With some inputs larger than `BiggestUInt.high`, `parseBiggestUInt` proc
in `parseutils.nim` fails to detect overflow and returns random value.
This is because `rawParseUInt` try to detects overflow with `if prev >
res:` but it doesn't detects the overflow from multiplication.
It is possible that `x *= 10` causes overflow and resulting value is
larger than original value.
Here is example values larger than `BiggestUInt.high` but
`parseBiggestUInt` returns without detecting overflow:
```
22751622367522324480000000
41404969074137497600000000
20701551093035827200000000000000000
22546225502460313600000000000000000
204963831854661632000000000000000000
```
Following code search for values larger than `BiggestUInt.high` and
`parseBiggestUInt` cannot detect overflow:
```nim
import std/[strutils]
const
# Increase this to extend search range
NBits = 34'u
NBitsMax1 = 1'u shl NBits
NBitsMax = NBitsMax1 - 1'u
# Increase this when there are too many results and want to see only larger result.
MinMultiply10 = 14
var nfound = 0
for i in (NBitsMax div 10'u + 1'u) .. NBitsMax:
var
x = i
n10 = 0
for j in 0 ..< NBits:
let px = x
x = (x * 10'u) and NBitsMax
if x < px:
break
inc n10
if n10 >= MinMultiply10:
echo "i = ", i
echo "uint: ", (i shl (64'u - NBits)), '0'.repeat n10
inc nfound
if nfound > 15:
break
echo "found: ", nfound
```
Essentially this PR removes the `{.error.}` pragmas littered around in
the OS module and submodules which prevents them from being imported if
the target OS is not supported. This made it impossible to use certain
supported features of the OS module in macros from a supported host OS.
Instead of the `{.error.}` pragmas the `oscommon` module now has a
constant `supportedSystem` which is false in the cases where the
`{.error.}` pragmas where generated. All procedures which can't be run
by macros is also not declared when `supportedSystem` is false.
It would be possible to create dummy versions of the omitted functions
with an `{.error.}` pragma that would trigger upon their use, but this
is currently not done.
This properly fixes#19414
This pull request adds the `cumproded` function along with its in-place
equivalent, `cumprod`, to the math library. These functions provide
functionality similar to `cumsum` and `cumsummed`, allowing users to
calculate the cumulative sum of elements.
The `cumprod` function computes the cumulative product of elements
in-place, while `cumproded` additionally returns the prod seq.
This makes await point to the caller line instead of asyncmacro. It also
reworks the "Async traceback:" section of the traceback. Follow up PR
#21091 (issue #19931) so it works if there is asynchronous work done.
With this example
```nim
import std/strformat
echo fmt"{invalid, code}"
```
We get the error message
```
stack trace: (most recent call last)
/home/jake/.choosenim/toolchains/nim-hashdevel/lib/pure/strformat.nim(750, 16) fmt
/home/jake/.choosenim/toolchains/nim-hashdevel/lib/pure/strformat.nim(714, 16) strformatImpl
/home/jake/Documents/projects/Nim/temp.nim(3, 9) template/generic instantiation of `fmt` from here
/home/jake/.choosenim/toolchains/nim-hashdevel/lib/pure/strformat.nim(714, 16) Error: could not parse `invalid, code` in `{invalid, code}`.
(1, 8) Error: invalid indentation
```
After PR it now shortens it to just appear in user code
```
/home/jake/Documents/projects/Nim/lib/pure/strformat.nim(750, 16) fmt
/home/jake/Documents/projects/Nim/lib/pure/strformat.nim(714, 16) strformatImpl
/home/jake/Documents/projects/Nim/temp.nim(3, 9) Error: could not parse `invalid, code` in `{invalid, code}`.
(1, 8) Error: invalid indentation
```
Follows up #24423, needed more refactoring than I expected, sorry for
ugly diff.
With this pretty much all of the raw C code generating parts of the
codegen are abstracted into the cbuilder API (to my knowledge at least).
