Like with libnative, when a green task failed to spawn it would leave the world
in a corrupt state where the local scheduler had been dropped as well as the
local task. Also like libnative, this patch sets up a "bomb" which when it goes
off will restore the state of the world.
This adds support for `quote_arm!(cx, $pat => $expr)`, and `macro_rules!(($a:arm) => (...))`. It also fixes a bug in pretty printing, where this would generate invalid code:
```
match { 5i } {
1 => 2,
_ => 3,
}
```
It would generate this code:
```
match { 5i } {
1 => 2
_ => 3
}
```
Finally, it adds a couple helper methods to `ExtCtxt`.
When dealing with HTTP request or responses, many tokens are case-insensitive in the ASCII range but the bytes from the network are not necessarily valid UTF-8.
**[breaking-change]** Rather than adding new very similar traits, this re-uses the `std::ascii::OwnedStrAsciiExt` and `std::ascii::StrAsciiExt` traits, but rename to remove `Str` since that does not apply for bytes.
This PR also makes `std::ascii::ASCII_UPPER_MAP` and `std::ascii::ASCII_LOWER_MAP`, the lookup table all these methods are based on, public. In case there is something else related to ASCII case we haven’t thought of yet, that can be implemented outside of libstd without duplicating the tables.
Although this is a breaking change, I thought this could do without an RFC since the relevant traits are not in the prelude.
r? @alexcrichton
Closes#15296 (Update disclaimer to improve clarity and intent)
Closes#15804 (Don't ICE when dealing with the count expr for fixed array types in various places.)
Closes#15893 (lint: Improve ffi-unsafe enum lint warning)
Closes#16045 (Rename Integer divides to is_multiple_of.)
Closes#16055 (manual: update list of feature gates, add phase attribute)
Closes#16056 (Improve documentation of rounding functions)
Closes#16061 (Remove references to non-existant functions in the std::path documentation)
Closes#16062 (Fix documentation error in MutableVectorAllocating::move_from)
Closes#16063 (adding discuss.rust-lang to community)
Closes#16064 (rustc: Switch dsymutil status => output)
Closes#16066 (making raw source display better)
Closes#16079 (doc: add missing word)
Closes#16080 (Update LLVM to fix miscompilations due to wrongfully removed lifetime intrinsics)
Closes#16084 (Elide lifetimes around Arc<T>.)
Closes#16085 (Gedit/gtksourceview language spec: add raw strings)
Closes#16086 (Implement Hash for DList)
the CFG for match statements.
There were two bugs in issue #14684. One was simply that the borrow
check didn't know about the correct CFG for match statements: the
pattern must be a predecessor of the guard. This disallows the bad
behavior if there are bindings in the pattern. But it isn't enough to
prevent the memory safety problem, because of wildcards; thus, this
patch introduces a more restrictive rule, which disallows assignments
and mutable borrows inside guards outright.
I discussed this with Niko and we decided this was the best plan of
action.
This breaks code that performs mutable borrows in pattern guards. Most
commonly, the code looks like this:
impl Foo {
fn f(&mut self, ...) {}
fn g(&mut self, ...) {
match bar {
Baz if self.f(...) => { ... }
_ => { ... }
}
}
}
Change this code to not use a guard. For example:
impl Foo {
fn f(&mut self, ...) {}
fn g(&mut self, ...) {
match bar {
Baz => {
if self.f(...) {
...
} else {
...
}
}
_ => { ... }
}
}
}
Sometimes this can result in code duplication, but often it illustrates
a hidden memory safety problem.
Closes#14684.
[breaking-change]
r? @pnkfelix
Everyone agreed except @thestinger. As @thestinger contribution on this file is trivial,
we can relicense it.
Related to #14248, close#15330
@brson OK?
This commit applies stability attributes to the contents of these modules,
summarized here:
* The `unit` and `bool` modules have become #[unstable] as they are purely meant
for documentation purposes and are candidates for removal.
* The `ty` module has been deprecated, and the inner `Unsafe` type has been
renamed to `UnsafeCell` and moved to the `cell` module. The `marker1` field
has been removed as the compiler now always infers `UnsafeCell` to be
invariant. The `new` method i stable, but the `value` field, `get` and
`unwrap` methods are all unstable.
* The `tuple` module has its name as stable, the naming of the `TupleN` traits
as stable while the methods are all #[unstable]. The other impls in the module
have appropriate stability for the corresponding trait.
