On Windows, `LLVMRustGetLastError()` may return non-utf8 mojibake string
if system uses non-English locale. It caused ICE when llvm fails.
This patch doesn't fix the real problem, but just make rustc not die.
On Windows, `LLVMRustGetLastError()` may return non-utf8 mojibake string
if system uses non-English locale. It caused ICE when llvm fails.
This patch doesn't fix the real problem, but just make rustc not die.
Cosmetic changes at best, but there are so many such typos that I couldn't ignore them. :) Some occurrences of typos are linked to the generated documentations but no changes should break the builds.
This version is slightly more up to date and is closer to the 3.5 that we're
using. This also updates the travis config to have a build matrix which tests
rust against LLVM 3.3 and 3.4. For pull requests only LLVM 3.4 is tested to
reduce the load on travis.
This is mostly just fluff, there's no real reason to gate rust on these results,
it's more of just a nice thing to know when we break compatibility with LLVM 3.3
and 3.4 (and eventually 3.5). This turns off notifications of failed commits
(which are sent out for pushes to master).
The llvm.copysign and llvm.round intrinsics weren't added until LLVM 3.4, so if
we're on LLVM 3.3 we lower these to calls in libm instead of LLVM intrinsics.
This should fix our travis failures.
This PR brings back limited debuginfo which allows for nice backtraces and breakpoints, but omits any info about variables and types.
The `-g` and `--debuginfo` command line options have been extended to take an optional argument:
`-g0` means no debug info.
`-g1` means line-tables only.
`-g2` means full debug info.
Specifying `-g` without argument is equivalent to `-g2`.
Fixes#12280
This version is slightly more up to date and is closer to the 3.5 that we're
using. This also updates the travis config to have a build matrix which tests
rust against LLVM 3.3 and 3.4. For pull requests only LLVM 3.4 is tested to
reduce the load on travis.
This is mostly just fluff, there's no real reason to gate rust on these results,
it's more of just a nice thing to know when we break compatibility with LLVM 3.3
and 3.4 (and eventually 3.5). This turns off notifications of failed commits
(which are sent out for pushes to master).
This commit adds a appear-on-over link to all section headers to generated
documentation. Each header also receives an id now, even those generated through
markdown. The purpose of this is to provide easy to link to sections.
This modifies the default header markdown generation because the default id
added looks like "toc_NN" which is difficult to reconcile among all sections (by
default each section gets a "toc_0" id), and it's also not very descriptive of
where you're going.
This chooses to adopt the github-style anchors by taking the contents of the
title and hyphen-separating them (after lower casing).
Closes#12681
This commit adds a appear-on-over link to all section headers to generated
documentation. Each header also receives an id now, even those generated through
markdown. The purpose of this is to provide easy to link to sections.
This modifies the default header markdown generation because the default id
added looks like "toc_NN" which is difficult to reconcile among all sections (by
default each section gets a "toc_0" id), and it's also not very descriptive of
where you're going.
This chooses to adopt the github-style anchors by taking the contents of the
title and hyphen-separating them (after lower casing).
Closes#12681
When using tasks in Rust, the expectation is that the runtime does not exit
before all tasks have exited. This is enforced in libgreen through the
`SchedPool` type, and it is enforced in libnative through a `bookkeeping` module
and a global count/mutex pair. Unfortunately, this means that a process which
originates with libgreen will not wait for spawned native tasks.
In order to fix this problem, the bookkeeping module was moved from libnative to
libstd so the runtime itself can wait for native tasks to exit. Green tasks do
not manage themselves through this bookkeeping module, but native tasks will
continue to manage themselves through this module.
Closes#12684
Closes#8506.
The `trans::adt` code for statics uses fields with `C_undef` values to
insert alignment padding (because LLVM's own alignment padding isn't
always sufficient for aggregate constants), and assumes that all fields
in the actual Rust value are represented by non-undef LLVM values, to
distinguish them from that padding.
But for nullable pointer enums, if non-null variant has fields other
than the pointer used as the discriminant, they would be set to undef in
the null case, to reflect that they're never accessed.
To avoid the obvious conflict between these two items, the latter undefs
were wrapped in unary LLVM structs to distinguish them from the former
undefs. Except this doesn't actually work -- LLVM, not unreasonably,
treats the "wrapped undef" as a regular undef.
So this commit just sets all fields to null in the null pointer case of
a nullable pointer enum static, because the other fields don't really
need to be undef in the first place.
The llvm.copysign and llvm.round intrinsics weren't added until LLVM 3.4, so if
we're on LLVM 3.3 we lower these to calls in libm instead of LLVM intrinsics.
This should fix our travis failures.
Fixes#10877
There was another PR which attempted to fix this in the parser (#11804) and which was closed due to inactivity.
This PR modifies typeck instead (as suggested in #11804), which indeed seems to be simpler than modifying the parser and allows for a better error message.
When the timer_helper thread exited, it would attempt to re-acquire the global
task count mutex, but the mutex had previously been deallocated, leading to
undefined behavior of the mutex, and in some cases deadlock.
Another mutex is used to coordinate shutting down the timer helper thread.
Closes#12699
Using nanosleep() allows us to gracefully recover from EINTR because on error it
fills in the second parameter with the remaining time to sleep.
Closes#12689
The `std::cmp` functions are not correct for floating point types.
`min(NaN, 2.0)` and `min(2.0, NaN)` return different values, because
these functions assume a total order. Floating point types need special
`min`, `max` and `clamp` functions.
I added a new lint for variables whose names contain uppercase characters, since, by convention, variable names should be all lowercase. What motivated me to work on this was when I ran into something like the following:
```rust
use std::io::File;
use std::io::IoError;
fn main() {
let mut f = File::open(&Path::new("/something.txt"));
let mut buff = [0u8, ..16];
match f.read(buff) {
Ok(cnt) => println!("read this many bytes: {}", cnt),
Err(IoError{ kind: EndOfFile, .. }) => println!("Got end of file: {}", EndOfFile.to_str()),
}
}
```
I then got compile errors when I tried to add a wildcard match pattern at the end which I found very confusing since I believed that the 2nd match arm was only matching the EndOfFile condition. The problem is that I hadn't imported io::EndOfFile into the local scope. So, I thought that I was using EndOfFile as a sub-pattern, however, what I was actually doing was creating a new local variable named EndOfFile. This lint makes this error easier to spot by providing a warning that the variable name EndOfFile contains a uppercase characters which provides a nice hint as to why the code isn't doing what is intended.
The lint warns on local bindings as well:
```rust
let Hi = 0;
```
And also struct fields:
```rust
struct Something {
X: uint
}
```
Linker argument order with respect to libraries is important enough that we
shouldn't be attempting to filter out libraries getting passed through to the
linker. When linking with a native library that has multiple dependant native
libraries, it's useful to have control over the link argument order.