very small runs.
This uses a lot of unsafe code for speed, otherwise we would be having
to sort by sorting lists of indices and then do a pile of swaps to put
everything in the correct place.
Fixes#9819.
Also, add `.remove_opt` and replace `.unshift` with `.remove(0)`. The
code size reduction seem to compensate for not having the optimised
special cases.
This makes the included benchmark more than 3 times faster.
I haven't landed this fix upstream just yet, but it's opened as
joyent/libuv#1048. For now, I've locally merged it into my fork, and I've
upgraded our repo to point to the new revision.
Closes#11027
I haven't landed this fix upstream just yet, but it's opened as
joyent/libuv#1048. For now, I've locally merged it into my fork, and I've
upgraded our repo to point to the new revision.
Closes#11027
This makes the included benchmark more than 3 times faster. Also,
`.unshift(x)` is now faster as `.insert(0, x)` which can reuse the
allocation if necessary.
For `str.as_mut_buf`, un-closure-ification is achieved by outright removal (see commit message). The others are replaced by `.as_ptr`, `.as_mut_ptr` and `.len`
`.as_mut_buf` was used exactly once, in `.push_char` which could be
written in a simpler way, using the `&mut ~[u8]` that it already
retrieved. In the rare situation when someone really needs
`.as_mut_buf`-like functionality (getting a `*mut u8`), they can go via
`str::raw::as_owned_vec`.
This code in resolve accidentally forced all types with an impl to become
public. This fixes it by default inheriting the privacy of what was previously
there and then becoming `true` if nothing else exits.
Closes#10545
### Remove {As,Into,To}{Option,Either,Result} traits.
Expanded, that is:
- `AsOption`
- `IntoOption`
- `ToOption`
- `AsEither`
- `IntoEither`
- `ToEither`
- `AsResult`
- `IntoResult`
- `ToResult`
These were defined for each other but never *used* anywhere. They are
all trivial and so removal will have negligible effect upon anyone.
`Either` has fallen out of favour (and its implementation of these
traits of dubious semantics), `Option<T>` → `Result<T, ()>` was never
really useful and `Result<T, E>` → `Option<T>` should now be done with
`Result.ok()` (mirrored with `Result.err()` for even more usefulness).
In summary, there's really no point in any of these remaining.
### Rename To{Str,Bytes}Consume traits to Into*.
That is:
- `ToStrConsume` → `IntoStr`;
- `ToBytesConsume` → `IntoBytes`.
This code in resolve accidentally forced all types with an impl to become
public. This fixes it by default inheriting the privacy of what was previously
there and then becoming `true` if nothing else exits.
Closes#10545
The removal of the aliasing &mut[] and &[] from `shift_opt` also comes with its simplification.
The above also allows the use of `copy_nonoverlapping_memory` in `[].copy_memory` (I did an audit of each use of `.copy_memory` and `std::vec::bytes::copy_memory`, and I believe none of them are called with arguments can ever alias). This changes requires that `unsafe` code using `copy_memory` **needs** to respect the aliasing rules of `&mut[]`.
This pull request completely rewrites std::comm and all associated users. Some major bullet points
* Everything now works natively
* oneshots have been removed
* shared ports have been removed
* try_recv no longer blocks (recv_opt blocks)
* constructors are now Chan::new and SharedChan::new
* failure is propagated on send
* stream channels are 3x faster
I have acquired the following measurements on this patch. I compared against Go, but remember that Go's channels are fundamentally different than ours in that sends are by-default blocking. This means that it's not really a totally fair comparison, but it's good to see ballpark numbers for anyway
```
oneshot stream shared1
std 2.111 3.073 1.730
my 6.639 1.037 1.238
native 5.748 1.017 1.250
go8 1.774 3.575 2.948
go8-inf slow 0.837 1.376
go8-128 4.832 1.430 1.504
go1 1.528 1.439 1.251
go2 1.753 3.845 3.166
```
I had three benchmarks:
* oneshot - N times, create a "oneshot channel", send on it, then receive on it (no task spawning)
* stream - N times, send from one task to another task, wait for both to complete
* shared1 - create N threads, each of which sends M times, and a port receives N*M times.
The rows are as follows:
* `std` - the current libstd implementation (before this pull request)
* `my` - this pull request's implementation (in M:N mode)
* `native` - this pull request's implementation (in 1:1 mode)
* `goN` - go's implementation with GOMAXPROCS=N. The only relevant value is 8 (I had 8 cores on this machine)
* `goN-X` - go's implementation where the channels in question were created with buffers of size `X` to behave more similarly to rust's channels.
* Streams are now ~3x faster than before (fewer allocations and more optimized)
* Based on a single-producer single-consumer lock-free queue that doesn't
always have to allocate on every send.
* Blocking via mutexes/cond vars outside the runtime
* Streams work in/out of the runtime seamlessly
* Select now works in/out of the runtime seamlessly
* Streams will now fail!() on send() if the other end has hung up
* try_send() will not fail
* PortOne/ChanOne removed
* SharedPort removed
* MegaPipe removed
* Generic select removed (only one kind of port now)
* API redesign
* try_recv == never block
* recv_opt == block, don't fail
* iter() == Iterator<T> for Port<T>
* removed peek
* Type::new
* Removed rt::comm
docs for copy_memory.
