Commit Graph

913 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Patrick Walton
1fb08f11b7 libgetopts: Remove all uses of ~str from libgetopts 2014-05-16 11:41:27 -07:00
Alex Crichton
2e2160b026 core: Update all tests for fmt movement 2014-05-15 23:22:15 -07:00
Kevin Butler
b9e4fcbf04 shootout-mandelbrot: Precalc initial values & use SIMD in the main loop. +80-100% 2014-05-15 13:50:39 -07:00
Kevin Butler
03f48534b3 shootout-mandlebrot: calculate two bits of the result per inner loop, +10-15% 2014-05-15 13:50:39 -07:00
Patrick Walton
95e310abdc test: Remove all uses of ~str from the test suite. 2014-05-14 14:58:00 -07:00
Alex Crichton
1237530452 Touch up and rebase previous commits
* Added `// no-pretty-expanded` to pretty-print a test, but not run it through
  the `expanded` variant.
* Removed #[deriving] and other expanded attributes after they are expanded
* Removed hacks around &str and &&str and friends (from both the parser and the
  pretty printer).
* Un-ignored a bunch of tests
2014-05-13 17:24:08 -07:00
Guillaume Pinot
437338ab65 shootout-nbody improvement
- factorize operation
- factorize loop (and gain a level of indentation)
- ~5% faster

Thanks to @Ryman for the propositions :)
2014-05-12 19:52:29 -07:00
bors
2877a4e989 auto merge of #14090 : TeXitoi/rust/shootout-nbody-improvement, r=alexcrichton
- minimize bound check
- factorise operations
- use x, y, z instead of [f64, ..3]
- ~1.15 faster
2014-05-11 04:41:43 -07:00
Guillaume Pinot
db93ca28e2 shootout-nbody improvements
- minimize bound check
- factorise operations
- use x, y, z instead of [f64, ..3]
- ~1.15 faster
2014-05-10 20:32:31 +02:00
Guillaume Pinot
3fa293c10f shootout-meteor improvement
- 5-10% of raw speedup
- parallelization of the search
2014-05-09 17:39:00 +02:00
Kevin Ballard
dbbb847bf0 Handle fallout in bench tests 2014-05-08 12:06:22 -07:00
Patrick Walton
090040bf40 librustc: Remove ~EXPR, ~TYPE, and ~PAT from the language, except
for `~str`/`~[]`.

Note that `~self` still remains, since I forgot to add support for
`Box<self>` before the snapshot.

How to update your code:

* Instead of `~EXPR`, you should write `box EXPR`.

* Instead of `~TYPE`, you should write `Box<Type>`.

* Instead of `~PATTERN`, you should write `box PATTERN`.

[breaking-change]
2014-05-06 23:12:54 -07:00
bors
59569397fb auto merge of #13921 : TeXitoi/rust/shootout-spectralnorm-tweaks, r=alexcrichton
- using libgreen to optimize CPU usage
- less tasks to limit wasted resources

Here, on a one core 2 threads CPU, new version is ~1.2 faster.  May
be better with more core.
2014-05-04 12:06:50 -07:00
Guillaume Pinot
2acab61377 shootout-spectralnorm tweaks
- using libgreen to optimize CPU usage
- less tasks to limit wasted resources

Here, on a one core 2 threads CPU, new version is ~1.2 faster.  May
be better with more core.
2014-05-03 23:20:13 +02:00
Guillaume Pinot
66b7c11c90 shootout-mandelbrot rewrite
- removed warning
- improved performances
- parallelization
2014-05-03 14:53:52 +02:00
Andrew Gallant
7269bc77e1 Ignore regex tests (regular, cfail and benchmark) on Windows (for now). 2014-04-25 01:37:27 -04:00
Andrew Gallant
b8b7484703 Add a regex crate to the Rust distribution.
Also adds a regex_macros crate, which provides natively compiled
regular expressions with a syntax extension.

Closes #3591.

RFC: 0007-regexps
2014-04-25 00:27:24 -04:00
bors
0e750adefc auto merge of #13675 : sfackler/rust/taskbuilder-new, r=alexcrichton
The constructor for `TaskBuilder` is being changed to an associated
function called `new` for consistency with the rest of the standard
library.

Closes #13666

[breaking-change]
2014-04-23 20:31:36 -07:00
Steven Fackler
adeeadf49f Move task::task() to TaskBuilder::new()
The constructor for `TaskBuilder` is being changed to an associated
function called `new` for consistency with the rest of the standard
library.

