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yaml --- r: 234072 b: refs/heads/beta c: d2a5b11 h: refs/heads/master v: v3
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[refs]

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@@ -23,7 +23,7 @@ refs/tags/0.9: 36870b185fc5f5486636d4515f0e22677493f225
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refs/tags/0.10: ac33f2b15782272ae348dbd7b14b8257b2148b5a
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refs/tags/0.11.0: e1247cb1d0d681be034adb4b558b5a0c0d5720f9
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refs/tags/0.12.0: f0c419429ef30723ceaf6b42f9b5a2aeb5d2e2d1
26-
refs/heads/beta: 31310f5b65232ce9714f8f4c9ad066a97f7f20f4
26+
refs/heads/beta: d2a5b117c1933d16072e78bb9b58604984597fca
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refs/tags/1.0.0-alpha: e42bd6d93a1d3433c486200587f8f9e12590a4d7
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refs/heads/tmp: 370fe2786109360f7c35b8ba552b83b773dd71d6
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refs/tags/1.0.0-alpha.2: 4c705f6bc559886632d3871b04f58aab093bfa2f

branches/beta/configure

Lines changed: 15 additions & 4 deletions
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@@ -1180,16 +1180,27 @@ do
11801180
# MSVC requires cmake because that's how we're going to build LLVM
11811181
probe_need CFG_CMAKE cmake
11821182

1183+
# There are three builds of cmake on windows: MSVC, MinGW and Cygwin
1184+
# The Cygwin build does not have generators for Visual Studio, so
1185+
# detect that here and error.
1186+
if ! "$CFG_CMAKE" --help | sed -n '/^Generators/,$p' | grep 'Visual Studio' > /dev/null
1187+
then
1188+
err "cmake does not support Visual Studio generators.\n\n \
1189+
This is likely due to it being an msys/cygwin build of cmake, \
1190+
rather than the required windows version, built using MinGW \
1191+
or Visual Studio."
1192+
fi
1193+
11831194
# Use the REG program to figure out where VS is installed
11841195
# We need to figure out where cl.exe and link.exe are, so we do some
11851196
# munging and some probing here. We also look for the default
11861197
# INCLUDE and LIB variables for MSVC so we can set those in the
11871198
# build system as well.
1188-
install=$(reg QUERY \
1199+
install=$(cmd //c reg QUERY \
11891200
'HKLM\SOFTWARE\Wow6432Node\Microsoft\VisualStudio\14.0' \
11901201
-v InstallDir)
11911202
if [ -z "$install" ]; then
1192-
install=$(reg QUERY \
1203+
install=$(cmd //c reg QUERY \
11931204
'HKLM\SOFTWARE\Wow6432Node\Microsoft\VisualStudio\12.0' \
11941205
-v InstallDir)
11951206
fi
@@ -1222,9 +1233,9 @@ do
12221233
eval CFG_MSVC_LINK_$bits="\"$bindir/link.exe\""
12231234

12241235
vcvarsall="${CFG_MSVC_ROOT}/VC/vcvarsall.bat"
1225-
include_path=$(cmd /c "\"$vcvarsall\" $msvc_part && cmd /c echo %INCLUDE%")
1236+
include_path=$(cmd //V:ON //c "$vcvarsall" $msvc_part \& echo !INCLUDE!)
12261237
need_ok "failed to learn about MSVC's INCLUDE"
1227-
lib_path=$(cmd /c "\"$vcvarsall\" $msvc_part && cmd /c echo %LIB%")
1238+
lib_path=$(cmd //V:ON //c "$vcvarsall" $msvc_part \& echo !LIB!)
12281239
need_ok "failed to learn about MSVC's LIB"
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12301241
eval CFG_MSVC_INCLUDE_PATH_${bits}="\"$include_path\""

