Safe fns are no longer subtypes of unsafe fns, but you can coerce from one to the other.
This is a [breaking-change] in that impl fns must now be declared `unsafe` if the trait is declared `unsafe`. In some rare cases, the subtyping change may also direct affect you, but no such cases were encountered in practice.
Fixes#23449.
r? @nrc
This commit stabilizes the `cloned` iterator after tweaking the signature to
require that the iterator is over `&T` instead of `U: Deref<T>`. This method has
had time to bake for awhile now and it's not clear whether the `Deref` bound is
worth it. Additionally, there aren't clear conventions on when to bound and/or
implement the `Deref` trait, so for now the conservative route is to require
references instead of `U: Deref<T>`.
To change this signature to using `Deref` would technically be a
backwards-incompatible change, but it is doubtful that any code will actually
break in practice.
This commit clarifies some of the unstable features in the `str` module by
moving them out of the blanket `core` and `collections` features.
The following methods were moved to the `str_char` feature which generally
encompasses decoding specific characters from a `str` and dealing with the
result. It is unclear if any of these methods need to be stabilized for 1.0 and
the most conservative route for now is to continue providing them but to leave
them as unstable under a more specific name.
* `is_char_boundary`
* `char_at`
* `char_range_at`
* `char_at_reverse`
* `char_range_at_reverse`
* `slice_shift_char`
The following methods were moved into the generic `unicode` feature as they are
specifically enabled by the `unicode` crate itself.
* `nfd_chars`
* `nfkd_chars`
* `nfc_chars`
* `graphemes`
* `grapheme_indices`
* `width`
Final remnant of reflection is gone. Also, virtual `Trait` destructors are no longer tied to `Box`.
That means they can be used to drop any instance of the type (used in libarena to replace TyDesc).
This is [breaking-change] for direct users of intrinsics:
* use `intrinsics::type_name::<T>()` instead of `(*intrinsics::get_tydesc::<T>()).name`
* the only way to get the destructor is from a trait object's vtable (see libarena changes)
r? @pcwalton f? @dotdash
The alignment field is actually a "pointer sized" type instead of always i64,
requiring that the size of the padding field is also calculated slightly
differently.
Closes#23425
This function is the current replacement for `std::old_io::timer` which will
soon be deprecated. This function is unstable and has its own feature gate as it
does not yet have an RFC nor has it existed for very long.
These two borrowing examples were confusing/misleading. This changes it
to more clearly show how you _can_ borrow a box, and also uses & instead
of &*.
This function is the current replacement for `std::old_io::timer` which will
soon be deprecated. This function is unstable and has its own feature gate as it
does not yet have an RFC nor has it existed for very long.
Very minor fix: in `std::net::Ipv6Addr::new`, the documentation had an incomplete representation of the resulting address, missing the last two groups.
This upcast coercion currently never requires vtable changes. It should be generalized.
This is a [breaking-change] -- if you have an impl on an object type like `impl SomeTrait`, then this will no longer be applicable to object types like `SomeTrait+Send`. In the standard library, this primarily affected `Any`, and this PR adds impls for `Any+Send` as to keep the API the same in practice. An alternate workaround is to use UFCS form or standalone fns. For more details, see <https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/18737#issuecomment-78450798>.
r? @nrc
This upcast coercion currently preserves the vtable for the object, but
eventually it can be used to create a derived vtable. The upcast
coercion is not introduced into method dispatch; see comment on #18737
for information about why. Fixes#18737.
This looks like the most logical target to give to this link, or at least what I would expect as someone that want to integrate with a native library.
r? @steveklabnik
The [associated RFC][rfc] for possibly splitting out `flush` has been closed and
as a result there are no more blockers for stabilizing this method, so this
commit marks the method as such.
[rfc]: https://github.com/rust-lang/rfcs/pull/950
To the correct MAP_NORESERVE. Every other instance is known as MAP_NORESERVE, so this is just a basic typo.
I really doubt this will break anybody's but my own code.
[breaking-change]
This removes the error case of the compression functions, the only errors that
can occur are incorrect parameters or an out-of-memory condition, both of which
are handled with panics in Rust.
