Commit Graph

25871 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
bors
1ea0947c5d auto merge of #11753 : misfo/rust/patch-1, r=pcwalton 2014-01-24 07:26:31 -08:00
bors
a5ab960d2e auto merge of #11750 : bnoordhuis/rust/follow-rustc-symlink, r=thestinger
Before this commit, rustc looked in `dirname $0`/../lib for libraries
but that doesn't work when rustc is invoked through a symlink.

This commit makes rustc look in `dirname $(readlink $0)`/../lib, i.e.
it first canonicalizes the symlink before walking up the directory tree.

Fixes #3632.
2014-01-24 06:06:33 -08:00
Seo Sanghyeon
0f36438a8e Remove reexport field 2014-01-24 20:46:19 +09:00
bors
5675f2813f auto merge of #11742 : eminence/rust/dylib-test-fix, r=alexcrichton
On my Gentoo Linux machine, the c-dynamic-dylib test is failing, because libcfoo can't be found.  bar has a correct rpath for finding libfoo.so, but libfoo.so's rpath doesn't contain the right entries for finding libcfoo.


Below is the test failure on my machine.  This test pass with this commit:

```
maketest: c-dynamic-dylib
----- /storage/home/achin/devel/rust/src/test/run-make/c-dynamic-dylib/ --------------------
------ stdout ---------------------------------------------
make[1]: Entering directory `/storage/home/achin/devel/rust/src/test/run-make/c-dynamic-dylib'
gcc -Wall -Werror -g -fPIC -m64 -L /storage/home/achin/devel/rust/x86_64-unknown-linux-gnu/test/run-make/c-dynamic-dylib -c -o /storage/home/achin/devel/rust/x86_64-unknown-linux-gnu/test/run-make/c-dynamic-dylib/libcfoo.o cfoo.c
gcc -Wall -Werror -g -fPIC -m64 -L /storage/home/achin/devel/rust/x86_64-unknown-linux-gnu/test/run-make/c-dynamic-dylib -o /storage/home/achin/devel/rust/x86_64-unknown-linux-gnu/test/run-make/c-dynamic-dylib/libcfoo.so /storage/home/achin/devel/rust/x86_64-unknown-linux-gnu/test/run-make/c-dynamic-dylib/libcfoo.o -shared
/storage/home/achin/devel/rust/x86_64-unknown-linux-gnu/stage2/bin/rustc --out-dir /storage/home/achin/devel/rust/x86_64-unknown-linux-gnu/test/run-make/c-dynamic-dylib -L /storage/home/achin/devel/rust/x86_64-unknown-linux-gnu/test/run-make/c-dynamic-dylib foo.rs
/storage/home/achin/devel/rust/x86_64-unknown-linux-gnu/stage2/bin/rustc --out-dir /storage/home/achin/devel/rust/x86_64-unknown-linux-gnu/test/run-make/c-dynamic-dylib -L /storage/home/achin/devel/rust/x86_64-unknown-linux-gnu/test/run-make/c-dynamic-dylib bar.rs
/storage/home/achin/devel/rust/x86_64-unknown-linux-gnu/test/run-make/c-dynamic-dylib/bar
rm /storage/home/achin/devel/rust/x86_64-unknown-linux-gnu/test/run-make/c-dynamic-dylib/libcfoo.o
make[1]: Leaving directory `/storage/home/achin/devel/rust/src/test/run-make/c-dynamic-dylib'

------ stderr ---------------------------------------------
/storage/home/achin/devel/rust/x86_64-unknown-linux-gnu/test/run-make/c-dynamic-dylib/bar: error while loading shared libraries: libcfoo.so: cannot open shared object file: No such file or directory
make[1]: *** [all] Error 127

------        ---------------------------------------------

```
2014-01-24 03:16:31 -08:00
bors
4ce84fa1de auto merge of #11720 : sfackler/rust/macro-export-source, r=alexcrichton
The old method of serializing the AST gives totally bogus spans if the
expansion of an imported macro causes compilation errors. The best
solution seems to be to serialize the actual textual macro definition
and load it the same way the std-macros are. I'm not totally confident
that getting the source from the CodeMap will always do the right thing,
but it seems to work in simple cases.
2014-01-24 00:06:31 -08:00
bors
cd8ee786f9 auto merge of #11718 : ktt3ja/rust/borrowck-error-msg, r=brson
A mutable and immutable borrow place some restrictions on what you can
with the variable until the borrow ends. This commit attempts to convey
to the user what those restrictions are. Also, if the original borrow is
a mutable borrow, the error message has been changed (more specifically,
i. "cannot borrow `x` as immutable because it is also borrowed as
mutable" and ii. "cannot borrow `x` as mutable more than once" have
been changed to "cannot borrow `x` because it is already borrowed as
mutable").

