rustc 1.21.0+dfsg1+llvm-0ubuntu3~14.04.5 source package in Ubuntu
Changelog
rustc (1.21.0+dfsg1+llvm-0ubuntu3~14.04.5) trusty; urgency=medium * Backport 1.21.0 to trusty * Relax the gdb requirement and don't build-conflict on gdb-minimal - update debian/control * Relax the dependency on xz-utils by commenting out some unused code - add debian/patches/d-relax-xz-utils-dependency.patch - update debian/patches/series - update debian/rules * Relax dpkg-dev requirement to 1.17.5 - update debian/control * Relax binutils requirement. Even though previous uploads have depended on a binutils-2.26, we've never actually used it - update debian/rules * Set build.full-bootstrap to true to work-around a runtime link failure when we're bootstrapping from the same rust version - update debian/config.toml.in * Don't build with debuginfo for now, to avoid running out of address space on x86 - update debian/config.toml.in -- Chris Coulson <email address hidden> Tue, 31 Oct 2017 20:26:19 +0000
Upload details
- Uploaded by:
- Chris Coulson
- Uploaded to:
- Trusty
- Original maintainer:
- Rust Maintainers
- Architectures:
- any all
- Section:
- devel
- Urgency:
- Medium Urgency
See full publishing history Publishing
Series | Published | Component | Section |
---|
Downloads
File | Size | SHA-256 Checksum |
---|---|---|
rustc_1.21.0+dfsg1+llvm.orig.tar.xz | 23.7 MiB | aebb3218f552da8d4c56202a2cc98507c0104d62ddf8458f652e3be764b8ee1a |
rustc_1.21.0+dfsg1+llvm-0ubuntu3~14.04.5.debian.tar.xz | 56.6 KiB | 6a140d1918d3605ff82b53a091b45663d01b05145fa20d5f6236cf370e202acf |
rustc_1.21.0+dfsg1+llvm-0ubuntu3~14.04.5.dsc | 2.5 KiB | d978e96b45b7c77755c8d50382947dc2184240e723723d43a7d8b7b6161600b7 |
Available diffs
- diff from 1.17.0+dfsg2-8~ubuntu0.14.04.3 to 1.21.0+dfsg1+llvm-0ubuntu3~14.04.5 (26.9 MiB)
- diff from 1.19.0+dfsg3-3ubuntu1~14.04.1 (in ~ubuntu-mozilla-security/ubuntu/rust-next) to 1.21.0+dfsg1+llvm-0ubuntu3~14.04.5 (24.9 MiB)
- diff from 1.21.0+dfsg1+llvm-0ubuntu3~14.04.4 to 1.21.0+dfsg1+llvm-0ubuntu3~14.04.5 (756 bytes)
Binary packages built by this source
- libstd-rust-1.21: Rust standard libraries
Rust is a curly-brace, block-structured expression language. It
visually resembles the C language family, but differs significantly
in syntactic and semantic details. Its design is oriented toward
concerns of "programming in the large", that is, of creating and
maintaining boundaries - both abstract and operational - that
preserve large-system integrity, availability and concurrency.
.
It supports a mixture of imperative procedural, concurrent actor,
object-oriented and pure functional styles. Rust also supports
generic programming and meta-programming, in both static and dynamic
styles.
.
This package contains the standard Rust libraries, built as dylibs.
- libstd-rust-1.21-dbgsym: debug symbols for package libstd-rust-1.21
Rust is a curly-brace, block-structured expression language. It
visually resembles the C language family, but differs significantly
in syntactic and semantic details. Its design is oriented toward
concerns of "programming in the large", that is, of creating and
maintaining boundaries - both abstract and operational - that
preserve large-system integrity, availability and concurrency.
.
It supports a mixture of imperative procedural, concurrent actor,
object-oriented and pure functional styles. Rust also supports
generic programming and meta-programming, in both static and dynamic
styles.
.
This package contains the standard Rust libraries, built as dylibs.
