Printing is an incredibly useful debugging utility, and it's not much help if
your debugging prints just trigger an obscure abort when you need them most. In
order to handle this case, forcibly fall back to a libc::write implementation of
printing whenever a local task is not available.
Note that this is *not* a 1:1 fallback. All 1:1 rust tasks will still have a
local Task that it can go through (and stdio will be created through the local
IO factory), this is only a fallback for "no context" rust code (such as that
setting up the context).
It is not the case that all programs will always be able to acquire an instance
of the LocalIo borrow, so this commit exposes this limitation by returning
Option<LocalIo> from LocalIo::borrow().
At the same time, a helper method LocalIo::maybe_raise() has been added in order
to encapsulate the functionality of raising on io_error if there is on local I/O
available.
For now, this moves the following modules to std::sync
* UnsafeArc (also removed unwrap method)
* mpsc_queue
* spsc_queue
* atomics
* mpmc_bounded_queue
* deque
We may want to remove some of the queues, but for now this moves things out of
std::rt into std::sync
This module contains many M:N specific concepts. This will no longer be
available with libgreen, and most functions aren't really that necessary today
anyway. New testing primitives will be introduced as they become available for
1:1 and M:N.
A new io::test module is introduced with the new ip4/ip6 address helpers to
continue usage in io tests.
This trait is used to abstract the differences between 1:1 and M:N scheduling
and is the sole dispatch point for the differences between these two scheduling
modes.
This, and the following series of commits, is not intended to compile. Only
after the entire transition is complete are programs expected to compile.
So that `Uuid` can be used as the key in a `HashMap` or in a `HashSet`, etc
The only question I have about this is: Is endianness an issue, here? If so, what's the correct way to proceed?
Could prevent callers from catching the situation and lead to e.g early
iterator terminations (cf. `Reader::read_byte`) since `None` is only to
be returned only on EOF.
… instead of failing.
Make them default methods on the trait, and also make .to_ascii()
a default method while we’re at it.
Conflicts:
src/libstd/ascii.rs
This commit adds a `--test` flag to rustdoc to expose the ability to test code examples in doc strings. This work by using sundown's `lang` attribute to figure out how a code block should be tested. The format for this is:
```
1. ```rust
2. ```rust,ignore
3. ```rust,notest
4. ```rust,should_fail
```
Where `rust` means that rustdoc will attempt to test is, `ignore` means that it will not execute the test but it will compile it, `notest` means that rustdoc completely ignores it, and `should_fail` means that the test should fail. This commit also leverages `extra::test` for the testing harness in order to allow parallelization and whatnot.
I have fixed all existing code examples in libstd and libextra, but I have not made a pass through the crates in order to change code blocks to testable code blocks.
It may also be a questionable decision to require opting-in to a testable code block.
Finally, I kept our sugar in the doc suite to omit lines starting with `#` in documentation but still process them during tests.
Closes#2925
This adds support for the `--test` flag to rustdoc which will parse a crate,
extract all code examples in doc comments, and then run each test in the
extra::test driver.
Turns out libuv's build system doesn't like us telling them that the build
directory is a relative location, as it always spits out a warning about a
circular dependency being dropped. By using an absolute path, turns out the
warnings isn't spit out, who knew?
Closes#11067
Turns out libuv's build system doesn't like us telling them that the build
directory is a relative location, as it always spits out a warning about a
circular dependency being dropped. By using an absolute path, turns out the
warnings isn't spit out, who knew?
Closes#11067
Using --dep-info writes Makefile-compatible dependency info to a file that is by default named based on the crate source filename. This adds an optional string argument to the --dep-info option which allows to write dependency info to an arbitrary filename.
cc #10698
This uses quite a bit of unsafe code for speed and failure safety, and allocates `2*n` temporary storage.
[Performance](https://gist.github.com/huonw/5547f2478380288a28c2):
| n | new | priority_queue | quick3 |
|-------:|---------:|---------------:|---------:|
| 5 | 200 | 155 | 106 |
| 100 | 6490 | 8750 | 5810 |
| 10000 | 1300000 | 1790000 | 1060000 |
| 100000 | 16700000 | 23600000 | 12700000 |
| sorted | 520000 | 1380000 | 53900000 |
| trend | 1310000 | 1690000 | 1100000 |
(The times are in nanoseconds, having subtracted the set-up time (i.e. the `just_generate` bench target).)
I imagine that there is still significant room for improvement, particularly because both priority_queue and quick3 are doing a static call via `Ord` or `TotalOrd` for the comparisons, while this is using a (boxed) closure.
Also, this code does not `clone`, unlike `quick_sort3`; and is stable, unlike both of the others.
Trap the io_error condition so that a more informative error message is
displayed when the linker program cannot be started, such as when the
name of the linker binary is accidentally mistyped.
closes#10755
Upon inspecting the core dumps, they're all segfaulting at the same instruction
with the same value in a register that looks fishy. It appears to be indexing
into an array with a -1 index and then getting some weird overflow and dying.
I have attempted to fix this as part of
alexcrichton/libuv@fd5308383c,
but I am unsure of whether this is the actual cause of the problem, so I am not
going to upstream it just yet. I have a fairly high confidence that this is
indeed the problem, but I want to make sure that the bots to segfault all over
the place before upstreaming.
Upon inspecting the core dumps, they're all segfaulting at the same instruction
with the same value in a register that looks fishy. It appears to be indexing
into an array with a -1 index and then getting some weird overflow and dying.
I have attempted to fix this as part of
alexcrichton/libuv@fd5308383c,
but I am unsure of whether this is the actual cause of the problem, so I am not
going to upstream it just yet. I have a fairly high confidence that this is
indeed the problem, but I want to make sure that the bots to segfault all over
the place before upstreaming.