Make `span_to_lines` to return a `Result`.
(This is better than just asserting internally, since it allows caller
to decide if they can recover from the problem.)
Added type alias for `FileLinesResult` returned by `span_to_lines`.
Update embedded unit test to reflect `span_to_lines` signature change.
In diagnostic, catch `Err` from `span_to_lines` and print
`"(internal compiler error: unprintable span)"` instead.
----
There a number of recent issues that report the bug here. See
e.g. #24761 and #24954.
This change *might* fix them. However, that is not its main goal.
The main goals are:
1. Make it possible for callers to recover from an error here, and
2. Insert a more conservative check, in that we are
also checking that the files match up.
This did not render as intended:
>This is defined in RFC 5737 - 192.0.2.0/24 (TEST-NET-1) - 198.51.100.0/24 (TEST-NET-2) - 203.0.113.0/24 (TEST-NET-3)
vs.
> This is defined in RFC 5737
- 192.0.2.0/24 (TEST-NET-1)
- 198.51.100.0/24 (TEST-NET-2)
- 203.0.113.0/24 (TEST-NET-3)
This commit does two things: it adds an example for indexing vectors, and it changes the \"Examples\" section to use full sentences.
This change was spurred by someone in the #rust IRC channel asking if there was a `.set()` method for changing the `i`-th value of a vector (they had missed that `Vec` implements `IndexMut`, which is easy to do if you're not aware of that trait).
This script used to be used to [extract the grammar sections from the reference](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/8585), but there is [now a separate src/doc/grammar.md](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/22308) that generates grammar.html where the grammar sections that used to be in the reference live, so there is no longer a need to extract the grammar from the reference.
I ❤️ deleting code :) But I totally understand if there's a reason to keep this around that I don't know about :)
- `File::open` is for opening a file in read-only mode
- `File::create` is for opening a file in write-only mode, which is what we want instead for this example to make sense
This makes the `bit::vec::bench::bench_bit_vec_big_union` benchmark go
from `774 ns/iter (+/- 190)` to `602 ns/iter (+/- 5)`.
(There's room for more work here too: if one can guarantee 128-bit
alignment for the vector, the compiler actually optimises `union`,
`intersection` etc. to SIMD instructions, which end up being ~5x faster
that the original version, and 4x faster than the optimised version in
this patch.)
This was one last spot where directories were being leaked through with
arguments of the form `\\?\` which neither `ld.exe` nor `gcc.exe` does
understands so the prefix needed to be stripped.
Closes#25072
This was one last spot where directories were being leaked through with
arguments of the form `\\?\` which neither `ld.exe` nor `gcc.exe` does
understands so the prefix needed to be stripped.
Closes#25072
This test has deadlocked on Windows once or twice now and we've had lots of
problems in the past of threads panicking when the process is being shut down.
One of the two threads in this test is guaranteed to panic because of the
`.unwrap()` on the `send` calls, so just call `recv` on both receivers after the
test executes to ensure that both threads are dying/dead.
I'm uncertain whether the 3 implementations in `net2` should unwrap the socket address values. Without unwrapping it looks like this:
```
UdpSocket { addr: Ok(V4(127.0.0.1:34354)), inner: 3 }
TcpListener { addr: Ok(V4(127.0.0.1:9123)), inner: 4 }
TcpStream { addr: Ok(V4(127.0.0.1:9123)), peer: Ok(V4(127.0.0.1:58360)), inner: 5 }
```
One issue is that you can create, e.g. `UdpSocket`s with bad addresses, which means you can't just unwrap in the implementation:
```
#![feature(from_raw_os)]
use std::net::UdpSocket;
use std::os::unix::io::FromRawFd;
let sock: UdpSocket = unsafe { FromRawFd::from_raw_fd(-1) };
println!("{:?}", sock); // prints "UdpSocket { addr: Err(Error { repr: Os(9) }), inner: -1 }"
```
Fixes#23134.
This makes the `bit::vec::bench::bench_bit_vec_big_union` benchmark go
from `774 ns/iter (+/- 190)` to `602 ns/iter (+/- 5)`.
(There's room for more work here too: if one can guarantee 128-bit
alignment for the vector, the compiler actually optimises `union`,
`intersection` etc. to SIMD instructions, which end up being ~5x faster
that the original version, and 4x faster than the optimised version in
this patch.)
- I found n error in the book, before contributing the patch to fix it, I had to find where they were hosted
- It took me quite look to find where within the rust-lang *organisation* it was! ... and this should make it easier for the next person in the same position
Without the inline annotation this:
str::from_utf8_unchecked( slice::from_raw_parts( ptr, len ) )
doesn't get inlined which can be pretty brutal performance-wise
when used in an inner loop of a low level string manipulation method.