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[refs]

Lines changed: 1 addition & 1 deletion
Original file line numberDiff line numberDiff line change
@@ -2,7 +2,7 @@
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refs/heads/master: 3e561f05c00cd180ec02db4ccab2840a4aba93d2
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refs/heads/snap-stage1: e33de59e47c5076a89eadeb38f4934f58a3618a6
44
refs/heads/snap-stage3: ba0e1cd8147d452c356aacb29fb87568ca26f111
5-
refs/heads/try: 497942332f919b1a952310a730349ca1b9524968
5+
refs/heads/try: c82da7a54b9efb1a0ccbe11de66c71f547bf7db9
66
refs/tags/release-0.1: 1f5c5126e96c79d22cb7862f75304136e204f105
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refs/heads/dist-snap: ba4081a5a8573875fed17545846f6f6902c8ba8d
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refs/tags/release-0.2: c870d2dffb391e14efb05aa27898f1f6333a9596

branches/try/AUTHORS.txt

Lines changed: 1 addition & 1 deletion
Original file line numberDiff line numberDiff line change
@@ -518,7 +518,6 @@ Luke Francl <[email protected]>
518518
Luke Metz <[email protected]>
519519
Luke Steensen <[email protected]>
520520
Luqman Aden <[email protected]>
521-
Łukasz Niemier <[email protected]>
522521
Magnus Auvinen <[email protected]>
523522
Mahmut Bulut <[email protected]>
524523
Makoto Nakashima <[email protected]>
@@ -998,4 +997,5 @@ xales <[email protected]>
998997
999998
1000999
1000+
Łukasz Niemier <[email protected]>
10011001

branches/try/configure

Lines changed: 7 additions & 23 deletions
Original file line numberDiff line numberDiff line change
@@ -19,11 +19,6 @@ err() {
1919
exit 1
2020
}
2121

22-
run() {
23-
msg "$@"
24-
"$@"
25-
}
26-
2722
need_ok() {
2823
if [ $? -ne 0 ]
2924
then
@@ -41,7 +36,8 @@ need_cmd() {
4136
make_dir() {
4237
if [ ! -d $1 ]
4338
then
44-
run mkdir -p $1
39+
msg "mkdir -p $1"
40+
mkdir -p $1
4541
fi
4642
}
4743

@@ -50,7 +46,8 @@ copy_if_changed() {
5046
then
5147
msg "leaving $2 unchanged"
5248
else
53-
run cp -f $1 $2
49+
msg "cp $1 $2"
50+
cp -f $1 $2
5451
chmod u-w $2 # make copied artifact read-only
5552
fi
5653
}
@@ -60,7 +57,8 @@ move_if_changed() {
6057
then
6158
msg "leaving $2 unchanged"
6259
else
63-
run mv -f $1 $2
60+
msg "mv $1 $2"
61+
mv -f $1 $2
6462
chmod u-w $2 # make moved artifact read-only
6563
fi
6664
}
@@ -735,20 +733,6 @@ then
735733
probe CFG_JAVAC javac
736734
fi
737735

738-
# the valgrind rpass tests will fail if you don't have a valgrind, but they're
739-
# only disabled if you opt out.
740-
if [ -z "$CFG_VALGRIND" ]
741-
then
742-
# If the user has explicitly asked for valgrind tests, then fail
743-
if [ -n "$CFG_ENABLE_VALGRIND" ] && [ -n "$CFG_ENABLE_VALGRIND_PROVIDED" ]
744-
then
745-
err "No valgrind present, but valgrind tests explicitly requested"
746-
else
747-
CFG_DISABLE_VALGRIND_RPASS=1
748-
putvar CFG_DISABLE_VALGRIND_RPASS
749-
fi
750-
fi
751-
752736
if [ ! -z "$CFG_GDB" ]
753737
then
754738
# Store GDB's version
@@ -860,7 +844,7 @@ then
860844
CFG_OSX_GCC_VERSION=$("$CFG_GCC" --version 2>&1 | grep "Apple LLVM version")
861845
if [ $? -eq 0 ]
862846
then
863-
step_msg "on OS X >=10.9, forcing use of clang"
847+
step_msg "on OS X 10.9, forcing use of clang"
864848
CFG_ENABLE_CLANG=1
865849
else
866850
if [ $("$CFG_GCC" --version 2>&1 | grep -c ' 4\.[0-6]') -ne 0 ]; then

