`.
  This renaming emphasizes that it is not a hasher, but rather just state to
  generate hashers. It also moves away from the name "sip" as it may not always
  be implemented as `SipHasher`. This type lives in the
  `std::collections::hash_map` module as `#[unstable]`

* The associated `Hasher` type of `RandomState` is creatively called...
  `Hasher`! This concrete structure lives next to `RandomState` as an
  implemenation of the "default hashing algorithm" used for a `HashMap`. Under
  the hood this is currently implemented as `SipHasher`, but it draws an
  explicit interface for now and allows us to modify the implementation over
  time if necessary.

There are many breaking changes outlined above, and as a result this commit is
a:

[breaking-change]
2015-01-07 17:17:19 -08:00
Alex Crichton
b1c23f6d25 rollup merge of #20611: simnalamburt/master
This PR fixes the issue #20460, and it doesn't touch any existing behavior except the bug of the SIMD types.

Closes #20460.
2015-01-07 17:17:18 -08:00
Felix S. Klock II
cfeab2593b Allow unknown features to bootstrap rustc with box_syntax feature.
Specifically added to the test, librustc_trans, librustc_typeck crates.
2015-01-08 00:41:48 +01:00
Felix S. Klock II
4a31aaddb3 Added box_syntax feature gate; added to std and rustc crates for bootstrap.
To avoid using the feauture, change uses of `box <expr>` to
`Box::new(<expr>)` alternative, as noted by the feature gate message.

(Note that box patterns have no analogous trivial replacement, at
least not in general; you need to revise the code to do a partial
match, deref, and then the rest of the match.)

[breaking-change]
2015-01-08 00:41:43 +01:00
Brian Anderson
c27133e2ce Preliminary feature staging
This partially implements the feature staging described in the
[release channel RFC][rc]. It does not yet fully conform to the RFC as
written, but does accomplish its goals sufficiently for the 1.0 alpha
release.

It has three primary user-visible effects:

* On the nightly channel, use of unstable APIs generates a warning.
* On the beta channel, use of unstable APIs generates a warning.
* On the beta channel, use of feature gates generates a warning.

Code that does not trigger these warnings is considered 'stable',
modulo pre-1.0 bugs.

Disabling the warnings for unstable APIs continues to be done in the
existing (i.e. old) style, via `#[allow(...)]`, not that specified in
the RFC. I deem this marginally acceptable since any code that must do
this is not using the stable dialect of Rust.

Use of feature gates is itself gated with the new 'unstable_features'
lint, on nightly set to 'allow', and on beta 'warn'.

The attribute scheme used here corresponds to an older version of the
RFC, with the `#[staged_api]` crate attribute toggling the staging
behavior of the stability attributes, but the user impact is only
in-tree so I'm not concerned about having to make design changes later
(and I may ultimately prefer the scheme here after all, with the
`#[staged_api]` crate attribute).

Since the Rust codebase itself makes use of unstable features the
compiler and build system to a midly elaborate dance to allow it to
bootstrap while disobeying these lints (which would otherwise be
errors because Rust builds with `-D warnings`).

This patch includes one significant hack that causes a
regression. Because the `format_args!` macro emits calls to unstable
APIs it would trigger the lint.  I added a hack to the lint to make it
not trigger, but this in turn causes arguments to `println!` not to be
checked for feature gates. I don't presently understand macro
expansion well enough to fix. This is bug #20661.

Closes #16678

[rc]: https://github.com/rust-lang/rfcs/blob/master/text/0507-release-channels.md
2015-01-07 15:34:56 -08:00
Jorge Aparicio
517f1cc63c use slicing sugar 2015-01-07 17:35:56 -05:00
Alex Crichton
511f0b8a3d std: Stabilize the std::hash module
This commit aims to prepare the `std::hash` module for alpha by formalizing its
current interface whileholding off on adding `#[stable]` to the new APIs.  The
current usage with the `HashMap` and `HashSet` types is also reconciled by
separating out composable parts of the design. The primary goal of this slight
redesign is to separate the concepts of a hasher's state from a hashing
algorithm itself.

The primary change of this commit is to separate the `Hasher` trait into a
`Hasher` and a `HashState` trait. Conceptually the old `Hasher` trait was
actually just a factory for various states, but hashing had very little control
over how these states were used. Additionally the old `Hasher` trait was
actually fairly unrelated to hashing.

This commit redesigns the existing `Hasher` trait to match what the notion of a
`Hasher` normally implies with the following definition:

    trait Hasher {
        type Output;
        fn reset(&mut self);
        fn finish(&self) -> Output;
    }

This `Hasher` trait emphasizes that hashing algorithms may produce outputs other
than a `u64`, so the output type is made generic. Other than that, however, very
little is assumed about a particular hasher. It is left up to implementors to
provide specific methods or trait implementations to feed data into a hasher.

The corresponding `Hash` trait becomes:

    trait Hash<H: Hasher> {
        fn hash(&self, &mut H);
    }

The old default of `SipState` was removed from this trait as it's not something
that we're willing to stabilize until the end of time, but the type parameter is
always required to implement `Hasher`. Note that the type parameter `H` remains
on the trait to enable multidispatch for specialization of hashing for
particular hashers.

Note that `Writer` is not mentioned in either of `Hash` or `Hasher`, it is
simply used as part `derive` and the implementations for all primitive types.

With these definitions, the old `Hasher` trait is realized as a new `HashState`
trait in the `collections::hash_state` module as an unstable addition for
now. The current definition looks like:

    trait HashState {
        type Hasher: Hasher;
        fn hasher(&self) -> Hasher;
    }

The purpose of this trait is to emphasize that the one piece of functionality
for implementors is that new instances of `Hasher` can be created.  This
conceptually represents the two keys from which more instances of a
`SipHasher` can be created, and a `HashState` is what's stored in a
`HashMap`, not a `Hasher`.

Implementors of custom hash algorithms should implement the `Hasher` trait, and
only hash algorithms intended for use in hash maps need to implement or worry
about the `HashState` trait.

The entire module and `HashState` infrastructure remains `#[unstable]` due to it
being recently redesigned, but some other stability decision made for the
`std::hash` module are:

* The `Writer` trait remains `#[experimental]` as it's intended to be replaced
  with an `io::Writer` (more details soon).
* The top-level `hash` function is `#[unstable]` as it is intended to be generic
  over the hashing algorithm instead of hardwired to `SipHasher`
* The inner `sip` module is now private as its one export, `SipHasher` is
  reexported in the `hash` module.

And finally, a few changes were made to the default parameters on `HashMap`.

* The `RandomSipHasher` default type parameter was renamed to `RandomState`.
  This renaming emphasizes that it is not a hasher, but rather just state to
  generate hashers. It also moves away from the name "sip" as it may not always
  be implemented as `SipHasher`. This type lives in the
  `std::collections::hash_map` module as `#[unstable]`

* The associated `Hasher` type of `RandomState` is creatively called...
  `Hasher`! This concrete structure lives next to `RandomState` as an
  implemenation of the "default hashing algorithm" used for a `HashMap`. Under
  the hood this is currently implemented as `SipHasher`, but it draws an
  explicit interface for now and allows us to modify the implementation over
  time if necessary.

There are many breaking changes outlined above, and as a result this commit is
a:

[breaking-change]
2015-01-07 12:18:08 -08:00
Nick Cameron
dd3e89aaf2 Rename target_word_size to target_pointer_width
Closes #20421

[breaking-change]
2015-01-08 09:07:55 +13:00
Niko Matsakis
448ddad877 Better debug output in decl_rust_fn. The lack of output here has
caused me quite a bit of hair-pulling.
2015-01-07 14:07:58 -05:00
Niko Matsakis
cf136cd350 Use the erase_regions helper within trans in deference to
`ty_fold::erase_regions`; also erase regions whenever we normalize
associated types.
2015-01-07 14:07:58 -05:00
Niko Matsakis
bdc1bfd8f1 Rename common::normalize to common::erase_regions 2015-01-07 14:07:58 -05:00
Niko Matsakis
6300a97216 Remove assertion that substitutions are erased. It'd be nice if they
always were but it's dang annoying to weed out all the places that
fail to meet the assertion, and it doesn't really hurt things if we don't
always get it right.
2015-01-07 13:59:02 -05:00
Niko Matsakis
064cf553c7 Normalize associated types in various parts of adt 2015-01-07 13:58:27 -05:00
bors
c0216c8945 Merge pull request #20674 from jbcrail/fix-misspelled-comments
Fix misspelled comments.

Reviewed-by: steveklabnik
2015-01-07 15:35:30 +00:00
Alex Crichton
a64000820f More test fixes 2015-01-06 21:26:48 -08:00
Hyeon Kim
9041e6e0ee Let size_of always be multiple of min_align_of
This change fixes the issue #20460
2015-01-07 12:43:12 +09:00
Hyeon Kim
1bc3c960f4 Correct the comment of the function llsize_of_real
Consult the issue #20460
2015-01-07 12:43:12 +09:00
Joseph Crail
e3b7fedc20 Fix misspelled comments.
I cleaned up comments prior to the 1.0 alpha release.
2015-01-06 20:53:18 -05:00
Alex Crichton
26cd8eae48 rollup merge of #20563: cmr/macro-input-future-proofing 2015-01-06 15:49:15 -08:00
Alex Crichton
36f5d122b8 rollup merge of #20615: aturon/stab-2-thread
This commit takes a first pass at stabilizing `std::thread`:

* It removes the `detach` method in favor of two constructors -- `spawn`
  for detached threads, `scoped` for "scoped" (i.e., must-join)
  threads. This addresses some of the surprise/frustrating debug
  sessions with the previous API, in which `spawn` produced a guard that
  on destruction joined the thread (unless `detach` was called).

