Commit Graph

250 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Alex Crichton
ca7fb82e0b rustuv: Don't zero-out data on clones
When cloning a stream, the data is already guaranteed to be in a consistent
state, so there's no need to perform a zeroing. This prevents segfaults as seen
in #15231

Closes #15231
2014-06-29 09:38:07 -07:00
Huon Wilson
d4d4bc4fe9 c_str: replace .with_ref with .as_ptr throughout the codebase. 2014-06-29 21:15:26 +10:00
Alex Crichton
0dfc90ab15 Rename all raw pointers as necessary 2014-06-28 11:53:58 -07:00
Patrick Walton
dcbf4ec2a1 librustc: Put #[unsafe_destructor] behind a feature gate.
Closes #8142.

This is not the semantics we want long-term. You can continue to use
`#[unsafe_destructor]`, but you'll need to add
`#![feature(unsafe_destructor)]` to the crate attributes.

[breaking-change]
2014-06-20 14:24:31 -07:00
bors
f05cd6e04e auto merge of #15014 : brson/rust/all-crates-experimental, r=cmr
This creates a stability baseline for all crates that we distribute that are not `std`. In general, all library code must start as experimental and progress in stages to become stable.
2014-06-19 03:31:18 +00:00
Brendan Zabarauskas
cb8ca2dafd Shorten endian conversion method names
The consensus on #14917 was that the proposed names were too long.
2014-06-18 17:01:34 -07:00
Brendan Zabarauskas
ff9f92ce52 Merge the Bitwise and ByteOrder traits into the Int trait
This reduces the complexity of the trait hierarchy.
2014-06-18 17:01:34 -07:00
Brendan Zabarauskas
b84d17d4d7 Use ByteOrder methods instead of free-standing functions 2014-06-18 17:01:34 -07:00
Brian Anderson
77657baf2c Mark all crates except std as experimental 2014-06-17 22:13:36 -07:00
Alex Crichton
89b0e6e12b Register new snapshots 2014-06-15 23:30:24 -07:00
bors
b1302f9c4f auto merge of #14764 : jbcrail/rust/fix-more-comments, r=alexcrichton 2014-06-10 15:17:01 -07:00
Joseph Crail
c2c9946372 Fix more misspelled comments and strings. 2014-06-10 11:24:17 -04:00
Jakub Wieczorek
f7d86b2f4a Remove the dead code identified by the new lint 2014-06-08 13:36:28 +02:00
Alex Crichton
75014f7b17 libs: Fix miscellaneous fallout of librustrt 2014-06-06 23:00:01 -07:00
Alex Crichton
550c347d7b rustuv: Deal with the rtio changes 2014-06-06 22:19:57 -07:00
Alex Crichton
a3f9aa9ef8 rtio: Remove usage of Path
The rtio interface is a thin low-level interface over the I/O subsystems, and
the `Path` type is a little too high-level for this interface.
2014-06-06 22:19:41 -07:00
Alex Crichton
c5830a954e doc: Fix a number of broken links
cc #14515
2014-05-31 21:59:50 -07:00
Alex Crichton
748bc3ca49 std: Rename {Eq,Ord} to Partial{Eq,Ord}
This is part of the ongoing renaming of the equality traits. See #12517 for more
details. All code using Eq/Ord will temporarily need to move to Partial{Eq,Ord}
or the Total{Eq,Ord} traits. The Total traits will soon be renamed to {Eq,Ord}.

cc #12517

[breaking-change]
2014-05-30 15:52:24 -07:00
Kevin Butler
3faa6762c1 lib{std,core,debug,rustuv,collections,native,regex}: Fix snake_case errors.
A number of functions/methods have been moved or renamed to align
better with rust standard conventions.

std::reflect::MovePtrAdaptor => MovePtrAdaptor::new
debug::reflect::MovePtrAdaptor => MovePtrAdaptor::new
std::repr::ReprVisitor => ReprVisitor::new
debug::repr::ReprVisitor => ReprVisitor::new
rustuv::homing::HomingIO.go_to_IO_home => go_to_io_home