The current design of NIFC does not implement everything the codegen
generates, such things have mostly not been adapted, they are the
following along with how I'm guessing they could be implemented:
* C++ specific codegen: Maybe a dialect of NIFC for generating C++?
* `codegenDecl` pragma: Could be passed as a pragma to NIFC
* C macros, currently only used for line info IIRC i.e. `nimln_(123)`:
Just inline them when generating NIFC
* Other C defines & `#line`: Maybe as NIFC directives or line infos?
* There is also [this
`#ifndef`](21420d8b09/compiler/cgen.nim (L2249))
when generating headers but NIFC shouldn't need it
* `alignof`/`offsetof`: Is in `cbuilder` but not implemented in NIFC,
should be easy
For now we can disable C++ and the `codegenDecl` pragma when generating
NIFC but since cbuilder is mostly designed to generate NIFC as a flag
when booting the compiler, this hinders the ability to run the CI
against NIFC. Maybe we could also make cbuilder able to generate both C
and NIFC at runtime, this would be a large refactor but wouldn't be too
difficult.
Other missing abstractions before being able to generate NIFC are:
* Primitive types and symbols i.e. `int`, `void*`, `NI`, `NIM_NULL` are
currently still constant string literals, `NU8`, `NU16` etc are also
sometimes generated like `"NU" & $bits`.
* NIFC identifiers, i.e. adding `.c` to imported symbols and properly
mangling generated ones. Not sure how difficult this is going to be.
This commit fixes/adds tests for and fixes several issues with `JOIN`
operator parsing:
- For OUTER joins, LEFT | RIGHT | FULL specifier is not optional
```nim
doAssertRaises(SqlParseError): discard parseSql("""
SELECT id FROM a
OUTER JOIN b
ON a.id = b.id
""")
```
- For NATURAL JOIN and CROSS JOIN, ON and USING clauses are forbidden
```nim
doAssertRaises(SqlParseError): discard parseSql("""
SELECT id FROM a
CROSS JOIN b
ON a.id = b.id
""")
```
- JOIN should parse as part of FROM, not after WHERE
```nim
doAssertRaises(SqlParseError): discard parseSql("""
SELECT id FROM a
WHERE a.id IS NOT NULL
INNER JOIN b
ON a.id = b.id
""")
```
- LEFT JOIN should parse
```nim
doAssert $parseSql("""
SELECT id FROM a
LEFT JOIN b
ON a.id = b.id
""") == "select id from a left join b on a.id = b.id;"
```
- NATURAL JOIN should parse
```nim
doAssert $parseSql("""
SELECT id FROM a
NATURAL JOIN b
""") == "select id from a natural join b;"
```
- USING should parse
```nim
doAssert $parseSql("""
SELECT id FROM a
JOIN b
USING (id)
""") == "select id from a join b using (id );"
```
- Multiple JOINs should parse
```nim
doAssert $parseSql("""
SELECT id FROM a
JOIN b
ON a.id = b.id
LEFT JOIN c
USING (id)
""") == "select id from a join b on a.id = b.id left join c using (id );"
```
This fixes several cases of the Nim binding of nfds_t being inconsistent
with the target platform signedness and/or size.
Additionally, it fixes poll's third argument (timeout) being set to Nim
"int" when it should have been "cint".
The former is the same issue that #23045 had attempted to fix, but
failed because it only considered Linux. (Also, it was only applied to
version 2.0, so the two branches now have incompatible versions of the
same bug.)
Notes:
* SVR4's original "unsigned long" definition is cloned by Linux and
Haiku. Nim got this right for Haiku and Linux-amd64, but it was wrong on
non-amd64 Linux.
* Zephyr does not have nfds_t, but simply uses (signed) "int". This was
already correctly reflected by Nim.