  The reason to have the division in part is that `Send` will soon not
  imply `'static`, which means that `scoped` thread creation can take a
  closure over *shared stack data* of the parent thread. On the other
  hand, this means that the parent must not pop the relevant stack
  frames while the child thread is running. The `JoinGuard` is used to
  prevent this from happening by joining on drop (if you have not
  already explicitly `join`ed.) The APIs around `scoped` are
  future-proofed for the `Send` changes by taking an additional lifetime
  parameter. With the current definition of `Send`, this is forced to be
  `'static`, but when `Send` changes these APIs will gain their full
  flexibility immediately.

  Threads that are `spawn`ed, on the other hand, are detached from the
  start and do not yield an RAII guard.

  The hope is that, by making `scoped` an explicit opt-in with a very
  suggestive name, it will be drastically less likely to be caught by a
  surprising deadlock due to an implicit join at the end of a scope.

* The module itself is marked stable.

* Existing methods other than `spawn` and `scoped` are marked stable.

The migration path is:

```rust
Thread::spawn(f).detached()
```

becomes

```rust
Thread::spawn(f)
```

while

```rust
let res = Thread::spawn(f);
res.join()
```

becomes

```rust
let res = Thread::scoped(f);
res.join()
```

[breaking-change]
2015-01-06 15:38:38 -08:00
Alex Crichton
0b3b957554 rollup merge of #20645: nikomatsakis/rustbook-ice
Conflicts:
	src/librustc/middle/mem_categorization.rs
	src/librustc/middle/ty.rs
	src/librustc_trans/trans/base.rs
	src/librustc_trans/trans/expr.rs
	src/librustc_trans/trans/foreign.rs
	src/librustc_typeck/check/mod.rs
2015-01-06 15:29:09 -08:00
Alex Crichton
e2f97f51ad Register new snapshots
Conflicts:
	src/librbml/lib.rs
	src/libserialize/json_stage0.rs
	src/libserialize/serialize_stage0.rs
	src/libsyntax/ast.rs
	src/libsyntax/ext/deriving/generic/mod.rs
	src/libsyntax/parse/token.rs
2015-01-06 15:24:24 -08:00
Alex Crichton
5c3ddcb15d rollup merge of #20481: seanmonstar/fmt-show-string
Conflicts:
	src/compiletest/runtest.rs
	src/libcore/fmt/mod.rs
	src/libfmt_macros/lib.rs
	src/libregex/parse.rs
	src/librustc/middle/cfg/construct.rs
	src/librustc/middle/dataflow.rs
	src/librustc/middle/infer/higher_ranked/mod.rs
	src/librustc/middle/ty.rs
	src/librustc_back/archive.rs
	src/librustc_borrowck/borrowck/fragments.rs
	src/librustc_borrowck/borrowck/gather_loans/mod.rs
	src/librustc_resolve/lib.rs
	src/librustc_trans/back/link.rs
	src/librustc_trans/save/mod.rs
	src/librustc_trans/trans/base.rs
	src/librustc_trans/trans/callee.rs
	src/librustc_trans/trans/common.rs
	src/librustc_trans/trans/consts.rs
	src/librustc_trans/trans/controlflow.rs
	src/librustc_trans/trans/debuginfo.rs
	src/librustc_trans/trans/expr.rs
	src/librustc_trans/trans/monomorphize.rs
	src/librustc_typeck/astconv.rs
	src/librustc_typeck/check/method/mod.rs
	src/librustc_typeck/check/mod.rs
	src/librustc_typeck/check/regionck.rs
	src/librustc_typeck/collect.rs
	src/libsyntax/ext/format.rs
	src/libsyntax/ext/source_util.rs
	src/libsyntax/ext/tt/transcribe.rs
	src/libsyntax/parse/mod.rs
	src/libsyntax/parse/token.rs
	src/test/run-pass/issue-8898.rs
2015-01-06 15:22:24 -08:00
Alex Crichton
5f27b50080 rollup merge of #20609: cmr/mem 2015-01-06 15:07:48 -08:00
Nick Cameron
0c7f7a5fb8 fallout 2015-01-07 12:02:52 +13:00
Aaron Turon
caca9b2e71 Fallout from stabilization 2015-01-06 14:57:52 -08:00
Sean McArthur
44440e5c18 core: split into fmt::Show and fmt::String
fmt::Show is for debugging, and can and should be implemented for
all public types. This trait is used with `{:?}` syntax. There still
exists #[derive(Show)].

fmt::String is for types that faithfully be represented as a String.
Because of this, there is no way to derive fmt::String, all
implementations must be purposeful. It is used by the default format
syntax, `{}`.

This will break most instances of `{}`, since that now requires the type
to impl fmt::String. In most cases, replacing `{}` with `{:?}` is the
correct fix. Types that were being printed specifically for users should
receive a fmt::String implementation to fix this.

Part of #20013

[breaking-change]
2015-01-06 14:49:42 -08:00
Nick Cameron
e970db37a9 Remove old slicing hacks and make new slicing work 2015-01-07 10:49:00 +13:00
Nick Cameron
f7ff37e4c5 Replace full slice notation with index calls 2015-01-07 10:46:33 +13:00
Corey Richardson
abcbe27695 syntax/rustc: implement isize/usize 2015-01-06 15:15:07 -05:00
Niko Matsakis
2486d93e5b Fix ICE that @steveklabnik encountered in rust-ice. The problems turned out to be that were being very loose with bound regions in trans (we were basically just ignoring and flattening binders). Since binders are significant to subtyping and hence to trait selection, this can cause a lot of problems. So this patch makes us treat them more strictly -- for example, we propagate binders, and avoid skipping past the Binder by writing foo.0.
Fixes #20644.
2015-01-06 13:42:42 -05:00
Corey Richardson
e0b4287df6 Fix fallout 2015-01-06 12:04:41 -05:00
Alex Crichton
4b359e3aee More test fixes! 2015-01-05 22:58:37 -08:00
Alex Crichton
7975fd9cee rollup merge of #20482: kmcallister/macro-reform
Conflicts:
	src/libflate/lib.rs
	src/libstd/lib.rs
	src/libstd/macros.rs
	src/libsyntax/feature_gate.rs
	src/libsyntax/parse/parser.rs
	src/libsyntax/show_span.rs
	src/test/auxiliary/macro_crate_test.rs
	src/test/compile-fail/lint-stability.rs
	src/test/run-pass/intrinsics-math.rs
	src/test/run-pass/tcp-connect-timeouts.rs
2015-01-05 19:01:17 -08:00
Alex Crichton
afbce050ca rollup merge of #20556: japaric/no-for-sized
Conflicts:
	src/libcollections/slice.rs
	src/libcollections/str.rs
	src/libcore/borrow.rs
	src/libcore/cmp.rs
	src/libcore/ops.rs
	src/libstd/c_str.rs
	src/test/compile-fail/issue-19009.rs
2015-01-05 18:47:45 -08:00
Alex Crichton
bb5e16b4b8 rollup merge of #20554: huonw/mut-pattern
Conflicts:
	src/librustc_typeck/check/_match.rs
2015-01-05 18:38:51 -08:00
Alex Crichton
25d5a3a194 rollup merge of #20507: alexcrichton/issue-20444
This commit is an implementation of [RFC 494][rfc] which removes the entire
`std::c_vec` module and redesigns the `std::c_str` module as `std::ffi`.

[rfc]: https://github.com/rust-lang/rfcs/blob/master/text/0494-c_str-and-c_vec-stability.md

The interface of the new `CString` is outlined in the linked RFC, the primary
changes being:

* The `ToCStr` trait is gone, meaning the `with_c_str` and `to_c_str` methods
  are now gone. These two methods are replaced with a `CString::from_slice`
  method.
* The `CString` type is now just a wrapper around `Vec<u8>` with a static
  guarantee that there is a trailing nul byte with no internal nul bytes. This
  means that `CString` now implements `Deref<Target = [c_char]>`, which is where
  it gains most of its methods from. A few helper methods are added to acquire a
  slice of `u8` instead of `c_char`, as well as including a slice with the
  trailing nul byte if necessary.
* All usage of non-owned `CString` values is now done via two functions inside
  of `std::ffi`, called `c_str_to_bytes` and `c_str_to_bytes_with_nul`. These
  functions are now the one method used to convert a `*const c_char` to a Rust
  slice of `u8`.

Many more details, including newly deprecated methods, can be found linked in
the RFC. This is a:

[breaking-change]
Closes #20444
2015-01-05 18:37:22 -08:00
Keegan McAllister
416137eb31 Modernize macro_rules! invocations
macro_rules! is like an item that defines a macro.  Other items don't have a
trailing semicolon, or use a paren-delimited body.

If there's an argument for matching the invocation syntax, e.g. parentheses for
an expr macro, then I think that applies more strongly to the *inner*
delimiters on the LHS, wrapping the individual argument patterns.
2015-01-05 18:21:14 -08:00
Keegan McAllister
60be2f52d2 Replace #[phase] with #[plugin] / #[macro_use] / #[no_link] 2015-01-05 18:21:13 -08:00
Niko Matsakis
c98814b124 Correctly "detuple" arguments when creating trait object shims for a trait method with rust-call ABI. 2015-01-05 17:22:18 -05:00
Niko Matsakis
f97b124a44 Fix ICE caused by forgotten bcx 2015-01-05 17:22:18 -05:00
Jorge Aparicio
643826150b trans: remove dead code 2015-01-05 17:22:16 -05:00
Jorge Aparicio
865aabb662 trans: remove Closure 2015-01-05 17:22:15 -05:00
Jorge Aparicio
8a6d7a68b1 remove mk_closure 2015-01-05 17:22:15 -05:00
Jorge Aparicio
4e9c50e081 remove AdjustAddEnv 2015-01-05 17:22:15 -05:00
Jorge Aparicio
5f7f2c9a05 remove ty_closure 2015-01-05 17:22:15 -05:00
Jorge Aparicio
bf52e262e2 trans: remove remaining boxed closures 2015-01-05 17:22:14 -05:00
Jorge Aparicio
0cb34a3609 EncodeInlinedItem: convert to "unboxed" closures 2015-01-05 17:22:13 -05:00
Jorge Aparicio
bd9eef7ac6 DecodeInlinedItem: convert to "unboxed" closures 2015-01-05 17:22:13 -05:00
Keegan McAllister
5bf385be6a Rename macro_escape to macro_use
In the future we want to support

    #[macro_use(foo, bar)]
    mod macros;

but it's not an essential part of macro reform.  Reserve the syntax for now.
2015-01-05 12:00:57 -08:00
Keegan McAllister
fc58479323 Stop using macro_escape as an inner attribute
In preparation for the rename.
2015-01-05 12:00:57 -08:00
Jorge Aparicio
774588fd9d sed -i -s 's/ for Sized?//g' **/*.rs 2015-01-05 14:56:49 -05:00
Alex Crichton
ec7a50d20d std: Redesign c_str and c_vec
This commit is an implementation of [RFC 494][rfc] which removes the entire
`std::c_vec` module and redesigns the `std::c_str` module as `std::ffi`.