* The `arc` module has received the exact same treatment as the `rc` module
previously did.
* The `any` module has its name as stable. The `Any` trait is also stable, with
a new private supertrait which now contains the `get_type_id` method. This is
to make the method a private implementation detail rather than a public-facing
detail.
The two extension traits in the module are marked #[unstable] as they will not
be necessary with DST. The `is` method is #[stable], the as_{mut,ref} methods
have been renamed to downcast_{mut,ref} and are #[unstable].
The extension trait `BoxAny` has been clarified as to why it is unstable as it
will not be necessary with DST.
This is a breaking change because the `marker1` field was removed from the
`UnsafeCell` type. To deal with this change, you can simply delete the field and
only specify the value of the `data` field in static initializers.
[breaking-change]
Rename and gensym the runtime on import, so that users
can't refer to the `native` crate.
This is unlikely to break code, but users should import the "native" crate directly.
[breaking-change]
cc @alexcrichton
the CFG for match statements.
There were two bugs in issue #14684. One was simply that the borrow
check didn't know about the correct CFG for match statements: the
pattern must be a predecessor of the guard. This disallows the bad
behavior if there are bindings in the pattern. But it isn't enough to
prevent the memory safety problem, because of wildcards; thus, this
patch introduces a more restrictive rule, which disallows assignments
and mutable borrows inside guards outright.
I discussed this with Niko and we decided this was the best plan of
action.
This breaks code that performs mutable borrows in pattern guards. Most
commonly, the code looks like this:
impl Foo {
fn f(&mut self, ...) {}
fn g(&mut self, ...) {
match bar {
Baz if self.f(...) => { ... }
_ => { ... }
}
}
}
Change this code to not use a guard. For example:
impl Foo {
fn f(&mut self, ...) {}
fn g(&mut self, ...) {
match bar {
Baz => {
if self.f(...) {
...
} else {
...
}
}
_ => { ... }
}
}
}
Sometimes this can result in code duplication, but often it illustrates
a hidden memory safety problem.
Closes#14684.
[breaking-change]
method calls are involved.
This breaks code like:
impl<T:Copy> Foo for T { ... }
fn take_param<T:Foo>(foo: &T) { ... }
fn main() {
let x = box 3i; // note no `Copy` bound
take_param(&x);
}
Change this code to not contain a type error. For example:
impl<T:Copy> Foo for T { ... }
fn take_param<T:Foo>(foo: &T) { ... }
fn main() {
let x = 3i; // satisfies `Copy` bound
take_param(&x);
}
Closes#15860.
[breaking-change]
r? @alexcrichton
method calls are involved.
This breaks code like:
impl<T:Copy> Foo for T { ... }
fn take_param<T:Foo>(foo: &T) { ... }
fn main() {
let x = box 3i; // note no `Copy` bound
take_param(&x);
}
Change this code to not contain a type error. For example:
impl<T:Copy> Foo for T { ... }
fn take_param<T:Foo>(foo: &T) { ... }
fn main() {
let x = 3i; // satisfies `Copy` bound
take_param(&x);
}
Closes#15860.
[breaking-change]
librustc: Stop desugaring `for` expressions and translate them directly.
This makes edge cases in which the `Iterator` trait was not in scope
and/or `Option` or its variants were not in scope work properly.
This breaks code that looks like:
struct MyStruct { ... }
impl MyStruct {
fn next(&mut self) -> Option<int> { ... }
}
for x in MyStruct { ... } { ... }
Change ad-hoc `next` methods like the above to implementations of the
`Iterator` trait. For example:
impl Iterator<int> for MyStruct {
fn next(&mut self) -> Option<int> { ... }
}
Closes#15392.
[breaking-change]
This makes edge cases in which the `Iterator` trait was not in scope
and/or `Option` or its variants were not in scope work properly.
This breaks code that looks like:
struct MyStruct { ... }
impl MyStruct {
fn next(&mut self) -> Option<int> { ... }
}
for x in MyStruct { ... } { ... }
Change ad-hoc `next` methods like the above to implementations of the
`Iterator` trait. For example:
impl Iterator<int> for MyStruct {
fn next(&mut self) -> Option<int> { ... }
}
Closes#15392.
[breaking-change]
This is done entirely in the libraries for functions up to 16 arguments.
A macro is used so that more arguments can be easily added if we need.
Note that I had to adjust the overloaded call algorithm to not try
calling the overloaded call operator if the callee is a built-in
function type, to prevent loops.
Closes#15448.