New functions, `slice::from_raw_parts` and `slice::from_raw_parts_mut`,
are added to implement the lifetime convention as agreed in rust-lang/rfcs#556.
The functions `slice::from_raw_buf` and `slice::from_raw_mut_buf` are
left deprecated for the time being.
Holding back on changing the signature of `std::ffi::c_str_to_bytes` as consensus in rust-lang/rfcs#592 is building to replace it with a composition of other functions.
Contribution to #21923.
This is 99% burning ints to the ground, but I also got rid of useless annotations or made code more \"idiomatic\" as I went along. Mostly changes in tests.
This was particularly helpful in the time just after OIBIT's
implementation to make sure things that were supposed to be Copy
continued to be, but it's now creates a lot of noise for types that
intentionally don't want to be Copy.
r? @alexcrichton
This also removes two erroneous re-exports of the Entry variants, and so is incidentally a [breaking-change], though presumably no one should have been using those.
r? @aturon
- add `_SC_GETPW_R_SIZE_MAX` constant
- declare `struct passwd`
- convert `load_self` to `current_exe`
Note: OpenBSD don't provide system function to return a valuable Path
for `env::current_exe`. The implementation is currently based on the
value of `argv[0]`, which couldn't be used when executable is called via
PATH.
- add `_SC_GETPW_R_SIZE_MAX` constant
- declare `struct passwd`
- convert `load_self` to `current_exe`
Note: OpenBSD don't provide system function to return a valuable Path
for `env::current_exe`. The implementation is currently based on the
value of `argv[0]`, which couldn't be used when executable is called via
PATH.
New functions, slice::from_raw_parts and slice::from_raw_parts_mut,
are added to implement the lifetime convention as agreed in RFC PR #556.
The functions slice::from_raw_buf and slice::from_raw_mut_buf are
left deprecated for the time being.
`{` and `}` aren’t valid characters on ARM, so this makes Unicode characters render as, e.g., `$u38d$` instead of `$u{38d}`.
This also fixes a small bug where `)` (**r**ight **p**arenthesis) and `*` (**r**aw **p**ointer) would both mangle to `$RP$`, making `)` show up as `*` in backtraces.
This was particularly helpful in the time just after OIBIT's
implementation to make sure things that were supposed to be Copy
continued to be, but it's now creates a lot of noise for types that
intentionally don't want to be Copy.
Currently, if a `#![staged_api]` crate contains an exported item without a stability marker (or inherited stability),
the item is useless.
This change introduces a check to ensure that all exported items have a defined stability.
it also introduces the `unmarked_api` feature, which lets users import unmarked features. While this PR should in theory forbid these from existing,
in practice we can't be so sure; so this lets users bypass this check instead of having to wait for the library and/or compiler to be fixed (since otherwise this is a hard error).
r? @aturon
`{` and `}` aren’t valid characters on ARM.
This also fixes a small bug where `)` (**r**ight **p**arenthesis) and `*`
(**r**aw **p**ointer) would both mangle to `$RP$`, making `)` show up as `*` in
backtraces.
This commit is an implementation of [RFC 576][rfc] which adds back the `std::io`
module to the standard library. No functionality in `std::old_io` has been
deprecated just yet, and the new `std::io` module is behind the same `io`
feature gate.
[rfc]: https://github.com/rust-lang/rfcs/pull/576
A good bit of functionality was copied over from `std::old_io`, but many tweaks
were required for the new method signatures. Behavior such as precisely when
buffered objects call to the underlying object may have been tweaked slightly in
the transition. All implementations were audited to use composition wherever
possible. For example the custom `pos` and `cap` cursors in `BufReader` were
removed in favor of just using `Cursor<Vec<u8>>`.
A few liberties were taken during this implementation which were not explicitly
spelled out in the RFC:
* The old `LineBufferedWriter` is now named `LineWriter`
* The internal representation of `Error` now favors OS error codes (a
0-allocation path) and contains a `Box` for extra semantic data.
