Currently LLVM does not generate the debug info required to get complete backtraces even when functions are inlined, so that part of the `run-pass/backtrace-debuginfo.rs` test is disabled when targetting MSVC. At worst this results in missing stack frames where functions have been inlined.
The Introduction page generated by rustbook used weird relative links
like "./getting-started.html" instead of just "getting-started.html"
like on the other pages. This adversely affected Windows builds the
worst, since it generated links like ".\getting-started.html" (note the
backslash). If you then try to upload the generated book to a webserver,
you end up with 404's. See this example of what is going on with the
Introduction page links and why this PR should fix it:
http://is.gd/fRUTXk
Compare the links on these two pages, for instance:
https://doc.rust-lang.org/nightly/book/https://doc.rust-lang.org/nightly/book/getting-started.html
Also, fix a few whitespace issues in build.rs.
The ARM equivalents of the AArch64 are annoyingly more complicated (and some of the AArch64 ones are too).
I think I've got exposed all the x86 intrinsics from SSE to AVX2 now (at least, the ones that LLVM implements as callable intrinsics).
The Introduction page generated by rustbook used weird relative links
like "./getting-started.html" instead of just "getting-started.html"
like on the other pages. This adversely affected Windows builds the
worst, since it generated links like ".\getting-started.html" (note the
backslash). If you then try to upload the generated book to a webserver,
you end up with 404's. See this example of what is going on with the
Introduction page links and why this PR should fix it:
http://is.gd/fRUTXk
Compare the links on these two pages, for instance:
https://doc.rust-lang.org/nightly/book/https://doc.rust-lang.org/nightly/book/getting-started.html
Also, fix a few whitespace issues in build.rs.
This also involved adding `[TYPE;N]` syntax and aggregate indexing
support to the generator script: it's the only way to be able to have a
parameterised intrinsic that returns an aggregate, since one can't refer
to previous elements of the current aggregate (and that was harder to
implement).
This commit is an implementation of [RFC 1212][rfc] which tweaks the behavior of
the `str::lines` and `BufRead::lines` iterators. Both iterators now account for
`\r\n` sequences in addition to `\n`, allowing for less surprising behavior
across platforms (especially in the `BufRead` case). Splitting *only* on the
`\n` character can still be achieved with `split('\n')` in both cases.
The `str::lines_any` function is also now deprecated as `str::lines` is a
drop-in replacement for it.
[rfc]: https://github.com/rust-lang/rfcs/blob/master/text/1212-line-endings.mdCloses#28032
Technically this could also be used for `windows-msvc` targets, as I believe they have *both* dwarf and pdb debug information, but I haven't enabled it there as it should really use the native windows APIs for that, instead of libbacktrace.
I wasn't exactly sure where I should put "gnu" specific stuff, so tell me if I should structure things differently.
This is still a WIP, and I haven't tested properly to make sure I haven't broken msvc/linux builds yet.
This commit is an implementation of [RFC 1212][rfc] which tweaks the behavior of
the `str::lines` and `BufRead::lines` iterators. Both iterators now account for
`\r\n` sequences in addition to `\n`, allowing for less surprising behavior
across platforms (especially in the `BufRead` case). Splitting *only* on the
`\n` character can still be achieved with `split('\n')` in both cases.
The `str::lines_any` function is also now deprecated as `str::lines` is a
drop-in replacement for it.
[rfc]: https://github.com/rust-lang/rfcs/blob/master/text/1212-line-endings.mdCloses#28032