Closes #13666

[breaking-change]
2014-04-23 20:02:02 -07:00
bors
6c82eb5d4d auto merge of #13667 : TeXitoi/rust/shootout-chameneos-redux-fix, r=alexcrichton
* fix official shootout test (spacing)
* use libgreen to improve performances
* simplify and modernize code
* remove warnings
2014-04-22 12:01:34 -07:00
Guillaume Pinot
0a0e2c36af fix and improve shootout-chameneos-redux
* fix official shootout test (spacing)
* use libgreen to improve performances
* simplify and modernize code
* remove warnings
2014-04-21 23:12:58 +02:00
Guillaume Pinot
72655677b1 shootout-threadring rewrite
* simplify the code
* remove trace to satisfy official shootout test
* use libgreen to improve performances
2014-04-21 16:05:57 +02:00
bors
412a18f12e auto merge of #13633 : TeXitoi/rust/shootout-fannkuch-redux-rewrite, r=alexcrichton
Less bound checking and parallelisation.  Brute speed improvement
is about 15% faster.

The unsafe block improve the brute speed by about 5%.
2014-04-20 00:31:34 -07:00
Guillaume Pinot
57d693460b shootout-fannkuch-redux rewrite
Less bound checking and parallelisation.  Brute speed improvement
is about 15% faster.
2014-04-20 03:16:58 +02:00
Richo Healey
919889a1d6 Replace all ~"" with "".to_owned() 2014-04-18 17:25:34 -07:00
Alex Crichton
675b82657e Update the rest of the compiler with ~[T] changes 2014-04-18 10:57:10 -07:00
bors
0c23140aaf auto merge of #13575 : TeXitoi/rust/shootout-knucleotide-parallel, r=alexcrichton 2014-04-17 18:41:24 -07:00
Guillaume Pinot
ba99e4ce54 parallelisation of shootout-k-nucleotide 2014-04-17 09:38:55 +02:00
Huon Wilson
54ec04f1c1 Use the unsigned integer types for bitwise intrinsics.
Exposing ctpop, ctlz, cttz and bswap as taking signed i8/i16/... is just
exposing the internal LLVM names pointlessly (LLVM doesn't have "signed
integers" or "unsigned integers", it just has sized integer types
with (un)signed *operations*).

These operations are semantically working with raw bytes, which the
unsigned types model better.
2014-04-15 19:45:00 -07:00
Manish Goregaokar
713e87526e Use new attribute syntax in python files in src/etc too (#13478) 2014-04-14 21:00:31 +05:30
bors
ab0d847277 auto merge of #13448 : alexcrichton/rust/rework-chan-return-values, r=brson
There are currently a number of return values from the std::comm methods, not
all of which are necessarily completely expressive:

 * `Sender::try_send(t: T) -> bool`
    This method currently doesn't transmit back the data `t` if the send fails
    due to the other end having disconnected. Additionally, this shares the name
    of the synchronous try_send method, but it differs in semantics in that it
    only has one failure case, not two (the buffer can never be full).

 * `SyncSender::try_send(t: T) -> TrySendResult<T>`
    This method accurately conveys all possible information, but it uses a
    custom type to the std::comm module with no convenience methods on it.
    Additionally, if you want to inspect the result you're forced to import
    something from `std::comm`.

 * `SyncSender::send_opt(t: T) -> Option<T>`
    This method uses Some(T) as an "error value" and None as a "success value",
    but almost all other uses of Option<T> have Some/None the other way

 * `Receiver::try_recv(t: T) -> TryRecvResult<T>`
    Similarly to the synchronous try_send, this custom return type is lacking in
    terms of usability (no convenience methods).

With this number of drawbacks in mind, I believed it was time to re-work the
return types of these methods. The new API for the comm module is:

    Sender::send(t: T) -> ()
    Sender::send_opt(t: T) -> Result<(), T>
    SyncSender::send(t: T) -> ()
    SyncSender::send_opt(t: T) -> Result<(), T>
    SyncSender::try_send(t: T) -> Result<(), TrySendError<T>>
    Receiver::recv() -> T
    Receiver::recv_opt() -> Result<T, ()>
    Receiver::try_recv() -> Result<T, TryRecvError>

The notable changes made are:

* Sender::try_send => Sender::send_opt. This renaming brings the semantics in
  line with the SyncSender::send_opt method. An asychronous send only has one
  failure case, unlike the synchronous try_send method which has two failure
  cases (full/disconnected).

* Sender::send_opt returns the data back to the caller if the send is guaranteed
  to fail. This method previously returned `bool`, but then it was unable to
  retrieve the data if the data was guaranteed to fail to send. There is still a
  race such that when `Ok(())` is returned the data could still fail to be
  received, but that's inherent to an asynchronous channel.

* Result is now the basis of all return values. This not only adds lots of
  convenience methods to all return values for free, but it also means that you
  can inspect the return values with no extra imports (Ok/Err are in the
  prelude). Additionally, it's now self documenting when something failed or not
  because the return value has "Err" in the name.

