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rust: Add type annotation to fix inference on Rust Nightly...
rust: Add type annotation to fix inference on Rust Nightly When compiling with Rust Nightly, the im-rs crate silently makes use of the experimental language feature for trait impl specialization. This apperently changes public its APIs in subtle ways such that type inference of some user code can fail where it succeeds when specialization is disabled. This made Mercurial’s Rust unit tests have compilation errors on Nightly. I have not managed to find the exactl root cause, but I wrote down my findings so far at https://github.com/bodil/im-rs/issues/188 This adds type annotation to make unit tests rely less on type inference and work around the issue. Differential Revision: https://phab.mercurial-scm.org/D10742

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main.rs
39 lines | 1.4 KiB | application/rls-services+xml | RustLexer
use pyembed::MainPythonInterpreter;
// Include an auto-generated file containing the default
// `pyembed::PythonConfig` derived by the PyOxidizer configuration file.
//
// If you do not want to use PyOxidizer to generate this file, simply
// remove this line and instantiate your own instance of
// `pyembed::PythonConfig`.
include!(env!("PYOXIDIZER_DEFAULT_PYTHON_CONFIG_RS"));
fn main() {
// The following code is in a block so the MainPythonInterpreter is
// destroyed in an orderly manner, before process exit.
let code = {
// Load the default Python configuration as derived by the PyOxidizer
// config file used at build time.
let config = default_python_config();
// Construct a new Python interpreter using that config, handling any
// errors from construction.
match MainPythonInterpreter::new(config) {
Ok(mut interp) => {
// And run it using the default run configuration as specified
// by the configuration. If an uncaught Python
// exception is raised, handle it.
// This includes the special SystemExit, which is a request to
// terminate the process.
interp.run_as_main()
}
Err(msg) => {
eprintln!("{}", msg);
1
}
}
};
// And exit the process according to code execution results.
std::process::exit(code);
}