Commit Graph

33668 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Alex Crichton
fab6c74cf3 rollup merge of #18494 : nikomatsakis/issue-18453 2014-11-03 08:31:44 -08:00
Alex Crichton
0f4d7f248d rollup merge of #18493 : jakub-/issue-18464 2014-11-03 08:31:44 -08:00
Alex Crichton
68e7dd0ffe rollup merge of #18476 : vadimcn/17982 2014-11-03 08:31:44 -08:00
Alex Crichton
6478fcfafe rollup merge of #18470 : alexcrichton/dash-l 2014-11-03 08:31:44 -08:00
Alex Crichton
566ee9ecb3 rollup merge of #18460 : gamazeps/issue18451 2014-11-03 08:31:44 -08:00
bors
2790505c19 auto merge of #18468 : jakub-/rust/iter-repeat, r=alexcrichton
Implements a part of RFC 235.

[breaking-change]
2014-11-03 14:17:26 +00:00
bors
b9b396cd75 auto merge of #18463 : japaric/rust/bytes2, r=alexcrichton
- The `BytesContainer::container_into_owned_bytes` method has been removed

- Methods that used to take `BytesContainer` implementors by value, now take them by reference. In particular, this breaks some uses of Path:

``` rust
Path::new("foo")  // Still works
path.join(another_path) -> path.join(&another_path)
```

[breaking-change]

---

Re: `container_into_owned_bytes`, I've removed it because

- Nothing in the whole repository uses it
- Takes `self` by value, which is incompatible with unsized types (`str`)

The alternative to removing this method is to split `BytesContainer` into `BytesContainer for Sized?` and `SizedBytesContainer: BytesContainer + Sized`, where the second trait only contains the `container_into_owned_bytes` method. I tried this alternative [in another branch](https://github.com/japaric/rust/commits/bytes) and it works, but it seemed better not to create a new trait for an unused method.

Re: Breakage of `Path` methods

We could use the idea that @alexcrichton proposed in #18457 (add blanket `impl BytesContainer for &T where T: BytesContainer` + keep taking `T: BytesContainer` by value in `Path` methods) to avoid breaking any code.

r? @aturon 
cc #16918
2014-11-03 12:12:24 +00:00
bors
851799d09e auto merge of #18206 : hirschenberger/rust/issue-17713, r=thestinger
Add lint for checking exceeding bitshifts #17713

It also const-evaluates the shift width (RHS) to check more complex shifts like `1u8 << (4+5)`.
The lint-level is set to `Warn` but perhaps it must be `Deny` as in llvm exceeding bitshifts are undefined as @ben0x539 stated in #17713
2014-11-03 07:37:23 +00:00
bors
ff50f24feb auto merge of #17753 : aturon/rust/error-interop, r=alexcrichton
This PR:

* Adds the error interoperation traits (`Error` and `FromError`) to a new module, `std::error`, as per [RFC 70](https://github.com/rust-lang/rfcs/blob/master/active/0070-error-chaining.md). Note that this module must live in `std` in order to refer to `String`.

    Note that, until multidispatch lands, the `FromError` trait cannot be
usefully implemented outside of the blanket impl given here.

* Incorporates `std::error::FromError` into the `try!` macro.

* Implements `Error` for most existing error enumerations.

Closes #17747
2014-11-03 03:57:18 +00:00
bors
dcc5c3b31b auto merge of #18554 : sfackler/rust/jemalloc-fix, r=thestinger 2014-11-03 01:27:18 +00:00
Steven Fackler
711a955e0c Work around jemalloc/jemalloc#161 2014-11-02 15:52:16 -08:00
Aaron Turon
38e0745e3f Add type annotation to deal with fallout 2014-11-02 15:31:52 -08:00
Aaron Turon
7c152f870d Add Error impls to a few key error types 2014-11-02 15:31:52 -08:00
bors
b87619e274 auto merge of #18456 : gamazeps/rust/issue18449, r=thestinger
Made the fact that rodata is a section of the executable more explicit
Closes #18449
2014-11-02 23:27:10 +00:00
Aaron Turon
6815c2e8e8 Add error module with Error and FromError traits
As per [RFC 70](https://github.com/rust-lang/rfcs/blob/master/active/0070-error-chaining.md)

Closes #17747

Note that the `error` module must live in `std` in order to refer to `String`.

Note that, until multidispatch lands, the `FromError` trait cannot be
usefully implemented outside of the blanket impl given here.
2014-11-02 15:25:38 -08:00
bors
a294b35060 auto merge of #18406 : thestinger/rust/oom, r=cmr
This makes the low-level allocation API suitable for use cases where
out-of-memory conditions need to be handled.

