Fix#30063
Note: while this code is careful to handle the case of mutliple emit
types (e.g. `--emit=asm,obj`) by reporting all the emit types that
conflict with codegen units in its warnings, an invocation with
multiple emit types *and* `-o PATH` will continue to ignore the
requested target path (with a warning), as it already does today,
since the code that checks for that is further downstream.
It appears this was left out of RFC #528 because it might be useful to
also generalize the second argument in some way. That doesn't seem to
prevent generalizing the first argument now, however.
This is a [breaking-change] because it could cause type-inference to
fail where it previously succeeded.
The presence of the drop flag caused the offset calculation to be
incorrect, leading to the pointer being incorrect. This has been fixed
by calculating the offset based on the field index (and not assuming
that the field is always the last one).
However, I've also stopped the drop flag from being added to the end of
unsized structs to begin with. Since it's not actually accessed for
unsized structs, and isn't actually where we would say it is, this made
more sense.
I've measured the time/memory consumption before and after - the difference is lost in statistical noise, so it's mostly a code simplification.
Sizes of `enum`s are not affected.
r? @nrc
I wonder if AST/HIR visitors could run faster if `P`s are systematically removed (except for cases where they control `enum` sizes). Theoretically they should.
Remaining unnecessary `P`s can't be easily removed because many folders accept `P<X>`s as arguments, but these folders can be converted to accept `X`s instead without loss of efficiency.
When I have a mood for some mindless refactoring again, I'll probably try to convert the folders, remove remaining `P`s and measure again.
DST fields, being of an unknown type, are not automatically aligned
properly, so a pointer to the field needs to be aligned using the
information in the vtable.
Fixes#26403 and a number of other DST-related bugs discovered while
implementing this.
Revert "PR #30130 Implement `Clone` for more arrays"
This reverts commit e22a64e8d8.
This caused a regression such that types like `[[u8; 256]; 4]`
no longer implemented Clone. This previously worked due to Clone
for `[T; N]` (N in 0 to 32) being implemented for T: Copy.
Due to fixed size arrays not implementing Clone for sizes above 32,
the new implementation requiring T: Clone would not allow
`[[u8; 256]; 4]` to be Clone.
Fixes#30244
Due to changing back, this is technically a [breaking-change],
albeit for a behavior that existed for a very short time.
Running `/usr/bin/time -v make` to build rust (using local llvm) shows the maximum memory usage at 715 megabytes on 32-bit x86 (on arm linux it's even less @ 580M).
Reworded according to @brson's input.
This reverts commit e22a64e8d8.
This caused a regression such that types like `[[u8; 256]; 4]`
no longer implemented Clone. This previously worked due to Clone
for `[T; N]` (N in 0 to 32) being implemented for T: Copy.
Due to fixed size arrays not implementing Clone for sizes above 32,
the new implementation requiring T: Clone would not allow
`[[u8; 256]; 4]` to be Clone.
The example code in the Channels subsection of the rust book give warnings about
unused result which must be used, #[warn(unused_must_use)] on by default
Added a small pattern match to resolve those warnings.
This commit is the standard API stabilization commit for the 1.6 release cycle.
The list of issues and APIs below have all been through their cycle-long FCP and
the libs team decisions are listed below
Stabilized APIs
* `Read::read_exact`
* `ErrorKind::UnexpectedEof` (renamed from `UnexpectedEOF`)
* libcore -- this was a bit of a nuanced stabilization, the crate itself is now
marked as `#[stable]` and the methods appearing via traits for primitives like
`char` and `str` are now also marked as stable. Note that the extension traits
themeselves are marked as unstable as they're imported via the prelude. The
`try!` macro was also moved from the standard library into libcore to have the
same interface. Otherwise the functions all have copied stability from the
standard library now.
