Commit graph

71 commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Niels Sascha Reedijk
1a6fc8b7b8 Add support for the Haiku operating system on x86 and x86_64 machines
* Hand rebased from Niels original work on 1.9.0
2016-09-25 11:12:23 -05:00
Jan-Erik Rediger
60599df03b [emscripten] Disable code paths that don't work on emscripten 2016-08-10 16:39:32 +02:00
Jorge Aparicio
774fbdf40d keep backtraces if using the old build system 2016-07-26 22:33:45 -05:00
Jorge Aparicio
d464422c0a rustbuild: make backtraces (RUST_BACKTRACE) optional
but keep them enabled by default to maintain the status quo.

When disabled shaves ~56KB off every x86_64-unknown-linux-gnu
binary.

To disable backtraces you have to use a config.toml (see
src/bootstrap/config.toml.example for details) when building rustc/std:

$ python bootstrap.py --config=config.toml
2016-07-26 15:21:25 -05:00
Alex Crichton
3016626c3a std: Stabilize APIs for the 1.11.0 release
Although the set of APIs being stabilized this release is relatively small, the
trains keep going! Listed below are the APIs in the standard library which have
either transitioned from unstable to stable or those from unstable to
deprecated.

Stable

* `BTreeMap::{append, split_off}`
* `BTreeSet::{append, split_off}`
* `Cell::get_mut`
* `RefCell::get_mut`
* `BinaryHeap::append`
* `{f32, f64}::{to_degrees, to_radians}` - libcore stabilizations mirroring past
  libstd stabilizations
* `Iterator::sum`
* `Iterator::product`

Deprecated

* `{f32, f64}::next_after`
* `{f32, f64}::integer_decode`
* `{f32, f64}::ldexp`
* `{f32, f64}::frexp`
* `num::One`
* `num::Zero`

Added APIs (all unstable)

* `iter::Sum`
* `iter::Product`
* `iter::Step` - a few methods were added to accomodate deprecation of One/Zero

Removed APIs

* `From<Range<T>> for RangeInclusive<T>` - everything about `RangeInclusive` is
  unstable

Closes #27739
Closes #27752
Closes #32526
Closes #33444
Closes #34152
cc #34529 (new tracking issue)
2016-07-03 10:49:01 -07:00
Alex Crichton
c31e2e77ed std: Add compatibility with android-9
The Gecko folks currently use Android API level 9 for their builds, so they're
requesting that we move back our minimum supported API level from 18 to 9. Turns
out, ABI-wise at least, there's not that many changes we need to take care of.
The `ftruncate64` API appeared in android-12 and the `log2` and `log2f` APIs
appeared in android-18. We can have a simple shim for `ftruncate64` which falls
back on `ftruncate` and the `log2` function can be approximated with just
`ln(f) / ln(2)`.

This should at least get the standard library building on API level 9, although
the tests aren't quite happening there just yet. As we seem to be growing a
number of Android compatibility shims, they're now centralized in a common
`sys::android` module.
2016-04-27 09:28:48 -07:00
Alex Crichton
9c462b84c8 std: Fix linking against signal on Android
Currently the minimum supported Android version of the standard library is
API level 18 (android-18). Back in those days [1] the `signal` function was
just an inline wrapper around `bsd_signal`, but starting in API level
android-20 the `signal` symbols was introduced [2]. Finally, in android-21
the API `bsd_signal` was removed [3].

Basically this means that if we want to be binary compatible with multiple
Android releases (oldest being 18 and newest being 21) then we need to check
for both symbols and not actually link against either.

This was first discovered in rust-lang/libc#236 with a fix proposed in
rust-lang/libc#237. I suspect that we'll want to accept rust-lang/libc#237 so
Rust crates at large continue to be compatible with newer releases of Android
and crates, like the standard library, that want to opt into older support can
continue to do so via similar means.

