Commit Graph

175 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Eduard Burtescu
f786437bd2 syntax: refactor (Span)Handler and ParseSess constructors to be methods. 2015-05-14 01:47:56 +03:00
Barosl Lee
ff332b6467 Squeeze the last bits of tasks in documentation in favor of thread
An automated script was run against the `.rs` and `.md` files,
subsituting every occurrence of `task` with `thread`. In the `.rs`
files, only the texts in the comment blocks were affected.
2015-05-09 02:24:18 +09:00
bors
e959fab4a5 Auto merge of #24597 - bombless:doc, r=steveklabnik
This patch will make links like http://doc.rust-lang.org/std/collections/struct.BTreeMap.html#examples actually playable without modifying the code.

It seems that this patch cannot be tested on test/rustdoc.

And I suggest adding a `&run=1` to those links.

Thank @jorisgio for noticing me this!

r? @steveklabnik 

Closes https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/24332
2015-04-20 15:23:52 +00:00
York Xiang
adc93ceac9 rustdoc: don't inject "extern crate std;" 2015-04-19 18:10:45 +08:00
bors
7a5754b330 Auto merge of #24428 - kwantam:deprecate_unicode_fns, r=alexcrichton
This patch
1. renames libunicode to librustc_unicode,
2. deprecates several pieces of libunicode (see below), and
3. removes references to deprecated functions from
   librustc_driver and libsyntax. This may change pretty-printed
   output from these modules in cases involving wide or combining
   characters used in filenames, identifiers, etc.

The following functions are marked deprecated:

1. char.width() and str.width():
   --> use unicode-width crate

2. str.graphemes() and str.grapheme_indices():
   --> use unicode-segmentation crate

3. str.nfd_chars(), str.nfkd_chars(), str.nfc_chars(), str.nfkc_chars(),
   char.compose(), char.decompose_canonical(), char.decompose_compatible(),
   char.canonical_combining_class():
   --> use unicode-normalization crate
2015-04-18 07:09:22 +00:00
kwantam
29d1252e4d deprecate Unicode functions that will be moved to crates.io
This patch
1. renames libunicode to librustc_unicode,
2. deprecates several pieces of libunicode (see below), and
3. removes references to deprecated functions from
   librustc_driver and libsyntax. This may change pretty-printed
   output from these modules in cases involving wide or combining
   characters used in filenames, identifiers, etc.

The following functions are marked deprecated:

1. char.width() and str.width():
   --> use unicode-width crate

2. str.graphemes() and str.grapheme_indices():
   --> use unicode-segmentation crate

3. str.nfd_chars(), str.nfkd_chars(), str.nfc_chars(), str.nfkc_chars(),
   char.compose(), char.decompose_canonical(), char.decompose_compatible(),
   char.canonical_combining_class():
   --> use unicode-normalization crate
2015-04-16 17:03:05 -04:00
Alex Crichton
71c1b5b704 rustdoc: Inline methods inhereted through Deref
Whenever a type implements Deref, rustdoc will now add a section to the "methods
available" sections for "Methods from Deref<Target=Foo>", listing all the
inherent methods of the type `Foo`.

Closes #19190
2015-04-16 13:28:15 -07:00
Tamir Duberstein
29ac04402d Positive case of len() -> is_empty()
`s/(?<!\{ self)(?<=\.)len\(\) == 0/is_empty()/g`
2015-04-14 20:26:03 -07:00
Alex Crichton
445faca844 Test fixes and review feedback 2015-04-10 00:58:10 -07:00
Alex Crichton
179719d450 rustdoc: Allowing specifying attrs for doctests
This adds support in rustdoc to blanket apply crate attributes to all doc tests
for a crate at once. The syntax for doing this is:

    #![doc(test(attr(...)))]

Each meta item in `...` will be applied to each doctest as a crate attribute.

cc #18199
2015-04-07 17:54:34 -07:00
Niko Matsakis
cade32acf6 Remove Thunk struct and Invoke trait; change Thunk to be an alias
for `Box<FnBox()>`. I found the alias was still handy because it is
shorter than the fully written type.

This is a [breaking-change]: convert code using `Invoke` to use `FnBox`,
which is usually pretty straight-forward. Code using thunk mostly works
if you change `Thunk::new => Box::new` and `foo.invoke(arg)` to
`foo(arg)`.
2015-04-01 14:41:21 -04:00
ray glover
5dc23be5b1 rustdoc: output stderr on doc-test fail
Forward output from stderr when a test executable panics/fails.
2015-03-30 23:42:41 +01:00
Alex Crichton
d3a4f362cb rollup merge of #23786: alexcrichton/less-quotes
Conflicts:
	src/test/auxiliary/static-function-pointer-aux.rs
	src/test/auxiliary/trait_default_method_xc_aux.rs
	src/test/run-pass/issue-4545.rs
2015-03-27 16:10:25 -07:00
Alex Crichton
b24a3b8201 rustc: Remove support for hyphens in crate names
This commit removes parser support for `extern crate "foo" as bar` as the
renamed crate is now required to be an identifier. Additionally this commit
enables hard errors on crate names that contain hyphens in them, they must now
solely contain alphanumeric characters or underscores.

