Turns out this was a little more far-reaching than I thought it was.
The first commit is the crux of this stack of commits. The `io::io_error` condition is completely removed and the `read` and `write` methods are altered to return `IoResult<T>`. This turned out to be an incredibly far-reaching change!
Overall, I'm very happy with how this turned out (in addition with the `unused_must_use` lint). I had to almost rewrite the pretty printer in `libsyntax` as well as the the formatting in `librustdoc` (as one would expect). These two modules do *tons* of I/O, and I believe that it's definitely improved.
This pull request also introduces the `if_ok!()` macro for returning-early from something that returns a result. I made quite liberal use of this in mostly the pretty printer and html renderer, and I found its usage generally quite pleasant and convenient to have. I didn't really feel like adding any other macro while I was using it, and I figured that pretty printing could be nicer, but it's nowhere near horrid today.
This may be a controversial issue closing, but I'm going to say it.
Closes#6163
* All I/O now returns IoResult<T> = Result<T, IoError>
* All formatting traits now return fmt::Result = IoResult<()>
* The if_ok!() macro was added to libstd
Make the definition of epoll_event use natural alignment on all
architectures except x86_64.
Before this commit, the struct was always 12 bytes big, which works okay
on x86 and x86_64 but not on ARM and MIPS, where it should be 16 bytes
big with the `data` field aligned on an 8 byte boundary.
I moved all documentation sources (guides, manuals, etc) to `src/doc` to free up `doc` as a build directory for all generated files.
At the same time, I also removed our usage of `VPATH` from the makefiles because it was wreaking havoc with doc deps and it's not very necessary now that we're primarily a rust project rather than having a good portion of C++/C inside of it.
Make the definition of epoll_event use natural alignment on all
architectures except x86_64.
Before this commit, the struct was always 12 bytes big, which works okay
on x86 and x86_64 but not on ARM and MIPS, where it should be 16 bytes
big with the `data` field aligned on an 8 byte boundary.
This Pull Request aims to add backticks to all instances of code inside comments in snippets present in tutorial.md. It also includes backticks for filenames in the same conditions. See #11796 for motivation.
- renames `Default` to `Show`
- introduces some hidden `std::fmt::secret_...` functions, designed to work-around the lack of UFCS (with UFCS they can be replaced by referencing the trait methods directly) because I'm going to convert the traits to have methods rather than static functions, since `#[deriving]` works much better with true methods.
I'm blocked on a snapshot after this. (I could probably do a large number of `#[cfg]`s, but I can work on other things in the meantime.)
This removes @[] from the parser as well as much of the handling of it (and `@str`) from the compiler as I can find.
I've just rebased @pcwalton's (already reviewed) `@str` removal (and fixed the problems in a separate commit); the only new work is the trailing commits with my authorship.
Closes#11967
LLVM fails to properly optimize the shifts used to convert the source
value to the right endianess. The resulting assembly copies the value
to the stack one byte at a time even when there's no conversion required
(e.g. u64_to_le_bytes on a little endian machine).
Instead of doing the conversion ourselves using shifts, we can use the
existing intrinsics to perform the endianess conversion and then
transmute the value to get a fixed vector of its bytes.
Before:
````
test be_i8 ... bench: 21442 ns/iter (+/- 70)
test be_i16 ... bench: 21447 ns/iter (+/- 45)
test be_i32 ... bench: 23832 ns/iter (+/- 63)
test be_i64 ... bench: 26887 ns/iter (+/- 267)
test le_i8 ... bench: 21442 ns/iter (+/- 56)
test le_i16 ... bench: 21448 ns/iter (+/- 36)
test le_i32 ... bench: 23825 ns/iter (+/- 153)
test le_i64 ... bench: 26271 ns/iter (+/- 138)
````
After:
````
test be_i8 ... bench: 21438 ns/iter (+/- 10)
test be_i16 ... bench: 21441 ns/iter (+/- 15)
test be_i32 ... bench: 19057 ns/iter (+/- 6)
test be_i64 ... bench: 21439 ns/iter (+/- 34)
test le_i8 ... bench: 21438 ns/iter (+/- 19)
test le_i16 ... bench: 21439 ns/iter (+/- 8)
test le_i32 ... bench: 21439 ns/iter (+/- 19)
test le_i64 ... bench: 21438 ns/iter (+/- 22)
````