Also introduces an extensible `Error` type instead of returning an `Option`.
The type implements a destructor so you can't destructure it.
- Allow inherent implementations on `char`, `str`, `[T]`, `*const T`, `*mut T` and all the numeric primitives.
- copy `unicode::char::CharExt` methods into `impl char`
- remove `unicode::char::CharExt`, its re-export `std::char::CharExt` and `CharExt` from the prelude
- copy `collections::str::StrExt` methods into `impl str`
- remove `collections::str::StrExt` its re-export `std::str::StrExt`, and `StrExt` from the prelude
- copy `collections::slice::SliceExt` methods into `impl<T> [T]`
- remove `collections::slice::SliceExt` its re-export `std::slice::SliceExt`, and `SliceExt` from the prelude
- copy `core::ptr::PtrExt` methods into `impl<T> *const T`
- remove `core::ptr::PtrExt` its re-export `std::ptr::PtrExt`, and `PtrExt` from the prelude
- copy `core::ptr::PtrExt` and `core::ptr::MutPtrExt` methods into `impl<T> *mut T`
- remove `core::ptr::MutPtrExt` its re-export `std::ptr::MutPtrExt`, and `MutPtrExt` from the prelude
- copy `core::num::Int` and `core::num::SignedInt` methods into `impl i{8,16,32,64,size}`
- copy `core::num::Int` and `core::num::UnsignedInt` methods into `impl u{8,16,32,64,size}`
- remove `core::num::UnsignedInt` and its re-export `std::num::UnsignedInt`
- move `collections` tests into its own crate: `collectionstest`
- copy `core::num::Float` methods into `impl f{32,64}`
Because this PR removes several traits, this is a [breaking-change], however functionality remains unchanged and breakage due to unresolved imports should be minimal. If you encounter an error due to an unresolved import, simply remove the import:
``` diff
fn main() {
- use std::num::UnsignedInt; //~ error: unresolved import `std::num::UnsignedInt`.
-
println!("{}", 8_usize.is_power_of_two());
}
```
---
cc #16862
[preview docs](http://japaric.github.io/inherent/std/index.html)
[unicode::char](http://japaric.github.io/inherent/unicode/primitive.char.html)
[collections::str](http://japaric.github.io/inherent/collections/primitive.str.html)
[std::f32](http://japaric.github.io/inherent/std/primitive.f32.html)
This commit performs a stabilization pass over the std::net module,
incorporating the changes from RFC 923. Specifically, the following actions were
taken:
Stable functionality:
* `net` (the name)
* `Shutdown`
* `Shutdown::{Read, Write, Both}`
* `lookup_host`
* `LookupHost`
* `SocketAddr`
* `SocketAddr::{V4, V6}`
* `SocketAddr::port`
* `SocketAddrV4`
* `SocketAddrV4::{new, ip, port}`
* `SocketAddrV6`
* `SocketAddrV4::{new, ip, port, flowinfo, scope_id}`
* Common trait impls for socket addr structures
* `ToSocketAddrs`
* `ToSocketAddrs::Iter`
* `ToSocketAddrs::to_socket_addrs`
* `ToSocketAddrs for {SocketAddr*, (Ipv*Addr, u16), str, (str, u16)}`
* `Ipv4Addr`
* `Ipv4Addr::{new, octets, to_ipv6_compatible, to_ipv6_mapped}`
* `Ipv6Addr`
* `Ipv6Addr::{new, segments, to_ipv4}`
* `TcpStream`
* `TcpStream::connect`
* `TcpStream::{peer_addr, local_addr, shutdown, try_clone}`
* `{Read,Write} for {TcpStream, &TcpStream}`
* `TcpListener`
* `TcpListener::bind`
* `TcpListener::{local_addr, try_clone, accept, incoming}`
* `Incoming`
* `UdpSocket`
* `UdpSocket::bind`
* `UdpSocket::{recv_from, send_to, local_addr, try_clone}`
Unstable functionality:
* Extra methods on `Ipv{4,6}Addr` for various methods of inspecting the address
and determining qualities of it.