If the crate name is inferred from the file name, however, the file name
`foo-bar.rs` will have the crate name inferred as `foo_bar`. If a binary is
being emitted it will have the name `foo-bar` and a library will have the name
`libfoo_bar.rlib`.

This commit is a breaking change for a number of reasons:

* Old syntax is being removed. This was previously only issuing warnings.
* The output for the compiler when input is received on stdin is now `rust_out`
  instead of `rust-out`.
* The crate name for a crate in the file `foo-bar.rs` is now `foo_bar` which can
  affect infrastructure such as logging.

[breaking-change]
2015-03-27 10:19:59 -07:00
Alex Crichton
43bfaa4a33 Mass rename uint/int to usize/isize
Now that support has been removed, all lingering use cases are renamed.
2015-03-26 12:10:22 -07:00
Alex Crichton
c608084ff5 rollup merge of #23598: brson/gate
Conflicts:
	src/compiletest/compiletest.rs
	src/libcollections/lib.rs
	src/librustc_back/lib.rs
	src/libserialize/lib.rs
	src/libstd/lib.rs
	src/libtest/lib.rs
	src/test/run-make/rustdoc-default-impl/foo.rs
	src/test/run-pass/env-home-dir.rs
2015-03-23 15:13:15 -07:00
Aaron Turon
8389253df0 Add generic conversion traits
This commit:

* Introduces `std::convert`, providing an implementation of
RFC 529.

* Deprecates the `AsPath`, `AsOsStr`, and `IntoBytes` traits, all
in favor of the corresponding generic conversion traits.

  Consequently, various IO APIs now take `AsRef<Path>` rather than
`AsPath`, and so on. Since the types provided by `std` implement both
traits, this should cause relatively little breakage.

* Deprecates many `from_foo` constructors in favor of `from`.

* Changes `PathBuf::new` to take no argument (creating an empty buffer,
  as per convention). The previous behavior is now available as
  `PathBuf::from`.

* De-stabilizes `IntoCow`. It's not clear whether we need this separate trait.

Closes #22751
Closes #14433

[breaking-change]
2015-03-23 15:01:45 -07:00
Brian Anderson
e9019101a8 Add #![feature] attributes to doctests 2015-03-23 14:40:26 -07:00
Brian Anderson
7770ea706b rustdoc: Add #[doc(test(no_inject_crate))] attribute
So that collections doctests don't automatically fail themselves
by injecting `extern crate collections` when they are mostly
using the std facade.
2015-03-23 14:40:25 -07:00
Brian Anderson
3d365f6a01 rustdoc: interpret all leading feature attributes in examples as crate attributes
This makes it possible to write `#![feature(foo)]` in doc tests.
2015-03-23 14:40:25 -07:00
Alex Crichton
981bf5f690 Fallout of std::old_io deprecation 2015-03-13 10:00:28 -07:00
Steven Fackler
e2605b42c7 Rename #[should_fail] to #[should_panic] 2015-03-09 10:14:21 -07:00
Manish Goregaokar
fe41c93560 Rollup merge of #23081 - alexcrichton:stabilize-fs, r=aturon
This commit performs a stabilization pass over the `std::fs` module now that
it's had some time to bake. The change was largely just adding `#[stable]` tags,
but there are a few APIs that remain `#[unstable]`.

The following apis are now marked `#[stable]`:

* `std::fs` (the name)
* `File`
* `Metadata`
* `ReadDir`
* `DirEntry`
* `OpenOptions`
* `Permissions`
* `File::{open, create}`
* `File::{sync_all, sync_data}`
* `File::set_len`
* `File::metadata`
* Trait implementations for `File` and `&File`
* `OpenOptions::new`
* `OpenOptions::{read, write, append, truncate, create}`
* `OpenOptions::open` - this function was modified, however, to not attempt to
  reject cross-platform openings of directories. This means that some platforms
  will succeed in opening a directory and others will fail.
* `Metadata::{is_dir, is_file, len, permissions}`
* `Permissions::{readonly, set_readonly}`
* `Iterator for ReadDir`
* `DirEntry::path`
* `remove_file` - like with `OpenOptions::open`, the extra windows code to
  remove a readonly file has been removed. This means that removing a readonly
  file will succeed on some platforms but fail on others.
* `metadata`
* `rename`
* `copy`
* `hard_link`
* `soft_link`
* `read_link`
* `create_dir`
* `create_dir_all`
* `remove_dir`
* `remove_dir_all`
* `read_dir`

The following apis remain `#[unstable]`.

