Remove host_supported property. am: 776ba3a1e2 am: f8b2601e37
am: e9c390f720

Change-Id: I2641e3ae8cd4b6dd186d6f2a21127aea3a2b09ae
tree: 03e0f3547135aad7d468690973a851926e1b0806
  1. src/
  2. tests/
  3. .gitignore
  4. .travis.yml
  5. Android.bp
  6. Cargo.toml
  7. LICENSE-APACHE
  8. LICENSE-MIT
  9. README.md
README.md

Remain sorted

Build Status Latest Version Rust Documentation

This crate provides an attribute macro to check at compile time that the variants of an enum or the arms of a match expression are written in sorted order.

[dependencies]
remain = "0.1"

Syntax

Place a #[remain::sorted] attribute on enums, structs, match-expressions, or let-statements whose value is a match-expression.

Alternatively, import as use remain::sorted; and use #[sorted] as the attribute.

#[remain::sorted]
#[derive(Debug)]
pub enum Error {
    BlockSignal(signal::Error),
    CreateCrasClient(libcras::Error),
    CreateEventFd(sys_util::Error),
    CreateSignalFd(sys_util::SignalFdError),
    CreateSocket(io::Error),
    DetectImageType(qcow::Error),
    DeviceJail(io_jail::Error),
    NetDeviceNew(virtio::NetError),
    SpawnVcpu(io::Error),
}

#[remain::sorted]
#[derive(Debug)]
pub enum Registers {
    ax: u16,
    cx: u16,
    di: u16,
    si: u16,
    sp: u16,
}

impl Display for Error {
    fn fmt(&self, f: &mut fmt::Formatter) -> fmt::Result {
        use self::Error::*;

        #[remain::sorted]
        match self {
            BlockSignal(e) => write!(f, "failed to block signal: {}", e),
            CreateCrasClient(e) => write!(f, "failed to create cras client: {}", e),
            CreateEventFd(e) => write!(f, "failed to create eventfd: {}", e),
            CreateSignalFd(e) => write!(f, "failed to create signalfd: {}", e),
            CreateSocket(e) => write!(f, "failed to create socket: {}", e),
            DetectImageType(e) => write!(f, "failed to detect disk image type: {}", e),
            DeviceJail(e) => write!(f, "failed to jail device: {}", e),
            NetDeviceNew(e) => write!(f, "failed to set up virtio networking: {}", e),
            SpawnVcpu(e) => write!(f, "failed to spawn VCPU thread: {}", e),
        }
    }
}

If an enum variant, struct field, or match arm is inserted out of order,

      NetDeviceNew(virtio::NetError),
      SpawnVcpu(io::Error),
+     AaaUhOh(Box<dyn StdError>),
  }

then the macro produces a compile error.

error: AaaUhOh should sort before BlockSignal
  --> tests/stable.rs:49:5
   |
49 |     AaaUhOh(Box<dyn StdError>),
   |     ^^^^^^^

Compiler support

The attribute on enums and structs is supported on any rustc version 1.31+.

Rust does not yet have stable support for user-defined attributes within a function body, so the attribute on match-expressions and let-statements requires a nightly compiler and the following two features enabled:

#![feature(proc_macro_hygiene, stmt_expr_attributes)]

As a stable alternative, this crate provides a function-level attribute called #[remain::check] which makes match-expression and let-statement attributes work on any rustc version 1.31+. Place this attribute on any function containing #[sorted] to make them work on a stable compiler.

impl Display for Error {
    #[remain::check]
    fn fmt(&self, f: &mut fmt::Formatter) -> fmt::Result {
        use self::Error::*;

        #[sorted]
        match self {
            /* ... */
        }
    }
}

License