Fixes most of #4989. I didn't add Persistent{Set,Map} since the only
persistent data structure is fun_treemap and its functionality is
currently too limited to build a trait out of.
Unify the mutable iterators too. Switch the ListInsertion trait to use
method .insert_next() and .peek_next() for list mutation. .insert_next()
inserts an element into the list that will not appear in iteration, of
course; so the length of the iteration can not change during iteration.
Did not properly allow runs from the `other` list to be merged in. The
test case was using a wrong expected value.
Edited docs for merge so they explain more clearly what it does.
Also make sure insert_ordered is marked pub.
cc #6004 and #3273
This is a rewrite of TLS to get towards not requiring `@` when using task local storage. Most of the rewrite is straightforward, although there are two caveats:
1. Changing `local_set` to not require `@` is blocked on #7673
2. The code in `local_pop` is some of the most unsafe code I've written. A second set of eyes should definitely scrutinize it...
The public-facing interface currently hasn't changed, although it will have to change because `local_data::get` cannot return `Option<T>`, nor can it return `Option<&T>` (the lifetime isn't known). This will have to be changed to be given a closure which yield `&T` (or as an Option). I didn't do this part of the api rewrite in this pull request as I figured that it could wait until when `@` is fully removed.
This also doesn't deal with the issue of using something other than functions as keys, but I'm looking into using static slices (as mentioned in the issues).
An iterator that allows mutating the list is very useful but needs care
to not be unsound. ListIteration exposes only insert_before (used for
insert_ordered) and peek_next so far.
This is an owned sendable linked list which allows insertion and
deletion at both ends, with fast traversal through iteration, and fast
append/prepend.
It is indended to replace the previous managed DList with exposed list
nodes. It does not match it feature by feature, but DList could grow
more methods if needed.
This is much faster for strings, and eventually when there is a
buffered reader of some sort.
Reading example.json 100 times before was around 1.18s.
After:
- reading from string 0.68s
- reading from file 1.08s (extra time is all in io::Reader)
r? @graydon, @nikomatsakis, @pcwalton, or @catamorphism
Sorry this is so huge, but it's been accumulating for about a month. There's lots of stuff here, mostly oriented toward enabling multithreaded scheduling and improving compatibility between the old and new runtimes. Adds task pinning so that we can create the 'platform thread' in servo.
[Here](e1555f9b56/src/libstd/rt/mod.rs (L201)) is the current runtime setup code.
About half of this has already been reviewed.
The free-standing functions in f32, f64, i8, i16, i32, i64, u8, u16,
u32, u64, float, int, and uint are replaced with generic functions in
num instead.
This means that instead of having to know everywhere what the type is, like
~~~
f64::sin(x)
~~~
You can simply write code that uses the type-generic versions in num instead, this works for all types that implement the corresponding trait in num.
~~~
num::sin(x)
~~~
Note 1: If you were previously using any of those functions, just replace them
with the corresponding function with the same name in num.
Note 2: If you were using a function that corresponds to an operator, use the
operator instead.
Note 3: This is just https://github.com/mozilla/rust/pull/7090 reopened against master.
Correct treatment of irrefutable patterns. The old code was wrong in many, many ways. `ref` bindings didn't work, it sometimes copied when it should have moved, the borrow checker didn't even look at such patterns at all, we weren't consistent about preventing values with destructors from being pulled apart, etc.
Fixes#3224.
Fixes#3225.
Fixes#3255.
Fixes#6225.
Fixes#6386.
r? @catamorphism
Avoids the overhead of read_char for every character.
Benchmark reading example.json 10 times from
https://code.google.com/p/rapidjson/wiki/Performance
Before: 2.55s
After: 0.16s
Regression testing is already done by isrustfastyet.
The free-standing functions in f32, f64, i8, i16, i32, i64, u8, u16,
u32, u64, float, int, and uint are replaced with generic functions in
num instead.
If you were previously using any of those functions, just replace them
with the corresponding function with the same name in num.
Note: If you were using a function that corresponds to an operator, use
the operator instead.
It's broken/unmaintained and needs to be rewritten to avoid managed
pointers and needless copies. A full rewrite is necessary and the API
will need to be redone so it's not worth keeping this around (#7628).
Closes#2236, #2744
Where * = tcp, ip, url.
Formerly, extra::net::* were aliases of extra::net_*, but were the
recommended path to use. Thus, the documentation talked of the `net_*`
modules while everything else was written expecting `net::*`.
This moves the actual modules so that `extra::net::*` is the actual
location of the modules.
This will naturally break any code which used `extra::net_*` directly.
They should be altered to use `extra::net::*` (which has been the
documented way of doing things for some time).
This ensures that there is one, and only one, obvious way of doing
things.
Change the signature of Iterator.size_hint() to always have a lower bound.