* `WalkDir` and `walk` - there are many methods by which a directory walk can be
  constructed, and it's unclear whether the current semantics are the right
  ones. For example symlinks are not handled super well currently. This is now
  behind a new `fs_walk` feature.
* `File::path` - this is an extra abstraction which the standard library
  provides on top of what the system offers and it's unclear whether we should
  be doing so. This is now behind a new `file_path` feature.
* `Metadata::{accessed, modified}` - we do not currently have a good
  abstraction for a moment in time which is what these APIs should likely be
  returning, so these remain `#[unstable]` for now. These are now behind a new
  `fs_time` feature
* `set_file_times` - like with `Metadata::accessed`, we do not currently have
  the appropriate abstraction for the arguments here so this API remains
  unstable behind the `fs_time` feature gate.
* `PathExt` - the precise set of methods on this trait may change over time and
  some methods may be removed. This API remains unstable behind the `path_ext`
  feature gate.
* `set_permissions` - we may wish to expose a more granular ability to set the
  permissions on a file instead of just a blanket \"set all permissions\" method.
  This function remains behind the `fs` feature.

The following apis are now `#[deprecated]`

* The `TempDir` type is now entirely deprecated and is [located on
  crates.io][tempdir] as the `tempdir` crate with [its source][github] at
  rust-lang/tempdir.

[tempdir]: https://crates.io/crates/tempdir
[github]: https://github.com/rust-lang/tempdir

The stability of some of these APIs has been questioned over the past few weeks
in using these APIs, and it is intentional that the majority of APIs here are
marked `#[stable]`. The `std::fs` module has a lot of room to grow and the
material is [being tracked in a RFC issue][rfc-issue].

[rfc-issue]: rust-lang/rfcs#939

Closes #22879

[breaking-change]
2015-03-06 09:01:50 +05:30
Manish Goregaokar
32631b4138 Rollup merge of #23010 - alexcrichton:deprecate-some-old-io, r=aturon
The new `io` module has had some time to bake and this commit stabilizes some of
the utilities associated with it. This commit also deprecates a number of
`std::old_io::util` functions and structures.

These items are now `#[stable]`

* `Cursor`
* `Cursor::{new, into_inner, get_ref, get_mut, position, set_position}`
* Implementations of I/O traits for `Cursor<T>`
* Delegating implementations of I/O traits for references and `Box` pointers
* Implementations of I/O traits for primitives like slices and `Vec<T>`
* `ReadExt::bytes`
* `Bytes` (and impls)
* `ReadExt::chain`
* `Chain` (and impls)
* `ReadExt::take` (and impls)
* `BufReadExt::lines`
* `Lines` (and impls)
* `io::copy`
* `io::{empty, Empty}` (and impls)
* `io::{sink, Sink}` (and impls)
* `io::{repeat, Repeat}` (and impls)

These items remain `#[unstable]`

* Core I/O traits. These may want a little bit more time to bake along with the
  commonly used methods like `read_to_end`.
* `BufReadExt::split` - this function may be renamed to not conflict with
  `SliceExt::split`.
* `Error` - there are a number of questions about its representation,
  `ErrorKind`, and usability.

These items are now `#[deprecated]` in `old_io`

* `LimitReader` - use `take` instead
* `NullWriter` - use `io::sink` instead
* `ZeroReader` - use `io::repeat` instead
* `NullReader` - use `io::empty` instead
* `MultiWriter` - use `broadcast` instead
* `ChainedReader` - use `chain` instead
* `TeeReader` - use `tee` instead
* `copy` - use `io::copy` instead

[breaking-change]
2015-03-06 08:58:44 +05:30
Alex Crichton
73b0b25e32 std: Stabilize the fs module
This commit performs a stabilization pass over the `std::fs` module now that
it's had some time to bake. The change was largely just adding `#[stable]` tags,
but there are a few APIs that remain `#[unstable]`.

The following apis are now marked `#[stable]`:

* `std::fs` (the name)
* `File`
* `Metadata`
* `ReadDir`
* `DirEntry`
* `OpenOptions`
* `Permissions`
* `File::{open, create}`
* `File::{sync_all, sync_data}`
* `File::set_len`
* `File::metadata`
* Trait implementations for `File` and `&File`
* `OpenOptions::new`
* `OpenOptions::{read, write, append, truncate, create}`
* `OpenOptions::open` - this function was modified, however, to not attempt to
  reject cross-platform openings of directories. This means that some platforms
  will succeed in opening a directory and others will fail.
* `Metadata::{is_dir, is_file, len, permissions}`
* `Permissions::{readonly, set_readonly}`
* `Iterator for ReadDir`
* `DirEntry::path`
* `remove_file` - like with `OpenOptions::open`, the extra windows code to
  remove a readonly file has been removed. This means that removing a readonly
  file will succeed on some platforms but fail on others.
* `metadata`
* `rename`
* `copy`
* `hard_link`
* `soft_link`
* `read_link`
* `create_dir`
* `create_dir_all`
* `remove_dir`
* `remove_dir_all`
* `read_dir`

The following apis remain `#[unstable]`.

