68d2f68ed introduced special handling for StructInit fields
containing multiline strings to prevent inserting whitespace after =.
However, this logic didn't handle cases without a trailing comma,
which resulted in unwanted trailing whitespace.
`std.Io.tty.Config.detect` may be an expensive check (e.g. involving
syscalls), and doing it every time we need to print isn't really
necessary; under normal usage, we can compute the value once and cache
it for the whole program's execution. Since anyone outputting to stderr
may reasonably want this information (in fact they are very likely to),
it makes sense to cache it and return it from `lockStderrWriter`. Call
sites who do not need it will experience no significant overhead, and
can just ignore the TTY config with a `const w, _` destructure.
Unfortunately this can't be implemented "above the vtable" because
various operating systems don't provide low level DNS resolution
primitives such as just putting the list of nameservers in a file.
Without libc on Linux it works great though!
Anyway this also changes the API to be based on Io.Queue. By using a
large enough buffer, reusable code can be written that does not require
concurrent, yet takes advantage of responding to DNS queries as they
come in. I sketched out a new implementation of `HostName.connect` to
demonstrate this, but it will require an additional API (`Io.Select`) to
be implemented in a future commit.
This commit also introduces "uncancelable" variants for mutex locking,
waiting on a condition, and putting items into a queue.
There is no straightforward way for the Zig team to access the Solaris system
headers; to do this, one has to create an Oracle account, accept their EULA to
download the installer ISO, and finally install it on a machine or VM. We do not
have to jump through hoops like this for any other OS that we support, and no
one on the team has expressed willingness to do it.
As a result, we cannot audit any Solaris contributions to std.c or other
similarly sensitive parts of the standard library. The best we would be able to
do is assume that Solaris and illumos are 100% compatible with no way to verify
that assumption. But at that point, the solaris and illumos OS tags would be
functionally identical anyway.
For Solaris especially, any contributions that involve APIs introduced after the
OS was made closed-source would also be inherently more risky than equivalent
contributions for other proprietary OSs due to the case of Google LLC v. Oracle
America, Inc., wherein Oracle clearly demonstrated its willingness to pursue
legal action against entities that merely copy API declarations.
Finally, Oracle laid off most of the Solaris team in 2017; the OS has been in
maintenance mode since, presumably to be retired completely sometime in the 2030s.
For these reasons, this commit removes all Oracle Solaris support.
Anyone who still wishes to use Zig on Solaris can try their luck by simply using
illumos instead of solaris in target triples - chances are it'll work. But there
will be no effort from the Zig team to support this use case; we recommend that
people move to illumos instead.
This is a major refactor to `Step.Run` which adds new functionality,
primarily to the execution of Zig tests.
* All tests are run, even if a test crashes. This happens through the
same mechanism as timeouts where the test processes is repeatedly
respawned as needed.
* The build status output is more precise. For each unit test, it
differentiates pass, skip, fail, crash, and timeout. Memory leaks are
reported separately, as they do not indicate a test's "status", but
are rather an additional property (a test with leaks may still pass!).
* The number of memory leaks is tracked and reported, both per-test and
for a whole `Run` step.
* Reporting is made clearer when a step is failed solely due to error
logs (`std.log.err`) where every unit test passed.
For now, there is a flag to `zig build` called `--test-timeout-ms` which
accepts a value in milliseconds. If the execution time of any individual
unit test exceeds that number of milliseconds, the test is terminated
and marked as timed out.
In the future, we may want to increase the granularity of this feature
by allowing timeouts to be specified per-step or even per-test. However,
a global option is actually very useful. In particular, it can be used
in CI scripts to ensure that no individual unit test exceeds some
reasonable limit (e.g. 60 seconds) without having to assign limits to
every individual test step in the build script.
Also, individual unit test durations are now shown in the time report
web interface -- this was fairly trivial to add since we're timing tests
(to check for timeouts) anyway.
This commit makes progress on #19821, but does not close it, because
that proposal includes a more sophisticated mechanism for setting
timeouts.
Co-Authored-By: David Rubin <david@vortan.dev>
- Revive some of the removed cache integration logic in `cmdTranslateC` now that `translate-c` can return error bundles
- Fixup inconsistent path separators (on Windows) when building the aro include path
- Move some error bundle logic from resinator into aro.Diagnostics
- Add `ErrorBundle.addRootErrorMessageWithNotes` (extracted from resinator)
Fix `takeDelimiter` and `takeDelimiterExclusive` tossing too many bytes
(#25132)
Also add/improve test coverage for all delimiter and sentinel methods,
update usages of `takeDelimiterExclusive` to not rely on the fixed bug,
tweak a handful of doc comments, and slightly simplify some logic.
I have not fixed#24950 in this commit because I am a little less
certain about the appropriate solution there.
Resolves: #25132
Co-authored-by: Andrew Kelley <andrew@ziglang.org>
FreeBSD doesn't support the same number of platforms as Linux, and even then,
only has usermode emulation for a subset of its supported platforms.
NetBSD's usermode emulation support is apparently just broken at the moment.
Adds the limit option to `--fuzz=[limit]`. the limit expresses a number
of iterations that *each fuzz test* will perform at maximum before
exiting. The limit argument supports also 'K', 'M', and 'G' suffixeds
(e.g. '10K').
Does not imply `--web-ui` (like unlimited fuzzing does) and prints a
fuzzing report at the end.
Closes#22900 but does not implement the time based limit, as after
internal discussions we concluded to be problematic to both implement
and use correctly.
with field_ptr_load and field_ptr_named_load.
These avoid doing by-val load operations for structs that are
runtime-known while keeping the previous semantics for comptime-known
values.
Call start/endBlock before/after `parseBlockInfoBlock` in order to not
use the current block context, which is wrong and leads to e.g. incorrect
abbrevlen being used.