Closes rust-lang/libc#236

[1]: https://chromium.googlesource.com/android_tools/+/20ee6d20/ndk/platforms/android-18/arch-arm/usr/include/signal.h
[2]: https://chromium.googlesource.com/android_tools/+/fbd420/ndk_experimental/platforms/android-20/arch-arm/usr/include/signal.h
[3]: https://chromium.googlesource.com/android_tools/+/20ee6d/ndk/platforms/android-21/arch-arm/usr/include/signal.h
2016-04-04 21:54:59 -07:00
Sean McArthur
34dfc3991d std: restructure rand os code into sys modules 2016-02-17 16:21:32 -08:00
bors
8c604dc940 Auto merge of #30629 - brson:emscripten-upstream, r=alexcrichton
Here's another go at adding emscripten support. This needs to wait again on new [libc definitions](https://github.com/rust-lang-nursery/libc/pull/122) landing. To get the libc definitions right I had to add support for i686-unknown-linux-musl, which are very similar to emscripten's, which are derived from arm/musl.

This branch additionally removes the makefile dependency on the `EMSCRIPTEN` environment variable by not building the unused compiler-rt.

Again, this is not sufficient for actually compiling to asmjs since it needs additional LLVM patches.

r? @alexcrichton
2016-02-06 21:18:50 +00:00
Brian Anderson
d6c0d859f6 Add the asmjs-unknown-emscripten triple. Add cfgs to libs.
Backtraces, and the compilation of libbacktrace for asmjs, are disabled.

This port doesn't use jemalloc so, like pnacl, it disables jemalloc *for all targets*
in the configure file.

It disables stack protection.
2016-02-06 20:56:14 +00:00
Alex Crichton
1a31e1c09f std: Add a helper for symbols that may not exist
Right now we only attempt to call one symbol which my not exist everywhere,
__pthread_get_minstack, but this pattern will come up more often as we start to
bind newer functionality of systems like Linux.

Take a similar strategy as the Windows implementation where we use `dlopen` to
lookup whether a symbol exists or not.
2016-02-05 17:11:02 -08:00
Nikita Baksalyar
e5da5d59f8
Rename sunos to solaris 2016-01-31 19:01:30 +03:00
Nikita Baksalyar
f189d7a693
Add Illumos support 2016-01-31 18:57:26 +03:00
Alex Crichton
cb343c33ac Fix warnings during tests
The deny(warnings) attribute is now enabled for tests so we need to weed out
these warnings as well.
2016-01-26 09:29:28 -08:00
Amanieu d'Antras
757f57bb1e Add set_oom_handler and use it print a message when out of memory 2016-01-12 01:55:45 +00:00
Florian Hahn
e27cbeff37 Fix warnings when compiling stdlib with --test 2015-12-29 16:07:01 +01:00
Alex Crichton
3d28b8b98e std: Migrate to the new libc
* Delete `sys::unix::{c, sync}` as these are now all folded into libc itself
* Update all references to use `libc` as a result.
* Update all references to the new flat namespace.
* Moves all windows bindings into sys::c
2015-11-09 22:55:50 -08:00
Richard Diamond
a7d93c939a Port the standard crates to PNaCl/NaCl. 2015-10-28 17:23:28 -05:00
Cristi Cobzarenco
4b308b44e1 typos: fix a grabbag of typos all over the place 2015-10-08 19:49:31 +01:00
Alex Crichton
f4be2026df std: Internalize almost all of std::rt
This commit does some refactoring to make almost all of the `std::rt` private.
Specifically, the following items are no longer part of its API:

* DEFAULT_ERROR_CODE
* backtrace
* unwind
* args
* at_exit
* cleanup
* heap (this is just alloc::heap)
* min_stack
* util

The module is now tagged as `#[doc(hidden)]` as the only purpose it's serve is
an entry point for the `panic!` macro via the `begin_unwind` and
`begin_unwind_fmt` reexports.
2015-09-11 11:19:20 -07:00
Alex Crichton
8d90d3f368 Remove all unstable deprecated functionality
This commit removes all unstable and deprecated functions in the standard
library. A release was recently cut (1.3) which makes this a good time for some
spring cleaning of the deprecated functions.
2015-08-12 14:55:17 -07:00
Alex Crichton
938099a7eb Register new snapshots
* Lots of core prelude imports removed
* Makefile support for MSVC env vars and Rust crates removed
* Makefile support for morestack removed
2015-08-11 15:11:13 -07:00
Alex Crichton
5cccf3cd25 syntax: Implement #![no_core]
This commit is an implementation of [RFC 1184][rfc] which tweaks the behavior of
the `#![no_std]` attribute and adds a new `#![no_core]` attribute. The
`#![no_std]` attribute now injects `extern crate core` at the top of the crate
as well as the libcore prelude into all modules (in the same manner as the
standard library's prelude). The `#![no_core]` attribute disables both std and
core injection.

