Commit Graph

95 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
John Ericson
ea9d5c9653 liballoc's "extern_funcs" impl mod had a duplicate and missing item 2015-01-07 19:19:01 +00:00
John Ericson
2b84e44b07 Shorten cfg line lengths in liballoc 2015-01-07 19:19:01 +00:00
John Ericson
efaa43ade5 liballoc's "external_funcs" and "external_crate" are now features
This allows the vanilla libary to built for kernel use with Cargo.
2015-01-07 19:19:00 +00:00
Akos Kiss
6e5fb8bd1b Initial version of AArch64 support.
Adds AArch64 knowledge to:
* configure,
* make files,
* sources,
* tests, and
* documentation.
2015-01-03 15:16:10 +00:00
Alex Crichton
54452cdd68 std: Second pass stabilization for ptr
This commit performs a second pass for stabilization over the `std::ptr` module.
The specific actions taken were:

* The `RawPtr` trait was renamed to `PtrExt`
* The `RawMutPtr` trait was renamed to `MutPtrExt`
* The module name `ptr` is now stable.
* These functions were all marked `#[stable]` with no modification:
  * `null`
  * `null_mut`
  * `swap`
  * `replace`
  * `read`
  * `write`
  * `PtrExt::is_null`
  * `PtrExt::offset`
* These functions remain unstable:
  * `as_ref`, `as_mut` - the return value of an `Option` is not fully expressive
                         as null isn't the only bad value, and it's unclear
                         whether we want to commit to these functions at this
                         time. The reference/lifetime semantics as written are
                         also problematic in how they encourage arbitrary
                         lifetimes.
  * `zero_memory` - This function is currently not used at all in the
                    distribution, and in general it plays a broader role in the
                    "working with unsafe pointers" story. This story is not yet
                    fully developed, so at this time the function remains
                    unstable for now.
  * `read_and_zero` - This function remains unstable for largely the same
                      reasons as `zero_memory`.
* These functions are now all deprecated:
  * `PtrExt::null` - call `ptr::null` or `ptr::null_mut` instead.
  * `PtrExt::to_uint` - use an `as` expression instead.
  * `PtrExt::is_not_null` - use `!p.is_null()` instead.
2014-12-29 15:57:28 -08:00
Corey Farwell
4ef16741e3 Utilize fewer reexports
In regards to:

https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/19253#issuecomment-64836729

This commit:

* Changes the #deriving code so that it generates code that utilizes fewer
  reexports (in particur Option::* and Result::*), which is necessary to
  remove those reexports in the future
* Changes other areas of the codebase so that fewer reexports are utilized
2014-12-05 18:13:04 -05:00
Alexander Light
87235687a1 Add ability to use custom alloc::heap::imp
Adds the ability to use a custom allocator heap by passing either --cfg
external_crate and --extern external=<allocator_crate_name> or --cfg
external_funcs and defining the allocator functions prefixed by 'rust_'
somewhere.

This is useful for many reasons including OS/embedded development, and
allocator development and testing.
2014-12-04 16:23:29 -05:00
Daniel Micay
fea985a0b5 bubble up out-of-memory errors from liballoc
This makes the low-level allocation API suitable for use cases where
out-of-memory conditions need to be handled.

Closes #18292

[breaking-change]
2014-11-01 19:23:20 -04:00
Daniel Micay
a9e85100cd fix sized deallocation documentation 2014-10-25 14:12:21 -04:00
Daniel Micay
a6426cb43d return the new usable size from reallocate_inplace
The real size is also more useful than just a boolean, and the caller
can easily determine if the operation failed from the real size. In most
cases, the caller is only going to be growing the allocation so a branch
can be avoided.

[breaking-change]
2014-10-25 14:12:21 -04:00
Daniel Micay
2bc4d3ec23 get rid of libc_heap::{malloc_raw, realloc_raw}
The C standard library functions should be used directly. The quirky
NULL / zero-size allocation workaround is no longer necessary and was
adding an extra branch to the allocator code path in a build without
jemalloc. This is a small step towards liballoc being compatible with
handling OOM errors instead of aborting (#18292).