* Extra methods on `TcpStream` to configure various protocol options.
* Extra methods on `UdpSocket` to configure various protocol options.
Deprecated functionality:
* The `socket_addr` method has been renamed to `local_addr`
This commit is a breaking change due to the restructuring of the `SocketAddr`
type as well as the renaming of the `socket_addr` method. Migration should be
fairly straightforward, however, after accounting for the new level of
abstraction in `SocketAddr` (protocol distinction at the socket address level,
not the IP address).
[breaking-change]
Most of the changes are cleanup facilitated by straight-forward attribute handling.
This is a minor [breaking-change] for users of `quote_stmt!` (returns `Option<P<Stmt>>` now) and some of the public methods in `Parser` (a few `Vec<Attribute>` arguments/returns were removed).
r? @nikomatsakis
This looks like the most logical target to give to this link, or at least what I would expect as someone that want to integrate with a native library.
r? @steveklabnik
The [associated RFC][rfc] for possibly splitting out `flush` has been closed and
as a result there are no more blockers for stabilizing this method, so this
commit marks the method as such.
[rfc]: https://github.com/rust-lang/rfcs/pull/950
This removes the error case of the compression functions, the only errors that
can occur are incorrect parameters or an out-of-memory condition, both of which
are handled with panics in Rust.
Also introduces an extensible `Error` type instead of returning an `Option`.
This commit deprecates the `count`, `range` and `range_step` functions
in `iter`, in favor of range notation. To recover all existing
functionality, a new `step_by` adapter is provided directly on `ops::Range`
and `ops::RangeFrom`.
[breaking-change]
r? @alexcrichton
To the correct MAP_NORESERVE. Every other thing is known as MAP_NORESERVE, so this is just a basic typo.
I really doubt this will break anybody's but my own code.
r? @alexcrichton or @aturon
This still needs to somehow figure out how to avoid unstable warnings arising from the use of unstable functions. I tried to use `#[allow_internal_unstable]` but it still spits out warnings as far as I can see. @huonw (I think you implemented it) does `#[allow_internal_unstable]` not work for some reason or am I using it incorrectly?
This commit starts to organize the `std::os::$platform` modules and in the
process stabilizes some of the functionality contained within. The organization
of these modules will reflect the organization of the standard library itself
with extension traits for primitives in the same corresponding module.
The OS-specific modules will grow more functionality over time including
concrete types that are not extending functionality of other structures, and
these will either go into the closest module in `std::os::$platform` or they
will grow a new module in the hierarchy.
The following items are now stable:
* `os::{unix, windows}`
* `unix::ffi`
* `unix::ffi::OsStrExt`
* `unix::ffi::OsStrExt::{from_bytes, as_bytes, to_cstring}`
* `unix::ffi::OsString`
* `unix::ffi::OsStringExt::{from_vec, into_vec}`
* `unix::process`
* `unix::process::CommandExt`
* `unix::process::CommandExt::{uid, gid}`
* `unix::process::ExitStatusExt`
* `unix::process::ExitStatusExt::signal`
* `unix::prelude`
* `windows::ffi`
* `windows::ffi::OsStringExt`
* `windows::ffi::OsStringExt::from_wide`
* `windows::ffi::OsStrExt`
* `windows::ffi::OsStrExt::encode_wide`
* `windows::prelude`
The following items remain unstable:
* `unix::io`
* `unix::io::{Fd, AsRawFd}`
* `unix::fs::{PermissionsExt, OpenOptionsExt}`
* `windows::io`
* `windows::io::{Handle, AsRawHandle}`
* `windows::io::{Socket, AsRawSocket}`
* `windows::fs`
* `windows::fs::OpenOptionsExt`
Due to the reorgnization of the platform extension modules, this commit is a
breaking change. Most imports can be fixed by adding the relevant libstd module
in the `use` path (such as `ffi` or `fs`).
[breaking-change]
This commit starts to organize the `std::os::$platform` modules and in the
process stabilizes some of the functionality contained within. The organization
of these modules will reflect the organization of the standard library itself
with extension traits for primitives in the same corresponding module.