[rfc]: https://github.com/rust-lang/rfcs/pull/1184
2015-08-03 17:23:01 -07:00
Alex Newman
0b7c4f57f6 Add netbsd amd64 support 2015-07-01 19:09:14 -07:00
Alex Crichton
377b1adc36 std: Rename sys::foo2 modules to sys::foo
Now that `std::old_io` has been removed for quite some time the naming real
estate here has opened up to allow these modules to move back to their proper
names.
2015-05-07 09:30:00 -07:00
Alex Crichton
9348700007 std: Expand the area of std::fs
This commit is an implementation of [RFC 1044][rfc] which adds additional
surface area to the `std::fs` module. All new APIs are `#[unstable]` behind
assorted feature names for each one.

[rfc]: https://github.com/rust-lang/rfcs/pull/1044

The new APIs added are:

* `fs::canonicalize` - bindings to `realpath` on unix and
  `GetFinalPathNameByHandle` on windows.
* `fs::symlink_metadata` - similar to `lstat` on unix
* `fs::FileType` and accessor methods as `is_{file,dir,symlink}`
* `fs::Metadata::file_type` - accessor for the raw file type
* `fs::DirEntry::metadata` - acquisition of metadata which is free on Windows
  but requires a syscall on unix.
* `fs::DirEntry::file_type` - access the file type which may not require a
  syscall on most platforms.
* `fs::DirEntry::file_name` - access just the file name without leading
  components.
* `fs::PathExt::symlink_metadata` - convenience method for the top-level
  function.
* `fs::PathExt::canonicalize` - convenience method for the top-level
  function.
* `fs::PathExt::read_link` - convenience method for the top-level
  function.
* `fs::PathExt::read_dir` - convenience method for the top-level
  function.
* `std::os::raw` - type definitions for raw OS/C types available on all
  platforms.
* `std::os::$platform` - new modules have been added for all currently supported
  platforms (e.g. those more specific than just `unix`).
* `std::os::$platform::raw` - platform-specific type definitions. These modules
  are populated with the bare essentials necessary for lowing I/O types into
  their raw representations, and currently largely consist of the `stat`
  definition for unix platforms.

This commit also deprecates `Metadata::{modified, accessed}` in favor of
inspecting the raw representations via the lowering methods of `Metadata`.
2015-04-27 17:16:44 -07:00
Alex Crichton
eeb94886ad std: Remove deprecated/unstable num functionality
This commit removes all the old casting/generic traits from `std::num` that are
no longer in use by the standard library. This additionally removes the old
`strconv` module which has not seen much use in quite a long time. All generic
functionality has been supplanted with traits in the `num` crate and the
`strconv` module is supplanted with the [rust-strconv crate][rust-strconv].

[rust-strconv]: https://github.com/lifthrasiir/rust-strconv

This is a breaking change due to the removal of these deprecated crates, and the
alternative crates are listed above.

[breaking-change]
2015-04-21 11:37:43 -07:00
Alex Crichton
bf4e77d4b5 std: Remove old_io/old_path/rand modules
This commit entirely removes the old I/O, path, and rand modules. All
functionality has been deprecated and unstable for quite some time now!
2015-04-14 10:14:11 -07:00
Aaron Turon
232424d995 Stabilize std::num
This commit stabilizes the `std::num` module:

* The `Int` and `Float` traits are deprecated in favor of (1) the
  newly-added inherent methods and (2) the generic traits available in
  rust-lang/num.

* The `Zero` and `One` traits are reintroduced in `std::num`, which
  together with various other traits allow you to recover the most
  common forms of generic programming.

* The `FromStrRadix` trait, and associated free function, is deprecated
  in favor of inherent implementations.

* A wide range of methods and constants for both integers and floating
  point numbers are now `#[stable]`, having been adjusted for integer
  guidelines.

* `is_positive` and `is_negative` are renamed to `is_sign_positive` and
  `is_sign_negative`, in order to address #22985

* The `Wrapping` type is moved to `std::num` and stabilized;
  `WrappingOps` is deprecated in favor of inherent methods on the
  integer types, and direct implementation of operations on
  `Wrapping<X>` for each concrete integer type `X`.