* `WalkDir` and `walk` - there are many methods by which a directory walk can be
  constructed, and it's unclear whether the current semantics are the right
  ones. For example symlinks are not handled super well currently. This is now
  behind a new `fs_walk` feature.
* `File::path` - this is an extra abstraction which the standard library
  provides on top of what the system offers and it's unclear whether we should
  be doing so. This is now behind a new `file_path` feature.
* `Metadata::{accessed, modified}` - we do not currently have a good
  abstraction for a moment in time which is what these APIs should likely be
  returning, so these remain `#[unstable]` for now. These are now behind a new
  `fs_time` feature
* `set_file_times` - like with `Metadata::accessed`, we do not currently have
  the appropriate abstraction for the arguments here so this API remains
  unstable behind the `fs_time` feature gate.
* `PathExt` - the precise set of methods on this trait may change over time and
  some methods may be removed. This API remains unstable behind the `path_ext`
  feature gate.
* `set_permissions` - we may wish to expose a more granular ability to set the
  permissions on a file instead of just a blanket "set all permissions" method.
  This function remains behind the `fs` feature.

The following apis are now `#[deprecated]`

* The `TempDir` type is now entirely deprecated and is [located on
  crates.io][tempdir] as the `tempdir` crate with [its source][github] at
  rust-lang/tempdir.

[tempdir]: https://crates.io/crates/tempdir
[github]: https://github.com/rust-lang/tempdir

The stability of some of these APIs has been questioned over the past few weeks
in using these APIs, and it is intentional that the majority of APIs here are
marked `#[stable]`. The `std::fs` module has a lot of room to grow and the
material is [being tracked in a RFC issue][rfc-issue].

[rfc-issue]: https://github.com/rust-lang/rfcs/issues/939

[breaking-change]
2015-03-05 16:49:41 -08:00
Alex Crichton
0dfa9978cc std: Stabilize portions of the io module
The new `io` module has had some time to bake and this commit stabilizes some of
the utilities associated with it. This commit also deprecates a number of
`std::old_io::util` functions and structures.

These items are now `#[stable]`

* `Cursor`
* `Cursor::{new, into_inner, get_ref, get_mut, position, set_position}`
* Implementations of I/O traits for `Cursor<T>`
* Delegating implementations of I/O traits for references and `Box` pointers
* Implementations of I/O traits for primitives like slices and `Vec<T>`
* `ReadExt::bytes`
* `Bytes` (and impls)
* `ReadExt::chain`
* `Chain` (and impls)
* `ReadExt::take` (and impls)
* `BufReadExt::lines`
* `Lines` (and impls)
* `io::copy`
* `io::{empty, Empty}` (and impls)
* `io::{sink, Sink}` (and impls)
* `io::{repeat, Repeat}` (and impls)

These items remain `#[unstable]`

* Core I/O traits. These may want a little bit more time to bake along with the
  commonly used methods like `read_to_end`.
* `BufReadExt::split` - this function may be renamed to not conflict with
  `SliceExt::split`.
* `Error` - there are a number of questions about its representation,
  `ErrorKind`, and usability.

These items are now `#[deprecated]` in `old_io`

* `LimitReader` - use `take` instead
* `NullWriter` - use `io::sink` instead
* `ZeroReader` - use `io::repeat` instead
* `NullReader` - use `io::empty` instead
* `MultiWriter` - use `broadcast` instead
* `ChainedReader` - use `chain` instead
* `TeeReader` - use `tee` instead
* `copy` - use `io::copy` instead

[breaking-change]
2015-03-04 17:04:22 -08:00
Alex Crichton
95d904625b std: Deprecate std::old_io::fs
This commit deprecates the majority of std::old_io::fs in favor of std::fs and
its new functionality. Some functions remain non-deprecated but are now behind a
feature gate called `old_fs`. These functions will be deprecated once
suitable replacements have been implemented.

