Commit Graph

45573 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Alex Crichton
59dac3175f libc,rand: Add issues for all unstable features 2015-08-15 18:09:16 -07:00
Alex Crichton
6734c933b5 alloc: Add issues for all unstable features 2015-08-15 18:09:16 -07:00
Alex Crichton
b7dcf272d9 core: Fill out issues for unstable features 2015-08-15 18:09:16 -07:00
Alex Crichton
6634777ae0 syntax: Require issues for unstable features
This turns an `#[unstable]` tag without an `issue` annotation into a hard error
to ensure that we've always got a tracking issue for unstable features in the
standard library.
2015-08-15 18:09:16 -07:00
bors
f05b22efb5 Auto merge of #27845 - dylanmckay:abstract-pointer-size-away, r=alexcrichton
This patch rewrites code in several places which assume that the current target has either 32-bit or 64-bit pointers so that it can support arbitrary-width pointers.

It does not completely remove all assumptions of pointer width, but it does reduce them significantly. There is a discussion [here](https://internals.rust-lang.org/t/adding-16-bit-pointer-support/2484/10) about the change.
2015-08-15 19:10:40 +00:00
bors
753a6a9e29 Auto merge of #27847 - birkenfeld:patch-3, r=sfackler 2015-08-15 17:30:15 +00:00
bors
29455557aa Auto merge of #27827 - w00ns:for-loop-expn-issue-27639, r=alexcrichton
Fixes #27639
2015-08-15 14:50:13 +00:00
Georg Brandl
56f3282f31 Iterator::all() - document short-circuiting property parallel to any() 2015-08-15 11:49:33 +02:00
bors
316f5e5acf Auto merge of #27846 - AlisdairO:diagnostics248, r=Manishearth
As title :-)
Part of #24407.

r? @Manishearth
2015-08-15 09:26:48 +00:00
Dylan McKay
ea7768c2dd Improve 'unknown instrinsic' error message
If you had previously tried to get the ValueRef associated with an
intrinsic that hadn't been described in
`trans::context::declare_intrinsic()`, the compile would panic with
an empty message.

Now we print out details about the error in the panic message.
2015-08-15 21:06:06 +12:00
Alisdair Owens
26cca1c258 Add extended diagnostics for E0248 2015-08-15 10:02:54 +01:00
w00ns
ae68e90af4 Fix issue with for loop expansion 2015-08-15 10:17:12 +02:00
Dylan McKay
30ec363c76 Reduce rustc::trans's dependence on pointer width 2015-08-15 20:04:21 +12:00
Dylan McKay
7ebc5e5134 Reduce libcore/liballoc's dependence on pointer sizes 2015-08-15 19:19:13 +12:00
bors
e859498d1c Auto merge of #27841 - jonas-schievink:still-repeating-span, r=alexcrichton
Current behaviour demo: http://is.gd/l3FEgo
(The span is printed at the start of the source code)

This patch moves the span to the use of `$i` in the macro rhs (as the code comment already claims)
2015-08-15 06:16:41 +00:00
bors
1e1b7f3022 Auto merge of #27825 - withoutboats:default_array, r=alexcrichton
Implemented Default for arrays up to length 32 where T: Default using an additional macro.
2015-08-15 04:19:14 +00:00
bors
ec8f072c18 Auto merge of #27839 - gkoz:netbsd_ar, r=brson
NetBSD didn't get its fix for #27124 and still suffers from that issue.
2015-08-15 01:45:15 +00:00
bors
ab450ef22b Auto merge of #27400 - alexcrichton:less-jemalloc, r=brson
This commit is an implementation of [RFC 1183][rfc] which allows swapping out
the default allocator on nightly Rust. No new stable surface area should be
added as a part of this commit.

[rfc]: https://github.com/rust-lang/rfcs/pull/1183

Two new attributes have been added to the compiler:

* `#![needs_allocator]` - this is used by liballoc (and likely only liballoc) to
  indicate that it requires an allocator crate to be in scope.
* `#![allocator]` - this is a indicator that the crate is an allocator which can
  satisfy the `needs_allocator` attribute above.