[breaking-change]
2014-10-25 14:12:19 -04:00
Björn Steinbrink
6c18e508f1 Make MIN_ALIGN a const to allow better optimization
With MIN_ALIGN as a static, other crates don't have access to its value
at compile time, because it is an extern global. That means that the
checks against it can't be optimized out, which is rather unfortunate.
So let's make it a constant instead.
2014-10-25 12:33:27 -04:00
Alex Crichton
abb1b2a309 alloc: Convert statics to constants 2014-10-09 09:44:51 -07:00
Daniel Micay
1c6fd76f80 saner parameter order for reallocation functions
Using reallocate(old_ptr, old_size, new_size, align) makes a lot more
sense than reallocate(old_ptr, new_size, align, old_size) and matches up
with the order used by existing platform APIs like mremap.

Closes #17837

[breaking-change]
2014-10-08 12:46:09 -04:00
Alex Crichton
f96ee10e88 Test fixes from the rollup 2014-10-02 15:43:37 -07:00
Daniel Micay
8d7274b31e alloc: fix reallocate_inplace implementation
The returned size is the new real size of the allocation.
2014-10-02 15:13:34 -04:00
Steven Fackler
1e0c7b682f Fix liballoc 2014-09-30 12:52:00 -07:00
Alex Crichton
c4a1c3800b Register new snapshots
This is the first linux snapshot created on our new CentOS 5.10 builders.

Closes #9545
2014-09-16 18:16:38 -07:00
Aaron Turon
fc525eeb4e Fallout from renaming 2014-09-16 14:37:48 -07:00
bors
946654a721 auto merge of #17197 : nikomatsakis/rust/issue-5527-trait-reform-revisited, r=pcwalton
This patch does not make many functional changes, but does a lot of restructuring towards the goals of #5527. This is the biggest patch, basically, that should enable most of the other patches in a relatively straightforward way.

Major changes:

- Do not track impls through trans, instead recompute as needed.
- Isolate trait matching code into its own module, carefully structure to distinguish various phases (selection vs confirmation vs fulfillment)
- Consider where clauses in their more general form
- Integrate checking of builtin bounds into the  trait matching process, rather than doing it separately in kind.rs (important for opt-in builtin bounds)

What is not included:

- Where clauses are still not generalized. This should be a straightforward follow-up patch.
- Caching. I did not include much caching. I have plans for various kinds of caching we can do. Should be straightforward. Preliminary perf measurements suggested that this branch keeps compilation times roughly what they are.
- Method resolution. The initial algorithm I proposed for #5527 does not work as well as I hoped. I have a revised plan which is much more similar to what we do today.
- Deref vs deref-mut. The initial fix I had worked great for autoderef, but not for explicit deref. 
- Permitting blanket impls to overlap with specific impls. Initial plan to consider all nested obligations before considering an impl to match caused many compilation errors. We have a revised plan but it is not implemented here, should be a relatively straightforward extension.
2014-09-16 15:25:59 +00:00
Daniel Micay
d206f05132 remove the closure_exchange_malloc lang item 2014-09-15 18:16:33 -04:00
Daniel Micay
84b37374bf heap: optimize EMPTY to avoid relocations
Sized deallocation makes it pointless to provide an address that never
overlaps with pointers returned by an allocator. Code can branch on the
capacity of the allocation instead of a comparison with this sentinel.

This improves the situation in #8859, and the remaining issues are only
from the logging API, which should be disabled by default in optimized
release builds anyway along with debug assertions. The remaining issues
are part of #17081.

Closes #8859
2014-09-15 16:48:20 -04:00
Daniel Micay
396f910617 heap: rm out-of-date FIXMEs 2014-09-15 15:28:25 -04:00
Niko Matsakis
48bc291a80 silence various warnings in stdlib, no idea why they suddenly started 2014-09-15 15:28:12 -04:00
bors
1f4117f518 auto merge of #17110 : thestinger/rust/dst, r=cmr
The pointer in the slice must not be null, because enum representations
make that assumption. The `exchange_malloc` function returns a non-null
sentinel for the zero size case, and it must not be passed to the
`exchange_free` lang item.

