The method with which backwards compatibility was retained ended up leading to
documentation that rustdoc didn't handle well and largely ended up confusing.
For the rust-call ABI, the last function argument is a tuple that gets
untupled for the actual call. For bare functions using this ABI, the
code has access to the tuple, so we need to tuple the arguments again.
But closures can't actually access the tuple. Their arguments map to the
elements in the tuple. So what we currently do is to tuple the arguments
and then immediately untuple them again, which is pretty useless and we
can just omit it.
This is a [breaking-change]. When indexing a generic map (hashmap, etc) using the `[]` operator, it is now necessary to borrow explicitly, so change `map[key]` to `map[&key]` (consistent with the `get` routine). However, indexing of string-valued maps with constant strings can now be written `map["abc"]`.
r? @japaric
cc @aturon @Gankro
This fixes a bug in LLVM IR generation for in-line assembly where Rust would always use the host clobbers instead of target clobbers.
I also took this opportunity to clean/simplify the ```trans_inline_asm``` function.
This is my first Rust pull request; please let me know if I'm missing anything.
This commit:
* Introduces `std::convert`, providing an implementation of
RFC 529.
* Deprecates the `AsPath`, `AsOsStr`, and `IntoBytes` traits, all
in favor of the corresponding generic conversion traits.
Consequently, various IO APIs now take `AsRef<Path>` rather than
`AsPath`, and so on. Since the types provided by `std` implement both
traits, this should cause relatively little breakage.
* Deprecates many `from_foo` constructors in favor of `from`.
* Changes `PathBuf::new` to take no argument (creating an empty buffer,
as per convention). The previous behavior is now available as
`PathBuf::from`.
* De-stabilizes `IntoCow`. It's not clear whether we need this separate trait.
Closes#22751Closes#14433
[breaking-change]
impls.
This requires:
1. modifying trait selection a bit so that when we synthesize impls for
fn pointers and closures;
2. adding code to trans so that we can synthesize a `FnMut`/`FnOnce`
impl for a `Fn` closure and so forth.
Boolean values and small aggregates have a different type in args/allocas than
in SSA values but the intrinsics for volatile and atomic ops were
missing the necessary casts to handle that.
Fixes#23550
For the rust-call ABI, the last function argument is a tuple that gets
untupled for the actual call. For bare functions using this ABI, the
code has access to the tuple, so we need to tuple the arguments again.
But closures can't actually access the tuple. Their arguments map to the
elements in the tuple. So what we currently do is to tuple the arguments
and then immediately untuple them again, which is pretty useless and we
can just omit it.
After this patch code like `let ref a = *"abcdef"` doesn't cause ICE anymore.
Required for #23121
There are still places in rustc_trans where pointers are always assumed to be thin. In particular, #19064 is not resolved by this patch.
The method with which backwards compatibility was retained ended up leading to
documentation that rustdoc didn't handle well and largely ended up confusing.
Boolean values and small aggregates have a different type in
args/allocas than in SSA values but the intrinsics for volatile and
atomic ops were missing the necessary casts to handle that.
Fixes#23550
This includes a slight refactoring of the `cast_shift_rhs` and related
functions in `trans::base`, so that I can call them from much later in
the compiler's control flow (so that we can clearly dilineate where
automatic conversions of the RHS occur, versus where we check it).
The rhs-checking and fallback-masking is generalized to 8- and 16-bit
values, and the fallback-masking is turned on unconditionally.
Fix#10183.
Is this a [breaking-change]? I would argue it is not; it only adds a
strict definition to what was previously undefined behavior; however,
there might be code that was e.g. assuming that `1_i8 << 17` yields 0.
(This happens in certain contexts and at certain optimization levels.)
* no_split_stack was renamed to no_stack_check
* deriving was renamed to derive
* `use foo::mod` was renamed to `use foo::self`;
* legacy lifetime definitions in closures have been replaced with `for` syntax
* `fn foo() -> &A + B` has been deprecated for some time (needs parens)
* Obsolete `for Sized?` syntax
* Obsolete `Sized? Foo` syntax
* Obsolete `|T| -> U` syntax
This patch changes the type of byte string literals from `&[u8]` to `&[u8; N]`.
It also implements some necessary traits (`IntoBytes`, `Seek`, `Read`, `BufRead`) for fixed-size arrays (also related to #21725) and adds test for #17233, which seems to be resolved.
Fixes#18465
[breaking-change]
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 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 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.
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
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