The compiler has been migrated to new `std::fs` and `std::path` APIs where
appropriate as part of this change.
2015-03-04 15:59:30 -08:00
Huon Wilson
532cd5f85a Separate most of rustc::lint::builtin into a separate crate.
This pulls out the implementations of most built-in lints into a
separate crate, to reduce edit-compile-test iteration times with
librustc_lint and increase parallelism. This should enable lints to be
refactored, added and deleted much more easily as it slashes the
edit-compile cycle to get a minimal working compiler to test with (`make
rustc-stage1`) from

    librustc -> librustc_typeck -> ... -> librustc_driver ->
        libcore -> ... -> libstd

to

    librustc_lint -> librustc_driver -> libcore -> ... libstd

which is significantly faster, mainly due to avoiding the librustc build
itself.

The intention would be to move as much as possible of the infrastructure
into the crate too, but the plumbing is deeply intertwined with librustc
itself at the moment. Also, there are lints for which diagnostics are
registered directly in the compiler code, not in their own crate
traversal, and their definitions have to remain in librustc.

This is a [breaking-change] for direct users of the compiler APIs:
callers of `rustc::session::build_session` or
`rustc::session::build_session_` need to manually call
`rustc_lint::register_builtins` on their return value.

This should make #22206 easier.
2015-02-28 15:33:59 +11:00
Alex Crichton
2d200c9c8b std: Move std::env to the new I/O APIs
This commit moves `std::env` away from the `std::old_io` error type as well as
the `std::old_path` module. Methods returning an error now return `io::Error`
and methods consuming or returning paths use `std::path` instead of
`std::old_path`. This commit does not yet mark these APIs as `#[stable]`.

This commit also migrates `std::old_io::TempDir` to `std::fs::TempDir` with
essentially the exact same API. This type was added to interoperate with the new
path API and has its own `tempdir` feature.

Finally, this commit reverts the deprecation of `std::os` APIs returning the old
path API types. This deprecation can come back once the entire `std::old_path`
module is deprecated.

[breaking-change]
2015-02-24 15:27:42 -08:00
Aaron Turon
d0de2b46e9 Fallout from stabilization 2015-02-17 15:14:17 -08:00
Andrew Paseltiner
ad3be9f23f parse cfgspecs passed to rustdoc
fixes #22131
2015-02-10 10:31:14 -05:00
Nick Cameron
f0e1e09dd9 Review changes 2015-02-09 19:58:49 +13:00
Nick Cameron
cacd6b66f1 Refactor compilation to make it easier to use for tools 2015-02-09 18:00:56 +13:00
Jorge Aparicio
17bc7d8d5b cleanup: replace as[_mut]_slice() calls with deref coercions 2015-02-05 13:45:01 -05:00
Jorge Aparicio
571cc7f8e9 remove all kind annotations from closures 2015-02-04 20:06:08 -05:00
Alex Crichton
70ed3a48df std: Add a new env module
This is an implementation of [RFC 578][rfc] which adds a new `std::env` module
to replace most of the functionality in the current `std::os` module. More
details can be found in the RFC itself, but as a summary the following methods
have all been deprecated:

[rfc]: https://github.com/rust-lang/rfcs/pull/578

* `os::args_as_bytes`   => `env::args`
* `os::args`            => `env::args`
* `os::consts`          => `env::consts`
* `os::dll_filename`    => no replacement, use `env::consts` directly
* `os::page_size`       => `env::page_size`
* `os::make_absolute`   => use `env::current_dir` + `join` instead
* `os::getcwd`          => `env::current_dir`
* `os::change_dir`      => `env::set_current_dir`
* `os::homedir`         => `env::home_dir`
* `os::tmpdir`          => `env::temp_dir`
* `os::join_paths`      => `env::join_paths`
* `os::split_paths`     => `env::split_paths`
* `os::self_exe_name`   => `env::current_exe`
* `os::self_exe_path`   => use `env::current_exe` + `pop`
* `os::set_exit_status` => `env::set_exit_status`
* `os::get_exit_status` => `env::get_exit_status`
* `os::env`             => `env::vars`
* `os::env_as_bytes`    => `env::vars`
* `os::getenv`          => `env::var` or `env::var_string`
* `os::getenv_as_bytes` => `env::var`
* `os::setenv`          => `env::set_var`
* `os::unsetenv`        => `env::remove_var`

Many function signatures have also been tweaked for various purposes, but the
main changes were:

* `Vec`-returning APIs now all return iterators instead
* All APIs are now centered around `OsString` instead of `Vec<u8>` or `String`.
  There is currently on convenience API, `env::var_string`, which can be used to
  get the value of an environment variable as a unicode `String`.

All old APIs are `#[deprecated]` in-place and will remain for some time to allow
for migrations. The semantics of the APIs have been tweaked slightly with regard
to dealing with invalid unicode (panic instead of replacement).