branches/beta/mk/crates.mk

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@@ -54,7 +54,7 @@ TARGET_CRATES := libc std flate arena term \
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log graphviz core rbml alloc \
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rustc_unicode rustc_bitflags \
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alloc_system
57-
RUSTC_CRATES := rustc rustc_typeck rustc_borrowck rustc_resolve rustc_driver \
57+
RUSTC_CRATES := rustc rustc_typeck rustc_mir rustc_borrowck rustc_resolve rustc_driver \
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rustc_trans rustc_back rustc_llvm rustc_privacy rustc_lint \
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rustc_data_structures rustc_front rustc_platform_intrinsics
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HOST_CRATES := syntax $(RUSTC_CRATES) rustdoc fmt_macros
@@ -70,11 +70,12 @@ DEPS_std := core libc rand alloc collections rustc_unicode \
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DEPS_graphviz := std
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DEPS_syntax := std term serialize log fmt_macros arena libc rustc_bitflags
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DEPS_rustc_driver := arena flate getopts graphviz libc rustc rustc_back rustc_borrowck \
73-
rustc_typeck rustc_resolve log syntax serialize rustc_llvm \
73+
rustc_typeck rustc_mir rustc_resolve log syntax serialize rustc_llvm \
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rustc_trans rustc_privacy rustc_lint rustc_front
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DEPS_rustc_trans := arena flate getopts graphviz libc rustc rustc_back \
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log syntax serialize rustc_llvm rustc_front rustc_platform_intrinsics
78+
DEPS_rustc_mir := rustc rustc_front syntax
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DEPS_rustc_typeck := rustc syntax rustc_front rustc_platform_intrinsics
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DEPS_rustc_borrowck := rustc rustc_front log graphviz syntax
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DEPS_rustc_resolve := rustc rustc_front log syntax

branches/beta/mk/main.mk

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@@ -172,6 +172,18 @@ RUST_LIB_FLAGS_ST3 += -C prefer-dynamic
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# by not emitting them.
173173
RUSTFLAGS_STAGE0 += -Z no-landing-pads
174174

175+
# Enable MIR to "always build" for crates where this works. This is
176+
# just temporary while MIR is being actively built up -- it's just a
177+
# poor man's unit testing infrastructure. Anyway we only want this for
178+
# stage1/stage2.
179+
define ADD_MIR_FLAG
180+
RUSTFLAGS1_$(1) += -Z always-build-mir
181+
RUSTFLAGS2_$(1) += -Z always-build-mir
182+
endef
183+
$(foreach crate,$(TARGET_CRATES),$(eval $(call ADD_MIR_FLAG,$(crate))))
184+
$(foreach crate,$(RUSTC_CRATES),$(eval $(call ADD_MIR_FLAG,$(crate))))
185+
$(foreach crate,$(HOST_CRATES),$(eval $(call ADD_MIR_FLAG,$(crate))))
186+
175187
# platform-specific auto-configuration
176188
include $(CFG_SRC_DIR)mk/platform.mk
177189

branches/beta/mk/target.mk

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@@ -93,6 +93,7 @@ $$(TLIB$(1)_T_$(2)_H_$(3))/stamp.$(4): \
9393
$$(LLVM_LIBDIR_RUSTFLAGS_$(2)) \
9494
$$(LLVM_STDCPP_RUSTFLAGS_$(2)) \
9595
$$(RUSTFLAGS_$(4)) \
96+
$$(RUSTFLAGS$(1)_$(4)) \
9697
$$(RUSTFLAGS$(1)_$(4)_T_$(2)) \
9798
--out-dir $$(@D) \
9899
-C extra-filename=-$$(CFG_FILENAME_EXTRA) \

branches/beta/src/doc/index.md

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@@ -20,13 +20,30 @@ series of small examples.
2020

2121
[rbe]: http://rustbyexample.com/
2222

23-
# The Standard Library
23+
# Language Reference
24+
25+
Rust does not have an exact specification yet, but an effort to describe as much of
26+
the language in as much detail as possible is in [the reference](reference.html).
27+
28+
# Standard Library Reference
2429

2530
We have [API documentation for the entire standard
2631
library](std/index.html). There's a list of crates on the left with more
2732
specific sections, or you can use the search bar at the top to search for
2833
something if you know its name.
2934

35+
# Tools
36+
37+
[Cargo](https://crates.io) is the Rust's package manager providing access to libraries
38+
beyond the standard one, and its website contains lots of good documentation.
39+
40+
[`rustdoc`](book/documentation.html) is the Rust's documentation generator, a tool converting
41+
annotated source code into HTML docs.
42+
43+
A bunch of non-official tools are available, such as [Racer](https://github.com/phildawes/racer)
44+
(code completion engine), or [rustfmt](https://github.com/nrc/rustfmt) (source code formatter),
45+
or text editor plugins.
46+
3047
# Community & Getting Help
3148

3249
If you need help with something, or just want to talk about Rust with others,
@@ -54,25 +71,10 @@ There is an active [subreddit](https://reddit.com/r/rust) with lots of
5471
discussion and news about Rust.
5572

5673
There is also a [user forum](https://users.rust-lang.org), for all
57-
user-oriented discussion, and a [developer
74+
user-oriented discussion, and a [developer
5875
forum](https://internals.rust-lang.org/), where the development of Rust
5976
itself is discussed.
6077

