* std.debug: optimized printLineFromFileAnyOs
Uses mem.indexOfScalar to speed line iteration instead of byte for byte.
Also prints the whole line in a single write (or up to a page size at a
time)
Closes#18099
* add test cases for printLineFromFileAnyOs
reads on eg. connected TCP sockets can fail with ETIMEDOUT, and ENOTCONN
happens eg. if you try to read a TCP socket that has not been connected
yet.
interestingly read() was already handling CONNRESET & TIMEDOUT, but
readv(), pread(), and preadv() were somewhat inconsistent.
This duplicates the source file string (as is done in other places such
as `addAssemblyFile()`) in order to prevent a segfault when the supplied
string is freed by the caller. This is still seen when the caller makes
use of a defer statement.
This reverts commit 8b10970836.
This implementation has the following problems:
* It does not provide context to the less than function. This will be an
API break in order to fix.
* It uses recursion, causing unbounded stack memory usage - likely
depending on user input, which is extra problematic.
* Sorting linked lists is generally an inefficient operation;
encouraging it by having a standard library function for it may
lead to suboptimal software being written in Zig.
Furthermore, there is almost no benefit to providing a sort function as
a method, when a third party implementation can easily be passed a
linked list to then be sorted.
* move std.atomic.Atomic to std.atomic.Value
* fix incorrect argument order passed to testing.expectEqual
* make the functions be a thin wrapper over the atomic builtins and
stick to the naming conventions.
* remove pointless functions loadUnchecked and storeUnchecked. Instead,
name the field `raw` instead of `value` (which is redundant with the
type name).
* simplify the tests by not passing every possible combination. Many
cases were iterating over every possible combinations but then not
even using the for loop element value!
* remove the redundant compile errors which are already implemented by
the language itself.
* remove dead x86 inline assembly. this should be implemented in the
language if at all.
This was originally supposed to be a lock-free queue, but I gave up on
that and made it be a thread-safe queue instead.
Putting the mutex directly inside the queue data structure makes it
non-composeable. Instead, the recommendation is to use a normal queue
protected by an external mutex.
This was originally supposed to be a lock-free stack, but I gave up on
that and made it be a thread-safe stack which is implemented poorly
using spin locks. Nobody should use this data structure.
The alternative is a normal stack protected by a mutex.
* remove `std.atomic.Ordering`
- it is provided by the language with `std.builtin.AtomicOrder`.
* remove `std.atomic.fence`
- it is provided by the language with `@fence`.
* remove `std.atomic.compilerFence`
- if this is desired, it should be a language feature, not a standard
library function with inline asm.
This reverts commit da94227f78, reversing
changes made to 8f943b3d33.
I was against this change originally, but decided to approve it to keep
an open mind. After a year of trying it in practice, I firmly believe
that the previous way of doing it was better.
* Take advantage of multi-object for loops.
* Remove use of BoundedArray since it had no meaningful impact on safety
or readability.
* Simplify some complex expressions, such as using `!` to invert a
boolean value.
We definitely want ArrayList in the standard library. Do we want
BoundedArray? Maybe, maybe not. But that makes ArrayList a more stable
dependency for std.fs.