This commit updates the bootstrap compiler and clears out a number of #[cfg(stage0)] annotations and related business
133 lines
4.7 KiB
Rust
133 lines
4.7 KiB
Rust
// Copyright 2012-2013 The Rust Project Developers. See the COPYRIGHT
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// file at the top-level directory of this distribution and at
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// http://rust-lang.org/COPYRIGHT.
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//
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// Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0 <LICENSE-APACHE or
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// http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0> or the MIT license
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// <LICENSE-MIT or http://opensource.org/licenses/MIT>, at your
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// option. This file may not be copied, modified, or distributed
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// except according to those terms.
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//! The `Clone` trait for types that cannot be 'implicitly copied'.
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//!
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//! In Rust, some simple types are "implicitly copyable" and when you
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//! assign them or pass them as arguments, the receiver will get a copy,
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//! leaving the original value in place. These types do not require
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//! allocation to copy and do not have finalizers (i.e. they do not
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//! contain owned boxes or implement [`Drop`]), so the compiler considers
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//! them cheap and safe to copy. For other types copies must be made
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//! explicitly, by convention implementing the [`Clone`] trait and calling
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//! the [`clone`][clone] method.
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//!
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//! [`Clone`]: trait.Clone.html
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//! [clone]: trait.Clone.html#tymethod.clone
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//! [`Drop`]: ../../std/ops/trait.Drop.html
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//!
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//! Basic usage example:
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//!
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//! ```
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//! let s = String::new(); // String type implements Clone
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//! let copy = s.clone(); // so we can clone it
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//! ```
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//!
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//! To easily implement the Clone trait, you can also use
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//! `#[derive(Clone)]`. Example:
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//!
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//! ```
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//! #[derive(Clone)] // we add the Clone trait to Morpheus struct
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//! struct Morpheus {
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//! blue_pill: f32,
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//! red_pill: i64,
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//! }
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//!
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//! fn main() {
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//! let f = Morpheus { blue_pill: 0.0, red_pill: 0 };
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//! let copy = f.clone(); // and now we can clone it!
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//! }
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//! ```
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#![stable(feature = "rust1", since = "1.0.0")]
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/// A common trait for the ability to explicitly duplicate an object.
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///
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/// Differs from [`Copy`] in that [`Copy`] is implicit and extremely inexpensive, while
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/// `Clone` is always explicit and may or may not be expensive. In order to enforce
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/// these characteristics, Rust does not allow you to reimplement [`Copy`], but you
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/// may reimplement `Clone` and run arbitrary code.
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///
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/// Since `Clone` is more general than [`Copy`], you can automatically make anything
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/// [`Copy`] be `Clone` as well.
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///
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/// ## Derivable
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///
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/// This trait can be used with `#[derive]` if all fields are `Clone`. The `derive`d
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/// implementation of [`clone`] calls [`clone`] on each field.
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///
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/// ## How can I implement `Clone`?
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///
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/// Types that are [`Copy`] should have a trivial implementation of `Clone`. More formally:
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/// if `T: Copy`, `x: T`, and `y: &T`, then `let x = y.clone();` is equivalent to `let x = *y;`.
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/// Manual implementations should be careful to uphold this invariant; however, unsafe code
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/// must not rely on it to ensure memory safety.
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///
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/// An example is an array holding more than 32 elements of a type that is `Clone`; the standard
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/// library only implements `Clone` up until arrays of size 32. In this case, the implementation of
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/// `Clone` cannot be `derive`d, but can be implemented as:
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///
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/// [`Copy`]: ../../std/marker/trait.Copy.html
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/// [`clone`]: trait.Clone.html#tymethod.clone
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///
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/// ```
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/// #[derive(Copy)]
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/// struct Stats {
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/// frequencies: [i32; 100],
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/// }
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///
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/// impl Clone for Stats {
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/// fn clone(&self) -> Stats { *self }
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/// }
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/// ```
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#[stable(feature = "rust1", since = "1.0.0")]
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#[lang = "clone"]
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pub trait Clone : Sized {
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/// Returns a copy of the value.
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///
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/// # Examples
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///
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/// ```
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/// let hello = "Hello"; // &str implements Clone
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///
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/// assert_eq!("Hello", hello.clone());
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/// ```
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#[stable(feature = "rust1", since = "1.0.0")]
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fn clone(&self) -> Self;
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/// Performs copy-assignment from `source`.
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///
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/// `a.clone_from(&b)` is equivalent to `a = b.clone()` in functionality,
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/// but can be overridden to reuse the resources of `a` to avoid unnecessary
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/// allocations.
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#[inline]
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#[stable(feature = "rust1", since = "1.0.0")]
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fn clone_from(&mut self, source: &Self) {
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*self = source.clone()
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}
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}
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// FIXME(aburka): these structs are used solely by #[derive] to
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// assert that every component of a type implements Clone or Copy.
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//
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// These structs should never appear in user code.
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#[doc(hidden)]
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#[allow(missing_debug_implementations)]
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#[unstable(feature = "derive_clone_copy",
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reason = "deriving hack, should not be public",
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issue = "0")]
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pub struct AssertParamIsClone<T: Clone + ?Sized> { _field: ::marker::PhantomData<T> }
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#[doc(hidden)]
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#[allow(missing_debug_implementations)]
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#[unstable(feature = "derive_clone_copy",
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reason = "deriving hack, should not be public",
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issue = "0")]
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pub struct AssertParamIsCopy<T: Copy + ?Sized> { _field: ::marker::PhantomData<T> }
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