The OS-specific modules will grow more functionality over time including
concrete types that are not extending functionality of other structures, and
these will either go into the closest module in `std::os::$platform` or they
will grow a new module in the hierarchy.
The following items are now stable:
* `os::{unix, windows}`
* `unix::ffi`
* `unix::ffi::OsStrExt`
* `unix::ffi::OsStrExt::{from_bytes, as_bytes, to_cstring}`
* `unix::ffi::OsString`
* `unix::ffi::OsStringExt::{from_vec, into_vec}`
* `unix::process`
* `unix::process::CommandExt`
* `unix::process::CommandExt::{uid, gid}`
* `unix::process::ExitStatusExt`
* `unix::process::ExitStatusExt::signal`
* `unix::prelude`
* `windows::ffi`
* `windows::ffi::OsStringExt`
* `windows::ffi::OsStringExt::from_wide`
* `windows::ffi::OsStrExt`
* `windows::ffi::OsStrExt::encode_wide`
* `windows::prelude`
The following items remain unstable:
* `unix::io`
* `unix::io::{Fd, AsRawFd}`
* `unix::fs::{PermissionsExt, OpenOptionsExt}`
* `windows::io`
* `windows::io::{Handle, AsRawHandle}`
* `windows::io::{Socket, AsRawSocket}`
* `windows::fs`
* `windows::fs::OpenOptionsExt`
Due to the reorgnization of the platform extension modules, this commit is a
breaking change. Most imports can be fixed by adding the relevant libstd module
in the `use` path (such as `ffi` or `fs`).
[breaking-change]
`std::io` does not currently expose the `stdin_raw`, `stdout_raw`, or
`stderr_raw` functions. According to the current plans for stdio (see
rust-lang/rfcs#517), raw access will likely be provided using the
platform-specific `std::os::{unix,windows}` modules. At the moment we
don't expose any way to do this. As such, delete all mention of the
`*_raw` functions from the `stdin`/`stdout`/`stderr` function
documentation.
While we're at it, remove a few `pub`s from items that aren't exposed.
This is done just to lessen the confusion experienced by anyone who
looks at the source in an attempt to find the `*_raw` functions.
It is a frequent pattern among I/O functions to take `P: AsPath + ?Sized` or
`AsOsStr` instead of `AsPath`. Most of these functions do not need to take
ownership of their argument, but for libraries in general it's much more
ergonomic to not deal with `?Sized` at all and simply require an argument `P`
instead of `&P`.
This change is aimed at removing unsightly `?Sized` bounds while retaining the
same level of usability as before. All affected functions now take ownership of
their arguments instead of taking them by reference, but due to the forwarding
implementations of `AsOsStr` and `AsPath` all code should continue to work as it
did before.
This is strictly speaking a breaking change due to the signatures of these
functions changing, but normal idiomatic usage of these APIs should not break in
practice.
[breaking-change]
It is a frequent pattern among I/O functions to take `P: AsPath + ?Sized` or
`AsOsStr` instead of `AsPath`. Most of these functions do not need to take
ownership of their argument, but for libraries in general it's much more
ergonomic to not deal with `?Sized` at all and simply require an argument `P`
instead of `&P`.
This change is aimed at removing unsightly `?Sized` bounds while retaining the
same level of usability as before. All affected functions now take ownership of
their arguments instead of taking them by reference, but due to the forwarding
implementations of `AsOsStr` and `AsPath` all code should continue to work as it
did before.
This is strictly speaking a breaking change due to the signatures of these
functions changing, but normal idiomatic usage of these APIs should not break in
practice.
[breaking-change]
LLVM older that 3.6 has a bug that cause assertions when compiling certain
constructs. For 3.5 there's still a chance that the bug might get fixed
in 3.5.2, so let's keep allowing to compile with it for it for now.
