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rust/src/libstd/lib.rs
Brian Anderson d36a8f3f9c collections: Move push/pop to MutableSeq
Implement for Vec, DList, RingBuf. Add MutableSeq to the prelude.

Since the collections traits are in the prelude most consumers of
these methods will continue to work without change.

[breaking-change]
2014-07-23 13:20:10 -07:00

293 lines
9.2 KiB
Rust

// Copyright 2012-2014 The Rust Project Developers. See the COPYRIGHT
// file at the top-level directory of this distribution and at
// http://rust-lang.org/COPYRIGHT.
//
// Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0 <LICENSE-APACHE or
// http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0> or the MIT license
// <LICENSE-MIT or http://opensource.org/licenses/MIT>, at your
// option. This file may not be copied, modified, or distributed
// except according to those terms.
//! # The Rust Standard Library
//!
//! The Rust Standard Library provides the essential runtime
//! functionality for building portable Rust software.
//! It is linked to all Rust crates by default.
//!
//! ## Intrinsic types and operations
//!
//! The [`ptr`](ptr/index.html) and [`mem`](mem/index.html)
//! modules deal with unsafe pointers and memory manipulation.
//! [`kinds`](kinds/index.html) defines the special built-in traits,
//! and [`raw`](raw/index.html) the runtime representation of Rust types.
//! These are some of the lowest-level building blocks in Rust.
//!
//! ## Math on primitive types and math traits
//!
//! Although basic operations on primitive types are implemented
//! directly by the compiler, the standard library additionally
//! defines many common operations through traits defined in
//! mod [`num`](num/index.html).
//!
//! ## Pervasive types
//!
//! The [`option`](option/index.html) and [`result`](result/index.html)
//! modules define optional and error-handling types, `Option` and `Result`.
//! [`iter`](iter/index.html) defines Rust's iterator protocol
//! along with a wide variety of iterators.
//! [`Cell` and `RefCell`](cell/index.html) are for creating types that
//! manage their own mutability.
//!
//! ## Vectors, slices and strings
//!
//! The common container type, `Vec`, a growable vector backed by an
//! array, lives in the [`vec`](vec/index.html) module. References to
//! arrays, `&[T]`, more commonly called "slices", are built-in types
//! for which the [`slice`](slice/index.html) module defines many
//! methods.
//!
//! `&str`, a UTF-8 string, is a built-in type, and the standard library
//! defines methods for it on a variety of traits in the
//! [`str`](str/index.html) module. Rust strings are immutable;
//! use the `String` type defined in [`string`](string/index.html)
//! for a mutable string builder.
//!
//! For converting to strings use the [`format!`](fmt/index.html)
//! macro, and for converting from strings use the
//! [`FromStr`](from_str/index.html) trait.
//!
//! ## Platform abstractions
//!
//! Besides basic data types, the standard library is largely concerned
//! with abstracting over differences in common platforms, most notably
//! Windows and Unix derivatives. The [`os`](os/index.html) module
//! provides a number of basic functions for interacting with the
//! operating environment, including program arguments, environment
//! variables, and directory navigation. The [`path`](path/index.html)
//! module encapsulates the platform-specific rules for dealing
//! with file paths.
//!
//! `std` also includes modules for interoperating with the
//! C language: [`c_str`](c_str/index.html) and
//! [`c_vec`](c_vec/index.html).
//!
//! ## Concurrency, I/O, and the runtime
//!
//! The [`task`](task/index.html) module contains Rust's threading abstractions,
//! while [`comm`](comm/index.html) contains the channel types for message
//! passing. [`sync`](sync/index.html) contains further, primitive, shared
//! memory types, including [`atomics`](sync/atomics/index.html).
//!
//! Common types of I/O, including files, TCP, UDP, pipes, Unix domain sockets,
//! timers, and process spawning, are defined in the [`io`](io/index.html) module.
//!
//! Rust's I/O and concurrency depends on a small runtime interface
//! that lives, along with its support code, in mod [`rt`](rt/index.html).
//! While a notable part of the standard library's architecture, this
//! module is not intended for public use.
//!
//! ## The Rust prelude and macros
//!
//! Finally, the [`prelude`](prelude/index.html) defines a
//! common set of traits, types, and functions that are made available
//! to all code by default. [`macros`](macros/index.html) contains
//! all the standard macros, such as `assert!`, `fail!`, `println!`,
//! and `format!`, also available to all Rust code.
#![crate_name = "std"]
#![unstable]
#![comment = "The Rust standard library"]
