Commit Graph

3485 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Daniel Micay
e532e8d55d remove a layer of indirection from most intrinsics 2014-01-29 18:48:34 -05:00
bors
1e23c5c051 auto merge of #11879 : thestinger/rust/frame-pointer, r=alexcrichton
This is still used for Rust code (`Options.NoFramePointerElim = true`).
2014-01-29 13:36:40 -08:00
Daniel Micay
cb263e875e enable fp-elim when debug info is disabled
This can almost be fully disabled, as it no longer breaks retrieving a
backtrace on OS X as verified by @alexcrichton. However, it still
breaks retrieving the values of parameters. This should be fixable in
the future via a proper location list...

Closes #7477
2014-01-29 16:35:05 -05:00
bors
c3ae182d5c auto merge of #11754 : alexcrichton/rust/unused-result, r=brson
The general consensus is that we want to move away from conditions for I/O, and I propose a two-step plan for doing so:

1. Warn about unused `Result` types. When all of I/O returns `Result`, it will require you inspect the return value for an error *only if* you have a result you want to look at. By default, for things like `write` returning `Result<(), Error>`, these will all go silently ignored. This lint will prevent blind ignorance of these return values, letting you know that there's something you should do about them.

2. Implement a `try!` macro:

```
macro_rules! try( ($e:expr) => (match $e { Ok(e) => e, Err(e) => return Err(e) }) )
```

With these two tools combined, I feel that we get almost all the benefits of conditions. The first step (the lint) is a sanity check that you're not ignoring return values at callsites. The second step is to provide a convenience method of returning early out of a sequence of computations. After thinking about this for awhile, I don't think that we need the so-called "do-notation" in the compiler itself because I think it's just *too* specialized. Additionally, the `try!` macro is super lightweight, easy to understand, and works almost everywhere. As soon as you want to do something more fancy, my answer is "use match".

Basically, with these two tools in action, I would be comfortable removing conditions. What do others think about this strategy?

----

This PR specifically implements the `unused_result` lint. I actually added two lints, `unused_result` and `unused_must_use`, and the first commit has the rationale for why `unused_result` is turned off by default.
2014-01-29 09:46:34 -08:00
bors
e1580f6d09 auto merge of #11868 : bytbox/rust/remove-do, r=alexcrichton
Fixes #10815.
2014-01-29 08:21:38 -08:00
bors
87004db113 auto merge of #11867 : dmanescu/rust/8784-arena-glob, r=huonw
In line with the dissolution of libextra - #8784 - this moves arena and glob into
their own respective modules. Updates .gitignore with the entries
doc/{arena,glob} in accordance.
2014-01-29 06:26:38 -08:00
Scott Lawrence
a6867e259b Removing support for the do syntax from libsyntax and librustc.
Fixes #10815.
2014-01-29 09:15:42 -05:00
Scott Lawrence
25e7e7f807 Removing do keyword from libstd and librustc 2014-01-29 09:15:41 -05:00
Alex Crichton
8a1b4dc9da Generate rlibs by default (instead of dylibs)
Closes #11253
2014-01-28 23:36:31 -08:00
David Manescu
4d0d3da9e4 extra: move arena to libarena
In line with the dissolution of libextra - #8784 - moves arena to its own library libarena.
Changes based on PR #11787. Updates .gitignore to ignore doc/arena.
2014-01-29 13:54:38 +11:00
Alex Crichton
9896beb5b5 Implement an unused_result lint
I attempted to implement the lint in two steps. My first attempt was a
default-warn lint about *all* unused results. While this attempt did indeed find
many possible bugs, I felt that the false-positive rate was too high to be
turned on by default for all of Rust.

My second attempt was to make unused-result a default-allow lint, but allow
certain types to opt-in to the notion of "you must use this". For example, the
Result type is now flagged with #[must_use]. This lint about "must use" types is
warn by default (it's different from unused-result).

The unused_must_use lint had a 100% hit rate in the compiler, but there's not
that many places that return Result right now. I believe that this lint is a
crucial step towards moving away from conditions for I/O (because all I/O will
return Result by default). I'm worried that this lint is a little too specific
to Result itself, but I believe that the false positive rate for the
unused_result lint is too high to make it useful when turned on by default.
2014-01-28 15:54:47 -08:00
bors
b3d10f4383 auto merge of #11864 : comex/rust/11352, r=alexcrichton
Set "Dwarf Version" to 2 on OS X to avoid toolchain incompatibility, and
set "Debug Info Version" to prevent debug info from being stripped from
bitcode.