Implement .size_hint() on all remaining iterators (if it differs from the default).
It's broken/unmaintained and needs to be rewritten to avoid managed
pointers and needless copies. A full rewrite is necessary and the API
will need to be redone so it's not worth keeping this around.
Closes#2236, #2744
Adding iterators for extra::smallintmap
Working on mutability error
Ran into ICE
More mutability problems
Working through mutability issue
working on getting tests passing
SmallIntMa tests passing
Added SmallIntSet iterators, and the tests are passing
Stripped trailing spaces
Removed extra use directive
The deque is split at the marker lo, or logical index 0. Move the
shortest part (split by lo) when growing. This way add_front is just as
fast as add_back, on average.
The previous implementation of reverse iterators used modulus (%) of
negative indices, which did work but was fragile due to dependency on
the divisor.
The deque is determined by vec self.elts.len(), self.nelts, and self.lo,
and self.hi is calculated from these.
self.hi is just the raw index of element number `self.nelts`
Fix some issues with the deque being very slow, keep the same vec around
instead of constructing a new. Move as few elements as possible, so the
self.lo point is not moved after grow.
[o o o o o|o o o]
hi...^ ^.... lo
grows to
[. . . . .|o o o o o o o o|. . .]
^.. lo ^.. hi
If the deque is append-only, it will result in moving no elements on
grow. If the deque is prepend-only, all will be moved each time.
The bench tests added show big improvements:
Timed using `rust build -O --test extra.rs && ./extra --bench deque`
Old version:
test deque::tests::bench_add_back ... bench: 4976 ns/iter (+/- 9)
test deque::tests::bench_add_front ... bench: 4108 ns/iter (+/- 18)
test deque::tests::bench_grow ... bench: 416964 ns/iter (+/- 4197)
test deque::tests::bench_new ... bench: 408 ns/iter (+/- 12)
With this commit:
test deque::tests::bench_add_back ... bench: 12 ns/iter (+/- 0)
test deque::tests::bench_add_front ... bench: 16 ns/iter (+/- 0)
test deque::tests::bench_grow ... bench: 1515 ns/iter (+/- 30)
test deque::tests::bench_new ... bench: 419 ns/iter (+/- 3)
Avoids the overhead of read_char for every character.
Benchmark reading example.json 10 times from
https://code.google.com/p/rapidjson/wiki/Performance
Before: 2.55s
After: 0.16s
Regression testing is already done by isrustfastyet.
Where * = tcp, ip, url.
Formerly, extra::net::* were aliases of extra::net_*, but were the
recommended path to use. Thus, the documentation talked of the `net_*`
modules while everything else was written expecting `net::*`.
This moves the actual modules so that `extra::net::*` is the actual
location of the modules.
This will naturally break any code which used `extra::net_*` directly.
They should be altered to use `extra::net::*` (which has been the
documented way of doing things for some time).
This ensures that there is one, and only one, obvious way of doing
things.
There's now an enum to pick the character set instead of a url_safe
bool.
from_base64 now returns a Result<~[u8], ~str> and returns an Err instead
of killing the task when it is called on invalid input.
Fixed documentation examples.
The Base64 package previously had extremely basic functionality. It only
suported the standard encoding character set, didn't support line breaks
and always padded output. This commit makes it significantly more
powerful.
The FromBase64 impl now supports all of the standard variants of Base64.
It ignores newlines,interprets '-' and '_' as well as '+' and '/' and
doesn't require padding. It isn't incredibly pedantic and will
successfully parse strings that are not strictly valid, but I don't
think the extra complexity required to make it accept _only_ valid
strings is worth it.
The ToBase64 trait has been modified such that to_base64 now takes a
base64::Config struct which contains the output format configuration.
This currently includes the selection of character set (standard or
url safe), whether or not to pad and an optional line break width. The
package comes with three static Config structs for the RFC 4648
standard, RFC 4648 url safe and RFC 2045 MIME formats.
The other option for configuring ToBase64 output would be to have one
method with the configuration flags passed and other traits with default
impls for the common cases, but I think that's a little messier.
Adds a lint for `static some_lowercase_name: uint = 1;`. Warning by default since it causes confusion, e.g. `static a: uint = 1; ... let a = 2;` => `error: only refutable patterns allowed here`.
I think it's WIP - but I wanted to ask for feedback (/cc @thestinger)
I had to move the impl of FromIter for vec into extra::iter because I don't think std can depend on extra, but that's a bit messed up. Similarly some FromIter uses are gone now, not sure if this is fixable or if I made a complete mess here..
Continuation of #7430.
I haven't removed the `map` method, since the replacement `v.iter().transform(f).collect::<~[SomeType]>()` is a little ridiculous at the moment.
Don't spew a warn!() in reset() if num_colors is 0, because
non-color-supporting terminals are legit. Use debug!() there instead.