[breaking-change]
2014-05-30 17:55:41 +01:00
Ariel Ben-Yehuda
def2232595 Issue #13933: Remove transmute_mut from IO
The IO libraries casted self to mut so they can pass it to seek(SEEK_CUR, 0).
Fix this by introducing a private seek function that takes &self
  - of course one should be careful with it if he lacks an
    exclusive reference to self.
2014-05-28 19:25:51 +03:00
bors
0a092a8158 auto merge of #14455 : crabtw/rust/mips, r=alexcrichton
Because IPv4 address conversion doesn't consider big-endian target, I add functions to handle that.
These function names may need to be changed, but I can't come up with a good one.
2014-05-28 02:41:44 -07:00
Alex Crichton
b53454e2e4 Move std::{reflect,repr,Poly} to a libdebug crate
This commit moves reflection (as well as the {:?} format modifier) to a new
libdebug crate, all of which is marked experimental.

This is a breaking change because it now requires the debug crate to be
explicitly linked if the :? format qualifier is used. This means that any code
using this feature will have to add `extern crate debug;` to the top of the
crate. Any code relying on reflection will also need to do this.

Closes #12019

[breaking-change]
2014-05-27 21:44:51 -07:00
Richo Healey
1f1b2e42d7 std: Rename strbuf operations to string
[breaking-change]
2014-05-27 12:59:31 -07:00
Jyun-Yan You
abc2a92d9c fix MIPS target 2014-05-28 01:15:24 +08:00
Richo Healey
553074506e core: rename strbuf::StrBuf to string::String
[breaking-change]
2014-05-24 21:48:10 -07:00
bors
02117dd1bc auto merge of #14357 : huonw/rust/spelling, r=pnkfelix
The span on a inner doc-comment would point to the next token, e.g. the span for the `a` line points to the `b` line, and the span of `b` points to the `fn`.

```rust
//! a
//! b

fn bar() {}
```
2014-05-22 20:56:18 -07:00
Patrick Walton
36195eb91f libstd: Remove ~str from all libstd modules except fmt and str. 2014-05-22 14:42:01 -07:00
Huon Wilson
37bd466e58 Spelling/doc formatting fixes. 2014-05-22 22:55:37 +10:00
bors
257a73ce82 auto merge of #14301 : alexcrichton/rust/remove-unsafe-arc, r=brson
This type can be built with `Arc<Unsafe<T>>` now that liballoc exists.
2014-05-21 17:31:29 -07:00
Alex Crichton
19dc3b50bd core: Stabilize the mem module
Excluding the functions inherited from the cast module last week (with marked
stability levels), these functions received the following treatment.

* size_of - this method has become #[stable]
* nonzero_size_of/nonzero_size_of_val - these methods have been removed
* min_align_of - this method is now #[stable]
* pref_align_of - this method has been renamed without the
  `pref_` prefix, and it is the "default alignment" now. This decision is in line
  with what clang does (see url linked in comment on function). This function
  is now #[stable].
* init - renamed to zeroed and marked #[stable]
* uninit - marked #[stable]
* move_val_init - renamed to overwrite and marked #[stable]
* {from,to}_{be,le}{16,32,64} - all functions marked #[stable]
* swap/replace/drop - marked #[stable]
* size_of_val/min_align_of_val/align_of_val - these functions are marked
  #[unstable], but will continue to exist in some form. Concerns have been
  raised about their `_val` prefix.

