It turns out that libuv was returning ENOSPC to us in our usage of the
uv_ipX_name functions. It also turns out that there may be an off-by-one in
libuv. For now just add one to the buffer size and handle the return value
correctly.
Closes#10663
It turns out that libuv was returning ENOSPC to us in our usage of the
uv_ipX_name functions. It also turns out that there may be an off-by-one in
libuv. For now just add one to the buffer size and handle the return value
correctly.
Closes#10663
This moves the locking/waiting methods to returning an RAII struct instead of
relying on closures. Additionally, this changes the methods to all take
'&mut self' to discourage recursive locking. The new method to block is to call
`wait` on the returned RAII structure instead of calling it on the lock itself
(this enforces that the lock is held).
At the same time, this improves the Mutex interface a bit by allowing
destruction of non-initialized members and by allowing construction of an empty
mutex (nothing initialized inside).
This PR removes almost all `_iter` suffixes in various APIs of the codebase that return Iterators, as discussed in #9440.
As a summarize for the intend behind this PR:
- Iterators are the recommended way to provide a potentially lazy list of values, no need to name them painfully verbose. If anything, functions that return a specific container type should have more verbose names.
- We have a static type system, so no need to encode the return value of a constructor function into its name.
Following is a possibly incomplete list of all renamings I performed in the codebase. For a few of them I'm a bit unsure whether the new name still properly expresses their functionality, so feedback would be welcome:
~~~
&str : word_iter() -> words()
line_iter() -> lines()
any_line_iter() -> lines_any()
iter() -> chars()
char_offset_iter() -> char_indices()
byte_iter() -> bytes()
split_iter() -> split()
splitn_iter() -> splitn()
split_str_iter() -> split_str()
split_terminator_iter() -> split_terminator()
matches_index_iter() -> match_indices()
nfd_iter() -> nfd_chars()
nfkd_iter() -> nfkd_chars()
&[T] : split_iter() -> split()
splitn_iter() -> splitn()
window_iter() -> windows()
chunk_iter() -> chunks()
permutations_iter() -> permutations()
extra:bitv::Bitv : rev_liter() -> rev_iter()
common_iter() -> commons()
outlier_iter() -> outliers()
extra::treemap::{...} : lower_bound_iter() -> lower_bound()
upper_bound_iter() -> upper_bound()
std::trie::{...} : bound_iter() -> bound()
lower_bound_iter() -> lower_bound()
upper_bound_iter() -> upper_bound()
rustpkg::package_id::{...} : prefixes_iter() -> prefixes()
std::hashmap::{...} : difference_iter() -> difference()
symmetric_difference_iter() -> symmetric_difference()
intersection_iter() -> intersection()
union_iter() -> union()
std::path::{posix, windows} : component_iter() -> components()
str_component_iter() -> str_components()
... not showing all identical renamings for reverse versions
~~~
---
I'm also planning a few more changes, like removing all unnecessary `_rev` constructors (#9391), or reducing the `split` variants on `&str` to a more versatile and concise system.
This patchset fixes some parts broken on Win64.
This also adds `--disable-pthreads` flags to llvm on mingw-w64 archs (both 32-bit and 64-bit, not mingw) due to bad performance. See #8996 for discussion.
This patchset makes warning if crate-level attribute is used at other places, obsolete attributed is used, or unknown attribute is used, since they are usually from mistakes.
Closes#3348
This is needed so that the FFI works as expected on platforms that don't
flatten aggregates the way the AMD64 ABI does, especially for `#[repr(C)]`.
This moves more of `type_of` into `trans::adt`, because the type might
or might not be an LLVM struct.
Closes#10308.
This moves the locking/waiting methods to returning an RAII struct instead of
relying on closures. Additionally, this changes the methods to all take
'&mut self' to discourage recursive locking. The new method to block is to call
`wait` on the returned RAII structure instead of calling it on the lock itself
(this enforces that the lock is held).
At the same time, this improves the Mutex interface a bit by allowing
destruction of non-initialized members and by allowing construction of an empty
mutex (nothing initialized inside).
This is a behavioral difference in libuv between different platforms in
different situations. It turns out that libuv on windows will immediately
allocate a buffer instead of waiting for data to be ready. What this implies is
that we must have our custom data set on the handle before we call
uv_read_start.
I wish I knew of a way to test this, but this relies to being on the windows
platform *and* reading from a true TTY handle which only happens when this is
actually attached to a terminal. I have manually verified this works.
Closes#10645