Fixes #11352.
2014-01-28 05:11:28 -08:00
bors
e90a8c4a35 auto merge of #11851 : pnkfelix/rust/fsk-fix-issue-10031, r=alexcrichton
Fix #10031.
2014-01-28 02:01:27 -08:00
bors
1ac9bf65b6 auto merge of #11738 : dmanescu/rust/11721, r=alexcrichton
Fixes #11721
2014-01-27 21:46:33 -08:00
comex
ea7b20d8f2 Add appropriate LLVM module flags for debug info.
Set "Dwarf Version" to 2 on OS X to avoid toolchain incompatibility, and
set "Debug Info Version" to prevent debug info from being stripped from
bitcode.

Fixes #11352.
2014-01-28 00:05:33 -05:00
bors
d21b18306c auto merge of #11826 : huonw/rust/7621-deriving-errors, r=alexcrichton
cc #7621.

See the commit message. I'm not sure if we should merge this now, or wait until we can write `Clone::clone(x)` which will directly solve the above issue with perfect error messages.
2014-01-27 20:26:35 -08:00
Nick Desaulniers
ea9db66c50 can borrow mut in proc Fixes #10617 2014-01-27 17:06:11 -08:00
Huon Wilson
cb02a37042 syntax: make deriving have slightly less cryptic error messages.
This unfortunately changes an error like

    error: mismatched types: expected `&&NotClone` but found `&NotClone`

into

    error: type `NotClone` does not implement any method in scope named `clone`
2014-01-28 11:07:45 +11:00
bors
4176343073 auto merge of #11846 : michaelwoerister/rust/cu_name, r=pcwalton
Fixes #11600
2014-01-27 14:46:56 -08:00
Eduard Burtescu
e81ab4198c Removed take_glue from tydesc, inlining the equivalent refcount increment code instead. 2014-01-27 22:32:30 +02:00
Felix S. Klock II
965387acc5 Fix bug: metadata for struct constructor function needs to encode info
on its generic type parameters.

Test case to follow.
2014-01-27 21:08:59 +01:00
bors
d6d7812da8 auto merge of #11595 : eddyb/rust/env-et-self-no-more, r=nikomatsakis
Non-exhaustive change list:
* `self` is now present in argument lists (modulo type-checking code I don't trust myself to refactor)
* methods have the same calling convention as bare functions (including the self argument)
* the env param is gone from all bare functions (and methods), only used by closures and `proc`s
* bare functions can only be coerced to closures and `proc`s if they are statically resolved, as they now require creating a wrapper specific to that function, to avoid indirect wrappers (equivalent to `impl<..Args, Ret> Fn<..Args, Ret> for fn(..Args) -> Ret`) that might not be optimizable by LLVM and don't work for `proc`s
* refactored some `trans::closure` code, leading to the removal of `trans::glue::make_free_glue` and `ty_opaque_closure_ptr`
2014-01-27 09:31:44 -08:00
Michael Woerister
0a03bc073a debuginfo: Fix name attribute for DWARF compile units 2014-01-27 17:56:05 +01:00
David Manescu
28b987b99a Feature gate #[simd]
Fixes #11721
2014-01-28 01:04:15 +11:00
xales
b23fd080ff Feature gate trace_macros.
Fixes #11631
2014-01-27 09:02:22 -05:00
Michael Woerister
d39b6060f0 Add .rs- instead of .rc-extension to LLVM module name 2014-01-27 14:59:22 +01:00
Eduard Burtescu
15ba0c310a Demote self to an (almost) regular argument and remove the env param.
Fixes #10667 and closes #10259.
2014-01-27 14:31:24 +02:00
bors
74fedf325a auto merge of #11787 : alexcrichton/rust/refactor, r=brson
It was decided a long, long time ago that libextra should not exist, but rather its modules should be split out into smaller independent libraries maintained outside of the compiler itself. The theory was to use `rustpkg` to manage dependencies in order to move everything out of the compiler, but maintain an ease of usability.

