I just tried to build this container locally but it looks like connecting to
ftp.gnu.org requires SNI, so let's build curl/OpenSSL first to ensure that we've
got an SNI-capable client to download gcc/binutils with.
Right now we just run `shasum` on an absolute path but right now the shasum
files only include filenames, so let's use `current_dir` and just the file name
to only have the file name emitted.
According to the LLVM reference:
> A value of 0 or an omitted align argument means that the operation has
the ABI alignment for the target.
So loads/stores of fields of packed structs need to have their align set
to 1. Implement that by tracking the alignment of `LvalueRef`s.
Fixes#39376.
Currently attributes are only shown for structs, unions and enums but
they should be shown for all items. For example it is useful to know if a
function is `#[no_mangle]`.
Display correct filename with --test option
Fixes#39592.
With the current files:
```rust
pub mod foo;
/// This is a Foo;
///
/// ```
/// println!("baaaaaar");
/// ```
pub struct Foo;
/// This is a Bar;
///
/// ```
/// println!("fooooo");
/// ```
pub struct Bar;
```
```rust
// note the whitespaces
/// ```
/// println!("foo");
/// ```
pub fn foo() {}
```
It displays:
```
./build/x86_64-apple-darwin/stage1/bin/rustdoc --test test.rs
running 3 tests
test test.rs - line 13 ... ok
test test.rs - line 5 ... ok
test foo.rs - line 2 ... ok
test result: ok. 3 passed; 0 failed; 0 ignored; 0 measured
```
```
` ``
println!("lol");
` ``
asdjnfasd
asd
```
It displays:
```
./build/x86_64-apple-darwin/stage1/bin/rustdoc --test foo.md
running 1 test
test <input> - line 3 ... ok
test result: ok. 1 passed; 0 failed; 0 ignored; 0 measured
```
r? @alexcrichton
A few documentation improvements for `syntax::print::pp`
* Moved algorithm explanation to module docs
* Added ``` before and after the examples
* Explanation of the `rbox`, `ibox` and `cbox` names
* Added docs about the breaking types to `Breaks`
make Child::try_wait return io::Result<Option<ExitStatus>>
This is much nicer for callers who want to short-circuit real I/O errors
with `?`, because they can write this
if let Some(status) = foo.try_wait()? {
...
} else {
...
}
instead of this
match foo.try_wait() {
Ok(status) => {
...
}
Err(err) if err.kind() == io::ErrorKind::WouldBlock => {
...
}
Err(err) => return Err(err),
}
The original design of `try_wait` was patterned after the `Read` and
`Write` traits, which support both blocking and non-blocking
implementations in a single API. But since `try_wait` is never blocking,
it makes sense to optimize for the non-blocking case.
Tracking issue: https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/38903
This way we can call `cmp` instead of `partial_cmp` in the loop,
removing some burden of optimizing `Option`s away from the compiler.
PR #39538 introduced a regression where sorting slices suddenly became
slower, since `slice1.lt(slice2)` was much slower than
`slice1.cmp(slice2) == Less`. This problem is now fixed.
To verify, I benchmarked this simple program:
```rust
fn main() {
let mut v = (0..2_000_000).map(|x| x * x * x * 18913515181).map(|x| vec![x, x ^ 3137831591]).collect::<Vec<_>>();
v.sort();
}
```
Before this PR, it would take 0.95 sec, and now it takes 0.58 sec.
I also tried changing the `is_less` lambda to use `cmp` and
`partial_cmp`. Now all three versions (`lt`, `cmp`, `partial_cmp`) are
equally performant for sorting slices - all of them take 0.58 sec on the
benchmark.
Change deprecation warning to indicate custom derive support was removed
I'm very new to Rust and the message was confusing to me (using nightly and not really sure if I was > 1.15 or not).
Fix short hand struct doc
Don't want to discredit @hngiang effort on this issue.
I just want to lend a hand to fix this issue #38830, it is a very nice feature and is seemingly completed.
Fixes#39096
r? @steveklabnik