The ABI of the allocator crate is defined to be a set of symbols that implement
the standard Rust allocation/deallocation functions. The symbols are not
currently checked for exhaustiveness or typechecked. There are also a number of
restrictions on these crates:

* An allocator crate cannot transitively depend on a crate that is flagged as
  needing an allocator (e.g. allocator crates can't depend on liballoc).
* There can only be one explicitly linked allocator in a final image.
* If no allocator is explicitly requested one will be injected on behalf of the
  compiler. Binaries and Rust dylibs will use jemalloc by default where
  available and staticlibs/other dylibs will use the system allocator by
  default.

Two allocators are provided by the distribution by default, `alloc_system` and
`alloc_jemalloc` which operate as advertised.

Closes #27389
2015-08-14 22:52:11 +00:00
Jonas Schievink
59f8e3238a Fix span of invalid metavariable repetition 2015-08-15 00:45:34 +02:00
Alex Crichton
45bf1ed1a1 rustc: Allow changing the default allocator
This commit is an implementation of [RFC 1183][rfc] which allows swapping out
the default allocator on nightly Rust. No new stable surface area should be
added as a part of this commit.

[rfc]: https://github.com/rust-lang/rfcs/pull/1183

Two new attributes have been added to the compiler:

* `#![needs_allocator]` - this is used by liballoc (and likely only liballoc) to
  indicate that it requires an allocator crate to be in scope.
* `#![allocator]` - this is a indicator that the crate is an allocator which can
  satisfy the `needs_allocator` attribute above.

The ABI of the allocator crate is defined to be a set of symbols that implement
the standard Rust allocation/deallocation functions. The symbols are not
currently checked for exhaustiveness or typechecked. There are also a number of
restrictions on these crates:

* An allocator crate cannot transitively depend on a crate that is flagged as
  needing an allocator (e.g. allocator crates can't depend on liballoc).
* There can only be one explicitly linked allocator in a final image.
* If no allocator is explicitly requested one will be injected on behalf of the
  compiler. Binaries and Rust dylibs will use jemalloc by default where
  available and staticlibs/other dylibs will use the system allocator by
  default.

Two allocators are provided by the distribution by default, `alloc_system` and
`alloc_jemalloc` which operate as advertised.

Closes #27389
2015-08-14 15:13:10 -07:00
Gleb Kozyrev
ad9dd48059 fixes #27124 for netbsd
NetBSD didn't get its fix for #27124 and still suffers from that issue.
2015-08-14 22:26:29 +03:00
bors
c1e865c9df Auto merge of #27838 - AlisdairO:diagnostics221, r=Manishearth
As title :-)
Part of #24407.

r? @Manishearth
2015-08-14 19:21:59 +00:00
Alisdair Owens
de26d5e712 add diagnostics for E0221 2015-08-14 20:21:24 +01:00
Without Boats
975a8ed312 Implemented Default for arrays up to [T; 32]. 2015-08-14 10:11:19 -07:00
bors
e7261f3ab6 Auto merge of #27641 - nikomatsakis:soundness-rfc-1214, r=nrc
This PR implements the majority of RFC 1214. In particular, it implements:

- the new outlives relation
- comprehensive WF checking

For the most part, new code receives warnings, not errors, though 3 regressions were found via a crater run. 

There are some deviations from RFC 1214. Most notably:

- we still consider implied bounds from fn ret; this intersects other soundness issues that I intend to address in detail in a follow-up RFC. Fixing this without breaking a lot of code probably requires rewriting compare-method somewhat (which is probably a good thing).
- object types do not check trait bounds for fear of encountering `Self`; this was left as an unresolved question in RFC 1214, but ultimately feels inconsistent.

