This makes it easier to experiment with improved quasiquoting as an ordinary
plugin library.
The list of quote macros in feature_gate.rs was already out of sync;
this commit also prevents that problem in the future.
Modify the system %PATH% environment variable instead of the current
user's %PATH% environment. The current user will be an admin user
that may not be the same user who originally started the installer.
Closes#17570.
over inherent methods accessible via more autoderefs.
This simplifies the trait matching algorithm. It breaks code like:
impl Foo {
fn foo(self) {
// before this change, this will be called
}
}
impl<'a,'b,'c> Trait for &'a &'b &'c Foo {
fn foo(self) {
// after this change, this will be called
}
}
fn main() {
let x = &(&(&Foo));
x.foo();
}
To explicitly indicate that you wish to call the inherent method, perform
explicit dereferences. For example:
fn main() {
let x = &(&(&Foo));
(***x).foo();
}
Part of #17282.
[breaking-change]
r? @nikomatsakis
over inherent methods accessible via more autoderefs.
This simplifies the trait matching algorithm. It breaks code like:
impl Foo {
fn foo(self) {
// before this change, this will be called
}
}
impl<'a,'b,'c> Trait for &'a &'b &'c Foo {
fn foo(self) {
// after this change, this will be called
}
}
fn main() {
let x = &(&(&Foo));
x.foo();
}
To explicitly indicate that you wish to call the inherent method, perform
explicit dereferences. For example:
fn main() {
let x = &(&(&Foo));
(***x).foo();
}
Part of #17282.
[breaking-change]
in favor of `move`.
This breaks code that used `move` as an identifier, because it is now a
keyword. Change such identifiers to not use the keyword `move`.
Additionally, this breaks code that was counting on by-value or
by-reference capture semantics for unboxed closures (behind the feature
gate). Change `ref |:|` to `|:|` and `|:|` to `move |:|`.
Part of RFC #63; part of issue #12831.
[breaking-change]
This commit is another in the series of vector slice API stabilization. The focus here is the *mutable* slice API.
Largely, this API inherits the stability attributes [previously assigned](rust-lang#16332) to the analogous methods on immutable slides. It also adds comments to a few `unstable` attributes that were previously missing them.
In addition, the commit adds several `_mut` variants of APIs that were missing:
- `init_mut`
- `head_mut`
- `tail_mut`
- `splitn_mut`
- `rsplitn_mut`
Some of the unsafe APIs -- `unsafe_set`, `init_elem`, and `copy_memory` -- were deprecated in favor of working through `as_mut_ptr`, to simplify the API surface.
Due to deprecations, this is a:
[breaking-change]
The tuple serialization logic should be using the tuple-specific emit function. This fixes part of #17158. The JSON encoder already proxies to `emit_seq_elt` when `emit_tuple_arg` is called, so this should have an effect.
This commit is another in the series of vector slice API
stabilization. The focus here is the *mutable* slice API.
Largely, this API inherits the stability attributes [previously
assigned](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/16332) to the analogous
methods on immutable slides. It also adds comments to a few `unstable`
attributes that were previously missing them.
In addition, the commit adds several `_mut` variants of APIs that were
missing:
- `init_mut`
- `head_mut`
- `tail_mut`
- `splitn_mut`
- `rsplitn_mut`
Some of the unsafe APIs -- `unsafe_set`, `init_elem`, and `copy_memory`
-- were deprecated in favor of working through `as_mut_ptr`, to simplify
the API surface.
Due to deprecations, this is a:
[breaking-change]
Moves the vast majority of builtin bound checking out of type contents and into the trait system.
This is a preliminary step for a lot of follow-on work:
- opt-in builtin types, obviously
- generalized where clauses, because TypeContents has this notion that a type parameter has a single set of builtin kinds, but with where clauses it depends on context
- generalized coherence, because this adds support for recursive trait selection
Unfortunately I wasn't able to completely remove Type Contents from the front-end checking in this PR. It's still used by EUV to decide what gets moved and what doesn't.
r? @pcwalton
Intended to prevent each user to write his own partial_min/max, possibly differing in slight details. @sfackler encouraged to PR this on IRC.
(Let's hope this works... First PR.)
OrdIterator: the doc says that values must implement `PartialOrd`, while the implementation is only for `Ord` values. It looks like this initially got out of sync in 4e1c215. Removed the doc sentence entirely since it seems redundant.
MultiplicativeIterator: Fixed weird sentence.
This commit makes rustc emit debug locations for all call
and invoke statements in LLVM IR, if they are contained
within a function that debuginfo is enabled for. This is
important because LLVM does not handle the case where a
function body containing debuginfo is inlined into another
function with debuginfo, but the inlined call statement
does not have a debug location. In this case, LLVM will
not know where (in terms of source code coordinates) the
function was inlined to and we end up with some statements
still linked to the source locations in there original,
non-inlined function without any indication that they are
indeed an inline-copy. Later, when generating DWARF from
the IR, LLVM will interpret this as corrupt IR and abort.
Unfortunately, the undesirable case described above can
still occur when using LTO. If there is a crate compiled
without debuginfo calling into a crate compiled with
debuginfo, we again end up with the conditions triggering
the error. This is why some LTO tests still fail with the
dreaded assertion, if the standard library was built with
debuginfo enabled.
That is, `RUSTFLAGS_STAGE2=-g make rustc-stage2` will
succeed but `RUSTFLAGS_STAGE2=-g make check` will still
fail after this commit has been merged. This is a problem
that has to be dealt with separately.
Fixes#17201Fixes#15816Fixes#15156