* OpenBSD poll.h uses "unsigned int", and other BSD derivatives follow
suit. This being the most commonly copied definition, the fallback case
now returns cuint. (This also seems to be correct for the OS X headers I
could find on the web.)
* This changes Nintendo Switch nfds_t to cuint from culong. It is
purportedly a FreeBSD derivative, so I *think* this is correct, but I
can't tell because I don't have access to the Nintendo Switch headers.
I have also moved the platform-specific Tnfds to posix.nim so that we
can reuse the fallback logic on all platforms. (e.g. specifying the size
in posix_linux_amd64 only to then use when defined(linux) in posix_other
seems redundant.)
refs #6978, refs #6752, refs #21613, refs #24234
The `jsNoInt64`, `whenHasBigInt64`, `whenJsNoBigInt64` templates are
replaced with bool constants to use with `when`. Weird that I didn't do
this in the first place.
The `whenJsNoBigInt64` template was also slightly misleading. The first
branch was compiled for both no bigint64 on JS as well as on C/C++. It
seems only `trandom` depended on this by mistake.
The workaround for #6752 added in #6978 to `times` is also removed with
`--jsbigint64:on`, but #24233 was also encountered with this, so this PR
depends on #24234.
As said in the warning after #21659, a set of ints defaults to
`set[range[0..65535]]` which is very large. So in osproc, a `case`
statement is used instead of an int set to check for an int being one of
2 values.
Also tested all of CI with the warning from #21659 as an error, this
seems to be the only remaining case in CI.
I have added a new overload of `^` for float exponents.
Is two overloads for `float32` and `float64` better than just one
overload with `SomeFloat` type ?
I guess this would not work with `SomeFloat`, as `pow` is not defined
for `float`.
Another remark. Maybe we should catch exponents with 0.5 and call `sqrt`
instead ?
---------
Co-authored-by: Clay Sweetser <Varriount@users.noreply.github.com>
Co-authored-by: metagn <metagngn@gmail.com>
fixes#23587
As explained in the issue, `getOrDefault` has a parameter named
`default` that can be a proc after generic instantiation. But the
parameter having a proc type [overrides all other
overloads](f73e03b132/compiler/semexprs.nim (L1203))
including the magic `system.default` overload and causes a compile error
if the proc doesn't match the normal use of `default`. To fix this, the
`result = default(B)` initializer call is removed because it's not
needed, `result` is always set in `getOrDefaultImpl` when a default
value is provided.
This is still a suspicious behavior of the compiler but `tables` working
has a higher priority.
Hello, I am the original developer credited in this file.
I no longer wish to be credited for the it so I've updated it to say
"Nim Contributors".
This is a quick edit from the GitHub Web UI so let me know if I need to
make any changes to get this merged.
Thank you.
---------
Co-authored-by: ringabout <43030857+ringabout@users.noreply.github.com>
refs #24207
The `-d:nimUseCAtomics` flag added in #24207 is now inverted and made
into `-d:nimUseCppAtomics`, which means C++ atomics are only enabled
with the define. This flag is now also documented and tested.
refs https://github.com/nim-lang/Nim/pull/24200#issuecomment-2382501282
Workaround for C++ Atomic[T] issues that doesn't require a compiler
change. Not tested or documented in case it's not meant to be officially
supported, locally tested `tatomics` and #24159 to work with it though,
can add these as tests if required.
Since the module allows for a handler to be added multiple times, for
the sake of consistency, `removeHandler` only removes the first found
instance of the handler in the `handlers` seq. So for n calls of
`addHandler` using the same handler, n calls of `removeHandler` are
required.
fixes#23757
---------
Co-authored-by: Andreas Rumpf <rumpf_a@web.de>
kqueue will remove pipes automatically if their read end is closed.
Unfortunately this means that trying to unregister it (which is
necessary to clean up resources & for consistency with other ioselectors
implementations) will set an ENOENT error, which currently raises an
exception.