Previously it would fail on a trivial case like
/// Summary line
/// <trailing space>
/// Regular content
Compliant markdown preprocessor would render that as two separate paragraphs, but our summary line
extractor interprets both lines as the same paragraph and includes both into the short summary resulting in
![screenshot from 2015-03-13 22 47 08](https://cloud.githubusercontent.com/assets/679122/6648596/7ef792b2-c9e4-11e4-9c19-704c288ec4de.png)
Previously it would fail on a trivial case like
/// Summary line
/// <trailing space>
/// Regular content
Compliant markdown preprocessor would render that as two separate paragraphs, but our summary line
extractor interprets both lines as the same paragraph and includes both into the short summary resulting in
![screenshot from 2015-03-13 22 47 08](https://cloud.githubusercontent.com/assets/679122/6648596/7ef792b2-c9e4-11e4-9c19-704c288ec4de.png)
std::io does not currently expose the stdin_raw, stdout_raw, or
stderr_raw functions. According to the current plans for stdio (see RFC
#517), raw access will likely be provided using the platform-specific
std::os::{unix,windows} modules. At the moment we don't expose any way
to do this. As such, delete all mention of the _raw functions from the
stdin/stdout/stderr function documentation.
While we're at it, remove a few `pub`s from items that aren't exposed.
This is done just to lessen the confusion experienced by anyone who
looks at the source in an attempt to find the _raw functions.
This adds search by type (for functions/methods) support to Rustdoc. Target issue is at https://github.com/rust-lang/rfcs/issues/658.
I've described my approach here: https://github.com/rust-lang/rfcs/issues/658#issuecomment-76484200. I'll copy the text in here as well:
---
Hi, it took me longer than I wished, but I have implemented this in a not-too-complex way that I think can be extended to support more complex features (like the ones mentioned [here](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/12866#issuecomment-66945317)).
The idea is to generate a JSON representation of the types of methods/functions in the existing index, and then make the JS understand when it should look by type (and not by name).
I tried to come up with a JSON representation that can be extended to support generics, bounds, ref/mut annotations and so on. Here are a few samples:
Function:
```rust
fn to_uppercase(c: char) -> char
```
```json
{
"inputs": [
{"name": "char"}
],
"output": {
"name": "char",
}
}
```
Method (implemented or defined in trait):
```rust
// in struct Vec
// self is considered an argument as well
fn capacity(&self) -> usize
```
```json
{
"inputs": [
{"name": "vec"}
],
"output": {
"name": "usize"
}
}
```
This simple format can be extended by adding more fields, like `generic: bool`, a `bounds` mapping and so on.
I have a working implementation in https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/compare/master...mihneadb:rustdoc-search-by-type. You can check out a live demo [here](http://data.mihneadb.net/doc/std/index.html?search=charext%20-%3E%20char).
![screenshot from 2015-02-28 00 54 00](https://cloud.githubusercontent.com/assets/643127/6422722/7e5374ee-bee4-11e4-99a6-9aac3c9d5068.png)
The feature list is not that long:
- search by types (you *can* use generics as well, as long as you use the exact name - e.g. [`vec,t -> `](http://data.mihneadb.net/doc/std/index.html?search=vec%2C%20t%20-%3E))
- order of arguments does not matter
- `self` is took into account as well (e.g. search for `vec -> usize`)
- does not use "complex" annotations (e.g. you don't search for `&char -> char` but for `char -> char`)
My goal is to get a working, minimal "base" merged so that others can build upon it. How should I proceed? Do I open a PR (badly in need of code review since this is my first non "hello world"-ish rust code)?
---
In case that there is a destination for the array, like in
"let x = [expr; n]", we currently don't evaluate the given expression if
n is zero. That's inconsistent with all other cases, including "[expr;
0]" without a destination.
Fixes#23354
LLVM older that 3.6 has a bug that cause assertions when compiling certain
constructs. For 3.5 there's still a chance that the bug might get fixed
in 3.5.2, so let's keep allowing to compile with it for it for now.
Previously it would fail on a trivial case like
/// Summary line
/// <trailing space>
/// Regular content
Compliant markdown preprocessor would render that as two separate paragraphs, but our summary line
extractor would interpret both lines as the same paragraph and include both into the short summary.
at least that's what the docs say: http://doc.rust-lang.org/std/slice/fn.from_raw_parts.html
A few situations got prettier. In some situations the mutability of the resulting and source pointers differed (and was cast away by transmute), the mutability matches now.