[rfc]: https://github.com/rust-lang/rfcs/blob/master/text/0494-c_str-and-c_vec-stability.md

The interface of the new `CString` is outlined in the linked RFC, the primary
changes being:

* The `ToCStr` trait is gone, meaning the `with_c_str` and `to_c_str` methods
  are now gone. These two methods are replaced with a `CString::from_slice`
  method.
* The `CString` type is now just a wrapper around `Vec<u8>` with a static
  guarantee that there is a trailing nul byte with no internal nul bytes. This
  means that `CString` now implements `Deref<Target = [c_char]>`, which is where
  it gains most of its methods from. A few helper methods are added to acquire a
  slice of `u8` instead of `c_char`, as well as including a slice with the
  trailing nul byte if necessary.
* All usage of non-owned `CString` values is now done via two functions inside
  of `std::ffi`, called `c_str_to_bytes` and `c_str_to_bytes_with_nul`. These
  functions are now the one method used to convert a `*const c_char` to a Rust
  slice of `u8`.

Many more details, including newly deprecated methods, can be found linked in
the RFC. This is a:

[breaking-change]
Closes #20444
2015-01-05 08:00:13 -08:00
Huon Wilson
bf6c007760 Change & pat to only work with &T, and &mut with &mut T.
This implements RFC 179 by making the pattern `&<pat>` require matching
against a variable of type `&T`, and introducing the pattern `&mut
<pat>` which only works with variables of type `&mut T`.

The pattern `&mut x` currently parses as `&(mut x)` i.e. a pattern match
through a `&T` or a `&mut T` that binds the variable `x` to have type
`T` and to be mutable. This should be rewritten as follows, for example,

    for &mut x in slice.iter() {

becomes

    for &x in slice.iter() {
        let mut x = x;

Due to this, this is a

[breaking-change]

Closes #20496.
2015-01-05 16:14:17 +11:00
bors
ed22606c83 auto merge of #20285 : FlaPer87/rust/oibit-send-and-friends, r=nikomatsakis
This commit introduces the syntax for negative implementations of traits
as shown below:

`impl !Trait for Type {}`

cc #13231
Part of RFC rust-lang/rfcs#127

r? @nikomatsakis
2015-01-05 04:20:46 +00:00
Flavio Percoco
8b883ab268 Add syntax for negative implementations of traits
This commit introduces the syntax for negative implmenetations of traits
as shown below:

`impl !Trait for Type {}`

cc #13231
Part of RFC #3
2015-01-04 23:16:13 +01:00
bors
e9818564bd Merge pull request #20295 from eddyb/poly-const
Allow paths in constants to refer to polymorphic items.

Reviewed-by: nikomatsakis
2015-01-04 21:36:33 +00:00
Eduard Burtescu
9a90d436f6 rustc: allow paths in constants to refer to polymorphic items. 2015-01-04 18:47:58 +02:00
bors
260e46115b auto merge of #20443 : nikomatsakis/rust/autoderef-overloaded-calls, r=pcwalton
Use autoderef for call notation. This is consistent in that we now autoderef all postfix operators (`.`, `[]`, and `()`). It also means you can call closures without writing `(*f)()`. Note that this is rebased atop the rollup, so only the final commit is relevant.

r? @pcwalton
2015-01-04 16:36:41 +00:00
Jorge Aparicio
351409a622 sed -i -s 's/#\[deriving(/#\[derive(/g' **/*.rs 2015-01-03 22:54:18 -05:00
Jorge Aparicio
56dcbd17fd sed -i -s 's/\bmod,/self,/g' **/*.rs 2015-01-03 22:42:21 -05:00
bors
c6c786671d auto merge of #20490 : japaric/rust/assoc-types, r=aturon
closes #20486 
closes #20474 
closes #20441

[breaking-change]

The `Index[Mut]` traits now have one less input parameter, as the return type of the indexing operation is an associated type. This breaks all existing implementations.

---

binop traits (`Add`, `Sub`, etc) now have an associated type for their return type. Also, the RHS input parameter now defaults to `Self` (except for the `Shl` and `Shr` traits). For example, the `Add` trait now looks like this:

``` rust
trait Add<Rhs=Self> {
    type Output;

    fn add(self, Rhs) -> Self::Output;
}
```

The `Neg` and `Not` traits now also have an associated type for their return type.

This breaks all existing implementations of these traits.

---
Affected traits:

- `Iterator { type Item }`
- `IteratorExt` no input/output types, uses `<Self as Iterator>::Item` in its methods
- `DoubleEndedIterator` no input/output types, uses `<Self as Iterator>::Item` in its methods
- `DoubleEndedIteratorExt` no input/output types, uses `<Self as Iterator>::Item` in its methods
- `RandomAccessIterator` no input/output types
- `ExactSizeIterator` no input/output types, uses `<Self as Iterator>::Item` in its methods

This breaks all the implementations of these traits.
2015-01-04 00:50:59 +00:00
bors
496dc4eae7 auto merge of #19790 : akiss77/rust/aarch64-configure, r=alexcrichton
Preparing AArch64 support, starting work at the build system.
2015-01-03 20:20:48 +00:00
Akos Kiss
6e5fb8bd1b Initial version of AArch64 support.
Adds AArch64 knowledge to:
* configure,
* make files,
* sources,
* tests, and
* documentation.
2015-01-03 15:16:10 +00:00
Jorge Aparicio
964ff83cbc rustc_trans: fix fallout 2015-01-03 09:34:05 -05:00
Niko Matsakis
7474be0660 Make ty::ParameterEnvironment, not ty::ctxt, implement Typer and
`UnboxedClosureTyper`. This requires adding a `tcx` field to
`ParameterEnvironment` but generally simplifies everything since we
only need to pass along an `UnboxedClosureTyper` or `Typer`.
2015-01-03 07:01:21 -05:00
Niko Matsakis
83ef3042de Modify type_known_to_meet_builtin_bound so that it doesn't suppress overflow,
which should always result in an error.

NB. Some of the hunks in this commit rely on a later commit which adds
`tcx` into `param_env` and modifies `ParameterEnvironment` to
implement `Typer`.
2015-01-03 07:01:21 -05:00
Niko Matsakis
dc97247d11 Make call notation use autoderef. Fixes #18742. 2015-01-02 20:59:11 -05:00
bors
a6b109723a auto merge of #19835 : pythonesque/rust/add-unordered-intrinsic, r=thestinger
This corresponds to the JMM memory model's non-volatile reads and writes to shared variables.  It provides fairly weak guarantees, but prevents UB (specifically, you will never see a value that was not written _at some point_ to the provided location).  It is not part of the C++ memory model and is only legal to provide to LLVM for loads and stores (not fences, atomicrmw, etc.).

Valid uses of this ordering are things like racy counters where you don't care about the operation actually being atomic, just want to avoid UB.  It cannot be used for synchronization without additional memory barriers since unordered loads and stores may be reordered freely by the optimizer (this is the main way it differs from relaxed).