[breaking-change]
2014-05-20 23:06:54 -07:00
Alex Crichton
5e10d373b5 rustuv: Remove usage of UnsafeArc 2014-05-19 18:12:18 -07:00
Patrick Walton
ce11f19695 librustuv: Remove all uses of ~str from librustuv 2014-05-16 11:41:27 -07:00
Alex Crichton
1de4b65d2a Updates with core::fmt changes
1. Wherever the `buf` field of a `Formatter` was used, the `Formatter` is used
   instead.
2. The usage of `write_fmt` is minimized as much as possible, the `write!` macro
   is preferred wherever possible.
3. Usage of `fmt::write` is minimized, favoring the `write!` macro instead.
2014-05-15 23:22:06 -07:00
Alex Crichton
17df573a2e Test fixes from rollup
Closes #14231 (mk: Don't run benchmarks with `make check`)
Closes #14215 (std: Modify TempDir to not fail on drop. Closes #12628)
Closes #14211 (rustdoc: functions in ffi blocks are unsafe)
Closes #14210 (Make Vec.truncate() resilient against failure in Drop)
Closes #14208 (Make `from_bits` in `bitflags!` safe; add `from_bits_truncate`)
Closes #14206 (Register new snapshots)
Closes #14205 (use sched_yield on linux and freebsd)
Closes #14204 (Add a crate for missing stubs from libcore)
Closes #14203 (shootout-mandelbrot: Either 10-20% or 80-100% improvement.)
Closes #14202 (Add flow-graph visualization (via graphviz) to rustc)
Closes #14201 (Render not_found with an absolute path to the rust stylesheet)
Closes #14200 (std cleanup)
Closes #14189 (Implement cell::clone_ref)
2014-05-15 15:00:27 -07:00
Brian Anderson
514fc308b0 std: Remove run_in_bare_thread 2014-05-15 13:50:50 -07:00
Aaron Turon
912a9675c0 Make from_bits in bitflags! safe; add from_bits_truncate
Previously, the `from_bits` function in the `std::bitflags::bitflags`
macro was marked as unsafe, as it did not check that the bits being
converted actually corresponded to flags.

This patch changes the function to check against the full set of
possible flags and return an `Option` which is `None` if a non-flag bit
is set. It also adds a `from_bits_truncate` function which simply zeros
any bits not corresponding to a flag.

This addresses the concern raised in https://github.com/mozilla/rust/pull/13897
2014-05-15 13:50:33 -07:00
Aaron Turon
046062d3bf Process::new etc should support non-utf8 commands/args
The existing APIs for spawning processes took strings for the command
and arguments, but the underlying system may not impose utf8 encoding,
so this is overly limiting.

The assumption we actually want to make is just that the command and
arguments are viewable as [u8] slices with no interior NULLs, i.e., as
CStrings. The ToCStr trait is a handy bound for types that meet this
requirement (such as &str and Path).

However, since the commands and arguments are often a mixture of
strings and paths, it would be inconvenient to take a slice with a
single T: ToCStr bound. So this patch revamps the process creation API
to instead use a builder-style interface, called `Command`, allowing
arguments to be added one at a time with differing ToCStr
implementations for each.

The initial cut of the builder API has some drawbacks that can be
addressed once issue #13851 (libstd as a facade) is closed. These are
detailed as FIXMEs.

Closes #11650.

[breaking-change]
2014-05-14 22:52:31 -07:00
Alex Crichton
f09592a5d1 io: Implement process wait timeouts
This implements set_timeout() for std::io::Process which will affect wait()
operations on the process. This follows the same pattern as the rest of the
timeouts emerging in std::io::net.

The implementation was super easy for everything except libnative on unix
(backwards from usual!), which required a good bit of signal handling. There's a
doc comment explaining the strategy in libnative. Internally, this also required
refactoring the "helper thread" implementation used by libnative to allow for an
extra helper thread (not just the timer).

This is a breaking change in terms of the io::Process API. It is now possible
for wait() to fail, and subsequently wait_with_output(). These two functions now
return IoResult<T> due to the fact that they can time out.

Additionally, the wait_with_output() function has moved from taking `&mut self`
to taking `self`. If a timeout occurs while waiting with output, the semantics
are undesirable in almost all cases if attempting to re-wait on the process.
Equivalent functionality can still be achieved by dealing with the output
handles manually.

[breaking-change]

cc #13523
2014-05-13 17:27:42 -07:00
Yuri Kunde Schlesner
8c55fcd1f2 Add stat method to std::io::fs::File to stat without a Path.
The `FileStat` struct contained a `path` field, which was filled by the
`stat` and `lstat` function. Since this field isn't in fact returned by
the operating system (it was copied from the paths passed to the
functions) it was removed, as in the `fstat` case we aren't working with
a `Path`, but directly with a fd.

If your code used the `path` field of `FileStat` you will now have to
manually store the path passed to `stat` along with the returned struct.