&mut [u8] and &[u8] really shouldn't be overlapping at all (part of the
uniqueness/aliasing guarantee of &mut), so no point in encouraging it.
Could prevent callers from catching the situation and lead to e.g early
iterator terminations (cf. `Reader::read_byte') since `None' is only to
be returned only on EOF.
Understand 'pkgid' in stage0. As a bonus, the snapshot now contains now metadata
(now that those changes have landed), and the snapshot download is half as large
as it used to be!
The problem was that std::run::Process::new() was unwrap()ing the result
of std::io::process::Process::new(), which returns None in the case
where the io_error condition is raised to signal failure to start the
process.
Have std::run::Process::new() similarly return an Option\<run::Process\>
to reflect the fact that a subprocess might have failed to start. Update
utility functions run::process_status() and run::process_output() to
return Option\<ProcessExit\> and Option\<ProcessOutput\>, respectively.
Various parts of librustc and librustpkg needed to be updated to reflect
these API changes.
closes#10754
The problem was that std::run::Process::new() was unwrap()ing the result
of std::io::process::Process::new(), which returns None in the case
where the io_error condition is raised to signal failure to start the
process.
Have std::run::Process::new() similarly return an Option<run::Process>
to reflect the fact that a subprocess might have failed to start. Update
utility functions run::process_status() and run::process_output() to
return Option<ProcessExit> and Option<ProcessOutput>, respectively.
Various parts of librustc and librustpkg needed to be updated to reflect
these API changes.
closes#10754
Expanded, that is:
- `AsOption`
- `IntoOption`
- `ToOption`
- `AsEither`
- `IntoEither`
- `ToEither`
- `AsResult`
- `IntoResult`
- `ToResult`
These were defined for each other but never *used* anywhere. They are
all trivial and so removal will have negligible effect upon anyone.
`Either` has fallen out of favour (and its implementation of these
traits of dubious semantics), `Option<T>` → `Result<T, ()>` was never
really useful and `Result<T, E>` → `Option<T>` should now be done with
`Result.ok()` (mirrored with `Result.err()` for even more usefulness).
In summary, there's really no point in any of these remaining.
This adds a bunch of useful Reader and Writer implementations. I'm not a
huge fan of the name `util` but I can't think of a better name and I
don't want to make `std::io` any longer than it already is.
This adds a bunch of useful Reader and Writer implementations. I'm not a
huge fan of the name `util` but I can't think of a better name and I
don't want to make `std::io` any longer than it already is.
- `Buffer.lines()` returns `LineIterator` which yields line using
`.read_line()`.
- `Reader.bytes()` now takes `&mut self` instead of `self`.
- `Reader.read_until()` swallows `EndOfFile`. This also affects
`.read_line()`.
This replaces the link meta attributes with a pkgid attribute and uses a hash
of this as the crate hash. This makes the crate hash computable by things
other than the Rust compiler. It also switches the hash function ot SHA1 since
that is much more likely to be available in shell, Python, etc than SipHash.
Fixes#10188, #8523.
This moves `std::rand::distribitions::{Normal, StandardNormal}` to `...::distributions::normal`, reexporting `Normal` from `distributions` (and similarly for `Exp` and Exp1`), and adds:
- Log-normal
- Chi-squared
- F
- Student T
all of which are implemented in C++11's random library. Tests in 0424b8aded. Note that these are approximately half documentation & half implementation (of which a significant portion is boilerplate `}`'s and so on).
This implements parts of the changes to `Result` and `Option` I proposed and discussed in this thread: https://mail.mozilla.org/pipermail/rust-dev/2013-November/006254.html
This PR includes:
- Adding `ok()` and `err()` option adapters for both `Result` variants.
- Removing `get_ref`, `expect` and iterator constructors for `Result`, as they are reachable with the variant adapters.
- Removing `Result`s `ToStr` bound on the error type because of composability issues. (See https://mail.mozilla.org/pipermail/rust-dev/2013-November/006283.html)
- Some warning cleanups
In order to keep up to date with changes to the libraries that `llvm-config`
spits out, the dependencies to the LLVM are a dynamically generated rust file.
This file is now automatically updated whenever LLVM is updated to get kept
up-to-date.
At the same time, this cleans out some old cruft which isn't necessary in the
makefiles in terms of dependencies.
Closes#10745Closes#10744
It's useful to allow users to get at the internal std::rc::comm::Port,
and other such fields, since they implement important traits like
Select.
See [rust-dev] "select on std::comm::Port and different types" at https://mail.mozilla.org/pipermail/rust-dev/2013-November/006735.html for background.
Right now, as pointed out in #8132, it is very easy to introduce a subtle race
in the runtime. I believe that this is the cause of the current flakiness on the
bots.
I have taken the last idea mentioned in that issue which is to use a lock around
descheduling and context switching in order to solve this race.
Closes#8132
Right now, as pointed out in #8132, it is very easy to introduce a subtle race
in the runtime. I believe that this is the cause of the current flakiness on the
bots.
I have taken the last idea mentioned in that issue which is to use a lock around
descheduling and context switching in order to solve this race.
Closes#8132