Because it is new to Rust and it provides so few guarantees, for now only the intrinsic is provided--this patch doesn't add it to any of the higher-level atomic wrappers.
2015-01-03 01:10:40 +00:00
Alex Crichton
4459b1dced rollup merge of #20341: nikomatsakis/impl-trait-for-trait-2
Conflicts:
	src/librustc/middle/traits/mod.rs
	src/libstd/io/mod.rs
	src/test/run-pass/builtin-superkinds-self-type.rs
2015-01-02 11:13:05 -08:00
Alex Crichton
e921e3f045 Rollup test fixes and rebase conflicts 2015-01-02 10:50:13 -08:00
Alex Crichton
6f567e0c29 rollup merge of #20425: sanxiyn/opt-local-ty
This avoids having ast::Ty nodes which have no counterpart in the source.
2015-01-02 09:23:47 -08:00
Alex Crichton
735c308aed rollup merge of #20416: nikomatsakis/coherence
Conflicts:
	src/test/run-pass/issue-15734.rs
	src/test/run-pass/issue-3743.rs
2015-01-02 09:23:42 -08:00
Alex Crichton
4dab96758a rollup merge of #20407: michaelwoerister/unreachable-locals
Fixes #20312
2015-01-02 09:22:50 -08:00
Alex Crichton
009ec5d2b0 rollup merge of #20315: alexcrichton/std-sync
Conflicts:
	src/libstd/rt/exclusive.rs
	src/libstd/sync/barrier.rs
	src/libstd/sys/unix/pipe.rs
	src/test/bench/shootout-binarytrees.rs
	src/test/bench/shootout-fannkuch-redux.rs
2015-01-02 09:19:00 -08:00
Alex Crichton
8b7d032014 rollup merge of #20273: alexcrichton/second-pass-comm
Conflicts:
	src/doc/guide.md
	src/libcollections/bit.rs
	src/libcollections/btree/node.rs
	src/libcollections/slice.rs
	src/libcore/ops.rs
	src/libcore/prelude.rs
	src/librand/rand_impls.rs
	src/librustc/middle/check_match.rs
	src/librustc/middle/infer/region_inference/mod.rs
	src/librustc_driver/lib.rs
	src/librustdoc/test.rs
	src/libstd/bitflags.rs
	src/libstd/io/comm_adapters.rs
	src/libstd/io/mem.rs
	src/libstd/io/mod.rs
	src/libstd/io/net/pipe.rs
	src/libstd/io/net/tcp.rs
	src/libstd/io/net/udp.rs
	src/libstd/io/pipe.rs
	src/libstd/io/process.rs
	src/libstd/io/stdio.rs
	src/libstd/io/timer.rs
	src/libstd/io/util.rs
	src/libstd/macros.rs
	src/libstd/os.rs
	src/libstd/path/posix.rs
	src/libstd/path/windows.rs
	src/libstd/prelude/v1.rs
	src/libstd/rand/mod.rs
	src/libstd/rand/os.rs
	src/libstd/sync/barrier.rs
	src/libstd/sync/condvar.rs
	src/libstd/sync/future.rs
	src/libstd/sync/mpsc/mod.rs
	src/libstd/sync/mpsc/mpsc_queue.rs
	src/libstd/sync/mpsc/select.rs
	src/libstd/sync/mpsc/spsc_queue.rs
	src/libstd/sync/mutex.rs
	src/libstd/sync/once.rs
	src/libstd/sync/rwlock.rs
	src/libstd/sync/semaphore.rs
	src/libstd/sync/task_pool.rs
	src/libstd/sys/common/helper_thread.rs
	src/libstd/sys/unix/process.rs
	src/libstd/sys/unix/timer.rs
	src/libstd/sys/windows/c.rs
	src/libstd/sys/windows/timer.rs
	src/libstd/sys/windows/tty.rs
	src/libstd/thread.rs
	src/libstd/thread_local/mod.rs
	src/libstd/thread_local/scoped.rs
	src/libtest/lib.rs
	src/test/auxiliary/cci_capture_clause.rs
	src/test/bench/shootout-reverse-complement.rs
	src/test/bench/shootout-spectralnorm.rs
	src/test/compile-fail/array-old-syntax-2.rs
	src/test/compile-fail/bind-by-move-no-guards.rs
	src/test/compile-fail/builtin-superkinds-self-type.rs
	src/test/compile-fail/comm-not-freeze-receiver.rs
	src/test/compile-fail/comm-not-freeze.rs
	src/test/compile-fail/issue-12041.rs
	src/test/compile-fail/unsendable-class.rs
	src/test/run-pass/builtin-superkinds-capabilities-transitive.rs
	src/test/run-pass/builtin-superkinds-capabilities-xc.rs
	src/test/run-pass/builtin-superkinds-capabilities.rs
	src/test/run-pass/builtin-superkinds-self-type.rs
	src/test/run-pass/capturing-logging.rs
	src/test/run-pass/closure-bounds-can-capture-chan.rs
	src/test/run-pass/comm.rs
	src/test/run-pass/core-run-destroy.rs
	src/test/run-pass/drop-trait-enum.rs
	src/test/run-pass/hashmap-memory.rs
	src/test/run-pass/issue-13494.rs
	src/test/run-pass/issue-3609.rs
	src/test/run-pass/issue-4446.rs
	src/test/run-pass/issue-4448.rs
	src/test/run-pass/issue-8827.rs
	src/test/run-pass/issue-9396.rs
	src/test/run-pass/ivec-tag.rs
	src/test/run-pass/rust-log-filter.rs
	src/test/run-pass/send-resource.rs
	src/test/run-pass/send-type-inference.rs
	src/test/run-pass/sendable-class.rs
	src/test/run-pass/spawn-types.rs
	src/test/run-pass/task-comm-0.rs
	src/test/run-pass/task-comm-10.rs
	src/test/run-pass/task-comm-11.rs
	src/test/run-pass/task-comm-13.rs
	src/test/run-pass/task-comm-14.rs
	src/test/run-pass/task-comm-15.rs
	src/test/run-pass/task-comm-16.rs
	src/test/run-pass/task-comm-3.rs
	src/test/run-pass/task-comm-4.rs
	src/test/run-pass/task-comm-5.rs
	src/test/run-pass/task-comm-6.rs
	src/test/run-pass/task-comm-7.rs
	src/test/run-pass/task-comm-9.rs
	src/test/run-pass/task-comm-chan-nil.rs
	src/test/run-pass/task-spawn-move-and-copy.rs
	src/test/run-pass/task-stderr.rs
	src/test/run-pass/tcp-accept-stress.rs
	src/test/run-pass/tcp-connect-timeouts.rs
	src/test/run-pass/tempfile.rs
	src/test/run-pass/trait-bounds-in-arc.rs
	src/test/run-pass/trivial-message.rs
	src/test/run-pass/unique-send-2.rs
	src/test/run-pass/unique-send.rs
	src/test/run-pass/unwind-resource.rs
2015-01-02 09:15:54 -08:00
Niko Matsakis
dabd7507b6 Ensure that, for every trait Foo, the predicate Foo : Foo holds. 2015-01-02 12:09:38 -05:00
Alex Crichton
56290a0044 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
2015-01-02 08:54:06 -08:00
Seo Sanghyeon
f2a06f760b Make type in ast::Local optional 2015-01-02 20:55:31 +09:00
Niko Matsakis
c61a0092bc Fix orphan checking (cc #19470). (This is not a complete fix of #19470 because of the backwards compatibility feature gate.)
This is a [breaking-change]. The new rules require that, for an impl of a trait defined
in some other crate, two conditions must hold:

1. Some type must be local.
2. Every type parameter must appear "under" some local type.

Here are some examples that are legal:

```rust
struct MyStruct<T> { ... }

// Here `T` appears "under' `MyStruct`.
impl<T> Clone for MyStruct<T> { }

// Here `T` appears "under' `MyStruct` as well. Note that it also appears
// elsewhere.
impl<T> Iterator<T> for MyStruct<T> { }
```

Here is an illegal example:

```rust
// Here `U` does not appear "under" `MyStruct` or any other local type.
// We call `U` "uncovered".
impl<T,U> Iterator<U> for MyStruct<T> { }
```

There are a couple of ways to rewrite this last example so that it is
legal:

1. In some cases, the uncovered type parameter (here, `U`) should be converted
   into an associated type. This is however a non-local change that requires access
   to the original trait. Also, associated types are not fully baked.
2. Add `U` as a type parameter of `MyStruct`:
   ```rust
   struct MyStruct<T,U> { ... }
   impl<T,U> Iterator<U> for MyStruct<T,U> { }
   ```
3. Create a newtype wrapper for `U`
   ```rust
   impl<T,U> Iterator<Wrapper<U>> for MyStruct<T,U> { }
   ```

Because associated types are not fully baked, which in the case of the
`Hash` trait makes adhering to this rule impossible, you can
temporarily disable this rule in your crate by using
`#![feature(old_orphan_check)]`. Note that the `old_orphan_check`
feature will be removed before 1.0 is released.
2015-01-02 04:06:09 -05:00
bors
1f887c8c57 auto merge of #20412 : nikomatsakis/rust/assoc-types, r=aturon
These changes fix various problems encountered getting japaric's `at-iter` branch to work. This branch converts the `Iterator` trait to use an associated type.
2015-01-02 08:11:19 +00:00
Alex Crichton
f3a7ec7028 std: Second pass stabilization of sync
This pass performs a second pass of stabilization through the `std::sync`
module, avoiding modules/types that are being handled in other PRs (e.g.
mutexes, rwlocks, condvars, and channels).

The following items are now stable

* `sync::atomic`
* `sync::atomic::ATOMIC_BOOL_INIT` (was `INIT_ATOMIC_BOOL`)
* `sync::atomic::ATOMIC_INT_INIT` (was `INIT_ATOMIC_INT`)
* `sync::atomic::ATOMIC_UINT_INIT` (was `INIT_ATOMIC_UINT`)
* `sync::Once`
* `sync::ONCE_INIT`
* `sync::Once::call_once` (was `doit`)
  * C == `pthread_once(..)`
  * Boost == `call_once(..)`
  * Windows == `InitOnceExecuteOnce`
* `sync::Barrier`
* `sync::Barrier::new`
* `sync::Barrier::wait` (now returns a `bool`)
* `sync::Semaphore::new`
* `sync::Semaphore::acquire`
* `sync::Semaphore::release`

The following items remain unstable

* `sync::SemaphoreGuard`
* `sync::Semaphore::access` - it's unclear how this relates to the poisoning
                              story of mutexes.
* `sync::TaskPool` - the semantics of a failing task and whether a thread is
                     re-attached to a thread pool are somewhat unclear, and the
                     utility of this type in `sync` is question with respect to
                     the jobs of other primitives. This type will likely become
                     stable or move out of the standard library over time.
* `sync::Future` - futures as-is have yet to be deeply re-evaluated with the
                   recent core changes to Rust's synchronization story, and will
                   likely become stable in the future but are unstable until
                   that time comes.

[breaking-change]
2015-01-01 22:02:59 -08:00
Niko Matsakis
1e3214ba33 Normalize the associated types in closure and closure upvar types. 2015-01-01 18:48:26 -05:00
Niko Matsakis
78f848cde5 Refactor the Typer interface to separate out UnboxedClosureTyper methods, which are
the only things that trait selection needs.
2015-01-01 18:48:26 -05:00
Nick Cameron
2c92ddeda7 More fallout 2015-01-02 10:28:19 +13:00
Michael Woerister
7a11b9aac4 debuginfo: Fix an ICE related to local variables in unreachable code. 2015-01-01 18:43:48 +01:00
bors
47b8479e73 auto merge of #20363 : japaric/rust/moar-uc, r=nmatsakis
The the last argument of the `ItemDecorator::expand` method has changed to `Box<FnMut>`. Syntax extensions will break.

[breaking-change]

---

This PR removes pretty much all the remaining uses of boxed closures from the libraries. There are still boxed closures under the `test` directory, but I think those should be removed or replaced with unboxed closures at the same time we remove boxed closures from the language.

