Commit Graph

7414 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Manish Goregaokar
1ceb26b48c Rollup merge of #22631 - aepsil0n:issue-22098, r=aturon
Fixes #22098.
2015-03-20 12:43:12 +05:30
Manish Goregaokar
17c1a46a7d Rollup merge of #23529 - steveklabnik:gh23426, r=alexcrichton
Fixes #23426
2015-03-20 12:43:11 +05:30
Manish Goregaokar
3e433738fb Rollup merge of #23504 - alexcrichton:parse-error-not-unit, r=aturon
The IP and socket address types all had `FromStr` implemented but the
implementations were not marked stable, nor was the error type returned ready to
be properly stabilized.

This commit marks the implementations of `FromStr` as stable and also renamed
the `ParseError` structure to `AddrParseError`. The error is now also an opaque
structure that cannot be constructed outside the standard library.

cc #22949
[breaking-change]
2015-03-20 12:43:11 +05:30
Steve Klabnik
71321ff33f Remove rt::default_sched_threads and RUST_THREADS.
As @alexcrichton says, this was really a libgreen thing, and isn't
relevant now.

As this removes a technically-public function, this is a

[breaking-change]

Conflicts:
	src/libtest/lib.rs
2015-03-20 05:36:07 +05:30
Steve Klabnik
3e3408de0f Comment on when ReadDir is Err
Fixes #23426
2015-03-19 18:21:39 -04:00
bors
7f53b943f9 Auto merge of #23430 - alexcrichton:io-error, r=aturon
This commit stabilizes the `ErrorKind` enumeration which is consumed by and
generated by the `io::Error` type. The purpose of this type is to serve as a
cross-platform namespace to categorize errors into. Two specific issues are
addressed as part of this stablization:

* The naming of each variant was scrutinized and some were tweaked. An example
  is how `FileNotFound` was renamed to simply `NotFound`. These names should not
  show either a Unix or Windows bias and the set of names is intended to grow
  over time. For now the names will likely largely consist of those errors
  generated by the I/O APIs in the standard library.

* The mapping of OS error codes onto kinds has been altered. Coalescing no
  longer occurs (multiple error codes become one kind). It is intended that each
  OS error code, if bound, corresponds to only one `ErrorKind`. The current set
  of error kinds was expanded slightly to include some networking errors.

This commit also adds a `raw_os_error` function which returns an `Option<i32>`
to extract the underlying raw error code from the `Error`.

Closes #16666

[breaking-change]
2015-03-19 19:15:22 +00:00
Alex Crichton
dedac5eb3c std: Stablize io::ErrorKind
This commit stabilizes the `ErrorKind` enumeration which is consumed by and
generated by the `io::Error` type. The purpose of this type is to serve as a
cross-platform namespace to categorize errors into. Two specific issues are
addressed as part of this stablization:

* The naming of each variant was scrutinized and some were tweaked. An example
  is how `FileNotFound` was renamed to simply `NotFound`. These names should not
  show either a Unix or Windows bias and the set of names is intended to grow
  over time. For now the names will likely largely consist of those errors
  generated by the I/O APIs in the standard library.

* The mapping of OS error codes onto kinds has been altered. Coalescing no
  longer occurs (multiple error codes become one kind). It is intended that each
  OS error code, if bound, corresponds to only one `ErrorKind`. The current set
  of error kinds was expanded slightly to include some networking errors.

This commit also adds a `raw_os_error` function which returns an `Option<i32>`
to extract the underlying raw error code from the `Error`.
2015-03-19 09:59:21 -07:00
Eduard Bopp
5bfb5bab9a Allow Float::ldexp to be called as a method
Fixes #22098.
2015-03-19 14:00:00 +01:00
bors
d5408f376f Auto merge of #23507 - jbcrail:fix-comment-spelling, r=alexcrichton
I corrected misspelled comments in several crates.
2015-03-19 09:50:13 +00:00
Aaron Turon
6f693e9486 Stabilize Entry types
This commit marks as `#[stable]` the `Entry` types for the maps provided
by `std`. The main reason these had been left unstable previously was
uncertainty about an eventual trait design, but several plausible
designs have been proposed that all work fine with the current type definitions.
2015-03-18 23:36:19 -07:00
Joseph Crail
857035ade7 Fix spelling errors in comments.
I corrected misspelled comments in several crates.
2015-03-19 00:48:08 -04:00
Manish Goregaokar
f5c61a7899 Rollup merge of #23496 - steveklabnik:gh22309, r=nikomatsakis
Fixes #22309

I am pretty sure that this is the right way to do this, given the other macros, but I'm not 100% sure.
2015-03-19 08:49:37 +05:30
Manish Goregaokar
acc706db4b Rollup merge of #23483 - semarie:openbsd-threads, r=alexcrichton
unbreak openbsd/bitrig build
- remove `pub` from `struct` (error: visibility has no effect inside functions)
- move `pthread_main_np` into function

r? @alexcrichton
2015-03-19 08:49:35 +05:30
Manish Goregaokar
d6986c9ce9 Rollup merge of #23479 - tamird:fix-ios-build, r=aturon
r? @aturon
2015-03-19 08:49:34 +05:30
Alex Crichton
f2e3c7469b std: Stabilize FromStr implementations in std::net
The IP and socket address types all had `FromStr` implemented but the
implementations were not marked stable, nor was the error type returned ready to
be properly stabilized.

This commit marks the implementations of `FromStr` as stable and also renamed
the `ParseError` structure to `AddrParseError`. The error is now also an opaque
structure that cannot be constructed outside the standard library.

cc #22949
[breaking-change]
2015-03-18 20:10:15 -07:00
Steve Klabnik
f8c63d00e2 Document include!
Fixes #22309
2015-03-19 08:24:41 +05:30
Manish Goregaokar
c7392be968 Rollup merge of #23468 - sfackler:stdio-panic, r=alexcrichton
Nothing inside of the read/write interface itself can panic, so any
poison must have been the result of user code which the lock isn't
protecting.

This seems safe to me, but if we don't want to go this route we should update the docs to indicate that these methods can panic.

r? @alexcrichton
2015-03-19 08:24:36 +05:30
Matt Brubeck
a7a28d7091 Clarify in docs that BufRead::read_line appends
Multiple people have been suprised by this aspect of read_line's behavior,
which is not obvious from the docs.
2015-03-18 17:38:11 -07:00
Alex Crichton
fccf5a0005 Register new snapshots 2015-03-18 16:32:32 -07:00
Manish Goregaokar
51bc2f1f37 Rollup merge of #23443 - meqif:ipv6addr-new-documentation-fix, r=steveklabnik
Very minor fix: in `std::net::Ipv6Addr::new`, the documentation had an incomplete representation of the resulting address, missing the last two groups.
2015-03-18 22:21:07 +05:30
Manish Goregaokar
dda42204be Rollup merge of #23392 - WiSaGaN:bugfix/fix_deprecate_link, r=Manishearth
Since module `std::sync::mpsc` is stable now, fix the deprecated link `comm` with `sync::mpsc`.
2015-03-18 22:21:07 +05:30
Manish Goregaokar
181441cf66 Rollup merge of #23461 - alexcrichton:feat-char-at, r=aturon
This commit clarifies some of the unstable features in the `str` module by
moving them out of the blanket `core` and `collections` features.

