* move concurrency primitives that always operate on kernel threads to
the std.Thread namespace
* remove std.SpinLock. Nobody should use this in a non-freestanding
environment; the other primitives are always preferable. In
freestanding, it will be necessary to put custom spin logic in there,
so there are no use cases for a std lib version.
* move some std lib files to the top level fields convention
* add std.Thread.spinLoopHint
* add std.Thread.Condition
* add std.Thread.Semaphore
* new implementation of std.Thread.Mutex for Windows and non-pthreads Linux
* add std.Thread.RwLock
Implementations provided by @kprotty
* split std.ResetEvent into:
- ResetEvent - requires init() at runtime and it can fail. Also
requires deinit().
- StaticResetEvent - can be statically initialized and requires no
deinitialization. Initialization cannot fail.
* the POSIX sem_t implementation can in fact fail on initialization
because it is allowed to be implemented as a file descriptor.
* Completely define, clarify, and explain in detail the semantics of
these APIs. Remove the `isSet` function.
* `ResetEvent.timedWait` returns an enum instead of a possible error.
* `ResetEvent.init` takes a pointer to the ResetEvent instead of
returning a copy.
* On Darwin, `ResetEvent` is implemented using Grand Central Dispatch,
which is exposed by libSystem.
stage2 changes:
* ThreadPool: use a single, pre-initialized `ResetEvent` per worker.
* WaitGroup: now requires init() and deinit() and init() can fail.
- Add a `reset` function.
- Compilation initializes one for the work queue in creation and
re-uses it for every update.
- Rename `stop` to `finish`.
- Simplify the implementation based on the usage pattern.
Do the alignment dance by ourselves whenever posix_memalign is not
available.
Don't try to use malloc as it has too many edge cases, figuring out
whether a block of memory is manually aligned by the mechanism above or
is directly coming from malloc becomes too hard to be valuable.
There's no guarantee for the kernel definition to be ABI compatible with
the libc one (and vice versa).
There's also no guarantee of ABI compatibility between musl/glibc.
Fun, isn't it?
* rework os.sendfile and add macosx support, and a fallback
implementation for any OS.
* fix sendto compile error
* std.os write functions support partial writes. closes#3443.
* std.os pread / pwrite functions can now return `error.Unseekable`.
* std.fs.File read/write functions now have readAll/writeAll variants
which loop to complete operations even when partial reads/writes
happen.
* Audit std.os read/write functions with respect to Linux returning
EINVAL for lengths greater than 0x7fff0000.
* std.os read/write shim functions do not unnecessarily loop. Since
partial reads/writes are part of the API, the caller will be forced
to loop anyway, and so that would just be code bloat.
* Improve doc comments
* Add a non-trivial test for std.os.sendfile
* Fix std.os.pread on 32 bit Linux
* Add missing SYS_sendfile bit on aarch64
* Let's consolidate the special-cased DWARF interpreter for OSX with the
general purpose one
* Drop the assumption that all the debug data is contained in a single
contiguous slice of memory. This is a good news for freestanding
targets and paves the way for supporting compressed debug sections.
Use a struct as second parameter to be future proof (and also allows to
specify default values for the parameters)
Closes#2679 as it was just a matter of a few lines of code.
It had the downside of running all the comptime blocks and resolving
all the usingnamespaces of each system, when just trying to discover if
the current system is a particular one.
For Darwin, where it's nice to use `std.Target.current.isDarwin()`, this
demonstrates the utility that #425 would provide.