In addition, this adds a (custom) span note to communicate where the
original borrow ends.

```rust
fn main() {
    match true {
        true => {
            let mut x = 1;
            let y = &x;
            let z = &mut x;
        }
        false => ()
    }
}

test.rs:6:21: 6:27 error: cannot borrow `x` as mutable because it is already borrowed as immutable
test.rs:6             let z = &mut x;
                              ^~~~~~
test.rs:5:21: 5:23 note: previous borrow of `x` occurs here; the immutable borrow prevents subsequent moves or mutable borrows of `x` until the borrow ends
test.rs:5             let y = &x;
                              ^~
test.rs:7:10: 7:10 note: previous borrow ends here
test.rs:3         true => {
test.rs:4             let mut x = 1;
test.rs:5             let y = &x;
test.rs:6             let z = &mut x;
test.rs:7         }
                  ^
```

```rust
fn foo3(t0: &mut &mut int) {
    let t1 = &mut *t0;
    let p: &int = &**t0;
}

fn main() {}

test.rs:3:19: 3:24 error: cannot borrow `**t0` because it is already borrowed as mutable
test.rs:3     let p: &int = &**t0;
                            ^~~~~
test.rs:2:14: 2:22 note: previous borrow of `**t0` as mutable occurs here; the mutable borrow prevents subsequent moves, borrows, or modification of `**t0` until the borrow ends
test.rs:2     let t1 = &mut *t0;
                       ^~~~~~~~
test.rs:4:2: 4:2 note: previous borrow ends here
test.rs:1 fn foo3(t0: &mut &mut int) {
test.rs:2     let t1 = &mut *t0;
test.rs:3     let p: &int = &**t0;
test.rs:4 }
          ^
```

For the "previous borrow ends here" note, if the span is too long (has too many lines), then only the first and last lines are printed, and the middle is replaced with dot dot dot:
```rust
fn foo3(t0: &mut &mut int) {
    let t1 = &mut *t0;
    let p: &int = &**t0;



}

fn main() {}

test.rs:3:19: 3:24 error: cannot borrow `**t0` because it is already borrowed as mutable
test.rs:3     let p: &int = &**t0;
                            ^~~~~
test.rs:2:14: 2:22 note: previous borrow of `**t0` as mutable occurs here; the mutable borrow prevents subsequent moves, borrows, or modification of `**t0` until the borrow ends
test.rs:2     let t1 = &mut *t0;
                       ^~~~~~~~
test.rs:7:2: 7:2 note: previous borrow ends here
test.rs:1 fn foo3(t0: &mut &mut int) {
...
test.rs:7 }
          ^
```

(Sidenote: the `span_end_note` currently also has issue #11715)
2014-01-23 22:46:32 -08:00
bors
bf9c25562d auto merge of #11686 : mankyKitty/rust/rename-invert-to-flip-issue-10632, r=alexcrichton
Renamed the ```invert()``` function in ```iter.rs``` to ```flip()```, from #10632 

Also renamed the ```Invert<T>``` type to ```Flip<T>```.

Some related code comments changed. Documentation that I could find has
been updated, and all the instances I could locate where the
function/type were called have been updated as well.

This is my first contribution to Rust! Apologies in advance if I've snarfed the 
PR process, I'm not used to rebase.

I initially had issues with the ```codegen``` section of the tests failing, however
the ```make check``` process is not reporting any failures at this time. I think
that was a local env issue more than me facerolling my changes. :)
2014-01-23 19:56:35 -08:00
Virgile Andreani
7b1d124f6e Add '@' subpattern binding and examples to manual and tutorial 2014-01-24 03:58:02 +01:00
Virgile Andreani
2c5b04cef1 Replace '*' by '..' in the doc of pattern matching 2014-01-24 03:58:02 +01:00
bors
2b62371c20 auto merge of #11478 : klutzy/rust/rustpkg-crate-id, r=cmr
This patchset consists of three parts:

- rustpkg doesn't guess crate version if it is not given by user.
- `rustpkg::version::Version` is replaced by `Option<~str>`.
  It removes some semantic versioning portions which is not currently used.
  (cc #8405 and #11396)
  `rustpkg::crate_id::CrateId` is also replaced by `syntax::crateid::CrateId`.
- rustpkg now computes hash to find crate, instead of manual filename parse.

cc @metajack
2014-01-23 17:31:44 -08:00
bors
9f4e5b6f31 auto merge of #11761 : alexcrichton/rust/epoll-eintr, r=alexcrichton 2014-01-23 15:36:56 -08:00
aydin.kim
be6fb8f2cd update llvm 2014-01-23 15:15:43 -08:00
Alex Crichton
219478fb41 Build llvm-extract (needed by codegen tests) 2014-01-23 15:13:00 -08:00
Daniel MacDougall
b869f36e78 Make docs search results URL-addressable
This change adds two improvements to docs searching functionality.