Both of those two issues are highlighted in the tracking issue, https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/27579. #27579 also includes a testing matrix with new tests that I wrote -- these probably duplicate some existing tests, I tried to check but wasn't quite sure what to look for. I tried to be thorough in testing the WF relation, at least, but would welcome suggestions for missing tests.

r? @nrc (or perhaps someone else?)
2015-08-14 15:26:09 +00:00
Niko Matsakis
7f8942c18d Correct nits from @nrc 2015-08-14 09:26:19 -04:00
bors
0649b16ade Auto merge of #27822 - arielb1:inline-round-take-2, r=Gankro
This speeds up rustc on #25916 from 1.36±0.022s to 1.326±0.025s

Tests pass locally (even on 32-bit :-)

r? @Gankro
2015-08-14 07:11:07 +00:00
bors
e907fab178 Auto merge of #27821 - dhuseby:manual_snapshots_1af31d4, r=alexcrichton
@alexcrichton please upload these snapshots when landing this patch:

https://github.com/dhuseby/rust-manual-snapshots/raw/master/rust-stage0-2015-08-11-1af31d4-bitrig-x86_64-739e0635cd5a1b3635f1457aae3ef6390ea9a7a8.tar.bz2
https://github.com/dhuseby/rust-manual-snapshots/raw/master/rust-stage0-2015-08-11-1af31d4-freebsd-i386-3cd4a44fb97b3135be3d1b760bea604a381e85dc.tar.bz2
https://github.com/dhuseby/rust-manual-snapshots/raw/master/rust-stage0-2015-08-11-1af31d4-freebsd-x86_64-de1f36592bac0eeb90c049a8421246652c511b9e.tar.bz2
2015-08-14 05:40:44 +00:00
bors
741a19f8ef Auto merge of #27816 - steveklabnik:for_chrisbot, r=alexcrichton
reported by @chris-code here: https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/24486#issuecomment-130812460
2015-08-14 04:09:57 +00:00
bors
033e127066 Auto merge of #27786 - alexcrichton:start-testing-msvc, r=brson
* An apparent bug in VS 2013's implementation of the `exp2` function is worked
  around in one of flt2dec's tests.

Turns out this was the only fix necessary!
2015-08-14 02:38:29 +00:00
bors
e2bebf32fa Auto merge of #27696 - bluss:into-boxed-str, r=alexcrichton
Rename String::into_boxed_slice -> into_boxed_str

This is the name that was decided in rust-lang/rfcs#1152, and it's
better if we say “boxed str” for `Box<str>`.

The old name `String::into_boxed_slice` is deprecated.
2015-08-14 01:06:37 +00:00
bors
82b89645fb Auto merge of #27684 - alexcrichton:remove-deprecated, r=aturon
This commit removes all unstable and deprecated functions in the standard
library. A release was recently cut (1.3) which makes this a good time for some
spring cleaning of the deprecated functions.
2015-08-13 23:32:30 +00:00
Dave Huseby
fe5336b04d Fixes #27805 - adds missing snapshots for Bitrig and FreeBSD 2015-08-13 13:45:04 -07:00
bors
a4066271b7 Auto merge of #27758 - nathankleyn:diagnostics-386, r=Manishearth
This adds detailed diagnostics for E0386, 'cannot assign to data in an
immutable container'.

This is part of rust-lang/rust#24407.

r? @Manishearth
2015-08-13 20:37:18 +00:00
Steve Klabnik
e4266803cb Fix broken link to Wilson
reported by @chris-code here: https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/24486#issuecomment-130812460
2015-08-13 15:42:14 -04:00
arielb1
21eae93550 Mark round_up_to_next as inline
This speeds up rustc on #25916 from 1.36±0.022s to 1.326±0.025s

Tests pass locally (even on 32-bit :-)
2015-08-13 22:23:26 +03:00
bors
7b7fc67dd4 Auto merge of #27625 - wthrowe:find, r=alexcrichton
New enough find on Linux doesn't support "-perm +..." and suggests
using "-perm /..." instead, but that doesn't work on Windows.
Hopefully all platforms are happy with this expanded version.

I don't have access to a Windows development system to test this, so someone needs to verify that this actually works there before merging.

Closes #19981.
2015-08-13 16:09:22 +00:00
Alex Crichton
60ac0d85b9 Get make check working on MSVC
* An apparent bug in VS 2013's implementation of the `exp2` function is worked
  around in one of flt2dec's tests.
2015-08-13 09:02:38 -07:00
bors
bb954cfa75 Auto merge of #27307 - rkruppe:dec2flt, r=pnkfelix
Completely rewrite the conversion of decimal strings to `f64` and `f32`. The code is intended to be absolutely positively completely 100% accurate (when it doesn't give up). To the best of my knowledge, it achieves that goal. Any input that is not rejected is converted to the floating point number that is closest to the true value of the input. This includes overflow, subnormal numbers, and underflow to zero. In other words, the rounding error is less than or equal to 0.5 units in the last place. Half-way cases (exactly 0.5 ULP error) are handled with half-to-even rounding, also known as banker's rounding.