The following methods were moved to the `str_char` feature which generally
encompasses decoding specific characters from a `str` and dealing with the
result. It is unclear if any of these methods need to be stabilized for 1.0 and
the most conservative route for now is to continue providing them but to leave
them as unstable under a more specific name.

* `is_char_boundary`
* `char_at`
* `char_range_at`
* `char_at_reverse`
* `char_range_at_reverse`
* `slice_shift_char`

The following methods were moved into the generic `unicode` feature as they are
specifically enabled by the `unicode` crate itself.

* `nfd_chars`
* `nfkd_chars`
* `nfc_chars`
* `graphemes`
* `grapheme_indices`
* `width`
2015-03-18 22:21:06 +05:30
Steven Fackler
a51cd61164 Add a test 2015-03-18 09:03:17 -07:00
Tamir Duberstein
21d8c418d2 iOS: fallout from 1d5983a 2015-03-18 08:35:53 -07:00
Sébastien Marie
95a1e98fce openbsd/bitrig threads
- remove `pub` from `struct` (visibility has no effect inside functions)
- move `pthread_main_np` into function
2015-03-18 10:59:09 +01:00
bors
46f649c479 Auto merge of #22838 - petrochenkov:bytelit, r=alexcrichton
This patch changes the type of byte string literals from `&[u8]` to `&[u8; N]`.
It also implements some necessary traits (`IntoBytes`, `Seek`, `Read`, `BufRead`) for fixed-size arrays (also related to #21725) and adds test for #17233, which seems to be resolved.

Fixes #18465
[breaking-change]
2015-03-18 08:27:22 +00:00
Vadim Petrochenkov
dccd17d23e Remove the newly introduced trait impls for fixed-size arrays and use &b"..."[..] instead. 2015-03-18 09:16:08 +03:00
Steven Fackler
2e8e8ab564 Ignore stdio mutex poison state
Nothing inside of the read/write interface itself can panic, so any
poison must have been the result of user code which the lock isn't
protecting.
2015-03-17 23:05:44 -07:00
Nick Cameron
46aa621452 Fix private module loophole in the 'private type in public item' check 2015-03-18 16:47:24 +13:00
Alex Crichton
aa88da6317 std: Tweak some unstable features of str
This commit clarifies some of the unstable features in the `str` module by
moving them out of the blanket `core` and `collections` features.

The following methods were moved to the `str_char` feature which generally
encompasses decoding specific characters from a `str` and dealing with the
result. It is unclear if any of these methods need to be stabilized for 1.0 and
the most conservative route for now is to continue providing them but to leave
them as unstable under a more specific name.

* `is_char_boundary`
* `char_at`
* `char_range_at`
* `char_at_reverse`
* `char_range_at_reverse`
* `slice_shift_char`

The following methods were moved into the generic `unicode` feature as they are
specifically enabled by the `unicode` crate itself.

* `nfd_chars`
* `nfkd_chars`
* `nfc_chars`
* `graphemes`
* `grapheme_indices`
* `width`
2015-03-17 18:03:03 -07:00
Vadim Petrochenkov
3c31794d31 Avoid metadata bloat by using trait FixedSizeArray 2015-03-18 00:40:59 +03:00
Vadim Petrochenkov
b98255cbd2 Add and fix more tests 2015-03-18 00:40:59 +03:00
Vadim Petrochenkov
1e9bef916f Fixed-size byte string literals (RFC 339) 2015-03-18 00:40:59 +03:00
bors
bfac337daa Auto merge of #23330 - alexcrichton:thread-sleep, r=aturon
This function is the current replacement for `std::old_io::timer` which will
soon be deprecated. This function is unstable and has its own feature gate as it
does not yet have an RFC nor has it existed for very long.
2015-03-17 17:15:54 +00:00
Alex Crichton
04cf534411 std: Implement thread::sleep
This function is the current replacement for `std::old_io::timer` which will
soon be deprecated. This function is unstable and has its own feature gate as it
does not yet have an RFC nor has it existed for very long.
2015-03-17 09:34:42 -07:00
Ricardo Martins
730defc9d1 Fix IPv6 address format in documentation
Very minor fix: in `std::net::Ipv6Addr::new`, the documentation had an incomplete representation of the resulting address, missing the last two groups.
2015-03-17 14:56:27 +00:00
Manish Goregaokar
2e083063e7 Rollup merge of #23432 - mzabaluev:io-into-inner-doc, r=alexcrichton
Resolves #23386.
2015-03-17 15:21:56 +05:30
Manish Goregaokar
fad4c380e8 Rollup merge of #23385 - tamird:cleanup-whitespace, r=alexcrichton
r? @alexcrichton

Conflicts:
	src/test/run-pass/test-fn-signature-verification-for-explicit-return-type.rs
2015-03-17 15:21:22 +05:30
Manish Goregaokar
0b463b075e Rollup merge of #23329 - jbcrail:rm-syntax-highlight, r=sanxiyn
As suggested by @steveklabnik in #23254, I removed the redundant Rust syntax highlighting from the documentation.
2015-03-17 15:20:27 +05:30
Manish Goregaokar
46200e5090 Rollup merge of #23427 - tshepang:dur-becomes-duration, r=steveklabnik
Also:

- italize the binding name
- complete a sentence
2015-03-17 15:20:19 +05:30
Manish Goregaokar
925d5ad715 Rollup merge of #23415 - alexcrichton:stabilize-flush, r=aturon
The [associated RFC][rfc] for possibly splitting out `flush` has been closed and
as a result there are no more blockers for stabilizing this method, so this
commit marks the method as such.

[rfc]: https://github.com/rust-lang/rfcs/pull/950
2015-03-17 15:20:03 +05:30
Mikhail Zabaluev
e3aefaaa4d std::io::buffered: Don't use 'flush' in documentation of into_inner
The word 'flush' may be misinterpreted as if `flush` is called on the
underlying writer, which is not the case.
2015-03-17 06:33:47 +02:00
bors
e46610966f Auto merge of #23104 - japaric:inherent, r=nikomatsakis
- Allow inherent implementations on `char`, `str`, `[T]`, `*const T`, `*mut T` and all the numeric primitives.
- copy `unicode::char::CharExt` methods into `impl char`
- remove `unicode::char::CharExt`, its re-export `std::char::CharExt` and `CharExt` from the prelude
- copy `collections::str::StrExt` methods into `impl str`
- remove `collections::str::StrExt` its re-export `std::str::StrExt`, and `StrExt` from the prelude
- copy `collections::slice::SliceExt` methods into `impl<T> [T]`
- remove `collections::slice::SliceExt` its re-export `std::slice::SliceExt`, and `SliceExt` from the prelude
- copy `core::ptr::PtrExt` methods into `impl<T> *const T`
- remove `core::ptr::PtrExt` its re-export `std::ptr::PtrExt`, and `PtrExt` from the prelude
- copy `core::ptr::PtrExt` and `core::ptr::MutPtrExt` methods into `impl<T> *mut T`
- remove `core::ptr::MutPtrExt` its re-export `std::ptr::MutPtrExt`, and `MutPtrExt` from the prelude
- copy `core::num::Int` and `core::num::SignedInt` methods into `impl i{8,16,32,64,size}`
- copy `core::num::Int` and `core::num::UnsignedInt` methods into `impl u{8,16,32,64,size}`
- remove `core::num::UnsignedInt` and its re-export `std::num::UnsignedInt`
- move `collections` tests into its own crate: `collectionstest`
- copy `core::num::Float` methods into `impl f{32,64}`