61-
# Specification
62-
63-
Rust does not have an exact specification, but an effort to describe as much of
64-
the language in as much detail as possible is in [the reference](reference.html).
65-
66-
# Tools
67-
68-
Rust is still a young language, so there isn't a ton of tooling yet, but the
69-
tools we have are really nice.
70-
71-
[Cargo](https://crates.io) is Rust's package manager, and its website contains
72-
lots of good documentation.
73-
74-
[`rustdoc`](book/documentation.html) is used to generate documentation for Rust code.
75-
7678
# FAQs
7779

7880
There are questions that are asked quite often, so we've made FAQs for them:

branches/beta/src/doc/nomicon/vec-drain.md

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@@ -129,14 +129,16 @@ impl<'a, T> Drop for Drain<'a, T> {
129129
130130
impl<T> Vec<T> {
131131
pub fn drain(&mut self) -> Drain<T> {
132-
// this is a mem::forget safety thing. If Drain is forgotten, we just
133-
// leak the whole Vec's contents. Also we need to do this eventually
134-
// anyway, so why not do it now?
135-
self.len = 0;
136-
137132
unsafe {
133+
let iter = RawValIter::new(&self);
134+
135+
// this is a mem::forget safety thing. If Drain is forgotten, we just
136+
// leak the whole Vec's contents. Also we need to do this *eventually*
137+
// anyway, so why not do it now?
138+
self.len = 0;
139+
138140
Drain {
139-
iter: RawValIter::new(&self),
141+
iter: iter,
140142
vec: PhantomData,
141143
}
142144
}

branches/beta/src/doc/nomicon/vec-final.md

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@@ -155,13 +155,16 @@ impl<T> Vec<T> {
155155
}
156156

157157
pub fn drain(&mut self) -> Drain<T> {
158-
// this is a mem::forget safety thing. If this is forgotten, we just
159-
// leak the whole Vec's contents. Also we need to do this *eventually*
160-
// anyway, so why not do it now?
161-
self.len = 0;
162158
unsafe {
159+
let iter = RawValIter::new(&self);
160+
161+
// this is a mem::forget safety thing. If Drain is forgotten, we just
162+
// leak the whole Vec's contents. Also we need to do this *eventually*
163+
// anyway, so why not do it now?
164+
self.len = 0;
165+
163166
Drain {
164-
iter: RawValIter::new(&self),
167+
iter: iter,
165168
vec: PhantomData,
166169
}
167170
}

branches/beta/src/doc/trpl/advanced-linking.md

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@@ -34,8 +34,8 @@ formal `#[link(...)]` attribute on `extern` blocks instead.
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3535
# Static linking
3636

37-
Static linking refers to the process of creating output that contain all
38-
required libraries and so don't need libraries installed on every system where
37+
Static linking refers to the process of creating output that contains all
38+
required libraries and so doesn't need libraries installed on every system where
3939
you want to use your compiled project. Pure-Rust dependencies are statically
4040
linked by default so you can use created binaries and libraries without
4141
installing Rust everywhere. By contrast, native libraries

branches/beta/src/doc/trpl/macros.md

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@@ -313,7 +313,7 @@ fn main() {
313313
}
314314
```
315315

316-
This works because Rust has a [hygienic macro system][]. Each macro expansion
316+
This works because Rust has a [hygienic macro system][https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hygienic_macro]. Each macro expansion
317317
happens in a distinct ‘syntax context’, and each variable is tagged with the
318318
syntax context where it was introduced. It’s as though the variable `state`
319319
inside `main` is painted a different "color" from the variable `state` inside

branches/beta/src/doc/trpl/method-syntax.md

Lines changed: 8 additions & 8 deletions
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@@ -7,7 +7,7 @@ can be awkward. Consider this code:
77
baz(bar(foo));
88
```
99

10-
We would read this left-to right, and so we see ‘baz bar foo’. But this isn’t the
10+
We would read this left-to-right, and so we see ‘baz bar foo’. But this isn’t the
1111
order that the functions would get called in, that’s inside-out: ‘foo bar baz’.
1212
Wouldn’t it be nice if we could do this instead?
1313

@@ -45,17 +45,17 @@ This will print `12.566371`.
4545

4646

4747

48-
We’ve made a struct that represents a circle. We then write an `impl` block,
48+
We’ve made a `struct` that represents a circle. We then write an `impl` block,
4949
and inside it, define a method, `area`.
5050