Closes #18292

[breaking-change]
2014-11-02 21:22:14 +00:00
bors
0c1268451b auto merge of #18481 : sfackler/rust/enum-namespace, r=pcwalton
After a snapshot, everything can be switched over and the small bit of hackery in resolve dealing with `ENUM_STAGING_HACK` can be removed.

cc #18478
2014-11-02 19:22:16 +00:00
Jorge Aparicio
fe256f8140 Remove unnecessary allocations 2014-11-01 19:56:07 -05:00
Jorge Aparicio
423e17b9df DSTify BytesContainer 2014-11-01 19:56:07 -05:00
Daniel Micay
fea985a0b5 bubble up out-of-memory errors from liballoc
This makes the low-level allocation API suitable for use cases where
out-of-memory conditions need to be handled.

Closes #18292

[breaking-change]
2014-11-01 19:23:20 -04:00
bors
3327ecca42 auto merge of #17595 : danburkert/rust/tuple-index-deserialization, r=alexcrichton
Currently `Decoder` implementations are not provided the tuple arity as
a parameter to `read_tuple`. This forces all encoder/decoder combos to
serialize the arity along with the elements. Tuple-arity is always known
statically at the decode site, because it is part of the type of the
tuple, so it could instead be provided as an argument to `read_tuple`,
as it is to `read_struct`.

The upside to this is that serialized tuples could become smaller in
encoder/decoder implementations which choose not to serialize type
(arity) information. For example, @TyOverby's
[binary-encode](https://github.com/TyOverby/binary-encode) format is
currently forced to serialize the tuple-arity along with every tuple,
despite the information being statically known at the decode site.

A downside to this change is that the tuple-arity of serialized tuples
can no longer be automatically checked during deserialization. However,
for formats which do serialize the tuple-arity, either explicitly (rbml)
or implicitly (json), this check can be added to the `read_tuple` method.

The signature of `Deserialize::read_tuple` and
`Deserialize::read_tuple_struct` are changed, and thus binary
backwards-compatibility is broken. This change does *not* force
serialization formats to change, and thus does not break decoding values
serialized prior to this change.

[breaking-change]
2014-11-01 22:41:48 +00:00
bors
39f90aead4 auto merge of #18474 : alexcrichton/rust/no-more-traits, r=aturon
As part of the collections reform RFC, this commit removes all collections
traits in favor of inherent methods on collections themselves. All methods
should continue to be available on all collections.

This is a breaking change with all of the collections traits being removed and
no longer being in the prelude. In order to update old code you should move the
trait implementations to inherent implementations directly on the type itself.

Note that some traits had default methods which will also need to be implemented
to maintain backwards compatibility.

[breaking-change]
cc #18424
2014-11-01 20:21:47 +00:00
Alex Crichton
21ac985af4 collections: Remove all collections traits
As part of the collections reform RFC, this commit removes all collections
traits in favor of inherent methods on collections themselves. All methods
should continue to be available on all collections.

This is a breaking change with all of the collections traits being removed and
no longer being in the prelude. In order to update old code you should move the
trait implementations to inherent implementations directly on the type itself.

Note that some traits had default methods which will also need to be implemented
to maintain backwards compatibility.

[breaking-change]
cc #18424
2014-11-01 11:37:04 -07:00
Dan Burkert
05f6bdaefc Tuple deserialization should not fail 2014-11-01 10:54:34 -07:00
Dan Burkert
ca6b082c05 libserialize: tuple-arity should be provided to Decoder::read_tuple
Currently `Decoder` implementations are not provided the tuple arity as
a parameter to `read_tuple`. This forces all encoder/decoder combos to
serialize the arity along with the elements. Tuple-arity is always known
statically at the decode site, because it is part of the type of the
tuple, so it could instead be provided as an argument to `read_tuple`,
as it is to `read_struct`.

The upside to this is that serialized tuples could become smaller in
encoder/decoder implementations which choose not to serialize type
(arity) information. For example, @TyOverby's
[binary-encode](https://github.com/TyOverby/binary-encode) format is
currently forced to serialize the tuple-arity along with every tuple,
despite the information being statically known at the decode site.

A downside to this change is that the tuple-arity of serialized tuples
can no longer be automatically checked during deserialization. However,
for formats which do serialize the tuple-arity, either explicitly (rbml)
or implicitly (json), this check can be added to the `read_tuple` method.

The signature of `Deserialize::read_tuple` and
`Deserialize::read_tuple_struct` are changed, and thus binary
backwards-compatibility is broken. This change does *not* force
serialization formats to change, and thus does not break decoding values
serialized prior to this change.