Things I'm a little uneasy about:

* The methods send_opt and recv_opt are not returning options, but rather
  results. I felt more strongly that Option was the wrong return type than the
  _opt prefix was wrong, and I coudn't think of a much better name for these
  methods. One possible way to think about them is to read the _opt suffix as
  "optionally".

* Result<T, ()> is often better expressed as Option<T>. This is only applicable
  to the recv_opt() method, but I thought it would be more consistent for
  everything to return Result rather than one method returning an Option.

Despite my two reasons to feel uneasy, I feel much better about the consistency
in return values at this point, and I think the only real open question is if
there's a better suffix for {send,recv}_opt.

Closes #11527
2014-04-12 12:21:58 -07:00
Alex Crichton
545d4718c8 std: Make std::comm return types consistent
There are currently a number of return values from the std::comm methods, not
all of which are necessarily completely expressive:

  Sender::try_send(t: T) -> bool
    This method currently doesn't transmit back the data `t` if the send fails
    due to the other end having disconnected. Additionally, this shares the name
    of the synchronous try_send method, but it differs in semantics in that it
    only has one failure case, not two (the buffer can never be full).

  SyncSender::try_send(t: T) -> TrySendResult<T>
    This method accurately conveys all possible information, but it uses a
    custom type to the std::comm module with no convenience methods on it.
    Additionally, if you want to inspect the result you're forced to import
    something from `std::comm`.

  SyncSender::send_opt(t: T) -> Option<T>
    This method uses Some(T) as an "error value" and None as a "success value",
    but almost all other uses of Option<T> have Some/None the other way

  Receiver::try_recv(t: T) -> TryRecvResult<T>
    Similarly to the synchronous try_send, this custom return type is lacking in
    terms of usability (no convenience methods).

With this number of drawbacks in mind, I believed it was time to re-work the
return types of these methods. The new API for the comm module is:

  Sender::send(t: T) -> ()
  Sender::send_opt(t: T) -> Result<(), T>
  SyncSender::send(t: T) -> ()
  SyncSender::send_opt(t: T) -> Result<(), T>
  SyncSender::try_send(t: T) -> Result<(), TrySendError<T>>
  Receiver::recv() -> T
  Receiver::recv_opt() -> Result<T, ()>
  Receiver::try_recv() -> Result<T, TryRecvError>

The notable changes made are:

* Sender::try_send => Sender::send_opt. This renaming brings the semantics in
  line with the SyncSender::send_opt method. An asychronous send only has one
  failure case, unlike the synchronous try_send method which has two failure
  cases (full/disconnected).

* Sender::send_opt returns the data back to the caller if the send is guaranteed
  to fail. This method previously returned `bool`, but then it was unable to
  retrieve the data if the data was guaranteed to fail to send. There is still a
  race such that when `Ok(())` is returned the data could still fail to be
  received, but that's inherent to an asynchronous channel.

* Result is now the basis of all return values. This not only adds lots of
  convenience methods to all return values for free, but it also means that you
  can inspect the return values with no extra imports (Ok/Err are in the
  prelude). Additionally, it's now self documenting when something failed or not
  because the return value has "Err" in the name.

Things I'm a little uneasy about:

* The methods send_opt and recv_opt are not returning options, but rather
  results. I felt more strongly that Option was the wrong return type than the
  _opt prefix was wrong, and I coudn't think of a much better name for these
  methods. One possible way to think about them is to read the _opt suffix as
  "optionally".

* Result<T, ()> is often better expressed as Option<T>. This is only applicable
  to the recv_opt() method, but I thought it would be more consistent for
  everything to return Result rather than one method returning an Option.

Despite my two reasons to feel uneasy, I feel much better about the consistency
in return values at this point, and I think the only real open question is if
there's a better suffix for {send,recv}_opt.

Closes #11527
2014-04-10 21:41:19 -07:00
bors
cea8def620 auto merge of #13440 : huonw/rust/strbuf, r=alexcrichton
libstd: Implement `StrBuf`, a new string buffer type like `Vec`, and port all code over to use it.

Rebased & tests-fixed version of https://github.com/mozilla/rust/pull/13269
2014-04-10 21:01:41 -07:00
Huon Wilson
def90f43e2 Fix tests. Add Vec<u8> conversion to StrBuf. 2014-04-11 10:55:30 +10:00
Huon Wilson
6e63b12f5f Remove some internal ~[] from several libraries.
Some straggling instances of `~[]` across a few different libs. Also,
remove some public ones from workcache.
2014-04-10 15:21:58 -07:00
Patrick Walton
d8e45ea7c0 libstd: Implement StrBuf, a new string buffer type like Vec, and
port all code over to use it.
2014-04-10 22:10:10 +10:00
Boris Egorov
00cbda2d0a Improve searching for XXX in tidy script (#3303)
Few places where previous version of tidy script cannot find XXX:
* inside one-line comment preceding by a few spaces;
* inside multiline comments (now it finds it if multiline comment starts
on the same line with XXX).