Closes #22985
Closes #21069

[breaking-change]
2015-03-31 07:50:25 -07:00
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
Alex Crichton
981bf5f690 Fallout of std::old_io deprecation 2015-03-13 10:00:28 -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
Alex Crichton
94d71f8836 std: Implement stdio for std::io
This is an implementation of RFC 899 and adds stdio functionality to the new
`std::io` module. Details of the API can be found on the RFC, but from a high
level:

* `io::{stdin, stdout, stderr}` constructors are now available. There are also
  `*_raw` variants for unbuffered and unlocked access.
* All handles are globally shared (excluding raw variants).
* The stderr handle is no longer buffered.
* All handles can be explicitly locked (excluding the raw variants).

The `print!` and `println!` machinery has not yet been hooked up to these
streams just yet. The `std::fmt::output` module has also not yet been
implemented as part of this commit.
2015-02-28 23:13:02 -08:00
Tobias Bucher
d0c589d5ce Hide unnecessary error checking from the user
This affects the `set_non_blocking` function which cannot fail for Unix or
Windows, given correct parameters. Additionally, the short UDP write error case
has been removed as there is no such thing as "short UDP writes", instead, the
operating system will error out if the application tries to send a packet
larger than the MTU of the network path.
2015-02-23 23:52:24 +01:00
Alex Crichton
1860ee521a std: Implement CString-related RFCs
This commit is an implementation of [RFC 592][r592] and [RFC 840][r840]. These
two RFCs tweak the behavior of `CString` and add a new `CStr` unsized slice type
to the module.

[r592]: https://github.com/rust-lang/rfcs/blob/master/text/0592-c-str-deref.md
[r840]: https://github.com/rust-lang/rfcs/blob/master/text/0840-no-panic-in-c-string.md

The new `CStr` type is only constructable via two methods:

1. By `deref`'ing from a `CString`
2. Unsafely via `CStr::from_ptr`

The purpose of `CStr` is to be an unsized type which is a thin pointer to a
`libc::c_char` (currently it is a fat pointer slice due to implementation
limitations). Strings from C can be safely represented with a `CStr` and an
appropriate lifetime as well. Consumers of `&CString` should now consume `&CStr`
instead to allow producers to pass in C-originating strings instead of just
Rust-allocated strings.

A new constructor was added to `CString`, `new`, which takes `T: IntoBytes`
instead of separate `from_slice` and `from_vec` methods (both have been
deprecated in favor of `new`). The `new` method returns a `Result` instead of
panicking.  The error variant contains the relevant information about where the
error happened and bytes (if present). Conversions are provided to the
`io::Error` and `old_io::IoError` types via the `FromError` trait which
translate to `InvalidInput`.

This is a breaking change due to the modification of existing `#[unstable]` APIs
and new deprecation, and more detailed information can be found in the two RFCs.
Notable breakage includes:

* All construction of `CString` now needs to use `new` and handle the outgoing
  `Result`.
* Usage of `CString` as a byte slice now explicitly needs a `.as_bytes()` call.
* The `as_slice*` methods have been removed in favor of just having the
  `as_bytes*` methods.

Closes #22469
Closes #22470
[breaking-change]
2015-02-18 14:15:43 -08:00
Aaron Turon
4175f1ce2f Add std::process
Per [RFC 579](https://github.com/rust-lang/rfcs/pull/579), this commit
adds a new `std::process` module. This module is largely based on the
existing `std::old_io::process` module, but refactors the API to use
`OsStr` and other new standards set out by IO reform.

The existing module is not yet deprecated, to allow for the new API to
get a bit of testing before a mass migration to it.
2015-02-13 23:21:08 -08:00
Alex Crichton
395709ca6d std: Add a net module for TCP/UDP
This commit is an implementation of [RFC 807][rfc] which adds a `std::net`
module for basic neworking based on top of `std::io`. This module serves as a
replacement for the `std::old_io::net` module and networking primitives in
`old_io`.

[rfc]: fillmein

The major focus of this redesign is to cut back on the level of abstraction to
the point that each of the networking types is just a bare socket. To this end
functionality such as timeouts and cloning has been removed (although cloning
can be done through `duplicate`, it may just yield an error).