First, search results will immediately be displayed when a ?search=searchterm
query string parameter is provided to any docs url.

Second, search results are now inserted into the browser history, allowing for
easier navigation between search results and docs pages.
2014-01-23 14:04:50 -08:00
Sean Chalmers
292ed3e55c Update flip() to be rev().
Consensus leaned in favour of using rev instead of flip.
2014-01-23 22:18:18 +01:00
Sean Chalmers
55d6e0e1b7 Rename Invert to Flip - Issue 10632
Renamed the invert() function in iter.rs to flip().

Also renamed the Invert<T> type to Flip<T>.

Some related code comments changed. Documentation that I could find has
been updated, and all the instances I could locate where the
function/type were called have been updated as well.
2014-01-23 21:50:18 +01:00
Alex Crichton
aa78da3f45 Handle EINTR in epoll for native timers 2014-01-23 12:34:01 -08:00
Kiet Tran
b3290d322e Make some borrow checker errors more user friendly
A mutable and immutable borrow place some restrictions on what you can
with the variable until the borrow ends. This commit attempts to convey
to the user what those restrictions are. Also, if the original borrow is
a mutable borrow, the error message has been changed (more specifically,
i. "cannot borrow `x` as immutable because it is also borrowed as
mutable" and ii. "cannot borrow `x` as mutable more than once" have
been changed to "cannot borrow `x` because it is already borrowed as
mutable").

In addition, this adds a (custom) span note to communicate where the
original borrow ends.
2014-01-23 14:44:28 -05:00
Steven Fackler
d908e97da3 Redo exported macro serialization
The old method of serializing the AST gives totally bogus spans if the
expansion of an imported macro causes compilation errors. The best
solution seems to be to serialize the actual textual macro definition
and load it the same way the std-macros are. I'm not totally confident
that getting the source from the CodeMap will always do the right thing,
but it seems to work in simple cases.
2014-01-23 09:01:36 -08:00
Trent Ogren
e1e7ddc494 Fix typo in tutorial 2014-01-23 10:43:48 -06:00
bors
657e353022 auto merge of #11739 : thestinger/rust/rm-old-ext, r=alexcrichton 2014-01-23 05:56:30 -08:00
Ben Noordhuis
51103c89d0 Make check-summary.py support file globbing
Fixes the following error when executing `make check-lite`:

    Traceback (most recent call last):
      File "/home/bnoordhuis/src/rust/src/etc/check-summary.py", line 27, in <module>
        map(summarise, logfiles)
      File "/home/bnoordhuis/src/rust/src/etc/check-summary.py", line 10, in summarise
        with open(fname) as fd:
    IOError: [Errno 2] No such file or directory: 'tmp/*.log'
2014-01-23 13:06:21 +01:00
bors
7cabd40320 auto merge of #11737 : alexcrichton/rust/issue-11729, r=thestinger
Closes #11729
2014-01-23 03:51:29 -08:00
Ben Noordhuis
8cce35e490 Follow symlinks in sysroot
Before this commit, rustc looked in `dirname $0`/../lib for libraries
but that doesn't work when rustc is invoked through a symlink.

This commit makes rustc look in `dirname $(readlink $0)`/../lib, i.e.
it first canonicalizes the symlink before walking up the directory tree.

Fixes #3632.
2014-01-23 11:45:23 +01:00
bors
aa9cf4cf8d auto merge of #11701 : FeGs/rust/stray-debug-in-metadata, r=alexcrichton
When there is `println!` macro in the code, compiling is never end.

```rust
// print.rs
fn main() {
  println!("Hello!");
}
```

```bash
$ RUST_LOG=rustc rustc print.rs
```

And this is a part of output from stderr.

```bash
# ...
Looking up syntax::ast::DefId{crate: 1u32, node: 176234u32}
looking up syntax::ast::DefId{crate: 1u32, node: 176235u32} : extra::ebml::Doc<>{data: &[168u8, 16u8, 0u8, 0u8, 16u8, 51u8, 101u8, 53u8, 97u8, 101u8, 98u8, 56u8, 51u8, 55u8, 97u8, 101u8, 49u8, 54u8, 50u8
# ...
# vector which has infinite length.
```