* The io prelude currently reexports `Seek` as `NewSeek` to prevent conflicts
with the real prelude reexport of `old_io::Seek`
* The `chars` method was moved from `BufReadExt` to `ReadExt`.
* The `chars` iterator returns a custom error with a variant that explains that
the data was not valid UTF-8.
Implements [RFC 474](https://github.com/rust-lang/rfcs/pull/474); see
that RFC for details/motivation for this change.
This initial commit does not include additional normalization or
platform-specific path extensions. These will be done in follow up
commits or PRs.
Use the crates.io crate `rand` (version 0.1 should be a drop in
replacement for `std::rand`) and `rand_macros` (`#[derive_Rand]` should
be a drop-in replacement).
[breaking-change]
As part of [RFC 474](https://github.com/rust-lang/rfcs/pull/474), this
commit renames `std::path` to `std::old_path`, leaving the existing path
API in place to ease migration to the new one. Updating should be as
simple as adjusting imports, and the prelude still maps to the old path
APIs for now.
[breaking-change]
This commit is an implementation of [RFC 576][rfc] which adds back the `std::io`
module to the standard library. No functionality in `std::old_io` has been
deprecated just yet, and the new `std::io` module is behind the same `io`
feature gate.
[rfc]: https://github.com/rust-lang/rfcs/pull/576
A good bit of functionality was copied over from `std::old_io`, but many tweaks
were required for the new method signatures. Behavior such as precisely when
buffered objects call to the underlying object may have been tweaked slightly in
the transition. All implementations were audited to use composition wherever
possible. For example the custom `pos` and `cap` cursors in `BufReader` were
removed in favor of just using `Cursor<Vec<u8>>`.
A few liberties were taken during this implementation which were not explicitly
spelled out in the RFC:
* The old `LineBufferedWriter` is now named `LineWriter`
* The internal representation of `Error` now favors OS error codes (a
0-allocation path) and contains a `Box` for extra semantic data.
* The io prelude currently reexports `Seek` as `NewSeek` to prevent conflicts
with the real prelude reexport of `old_io::Seek`
* The `chars` method was moved from `BufReadExt` to `ReadExt`.
* The `chars` iterator returns a custom error with a variant that explains that
the data was not valid UTF-8.
I’d kind of like to be able to use HashState in AnyMap, which I can’t do without a stability attribute on it. While I was at it I looked around and found a few more missing.
Now that associated types are fully implemented the iterator adaptors only need
type parameters which are associated with actual storage. All other type
parameters can either be derived from these (e.g. they are an associated type)
or can be bare on the `impl` block itself.
This is a breaking change due to the removal of type parameters on these
iterator adaptors, but code can fairly easily migrate by just deleting the
relevant type parameters for each adaptor. Other behavior should not be
affected.
Closes#21839
[breaking-change]
Hi.
Here a commit in order to add OpenBSD support to rust.
- tests status:
run-pass: test result: ok. 1879 passed; 0 failed; 24 ignored; 0 measured
run-fail: test result: ok. 81 passed; 0 failed; 5 ignored; 0 measured
compile-fail: test result: ok. 1634 passed; 0 failed; 22 ignored; 0 measured
run-pass-fulldeps: test result: ok. 22 passed; 0 failed; 1 ignored; 0 measured
compile-fail-fulldeps: test result: ok. 13 passed; 0 failed; 0 ignored; 0 measured
- The current implementation of load_self function (src/libstd/sys/unix/os.rs) isn't optimal as under OpenBSD I haven't found a reliable method to get the filename of a running process. The current implementation is enought for bootstrapping purpose.
- I have disable `run-pass/tcp-stress.rs` test under openbsd. When run manually, the test pass, but when run under `compiletest`, it timeout and echo continuoulsy `Too many open files`.
- For building with jemalloc, a more recent version of jemalloc would be mandatory. See https://github.com/jemalloc/jemalloc/pull/188 for more details.