[breaking-change]
2014-05-12 19:52:29 -07:00
Brian Anderson
c1da4f875f Add the patch number to version strings. Closes #13289 2014-05-12 19:52:29 -07:00
Alex Crichton
f94d671bfa core: Remove the cast module
This commit revisits the `cast` module in libcore and libstd, and scrutinizes
all functions inside of it. The result was to remove the `cast` module entirely,
folding all functionality into the `mem` module. Specifically, this is the fate
of each function in the `cast` module.

* transmute - This function was moved to `mem`, but it is now marked as
              #[unstable]. This is due to planned changes to the `transmute`
              function and how it can be invoked (see the #[unstable] comment).
              For more information, see RFC 5 and #12898

* transmute_copy - This function was moved to `mem`, with clarification that is
                   is not an error to invoke it with T/U that are different
                   sizes, but rather that it is strongly discouraged. This
                   function is now #[stable]

* forget - This function was moved to `mem` and marked #[stable]

* bump_box_refcount - This function was removed due to the deprecation of
                      managed boxes as well as its questionable utility.

* transmute_mut - This function was previously deprecated, and removed as part
                  of this commit.

* transmute_mut_unsafe - This function doesn't serve much of a purpose when it
                         can be achieved with an `as` in safe code, so it was
                         removed.

* transmute_lifetime - This function was removed because it is likely a strong
                       indication that code is incorrect in the first place.

* transmute_mut_lifetime - This function was removed for the same reasons as
                           `transmute_lifetime`

* copy_lifetime - This function was moved to `mem`, but it is marked
                  `#[unstable]` now due to the likelihood of being removed in
                  the future if it is found to not be very useful.

* copy_mut_lifetime - This function was also moved to `mem`, but had the same
                      treatment as `copy_lifetime`.

* copy_lifetime_vec - This function was removed because it is not used today,
                      and its existence is not necessary with DST
                      (copy_lifetime will suffice).

In summary, the cast module was stripped down to these functions, and then the
functions were moved to the `mem` module.

    transmute - #[unstable]
    transmute_copy - #[stable]
    forget - #[stable]
    copy_lifetime - #[unstable]
    copy_mut_lifetime - #[unstable]

[breaking-change]
2014-05-11 01:13:02 -07:00
Daniel Micay
121ad1cb7d rename global_heap -> libc_heap
This module only contains wrappers for malloc and realloc with
out-of-memory checks.
2014-05-10 19:58:18 -04:00
Kevin Ballard
fa82ef23b8 Handle fallout in librustuv
API Changes:

- GetAddrInfoRequest::run() returns Result<Vec<..>, ..>
- Process::spawn() returns Result<(.., Vec<..>), ..>
2014-05-08 12:06:22 -07:00
Alex Crichton
418f197351 Test fixes and rebase conflicts 2014-05-07 23:58:55 -07:00
Alex Crichton
b2c6d6fd3f rustuv: Implement timeouts for unix networking
This commit implements the set{,_read,_write}_timeout() methods for the
libuv-based networking I/O objects. The implementation details are commented
thoroughly throughout the implementation.
2014-05-07 23:29:04 -07:00
Alex Crichton
ec9ade938e std: Add close_{read,write}() methods to I/O
Two new methods were added to TcpStream and UnixStream:

    fn close_read(&mut self) -> IoResult<()>;
    fn close_write(&mut self) -> IoResult<()>;

These two methods map to shutdown()'s behavior (the system call on unix),
closing the reading or writing half of a duplex stream. These methods are
primarily added to allow waking up a pending read in another task. By closing
the reading half of a connection, all pending readers will be woken up and will
return with EndOfFile. The close_write() method was added for symmetry with
close_read(), and I imagine that it will be quite useful at some point.

Implementation-wise, librustuv got the short end of the stick this time. The
native versions just delegate to the shutdown() syscall (easy). The uv versions
can leverage uv_shutdown() for tcp/unix streams, but only for closing the
writing half. Closing the reading half is done through some careful dancing to
wake up a pending reader.