Because this PR removes several traits, this is a [breaking-change], however functionality remains unchanged and breakage due to unresolved imports should be minimal. If you encounter an error due to an unresolved import, simply remove the import:

``` diff
  fn main() {
-     use std::num::UnsignedInt;  //~ error: unresolved import `std::num::UnsignedInt`.
-
      println!("{}", 8_usize.is_power_of_two());
  }
```

---

cc  #16862
[preview docs](http://japaric.github.io/inherent/std/index.html)
[unicode::char](http://japaric.github.io/inherent/unicode/primitive.char.html)
[collections::str](http://japaric.github.io/inherent/collections/primitive.str.html)
[std::f32](http://japaric.github.io/inherent/std/primitive.f32.html)
2015-03-17 03:23:50 +00:00
Jorge Aparicio
8256241d3a impl f{32,64} 2015-03-16 21:57:43 -05:00
Jorge Aparicio
6d49476e7b preemptively fix windows compilation errors 2015-03-16 21:57:42 -05:00
Jorge Aparicio
a079d5e4d2 remove imports 2015-03-16 21:57:42 -05:00
Jorge Aparicio
3ff84fc5fd impl {i,u}{8,16,32,64,size} 2015-03-16 21:57:42 -05:00
Jorge Aparicio
8afcaabee3 impl<T> *const T, impl<T> *mut T 2015-03-16 21:57:42 -05:00
Jorge Aparicio
633c593bc3 impl<T> [T] 2015-03-16 21:56:31 -05:00
Jorge Aparicio
5b118f5ecd impl str 2015-03-16 21:56:31 -05:00
Jorge Aparicio
b2f37554bf impl char 2015-03-16 21:56:31 -05:00
bors
a2572885ab Auto merge of #23352 - alexcrichton:stabilize-net, r=aturon
This commit performs a stabilization pass over the std::net module,
incorporating the changes from RFC 923. Specifically, the following actions were
taken:

Stable functionality:

* `net` (the name)
* `Shutdown`
* `Shutdown::{Read, Write, Both}`
* `lookup_host`
* `LookupHost`
* `SocketAddr`
* `SocketAddr::{V4, V6}`
* `SocketAddr::port`
* `SocketAddrV4`
* `SocketAddrV4::{new, ip, port}`
* `SocketAddrV6`
* `SocketAddrV4::{new, ip, port, flowinfo, scope_id}`
* Common trait impls for socket addr structures
* `ToSocketAddrs`
* `ToSocketAddrs::Iter`
* `ToSocketAddrs::to_socket_addrs`
* `ToSocketAddrs for {SocketAddr*, (Ipv*Addr, u16), str, (str, u16)}`
* `Ipv4Addr`
* `Ipv4Addr::{new, octets, to_ipv6_compatible, to_ipv6_mapped}`
* `Ipv6Addr`
* `Ipv6Addr::{new, segments, to_ipv4}`
* `TcpStream`
* `TcpStream::connect`
* `TcpStream::{peer_addr, local_addr, shutdown, try_clone}`
* `{Read,Write} for {TcpStream, &TcpStream}`
* `TcpListener`
* `TcpListener::bind`
* `TcpListener::{local_addr, try_clone, accept, incoming}`
* `Incoming`
* `UdpSocket`
* `UdpSocket::bind`
* `UdpSocket::{recv_from, send_to, local_addr, try_clone}`

Unstable functionality:

* Extra methods on `Ipv{4,6}Addr` for various methods of inspecting the address
  and determining qualities of it.
* Extra methods on `TcpStream` to configure various protocol options.
* Extra methods on `UdpSocket` to configure various protocol options.

Deprecated functionality:

* The `socket_addr` method has been renamed to `local_addr`

This commit is a breaking change due to the restructuring of the `SocketAddr`
type as well as the renaming of the `socket_addr` method. Migration should be
fairly straightforward, however, after accounting for the new level of
abstraction in `SocketAddr` (protocol distinction at the socket address level,
not the IP address).

[breaking-change]
2015-03-17 00:50:26 +00:00
Tshepang Lekhonkhobe
4b75dc4648 thread: 'dur' -> 'duration'
Also:

- italize the binding name
- complete a sentence
2015-03-16 23:25:22 +02:00
bors
1760e8749a Auto merge of #23342 - apasel422:23327, r=alexcrichton
closes #23327
2015-03-16 19:35:42 +00:00
Alex Crichton
b3a44859ec std: Stabilize the Write::flush method
The [associated RFC][rfc] for possibly splitting out `flush` has been closed and
as a result there are no more blockers for stabilizing this method, so this
commit marks the method as such.

[rfc]: https://github.com/rust-lang/rfcs/pull/950
2015-03-16 11:51:57 -07:00
bors
bde09eea35 Auto merge of #23347 - aturon:stab-misc, r=alexcrichton
This commit deprecates the `count`, `range` and `range_step` functions
in `iter`, in favor of range notation. To recover all existing
functionality, a new `step_by` adapter is provided directly on `ops::Range`
and `ops::RangeFrom`.

[breaking-change]

r? @alexcrichton
2015-03-16 17:02:11 +00:00
Andrew Paseltiner
90f06ae33f document undefined collection behavior with interior mutability
closes #23327
2015-03-16 09:55:41 -04:00
bors
cd3faf38ee Auto merge of #23394 - tanadeau:remove-old_io-notes, r=alexcrichton
r? @alexcrichton
2015-03-16 03:55:13 +00:00
bors
b1eadf3f1d Auto merge of #23396 - semarie:remove-sized-bounds, r=sfackler
cc @alexcrichton
2015-03-16 01:23:30 +00:00
bors
c62ae87db2 Auto merge of #23206 - nagisa:print-io, r=alexcrichton
r? @alexcrichton or @aturon 

This still needs to somehow figure out how to avoid unstable warnings arising from the use of unstable functions. I tried to use `#[allow_internal_unstable]` but it still spits out warnings as far as I can see. @huonw (I think you implemented it) does `#[allow_internal_unstable]` not work for some reason or am I using it incorrectly?
2015-03-15 21:16:04 +00:00
bors
542e2bb391 Auto merge of #23353 - alexcrichton:stabilize-os, r=aturon
This commit starts to organize the `std::os::$platform` modules and in the
process stabilizes some of the functionality contained within. The organization
of these modules will reflect the organization of the standard library itself
with extension traits for primitives in the same corresponding module.

The OS-specific modules will grow more functionality over time including
concrete types that are not extending functionality of other structures, and
these will either go into the closest module in `std::os::$platform` or they
will grow a new module in the hierarchy.