Continue spewing warn!() if we believe the terminal to support colors.
Use a better warning when the `op` capability can't be found.
Instead of determining paths from the path tag, we iterate through
modules' children recursively in the metadata. This will allow for
lazy external module resolution.
Unlike fg() and bg(), we haven't already checked for the presence of
"op" in the terminfo when we call reset(), so we need to handle the case
where it's missing.
Also update the warn!() lines to avoid double-quoting the output.
Fixes#7431.
Unlike fg() and bg(), we haven't already checked for the presence of
"op" in the terminfo when we call reset(), so we need to handle the case
where it's missing.
Also update the warn!() lines to avoid double-quoting the output.
Fixes#7431.
Both extra::treemap::TreeMap and extra::treemap::TreeSet have
corresponding iterators TreeMapIterator and TreeSetIterator.
Unfortunately, the tests and extra::serialize use the older .each.
Update all the dependent code, and remove .each.
Signed-off-by: Ramkumar Ramachandra <artagnon@gmail.com>
Remove PriorityQueue::each and replace it with PriorityQueue::iter,
which ultimately calls into vec::VecIterator via PriorityQueueIterator.
Implement iterator::Iterator for PriorityQueueIterator. Now you should
be able to do:
extern mod extra;
let mut pq = extra::priority_queue::PriorityQueue::new();
pq.push(5);
pq.push(6);
pq.push(3);
for pq.iter().advance |el| {
println(fmt!("%d", *el));
}
just like you iterate over vectors, hashmaps, hashsets etc. Note that
the iteration order is arbitrary (as before with PriorityQueue::each),
and _not_ the order you get when you pop() repeatedly.
Add an in-file test to guard this.
Reported-by: Daniel Micay <danielmicay@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Ramkumar Ramachandra <artagnon@gmail.com>
Move all the colors into a nested mod named color instead of prefixing
with "color_".
Define a new type color::Color, and make this a u16 instead of a u8 (to
allow for easy comparisons against num_colors, which is a u16).
Remove color_supported and replace it with num_colors.
Teach fg() and bg() to "dim" bright colors down to the normal intensity
if num_colors isn't high enough.
Remove unnecessary copies, and fix a bug where a terminfo parse failure
would try to use the wrong error and end up failing.
Reopening of #7031, Closes#6963
I imagine though that this will bounce in bors once or twice... Because attributes can't be cfg(stage0)'d off, there's temporarily a lot of new stage0/stage1+ code.
This adds a `#[no_drop_flag]` attribute. This attribute tells the compiler to omit the drop flag from the struct, if it has a destructor. When the destructor is run, instead of setting the drop flag, it instead zeroes-out the struct. This means the destructor can run multiple times and therefore it is up to the developer to use it safely.
The primary usage case for this is smart-pointer types like `Rc<T>` as the extra flag caused the struct to be 1 word larger because of alignment.
This closes#7271 and #7138
This sets the `get_tydesc()` return type correctly and removes the intrinsic module. See #3730, #3475.
Update: this now also removes the unused shape fields in tydescs.
This PR fixes a few problems with the benchmark, mentioned in #2913. Since I do not have a 4GB RAM machine (I run rust on a puny 2GB RAM VM) I can't test binarytrees with N=20. If it works we can close#2913.
Fixes: 1) binarytrees prints "long lived trees of depth" instead of "long lived tree of depth"
Fixes: 2) chameneosredux -- the whitespace printed by show_number should be the same as printed by show_color
Already fixed: 3) spectralnorm prints an extra
Fixes: 4) threadring prints an extra
Fixes: 5) fasta -- strangely, output stops half-way through line 169 -- with another 8166 lines still to do.
Could not test: 6) the latest binarytrees fails with input N=20 on a 4GB machine.
r?
the `test/run-pass/class-trait-bounded-param.rs` test was xfailed and
written in an ancient dialect of Rust so I've just removed it
this also removes `to_vec` from DList because it's provided by
`std::iter::to_vec`
an Iterator implementation is added for OptVec but some transitional
internal iterator methods are still left
the `test/run-pass/class-trait-bounded-param.rs` test was xfailed and
written in an ancient dialect of Rust so I've just removed it
this also removes `to_vec` from DList because it's provided by
`std::iter::to_vec`
an Iterator implementation is added for OptVec but some transitional
internal iterator methods are still left
* Rename struct Sha1State to Sha1
* Remove all use of @ types
* Use fixed length vectors
* Move all of the inner functions from inside sha1() to top level, private functions
* Sha1 instances are now created via Sha1::new()
* Update all constant names to uppercase
* Remove unecessary assert_eq!s
* Remove check_vec_eq() helper function; use vec::eq() instead
To achieve this, the following changes were made:
* Move TyDesc, TyVisitor and Opaque to std::unstable::intrinsics
* Convert TyDesc, TyVisitor and Opaque to lang items instead of specially
handling the intrinsics module
* Removed TypeDesc, FreeGlue and get_type_desc() from sys
Fixes#3475.