With this `net` module comes a new implementation of `SocketAddr` and `IpAddr`.
This work is entirely based on #20785 and the only changes were to alter the
in-memory representation to match the `libc`-expected variants and to move from
public fields to accessors.
2015-02-11 15:23:34 -08:00
Alex Crichton
6bfbad937b std: Add a new fs module
This commit is an implementation of [RFC 739][rfc] which adds a new `std::fs`
module to the standard library. This module provides much of the same
functionality as `std::old_io::fs` but it has many tweaked APIs as well as uses
the new `std::path` module.

[rfc]: https://github.com/rust-lang/rfcs/pull/739
2015-02-09 18:43:12 -08:00
Alex Crichton
5cf9905e25 std: Add io module again
This commit is an implementation of [RFC 576][rfc] which adds back the `std::io`
module to the standard library. No functionality in `std::old_io` has been
deprecated just yet, and the new `std::io` module is behind the same `io`
feature gate.

[rfc]: https://github.com/rust-lang/rfcs/pull/576

A good bit of functionality was copied over from `std::old_io`, but many tweaks
were required for the new method signatures. Behavior such as precisely when
buffered objects call to the underlying object may have been tweaked slightly in
the transition. All implementations were audited to use composition wherever
possible. For example the custom `pos` and `cap` cursors in `BufReader` were
removed in favor of just using `Cursor<Vec<u8>>`.

A few liberties were taken during this implementation which were not explicitly
spelled out in the RFC:

* The old `LineBufferedWriter` is now named `LineWriter`
* The internal representation of `Error` now favors OS error codes (a
  0-allocation path) and contains a `Box` for extra semantic data.
* The io prelude currently reexports `Seek` as `NewSeek` to prevent conflicts
  with the real prelude reexport of `old_io::Seek`
* The `chars` method was moved from `BufReadExt` to `ReadExt`.
* The `chars` iterator returns a custom error with a variant that explains that
  the data was not valid UTF-8.
2015-02-03 12:51:12 -08:00
Alex Crichton
70ed3a48df std: Add a new env module
This is an implementation of [RFC 578][rfc] which adds a new `std::env` module
to replace most of the functionality in the current `std::os` module. More
details can be found in the RFC itself, but as a summary the following methods
have all been deprecated:

[rfc]: https://github.com/rust-lang/rfcs/pull/578

* `os::args_as_bytes`   => `env::args`
* `os::args`            => `env::args`
* `os::consts`          => `env::consts`
* `os::dll_filename`    => no replacement, use `env::consts` directly
* `os::page_size`       => `env::page_size`
* `os::make_absolute`   => use `env::current_dir` + `join` instead
* `os::getcwd`          => `env::current_dir`
* `os::change_dir`      => `env::set_current_dir`
* `os::homedir`         => `env::home_dir`
* `os::tmpdir`          => `env::temp_dir`
* `os::join_paths`      => `env::join_paths`
* `os::split_paths`     => `env::split_paths`
* `os::self_exe_name`   => `env::current_exe`
* `os::self_exe_path`   => use `env::current_exe` + `pop`
* `os::set_exit_status` => `env::set_exit_status`
* `os::get_exit_status` => `env::get_exit_status`
* `os::env`             => `env::vars`
* `os::env_as_bytes`    => `env::vars`
* `os::getenv`          => `env::var` or `env::var_string`
* `os::getenv_as_bytes` => `env::var`
* `os::setenv`          => `env::set_var`
* `os::unsetenv`        => `env::remove_var`

Many function signatures have also been tweaked for various purposes, but the
main changes were:

* `Vec`-returning APIs now all return iterators instead
* All APIs are now centered around `OsString` instead of `Vec<u8>` or `String`.
  There is currently on convenience API, `env::var_string`, which can be used to
  get the value of an environment variable as a unicode `String`.

All old APIs are `#[deprecated]` in-place and will remain for some time to allow
for migrations. The semantics of the APIs have been tweaked slightly with regard
to dealing with invalid unicode (panic instead of replacement).

The new `std::env` module is all contained within the `env` feature, so crates
must add the following to access the new APIs:

    #![feature(env)]

[breaking-change]
2015-02-01 11:08:15 -08:00
Alex Crichton
3a07f859b8 Fallout of io => old_io 2015-01-26 16:01:16 -08:00
Aaron Turon
c5369ebc7f Add ffi::OsString and OsStr
Per [RFC 517](https://github.com/rust-lang/rfcs/pull/575/), this commit
introduces platform-native strings. The API is essentially as described
in the RFC.