The following items are now stable:

* `os::{unix, windows}`
* `unix::ffi`
* `unix::ffi::OsStrExt`
* `unix::ffi::OsStrExt::{from_bytes, as_bytes, to_cstring}`
* `unix::ffi::OsString`
* `unix::ffi::OsStringExt::{from_vec, into_vec}`
* `unix::process`
* `unix::process::CommandExt`
* `unix::process::CommandExt::{uid, gid}`
* `unix::process::ExitStatusExt`
* `unix::process::ExitStatusExt::signal`
* `unix::prelude`
* `windows::ffi`
* `windows::ffi::OsStringExt`
* `windows::ffi::OsStringExt::from_wide`
* `windows::ffi::OsStrExt`
* `windows::ffi::OsStrExt::encode_wide`
* `windows::prelude`

The following items remain unstable:

* `unix::io`
* `unix::io::{Fd, AsRawFd}`
* `unix::fs::{PermissionsExt, OpenOptionsExt}`
* `windows::io`
* `windows::io::{Handle, AsRawHandle}`
* `windows::io::{Socket, AsRawSocket}`
* `windows::fs`
* `windows::fs::OpenOptionsExt`

Due to the reorgnization of the platform extension modules, this commit is a
breaking change. Most imports can be fixed by adding the relevant libstd module
in the `use` path (such as `ffi` or `fs`).

[breaking-change]
2015-03-15 18:42:54 +00:00
Alex Crichton
970baad714 std: Clean up the sys::thread modules
This module had become a #[cfg] jungle, try to bring at least a small semblance
of order to it!
2015-03-15 10:35:48 -07:00
Sébastien Marie
b94bcbcdcf unbreak freebsd/openbsd/bitrig build after #23316 2015-03-15 18:34:18 +01:00
Alex Crichton
1f5f76adc3 std: Stabilize portions of std::os::$platform
This commit starts to organize the `std::os::$platform` modules and in the
process stabilizes some of the functionality contained within. The organization
of these modules will reflect the organization of the standard library itself
with extension traits for primitives in the same corresponding module.

The OS-specific modules will grow more functionality over time including
concrete types that are not extending functionality of other structures, and
these will either go into the closest module in `std::os::$platform` or they
will grow a new module in the hierarchy.

The following items are now stable:

* `os::{unix, windows}`
* `unix::ffi`
* `unix::ffi::OsStrExt`
* `unix::ffi::OsStrExt::{from_bytes, as_bytes, to_cstring}`
* `unix::ffi::OsString`
* `unix::ffi::OsStringExt::{from_vec, into_vec}`
* `unix::process`
* `unix::process::CommandExt`
* `unix::process::CommandExt::{uid, gid}`
* `unix::process::ExitStatusExt`
* `unix::process::ExitStatusExt::signal`
* `unix::prelude`
* `windows::ffi`
* `windows::ffi::OsStringExt`
* `windows::ffi::OsStringExt::from_wide`
* `windows::ffi::OsStrExt`
* `windows::ffi::OsStrExt::encode_wide`
* `windows::prelude`

The following items remain unstable:

* `unix::io`
* `unix::io::{Fd, AsRawFd}`
* `unix::fs::{PermissionsExt, OpenOptionsExt}`
* `windows::io`
* `windows::io::{Handle, AsRawHandle}`
* `windows::io::{Socket, AsRawSocket}`
* `windows::fs`
* `windows::fs::OpenOptionsExt`

Due to the reorgnization of the platform extension modules, this commit is a
breaking change. Most imports can be fixed by adding the relevant libstd module
in the `use` path (such as `ffi` or `fs`).

[breaking-change]
2015-03-15 10:28:34 -07:00
Tamir Duberstein
d51047ded0 Strip all leading/trailing newlines 2015-03-15 09:08:21 -07:00
bors
b4f5e78b46 Auto merge of #23387 - Manishearth:rollup, r=Manishearth
- Successful merges: #23375, #23379, #23382, #23384
- Failed merges:
2015-03-15 16:06:04 +00:00
Trent Nadeau
d14728ad28 Removed old_io note from std::net 2015-03-15 11:31:38 -04:00
Wangshan Lu
a89dc2dbf6 Fix deprecated comm link. 2015-03-15 21:42:58 +08:00
bors
95018eec69 Auto merge of #23372 - tamird:fix-ios-compilation, r=alexcrichton
r? @alexcrichton cc @vhbit
2015-03-15 13:32:21 +00:00
Manish Goregaokar
9f1240b665 Rollup merge of #23384 - daboross:patch-2, r=alexcrichton
This changed `an String` to `a String`. Very minor change!

The usage of `an String` was introduced in a828e79480 (diff-b596503c7c33ce457b6d047e351ac12bR423), which changed `an OsString` to `an String`.
2015-03-15 15:40:18 +05:30
Manish Goregaokar
9d8bafe742 Rollup merge of #23382 - FuGangqiang:typos, r=alexcrichton 2015-03-15 15:40:18 +05:30
Manish Goregaokar
f31d818739 Rollup merge of #23379 - kballard:tweak-stdio-docs-no-raw-constructors, r=alexcrichton
`std::io` does not currently expose the `stdin_raw`, `stdout_raw`, or
`stderr_raw` functions. According to the current plans for stdio (see
rust-lang/rfcs#517), raw access will likely be provided using the
platform-specific `std::os::{unix,windows}` modules. At the moment we
don't expose any way to do this. As such, delete all mention of the
`*_raw` functions from the `stdin`/`stdout`/`stderr` function
documentation.

While we're at it, remove a few `pub`s from items that aren't exposed.
This is done just to lessen the confusion experienced by anyone who
looks at the source in an attempt to find the `*_raw` functions.
2015-03-15 15:40:18 +05:30
Tamir Duberstein
04c947c13a Implement winsize() for {ios,dragonfly}
`sys/ttycom.h` in both:
`#define TIOCGWINSZ  _IOR('t', 104, struct winsize)  /* get window size */`
2015-03-15 01:29:13 -07:00
Tamir Duberstein
0b01a9bb4b Fallout of c933d44f7b 2015-03-15 01:29:12 -07:00
Dabo Ross
fe9bb26e78 Fix an String -> a String in env.rs documentation
Super minor change!

The `an String` was introduced in a828e79480 (diff-b596503c7c33ce457b6d047e351ac12bR423), which changed `an OsString` to `an String`.
2015-03-15 00:00:26 -07:00
Alex Crichton
9c906da7ad std: Fix create_dir_all for empty paths
Recent changes in path semantics meant that if none of the components in a
relative path existed as a part of a call to `create_dir_all` then the call
would fail as `create_dir("")` would be attempted and would fail with an OS
error.
2015-03-14 23:40:12 -07:00
Alex Crichton
60a4a2db88 std: Remove ?Sized bounds from many I/O functions
It is a frequent pattern among I/O functions to take `P: AsPath + ?Sized` or
`AsOsStr` instead of `AsPath`. Most of these functions do not need to take
ownership of their argument, but for libraries in general it's much more
ergonomic to not deal with `?Sized` at all and simply require an argument `P`
instead of `&P`.

This change is aimed at removing unsightly `?Sized` bounds while retaining the
same level of usability as before. All affected functions now take ownership of
their arguments instead of taking them by reference, but due to the forwarding
implementations of `AsOsStr` and `AsPath` all code should continue to work as it
did before.

This is strictly speaking a breaking change due to the signatures of these
functions changing, but normal idiomatic usage of these APIs should not break in
practice.

[breaking-change]
2015-03-14 23:23:54 -07:00
FuGangqiang
3be8380576 fix typos 2015-03-15 13:47:34 +08:00
Kevin Ballard
3453b5b4a8 Remove incorrect references to _raw stdio functions
std::io does not currently expose the stdin_raw, stdout_raw, or
stderr_raw functions. According to the current plans for stdio (see RFC
#517), raw access will likely be provided using the platform-specific
std::os::{unix,windows} modules. At the moment we don't expose any way
to do this. As such, delete all mention of the _raw functions from the
stdin/stdout/stderr function documentation.