This code implements the algorithms from the paper [How to Read Floating Point Numbers Accurately][paper] by William D. Clinger, with extensions to handle underflow, overflow and subnormals, as well as some algorithmic optimizations.

# Correctness

With such a large amount of tricky code, many bugs are to be expected. Indeed tracking down the obscure causes of various rounding errors accounts for the bulk of the development time. Extensive tests (taking in the order of hours to run through to completion) are included in `src/etc/test-float-parse`: Though exhaustively testing all possible inputs is impossible, I've had good success with generating millions of instances from various "classes" of inputs. These tests take far too long to be run by @bors so contributors who touch this code need the discipline to run them. There are `#[test]`s, but they don't even cover every stupid mistake I made in course of writing this.

Another aspect is *integer* overflow. Extreme (or malicious) inputs could cause overflow both in the machine-sized integers used for bookkeeping throughout the algorithms (e.g., the decimal exponent) as well as the arbitrary-precision arithmetic. There is input validation to reject all such cases I know of, and I am quite sure nobody will *accidentally* cause this code to go out of range. Still, no guarantees.

# Limitations

Noticed the weasel words "(when it doesn't give up)" at the beginning? Some otherwise well-formed decimal strings are rejected because spelling out the value of the input requires too many digits, i.e., `digits * 10^abs(exp)` can't be stored in a bignum. This only applies if the value is not "obviously" zero or infinite, i.e., if you take a near-infinity or near-zero value and add many pointless fractional digits. At least with the algorithm used here, computing the precise value would require computing the full value as a fraction, which would overflow. The precise limit is `number_of_digits + abs(exp) > 375` but could be raised almost arbitrarily. In the future, another algorithm might lift this restriction entirely.

This should not be an issue for any realistic inputs. Still, the code does reject inputs that would result in a finite float when evaluated with unlimited precision. Some of these inputs are even regressions that the old code (mostly) handled, such as `0.333...333` with 400+ `3`s. Thus this might qualify as [breaking-change].

# Performance

Benchmarks results are... tolerable. Short numbers that hit the fast paths (`f64` multiplication or shortcuts to zero/inf) have performance in the same order of magnitude as the old code tens of nanoseconds. Numbers that are delegated to Algorithm Bellerophon (using floats with 64 bit significand, implemented in software) are slower, but not drastically so (couple hundred nanoseconds).

Numbers that need the AlgorithmM fallback (for `f64`, roughly everything below 1e-305 and above 1e305) take far, far longer, hundreds of microseconds. Note that my implementation is not quite as naive as the expository version in the paper (it needs one to four division instead of ~1000), but division is fundamentally pretty expensive and my implementation of it is extremely simple and slow.

All benchmarks run on a mediocre laptop with a i5-4200U CPU under light load.

# Binary size

Unfortunately the implementation needs to duplicate almost all code: Once for `f32` and once for `f64`. Before you ask, no, this cannot be avoided, at least not completely (but see the Future Work section). There's also a precomputed table of powers of ten, weighing in at about six kilobytes.

Running a stage1 `rustc` over a stand-alone program that simply parses pi to `f32` and `f64` and outputs both results reveals that the overhead vs. the old parsing code is about 44 KiB normally and about 28 KiB with LTO. It's presumably half of that + 3 KiB when only one of the two code paths is exercised.

| rustc options                 | old       | new       | delta         |
|---------------------------    |---------  |---------  |-----------    |
| [nothing]                     | 2588375   | 2633828   | 44.39 KiB     |
| -O                            | 2585211   | 2630688   | 44.41 KiB     |
| -O -C lto                     | 1026353   | 1054981   | 27.96 KiB     |
| -O -C lto -C link-args=-s     | 414208    | 442368    | 27.5 KiB      |

# Future Work

## Directory layout

The `dec2flt` code uses some types embedded deeply in the `flt2dec` module hierarchy, even though nothing about them it formatting-specific. They should be moved to a more conversion-direction-agnostic location at some point.