#![license = "MIT/ASL2"]
#![crate_type = "rlib"]
#![crate_type = "dylib"]
#![doc(html_logo_url = "http://www.rust-lang.org/logos/rust-logo-128x128-blk-v2.png",
html_favicon_url = "http://www.rust-lang.org/favicon.ico",
html_root_url = "http://doc.rust-lang.org/master/",
html_playground_url = "http://play.rust-lang.org/")]
#![feature(macro_rules, globs, managed_boxes, linkage)]
#![feature(default_type_params, phase, lang_items, unsafe_destructor)]
// Don't link to std. We are std.
#![no_std]
#![allow(deprecated)]
#![deny(missing_doc)]
// When testing libstd, bring in libuv as the I/O backend so tests can print
// things and all of the std::io tests have an I/O interface to run on top
// of
#[cfg(test)] extern crate rustuv;
#[cfg(test)] extern crate native;
#[cfg(test)] extern crate green;
#[cfg(test)] extern crate debug;
#[cfg(test)] #[phase(plugin, link)] extern crate log;
extern crate alloc;
extern crate unicode;
extern crate core;
extern crate core_collections = "collections";
extern crate core_rand = "rand";
extern crate core_sync = "sync";
extern crate libc;
extern crate rustrt;
// Make std testable by not duplicating lang items. See #2912
#[cfg(test)] extern crate realstd = "std";
#[cfg(test)] pub use realstd::kinds;
#[cfg(test)] pub use realstd::ops;
#[cfg(test)] pub use realstd::cmp;
#[cfg(test)] pub use realstd::ty;
#[cfg(test)] pub use realstd::boxed;
#[cfg(test)] pub use realstd::gc;
// NB: These reexports are in the order they should be listed in rustdoc
pub use core::any;
pub use core::bool;
pub use core::cell;
pub use core::clone;
#[cfg(not(test))] pub use core::cmp;
pub use core::default;
pub use core::finally;
pub use core::intrinsics;
pub use core::iter;
#[cfg(not(test))] pub use core::kinds;
pub use core::mem;
#[cfg(not(test))] pub use core::ops;
pub use core::ptr;
pub use core::raw;
pub use core::simd;
pub use core::tuple;
// FIXME #15320: primitive documentation needs top-level modules, this
// should be `std::tuple::unit`.
pub use core::unit;
#[cfg(not(test))] pub use core::ty;
pub use core::result;
pub use core::option;
pub use alloc::boxed;
#[deprecated = "use boxed instead"]
pub use owned = boxed;
pub use alloc::rc;
pub use core_collections::slice;
pub use core_collections::str;
pub use core_collections::string;
pub use core_collections::vec;
pub use rustrt::c_str;
pub use rustrt::local_data;
pub use unicode::char;
pub use core_sync::comm;
// Run tests with libgreen instead of libnative.
//
// FIXME: This egregiously hacks around starting the test runner in a different
// threading mode than the default by reaching into the auto-generated
// '__test' module.
#[cfg(test)] #[start]
fn start(argc: int, argv: *const *const u8) -> int {
green::start(argc, argv, rustuv::event_loop, __test::main)
}
/* Exported macros */
pub mod macros;
pub mod bitflags;
mod rtdeps;
/* The Prelude. */
pub mod prelude;
/* Primitive types */
#[path = "num/float_macros.rs"] mod float_macros;
#[path = "num/int_macros.rs"] mod int_macros;
#[path = "num/uint_macros.rs"] mod uint_macros;
#[path = "num/int.rs"] pub mod int;
#[path = "num/i8.rs"] pub mod i8;
#[path = "num/i16.rs"] pub mod i16;
#[path = "num/i32.rs"] pub mod i32;
#[path = "num/i64.rs"] pub mod i64;
#[path = "num/uint.rs"] pub mod uint;
#[path = "num/u8.rs"] pub mod u8;
#[path = "num/u16.rs"] pub mod u16;
#[path = "num/u32.rs"] pub mod u32;
#[path = "num/u64.rs"] pub mod u64;
#[path = "num/f32.rs"] pub mod f32;
#[path = "num/f64.rs"] pub mod f64;
pub mod rand;
pub mod ascii;
#[cfg(not(test))]
pub mod gc;
/* Common traits */
pub mod from_str;
pub mod num;
pub mod to_string;
/* Common data structures */
pub mod collections;
pub mod hash;
/* Tasks and communication */
pub mod task;
pub mod sync;
/* Runtime and platform support */
pub mod c_vec;
pub mod dynamic_lib;
pub mod os;
pub mod io;
pub mod path;
pub mod fmt;
// FIXME #7809: This shouldn't be pub, and it should be reexported under 'unstable'
// but name resolution doesn't work without it being pub.
#[unstable]
pub mod rt;
mod failure;
// A curious inner-module that's not exported that contains the binding
// 'std' so that macro-expanded references to std::error and such
// can be resolved within libstd.
#[doc(hidden)]
mod std {
// mods used for deriving
pub use clone;
pub use cmp;
pub use hash;
pub use comm; // used for select!()
pub use fmt; // used for any formatting strings
pub use io; // used for println!()
pub use local_data; // used for local_data_key!()
pub use option; // used for bitflags!()
pub use rt; // used for fail!()
pub use vec; // used for vec![]
// The test runner calls ::std::os::args() but really wants realstd
#[cfg(test)] pub use os = realstd::os;
// The test runner requires std::slice::Vector, so re-export std::slice just for it.
#[cfg(test)] pub use slice;
pub use collections; // vec!() uses MutableSeq
}