Since the length is always equal to the true capacity, a branch on the
length is enough for most types. Slices of zero size types are
statically special cased to never attempt deallocation. This is the same
implementation as `Vec<T>`.

Closes #14395
2014-09-11 04:55:41 +00:00
Daniel Micay
72a92b2e14 implement sized deallocation
Closes #13994
2014-09-10 03:50:43 -04:00
Daniel Micay
92b09261e7 micro-optimize dynamic allocation alignment
Previously, some parts of this optimization were impossible because the
alignment passed to the free function was not correct. That was fully
fixed by #17012.

Closes #17092
2014-09-10 03:50:39 -04:00
Daniel Micay
9639cafd36 fixes for Box<[T]>
The pointer in the slice must not be null, because enum representations
make that assumption. The `exchange_malloc` function returns a non-null
sentinel for the zero size case, and it must not be passed to the
`exchange_free` lang item.

Since the length is always equal to the true capacity, a branch on the
length is enough for most types. Slices of zero size types are
statically special cased to never attempt deallocation. This is the same
implementation as `Vec<T>`.

Closes #14395
2014-09-09 15:14:36 -04:00
Daniel Micay
5aa2da0133 fix sized deallocation for proc 2014-09-06 13:50:58 -04:00
Nick Cameron
3e626375d8 DST coercions and DST structs
[breaking-change]

1. The internal layout for traits has changed from (vtable, data) to (data, vtable). If you were relying on this in unsafe transmutes, you might get some very weird and apparently unrelated errors. You should not be doing this! Prefer not to do this at all, but if you must, you should use raw::TraitObject rather than hardcoding rustc's internal representation into your code.

2. The minimal type of reference-to-vec-literals (e.g., `&[1, 2, 3]`) is now a fixed size vec (e.g., `&[int, ..3]`) where it used to be an unsized vec (e.g., `&[int]`). If you want the unszied type, you must explicitly give the type (e.g., `let x: &[_] = &[1, 2, 3]`). Note in particular where multiple blocks must have the same type (e.g., if and else clauses, vec elements), the compiler will not coerce to the unsized type without a hint. E.g., `[&[1], &[1, 2]]` used to be a valid expression of type '[&[int]]'. It no longer type checks since the first element now has type `&[int, ..1]` and the second has type &[int, ..2]` which are incompatible.

3. The type of blocks (including functions) must be coercible to the expected type (used to be a subtype). Mostly this makes things more flexible and not less (in particular, in the case of coercing function bodies to the return type). However, in some rare cases, this is less flexible. TBH, I'm not exactly sure of the exact effects. I think the change causes us to resolve inferred type variables slightly earlier which might make us slightly more restrictive. Possibly it only affects blocks with unreachable code. E.g., `if ... { fail!(); "Hello" }` used to type check, it no longer does. The fix is to add a semicolon after the string.
2014-08-26 12:38:51 +12:00
Felix S. Klock II
b1f7d3aaa0 Copy only up to min(new_size, old_size) when doing reallocate.
Fix #16687
2014-08-23 19:23:02 +02:00
P1start
f2aa88ca06 A few minor documentation fixes 2014-08-19 17:22:18 +12:00
Alex Crichton
1ae1461fbf rustc: Link entire archives of native libraries
As discovered in #15460, a particular #[link(kind = "static", ...)] line is not
actually guaranteed to link the library at all. The reason for this is that if
the external library doesn't have any referenced symbols in the object generated
by rustc, the entire library is dropped by the linker.

For dynamic native libraries, this is solved by passing -lfoo for all downstream
compilations unconditionally. For static libraries in rlibs this is solved
because the entire archive is bundled in the rlib. The only situation in which
this was a problem was when a static native library was linked to a rust dynamic
library.