The new `std::env` module is all contained within the `env` feature, so crates
must add the following to access the new APIs:

    #![feature(env)]

[breaking-change]
2015-02-01 11:08:15 -08:00
Brian Anderson
7122305053 Merge remote-tracking branch 'rust-lang/master'
Conflicts:
	src/libcore/cell.rs
	src/librustc_driver/test.rs
	src/libstd/old_io/net/tcp.rs
	src/libstd/old_io/process.rs
2015-01-27 15:05:04 -08:00
Brian Anderson
abc56a011a Make '-A warnings' apply to all warnings, including feature gate warnings 2015-01-26 16:29:27 -08:00
Alex Crichton
3a07f859b8 Fallout of io => old_io 2015-01-26 16:01:16 -08:00
Tom Jakubowski
e930aeb32b rustdoc: Accept string source in core::run_core
This is wanted by external tooling that uses rustdoc. There are likely
some bugs when actually generating HTML output (which may expect to be
able to read the source) but all I need for now is the cleaned crate and
analysis.
2015-01-17 22:54:23 -08:00
Nick Cameron
55d5c46d3a Make the compilation process more easily customisable 2015-01-12 12:53:07 +13:00
Brian Anderson
a728b4c9b8 rustdoc: Stop adding #[deny(warnings)] to all tests
Because we are warning about unstable APIs and there are many
of these yet, this creates a high likelyhood doc tests will
fail.

This doesn't seem right as a blanket policy to me anyway, though
certainly we want it in std. Probably more appropriate to add
a rustdoc option.
2015-01-08 18:13:20 -08:00
Brian Anderson
c27133e2ce Preliminary feature staging
This partially implements the feature staging described in the
[release channel RFC][rc]. It does not yet fully conform to the RFC as
written, but does accomplish its goals sufficiently for the 1.0 alpha
release.

It has three primary user-visible effects:

* On the nightly channel, use of unstable APIs generates a warning.
* On the beta channel, use of unstable APIs generates a warning.
* On the beta channel, use of feature gates generates a warning.

Code that does not trigger these warnings is considered 'stable',
modulo pre-1.0 bugs.

Disabling the warnings for unstable APIs continues to be done in the
existing (i.e. old) style, via `#[allow(...)]`, not that specified in
the RFC. I deem this marginally acceptable since any code that must do
this is not using the stable dialect of Rust.

Use of feature gates is itself gated with the new 'unstable_features'
lint, on nightly set to 'allow', and on beta 'warn'.

The attribute scheme used here corresponds to an older version of the
RFC, with the `#[staged_api]` crate attribute toggling the staging
behavior of the stability attributes, but the user impact is only
in-tree so I'm not concerned about having to make design changes later
(and I may ultimately prefer the scheme here after all, with the
`#[staged_api]` crate attribute).

Since the Rust codebase itself makes use of unstable features the
compiler and build system to a midly elaborate dance to allow it to
bootstrap while disobeying these lints (which would otherwise be
errors because Rust builds with `-D warnings`).

This patch includes one significant hack that causes a
regression. Because the `format_args!` macro emits calls to unstable
APIs it would trigger the lint.  I added a hack to the lint to make it
not trigger, but this in turn causes arguments to `println!` not to be
checked for feature gates. I don't presently understand macro
expansion well enough to fix. This is bug #20661.

Closes #16678

[rc]: https://github.com/rust-lang/rfcs/blob/master/text/0507-release-channels.md
2015-01-07 15:34:56 -08:00
Alex Crichton
36f5d122b8 rollup merge of #20615: aturon/stab-2-thread
This commit takes a first pass at stabilizing `std::thread`:

* It removes the `detach` method in favor of two constructors -- `spawn`
  for detached threads, `scoped` for "scoped" (i.e., must-join)
  threads. This addresses some of the surprise/frustrating debug
  sessions with the previous API, in which `spawn` produced a guard that
  on destruction joined the thread (unless `detach` was called).

  The reason to have the division in part is that `Send` will soon not
  imply `'static`, which means that `scoped` thread creation can take a
  closure over *shared stack data* of the parent thread. On the other
  hand, this means that the parent must not pop the relevant stack
  frames while the child thread is running. The `JoinGuard` is used to
  prevent this from happening by joining on drop (if you have not
  already explicitly `join`ed.) The APIs around `scoped` are
  future-proofed for the `Send` changes by taking an additional lifetime
  parameter. With the current definition of `Send`, this is forced to be
  `'static`, but when `Send` changes these APIs will gain their full
  flexibility immediately.

  Threads that are `spawn`ed, on the other hand, are detached from the
  start and do not yield an RAII guard.

  The hope is that, by making `scoped` an explicit opt-in with a very
  suggestive name, it will be drastically less likely to be caught by a
  surprising deadlock due to an implicit join at the end of a scope.

* The module itself is marked stable.

* Existing methods other than `spawn` and `scoped` are marked stable.