While we're at it, remove a few `pub`s from items that aren't exposed.
This is done just to lessen the confusion experienced by anyone who
looks at the source in an attempt to find the _raw functions.
2015-03-14 18:08:09 -07:00
Kevin Ballard
3dd455d4e1 Stop recommending old_io in the module doc for std::io
Now that `old_io` is deprecated and `std::io` is stable, we should stop
recommending the use of `old_io` in the module documentation.
2015-03-14 17:36:36 -07:00
Simonas Kazlauskas
6e92f0580b Use new io in print and println macroses 2015-03-15 00:26:17 +02:00
bors
766a4e1acc Auto merge of #23333 - oli-obk:slice_from_raw_parts, r=alexcrichton
at least that's what the docs say: http://doc.rust-lang.org/std/slice/fn.from_raw_parts.html

A few situations got prettier. In some situations the mutability of the resulting and source pointers differed (and was cast away by transmute), the mutability matches now.
2015-03-14 08:55:31 +00:00
Alex Crichton
f798674b86 std: Stabilize the net module
This commit performs a stabilization pass over the std::net module,
incorporating the changes from RFC 923. Specifically, the following actions were
taken:

Stable functionality:

* `net` (the name)
* `Shutdown`
* `Shutdown::{Read, Write, Both}`
* `lookup_host`
* `LookupHost`
* `SocketAddr`
* `SocketAddr::{V4, V6}`
* `SocketAddr::port`
* `SocketAddrV4`
* `SocketAddrV4::{new, ip, port}`
* `SocketAddrV6`
* `SocketAddrV4::{new, ip, port, flowinfo, scope_id}`
* Common trait impls for socket addr structures
* `ToSocketAddrs`
* `ToSocketAddrs::Iter`
* `ToSocketAddrs::to_socket_addrs`
* `ToSocketAddrs for {SocketAddr*, (Ipv*Addr, u16), str, (str, u16)}`
* `Ipv4Addr`
* `Ipv4Addr::{new, octets, to_ipv6_compatible, to_ipv6_mapped}`
* `Ipv6Addr`
* `Ipv6Addr::{new, segments, to_ipv4}`
* `TcpStream`
* `TcpStream::connect`
* `TcpStream::{peer_addr, local_addr, shutdown, try_clone}`
* `{Read,Write} for {TcpStream, &TcpStream}`
* `TcpListener`
* `TcpListener::bind`
* `TcpListener::{local_addr, try_clone, accept, incoming}`
* `Incoming`
* `UdpSocket`
* `UdpSocket::bind`
* `UdpSocket::{recv_from, send_to, local_addr, try_clone}`

Unstable functionality:

* Extra methods on `Ipv{4,6}Addr` for various methods of inspecting the address
  and determining qualities of it.
* Extra methods on `TcpStream` to configure various protocol options.
* Extra methods on `UdpSocket` to configure various protocol options.

Deprecated functionality:

* The `socket_addr` method has been renamed to `local_addr`

This commit is a breaking change due to the restructuring of the `SocketAddr`
type as well as the renaming of the `socket_addr` method. Migration should be
fairly straightforward, however, after accounting for the new level of
abstraction in `SocketAddr` (protocol distinction at the socket address level,
not the IP address).

[breaking-change]
2015-03-13 16:47:42 -07:00
Joseph Crail
fcf3f3209a Remove explicit syntax highlight from docs. 2015-03-13 19:25:18 -04:00
Aaron Turon
1d5983aded Deprecate range, range_step, count, distributions
This commit deprecates the `count`, `range` and `range_step` functions
in `iter`, in favor of range notation. To recover all existing
functionality, a new `step_by` adapter is provided directly on `ops::Range`
and `ops::RangeFrom`.

[breaking-change]
2015-03-13 14:45:13 -07:00
Alex Crichton
981bf5f690 Fallout of std::old_io deprecation 2015-03-13 10:00:28 -07:00
Oliver Schneider
6584ae5491 slice::from_raw_parts is preferred over transmuting a fresh raw::Slice 2015-03-13 09:56:18 +01:00
Alex Crichton
d54bd9f29a std: Stabilize the io module
The new `std::io` module has had some time to bake now, and this commit
stabilizes its functionality. There are still portions of the module which
remain unstable, and below contains a summart of the actions taken.

This commit also deprecates the entire contents of the `old_io` module in a
blanket fashion. All APIs should now have a reasonable replacement in the
new I/O modules.

Stable APIs:

* `std::io` (the name)
* `std::io::prelude` (the name)
* `Read`
* `Read::read`
* `Read::{read_to_end, read_to_string}` after being modified to return a `usize`
  for the number of bytes read.
* `Write`
* `Write::write`
* `Write::{write_all, write_fmt}`
* `BufRead`
* `BufRead::{fill_buf, consume}`
* `BufRead::{read_line, read_until}` after being modified to return a `usize`
  for the number of bytes read.
* `BufReader`
* `BufReader::{new, with_capacity}`
* `BufReader::{get_ref, get_mut, into_inner}`
* `{Read,BufRead} for BufReader`
* `BufWriter`
* `BufWriter::{new, with_capacity}`
* `BufWriter::{get_ref, get_mut, into_inner}`
* `Write for BufWriter`
* `IntoInnerError`
* `IntoInnerError::{error, into_inner}`
* `{Error,Display} for IntoInnerError`
* `LineWriter`
* `LineWriter::{new, with_capacity}` - `with_capacity` was added
* `LineWriter::{get_ref, get_mut, into_inner}` - `get_mut` was added)
* `Write for LineWriter`
* `BufStream`
* `BufStream::{new, with_capacities}`
* `BufStream::{get_ref, get_mut, into_inner}`
* `{BufRead,Read,Write} for BufStream`
* `stdin`
* `Stdin`
* `Stdin::lock`
* `Stdin::read_line` - added method
* `StdinLock`
* `Read for Stdin`
* `{Read,BufRead} for StdinLock`
* `stdout`
* `Stdout`
* `Stdout::lock`
* `StdoutLock`
* `Write for Stdout`
* `Write for StdoutLock`
* `stderr`
* `Stderr`
* `Stderr::lock`
* `StderrLock`
* `Write for Stderr`
* `Write for StderrLock`
* `io::Result`
* `io::Error`
* `io::Error::last_os_error`
* `{Display, Error} for Error`

Unstable APIs:

(reasons can be found in the commit itself)

* `Write::flush`
* `Seek`
* `ErrorKind`
* `Error::new`
* `Error::from_os_error`
* `Error::kind`

Deprecated APIs

* `Error::description` - available via the `Error` trait
* `Error::detail` - available via the `Display` implementation
* `thread::Builder::{stdout, stderr}`

Changes in functionality:

* `old_io::stdio::set_stderr` is now a noop as the infrastructure for printing
  backtraces has migrated to `std::io`.
* The `ReadExt`, `WriteExt`, and `BufReadExt` extension traits were all removed
  by folding functionality into the corresponding trait.