In a few places I had to do some contortions (see the first commit for an example) to work around issue #19596. I have marked those workarounds with FIXMEs. In the future when `&mut F where F: FnMut` implements the `FnMut` trait, we should be able to remove those workarounds. I've take care to avoid placing the workaround functions in the public API.

Since `let f = || {}` always gets type checked as a boxed closure, I have explictly annotated those closures (with e.g. `|&:| {}`) to force the compiler to type check them as unboxed closures.

Instead of removing the type aliases (like `GetCrateDataCb`), I could have replaced them with newtypes. But this seemed like overcomplicating things for little to no gain.

I think we should be able to remove the boxed closures from the languge after this PR lands. (I'm being optimistic here)

r? @alexcrichton or @aturon 
cc @nikomatsakis
2015-01-01 04:01:02 +00:00
Jorge Aparicio
10bbf69488 rustc_trans: replace EnterPatterns alias with an unboxed closure 2014-12-31 22:50:27 -05:00
Jorge Aparicio
e47035b9a5 rustc_trans: unbox closures used in let bindings 2014-12-31 22:50:27 -05:00
Jorge Aparicio
24b49228f0 rustc_trans: unbox closures used in function arguments 2014-12-31 22:50:26 -05:00
bors
7d4f4876d6 auto merge of #20374 : nikomatsakis/rust/assoc-types, r=nikomatsakis
These mostly derive from problems that @japaric encountered.

r? @pcwalton
2015-01-01 01:20:56 +00:00
Niko Matsakis
0a2d531b94 Teach trans to drain fulfillment context. japaric encountered problems
due to this but we were not able to isolate a smaller test case.
2014-12-31 14:42:06 -05:00
Niko Matsakis
6cb425d964 Rework normalization so that it works recursively, since the types extracted from an impl are potentially in need of normalization. This also lays groundwork for further cleanup in other areas by disconnecting normalization from the fulfillment context. 2014-12-31 12:50:30 -05:00
Alex Crichton
67d13883f8 rollup merge of #20061: aturon/stab-2-vec-slice
Conflicts:
	src/libcollections/slice.rs
	src/libcollections/vec.rs
	src/libstd/sys/windows/os.rs
2014-12-30 18:51:51 -08:00
Aaron Turon
6abfac083f Fallout from stabilization 2014-12-30 17:06:08 -08:00
Alex Crichton
520cdcb79a rollup merge of #20217: luqmana/pc 2014-12-30 16:25:58 -08:00
Alex Crichton
fe64ff1104 rollup merge of #19954: michaelwoerister/rust-gdb
This pull request adds the `rust-gdb` shell script which starts GDB with Rust pretty printers enabled. The PR also makes `rustc` add a special `.debug_gdb_scripts` ELF section on Linux which tells GDB that the produced binary should use the Rust pretty printers.

Note that at the moment this script will only work and be installed on Linux. On Mac OS X there's `rust-lldb` which works much better there. On Windows I had too many problems making this stable. I'll give it another try soonish.

You can use this script just like you would use GDB from the command line. It will use the pretty printers from the Rust "installation" found first in PATH. E.g. if you have `~/rust/x86_64-linux-gnu/stage1/bin` in your path, it will use the pretty printer scripts in `~/rust/x86_64-linux-gnu/stage1/lib/rustlib/etc`.
2014-12-30 16:25:44 -08:00
bors
84f5ad8679 auto merge of #20307 : nikomatsakis/rust/assoc-types-normalization-extend-bound, r=nrc
Rewrite associated types to use projection rather than dummy type parameters. This closes almost every (major) open issue, but I'm holding off on that until the code has landed and baked a bit. Probably it should have more tests, as well, but I wanted to get this landed as fast as possible so that we can collaborate on improving it.

The commit history is a little messy, particularly the merge commit at the end. If I get some time, I might just "reset" to the beginning and try to carve up the final state into logical pieces. Let me know if it seems hard to follow. By far the most crucial commit is "Implement associated type projection and normalization."

r? @nick29581
2014-12-30 17:51:21 +00:00
Michael Woerister
91a0e18866 debuginfo: Add a rust-gdb shell script that will start GDB with Rust pretty printers enabled. 2014-12-30 17:26:13 +01:00
Niko Matsakis
de8e0ae22c Remove the AssocSpace 2014-12-30 09:36:23 -05:00
Niko Matsakis
7ed0e23209 Resolve merge conflicts. This changes should really be integrated back to their respective
commits but oh dear what a pain.
2014-12-30 09:36:23 -05:00
Niko Matsakis
00cf176a5e Add FIXMEs relating to caching of projection results 2014-12-30 09:36:22 -05:00
Niko Matsakis
b7c6e317b0 Make projected types select out of the trait bounds. 2014-12-30 09:36:22 -05:00
Niko Matsakis
4404592f36 Implement associated type projection and normalization. 2014-12-30 09:36:21 -05:00
Niko Matsakis
f95bb55a1c Move the scalar types out of static data so that we can put Rc into sty. 2014-12-30 09:34:38 -05:00
Niko Matsakis
771dd54ea6 Rename Polytype to TypeScheme to differentiate type schemes (early bound) from higher-ranked things (late-bound), which also use the Poly prefix. 2014-12-30 09:32:42 -05:00
Niko Matsakis
c5edd22646 Rewrite the intrinsicck to take the parameter environment into account. Also fixes #20116. 2014-12-30 09:32:42 -05:00
Niko Matsakis
4946e1a463 Move the TypeContents-based "Sized" queries into trans, where the full
types are always known and hence the ParameterEnvironment is not
necessary. For other `Sized` queries, use the trait infrastructure
just like `Copy`.
2014-12-30 09:32:42 -05:00
Niko Matsakis
0b64e5796b Make ExprUseVisitor<..> use inherited parameter environments. 2014-12-30 09:32:42 -05:00
Niko Matsakis
c08d004545 Refactor various queries out of ty and into trans/common 2014-12-30 09:32:42 -05:00
bors
023dfb0c89 auto merge of #19941 : alexcrichton/rust/issue-19767, r=brson
This commit adds support for the compiler to distinguish between different forms
of lookup paths in the compiler itself. Issue #19767 has some background on this
topic, as well as some sample bugs which can occur if these lookup paths are not
separated.

This commits extends the existing command line flag `-L` with the same trailing
syntax as the `-l` flag. Each argument to `-L` can now have a trailing `:all`,
`:native`, `:crate`, or `:dependency`. This suffix indicates what form of lookup
path the compiler should add the argument to. The `dependency` lookup path is
used when looking up crate dependencies, the `crate` lookup path is used when
looking for immediate dependencies (`extern crate` statements), and the `native`
lookup path is used for probing for native libraries to insert into rlibs. Paths
with `all` are used for all of these purposes (the default).

The default compiler lookup path (the rustlib libdir) is by default added to all
of these paths. Additionally, the `RUST_PATH` lookup path is added to all of
these paths.

Closes #19767
2014-12-30 11:11:07 +00:00
Luqman Aden
82ebd2bc20 librustc_trans: Remove some dead code now that procs are gone. 2014-12-30 01:45:22 -05:00
Alex Crichton
806cb35f4d rollup merge of #20289: nick29581/shadowing
r? eddyb
2014-12-29 16:36:49 -08:00
Alex Crichton
066be2a72d rollup merge of #20266: nick29581/dxr-use
r? @huonw
2014-12-29 16:36:32 -08:00
Alex Crichton
2a8547783f rollup merge of #20194: nick29581/dst-syntax
Part of #19607.

r? @nikomatsakis
2014-12-29 16:35:59 -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
Alex Crichton
cc20d6009e rollup merge of #19661: alexcrichton/mutex-result
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 16:35:50 -08:00
Alex Crichton
94d82c1f55 rollup merge of #19457: reem/remove-is-lang-item
Removes a FIXME on closed issue #15064. This flag is no
longer needed or used since reflection is gone.
2014-12-29 16:35:49 -08:00
Nick Cameron
113f8aa86b Rebasing and reviewer changes 2014-12-30 13:06:25 +13:00
Nick Cameron
4e2afb0052 Remove ExprSlice by hacking the compiler
[breaking-change]

The `mut` in slices is now redundant. Mutability is 'inferred' from position. This means that if mutability is only obvious from the type, you will need to use explicit calls to the slicing methods.
2014-12-30 13:06:25 +13:00
Nick Cameron
ed8f503911 Add hypothetical support for ranges with only an upper bound
Note that this doesn't add the surface syntax.
2014-12-30 13:06:24 +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
Huon Wilson
91db254c81 More rebase fixes. 2014-12-30 00:11:30 +11:00
Huon Wilson
d442f77561 Rebase fixes.
I've totally mangled the history with these rebases; sorry, future programmer!
2014-12-29 23:55:25 +11:00
Huon Wilson
4f7e5ed660 Add the -Z print-enum-sizes flag for displaying enum info.
This replaces required the RUST_LOG=... invocation to make it much more
user friendly.
2014-12-29 23:55:25 +11:00
Huon Wilson
975a57ce43 Fix rebase artifacts. 2014-12-29 23:55:25 +11:00
Huon Wilson
85970d49df Intern Region in tcx.
This makes sty only 32 bytes on machines with 64-bit pointers.
2014-12-29 23:55:25 +11:00
Huon Wilson
ce3c949115 Intern BareFnTys to make sty slightly smaller.
This cuts the ty_bare_fn variant to 48 bytes rather than 56. There
doesn't seem to be a noticable memory usage decrease from this.
2014-12-29 23:55:24 +11:00
Huon Wilson
4f2b0f032a Store Substs in an arena in the tcx.
This current inflates memory use more than 3 times.
2014-12-29 23:55:24 +11:00
Huon Wilson
7cd6bf67a2 Implement debug printing for tcx interner sty's. 2014-12-29 23:55:24 +11:00
Nick Cameron
9c1567e622 Fallout from glob shadowing 2014-12-29 18:20:38 +13:00
Luqman Aden
27617a10f6 librustc_trans: Get rid of unnecessary allocation in finding discriminant field. 2014-12-28 19:40:48 -05:00
Luqman Aden
46e7376489 librustc: Add NonZero lang item and use it if possible for nullable pointer enum opt. 2014-12-28 19:40:47 -05:00
Luqman Aden
5fb1e6b1e2 librustc: Try looking in fixed sized arrays for nullable enum opt. 2014-12-28 19:40:47 -05:00
Luqman Aden
e6b6234e66 librustc: Try looking in tuple fields for nullable enum opt. 2014-12-28 19:40:47 -05:00
Luqman Aden
e954fc4385 librustc: Traverse arbitrarily deep for nullable enum opt. 2014-12-28 19:40:46 -05:00
Nick Cameron
4c4eabfd6c save-analysis: fix spans for paths to struct variants 2014-12-28 14:37:08 +13:00
Nick Cameron
25a77fbd48 save-analysis: fix spans for fields in struct patterns 2014-12-28 12:08:52 +13:00
Nick Cameron
e55b793ddd save-analysis: give the correct fully qualified name for fields in struct variants 2014-12-28 11:33:29 +13:00
Nick Cameron
35a6f6247b Fix spans for use view statements and their treatment in save-analysis 2014-12-28 10:28:01 +13:00
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
bors
16e4fef9bf auto merge of #20158 : nikomatsakis/rust/fn-inference-refactor, r=eddyb
Various refactorings simplifying the mem-categorization and regionck interface. This is working towards an improvement for closure-and-upvar-mode inference.