* `fs::DirBuilder`
* `fs::DirBuilder::new`
* `fs::DirBuilder::recursive`
* `fs::DirBuilder::create`
* `os::unix::fs::DirBuilderExt`
* `os::unix::fs::DirBuilderExt::mode`
* `vec::Drain`
* `vec::Vec::drain`
* `string::Drain`
* `string::String::drain`
* `vec_deque::Drain`
* `vec_deque::VecDeque::drain`
* `collections::hash_map::Drain`
* `collections::hash_map::HashMap::drain`
* `collections::hash_set::Drain`
* `collections::hash_set::HashSet::drain`
* `collections::binary_heap::Drain`
* `collections::binary_heap::BinaryHeap::drain`
* `Vec::extend_from_slice` (renamed from `push_all`)
* `Mutex::get_mut`
* `Mutex::into_inner`
* `RwLock::get_mut`
* `RwLock::into_inner`
* `Iterator::min_by_key` (renamed from `min_by`)
* `Iterator::max_by_key` (renamed from `max_by`)
Deprecated APIs
* `ErrorKind::UnexpectedEOF` (renamed to `UnexpectedEof`)
* `OsString::from_bytes`
* `OsStr::to_cstring`
* `OsStr::to_bytes`
* `fs::walk_dir` and `fs::WalkDir`
* `path::Components::peek`
* `slice::bytes::MutableByteVector`
* `slice::bytes::copy_memory`
* `Vec::push_all` (renamed to `extend_from_slice`)
* `Duration::span`
* `IpAddr`
* `SocketAddr::ip`
* `Read::tee`
* `io::Tee`
* `Write::broadcast`
* `io::Broadcast`
* `Iterator::min_by` (renamed to `min_by_key`)
* `Iterator::max_by` (renamed to `max_by_key`)
* `net::lookup_addr`
New APIs (still unstable)
* `<[T]>::sort_by_key` (added to mirror `min_by_key`)
Closes#27585Closes#27704Closes#27707Closes#27710Closes#27711Closes#27727Closes#27740Closes#27744Closes#27799Closes#27801
cc #27801 (doesn't close as `Chars` is still unstable)
Closes#28968
This commit is the standard API stabilization commit for the 1.6 release cycle.
The list of issues and APIs below have all been through their cycle-long FCP and
the libs team decisions are listed below
Stabilized APIs
* `Read::read_exact`
* `ErrorKind::UnexpectedEof` (renamed from `UnexpectedEOF`)
* libcore -- this was a bit of a nuanced stabilization, the crate itself is now
marked as `#[stable]` and the methods appearing via traits for primitives like
`char` and `str` are now also marked as stable. Note that the extension traits
themeselves are marked as unstable as they're imported via the prelude. The
`try!` macro was also moved from the standard library into libcore to have the
same interface. Otherwise the functions all have copied stability from the
standard library now.
* The `#![no_std]` attribute
* `fs::DirBuilder`
* `fs::DirBuilder::new`
* `fs::DirBuilder::recursive`
* `fs::DirBuilder::create`
* `os::unix::fs::DirBuilderExt`
* `os::unix::fs::DirBuilderExt::mode`
* `vec::Drain`
* `vec::Vec::drain`
* `string::Drain`
* `string::String::drain`
* `vec_deque::Drain`
* `vec_deque::VecDeque::drain`
* `collections::hash_map::Drain`
* `collections::hash_map::HashMap::drain`
* `collections::hash_set::Drain`
* `collections::hash_set::HashSet::drain`
* `collections::binary_heap::Drain`
* `collections::binary_heap::BinaryHeap::drain`
* `Vec::extend_from_slice` (renamed from `push_all`)
* `Mutex::get_mut`
* `Mutex::into_inner`
* `RwLock::get_mut`
* `RwLock::into_inner`
* `Iterator::min_by_key` (renamed from `min_by`)
* `Iterator::max_by_key` (renamed from `max_by`)
Deprecated APIs
* `ErrorKind::UnexpectedEOF` (renamed to `UnexpectedEof`)
* `OsString::from_bytes`
* `OsStr::to_cstring`
* `OsStr::to_bytes`
* `fs::walk_dir` and `fs::WalkDir`
* `path::Components::peek`
* `slice::bytes::MutableByteVector`
* `slice::bytes::copy_memory`
* `Vec::push_all` (renamed to `extend_from_slice`)
* `Duration::span`
* `IpAddr`
* `SocketAddr::ip`
* `Read::tee`
* `io::Tee`
* `Write::broadcast`
* `io::Broadcast`
* `Iterator::min_by` (renamed to `min_by_key`)
* `Iterator::max_by` (renamed to `max_by_key`)
* `net::lookup_addr`
New APIs (still unstable)
* `<[T]>::sort_by_key` (added to mirror `min_by_key`)
Closes#27585Closes#27704Closes#27707Closes#27710Closes#27711Closes#27727Closes#27740Closes#27744Closes#27799Closes#27801
cc #27801 (doesn't close as `Chars` is still unstable)
Closes#28968
Allows a `HANDLE` to be extracted from a `JoinHandle` on Windows.
Allows a `pthread_t` to be extracted from a `JoinHandle` everywhere else.
Because https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/29461 was closed.
r? @alexcrichton
This PR makes `AnalysisData` and`BorrowckCtxt` public. Those types are returned by the public function `build_borrowck_dataflow_data_for_fn` and are needed if a caller wants to pass on the return values.
It also removes `FnPartsWithCFG`, which required callers of `build_borrowck_dataflow_data_for_fn` to have a reference to a `CFG` with the same lifetime as `FnParts`, which is more limiting than required.