[breaking-change]
2015-03-12 20:39:03 -07:00
bors
79dd393a4f Auto merge of #23229 - aturon:stab-path, r=alexcrichton
This commit stabilizes essentially all of the new `std::path` API. The
API itself is changed in a couple of ways (which brings it in closer
alignment with the RFC):

* `.` components are now normalized away, unless they appear at the
  start of a path. This in turn effects the semantics of e.g. asking for
  the file name of `foo/` or `foo/.`, both of which yield `Some("foo")`
  now. This semantics is what the original RFC specified, and is also
  desirable given early experience rolling out the new API.

* The `parent` method is now `without_file` and succeeds if, and only
  if, `file_name` is `Some(_)`. That means, in particular, that it fails
  for a path like `foo/../`. This change affects `pop` as well.

In addition, the `old_path` module is now deprecated.

[breaking-change]

r? @alexcrichton
2015-03-13 01:00:02 +00:00
Aaron Turon
42c4e481cd Stabilize std::path
This commit stabilizes essentially all of the new `std::path` API. The
API itself is changed in a couple of ways (which brings it in closer
alignment with the RFC):

* `.` components are now normalized away, unless they appear at the
  start of a path. This in turn effects the semantics of e.g. asking for
  the file name of `foo/` or `foo/.`, both of which yield `Some("foo")`
  now. This semantics is what the original RFC specified, and is also
  desirable given early experience rolling out the new API.

* The `parent` function now succeeds if, and only if, the path has at
  least one non-root/prefix component. This change affects `pop` as
  well.

* The `Prefix` component now involves a separate `PrefixComponent`
  struct, to better allow for keeping both parsed and unparsed prefix data.

In addition, the `old_path` module is now deprecated.

Closes #23264

[breaking-change]
2015-03-12 16:38:58 -07:00
Alex Crichton
c933d44f7b std: Remove #[allow] directives in sys modules
These were suppressing lots of interesting warnings! Turns out there was also
quite a bit of dead code.
2015-03-12 10:23:27 -07:00
Manish Goregaokar
7f7a3cc29d Rollup merge of #23296 - shepmaster:explain-why-joinguard-is-must-use, r=alexcrichton 2015-03-12 09:15:06 +05:30
Steve Klabnik
64ab111b53 Example -> Examples
This brings comments in line with https://github.com/rust-lang/rfcs/blob/master/text/0505-api-comment-conventions.md#using-markdown
2015-03-11 21:11:40 -04:00
Jake Goulding
ac6cd90af1 Explain why immediately dropping a JoinGuard is not what you want to do 2015-03-11 20:10:52 -04:00
bors
cfea8ec416 Auto merge of #23126 - alexcrichton:char-third-pass, r=aturon
This commit performs another pass over the `std::char` module for stabilization.
Some minor cleanup is performed such as migrating documentation from libcore to
libunicode (where the `std`-facing trait resides) as well as a slight
reorganiation in libunicode itself. Otherwise, the stability modifications made
are:

* `char::from_digit` is now stable
* `CharExt::is_digit` is now stable
* `CharExt::to_digit` is now stable
* `CharExt::to_{lower,upper}case` are now stable after being modified to return
  an iterator over characters. While the implementation today has not changed
  this should allow us to implement the full set of case conversions in unicode
  where some characters can map to multiple when doing an upper or lower case
  mapping.
* `StrExt::to_{lower,upper}case` was added as unstable for a convenience of not
  having to worry about characters expanding to more characters when you just
  want the whole string to get into upper or lower case.

This is a breaking change due to the change in the signatures of the
`CharExt::to_{upper,lower}case` methods. Code can be updated to use functions
like `flat_map` or `collect` to handle the difference.

[breaking-change]

Closes #20333
2015-03-10 22:45:10 +00:00
Alex Crichton
0f6a0b58f9 std: Stabilize more of the char module
This commit performs another pass over the `std::char` module for stabilization.
Some minor cleanup is performed such as migrating documentation from libcore to
libunicode (where the `std`-facing trait resides) as well as a slight
reorganiation in libunicode itself. Otherwise, the stability modifications made
are:

* `char::from_digit` is now stable
* `CharExt::is_digit` is now stable
* `CharExt::to_digit` is now stable
* `CharExt::to_{lower,upper}case` are now stable after being modified to return
  an iterator over characters. While the implementation today has not changed
  this should allow us to implement the full set of case conversions in unicode
  where some characters can map to multiple when doing an upper or lower case
  mapping.
* `StrExt::to_{lower,upper}case` was added as unstable for a convenience of not
  having to worry about characters expanding to more characters when you just
  want the whole string to get into upper or lower case.

This is a breaking change due to the change in the signatures of the
`CharExt::to_{upper,lower}case` methods. Code can be updated to use functions
like `flat_map` or `collect` to handle the difference.

[breaking-change]
2015-03-10 15:08:31 -07:00
Manish Goregaokar
d034bc3e3a Rollup merge of #23125 - danburkert:master, r=brson 2015-03-10 14:59:31 +05:30
bors
b83b26bacb Auto merge of #22561 - richo:as_slice-as_str, r=Manishearth
This may not be quite ready to go out, I fixed some docs but suspect I missed a bunch.

I also wound up fixing a bunch of redundant `[]` suffixes, but on closer inspection I don't believe that can land until after a snapshot.
2015-03-09 21:02:50 +00:00
Steven Fackler
e2605b42c7 Rename #[should_fail] to #[should_panic] 2015-03-09 10:14:21 -07:00
Richo Healey
061d84399e remove uses of as_slice where deref coercions can be used 2015-03-09 07:54:19 -07:00
Manish Goregaokar
9f851a734b Rollup merge of #23190 - steveklabnik:fix_as_slice, r=alexcrichton 2015-03-09 00:13:33 +05:30
Manish Goregaokar
509c6fc9c1 Rollup merge of #22984 - carols10cents:tests-for-float, r=huonw
Building on #22076, I've added some tests for stable methods in f32 and f64 that didn't have any before.

Please let me know if there are any improvements I can make, and I am happy to make them! 📬
2015-03-09 00:02:28 +05:30
Steve Klabnik
6c6c23f9df Small fixes to example to be more idiomatic 2015-03-08 12:07:58 -04:00
Ryan Prichard
4a0c7ebc87 Use assert_eq! rather than assert!
The previous code was passing "true" as the panic! error value.
2015-03-07 16:53:01 -08:00
Alex Crichton
aed31ee08e Test fixes and rebase conflicts 2015-03-06 19:27:36 -08:00
Alex Crichton
3c2c516d0c rollup merge of #23097: alexcrichton/issue-23076
The `rsplitn` call was called with 2 instead of 1 so the iterator would yield 3
items in some cases, not the 2 that it should have.

Closes #23076
2015-03-06 15:37:56 -08:00
Alex Crichton
697de42f69 rollup merge of #23087: nagisa/std-undeadlock
Being a person who somehow has taken a liking to premature optimisation, my knee-jerk reaction to
locking in std handles was preamble resembling following snippet:

    let stdout = stdout();
    let lstdout = stdout.lock();
    let stdin = stdin();
    let lstdin = stdin.lock();

and then reading from the locked handle like this:

    let mut letter = [0; 1];
    lstdin.read(&mut letter).unwrap();

As it is now this code will deadlock because the `read` method attempts to lock stdout as well!

r? @alexcrichton

---

Either way, I find flushing stdout when stdin is used debatable. I believe people who write prompts should take care to flush stdout when necessary themselves.