branches/try/mk/crates.mk

Lines changed: 1 addition & 3 deletions
Original file line numberDiff line numberDiff line change
@@ -58,7 +58,7 @@ RUSTC_CRATES := rustc rustc_typeck rustc_borrowck rustc_resolve rustc_driver \
5858
rustc_data_structures
5959
HOST_CRATES := syntax $(RUSTC_CRATES) rustdoc fmt_macros
6060
CRATES := $(TARGET_CRATES) $(HOST_CRATES)
61-
TOOLS := compiletest rustdoc rustc rustbook error-index-generator
61+
TOOLS := compiletest rustdoc rustc rustbook
6262

6363
DEPS_core :=
6464
DEPS_libc := core
@@ -107,12 +107,10 @@ TOOL_DEPS_compiletest := test getopts
107107
TOOL_DEPS_rustdoc := rustdoc
108108
TOOL_DEPS_rustc := rustc_driver
109109
TOOL_DEPS_rustbook := std rustdoc
110-
TOOL_DEPS_error-index-generator := rustdoc syntax serialize
111110
TOOL_SOURCE_compiletest := $(S)src/compiletest/compiletest.rs
112111
TOOL_SOURCE_rustdoc := $(S)src/driver/driver.rs
113112
TOOL_SOURCE_rustc := $(S)src/driver/driver.rs
114113
TOOL_SOURCE_rustbook := $(S)src/rustbook/main.rs
115-
TOOL_SOURCE_error-index-generator := $(S)src/error-index-generator/main.rs
116114

117115
ONLY_RLIB_core := 1
118116
ONLY_RLIB_libc := 1

branches/try/mk/dist.mk

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Original file line numberDiff line numberDiff line change
@@ -52,7 +52,6 @@ PKG_FILES := \
5252
doc \
5353
driver \
5454
etc \
55-
error-index-generator \
5655
$(foreach crate,$(CRATES),lib$(crate)) \
5756
libcollectionstest \
5857
libcoretest \

branches/try/mk/docs.mk

Lines changed: 1 addition & 11 deletions
Original file line numberDiff line numberDiff line change
@@ -71,13 +71,9 @@ RUSTBOOK_EXE = $(HBIN2_H_$(CFG_BUILD))/rustbook$(X_$(CFG_BUILD))
7171
# ./configure
7272
RUSTBOOK = $(RPATH_VAR2_T_$(CFG_BUILD)_H_$(CFG_BUILD)) $(RUSTBOOK_EXE)
7373

74-
# The error-index-generator executable...
75-
ERR_IDX_GEN_EXE = $(HBIN2_H_$(CFG_BUILD))/error-index-generator$(X_$(CFG_BUILD))
76-
ERR_IDX_GEN = $(RPATH_VAR2_T_$(CFG_BUILD)_H_$(CFG_BUILD)) $(ERR_IDX_GEN_EXE)
77-
7874
D := $(S)src/doc
7975

80-
DOC_TARGETS := trpl style error-index
76+
DOC_TARGETS := trpl style
8177
COMPILER_DOC_TARGETS :=
8278
DOC_L10N_TARGETS :=
8379