51-
Methods take a special first parameter, of which there are three variants:
51+
Methods take a special first parameter, of which there are three variants:
5252
`self`, `&self`, and `&mut self`. You can think of this first parameter as
5353
being the `foo` in `foo.bar()`. The three variants correspond to the three
5454
kinds of things `foo` could be: `self` if it’s just a value on the stack,
5555
`&self` if it’s a reference, and `&mut self` if it’s a mutable reference.
5656
Because we took the `&self` parameter to `area`, we can use it just like any
5757
other parameter. Because we know it’s a `Circle`, we can access the `radius`
58-
just like we would with any other struct.
58+
just like we would with any other `struct`.
5959

6060
We should default to using `&self`, as you should prefer borrowing over taking
6161
ownership, as well as taking immutable references over mutable ones. Here’s an
@@ -120,12 +120,12 @@ Check the return type:
120120
```rust
121121
# struct Circle;
122122
# impl Circle {
123-
fn grow(&self) -> Circle {
123+
fn grow(&self, increment: f64) -> Circle {
124124
# Circle } }
125125
```
126126

127127
We just say we’re returning a `Circle`. With this method, we can grow a new
128-
circle to any arbitrary size.
128+
`Circle` to any arbitrary size.
129129

130130
# Associated functions
131131

@@ -161,7 +161,7 @@ methods’.
161161

162162
# Builder Pattern
163163

164-
Let’s say that we want our users to be able to create Circles, but we will
164+
Let’s say that we want our users to be able to create `Circle`s, but we will
165165
allow them to only set the properties they care about. Otherwise, the `x`
166166
and `y` attributes will be `0.0`, and the `radius` will be `1.0`. Rust doesn’t
167167
have method overloading, named arguments, or variable arguments. We employ
@@ -224,7 +224,7 @@ fn main() {
224224
}
225225
```
226226

227-
What we’ve done here is make another struct, `CircleBuilder`. We’ve defined our
227+
What we’ve done here is make another `struct`, `CircleBuilder`. We’ve defined our
228228
builder methods on it. We’ve also defined our `area()` method on `Circle`. We
229229
also made one more method on `CircleBuilder`: `finalize()`. This method creates
230230
our final `Circle` from the builder. Now, we’ve used the type system to enforce

branches/beta/src/etc/platform-intrinsics/aarch64.json

Lines changed: 42 additions & 0 deletions
Original file line numberDiff line numberDiff line change
@@ -336,6 +336,48 @@
336336
"ret": "i8",
337337
"args": ["0"]
338338
},
339+
{
340+
"intrinsic": "ld2{0[0].width}_{0[0].data_type}",
341+
"width": [64, 128],
342+
"llvm": "ld2.{0[0].llvm_name}.{1.llvm_name}",
343+
"ret": ["[i(8-64);2]","[f(32-64);2]"],
344+
"args": ["0.0SPc/0.0"]
345+
},
346+
{
347+
"intrinsic": "ld3{0[0].width}_{0[0].data_type}",
348+
"width": [64, 128],
349+
"llvm": "ld3.{0[0].llvm_name}.{1.llvm_name}",
350+
"ret": ["[i(8-64);3]","[f(32-64);3]"],
351+
"args": ["0.0SPc/0.0"]
352+
},
353+
{
354+
"intrinsic": "ld4{0[0].width}_{0[0].data_type}",
355+
"width": [64, 128],
356+
"llvm": "ld4.{0[0].llvm_name}.{1.llvm_name}",
357+
"ret": ["[i(8-64);4]","[f(32-64);4]"],
358+
"args": ["0.0SPc/0.0"]
359+
},
360+
{
361+
"intrinsic": "ld2{0[0].width}_dup_{0[0].data_type}",
362+
"width": [64, 128],
363+
"llvm": "ld2.{0[0].llvm_name}.{1.llvm_name}",
364+
"ret": ["[i(8-64);2]","[f(32-64);2]"],
365+
"args": ["0.0SPc"]
366+
},
367+
{
368+
"intrinsic": "ld3{0[0].width}_dup_{0[0].data_type}",
369+
"width": [64, 128],
370+
"llvm": "ld3.{0[0].llvm_name}.{1.llvm_name}",
371+
"ret": ["[i(8-64);3]","[f(32-64);3]"],
372+
"args": ["0.0SPc"]
373+
},
374+
{
375+
"intrinsic": "ld4{0[0].width}_dup_{0[0].data_type}",
376+
"width": [64, 128],
377+
"llvm": "ld4.{0[0].llvm_name}.{1.llvm_name}",
378+
"ret": ["[i(8-64);4]","[f(32-64);4]"],
379+
"args": ["0.0SPc"]
380+
},
339381
{
340382
"intrinsic": "padd{0.width}_{0.data_type}",
341383
"width": [64, 128],

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