r? @eddyb
2014-12-27 06:58:35 +00:00
Nick Cameron
df0c6d9385 save-analysis: emit names of items that a glob import actually imports.
There is also some work here to make resolve a bit more stable - it no longer overwrites a specific import with a glob import.

[breaking-change]

Import shadowing of single/list imports by globs is now forbidden. An interesting case is where a glob import imports a re-export (`pub use`) of a single import. This still counts as a single import for the purposes of shadowing .You can usually fix any bustage by re-ordering such imports. A single import may still shadow (override) a glob import or the prelude.
2014-12-27 09:55:25 +13:00
Flavio Percoco
f436f9ca29 Make Send and Sync traits unsafe 2014-12-26 17:26:33 +01:00
Flavio Percoco
fb803a8570 Require types to opt-in Sync 2014-12-26 17:26:32 +01:00
Nick Cameron
e656081b70 Accept ?Sized as well as Sized?
Includes a bit of refactoring to store `?` unbounds as bounds with a modifier, rather than in their own world, in the AST at least.
2014-12-26 10:16:24 +13:00
bors
f673e9841f auto merge of #20167 : michaelwoerister/rust/for-loop-var, r=alexcrichton
... really this time `:)`

I went for the simpler fix after all since it turned out to become a bit too complicated to extract the current iteration value from its containing `Option` with the different memory layouts it can have. It's also what we already do for match bindings.

I also extended the new test case to include the "simple identifier" case.

Fixes #20127, fixes #19732
2014-12-25 14:21:47 +00:00
Niko Matsakis
4856456dd7 Move mem-categorization more things to use TYPER for the method origin 2014-12-25 07:04:07 -05:00
Niko Matsakis
a583ba2fa0 Remove McResult from the mem-categorization interface. 2014-12-25 07:04:07 -05:00
Niko Matsakis
8f770f10b2 Extend Typer interface to include expr_ty_adjusted so that we can
remove another direct dependency on tcx from euv.
2014-12-25 07:04:07 -05:00
Jonathan Reem
f1e37f9893 trans: Remove is_lang_item from base::invoke
Removes a FIXME on closed issue #15064. This flag is no
longer needed or used since reflection is gone.
2014-12-24 22:52:47 -08:00
bors
29ad8539b9 auto merge of #20060 : Aatch/rust/enum-repr, r=alexcrichton
The previous behaviour of using the smallest type possible caused LLVM
to treat padding too conservatively, causing poor codegen. This commit
changes the behaviour to use an alignment-sized integer as the
discriminant. This keeps types the same size, but helps LLVM understand
the data structure a little better, resulting in better codegen.
2014-12-24 16:21:23 +00:00
Nick Cameron
17826e10a2 Type checking and trans for ranges 2014-12-24 09:12:45 +13:00
Nick Cameron
8a357e1d87 Add syntax for ranges 2014-12-24 09:12:45 +13:00
Alex Crichton
d085d9d315 rustc: Add knowledge of separate lookup paths
This commit adds support for the compiler to distinguish between different forms
of lookup paths in the compiler itself. Issue #19767 has some background on this
topic, as well as some sample bugs which can occur if these lookup paths are not
separated.

This commits extends the existing command line flag `-L` with the same trailing
syntax as the `-l` flag. Each argument to `-L` can now have a trailing `:all`,
`:native`, `:crate`, or `:dependency`. This suffix indicates what form of lookup
path the compiler should add the argument to. The `dependency` lookup path is
used when looking up crate dependencies, the `crate` lookup path is used when
looking for immediate dependencies (`extern crate` statements), and the `native`
lookup path is used for probing for native libraries to insert into rlibs. Paths
with `all` are used for all of these purposes (the default).

The default compiler lookup path (the rustlib libdir) is by default added to all
of these paths. Additionally, the `RUST_PATH` lookup path is added to all of
these paths.

Closes #19767
2014-12-23 10:08:17 -08:00
Michael Woerister
07f10310c0 debuginfo: Clean the debuginfo module up a bit. 2014-12-23 10:45:29 +01:00
Michael Woerister
6f88258f1d debuginfo: Create debuginfo for for-loop variables again. 2014-12-23 10:45:16 +01:00
bors
62fb41c32b auto merge of #20145 : alexcrichton/rust/rollup, r=alexcrichton 2014-12-23 02:41:48 +00:00
James Miller
f1a3ff047e Use type-alignment-sized integer for discriminant types
The previous behaviour of using the smallest type possible caused LLVM
to treat padding too conservatively, causing poor codegen. This commit
changes the behaviour to use an type-alignment-sized integer as the
discriminant. This keeps types the same size, but helps LLVM understand
the data structure a little better, resulting in better codegen.
2014-12-23 12:29:52 +13:00
Alex Crichton
3583d613b9 Test fixes and rebase conflicts 2014-12-22 15:17:26 -08:00
Alex Crichton
de11710d80 rollup merge of #19891: nikomatsakis/unique-fn-types-3
Conflicts:
	src/libcore/str.rs
	src/librustc_trans/trans/closure.rs
	src/librustc_typeck/collect.rs
	src/libstd/path/posix.rs
	src/libstd/path/windows.rs
2014-12-22 12:51:23 -08:00
Niko Matsakis
8fe9e4dff6 Insert coercions to fn pointer types required for the new types
post-unboxed-closure-conversion. This requires a fair amount of
annoying coercions because all the `map` etc types are defined
generically over the `F`, so the automatic coercions don't propagate;
this is compounded by the need to use `let` and not `as` due to
stage0. That said, this pattern is to a large extent temporary and
unusual.
2014-12-22 12:27:07 -05:00
Niko Matsakis
39be95c16b Insert FIXME links to issue #19925: fn item types should be zero-sized. 2014-12-22 12:27:07 -05:00
Niko Matsakis
2a43b352f7 Rote changes that don't care to distinguish between a fn pointer and a fn item. 2014-12-22 12:27:07 -05:00
Niko Matsakis
f46099575a Make ty_bare_fn carry an optional def-id indicating whether it is the
type of a fn item or a fn pointer, which are now differentiated.
Introduce coercion from fn item to fn pointer.
2014-12-22 12:27:07 -05:00
Alex Crichton
c5aaa8cc05 Revert "debuginfo: Create debuginfo for for-loop variables again."
This reverts commit b048114718.
2014-12-22 08:25:44 -08:00
Alex Crichton
8e2d952c68 Revert "debuginfo: Clean the debuginfo module up a bit."
This reverts commit 34a6fcf195.
2014-12-22 08:25:34 -08:00
Alex Crichton
082bfde412 Fallout of std::str stabilization 2014-12-21 23:31:42 -08:00
Alex Crichton
bc1d818b83 rollup merge of #20057: nick29581/array-syntax
This does NOT break any existing programs because the `[_, ..n]` syntax is also supported.

Part of #19999

r? @nikomatsakis
2014-12-21 09:27:35 -08:00
Alex Crichton
a3dfaa62fe rollup merge of #20027: michaelwoerister/for-loop-var
Back when for-loop iteration variables were just de-sugared into `let` bindings, debuginfo for them was created like for any other `let` binding. When the implementation approach for for-loops changed, we ceased having debuginfo for the iteration variable. This PR fixes this omission and adds a more prominent test case for it.

Also contains some minor, general cleanup of the debuginfo module.

Fixes #19732
2014-12-21 09:27:34 -08:00
Alex Crichton
2af8155bee rollup merge of #19898: Aatch/issue-19684
#16081 fixed an issue where a nested return statement would cause incorrect behaviour due to the inner return writing over the return stack slot that had already been written too. However, the check was very broad and picked many cases that wouldn't ever be affected by this issue.

As a result, the number of allocas increased dramatically and therefore stack-size increased. LLVM is not able to remove all of the extraneous allocas. Any code that had multiple return values in a compound expression at the end of a function (including loops) would be hit by the issue.

The check now uses a control-flow graph to only consider the case when the inner return is executed conditionally. By itself, this narrowed definition causes #15763 to return, so the control-flow graph is also used to avoid passing the return slot as a destination when the result won't be used.