It wasn't clear to me that early_error was correct here, but it seems to
work. This code is reachable from `rustdoc`, which is problematic, because
early_error panics. rustc handles the panics gracefully (without ICEing or
crashing), but rustdoc does not. It's not the first such rustdoc problem,
though:
$ rustdoc hello.rs --extern std=bad-std
error: extern location for std does not exist: bad-std
hello.rs:1:1: 1:1 error: can't find crate for `std`
hello.rs:1
^
error: aborting due to 2 previous errors
thread '<unnamed>' panicked at 'Box<Any>', /home/rustbuild/src/rust-buildbot/slave/nightly-dist-rustc-linux/build/src/libsyntax/diagnostic.rs:151
thread '<unnamed>' panicked at 'called `Result::unwrap()` on an `Err` value: "rustc failed"', /home/rustbuild/src/rust-buildbot/slave/nightly-dist-rustc-linux/build/src/libcore/result.rs:744
thread '<main>' panicked at 'child thread None panicked', /home/rustbuild/src/rust-buildbot/slave/nightly-dist-rustc-linux/build/src/libstd/thread.rs:661
Reduce code size overhead from core::panicking::panic
core::panicking::panic currently creates an Arguments structure using
format_args!("{}", expr), which formats the expr str using the Display::fmt.
Display::fmt pulls in Formatter::pad, which then also pulls in string-related
code for truncation and padding.
If core::panicking::panic instead creates an Arguments structure with a string
piece, it is possible that the Display::fmt function for str can be optimized
out of the program.
In my testing with a 32-bit x86 bare metal program, the change tended to save
between ~100 bytes and ~5500 bytes, depending on what other panic* functions
the program invokes and whether the panic_fmt lang item uses the Arguments
value.
This commit performs a stabilization pass over the std::net module,
incorporating the changes from RFC 923. Specifically, the following actions were
taken:
Stable functionality:
* `net` (the name)
* `Shutdown`
* `Shutdown::{Read, Write, Both}`
* `lookup_host`
* `LookupHost`
* `SocketAddr`
* `SocketAddr::{V4, V6}`
* `SocketAddr::port`
* `SocketAddrV4`
* `SocketAddrV4::{new, ip, port}`
* `SocketAddrV6`
* `SocketAddrV4::{new, ip, port, flowinfo, scope_id}`
* Common trait impls for socket addr structures
* `ToSocketAddrs`
* `ToSocketAddrs::Iter`
* `ToSocketAddrs::to_socket_addrs`
* `ToSocketAddrs for {SocketAddr*, (Ipv*Addr, u16), str, (str, u16)}`
* `Ipv4Addr`
* `Ipv4Addr::{new, octets, to_ipv6_compatible, to_ipv6_mapped}`
* `Ipv6Addr`
* `Ipv6Addr::{new, segments, to_ipv4}`
* `TcpStream`
* `TcpStream::connect`
* `TcpStream::{peer_addr, local_addr, shutdown, try_clone}`
* `{Read,Write} for {TcpStream, &TcpStream}`
* `TcpListener`
* `TcpListener::bind`
* `TcpListener::{local_addr, try_clone, accept, incoming}`
* `Incoming`
* `UdpSocket`
* `UdpSocket::bind`
* `UdpSocket::{recv_from, send_to, local_addr, try_clone}`
Unstable functionality:
* Extra methods on `Ipv{4,6}Addr` for various methods of inspecting the address
and determining qualities of it.
* Extra methods on `TcpStream` to configure various protocol options.
* Extra methods on `UdpSocket` to configure various protocol options.
Deprecated functionality:
* The `socket_addr` method has been renamed to `local_addr`
This commit is a breaking change due to the restructuring of the `SocketAddr`
type as well as the renaming of the `socket_addr` method. Migration should be
fairly straightforward, however, after accounting for the new level of
abstraction in `SocketAddr` (protocol distinction at the socket address level,
not the IP address).