Another idea: Would be cool if locks on std handles would be taken for a thread, rather than a handle, so given preamble (first code snippet)

    stdin.lock()

or more generally

    stdin.read(…)

worked fine. I.e. if more than a single lock are all taken inside the same thread, it would work, though not sure if our synchronisation primitives are expressive enough to make it possible.
2015-03-06 15:37:47 -08:00
Alex Crichton
2bd02ca837 rollup merge of #22975: alexcrichton/stabilize-ffi
Conflicts:
	src/librustc_trans/back/link.rs
	src/librustc_trans/lib.rs
2015-03-06 15:37:14 -08:00
Alex Crichton
fd86a01bb9 rollup merge of #22813: alexcrichton/deprecate-net
The `std::net` primitives should be ready for use now and as a result the old
ones are now deprecated and slated for removal. Most TCP/UDP functionality is
now available through `std::net` but the `std::old_io::net::pipe` module is
removed entirely from the standard library.

Unix socket funtionality can be found in sfackler's [`unix_socket`][unix] crate
and there is currently no replacement for named pipes on Windows.

[unix]: https://crates.io/crates/unix_socket

[breaking-change]
2015-03-06 15:36:08 -08:00
Alex Crichton
16ff1401d8 std: Ignore a test on windows
This test is known to fail on windows.
2015-03-06 13:55:06 -08:00
Alex Crichton
9aea749b83 std: Deprecate the std::old_io::net primitives
The `std::net` primitives should be ready for use now and as a result the old
ones are now deprecated and slated for removal. Most TCP/UDP functionality is
now available through `std::net` but the `std::old_io::net::pipe` module is
removed entirely from the standard library.

Unix socket funtionality can be found in sfackler's [`unix_socket`][unix] crate
and there is currently no replacement for named pipes on Windows.

[unix]: https://crates.io/crates/unix_socket

[breaking-change]
2015-03-06 10:27:28 -08:00
Dan Burkert
e8ed2d4150 Implement std::error::Error for std::sync::mpsc error types 2015-03-06 09:50:05 -08:00
Manish Goregaokar
ae16afb9e3 Rollup merge of #23096 - posborne:paths-documentation-grammar-fix, r=huonw 2015-03-06 22:22:37 +05:30
Manish Goregaokar
2fcdd824ef Rollup merge of #23056 - awlnx:master, r=nrc 2015-03-06 22:22:33 +05:30
Manish Goregaokar
55087e78fa Rollup merge of #23045 - ctjhoa:master, r=Manishearth
r? @steveklabnik
2015-03-06 22:22:32 +05:30
Manish Goregaokar
7a2eea5808 Rollup merge of #23101 - laijs:fix-file-perm, r=alexcrichton
Signed-off-by: Lai Jiangshan <laijs@cn.fujitsu.com>
2015-03-06 22:22:30 +05:30
Simonas Kazlauskas
3f94260b0f Fix an easy to trigger deadlock in std::io::stdio
Being a person who somehow has taken a liking to premature optimisation, my knee-jerk reaction to
locking in std handles was preamble resembling following snippet:

    let stdout = stdout();
    let lstdout = stdout.lock();
    let stdin = stdin();
    let lstdin = stdin.lock();

and then reading from the locked handle like this:

    let mut letter = [0; 1];
    lstdin.read(&mut letter).unwrap();

As it is now this code will deadlock because the `read` method attempts to lock stdout as well!
2015-03-06 11:22:07 +02:00
bors
1fe8f22145 Auto merge of #22899 - huonw:macro-stability, r=alexcrichton
Unstable items used in a macro expansion will now always trigger
stability warnings, *unless* the unstable items are directly inside a
macro marked with `#[allow_internal_unstable]`. IOW, the compiler warns
unless the span of the unstable item is a subspan of the definition of a
macro marked with that attribute.

E.g.

    #[allow_internal_unstable]
    macro_rules! foo {
        ($e: expr) => {{
            $e;
            unstable(); // no warning
            only_called_by_foo!();
        }}
    }

    macro_rules! only_called_by_foo {
        () => { unstable() } // warning
    }

    foo!(unstable()) // warning

The unstable inside `foo` is fine, due to the attribute. But the
`unstable` inside `only_called_by_foo` is not, since that macro doesn't
have the attribute, and the `unstable` passed into `foo` is also not
fine since it isn't contained in the macro itself (that is, even though
it is only used directly in the macro).

In the process this makes the stability tracking much more precise,
e.g. previously `println!("{}", unstable())` got no warning, but now it
does. As such, this is a bug fix that may cause [breaking-change]s.

The attribute is definitely feature gated, since it explicitly allows
side-stepping the feature gating system.

---

This updates `thread_local!` macro to use the attribute, since it uses
unstable features internally (initialising a struct with unstable
fields).
2015-03-06 05:20:11 +00:00
Manish Goregaokar
4993fd0fdc Rollup merge of #23095 - stepancheg:test-bind-fail, r=alexcrichton
Bind on non-local IP address is essentially the same test, and it works
same way on all platforms.

Fixes #11530
2015-03-06 09:02:27 +05:30
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
c9063e0f98 Rollup merge of #23079 - alexcrichton:deprecate-process, r=aturon
This module is now superseded by the `std::process` module. This module still
has some room to expand to get quite back up to parity with the `old_io`
version, and there is a [tracking issue][issue] for feature requests as well as
known room for expansion.

[issue]: https://github.com/rust-lang/rfcs/issues/941
[breaking-change]
2015-03-06 09:01:37 +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
Manish Goregaokar
9eb596ce8f Rollup merge of #22899 - huonw:macro-stability, r=alexcrichton
Unstable items used in a macro expansion will now always trigger
stability warnings, *unless* the unstable items are directly inside a
macro marked with `#[allow_internal_unstable]`. IOW, the compiler warns
unless the span of the unstable item is a subspan of the definition of a
macro marked with that attribute.

E.g.

    #[allow_internal_unstable]
    macro_rules! foo {
        ($e: expr) => {{
            $e;
            unstable(); // no warning
            only_called_by_foo!();
        }}
    }

    macro_rules! only_called_by_foo {
        () => { unstable() } // warning
    }

    foo!(unstable()) // warning

The unstable inside `foo` is fine, due to the attribute. But the
`unstable` inside `only_called_by_foo` is not, since that macro doesn't
have the attribute, and the `unstable` passed into `foo` is also not
fine since it isn't contained in the macro itself (that is, even though
it is only used directly in the macro).

In the process this makes the stability tracking much more precise,
e.g. previously `println!(\"{}\", unstable())` got no warning, but now it
does. As such, this is a bug fix that may cause [breaking-change]s.

The attribute is definitely feature gated, since it explicitly allows
side-stepping the feature gating system.