Change occurences of XXX found by new tidy script.
2014-04-08 00:03:12 -07:00
bors
e4779b5050 auto merge of #13165 : sfackler/rust/io-vec, r=alexcrichton
`Reader`, `Writer`, `MemReader`, `MemWriter`, and `MultiWriter` now work with `Vec<u8>` instead of `~[u8]`. This does introduce some extra copies since `from_utf8_owned` isn't usable anymore, but I think that can't be helped until `~str`'s representation changes.
2014-04-06 23:36:38 -07:00
Steven Fackler
49a8081095 De-~[] Mem{Reader,Writer} 2014-04-06 15:40:01 -07:00
Steven Fackler
d0e60b72ee De-~[] Reader and Writer
There's a little more allocation here and there now since
from_utf8_owned can't be used with Vec.
2014-04-06 15:39:56 -07:00
Alex Crichton
d1c584e41b syntax: Tweak parsing lifetime bounds on closures
In summary these are some example transitions this change makes:

    'a ||       => ||: 'a
    proc:Send() => proc():Send

The intended syntax for closures is to put the lifetime bound not at the front
but rather in the list of bounds. Currently there is no official support in the
AST for bounds that are not 'static, so this case is currently specially handled
in the parser to desugar to what the AST is expecting. Additionally, this moves
the bounds on procedures to the correct position, which is after the argument
list.

The current grammar for closures and procedures is:

    procedure := 'proc' [ '<' lifetime-list '>' ] '(' arg-list ')'
                        [ ':' bound-list ] [ '->' type ]
    closure := [ 'unsafe' ] ['<' lifetime-list '>' ] '|' arg-list '|'
                        [ ':' bound-list ] [ '->' type ]
    lifetime-list := lifetime | lifetime ',' lifetime-list
    arg-list := ident ':' type | ident ':' type ',' arg-list
    bound-list := bound | bound '+' bound-list
    bound := path | lifetime

This does not currently handle the << ambiguity in `Option<<'a>||>`, I am
deferring that to a later patch. Additionally, this removes the support for the
obsolete syntaxes of ~fn and &fn.

Closes #10553
Closes #10767
Closes #11209
Closes #11210
Closes #11211
2014-04-06 00:08:21 -07:00
Alex Crichton
487fa9568b Test fixes from the rollup 2014-04-03 17:11:26 -07:00
Alex Crichton
9a259f4303 Fix fallout of requiring uint indices 2014-04-02 15:56:31 -07:00
bors
b71c02e512 auto merge of #13115 : huonw/rust/rand-errors, r=alexcrichton
move errno -> IoError converter into std, bubble up OSRng errors

Also adds a general errno -> `~str` converter to `std::os`, and makes the failure messages for the things using `OSRng` (e.g. (transitively) the task-local RNG, meaning hashmap initialisation failures aren't such a black box).
2014-04-01 11:11:51 -07:00
Huon Wilson
bc7a2d72a3 rand: bubble up IO messages futher.
The various ...Rng::new() methods can hit IO errors from the OSRng they use,
and it seems sensible to expose them at a higher level. Unfortunately, writing
e.g. `StdRng::new().unwrap()` gives a much poorer error message than if it
failed internally, but this is a problem with all `IoResult`s.
2014-04-01 20:46:10 +11:00
bors
1c2ccf0503 auto merge of #13221 : thestinger/rust/append, r=alexcrichton
These were only free functions on `~[T]` because taking self by-value
used to be broken.
2014-03-31 02:11:34 -07:00
bors
6281299230 auto merge of #13206 : TeXitoi/rust/fix-shootout-k-nucleotide, r=alexcrichton
Correct printing (sort, new lines), reading on stdin.
2014-03-30 23:31:37 -07:00
Daniel Micay
cbbc1fc843 vec: convert append and append_one to methods
These were only free functions on `~[T]` because taking self by-value
used to be broken.
2014-03-31 01:13:48 -04:00
Guillaume Pinot
7c2abe7c85 make shootout-k-nucleotide.rs pass official test
Correct printing (sort, new lines), reading on stdin, s/i32/uint/,
ignore-android because it reads stdin
2014-03-30 19:20:35 +02:00
Erick Tryzelaar
a47d52c2f6 collections: remove List
It was decided in a meeting that this module wasn't needed,
and more thought should be put into a persistent collections
library.
2014-03-28 09:13:09 -07:00