Sadly, the work on `rustpkg` isn't making progress as quickly as expected, but the need for dissolving libextra is becoming more and more pressing. Because of this, we've thought that a good interim solution would be to simply package more libraries with the rust distribution itself. Instead of dissolving libextra into libraries outside of the mozilla/rust repo, we can dissolve libraries into the mozilla/rust repo for now.

Work on this has been excruciatingly painful in the past because the makefiles are completely opaque to all but a few. Adding a new library involved adding about 100 lines spread out across 8 files (incredibly error prone). The first commit of this pull request targets this pain point. It does not rewrite the build system, but rather refactors large portions of it. Afterwards, adding a new library is as simple as modifying 2 lines (easy, right?). The build system automatically keeps track of dependencies between crates (rust *and* native), promotes binaries between stages, tracks dependencies of installed tools, etc, etc.

With this newfound buildsystem power, I chose the `extra::flate` module as the first candidate for removal from libextra. While a small module, this module is relative complex in that is has a C dependency and the compiler requires it (messing with the dependency graph a bit). Albeit I modified more than 2 lines of makefiles to accomodate libflate (the native dependency required 2 extra lines of modifications), but the removal process was easy to do and straightforward.

---

Testing-wise, I've cross-compiled, run tests, built some docs, installed, uninstalled, etc. I'm still working out a few kinks, and I'm sure that there's gonna be built system issues after this, but it should be working well for basic use!

cc #8784
2014-01-26 16:46:34 -08:00
Alex Crichton
cdfdc1eb6b Move extra::flate to libflate
This is hopefully the beginning of the long-awaited dissolution of libextra.
Using the newly created build infrastructure for building libraries, I decided
to move the first module out of libextra.

While not being a particularly meaty module in and of itself, the flate module
is required by rustc and additionally has a native C dependency. I was able to
very easily split out the C dependency from rustrt, update librustc, and
magically everything gets installed to the right locations and built
automatically.

This is meant to be a proof-of-concept commit to how easy it is to remove
modules from libextra now. I didn't put any effort into modernizing the
interface of libflate or updating it other than to remove the one glob import it
had.
2014-01-26 15:42:15 -08:00
bors
d3f70f5a7d auto merge of #11817 : salemtalha/rust/master, r=brson
Fixes Issue #11815
2014-01-26 15:26:30 -08:00
Salem Talha
cc61fc0994 Removed all instances of XXX in preparation for relaxing of FIXME rule 2014-01-26 14:42:53 -05:00
Alex Crichton
4d6836f418 Fix privacy fallout from previous change 2014-01-26 11:03:13 -08:00
Alex Crichton
31ac9c4288 Change private structs to have private fields by default
This was the original intention of the privacy of structs, and it was
erroneously implemented before. A pub struct will now have default-pub fields,
and a non-pub struct will have default-priv fields. This essentially brings
struct fields in line with enum variants in terms of inheriting visibility.

As usual, extraneous modifiers to visibility are disallowed depend on the case
that you're dealing with.

Closes #11522
2014-01-26 10:37:08 -08:00
Chris Wong
988e4f0a1c Uppercase numeric constants
The following are renamed:

* `min_value` => `MIN`
* `max_value` => `MAX`
* `bits` => `BITS`
* `bytes` => `BYTES`

Fixes #10010.
2014-01-25 21:38:25 +13:00
bors
de57a22b9a auto merge of #11774 : sfackler/rust/move-macros, r=pcwalton
They all have to go into a single module at the moment unfortunately.
Ideally, the logging macros would live in std::logging, condition! would
live in std::condition, format! in std::fmt, etc. However, this
introduces cyclic dependencies between those modules and the macros they
use which the current expansion system can't deal with. We may be able
to get around this by changing the expansion phase to a two-pass system
but that's for a later PR.

Closes #2247
cc #11763
2014-01-24 20:31:37 -08:00
bors
7c028c9ba7 auto merge of #11772 : sanxiyn/rust/reexport, r=cmr
The field is always set to true.
2014-01-24 19:11:39 -08:00
bors
a1d9d9e6d2 auto merge of #11744 : alexcrichton/rust/issue-5219, r=thestinger
By default, the compiler and libraries are all still built with rpaths, but this
can be opted out of with --disable-rpath to ./configure or --no-rpath to rustc.