I removed the `static-method-test.rs` test because it was heavily based
on `BaseIter` and there are plenty of other more complex uses of static
methods anyway.
The removed test for issue #2611 is well covered by the `std::iterator`
module itself.
This adds the `count` method to `IteratorUtil` to replace `EqIter`.
Moves all the remaining functions that could reasonably be methods to be methods, except for some FFI ones (which I believe @erickt is working on, possibly) and `each_split_within`, since I'm not really sure the details of it (I believe @kimundi wrote the current implementation, so maybe he could convert it to an external iterator method on `StrSlice`, e.g. `word_wrap_iter(&self) -> WordWrapIterator<'self>`, where `WordWrapIterator` impls `Iterator<&'self str>`. It probably won't be too hard, since it's already a state machine.)
This also cleans up the comparison impls for the string types, except I'm not sure how the lang items `eq_str` and `eq_str_uniq` need to be handled, so they (`eq_slice` and `eq`) remain stand-alone functions.
This moves them all into the traits submodule, and delegates Ord
to the TotalOrd instance. It also deletes the stand-alone lt, gt,
ge and le functions.
r? @brson
links to issues: #7065 the race that's fixed; #7066 the perf improvement I added. There are also some minor cleanup commits here.
To measure the performance improvement from replacing the exclusive with an atomic uint, I edited the ```msgsend-ring-rw-arcs``` bench test to do a ```write_downgrade``` instead of just a ```write```, so that it stressed the code paths that accessed ```read_count```. (At first I was still using ```write``` and saw no performance difference whatsoever, whoooops.)
The bench test measures how long it takes to send 1,000,000 messages by using rwarcs to emulate pipes. I also measured the performance difference imposed by the fix to the ```access_lock``` race (which involves taking an extra semaphore in the ```cond.wait()``` path). The net result is that fixing the race imposes a 4% to 5% slowdown, but doing the atomic uint optimization gives a 6% to 8% speedup.
Note that this speedup will be most visible in read- or downgrade-heavy workloads. If an RWARC's only users are writers, the optimization doesn't matter. All the same, I think this more than justifies the extra complexity I mentioned in #7066.
The raw numbers are:
```
with xadd read count
before write_cond fix
4.18 to 4.26 us/message
with write_cond fix
4.35 to 4.39 us/message
with exclusive read count
before write_cond fix
4.41 to 4.47 us/message
with write_cond fix
4.65 to 4.76 us/message
```
Implement conditional support in terminfo, along with a few other related operators.
Fix implementation of non-commutative arithmetic operators.
Remove all known cases of task failure from `terminfo::parm::expand`, and change the method signature.
Fix some other miscellaneous issues.
Implement the %?, %t, %e, and %; operators. Also implement the %<, %=,
%> operators, without which conditionals aren't very useful.
Fix the order of parameters for the arithmetic operators.
Implement the missing %^ operator.
Replace all potentially-failing operations with Err returns and add
tests.
Remove the Char parameter type; characters are represented as Numbers.
Fix integer constants to work properly when there are multiple constants
in the same capability string.
Tweak loop to use iterators instead of indexing into cap.
This fixes the strange random crashes in compile-fail tests.
This reverts commit 96cd61ad03.
Conflicts:
src/librustc/driver/driver.rs
src/libstd/str.rs
src/libsyntax/ext/quote.rs
The confusing mixture of byte index and character count meant that every
use of .substr was incorrect; replaced by slice_chars which only uses
character indices. The old behaviour of `.substr(start, n)` can be emulated
via `.slice_from(start).slice_chars(0, n)`.
This was a lot more painful than just changing `x.each` to `x.iter().advance` . I ran into my old friend #5898 and had to add underscores to some method names as a temporary workaround.
The borrow checker also had other ideas because rvalues aren't handled very well yet so temporary variables had to be added. However, storing the temporary in a variable led to dynamic `@mut` failures, so those had to be wrapped in blocks except where the scope ends immediately.
Anyway, the ugliness will be fixed as the compiler issues are fixed and this change will amount to `for x.each |x|` becoming `for x.iter |x|` and making all the iterator adaptors available.
I dropped the run-pass tests for `old_iter` because there's not much point in fixing a module that's on the way out in the next week or so.
OS X's terminfo uses the hex representation of the first character of
the terminal name as the directory name.
Ubuntu seems to use /lib/terminfo instead of /usr/share/terminfo, at
least on the one machine I have access to.
This removes some unnecessary allocations in the lexer, the typechecker and the metadata decoder. Reduces the time spent in the parsing and typechecking passes by about 10% for me.