This commit brings the behavior of dylibs in line with rlibs by passing the
--whole-archive flag to the linker when linking native libraries. On OSX, this
uses the -force_load flag. This flag ensures that the entire archive is
considered candidate for being linked into the final dynamic library.

This is a breaking change because if any static library is included twice in the
same compilation unit then the linker will start emitting errors about duplicate
definitions now. The fix for this would involve only statically linking to a
library once.

Closes #15460
[breaking-change]
2014-08-04 11:02:26 -07:00
Patrick Walton
a5bb0a3a45 librustc: Remove the fallback to int for integers and f64 for
floating point numbers for real.

This will break code that looks like:

    let mut x = 0;
    while ... {
        x += 1;
    }
    println!("{}", x);

Change that code to:

    let mut x = 0i;
    while ... {
        x += 1;
    }
    println!("{}", x);

Closes #15201.

[breaking-change]
2014-06-29 11:47:58 -07:00
Alex Crichton
0dfc90ab15 Rename all raw pointers as necessary 2014-06-28 11:53:58 -07:00
Alex Crichton
2c3bf8836f Merge conflicts from the rollup
Closes #14480 (vim: Add :RustRun and associated commands)
Closes #14917 (Deprecate free-standing endian conversions in favor of methods on Int. Merge Bitwise into Int and add more bit operations.)
Closes #14981 (librustc: Use expr_ty_adjusted in trans_overloaded_call.)
Closes #14989 (std::task - Revamp TaskBuilder API)
Closes #14997 (Reject double moves out of array elements)
Closes #14998 (Vim: highlight escapes for byte literals.)
Closes #15002 (Fix FIXME #5275)
Closes #15004 (Fix #14865)
Closes #15007 (debuginfo: Add test case for issue #14411.)
Closes #15012 ((doc) Change search placeholder text.)
Closes #15013 (Update compiler-rt.)
Closes #15017 (Deprecate the bytes!() macro.)
2014-06-18 17:23:03 -07:00
Alex Crichton
051abae802 alloc: Refactor OOM into a common routine 2014-06-16 18:15:48 -07:00
Alex Crichton
4cd932f94e alloc: Allow disabling jemalloc 2014-06-16 18:15:48 -07:00
Alex Crichton
7613c9dd59 alloc: Format heap.rs to 80-char max 2014-06-16 18:15:48 -07:00
Alex Crichton
3316b1eb7c rustc: Remove ~[T] from the language
The following features have been removed

* box [a, b, c]
* ~[a, b, c]
* box [a, ..N]
* ~[a, ..N]
* ~[T] (as a type)
* deprecated_owned_vector lint

All users of ~[T] should move to using Vec<T> instead.
2014-06-11 15:02:17 -07:00
Alex Crichton
f4fa7c8a07 Register new snapshots 2014-05-30 15:52:23 -07:00
Patrick Walton
e878721d70 libcore: Remove all uses of ~str from libcore.
[breaking-change]
2014-05-22 14:42:02 -07:00
Daniel Micay
f1ce693e61 alter exchange_free for sized deallocation
The support for sized deallocation is nearly complete. The only known
missing pieces are `Box<str>`, `Box<[T]>` and `proc`.
2014-05-21 16:16:17 -04:00
Daniel Micay
945019830b migrate from exchange_malloc to allocate
This is now only used internally by the compiler.
2014-05-21 16:16:17 -04:00
Alex Crichton
639759b7f4 std: Refactor liballoc out of lib{std,sync}
This commit is part of the libstd facade RFC, issue #13851. This creates a new
library, liballoc, which is intended to be the core allocation library for all
of Rust. It is pinned on the basic assumption that an allocation failure is an
abort or failure.

This module has inherited the heap/libc_heap modules from std::rt, the owned/rc
modules from std, and the arc module from libsync. These three pointers are
currently the three most core pointer implementations in Rust.

The UnsafeArc type in std::sync should be considered deprecated and replaced by
Arc<Unsafe<T>>. This commit does not currently migrate to this type, but future
commits will continue this refactoring.
2014-05-17 21:52:23 -07:00