@@ -292,9 +288,3 @@ doc/style/index.html: $(RUSTBOOK_EXE) $(wildcard $(S)/src/doc/style/*.md) | doc/
292288
@$(call E, rustbook: $@)
293289
$(Q)rm -rf doc/style
294290
$(Q)$(RUSTBOOK) build $(S)src/doc/style doc/style
295-
296-
error-index: doc/error-index.html
297-
298-
doc/error-index.html: $(ERR_IDX_GEN_EXE) | doc/
299-
$(Q)$(call E, error-index-generator: $@)
300-
$(Q)$(ERR_IDX_GEN)

branches/try/mk/main.mk

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Original file line numberDiff line numberDiff line change
@@ -195,7 +195,6 @@ ifndef CFG_DISABLE_VALGRIND_RPASS
195195
$(info cfg: valgrind-rpass command set to $(CFG_VALGRIND))
196196
CFG_VALGRIND_RPASS :=$(CFG_VALGRIND)
197197
else
198-
$(info cfg: disabling valgrind run-pass tests)
199198
CFG_VALGRIND_RPASS :=
200199
endif
201200

branches/try/mk/prepare.mk

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Original file line numberDiff line numberDiff line change
@@ -70,7 +70,7 @@ define PREPARE_MAN
7070
$(Q)$(PREPARE_MAN_CMD) $(PREPARE_SOURCE_MAN_DIR)/$(1) $(PREPARE_DEST_MAN_DIR)/$(1)
7171
endef
7272

73-
PREPARE_TOOLS = $(filter-out compiletest rustbook error-index-generator, $(TOOLS))
73+
PREPARE_TOOLS = $(filter-out compiletest rustbook, $(TOOLS))
7474

7575

7676
# $(1) is tool

branches/try/src/compiletest/compiletest.rs

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Original file line numberDiff line numberDiff line change
@@ -226,15 +226,15 @@ pub fn run_tests(config: &Config) {
226226
}
227227

228228
// android debug-info test uses remote debugger
229-
// so, we test 1 thread at once.
229+
// so, we test 1 task at once.
230230
// also trying to isolate problems with adb_run_wrapper.sh ilooping
231231
env::set_var("RUST_TEST_THREADS","1");
232232
}
233233

234234
match config.mode {
235235
DebugInfoLldb => {
236236
// Some older versions of LLDB seem to have problems with multiple
237-
// instances running in parallel, so only run one test thread at a
237+
// instances running in parallel, so only run one test task at a
238238
// time.
239239
env::set_var("RUST_TEST_THREADS", "1");
240240
}

branches/try/src/doc/complement-design-faq.md

Lines changed: 2 additions & 2 deletions
Original file line numberDiff line numberDiff line change
@@ -39,7 +39,7 @@ representation as a primitive. This allows using Rust `enum`s in FFI where C
3939
`enum`s are also used, for most use cases. The attribute can also be applied
4040
to `struct`s to get the same layout as a C struct would.
4141

42-
[repr]: reference.html#ffi-attributes
42+
[repr]: reference.html#miscellaneous-attributes
4343

4444
## There is no GC
4545

@@ -96,7 +96,7 @@ code should need to run is a stack.
9696
possibility is covered by the `match`, adding further variants to the `enum`
9797
in the future will prompt a compilation failure, rather than runtime panic.
9898
Second, it makes cost explicit. In general, the only safe way to have a
99-
non-exhaustive match would be to panic the thread if nothing is matched, though
99+
non-exhaustive match would be to panic the task if nothing is matched, though
100100
it could fall through if the type of the `match` expression is `()`. This sort
101101
of hidden cost and special casing is against the language's philosophy. It's
102102
easy to ignore certain cases by using the `_` wildcard:

branches/try/src/doc/complement-lang-faq.md

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Original file line numberDiff line numberDiff line change
@@ -62,15 +62,15 @@ Data values in the language can only be constructed through a fixed set of initi
6262
* There is no global inter-crate namespace; all name management occurs within a crate.
6363
* Using another crate binds the root of _its_ namespace into the user's namespace.
6464

65-
## Why is panic unwinding non-recoverable within a thread? Why not try to "catch exceptions"?
65+
## Why is panic unwinding non-recoverable within a task? Why not try to "catch exceptions"?
6666

67-
In short, because too few guarantees could be made about the dynamic environment of the catch block, as well as invariants holding in the unwound heap, to be able to safely resume; we believe that other methods of signalling and logging errors are more appropriate, with threads playing the role of a "hard" isolation boundary between separate heaps.
67+
In short, because too few guarantees could be made about the dynamic environment of the catch block, as well as invariants holding in the unwound heap, to be able to safely resume; we believe that other methods of signalling and logging errors are more appropriate, with tasks playing the role of a "hard" isolation boundary between separate heaps.
6868