* note : rust 0.9, 0.10-pre
2014-01-23 01:31:39 -08:00
Brian Anderson
e70ca23b8d native: Don't use timerfd on Android
It doesn't seem to exist.
2014-01-23 01:08:34 -08:00
bors
19e0cbe420 auto merge of #11682 : thestinger/rust/vector, r=brson
This is just an initial implementation and does not yet fully replace `~[T]`. A generic initialization syntax for containers is missing, and the slice functionality needs to be reworked to make auto-slicing unnecessary.

Traits for supporting indexing properly are also required. This also needs to be fixed to make ring buffers as easy to use as vectors.

The tests and documentation for `~[T]` can be ported over to this type when it is removed. I don't really expect DST to happen for vectors as having both `~[T]` and `Vec<T>` is overcomplicated and changing the slice representation to 3 words is not at all appealing. Unlike with traits, it's possible (and easy) to implement `RcSlice<T>` and `GcSlice<T>` without compiler help.
2014-01-22 23:26:33 -08:00
bors
52ba3b6414 auto merge of #11611 : SiegeLord/rust/exp_printing, r=alexcrichton
Fixes #6593

Currently, Rust provides no way to print very large or very small floating point values which come up routinely in scientific and modeling work. The classical solution to this is to use the scientific/exponential notation, which not-coincidentally, corresponds to how floating point values are encoded in memory. Given this, there are two solutions to the problem. One is what, as far as I understand it, Python does. I.e. for floating point numbers in a certain range it does what we do today with the `'f'` formatting flag, otherwise it switches to exponential notation. The other way is to provide a set of formatting flags to explicitly choose the exponential notation, like it is done in C. I've chosen the second way as I think its important to provide that kind of control to the user.

This pull request changes the `std::num::strconv::float_to_str_common` function to optionally format floating point numbers using the exponential (scientific) notation. The base of the significant can be varied between 2 and 25, while the base of the exponent can be 2 or 10.

Additionally this adds two new formatting specifiers to `format!` and friends: `'e'` and `'E'` which switch between outputs like `1.0e5` and `1.0E5`. Mostly parroting C stdlib in this sense, although I wasn't going for an exact output match.
2014-01-22 22:01:40 -08:00
Andrew Chin
24c560a69f Set LD_LIBRARY_PATH on linux for c-dynamic-dylib test
Else, libfoo can't find libcfoo.so.

bar has an rpath, which lets it find libfoo.  But libfoo doesn't have an
rapth that tells it where to find libcfoo
2014-01-22 23:49:36 -05:00
bors
7ea063ea0f auto merge of #11294 : alexcrichton/rust/native-timer, r=brson
Commit messages have the fun details

Closes #10925
2014-01-22 20:41:29 -08:00
Daniel Micay
b2ec71fc27 hashmap: port to Vec<T> 2014-01-22 23:13:57 -05:00
Daniel Micay
1798de7d08 add new vector representation as a library 2014-01-22 23:13:57 -05:00
Daniel Micay
17d23b8c17 vec: make unsafe indexing functions higher-level 2014-01-22 23:13:57 -05:00
Daniel Micay
802d41fe23 libc: switch free to the proper signature
This does not attempt to fully propagate the mutability everywhere, but
gives new code a hint to avoid the same issues.
2014-01-22 23:13:53 -05:00
Alex Crichton
b8e43838cf Implement native timers
Native timers are a much hairier thing to deal with than green timers due to the
interface that we would like to expose (both a blocking sleep() and a
channel-based interface). I ended up implementing timers in three different ways
for the various platforms that we supports.

In all three of the implementations, there is a worker thread which does send()s
on channels for timers. This worker thread is initialized once and then
communicated to in a platform-specific manner, but there's always a shared
channel available for sending messages to the worker thread.

* Windows - I decided to use windows kernel timer objects via
  CreateWaitableTimer and SetWaitableTimer in order to provide sleeping
  capabilities. The worker thread blocks via WaitForMultipleObjects where one of
  the objects is an event that is used to wake up the helper thread (which then
  drains the incoming message channel for requests).