[breaking-change]
This commit deprecates the `count`, `range` and `range_step` functions
in `iter`, in favor of range notation. To recover all existing
functionality, a new `step_by` adapter is provided directly on `ops::Range`
and `ops::RangeFrom`.
[breaking-change]
The new `std::io` module has had some time to bake now, and this commit
stabilizes its functionality. There are still portions of the module which
remain unstable, and below contains a summart of the actions taken.
This commit also deprecates the entire contents of the `old_io` module in a
blanket fashion. All APIs should now have a reasonable replacement in the
new I/O modules.
Stable APIs:
* `std::io` (the name)
* `std::io::prelude` (the name)
* `Read`
* `Read::read`
* `Read::{read_to_end, read_to_string}` after being modified to return a `usize`
for the number of bytes read.
* `ReadExt`
* `Write`
* `Write::write`
* `Write::{write_all, write_fmt}`
* `WriteExt`
* `BufRead`
* `BufRead::{fill_buf, consume}`
* `BufRead::{read_line, read_until}` after being modified to return a `usize`
for the number of bytes read.
* `BufReadExt`
* `BufReader`
* `BufReader::{new, with_capacity}`
* `BufReader::{get_ref, get_mut, into_inner}`
* `{Read,BufRead} for BufReader`
* `BufWriter`
* `BufWriter::{new, with_capacity}`
* `BufWriter::{get_ref, get_mut, into_inner}`
* `Write for BufWriter`
* `IntoInnerError`
* `IntoInnerError::{error, into_inner}`
* `{Error,Display} for IntoInnerError`
* `LineWriter`
* `LineWriter::{new, with_capacity}` - `with_capacity` was added
* `LineWriter::{get_ref, get_mut, into_inner}` - `get_mut` was added)
* `Write for LineWriter`
* `BufStream`
* `BufStream::{new, with_capacities}`
* `BufStream::{get_ref, get_mut, into_inner}`
* `{BufRead,Read,Write} for BufStream`
* `stdin`
* `Stdin`
* `Stdin::lock`
* `Stdin::read_line` - added method
* `StdinLock`
* `Read for Stdin`
* `{Read,BufRead} for StdinLock`
* `stdout`
* `Stdout`
* `Stdout::lock`
* `StdoutLock`
* `Write for Stdout`
* `Write for StdoutLock`
* `stderr`
* `Stderr`
* `Stderr::lock`
* `StderrLock`
* `Write for Stderr`
* `Write for StderrLock`
* `io::Result`
* `io::Error`
* `io::Error::last_os_error`
* `{Display, Error} for Error`
Unstable APIs:
(reasons can be found in the commit itself)
* `Write::flush`
* `Seek`
* `ErrorKind`
* `Error::new`
* `Error::from_os_error`
* `Error::kind`
Deprecated APIs
* `Error::description` - available via the `Error` trait
* `Error::detail` - available via the `Display` implementation
* `thread::Builder::{stdout, stderr}`
Changes in functionality:
* `old_io::stdio::set_stderr` is now a noop as the infrastructure for printing
backtraces has migrated to `std::io`.
[breaking-change]
This implements a wish suggested in #17410, detecting enum variants that are never constructed, even in the presence of `#[derive(Clone)]`. The implementation is general and not specific to `#[derive(Clone)]`.
r? @jakub-
When this attribute is applied to a function, its return value gets the
noalias attribute, which is how you tell LLVM that the function returns
a \"new\" pointer that doesn't alias anything accessible to the caller,
i.e. it acts like a memory allocator.
Plain malloc doesn't need this attribute because LLVM already knows
about malloc and adds the attribute itself.
Show how to get a pointer without destroying the box.
Use `boxed::into_raw` instead of `mem::transmute`.
I removed the `let my_num: *const i32 = mem::transmute(my_num);` case altogether because we own the box, a `*mut` pointer is good anywhere a `*const` is needed, `from_raw` takes a mutable pointer and casting from a `*const` caused an ICE.