As usual, windows likes to be different from unix. The windows implementation
uses shutdown() for sockets, but shutdown() is not available for named pipes.
Instead, CancelIoEx was used with same fancy synchronization to make sure
everyone knows what's up.

cc #11165
2014-05-07 17:18:07 -07:00
Patrick Walton
090040bf40 librustc: Remove ~EXPR, ~TYPE, and ~PAT from the language, except
for `~str`/`~[]`.

Note that `~self` still remains, since I forgot to add support for
`Box<self>` before the snapshot.

How to update your code:

* Instead of `~EXPR`, you should write `box EXPR`.

* Instead of `~TYPE`, you should write `Box<Type>`.

* Instead of `~PATTERN`, you should write `box PATTERN`.

[breaking-change]
2014-05-06 23:12:54 -07:00
bors
cf6857b9e9 auto merge of #13897 : aturon/rust/issue-6085, r=bjz
The `std::bitflags::bitflags!` macro did not provide support for
adding attributes to the generates structure, due to limitations in
the parser for macros. This patch works around the parser limitations
by requiring a `flags` keyword in the `bitflags!` invocations:

    bitflags!(
        #[deriving(Hash)]
        #[doc="Three flags"]
        flags Flags: u32 {
            FlagA       = 0x00000001,
            FlagB       = 0x00000010,
            FlagC       = 0x00000100
        }
    )

The intent of `std::bitflags` is to allow building type-safe wrappers
around C-style flags APIs. But in addition to construction these flags
from the Rust side, we need a way to convert them from the C
side. This patch adds a `from_bits` function, which is unsafe since
the bits in question may not represent a valid combination of flags.

Finally, this patch changes `std::io::FilePermissions` from an exposed
`u32` representation to a typesafe representation (that only allows valid
flag combinations) using the `std::bitflags`.

Closes #6085.
2014-05-06 12:41:55 -07:00
Aaron Turon
8d1d7d9b5f Change std::io::FilePermission to a typesafe representation
This patch changes `std::io::FilePermissions` from an exposed `u32`
representation to a typesafe representation (that only allows valid
flag combinations) using the `std::bitflags`, thus ensuring a greater
degree of safety on the Rust side.

Despite the change to the type, most code should continue to work
as-is, sincde the new type provides bit operations in the style of C
flags. To get at the underlying integer representation, use the `bits`
method; to (unsafely) convert to `FilePermissions`, use
`FilePermissions::from_bits`.

Closes #6085.

[breaking-change]
2014-05-05 15:24:36 -07:00
Huon Wilson
781ac3e777 std: deprecate cast::transmute_mut.
Turning a `&T` into an `&mut T` carries a large risk of undefined
behaviour, and needs to be done very very carefully. Providing a
convenience function for exactly this task is a bad idea, just tempting
people into doing the wrong thing.

The right thing is to use types like `Cell`, `RefCell` or `Unsafe`.

For memory safety, Rust has that guarantee that `&mut` pointers do not
alias with any other pointer, that is, if you have a `&mut T` then that
is the only usable pointer to that `T`. This allows Rust to assume that
writes through a `&mut T` do not affect the values of any other `&` or
`&mut` references. `&` pointers have no guarantees about aliasing or
not, so it's entirely possible for the same pointer to be passed into
both arguments of a function like

    fn foo(x: &int, y: &int) { ... }

Converting either of `x` or `y` to a `&mut` pointer and modifying it
would affect the other value: invalid behaviour.

(Similarly, it's undefined behaviour to modify the value of an immutable
local, like `let x = 1;`.)

At a low-level, the *only* safe way to obtain an `&mut` out of a `&` is
using the `Unsafe` type (there are higher level wrappers around it, like
`Cell`, `RefCell`, `Mutex` etc.). The `Unsafe` type is registered with
the compiler so that it can reason a little about these `&` to `&mut`
casts, but it is still up to the user to ensure that the `&mut`s
obtained out of an `Unsafe` never alias.

(Note that *any* conversion from `&` to `&mut` can be invalid, including
a plain `transmute`, or casting `&T` -> `*T` -> `*mut T` -> `&mut T`.)

[breaking-change]
2014-05-05 18:20:41 +10:00