6969
Rust provides, instead, three predictable and well-defined options for handling any combination of the three main categories of "catch" logic:
7070

7171
* Failure _logging_ is done by the integrated logging subsystem.
72-
* _Recovery_ after a panic is done by trapping a thread panic from _outside_
73-
the thread, where other threads are known to be unaffected.
72+
* _Recovery_ after a panic is done by trapping a task panic from _outside_
73+
the task, where other tasks are known to be unaffected.
7474
* _Cleanup_ of resources is done by RAII-style objects with destructors.
7575

7676
Cleanup through RAII-style destructors is more likely to work than in catch blocks anyways, since it will be better tested (part of the non-error control paths, so executed all the time).
@@ -91,8 +91,8 @@ We don't know if there's an obvious, easy, efficient, stock-textbook way of supp
9191

9292
There's a lot of debate on this topic; it's easy to find a proponent of default-sync or default-async communication, and there are good reasons for either. Our choice rests on the following arguments:
9393

94-
* Part of the point of isolating threads is to decouple threads from one another, such that assumptions in one thread do not cause undue constraints (or bugs, if violated!) in another. Temporal coupling is as real as any other kind; async-by-default relaxes the default case to only _causal_ coupling.
95-
* Default-async supports buffering and batching communication, reducing the frequency and severity of thread-switching and inter-thread / inter-domain synchronization.
94+
* Part of the point of isolating tasks is to decouple tasks from one another, such that assumptions in one task do not cause undue constraints (or bugs, if violated!) in another. Temporal coupling is as real as any other kind; async-by-default relaxes the default case to only _causal_ coupling.
95+
* Default-async supports buffering and batching communication, reducing the frequency and severity of task-switching and inter-task / inter-domain synchronization.
9696
* Default-async with transmittable channels is the lowest-level building block on which more-complex synchronization topologies and strategies can be built; it is not clear to us that the majority of cases fit the 2-party full-synchronization pattern rather than some more complex multi-party or multi-stage scenario. We did not want to force all programs to pay for wiring the former assumption into all communications.
9797

9898
## Why are channels half-duplex (one-way)?

branches/try/src/doc/grammar.md

Lines changed: 4 additions & 4 deletions
Original file line numberDiff line numberDiff line change
@@ -329,7 +329,7 @@ view_item : extern_crate_decl | use_decl ;
329329

330330
```antlr
331331
extern_crate_decl : "extern" "crate" crate_name
332-
crate_name: ident | ( ident "as" ident )
332+
crate_name: ident | ( string_lit as ident )
333333
```
334334

335335
##### Use declarations
@@ -789,8 +789,8 @@ bound := path | lifetime
789789

790790
### Boxes
791791

792-
## Threads
792+
## Tasks
793793

794-
### Communication between threads
794+
### Communication between tasks
795795

796-
### Thread lifecycle
796+
### Task lifecycle

branches/try/src/doc/reference.md

Lines changed: 11 additions & 9 deletions
Original file line numberDiff line numberDiff line change
@@ -752,10 +752,11 @@ provided in the `extern_crate_decl`.
752752
The external crate is resolved to a specific `soname` at compile time, and a
753753
runtime linkage requirement to that `soname` is passed to the linker for
754754
loading at runtime. The `soname` is resolved at compile time by scanning the
755-
compiler's library path and matching the optional `crateid` provided against
756-
the `crateid` attributes that were declared on the external crate when it was
757-
compiled. If no `crateid` is provided, a default `name` attribute is assumed,
758-
equal to the `ident` given in the `extern_crate_decl`.
755+
compiler's library path and matching the optional `crateid` provided as a
756+
string literal against the `crateid` attributes that were declared on the
757+
external crate when it was compiled. If no `crateid` is provided, a default
758+
`name` attribute is assumed, equal to the `ident` given in the
759+
`extern_crate_decl`.
759760