[breaking-change]
2014-11-01 10:54:34 -07:00
bors
0547a407aa auto merge of #18457 : japaric/rust/tocstr, r=alexcrichton
Methods that used to take `ToCStr` implementors by value, now take them by reference. In particular, this breaks some uses of `Command`:

``` rust
Command::new("foo");  // Still works
Command::new(path) -> Command::new(&path)
cmd.arg(string) -> cmd.arg(&string) or cmd.arg(string.as_slice())
```

[breaking-change]

---

It may be sensible to remove `impl ToCstr for String` since:
- We're getting `impl Deref<str> for String`, so `string.to_cstr()` would still work
- `Command` methods would still be able to use `cmd.arg(string[..])` instead of `cmd.arg(&string)`.

But, I'm leaving that up to the library stabilization process.

r? @aturon 
cc #16918
2014-11-01 11:21:47 +00:00
Falco Hirschenberger
e5058a8f0c Add lint for checking exceeding bitshifts #17713 2014-11-01 09:10:10 +01:00
bors
51a25c7f96 auto merge of #18422 : michaelwoerister/rust/windows-freeze-fix, r=alexcrichton
On some Windows versions of GDB this is more stable than setting breakpoints via function names. This is also something I wanted to do for some time now because it makes the tests more consistent.

@brson:
These changes are in response to issue #17540. It works on my machine with the toolchain mentioned in the issue. In order to find out if the problem is really worked around, we also need to make the build bots use the newer GDB version again.
2014-11-01 03:56:44 +00:00
Steven Fackler
d7ff7da65a First stage of enum namespacing changes 2014-10-31 20:43:35 -07:00
bors
1442235d3f auto merge of #18371 : nikomatsakis/rust/issue-18262, r=pcwalton
Teach variance checker about the lifetime bounds that appear in trait object types.

[breaking-change] This patch fixes a hole in the type system which resulted in lifetime parameters that were only used in trait objects not being checked. It's hard to characterize precisely the changes that might be needed to fix target code.

cc #18262 (this fixes the test case by @jakub- but I am not sure if this is the same issue that @alexcrichton was reporting)

r? @pnkfelix 

Fixes #18205
2014-11-01 01:41:45 +00:00
bors
88b6e93d35 auto merge of #18177 : nick29581/rust/ufcs2, r=nikomatsakis
r?

closes #18061
2014-10-31 23:36:48 +00:00
Nick Cameron
060566f08a Fix RustDoc bug 2014-11-01 11:05:12 +13:00
Nick Cameron
2474d7d2c4 Rebasing and review changes 2014-11-01 11:05:12 +13:00
Nick Cameron
318472bea9 test 2014-11-01 11:05:12 +13:00
Nick Cameron
1397f990fe Cross crait inherant impls 2014-11-01 11:05:12 +13:00
Nick Cameron
d416d16cce Remove FnStyle from DefFn and DefStaticMethod 2014-11-01 11:05:12 +13:00
Nick Cameron
4e7d86c079 Resolve methods called as functions and...
...defined in another crate.

Fixes #18061
2014-11-01 11:03:50 +13:00
Niko Matsakis
9a5e7ba4c7 Teach variance checker about the lifetime bounds that appear in trait object types. 2014-10-31 17:39:41 -04:00
Niko Matsakis
6bf0dc849f Prefer where clauses to impls in trait resolution (not vice versa).
Fixes #18453.
2014-10-31 15:03:56 -04:00
Jakub Bukaj
d23d633eb8 Constants used in range patterns should not be considered unused 2014-10-31 19:14:57 +01:00
gamazeps
4ee0c4f3fb DOC: improves the str type explanation
Closes #18449
2014-10-31 19:00:00 +01:00
Michael Woerister
e06c338273 debuginfo: Enable some GDB tests on Windows. 2014-10-31 18:49:59 +01:00
Michael Woerister
54a5a2b365 debuginfo: Make GDB tests use line breakpoints like done in LLDB tests.
On some Windows versions of GDB this is more stable than setting breakpoints via function names.
2014-10-31 18:49:59 +01:00
bors
5e834243b6 auto merge of #18440 : japaric/rust/hash, r=alexcrichton
- The signature of the `*_equiv` methods of `HashMap` and similar structures have changed, and now require one less level of indirection. Change your code from:

``` rust
hashmap.find_equiv(&"Hello");
hashmap.find_equiv(&&[0u8, 1, 2]);
```

to:

``` rust
hashmap.find_equiv("Hello");
hashmap.find_equiv(&[0u8, 1, 2]);
```

- The generic parameter `T` of the `Hasher::hash<T>` method have become `Sized?`. Downstream code must add `Sized?` to that method in their implementations. For example:

``` rust
impl Hasher<FnvState> for FnvHasher {
    fn hash<T: Hash<FnvState>>(&self, t: &T) -> u64 { /* .. */ }
}
```

must be changed to:

``` rust
impl Hasher<FnvState> for FnvHasher {
    fn hash<Sized? T: Hash<FnvState>>(&self, t: &T) -> u64 { /* .. */ }
    //      ^^^^^^
}
```