The WTF-8 implementation is adapted from @SimonSapin's
[implementation](https://github.com/SimonSapin/rust-wtf8). To make this
work, some encodign and decoding functionality in `libcore` is now
exported in a "raw" fashion reusable for WTF-8. These exports are *not*
reexported in `std`, nor are they stable.
2015-01-24 10:21:30 -08:00
Steven Fackler
08f6380a9f Rewrite Condvar::wait_timeout and make it public
**The implementation is a direct adaptation of libcxx's
condition_variable implementation.**

pthread_cond_timedwait uses the non-monotonic system clock. It's
possible to change the clock to a monotonic via pthread_cond_attr, but
this is incompatible with static initialization. To deal with this, we
calculate the timeout using the system clock, and maintain a separate
record of the start and end times with a monotonic clock to be used for
calculation of the return value.
2015-01-16 09:17:37 -08:00
Alex Crichton
ec7a50d20d std: Redesign c_str and c_vec
This commit is an implementation of [RFC 494][rfc] which removes the entire
`std::c_vec` module and redesigns the `std::c_str` module as `std::ffi`.

[rfc]: https://github.com/rust-lang/rfcs/blob/master/text/0494-c_str-and-c_vec-stability.md

The interface of the new `CString` is outlined in the linked RFC, the primary
changes being:

* The `ToCStr` trait is gone, meaning the `with_c_str` and `to_c_str` methods
  are now gone. These two methods are replaced with a `CString::from_slice`
  method.
* The `CString` type is now just a wrapper around `Vec<u8>` with a static
  guarantee that there is a trailing nul byte with no internal nul bytes. This
  means that `CString` now implements `Deref<Target = [c_char]>`, which is where
  it gains most of its methods from. A few helper methods are added to acquire a
  slice of `u8` instead of `c_char`, as well as including a slice with the
  trailing nul byte if necessary.
* All usage of non-owned `CString` values is now done via two functions inside
  of `std::ffi`, called `c_str_to_bytes` and `c_str_to_bytes_with_nul`. These
  functions are now the one method used to convert a `*const c_char` to a Rust
  slice of `u8`.

Many more details, including newly deprecated methods, can be found linked in
the RFC. This is a:

[breaking-change]
Closes #20444
2015-01-05 08:00:13 -08:00
Jorge Aparicio
56dcbd17fd sed -i -s 's/\bmod,/self,/g' **/*.rs 2015-01-03 22:42:21 -05:00
Alex Crichton
56290a0044 std: Stabilize the prelude module
This commit is an implementation of [RFC 503][rfc] which is a stabilization
story for the prelude. Most of the RFC was directly applied, removing reexports.
Some reexports are kept around, however:

* `range` remains until range syntax has landed to reduce churn.
* `Path` and `GenericPath` remain until path reform lands. This is done to
  prevent many imports of `GenericPath` which will soon be removed.
* All `io` traits remain until I/O reform lands so imports can be rewritten all
  at once to `std::io::prelude::*`.

This is a breaking change because many prelude reexports have been removed, and
the RFC can be consulted for the exact list of removed reexports, as well as to
find the locations of where to import them.

[rfc]: https://github.com/rust-lang/rfcs/blob/master/text/0503-prelude-stabilization.md
[breaking-change]

Closes #20068
2015-01-02 08:54:06 -08:00
Alex Crichton
aec67c2ee0 Revert "std: Re-enable at_exit()"
This reverts commit 9e224c2bf1.

Conflicts:
	src/libstd/sys/windows/os.rs
2014-12-31 10:20:31 -08:00
Alex Crichton
b936fb3d16 rollup merge of #20286: murarth/get-address-name 2014-12-30 16:26:02 -08:00
Alex Crichton
9e224c2bf1 std: Re-enable at_exit()
The new semantics of this function are that the callbacks are run when the *main
thread* exits, not when all threads have exited. This implies that other threads
may still be running when the `at_exit` callbacks are invoked and users need to
be prepared for this situation.

Users in the standard library have been audited in accordance to these new rules
as well.

Closes #20012
2014-12-30 14:33:59 -08:00
Murarth
e6c8b8f480 Added get_address_name, an interface to getnameinfo 2014-12-28 15:45:43 -07:00