There's a few parts to this PR
* Implement unix pipes in libnative for unix platforms (thanks @Geal!)
* Implement named pipes in libnative for windows (terrible, terrible code)
* Remove `#[cfg(unix)]` from `mod unix` in `std::io::net`. This is a terrible name for what it is, but that's the topic of #12093.
The windows implementation was significantly more complicated than I thought it would be, but it seems to be passing all the tests. now.
Closes#11201
Extends the license and formatting check to `*.js` files in `src/doc` and `*.sh`, `*.pl`, `*.c`, and `*.h` files in `src/etc`. As best as I could tell, these files should be covered under the Rust project license.
cc @brson: Do any other scripts need a license? I'd like to double-check that this PR closes#4534.
Delete all the documentation from std::task that references linked
failure.
Tweak TaskBuilder to be more builder-like. `.name()` is now `.named()` and
`.add_wrapper()` is now `.with_wrapper()`. Remove `.watched()` and
`.unwatched()` as they didn't actually do anything.
Closes#6399.
The details can be found in the comments I added to the test, but the gist of it
is that capturing output injects rescheduling a green task on failure, which
wasn't desired for the test in question.
cc #12340
This deadlock was caused when the channel was closed at just the right time, so
the extra `self.cnt.fetch_add` actually should have preserved the DISCONNECTED
state of the channel. by modifying this the channel entered a state such that
the port would never succeed in dropping.
This also moves the increment of self.steals until after the MAX_STEALS block.
The reason for this is that in 'fn recv()' the steals variable is decremented
immediately after the try_recv(), which could in theory set steals to -1 if it
was previously set to 0 in try_recv().
Closes#12340
This deadlock was caused when the channel was closed at just the right time, so
the extra `self.cnt.fetch_add` actually should have preserved the DISCONNECTED
state of the channel. by modifying this the channel entered a state such that
the port would never succeed in dropping.
This also moves the increment of self.steals until after the MAX_STEALS block.
The reason for this is that in 'fn recv()' the steals variable is decremented
immediately after the try_recv(), which could in theory set steals to -1 if it
was previously set to 0 in try_recv().
Closes#12340
This is inspired by the [function naming in the Julia standard library](http://docs.julialang.org/en/release-0.2/stdlib/base/#Base.count_ones). It seems like a more self-explanatory name, and is more consistent with the accompanying methods, `leading_zeros` and `trailing_zeros`.
This replaces the iterator with one that handles lone surrogates
gracefully and uses that to implement `from_utf16_lossy` which replaces
invalid `u16`s with U+FFFD.
Work toward #9876.
This adds `prepare.mk`, which is simply a more heavily-parameterized `install.mk`, then uses `prepare` to implement both `install` and the windows installer (`dist`). Smoke tested on both Linux and Windows.
With Rc no longer trying to statically prevent cycles (and thus no
longer using the Freeze bound), it seems appropriate to remove that
restriction from MutexArc as well.
* Implementation of pipe_win32 filled out for libnative
* Reorganize pipes to be clone-able
* Fix a few file descriptor leaks on error
* Factor out some common code into shared functions
* Make use of the if_ok!() macro for less indentation
Closes#11201
Delete all the documentation from std::task that references linked
failure.
Tweak TaskBuilder to be more builder-like. .name() is now .named() and
.add_wrapper() is now .with_wrapper(). Remove .watched() and
.unwatched() as they didn't actually do anything.
This renames the `n*` and `n*_ref` tuple getters to `val*` and `ref*` respectively, and adds `mut*` getters. It also removes the `CloneableTuple` and `ImmutableTuple` traits.