This change allows the stack-size of the main rustc task to be reduced to 8MB from 32MB.
2014-12-21 09:26:41 -08:00
bors
f8f2c7a953 auto merge of #19900 : alexcrichton/rust/compiler-flags, r=cmr
This commit shuffles around some CLI flags of the compiler to some more stable
locations with some renamings. The changes made were:

* The `-v` flag has been repurposes as the "verbose" flag. The version flag has
  been renamed to `-V`.
* The `-h` screen has been split into two parts. Most top-level options (not
  all) show with `-h`, and the remaining options (generally obscure) can be
  shown with `--help -v` which is a "verbose help screen"
* The `-V` flag (version flag now) has lost its argument as it is now requested
  with `rustc -vV` "verbose version".
* The `--emit` option has had its `ir` and `bc` variants renamed to `llvm-ir`
  and `llvm-bc` to emphasize that they are LLVM's IR/bytecode.
* The `--emit` option has grown a new variant, `dep-info`, which subsumes the
  `--dep-info` CLI argument. The `--dep-info` flag is now deprecated.
* The `--parse-only`, `--no-trans`, `--no-analysis`, and `--pretty` flags have
  moved behind the `-Z` family of flags.
* The `--debuginfo` and `--opt-level` flags were moved behind the top-level `-C`
  flag.
* The `--print-file-name` and `--print-crate-name` flags were moved behind one
  global `--print` flag which now accepts one of `crate-name`, `file-names`, or
  `sysroot`. This global `--print` flag is intended to serve as a mechanism for
  learning various metadata about the compiler itself.
* The top-level `--pretty` flag was moved to a number of `-Z` options.

No warnings are currently enabled to allow tools like Cargo to have time to
migrate to the new flags before spraying warnings to all users.

cc https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/19051
2014-12-20 13:52:27 +00:00
bors
8f51ad2420 auto merge of #19511 : eddyb/rust/no-shadow, r=alexcrichton
r? @erickt
2014-12-20 08:10:23 +00:00
Eduard Burtescu
5193d542f6 Fix the fallout of removing feature(import_shadowing). 2014-12-20 07:49:37 +02:00
Eduard Burtescu
d9504d4a47 rustc: middle: move Export and ExportMap from resolve to def. 2014-12-20 07:28:46 +02:00
Eduard Burtescu
d8f57c3804 rustc: middle: move DefMap from resolve to def. 2014-12-20 07:25:37 +02:00
Eduard Burtescu
fb1d6f24fc middle: resolve: fix inconsistencies around ExportMap and remove the 2 suffix. 2014-12-20 07:11:03 +02:00
Eduard Burtescu
d5267d5845 Remove feature(import_shadowing) from all crates. 2014-12-20 06:37:14 +02:00
Nick Cameron
2e86929a4a Allow use of [_ ; n] syntax for fixed length and repeating arrays.
This does NOT break any existing programs because the `[_, ..n]` syntax is also supported.
2014-12-20 15:23:29 +13:00
Alex Crichton
117984b884 rustc: Start "stabilizing" some flags
This commit shuffles around some CLI flags of the compiler to some more stable
locations with some renamings. The changes made were:

* The `-v` flag has been repurposes as the "verbose" flag. The version flag has
  been renamed to `-V`.
* The `-h` screen has been split into two parts. Most top-level options (not
  all) show with `-h`, and the remaining options (generally obscure) can be
  shown with `--help -v` which is a "verbose help screen"
* The `-V` flag (version flag now) has lost its argument as it is now requested
  with `rustc -vV` "verbose version".
* The `--emit` option has had its `ir` and `bc` variants renamed to `llvm-ir`
  and `llvm-bc` to emphasize that they are LLVM's IR/bytecode.
* The `--emit` option has grown a new variant, `dep-info`, which subsumes the
  `--dep-info` CLI argument. The `--dep-info` flag is now deprecated.
* The `--parse-only`, `--no-trans`, and `--no-analysis` flags have
  moved behind the `-Z` family of flags.
* The `--debuginfo` and `--opt-level` flags were moved behind the top-level `-C`
  flag.
* The `--print-file-name` and `--print-crate-name` flags were moved behind one
  global `--print` flag which now accepts one of `crate-name`, `file-names`, or
  `sysroot`. This global `--print` flag is intended to serve as a mechanism for
  learning various metadata about the compiler itself.

No warnings are currently enabled to allow tools like Cargo to have time to
migrate to the new flags before spraying warnings to all users.
2014-12-19 11:38:24 -08:00
Jorge Aparicio
5e2bca9e86 librustc_trans: use #[deriving(Copy)] 2014-12-19 10:51:00 -05:00
bors
bd90b936d7 auto merge of #19884 : nikomatsakis/rust/issue-19730-perfect-forwarding, r=pnkfelix
Rewrite how the HRTB algorithm matches impls against obligations. Instead of impls providing higher-ranked trait-references, impls now once again only have early-bound regions. The skolemization checks are thus moved out into trait matching itself. This allows to implement "perfect forwarding" impls like those described in #19730. This PR builds on a previous PR that was already reviewed by @pnkfelix.

r? @pnkfelix 

Fixes #19730
2014-12-19 13:22:10 +00:00
Michael Woerister
34a6fcf195 debuginfo: Clean the debuginfo module up a bit. 2014-12-19 12:07:17 +01:00
Michael Woerister
b048114718 debuginfo: Create debuginfo for for-loop variables again. 2014-12-19 09:48:28 +01:00
Niko Matsakis
f45c0ef51e Implement "perfect forwarding" for HR impls (#19730). 2014-12-19 03:29:31 -05:00
Niko Matsakis
1205fd88df Centralize on using Binder to introduce new binding levels, rather than having FnSig carry an implicit binding level. This means that we be more typesafe in general, since things that instantiate bound regions can drop the Binder to reflect that. 2014-12-19 03:29:30 -05:00
Niko Matsakis
416e62924e Rename the code that replaces unbound variables to "freshen" rather than "skolemize" -- strictly speaking, this is not skolemization, because it is not discharging quantifiers. Also, the trait selection code will still be doing true skolemization, so it would be a confusing overlap of names. 2014-12-19 03:29:30 -05:00
Niko Matsakis
3cf0fbeee9 Create distinct types for a PolyTraitRef (with bindings) and a normal TraitRef. 2014-12-19 03:29:30 -05:00
bors
0efafac398 auto merge of #19654 : aturon/rust/merge-rt, r=alexcrichton
This PR substantially narrows the notion of a "runtime" in Rust, and allows calling into Rust code directly without any setup or teardown. 

After this PR, the basic "runtime support" in Rust will consist of:

* Unwinding and backtrace support
* Stack guards

Other support, such as helper threads for timers or the notion of a "current thread" are initialized automatically upon first use.

When using Rust in an embedded context, it should now be possible to call a Rust function directly as a C function with absolutely no setup, though in that case panics will cause the process to abort. In this regard, the C/Rust interface will look much like the C/C++ interface.

In more detail, this PR:

* Merges `librustrt` back into `std::rt`, undoing the facade. While doing so, it removes a substantial amount of redundant functionality (such as mutexes defined in the `rt` module). Code using `librustrt` can now call into `std::rt` to e.g. start executing Rust code with unwinding support.

* Allows all runtime data to be initialized lazily, including the "current thread", the "at_exit" infrastructure, and the "args" storage.

* Deprecates and largely removes `std::task` along with the widespread requirement that there be a "current task" for many APIs in `std`. The entire task infrastructure is replaced with `std::thread`, which provides a more standard API for manipulating and creating native OS threads. In particular, it's possible to join on a created thread, and to get a handle to the currently-running thread. In addition, threads are equipped with some basic blocking support in the form of `park`/`unpark` operations (following a tradition in some OSes as well as the JVM). See the `std::thread` documentation for more details.

* Channels are refactored to use a new internal blocking infrastructure that itself sits on top of `park`/`unpark`.

One important change here is that a Rust program ends when its main thread does, following most threading models. On the other hand, threads will often be created with an RAII-style join handle that will re-institute blocking semantics naturally (and with finer control).

This is very much a:

[breaking-change]

Closes #18000
r? @alexcrichton
2014-12-19 08:28:52 +00:00
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
Aaron Turon
43ae4b3301 Fallout from new thread API 2014-12-18 23:31:51 -08:00
Jorge Aparicio
9a962a7bdc Tell trans that user unops are by value 2014-12-18 14:56:00 -05:00
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
James Miller
5722410f72 Fix logic error and add unreachable after returns 2014-12-18 17:43:50 +13:00
James Miller
b4f54f96df Minor fixes 2014-12-18 15:28:34 +13:00
James Miller
9115b319c3 Fix formatting issues 2014-12-18 15:28:34 +13:00
James Miller
fb3e871734 Add some documentation 2014-12-18 15:28:33 +13:00
James Miller
eee209d9e2 Only count nested returns when the outer return is reachable
This narrows the definition of nested returns such that only when the
outer return has a chance of being executed (due to the inner return
being conditional) do we mark the function as having nested returns.

Fixes #19684
2014-12-18 15:28:33 +13:00
Alex Crichton
a02885e167 rollup merge of #19918: pnkfelix/ast-refactor-make-place-in-exprbox-an-option
This is to allow us to migrate away from UnUniq in a followup commit,
and thus unify the code paths related to all forms of `box`.
2014-12-17 11:50:30 -08:00
bors
4e8ba4955c auto merge of #19789 : nick29581/rust/assoc-ufcs2, r=nikomatsakis
Closes #18433
2014-12-17 08:13:07 +00:00
Felix S. Klock II
7d4e7f0795 AST refactor: make the place in ExprBox an option.
This is to allow us to migrate away from UnUniq in a followup commit,
and thus unify the code paths related to all forms of `box`.
2014-12-16 14:30:30 +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
Nick Cameron
65616644af Path types to associated types with form T::A
Closes #18433
2014-12-16 13:50:24 +13:00
bors
0669a432a2 auto merge of #19448 : japaric/rust/binops-by-value, r=nikomatsakis
- The following operator traits now take their arguments by value: `Add`, `Sub`, `Mul`, `Div`, `Rem`, `BitAnd`, `BitOr`, `BitXor`, `Shl`, `Shr`. This breaks all existing implementations of these traits.

- The binary operation `a OP b` now "desugars" to `OpTrait::op_method(a, b)` and consumes both arguments.

- `String` and `Vec` addition have been changed to reuse the LHS owned value, and to avoid internal cloning. Only the following asymmetric operations are available: `String + &str` and `Vec<T> + &[T]`, which are now a short-hand for the "append" operation.