[breaking-change]

---

After review I'll squash the commits and update the commit message with the above paragraph.

r? @aturon 
cc #16918
2014-10-31 17:11:43 +00:00
Jorge Aparicio
dd9dda7a1c DSTify ToCStr 2014-10-31 10:09:15 -05:00
bors
7e662316d1 auto merge of #18458 : eddyb/rust/free-region-args, r=nikomatsakis
This fixes ICEs caused by late-bound lifetimes ending up in argument
datum types and being used in cleanup - user Drop impl's would then
fail to monomorphize if the type was used to look up the impl of a
method call - which happens in trans now, I presume for multidispatch.
2014-10-31 15:06:45 +00:00
Eduard Burtescu
96ba514294 trans: use types from argument patterns instead of the function signature.
This fixes ICEs caused by late-bound lifetimes ending up in argument
datum types and being used in cleanup - user Drop impl's would then
fail to monomorphize if the type was used to look up the impl of a
method call - which happens in trans now, I presume for multidispatch.
2014-10-31 16:47:25 +02:00
Jorge Aparicio
1384a43db3 DSTify Hash
- The signature of the `*_equiv` methods of `HashMap` and similar structures
have changed, and now require one less level of indirection. Change your code
from:

```
hashmap.find_equiv(&"Hello");
hashmap.find_equiv(&&[0u8, 1, 2]);
```

to:

```
hashmap.find_equiv("Hello");
hashmap.find_equiv(&[0u8, 1, 2]);
```

- The generic parameter `T` of the `Hasher::hash<T>` method have become
`Sized?`. Downstream code must add `Sized?` to that method in their
implementations. For example:

```
impl Hasher<FnvState> for FnvHasher {
    fn hash<T: Hash<FnvState>>(&self, t: &T) -> u64 { /* .. */ }
}
```

must be changed to:

```
impl Hasher<FnvState> for FnvHasher {
    fn hash<Sized? T: Hash<FnvState>>(&self, t: &T) -> u64 { /* .. */ }
    //      ^^^^^^
}
```

[breaking-change]
2014-10-31 07:25:34 -05:00
bors
82045ca360 auto merge of #18264 : jakub-/rust/var-ids-in-error-messages, r=nikomatsakis
This PR aims to improve the readability of diagnostic messages that involve unresolved type variables. Currently, messages like the following:

```rust
mismatched types: expected `core::result::Result<uint,()>`, found `core::option::Option<<generic #1>>`
<anon>:6     let a: Result<uint, ()> = None;
                                       ^~~~
mismatched types: expected `&mut <generic #2>`, found `uint`
<anon>:7     f(42u);
               ^~~
```

tend to appear unapproachable to new users. [0] While specific type var IDs are valuable in
diagnostics that deal with more than one such variable, in practice many messages
only mention one. In those cases, leaving out the specific number makes the messages
slightly less terrifying.

```rust
mismatched types: expected `core::result::Result<uint, ()>`, found `core::option::Option<_>`
<anon>:6     let a: Result<uint, ()> = None;
                                       ^~~~
mismatched types: expected `&mut _`, found `uint`
<anon>:7     f(42u);
               ^~~
```

As you can see, I also tweaked the aesthetics slightly by changing type variables to use the type hole syntax _. For integer variables, the syntax used is:

```rust
mismatched types: expected `core::result::Result<uint, ()>`, found `core::option::Option<_#1i>`
<anon>:6     let a: Result<uint, ()> = Some(1);
```

and float variables:

```rust
mismatched types: expected `core::result::Result<uint, ()>`, found `core::option::Option<_#1f>`
<anon>:6     let a: Result<uint, ()> = Some(0.5);
```

[0] https://twitter.com/coda/status/517713085465772032

Closes https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/2632.
Closes https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/3404.
Closes https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/18426.
2014-10-31 11:16:44 +00:00
bors
065caf34f5 auto merge of #18431 : japaric/rust/show, r=alexcrichton
r? @aturon 
cc #16918
2014-10-31 06:01:41 +00:00