---

This updates `thread_local!` macro to use the attribute, since it uses
unstable features internally (initialising a struct with unstable
fields).
2015-03-06 08:58:16 +05:30
Lai Jiangshan
ccd83daa41 file permission: remove executable bit from *.rs
Signed-off-by: Lai Jiangshan <laijs@cn.fujitsu.com>
2015-03-06 10:03:00 +08:00
Carol Nichols
1bda1ff9da Removing unnecessary pub from a test function 2015-03-05 20:37:49 -05:00
Carol Nichols
8f091efa4f Add tests to stable f32 and f64 methods that didn't have any 2015-03-05 20:37:49 -05:00
Carol Nichols
33d8a4efea Rearrange tests to be in the same order as implementation
I was having trouble figuring out which functions had tests and which
didn't. This commit is just moving tests around and does not change
anything.
2015-03-05 20:37:49 -05:00
Alex Crichton
65b4eda5a6 std: Fix peeling ports from addresses
The `rsplitn` call was called with 2 instead of 1 so the iterator would yield 3
items in some cases, not the 2 that it should have.

Closes #23076
2015-03-05 17:20:16 -08:00
Paul Osborne
a08f12954c fix minor grammar mistake in paths documentation 2015-03-05 19:11:59 -06:00
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
Stepan Koltsov
d3e7700de4 std: net: enable bind_error test on all platforms
Bind on non-local IP address is essentially the same test, and it works
same way on all platforms.

Fixes #11530
2015-03-06 02:33:24 +03:00
Alex Crichton
628f5d29c3 std: Stabilize the ffi module
The two main sub-modules, `c_str` and `os_str`, have now had some time to bake
in the standard library. This commits performs a sweep over the modules adding
various stability tags.

The following APIs are now marked `#[stable]`

* `OsString`
* `OsStr`
* `OsString::from_string`
* `OsString::from_str`
* `OsString::new`
* `OsString::into_string`
* `OsString::push` (renamed from `push_os_str`, added an `AsOsStr` bound)
* various trait implementations for `OsString`
* `OsStr::from_str`
* `OsStr::to_str`
* `OsStr::to_string_lossy`
* `OsStr::to_os_string`
* various trait implementations for `OsStr`
* `CString`
* `CStr`
* `NulError`
* `CString::new` - this API's implementation may change as a result of
  rust-lang/rfcs#912 but the usage of `CString::new(thing)` looks like it is
  unlikely to change. Additionally, the `IntoBytes` bound is also likely to
  change but the set of implementors for the trait will not change (despite the
  trait perhaps being renamed).
* `CString::from_vec_unchecked`
* `CString::as_bytes`
* `CString::as_bytes_with_nul`
* `NulError::nul_position`
* `NulError::into_vec`
* `CStr::from_ptr`
* `CStr::as_ptr`
* `CStr::to_bytes`
* `CStr::to_bytes_with_nul`
* various trait implementations for `CStr`

The following APIs remain `#[unstable]`

* `OsStr*Ext` traits remain unstable as the organization of `os::platform` is
  uncertain still and the traits may change location.
* `AsOsStr` remains unstable as generic conversion traits are likely to be
  rethought soon.

The following APIs were deprecated

* `OsString::push_os_str` is now called `push` and takes `T: AsOsStr` instead (a
  superset of the previous functionality).
2015-03-05 14:57:01 -08:00
Alex Crichton
7ed418c3b4 std: Deprecate the old_io::process module
This module is now superseded by the `std::process` module. This module still
has some room to expand to get quite back up to parity with the `old_io`
version, and there is a [tracking issue][issue] for feature requests as well as
known room for expansion.

[issue]: https://github.com/rust-lang/rfcs/issues/941
[breaking-change]
2015-03-05 10:41:42 -08:00
awlnx
951ef9d1f1 fix for new attributes failing. issue #22964 2015-03-05 11:53:51 -05:00
Huon Wilson
ab7ef7402b Use #[allow_internal_unstable] for thread_local!
This destabilises all the implementation details of `thread_local!`,
since they do not *need* to be stable with the new attribute.
2015-03-06 00:18:29 +11:00
Manish Goregaokar
8a55fce389 Rollup merge of #23029 - vhbit:ios-env-stab, r=alexcrichton
"body": null,
2015-03-05 12:39:07 +05:30
Manish Goregaokar
acd9554fd6 Rollup merge of #23027 - fenhl:patch-1, r=sfackler
The docs for `std::time::duration::Duration::weeks` were formatted incorrectly.
2015-03-05 12:39:06 +05:30
Manish Goregaokar
ca13fd2a07 Rollup merge of #22973 - djmally:coll_docs, r=Gankro 2015-03-05 12:38:34 +05:30
Eduard Burtescu
e64670888a Remove integer suffixes where the types in compiled code are identical. 2015-03-05 12:38:33 +05:30
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
Camille TJHOA
b1e0dfb25c docs(path.rs): fix ends_with method 2015-03-04 23:09:03 +01:00
Valerii Hiora
6de0dc4ce3 iOS: fallout of env stab 2015-03-04 17:46:29 +02:00
bors
bdf6e4fcf5 Auto merge of #22920 - tshepang:remove-some-warnings, r=huonw 2015-03-04 12:16:51 +00:00
Fenhl
4486d78b93 Fix Duration::weeks docs
The docs for `std::duration::Duration::weeks` were formatted incorrectly.
2015-03-04 12:16:37 +00:00
Felix S. Klock II
0d5bcb14ad Switched to Box::new in many places.
Many of the modifications putting in `Box::new` calls also include a
pointer to Issue 22405, which tracks going back to `box <expr>` if
possible in the future.

(Still tried to use `Box<_>` where it sufficed; thus some tests still
have `box_syntax` enabled, as they use a mix of `box` and `Box::new`.)

Precursor for overloaded-`box` and placement-`in`; see Issue 22181.
2015-03-03 21:05:55 +01:00
Felix S. Klock II
270f0eef73 Add : Box<_> or ::Box<_> type annotations to various places.
This is the kind of change that one is expected to need to make to
accommodate overloaded-`box`.

----

Note that this is not *all* of the changes necessary to accommodate
Issue 22181.  It is merely the subset of those cases where there was
already a let-binding in place that made it easy to add the necesasry
type ascription.

(For unnamed intermediate `Box` values, one must go down a different
route; `Box::new` is the option that maximizes portability, but has
potential inefficiency depending on whether the call is inlined.)

----

There is one place worth note, `run-pass/coerce-match.rs`, where I
used an ugly form of `Box<_>` type ascription where I would have
preferred to use `Box::new` to accommodate overloaded-`box`.  I
deliberately did not use `Box::new` here, because that is already done
in coerce-match-calls.rs.

----

Precursor for overloaded-`box` and placement-`in`; see Issue 22181.
2015-03-03 20:29:01 +01:00
bors
14f0942a49 Auto merge of #22532 - pnkfelix:arith-overflow, r=pnkfelix,eddyb
Rebase and follow-through on work done by @cmr and @aatch.

Implements most of rust-lang/rfcs#560. Errors encountered from the checks during building were fixed.

The checks for division, remainder and bit-shifting have not been implemented yet.

See also PR #20795

cc @Aatch ; cc @nikomatsakis
2015-03-03 14:18:03 +00:00
Felix S. Klock II
243c5164ea sidestep potential over- and underflow in estimated stack bounds.
See buildlog here for evidence of such occurring:
  http://buildbot.rust-lang.org/builders/auto-linux-32-opt/builds/3910/steps/test/logs/stdio
2015-03-03 13:12:38 +01:00
Tobias Bucher
d18897cadf Revert incorrect usize -> u32 replacements from #22510
Conflicts:
	src/libstd/thread.rs
2015-03-03 17:02:24 +05:30