760761
Three examples of `extern crate` declarations:
761762

@@ -1866,12 +1867,13 @@ macro scope.
18661867
lower to the target's SIMD instructions, if any; the `simd` feature gate
18671868
is necessary to use this attribute.
18681869
- `static_assert` - on statics whose type is `bool`, terminates compilation
1869-
with an error if it is not initialized to `true`. To use this, the `static_assert`
1870-
feature gate must be enabled.
1870+
with an error if it is not initialized to `true`.
1871+
- `unsafe_destructor` - allow implementations of the "drop" language item
1872+
where the type it is implemented for does not implement the "send" language
1873+
item; the `unsafe_destructor` feature gate is needed to use this attribute
18711874
- `unsafe_no_drop_flag` - on structs, remove the flag that prevents
18721875
destructors from being run twice. Destructors might be run multiple times on
1873-
the same object with this attribute. To use this, the `unsafe_no_drop_flag` feature
1874-
gate must be enabled.
1876+
the same object with this attribute.
18751877
- `doc` - Doc comments such as `/// foo` are equivalent to `#[doc = "foo"]`.
18761878
- `rustc_on_unimplemented` - Write a custom note to be shown along with the error
18771879
when the trait is found to be unimplemented on a type.
@@ -3635,7 +3637,7 @@ that have since been removed):
36353637
* ML Kit, Cyclone: region based memory management
36363638
* Haskell (GHC): typeclasses, type families
36373639
* Newsqueak, Alef, Limbo: channels, concurrency
3638-
* Erlang: message passing, thread failure, ~~linked thread failure~~,
3640+
* Erlang: message passing, task failure, ~~linked task failure~~,
36393641
~~lightweight concurrency~~
36403642
* Swift: optional bindings
36413643
* Scheme: hygienic macros
Lines changed: 2 additions & 2 deletions
Original file line numberDiff line numberDiff line change
@@ -1,7 +1,7 @@
11
% Handling errors
22

3-
### Use thread isolation to cope with failure. [FIXME]
3+
### Use task isolation to cope with failure. [FIXME]
44

5-
> **[FIXME]** Explain how to isolate threads and detect thread failure for recovery.
5+
> **[FIXME]** Explain how to isolate tasks and detect task failure for recovery.
66
77
### Consuming `Result` [FIXME]

branches/try/src/doc/style/errors/signaling.md

Lines changed: 4 additions & 4 deletions
Original file line numberDiff line numberDiff line change
@@ -11,13 +11,13 @@ Errors fall into one of three categories:
1111
The basic principle of the convention is that:
1212

1313
* Catastrophic errors and programming errors (bugs) can and should only be
14-
recovered at a *coarse grain*, i.e. a thread boundary.
14+
recovered at a *coarse grain*, i.e. a task boundary.
1515
* Obstructions preventing an operation should be reported at a maximally *fine
1616
grain* -- to the immediate invoker of the operation.
1717

1818
## Catastrophic errors
1919

20-
An error is _catastrophic_ if there is no meaningful way for the current thread to
20+
An error is _catastrophic_ if there is no meaningful way for the current task to
2121
continue after the error occurs.
2222

2323
Catastrophic errors are _extremely_ rare, especially outside of `libstd`.
@@ -28,7 +28,7 @@ Catastrophic errors are _extremely_ rare, especially outside of `libstd`.
2828

2929
For errors like stack overflow, Rust currently aborts the process, but
3030
could in principle panic, which (in the best case) would allow
31-
reporting and recovery from a supervisory thread.
31+
reporting and recovery from a supervisory task.
3232

3333
## Contract violations
3434

@@ -44,7 +44,7 @@ existing borrows have been relinquished.
4444

4545
A contract violation is always a bug, and for bugs we follow the Erlang
4646
philosophy of "let it crash": we assume that software *will* have bugs, and we
47-
design coarse-grained thread boundaries to report, and perhaps recover, from these
47+
design coarse-grained task boundaries to report, and perhaps recover, from these
4848
bugs.
4949

5050
### Contract design

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