[breaking-change]

---

This passes `make check` locally. I haven't touch the unary operators in this PR, but converting them to by value should be very similar to this PR. I can work on them after this gets the thumbs up.

@nikomatsakis r? the compiler changes
@aturon r? the library changes. I think the only controversial bit is the semantic change of the `Vec`/`String` `Add` implementation.
cc #19148
2014-12-15 22:11:44 +00:00
Niko Matsakis
1718cd6ee0 Remove all shadowed lifetimes. 2014-12-15 10:23:48 -05:00
Brian Anderson
53982b64f3 rollup merge of #19787: akiss77/fix-i8-c_char
On AArch64, libc::c_char is u8. There are some places in the code where i8 is assumed, which causes compilation errors.

(AArch64 is not officially supported yet, but this change does not hurt any other targets and makes the code future-proof.)
2014-12-15 06:45:35 -08:00
Niko Matsakis
22f777ba2e Parse unsafe impl but don't do anything particularly interesting with the results. 2014-12-14 11:11:55 -05:00
Niko Matsakis
5686a91914 Parse unsafe trait but do not do anything with it beyond parsing and integrating into rustdoc etc. 2014-12-14 11:11:55 -05:00
Niko Matsakis
092d04a40a Rename FnStyle trait to Unsafety. 2014-12-14 11:11:55 -05:00
Joshua Yanovski
ccd88c5235 Add LLVM's unordered intrinsic to Rust. 2014-12-14 01:44:24 -08:00
Niko Matsakis
394f6846b8 Rewrite WorkItem not to use proc(). 2014-12-14 04:21:56 -05:00
Niko Matsakis
d258d68db6 Remove proc types/expressions from the parser, compiler, and
language. Recommend `move||` instead.
2014-12-14 04:21:56 -05:00
Niko Matsakis
698db04a8d Purge the hack that allows FnOnce to be used with a by-value self method. Besides being yucky, it will cause problems if we try to make all traits implement themselves, which would make a lot of things in life easier. Also, it was inextricably linked to Box, which was not the intention. We can work around its absence, so better to reimplement it later in a more thorough fashion. 2014-12-14 04:21:56 -05:00
Jorge Aparicio
f64e52a7f7 Tell trans which binops are by value 2014-12-13 20:15:38 -05:00
Jorge Aparicio
0c5d22c9cd librustc_trans: use tuple indexing 2014-12-13 20:04:41 -05:00
Jorge Aparicio
0676c3bf03 librustc_trans: use unboxed closures 2014-12-13 17:03:48 -05:00
Jorge Aparicio
0d4d8b9b78 librustc_trans: fix fallout 2014-12-13 17:03:47 -05:00
Jorge Aparicio
3739a2427b librustc_trans: fix fallout 2014-12-13 17:03:47 -05:00
Jorge Aparicio
80a04b1aed librustc_trans: fix fallout 2014-12-13 17:03:44 -05:00
Jorge Aparicio
44b419b820 librustc_trans: fix fallout 2014-12-13 17:03:44 -05:00
bors
2d90b91b5d auto merge of #19683 : nikomatsakis/rust/generalized-where-clauses, r=nrc
This patch does not itself enable generalized where clauses, but it lays the groundwork. Rather than storing a list of bounds per type parameter, the trait selection and other logic is now driven by a unified list of predicates. All predicate handling is now driven through a common interface. This also fixes a number of bugs where region predicates were being dropped on the floor. As a drive-by, this patch also fixes some bugs in the opt-out-copy feature flag.

That said, this patch does not change the parser or AST in any way, so we still *generate* the list of predicates by walking a list of bounds (and we still *store* the bounds on the `TypeParameterDef` and so on). Those will get patched in a follow-up.

The commits in this case are standalone; the first few are simple refactorings.

r? @nick29581 
cc @aturon
2014-12-13 03:07:17 +00:00
Niko Matsakis
9f492fefef Switch to using predicates to drive checking. Correct various tests --
in most cases, just the error message changed, but in some cases we
are reporting new errors that OUGHT to have been reported before but
we're overlooked (mostly involving the `'static` bound on `Send`).
2014-12-12 20:25:21 -05:00
Niko Matsakis
9bdd7f0040 Thread a id to Obligation 2014-12-12 20:24:34 -05:00
bors
8c66927242 auto merge of #19664 : tbu-/rust/pr_oibit2_fix, r=Gankro
These probably happened during the merge of the commit that made `Copy` opt-in.

Also, convert the last occurence of `/**` to `///` in `src/libstd/num/strconv.rs`
2014-12-13 00:27:15 +00:00
Akos Kiss
a28d16a751 libc::c_char is not necessarily i8 2014-12-12 22:41:14 +00:00
bors
2ea38750e9 auto merge of #19617 : nikomatsakis/rust/issue-19261-2, r=nrc
**First commit.** Patch up debruijn indices. Fixes #19537. 

**Second commit.** Stop reborrowing so much. Fixes #19147. Fixes #19261.

r? @nick29581
2014-12-12 13:21:58 +00:00
bors
193390d0e4 auto merge of #19672 : alexcrichton/rust/snapshots, r=brson
These snapshots were generated on the 10.7 bot which should be the first step in fixing #19643
2014-12-11 22:56:54 +00:00
Alex Crichton
52edb2ecc9 Register new snapshots 2014-12-11 11:30:38 -08:00
Niko Matsakis
061a87e519 Fix an incorrect type annotation (shadowed lifetime parameter) that was masked by
these bugs.
2014-12-11 04:16:11 -05:00
bors
872ba2ccd3 auto merge of #19294 : huonw/rust/transmute-inplace, r=nikomatsakis
This detects (a subset of) the cases when `transmute::<T, U>(x)` can be
lowered to a direct `bitcast T x to U` in LLVM. This assists with
efficiently handling a SIMD vector as multiple different types,
e.g. swapping bytes/words/double words around inside some larger vector
type.

C compilers like GCC and Clang handle integer vector types as `__m128i`
for all widths, and implicitly insert bitcasts as required. This patch
allows Rust to express this, even if it takes a bit of `unsafe`, whereas
previously it was impossible to do at all without inline assembly.

Example:

    pub fn reverse_u32s(u: u64x2) -> u64x2 {
        unsafe {
            let tmp = mem::transmute::<_, u32x4>(u);
            let swapped = u32x4(tmp.3, tmp.2, tmp.1, tmp.0);
            mem::transmute::<_, u64x2>(swapped)
        }
    }

Compiling with `--opt-level=3` gives:

Before

    define <2 x i64> @_ZN12reverse_u32s20hbdb206aba18a03d8tbaE(<2 x i64>) unnamed_addr #0 {
    entry-block:
      %1 = bitcast <2 x i64> %0 to i128
      %u.0.extract.trunc = trunc i128 %1 to i32
      %u.4.extract.shift = lshr i128 %1, 32
      %u.4.extract.trunc = trunc i128 %u.4.extract.shift to i32
      %u.8.extract.shift = lshr i128 %1, 64
      %u.8.extract.trunc = trunc i128 %u.8.extract.shift to i32
      %u.12.extract.shift = lshr i128 %1, 96
      %u.12.extract.trunc = trunc i128 %u.12.extract.shift to i32
      %2 = insertelement <4 x i32> undef, i32 %u.12.extract.trunc, i64 0
      %3 = insertelement <4 x i32> %2, i32 %u.8.extract.trunc, i64 1
      %4 = insertelement <4 x i32> %3, i32 %u.4.extract.trunc, i64 2
      %5 = insertelement <4 x i32> %4, i32 %u.0.extract.trunc, i64 3
      %6 = bitcast <4 x i32> %5 to <2 x i64>
      ret <2 x i64> %6
    }

    _ZN12reverse_u32s20hbdb206aba18a03d8tbaE:
    	.cfi_startproc
    	movd	%xmm0, %rax
    	punpckhqdq	%xmm0, %xmm0
    	movd	%xmm0, %rcx
    	movq	%rcx, %rdx
    	shrq	$32, %rdx
    	movq	%rax, %rsi
    	shrq	$32, %rsi
    	movd	%eax, %xmm0
    	movd	%ecx, %xmm1
    	punpckldq	%xmm0, %xmm1
    	movd	%esi, %xmm2
    	movd	%edx, %xmm0
    	punpckldq	%xmm2, %xmm0
    	punpckldq	%xmm1, %xmm0
    	retq

After

    define <2 x i64> @_ZN12reverse_u32s20hbdb206aba18a03d8tbaE(<2 x i64>) unnamed_addr #0 {
    entry-block:
      %1 = bitcast <2 x i64> %0 to <4 x i32>
      %2 = shufflevector <4 x i32> %1, <4 x i32> undef, <4 x i32> <i32 3, i32 2, i32 1, i32 0>
      %3 = bitcast <4 x i32> %2 to <2 x i64>
      ret <2 x i64> %3
    }

    _ZN12reverse_u32s20hbdb206aba18a03d8tbaE:
    	.cfi_startproc
    	pshufd	$27, %xmm0, %xmm0
    	retq
2014-12-11 00:11:23 +00:00
Tobias Bucher
deabeb0276 Rollback accidental documentation changes
These probably happened during the merge of the commit that made `Copy` opt-in.

Also, convert the last occurence of `/**` to `///` in `src/libstd/num/strconv.rs`
2014-12-09 18:50:31 +01:00
Alex Crichton
2593070d57 rollup merge of #19581: luqmana/duc
Fixes #19575.
2014-12-09 09:24:41 -08:00
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
bors
77cd5cc54e auto merge of #19548 : luqmana/rust/mfb, r=nikomatsakis
Fixes #19367.
2014-12-07 19:02:18 +00:00
Jorge Aparicio
8bb5ef9df5 librustc_trans: remove unnecessary as_slice calls 2014-12-06 19:05:58 -05:00
Luqman Aden
8ebc1c9fd8 librustc: Fix debuginfo for captured variables in non-FnOnce unboxed closures. 2014-12-05 18:56:40 -05:00