Closes #5219
2014-01-24 10:26:33 -08:00
Alex Crichton
e715cdba31 Allow opting-out of rpath usage
By default, the compiler and libraries are all still built with rpaths, but this
can be opted out of with --disable-rpath to ./configure or --no-rpath to rustc.

cc #5219
2014-01-24 09:24:45 -08:00
Steven Fackler
86a8b031f5 Move macro_rules! macros to libstd
They all have to go into a single module at the moment unfortunately.
Ideally, the logging macros would live in std::logging, condition! would
live in std::condition, format! in std::fmt, etc. However, this
introduces cyclic dependencies between those modules and the macros they
use which the current expansion system can't deal with. We may be able
to get around this by changing the expansion phase to a two-pass system
but that's for a later PR.

Closes #2247
cc #11763
2014-01-24 08:35:39 -08:00
bors
a5ab960d2e auto merge of #11750 : bnoordhuis/rust/follow-rustc-symlink, r=thestinger
Before this commit, rustc looked in `dirname $0`/../lib for libraries
but that doesn't work when rustc is invoked through a symlink.

This commit makes rustc look in `dirname $(readlink $0)`/../lib, i.e.
it first canonicalizes the symlink before walking up the directory tree.

Fixes #3632.
2014-01-24 06:06:33 -08:00
Seo Sanghyeon
0f36438a8e Remove reexport field 2014-01-24 20:46:19 +09:00
bors
4ce84fa1de auto merge of #11720 : sfackler/rust/macro-export-source, r=alexcrichton
The old method of serializing the AST gives totally bogus spans if the
expansion of an imported macro causes compilation errors. The best
solution seems to be to serialize the actual textual macro definition
and load it the same way the std-macros are. I'm not totally confident
that getting the source from the CodeMap will always do the right thing,
but it seems to work in simple cases.
2014-01-24 00:06:31 -08:00
bors
cd8ee786f9 auto merge of #11718 : ktt3ja/rust/borrowck-error-msg, r=brson
A mutable and immutable borrow place some restrictions on what you can
with the variable until the borrow ends. This commit attempts to convey
to the user what those restrictions are. Also, if the original borrow is
a mutable borrow, the error message has been changed (more specifically,
i. "cannot borrow `x` as immutable because it is also borrowed as
mutable" and ii. "cannot borrow `x` as mutable more than once" have
been changed to "cannot borrow `x` because it is already borrowed as
mutable").

In addition, this adds a (custom) span note to communicate where the
original borrow ends.

```rust
fn main() {
    match true {
        true => {
            let mut x = 1;
            let y = &x;
            let z = &mut x;
        }
        false => ()
    }
}

test.rs:6:21: 6:27 error: cannot borrow `x` as mutable because it is already borrowed as immutable
test.rs:6             let z = &mut x;
                              ^~~~~~
test.rs:5:21: 5:23 note: previous borrow of `x` occurs here; the immutable borrow prevents subsequent moves or mutable borrows of `x` until the borrow ends
test.rs:5             let y = &x;
                              ^~
test.rs:7:10: 7:10 note: previous borrow ends here
test.rs:3         true => {
test.rs:4             let mut x = 1;
test.rs:5             let y = &x;
test.rs:6             let z = &mut x;
test.rs:7         }
                  ^
```

```rust
fn foo3(t0: &mut &mut int) {
    let t1 = &mut *t0;
    let p: &int = &**t0;
}

fn main() {}

test.rs:3:19: 3:24 error: cannot borrow `**t0` because it is already borrowed as mutable
test.rs:3     let p: &int = &**t0;
                            ^~~~~
test.rs:2:14: 2:22 note: previous borrow of `**t0` as mutable occurs here; the mutable borrow prevents subsequent moves, borrows, or modification of `**t0` until the borrow ends
test.rs:2     let t1 = &mut *t0;
                       ^~~~~~~~
test.rs:4:2: 4:2 note: previous borrow ends here
test.rs:1 fn foo3(t0: &mut &mut int) {
test.rs:2     let t1 = &mut *t0;
test.rs:3     let p: &int = &**t0;
test.rs:4 }
          ^
```