The migration path is:

```rust
Thread::spawn(f).detached()
```

becomes

```rust
Thread::spawn(f)
```

while

```rust
let res = Thread::spawn(f);
res.join()
```

becomes

```rust
let res = Thread::scoped(f);
res.join()
```

[breaking-change]
2015-01-06 15:38:38 -08:00
Aaron Turon
caca9b2e71 Fallout from stabilization 2015-01-06 14:57:52 -08:00
Sean McArthur
44440e5c18 core: split into fmt::Show and fmt::String
fmt::Show is for debugging, and can and should be implemented for
all public types. This trait is used with `{:?}` syntax. There still
exists #[derive(Show)].

fmt::String is for types that faithfully be represented as a String.
Because of this, there is no way to derive fmt::String, all
implementations must be purposeful. It is used by the default format
syntax, `{}`.

This will break most instances of `{}`, since that now requires the type
to impl fmt::String. In most cases, replacing `{}` with `{:?}` is the
correct fix. Types that were being printed specifically for users should
receive a fmt::String implementation to fix this.

Part of #20013

[breaking-change]
2015-01-06 14:49:42 -08:00
Jorge Aparicio
56dcbd17fd sed -i -s 's/\bmod,/self,/g' **/*.rs 2015-01-03 22:42:21 -05:00
Alex Crichton
8b7d032014 rollup merge of #20273: alexcrichton/second-pass-comm
Conflicts:
	src/doc/guide.md
	src/libcollections/bit.rs
	src/libcollections/btree/node.rs
	src/libcollections/slice.rs
	src/libcore/ops.rs
	src/libcore/prelude.rs
	src/librand/rand_impls.rs
	src/librustc/middle/check_match.rs
	src/librustc/middle/infer/region_inference/mod.rs
	src/librustc_driver/lib.rs
	src/librustdoc/test.rs
	src/libstd/bitflags.rs
	src/libstd/io/comm_adapters.rs
	src/libstd/io/mem.rs
	src/libstd/io/mod.rs
	src/libstd/io/net/pipe.rs
	src/libstd/io/net/tcp.rs
	src/libstd/io/net/udp.rs
	src/libstd/io/pipe.rs
	src/libstd/io/process.rs
	src/libstd/io/stdio.rs
	src/libstd/io/timer.rs
	src/libstd/io/util.rs
	src/libstd/macros.rs
	src/libstd/os.rs
	src/libstd/path/posix.rs
	src/libstd/path/windows.rs
	src/libstd/prelude/v1.rs
	src/libstd/rand/mod.rs
	src/libstd/rand/os.rs
	src/libstd/sync/barrier.rs
	src/libstd/sync/condvar.rs
	src/libstd/sync/future.rs
	src/libstd/sync/mpsc/mod.rs
	src/libstd/sync/mpsc/mpsc_queue.rs
	src/libstd/sync/mpsc/select.rs
	src/libstd/sync/mpsc/spsc_queue.rs
	src/libstd/sync/mutex.rs
	src/libstd/sync/once.rs
	src/libstd/sync/rwlock.rs
	src/libstd/sync/semaphore.rs
	src/libstd/sync/task_pool.rs
	src/libstd/sys/common/helper_thread.rs
	src/libstd/sys/unix/process.rs
	src/libstd/sys/unix/timer.rs
	src/libstd/sys/windows/c.rs
	src/libstd/sys/windows/timer.rs
	src/libstd/sys/windows/tty.rs
	src/libstd/thread.rs
	src/libstd/thread_local/mod.rs
	src/libstd/thread_local/scoped.rs
	src/libtest/lib.rs
	src/test/auxiliary/cci_capture_clause.rs
	src/test/bench/shootout-reverse-complement.rs
	src/test/bench/shootout-spectralnorm.rs
	src/test/compile-fail/array-old-syntax-2.rs
	src/test/compile-fail/bind-by-move-no-guards.rs
	src/test/compile-fail/builtin-superkinds-self-type.rs
	src/test/compile-fail/comm-not-freeze-receiver.rs
	src/test/compile-fail/comm-not-freeze.rs
	src/test/compile-fail/issue-12041.rs
	src/test/compile-fail/unsendable-class.rs
	src/test/run-pass/builtin-superkinds-capabilities-transitive.rs
	src/test/run-pass/builtin-superkinds-capabilities-xc.rs
	src/test/run-pass/builtin-superkinds-capabilities.rs
	src/test/run-pass/builtin-superkinds-self-type.rs
	src/test/run-pass/capturing-logging.rs
	src/test/run-pass/closure-bounds-can-capture-chan.rs
	src/test/run-pass/comm.rs
	src/test/run-pass/core-run-destroy.rs
	src/test/run-pass/drop-trait-enum.rs
	src/test/run-pass/hashmap-memory.rs
	src/test/run-pass/issue-13494.rs
	src/test/run-pass/issue-3609.rs
	src/test/run-pass/issue-4446.rs
	src/test/run-pass/issue-4448.rs
	src/test/run-pass/issue-8827.rs
	src/test/run-pass/issue-9396.rs
	src/test/run-pass/ivec-tag.rs
	src/test/run-pass/rust-log-filter.rs
	src/test/run-pass/send-resource.rs
	src/test/run-pass/send-type-inference.rs
	src/test/run-pass/sendable-class.rs
	src/test/run-pass/spawn-types.rs
	src/test/run-pass/task-comm-0.rs
	src/test/run-pass/task-comm-10.rs
	src/test/run-pass/task-comm-11.rs
	src/test/run-pass/task-comm-13.rs
	src/test/run-pass/task-comm-14.rs
	src/test/run-pass/task-comm-15.rs
	src/test/run-pass/task-comm-16.rs
	src/test/run-pass/task-comm-3.rs
	src/test/run-pass/task-comm-4.rs
	src/test/run-pass/task-comm-5.rs
	src/test/run-pass/task-comm-6.rs
	src/test/run-pass/task-comm-7.rs
	src/test/run-pass/task-comm-9.rs
	src/test/run-pass/task-comm-chan-nil.rs
	src/test/run-pass/task-spawn-move-and-copy.rs
	src/test/run-pass/task-stderr.rs
	src/test/run-pass/tcp-accept-stress.rs
	src/test/run-pass/tcp-connect-timeouts.rs
	src/test/run-pass/tempfile.rs
	src/test/run-pass/trait-bounds-in-arc.rs
	src/test/run-pass/trivial-message.rs
	src/test/run-pass/unique-send-2.rs
	src/test/run-pass/unique-send.rs
	src/test/run-pass/unwind-resource.rs
2015-01-02 09:15:54 -08:00
Alex Crichton
56290a0044 std: Stabilize the prelude module
This commit is an implementation of [RFC 503][rfc] which is a stabilization
story for the prelude. Most of the RFC was directly applied, removing reexports.
Some reexports are kept around, however:

* `range` remains until range syntax has landed to reduce churn.
* `Path` and `GenericPath` remain until path reform lands. This is done to
  prevent many imports of `GenericPath` which will soon be removed.
* All `io` traits remain until I/O reform lands so imports can be rewritten all
  at once to `std::io::prelude::*`.

This is a breaking change because many prelude reexports have been removed, and
the RFC can be consulted for the exact list of removed reexports, as well as to
find the locations of where to import them.

[rfc]: https://github.com/rust-lang/rfcs/blob/master/text/0503-prelude-stabilization.md
[breaking-change]

Closes #20068
2015-01-02 08:54:06 -08:00
Alex Crichton
bc83a009f6 std: Second pass stabilization for comm
This commit is a second pass stabilization for the `std::comm` module,
performing the following actions:

* The entire `std::comm` module was moved under `std::sync::mpsc`. This movement
  reflects that channels are just yet another synchronization primitive, and
  they don't necessarily deserve a special place outside of the other
  concurrency primitives that the standard library offers.
* The `send` and `recv` methods have all been removed.
* The `send_opt` and `recv_opt` methods have been renamed to `send` and `recv`.
  This means that all send/receive operations return a `Result` now indicating
  whether the operation was successful or not.
* The error type of `send` is now a `SendError` to implement a custom error
  message and allow for `unwrap()`. The error type contains an `into_inner`
  method to extract the value.
* The error type of `recv` is now `RecvError` for the same reasons as `send`.
* The `TryRecvError` and `TrySendError` types have had public reexports removed
  of their variants and the variant names have been tweaked with enum
  namespacing rules.
* The `Messages` iterator is renamed to `Iter`

This functionality is now all `#[stable]`:

* `Sender`
* `SyncSender`
* `Receiver`
* `std::sync::mpsc`
* `channel`
* `sync_channel`
* `Iter`
* `Sender::send`
* `Sender::clone`
* `SyncSender::send`
* `SyncSender::try_send`
* `SyncSender::clone`
* `Receiver::recv`
* `Receiver::try_recv`
* `Receiver::iter`
* `SendError`
* `RecvError`
* `TrySendError::{mod, Full, Disconnected}`
* `TryRecvError::{mod, Empty, Disconnected}`
* `SendError::into_inner`
* `TrySendError::into_inner`

This is a breaking change due to the modification of where this module is
located, as well as the changing of the semantics of `send` and `recv`. Most
programs just need to rename imports of `std::comm` to `std::sync::mpsc` and
add calls to `unwrap` after a send or a receive operation.

[breaking-change]
2014-12-29 12:16:49 -08:00