- libstd-rust-dev: Rust standard libraries - development files
Rust is a curly-brace, block-structured expression language. It
visually resembles the C language family, but differs significantly
in syntactic and semantic details. Its design is oriented toward
concerns of "programming in the large", that is, of creating and
maintaining boundaries - both abstract and operational - that
preserve large-system integrity, availability and concurrency.
.
It supports a mixture of imperative procedural, concurrent actor,
object-oriented and pure functional styles. Rust also supports
generic programming and meta-programming, in both static and dynamic
styles.
.
This package contains development files necessary to use the standard
Rust libraries.
- rust-doc: Rust systems programming language - Documentation
Rust is a curly-brace, block-structured expression language. It
visually resembles the C language family, but differs significantly
in syntactic and semantic details. Its design is oriented toward
concerns of "programming in the large", that is, of creating and
maintaining boundaries - both abstract and operational - that
preserve large-system integrity, availability and concurrency.
.
It supports a mixture of imperative procedural, concurrent actor,
object-oriented and pure functional styles. Rust also supports
generic programming and meta-programming, in both static and dynamic
styles.
.
This package contains the Rust tutorial, language reference and
standard library documentation.
- rust-gdb: Rust debugger (gdb)
Rust is a curly-brace, block-structured expression language. It
visually resembles the C language family, but differs significantly
in syntactic and semantic details. Its design is oriented toward
concerns of "programming in the large", that is, of creating and
maintaining boundaries - both abstract and operational - that
preserve large-system integrity, availability and concurrency.
.
It supports a mixture of imperative procedural, concurrent actor,
object-oriented and pure functional styles. Rust also supports
generic programming and meta-programming, in both static and dynamic
styles.
.
This package contains pretty printers and a wrapper script for
invoking gdb on rust binaries.
- rust-lldb: Rust debugger (lldb)
Rust is a curly-brace, block-structured expression language. It
visually resembles the C language family, but differs significantly
in syntactic and semantic details. Its design is oriented toward
concerns of "programming in the large", that is, of creating and
maintaining boundaries - both abstract and operational - that
preserve large-system integrity, availability and concurrency.
.
It supports a mixture of imperative procedural, concurrent actor,
object-oriented and pure functional styles. Rust also supports
generic programming and meta-programming, in both static and dynamic
styles.
.
This package contains pretty printers and a wrapper script for
invoking lldb on rust binaries.
- rust-src: Rust systems programming language - source code
Rust is a curly-brace, block-structured expression language. It
visually resembles the C language family, but differs significantly
in syntactic and semantic details. Its design is oriented toward
concerns of "programming in the large", that is, of creating and
maintaining boundaries - both abstract and operational - that
preserve large-system integrity, availability and concurrency.
.
It supports a mixture of imperative procedural, concurrent actor,
object-oriented and pure functional styles. Rust also supports
generic programming and meta-programming, in both static and dynamic
styles.
.
This package contains sources of the Rust compiler and standard
libraries, useful for IDEs and code analysis tools such as Racer.
- rustc: Rust systems programming language
Rust is a curly-brace, block-structured expression language. It
visually resembles the C language family, but differs significantly
in syntactic and semantic details. Its design is oriented toward
concerns of "programming in the large", that is, of creating and
maintaining boundaries - both abstract and operational - that
preserve large-system integrity, availability and concurrency.
.
It supports a mixture of imperative procedural, concurrent actor,
object-oriented and pure functional styles. Rust also supports
generic programming and meta-programming, in both static and dynamic
styles.
- rustc-dbgsym: debug symbols for package rustc
Rust is a curly-brace, block-structured expression language. It
visually resembles the C language family, but differs significantly
in syntactic and semantic details. Its design is oriented toward
concerns of "programming in the large", that is, of creating and
maintaining boundaries - both abstract and operational - that
preserve large-system integrity, availability and concurrency.
.
It supports a mixture of imperative procedural, concurrent actor,
object-oriented and pure functional styles. Rust also supports
generic programming and meta-programming, in both static and dynamic
styles.