* Linux/(Android?) - These have the ideal interface for implementing timers,
  timerfd_create. Each timer corresponds to a timerfd, and the helper thread
  uses epoll to wait for all active timers and then send() for the next one that
  wakes up. The tricky part in this implementation is updating a timerfd, but
  see the implementation for the fun details

* OSX/FreeBSD - These obviously don't have the windows APIs, and sadly don't
  have the timerfd api available to them, so I have thrown together a solution
  which uses select() plus a timeout in order to ad-hoc-ly implement a timer
  solution for threads. The implementation is backed by a sorted array of timers
  which need to fire. As I said, this is an ad-hoc solution which is certainly
  not accurate timing-wise. I have done this implementation due to the lack of
  other primitives to provide an implementation, and I've done it the best that
  I could, but I'm sure that there's room for improvement.

I'm pretty happy with how these implementations turned out. In theory we could
drop the timerfd implementation and have linux use the select() + timeout
implementation, but it's so inaccurate that I would much rather continue to use
timerfd rather than my ad-hoc select() implementation.

The only change that I would make to the API in general is to have a generic
sleep() method on an IoFactory which doesn't require allocating a Timer object.
For everything but windows it's super-cheap to request a blocking sleep for a
set amount of time, and it's probably worth it to provide a sleep() which
doesn't do something like allocate a file descriptor on linux.
2014-01-22 19:31:39 -08:00
Daniel Micay
a2dab3c46e remove old rc extension from detection files 2014-01-22 20:39:32 -05:00
SiegeLord
acd718b378 Remove the initial and trailing blank doc-comment lines 2014-01-22 20:32:40 -05:00
SiegeLord
c13e0de836 Add some tests for the exponential notation 2014-01-22 20:32:40 -05:00
SiegeLord
25b107f1e3 Add LowerExp 'e' and UpperExp 'E' format traits/specifiers 2014-01-22 20:32:40 -05:00
SiegeLord
2b4bd0780b float_to_str_bytes_common can now handle exponential notation 2014-01-22 20:32:40 -05:00
Luqman Aden
5aa31c43a0 libnative: Implement get_host_addresses. 2014-01-22 20:05:06 -05:00
Alex Crichton
8edf57ee42 Don't fatally fail in driver::early_error
Closes #11729
2014-01-22 15:48:55 -08:00
Alex Crichton
530909f2d8 Implement std::rt::at_exit
This routine is currently only used to clean up the timer helper thread in the
libnative implementation, but there are possibly other uses for this.

The documentation is clear that the procedures are *not* run with any task
context and hence have very little available to them. I also opted to disallow
at_exit inside of at_exit and just abort the process at that point.
2014-01-22 15:15:28 -08:00
Ben Noordhuis
cdd146b895 Add std::os::self_exe_name() 2014-01-22 23:47:12 +01:00
Ben Striegel
fce792249e Typo in module tutorial 2014-01-22 16:03:00 -05:00
bors
aedf567a95 auto merge of #10943 : fhahn/rust/issue-7313-replace-c-types, r=alexcrichton
I've started working on a patch for #7313 . So far I tried to replace C types in `src/libstd/unstable/*` and related files.

So far, I have two questions. Is there a convention for passing pointers around in `std` as Rust types? Sometimes pointers are passed around as `*c_char` (which seems to be an `*i8`), `*c_void` or `*u8`, which leads to a lot of casts. E.g: [`exchange_malloc`](https://github.com/fhahn/rust/compare/issue-7313-replace-c-types?expand=1#diff-39f44b8c3f4496abab854b3425ac1617R60) used to return a `*c_char` but the function in turn only calls `malloc_raw` which returns a `*c_void`.
Is there a specific reason for this?

The second question is about `CString` and related functions like `with_c_str`. At the moment these functions use `*c_char*`. Should I replace it with `*u8` or keep it, because it's an wrapper around classical C strings?
2014-01-22 11:06:24 -08:00
Florian Hahn
2eb4f05850 Replace C types with Rust types in libstd, closes #7313 2014-01-22 19:20:47 +01:00
klutzy
a6a31ecb04 rustpkg::crate_id: Remove CrateId
There is no significant difference between `rustpkg::crate_id::CrateId`
and `syntax::crateid::CrateId`. rustpkg's one is replaced by syntax's
one.
2014-01-23 03:03:55 +09:00
klutzy
df9067cd15 rustpkg: Compute hash to find crate
Previously rustpkg tried to parse filenames to find crate. Now ue use
deterministic hashes, so it becomes possible to directly construct
filename and check if the file exists.
2014-01-23 03:03:55 +09:00
klutzy
655433e334 rustpkg::version: Remove enum Version
Currently rustpkg doesn't use SemanticVersion or Tagged, so they are
removed. Remaining variants are replaced by `Option<~str>`.
2014-01-23 03:02:40 +09:00