## Performance

It could be much better, especially for large inputs. Some low-hanging fruit has been picked but much more work could be done. Some specific ideas are jotted down in `FIXME`s all over the code.

## Binary size

One could try to compress the table further, though I am skeptical. Another avenue would be reducing the code duplication from basically everything being generic over `T: RawFloat`. Perhaps one can reduce the magnitude of the duplication by pushing the parts that don't need to know the target type into separate functions, but this is finicky and probably makes some code read less naturally.

## Other bases

This PR leaves `f{32,64}::from_str_radix` alone. It only replaces `FromStr` (and thus `.parse()`). I am convinced that `from_str_radix` should not exist, and have proposed its [deprecation and speedy removal][deprecate-radix]. Whatever the outcome of that discussion, it is independent from, and out of scope for, this PR.

Fixes #24557
Fixes #14353

r? @pnkfelix

cc @lifthrasiir @huonw 

[paper]: http://citeseerx.ist.psu.edu/viewdoc/summary?doi=10.1.1.45.4152
[deprecate-radix]: https://internals.rust-lang.org/t/deprecate-f-32-64-from-str-radix/2405
2015-08-13 13:29:38 +00:00
Ulrik Sverdrup
bec64090a7 Rename String::into_boxed_slice -> into_boxed_str
This is the name that was decided in rust-lang/rfcs#1152, and it's
better if we say “boxed str” for `Box<str>`.

The old name `String::into_boxed_slice` is deprecated.
2015-08-13 14:02:00 +02:00
Nathan Kleyn
b0b2952189 Improve interior mutability example for E0386. 2015-08-13 10:17:56 +01:00
Nathan Kleyn
75c6428e1b Add details about types with interior mutability to E0386.
Types with interior mutability like `Cell` and `RefCell` can be used to
skirt the restriction on mutating mutable values inside an immutable
container.
2015-08-13 10:17:56 +01:00
Nathan Kleyn
55752a4bde Add detailed diagnostics for E0386.
This adds detailed diagnostics for E0386, 'cannot assign to data in an
immutable container'.
2015-08-13 10:17:56 +01:00
Niko Matsakis
401a243552 astconv.rs: extended ast_ty_to_ty debugging 2015-08-13 05:10:56 -04:00
bors
e9205a20a8 Auto merge of #27803 - Manishearth:rollup, r=Manishearth
- Successful merges: #27699, #27757
- Failed merges:
2015-08-13 08:47:22 +00:00
Manish Goregaokar
0f3fada118 Rollup merge of #27757 - AlisdairO:diagnostics366, r=Manishearth
As title :-)
Part of #24407.

r? @Manishearth
2015-08-13 14:17:06 +05:30
Manish Goregaokar
9d0bca42e0 Rollup merge of #27699 - nathankleyn:diagnostics-383, r=Manishearth
This adds detailed diagnostics for `E0383`, 'partial reinitialization of
uninitialized structure'.

This is part of rust-lang/rust#24407.

r? @Manishearth
2015-08-13 14:17:06 +05:30
Nathan Kleyn
67c7fd710b Improve code examples for E0383 long diagnostic. 2015-08-13 09:11:06 +01:00
Nathan Kleyn
9c0d2b2465 Add detailed diagnostics for E0383.
This adds detailed diagnostics for E0383, 'partial reinitialization of
uninitialized structure'.

This is part of rust-lang/rust#24407.
2015-08-13 09:06:29 +01:00
bors
ea3cd022ef Auto merge of #27762 - alexcrichton:fix-libc, r=aturon
The corrected signature of `ioctl` broke some crates on crates.io, and it's not
currently worth the major version bump of libc, so for now keep the old
signature around for crates.io builds only with a comment to remove it at a
future date.

This should allow libc on crates.io to update to the master version in-tree.
I've verified that this was the only breakage of substance between the version
libc is currently built with and today's master branch.
2015-08-13 07:07:34 +00:00