For the "previous borrow ends here" note, if the span is too long (has too many lines), then only the first and last lines are printed, and the middle is replaced with dot dot dot:
```rust
fn foo3(t0: &mut &mut int) {
    let t1 = &mut *t0;
    let p: &int = &**t0;



}

fn main() {}

test.rs:3:19: 3:24 error: cannot borrow `**t0` because it is already borrowed as mutable
test.rs:3     let p: &int = &**t0;
                            ^~~~~
test.rs:2:14: 2:22 note: previous borrow of `**t0` as mutable occurs here; the mutable borrow prevents subsequent moves, borrows, or modification of `**t0` until the borrow ends
test.rs:2     let t1 = &mut *t0;
                       ^~~~~~~~
test.rs:7:2: 7:2 note: previous borrow ends here
test.rs:1 fn foo3(t0: &mut &mut int) {
...
test.rs:7 }
          ^
```

(Sidenote: the `span_end_note` currently also has issue #11715)
2014-01-23 22:46:32 -08:00
Sean Chalmers
292ed3e55c Update flip() to be rev().
Consensus leaned in favour of using rev instead of flip.
2014-01-23 22:18:18 +01:00
Sean Chalmers
55d6e0e1b7 Rename Invert to Flip - Issue 10632
Renamed the invert() function in iter.rs to flip().

Also renamed the Invert<T> type to Flip<T>.

Some related code comments changed. Documentation that I could find has
been updated, and all the instances I could locate where the
function/type were called have been updated as well.
2014-01-23 21:50:18 +01:00
Kiet Tran
b3290d322e Make some borrow checker errors more user friendly
A mutable and immutable borrow place some restrictions on what you can
with the variable until the borrow ends. This commit attempts to convey
to the user what those restrictions are. Also, if the original borrow is
a mutable borrow, the error message has been changed (more specifically,
i. "cannot borrow `x` as immutable because it is also borrowed as
mutable" and ii. "cannot borrow `x` as mutable more than once" have
been changed to "cannot borrow `x` because it is already borrowed as
mutable").

In addition, this adds a (custom) span note to communicate where the
original borrow ends.
2014-01-23 14:44:28 -05:00
Steven Fackler
d908e97da3 Redo exported macro serialization
The old method of serializing the AST gives totally bogus spans if the
expansion of an imported macro causes compilation errors. The best
solution seems to be to serialize the actual textual macro definition
and load it the same way the std-macros are. I'm not totally confident
that getting the source from the CodeMap will always do the right thing,
but it seems to work in simple cases.
2014-01-23 09:01:36 -08:00
bors
7cabd40320 auto merge of #11737 : alexcrichton/rust/issue-11729, r=thestinger
Closes #11729
2014-01-23 03:51:29 -08:00
Ben Noordhuis
8cce35e490 Follow symlinks in sysroot
Before this commit, rustc looked in `dirname $0`/../lib for libraries
but that doesn't work when rustc is invoked through a symlink.

This commit makes rustc look in `dirname $(readlink $0)`/../lib, i.e.
it first canonicalizes the symlink before walking up the directory tree.

Fixes #3632.
2014-01-23 11:45:23 +01:00
bors
aa9cf4cf8d auto merge of #11701 : FeGs/rust/stray-debug-in-metadata, r=alexcrichton
When there is `println!` macro in the code, compiling is never end.

```rust
// print.rs
fn main() {
  println!("Hello!");
}
```

```bash
$ RUST_LOG=rustc rustc print.rs
```

And this is a part of output from stderr.

```bash
# ...
Looking up syntax::ast::DefId{crate: 1u32, node: 176234u32}
looking up syntax::ast::DefId{crate: 1u32, node: 176235u32} : extra::ebml::Doc<>{data: &[168u8, 16u8, 0u8, 0u8, 16u8, 51u8, 101u8, 53u8, 97u8, 101u8, 98u8, 56u8, 51u8, 55u8, 97u8, 101u8, 49u8, 54u8, 50u8
# ...
# vector which has infinite length.
```

* note : rust 0.9, 0.10-pre
2014-01-23 01:31:39 -08:00