(ETA: in other words, it is currently impossible to call unregister on a
pipe fd without potentially getting the selector into an invalid state
on platforms with kqueue.)
Avoid this issue by ignoring ENOENT errors returned from kqueue.
(Tested on FreeBSD. I added a test case to the tioselectors file; the
seemingly unrelated change is to fix a race condition that doesn't
appear on Linux, so that it would run my code too.)
refs #21682, refs #24038
The `rangeBase` typetrait added in #21682 which gives the base type of a
range type is now added publicly to `typetraits`. Previously it was only
privately used in `repr_v2` and in `enumutils` since #24052
(coincidentally I didn't see this until now). This is part of an effort
to make range types easier to work with in generics, as mentioned in
#24038. Its use combined with #24037 is also tested.
The condition for the "enum to enum conversion" warning is now also
restricted to conversions between different enum base types, i.e.
conversion between an enum type and a range type of itself doesn't give
a warning. I put this in this PR since the test gave the warning and so
works as a regression test.
in https://forum.nim-lang.org/t/12463 which seems reasonable enough to
me.
stdlib has several dozens of places doing result.setLen now, but if
`experimental:strictDefs` move sot on by default and there is no easy
way to locally suppress the warning we can revisit this.
fixes#24054
`readData` is not implemented for the VM as mentioned in the issue, but
`readDataStr` is, so that is used for `readStr` instead on the VM. We
could also just use it in general since it falls back to `readData`
anyway but it's kept the same otherwise for now.
Also where and why streams in general don't work in VM is now documented
on the top level `streams` module documentation.
#23992 The test case provided does not cover the Windows situation, I
fixed it in this new PR.
Fixed an issue where errorCode was always 0 when startProcess didn't use
the poEvalCommand flag.
Tthe sleep command might not be available in all Windows installations,
so I skipped the relevant test.
Added a test case, tested on my fedora and windows systems.
fixes#15314, fixes#24002
The OpenSym behavior first added to generics in #23091 now also applies
to templates, since templates can also capture symbols that are meant to
be replaced by local symbols if the context imports symbols with the
same name, as in the issue #24002. The experimental switch
`templateOpenSym` is added to enable this behavior for templates only,
and the experimental switch `openSym` is added to enable it for both
templates and generics, and the documentation now mainly mentions this
switch.
Additionally the logic for `nkOpenSymChoice` nodes that were previously
wrapped in `nkOpenSym` now apply to all `nkOpenSymChoice` nodes, and so
these nodes aren't wrapped in `nkOpenSym` anymore. This means
`nkOpenSym` can only have children of kind `nkSym` again, so it is more
in line with the structure of symchoice nodes. As for why they aren't
merged with `nkOpenSymChoice` nodes yet, we need some way to signal that
the node shouldn't become ambiguous if other options exist at
instantiation time, we already captured a symbol at the beginning and
another symbol can only replace it if it's closer in scope and
unambiguous.
fixes#23898, supersedes #23966 and #23990
Since #20631 ambiguous type symbols in templates are rejected outright,
now we generate a symchoice for type nodes if they're ambiguous, a
generalization of what was done in #22375. This is done for generics as
well. Symchoices also handle type symbols better now, ensuring their
type is a `typedesc` type; this probably isn't necessary for everything
to work but it makes the logic more robust.
Similar to #23989, we have to prepare for the fact that ambiguous type
symbols behave differently than normal type symbols and either error
normally or relegate to other routine symbols if the symbol is being
called. Generating a symchoice emulates this behavior, `semExpr` will
find the type symbol first, but since the symchoice has other symbols,
it will count as an ambiguous type symbol.
I know it seems spammy to carry around an ambiguity flag everywhere, but
in the future when we have something like #23104 we could just always
generate a symchoice, and the symchoice itself would carry the info of
whether the first symbol was ambiguous. But this could harm compiler
performance/memory use, it might be better to generate it only when we
have to, which in the case of type symbols is only when they're
ambiguous.