Commit Graph

20 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Huon Wilson
0c70ce1424 Update compile fail tests to use isize. 2015-01-08 11:02:24 -05:00
Jorge Aparicio
7d5b0454e9 fix cfail tests 2015-01-05 17:22:17 -05:00
Niko Matsakis
4c01251416 Introduce new inference scheme: variables are now instantiated with at most one type, and region variables are introduced as needed 2014-08-29 10:21:54 -04:00
Niko Matsakis
1b487a8906 Implement generalized object and type parameter bounds (Fixes #16462) 2014-08-27 21:46:52 -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
Patrick Walton
6f99a27886 librustc: Implement lifetime elision.
This implements RFC 39. Omitted lifetimes in return values will now be
inferred to more useful defaults, and an error is reported if a lifetime
in a return type is omitted and one of the two lifetime elision rules
does not specify what it should be.

This primarily breaks two uncommon code patterns. The first is this:

    unsafe fn get_foo_out_of_thin_air() -> &Foo {
        ...
    }

This should be changed to:

    unsafe fn get_foo_out_of_thin_air() -> &'static Foo {
        ...
    }

The second pattern that needs to be changed is this:

    enum MaybeBorrowed<'a> {
        Borrowed(&'a str),
        Owned(String),
    }

    fn foo() -> MaybeBorrowed {
        Owned(format!("hello world"))
    }

Change code like this to:

    enum MaybeBorrowed<'a> {
        Borrowed(&'a str),
        Owned(String),
    }

    fn foo() -> MaybeBorrowed<'static> {
        Owned(format!("hello world"))
    }

Closes #15552.

[breaking-change]
2014-07-19 13:10:58 -07:00
Alex Crichton
cc6ec8df95 log: Introduce liblog, the old std::logging
This commit moves all logging out of the standard library into an external
crate. This crate is the new crate which is responsible for all logging macros
and logging implementation. A few reasons for this change are:

* The crate map has always been a bit of a code smell among rust programs. It
  has difficulty being loaded on almost all platforms, and it's used almost
  exclusively for logging and only logging. Removing the crate map is one of the
  end goals of this movement.

* The compiler has a fair bit of special support for logging. It has the
  __log_level() expression as well as generating a global word per module
  specifying the log level. This is unfairly favoring the built-in logging
  system, and is much better done purely in libraries instead of the compiler
  itself.

* Initialization of logging is much easier to do if there is no reliance on a
  magical crate map being available to set module log levels.

* If the logging library can be written outside of the standard library, there's
  no reason that it shouldn't be. It's likely that we're not going to build the
  highest quality logging library of all time, so third-party libraries should
  be able to provide just as high-quality logging systems as the default one
  provided in the rust distribution.

With a migration such as this, the change does not come for free. There are some
subtle changes in the behavior of liblog vs the previous logging macros:

* The core change of this migration is that there is no longer a physical
  log-level per module. This concept is still emulated (it is quite useful), but
  there is now only a global log level, not a local one. This global log level
  is a reflection of the maximum of all log levels specified. The previously
  generated logging code looked like:

    if specified_level <= __module_log_level() {
        println!(...)
    }

  The newly generated code looks like:

    if specified_level <= ::log::LOG_LEVEL {
        if ::log::module_enabled(module_path!()) {
            println!(...)
        }
    }

  Notably, the first layer of checking is still intended to be "super fast" in
  that it's just a load of a global word and a compare. The second layer of
  checking is executed to determine if the current module does indeed have
  logging turned on.

  This means that if any module has a debug log level turned on, all modules
  with debug log levels get a little bit slower (they all do more expensive
  dynamic checks to determine if they're turned on or not).

  Semantically, this migration brings no change in this respect, but
  runtime-wise, this will have a perf impact on some code.

* A `RUST_LOG=::help` directive will no longer print out a list of all modules
  that can be logged. This is because the crate map will no longer specify the
  log levels of all modules, so the list of modules is not known. Additionally,
  warnings can no longer be provided if a malformed logging directive was
  supplied.

The new "hello world" for logging looks like:

    #[phase(syntax, link)]
    extern crate log;

    fn main() {
        debug!("Hello, world!");
    }
2014-03-15 22:26:36 -07:00
Niko Matsakis
3805c5416e test -- update tests with new error messages 2014-02-11 16:55:25 -05:00
Patrick Walton
406813957b test: Remove most uses of &fn() from the tests. 2013-11-26 08:19:00 -08:00
Alex Crichton
daf5f5a4d1 Drop the '2' suffix from logging macros
Who doesn't like a massive renaming?
2013-10-22 08:09:56 -07:00
Alex Crichton
ebf5f406ef cfail: Remove usage of fmt! 2013-09-30 23:21:20 -07:00
Huon Wilson
e4f7561bcd Clean-up tests after debug!/std-macros change.
The entire testsuite is converted to using info! rather than debug!
because some depend on the code within the debug! being trans'd.
2013-07-17 03:10:13 +10:00
Niko Matsakis
9e6d5e152e Defer reasoning about region relationships until after regionck.
This patch makes error handling for region inference failures more
uniform by not reporting *any* region errors until the reigon inference
step. This requires threading through more information about what
caused a region constraint, so that we can still give informative
error messages.

I have only taken partial advantage of this information: when region
inference fails, we still report the same error we always did, despite
the fact that we now know precisely what caused the various constriants
and what the region variable represents, which we did not know before.

This change is required not only to improve error messages but
because the region hierarchy is not in fact fully known until regionck,
because it is not clear where closure bodies fit in (our current
treatment is unsound). Moreover, the relationships between free variables
cannot be fully determined until type inference is otherwise complete.

cc #3238.
2013-07-01 20:43:54 -04:00
Niko Matsakis
2ea52a38e5 refinement to technique used to not run regionck 2013-05-06 09:00:37 -04:00
Niko Matsakis
a896440ca1 new borrow checker (mass squash) 2013-04-30 06:59:32 -04:00
Patrick Walton
d18f785457 librustc: Replace all uses of fn() with &fn(). rs=defun 2013-03-11 09:35:58 -07:00
Graydon Hoare
d1affff623 Reliciense makefiles and testsuite. Yup. 2012-12-10 17:32:58 -08:00
Paul Stansifer
29f32b4a72 m1!{...} -> m1!(...) 2012-08-23 11:14:14 -07:00
Paul Stansifer
a9cc5066ee Change syntax extension syntax: #m[...] -> m!{...}. 2012-07-30 18:38:15 -07:00
Niko Matsakis
99674dc52b avoid capture of bound regions when infering types for closure
expressions. cc #2981
2012-07-25 05:45:52 -07:00